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Accession IconSRP100463

Cardiomyocyte gene programs encoding morphological and functional signatures in cardiac hypertrophy and failure (RNA-Seq)

Organism Icon Mus musculus
Sample Icon 620 Downloadable Samples
Technology Badge IconIllumina HiSeq 2500

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Description
Pressure overload induces a transition from cardiac hypertrophy to heart failure, but its underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Here we reconstruct a trajectory of cardiomyocyte remodeling and clarify distinct cardiomyocyte gene programs encoding morphological and functional signatures in cardiac hypertrophy and failure, by integrating single-cardiomyocyte transcriptome with cell morphology, epigenomic state and heart function. During early hypertrophy, cardiomyocytes activate mitochondrial translation/metabolism genes, whose expression is correlated with cell size and linked to ERK1/2 and NRF1/2 transcriptional networks. Persistent overload leads to a bifurcation into adaptive and failing cardiomyocytes, and p53 signaling is specifically activated in late hypertrophy. Cardiomyocyte-specific p53 deletion shows that cardiomyocyte remodeling is initiated by p53-independent mitochondrial activation and morphological hypertrophy, followed by p53-dependent mitochondrial inhibition, morphological elongation, and heart failure gene program activation. Human single-cardiomyocyte analysis validates the conservation of the pathogenic transcriptional signatures. Collectively, cardiomyocyte identity is encoded in transcriptional programs that orchestrate morphological and functional phenotypes. Overall design: Integrative analysis of single-cardiomyocyte RNA-seq of pressure-overload-induced heart failure model mice and heart failure patients with dilated cardiomyopathy, single-cell morphology, cardiac function and genetic perturbation
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631
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