Frontiers in Immunology (Mar 2025)

Cardiac autoantibodies promote a fibrotic transcriptome and reduced ventricular recovery in human myocarditis

  • Jennifer M. Myers,
  • Clayton Sandel,
  • Kathy Alvarez,
  • Lori Garman,
  • Lori Garman,
  • Graham Wiley,
  • Courtney Montgomery,
  • Patrick Gaffney,
  • Stavros Stavrakis,
  • DeLisa Fairweather,
  • Katelyn A. Bruno,
  • Yan Daniel Zhao,
  • Leslie T. Cooper,
  • Madeleine W. Cunningham

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2025.1500909
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16

Abstract

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Myocarditis leads to dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) with one-third failing to recover normal ejection fraction (EF 50%). Our previous studies have supported a Th17 autoimmune pathogenesis where IL17A and IL-6 are elevated in myocarditis patients who do not recover normal EF. In the non-recovered group, autoantibody mechanisms of pathogenesis in myocardial injury and systolic dysfunction are not fully understood. Furthermore, in our myocarditis cohort, cardiac myosin (CM) autoantibodies (AAbs) were elevated and cross-reactive with the β−adrenergic receptor (βAR). Here we studied cross-reactive CM/βAR serum AAbs and human myocarditis-derived monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) to define their potential pathogenic mechanisms and to identify unique human CM epitopes associated with non-recovery in a longitudinal (n=41) cohort. Elevated CM IgG AAbs in the non-recovered phenotype correlated with reduced EF and poor outcomes. Human CM epitopes unique to the non-recovered phenotype shared strong amino acid sequence homology with extracellular loops of βARs and supported molecular mimicry and cross-reactivity between CM and βAR. Myocarditis-derived IgG and human mAb 2C.4 activated protein kinase A (PKA) in an IgG, CM, and βAR-dependent manner in H9c2 heart myoblast cell line, and transcriptomic analysis revealed mAb 2C.4 induced fibrosis pathways which were highly similar pathways seen with isoproterenol, a beta receptor agonist. Our data translate into new mechanistic insights from our small longitudinal group of myocarditis/DCM patients and into potential therapeutic targets and biomarkers for future studies.

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