Scientific Reports (Sep 2023)

Fibulin-3 is necessary to prevent cardiac rupture following myocardial infarction

  • Lucy A. Murtha,
  • Sean A. Hardy,
  • Nishani S. Mabotuwana,
  • Mark J. Bigland,
  • Taleah Bailey,
  • Kalyan Raguram,
  • Saifei Liu,
  • Doan T. Ngo,
  • Aaron L. Sverdlov,
  • Tamara Tomin,
  • Ruth Birner-Gruenberger,
  • Robert D. Hume,
  • Siiri E. Iismaa,
  • David T. Humphreys,
  • Ralph Patrick,
  • James J. H. Chong,
  • Randall J. Lee,
  • Richard P. Harvey,
  • Robert M. Graham,
  • Peter P. Rainer,
  • Andrew J. Boyle

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-41894-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Despite the high prevalence of heart failure in the western world, there are few effective treatments. Fibulin-3 is a protein involved in extracellular matrix (ECM) structural integrity, however its role in the heart is unknown. We have demonstrated, using single cell RNA-seq, that fibulin-3 was highly expressed in quiescent murine cardiac fibroblasts, with expression highest prior to injury and late post-infarct (from ~ day-28 to week-8). In humans, fibulin-3 was upregulated in left ventricular tissue and plasma of heart failure patients. Fibulin-3 knockout (Efemp1 −/−) and wildtype mice were subjected to experimental myocardial infarction. Fibulin-3 deletion resulted in significantly higher rate of cardiac rupture days 3–6 post-infarct, indicating a weak and poorly formed scar, with severe ventricular remodelling in surviving mice at day-28 post-infarct. Fibulin-3 knockout mice demonstrated less collagen deposition at day-3 post-infarct, with abnormal collagen fibre-alignment. RNA-seq on day-3 infarct tissue revealed upregulation of ECM degradation and inflammatory genes, but downregulation of ECM assembly/structure/organisation genes in fibulin-3 knockout mice. GSEA pathway analysis showed enrichment of inflammatory pathways and a depletion of ECM organisation pathways. Fibulin-3 originates from cardiac fibroblasts, is upregulated in human heart failure, and is necessary for correct ECM organisation/structural integrity of fibrotic tissue to prevent cardiac rupture post-infarct.