Communications Biology (Jun 2023)

Molecular and cellular evidence for the impact of a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-associated RAF1 variant on the structure and function of contractile machinery in bioartificial cardiac tissues

  • Saeideh Nakhaei-Rad,
  • Fereshteh Haghighi,
  • Farhad Bazgir,
  • Julia Dahlmann,
  • Alexandra Viktoria Busley,
  • Marcel Buchholzer,
  • Karolin Kleemann,
  • Anne Schänzer,
  • Andrea Borchardt,
  • Andreas Hahn,
  • Sebastian Kötter,
  • Denny Schanze,
  • Ruchika Anand,
  • Florian Funk,
  • Annette Vera Kronenbitter,
  • Jürgen Scheller,
  • Roland P. Piekorz,
  • Andreas S. Reichert,
  • Marianne Volleth,
  • Matthew J. Wolf,
  • Ion Cristian Cirstea,
  • Bruce D. Gelb,
  • Marco Tartaglia,
  • Joachim P. Schmitt,
  • Martina Krüger,
  • Ingo Kutschka,
  • Lukas Cyganek,
  • Martin Zenker,
  • George Kensah,
  • Mohammad R. Ahmadian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-023-05013-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 18

Abstract

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Abstract Noonan syndrome (NS), the most common among RASopathies, is caused by germline variants in genes encoding components of the RAS-MAPK pathway. Distinct variants, including the recurrent Ser257Leu substitution in RAF1, are associated with severe hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Here, we investigated the elusive mechanistic link between NS-associated RAF1S257L and HCM using three-dimensional cardiac bodies and bioartificial cardiac tissues generated from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) harboring the pathogenic RAF1 c.770 C > T missense change. We characterize the molecular, structural, and functional consequences of aberrant RAF1–associated signaling on the cardiac models. Ultrastructural assessment of the sarcomere revealed a shortening of the I-bands along the Z disc area in both iPSC-derived RAF1S257L cardiomyocytes and myocardial tissue biopsies. The aforementioned changes correlated with the isoform shift of titin from a longer (N2BA) to a shorter isoform (N2B) that also affected the active force generation and contractile tensions. The genotype-phenotype correlation was confirmed using cardiomyocyte progeny of an isogenic gene-corrected RAF1S257L-iPSC line and was mainly reversed by MEK inhibition. Collectively, our findings uncovered a direct link between a RASopathy gene variant and the abnormal sarcomere structure resulting in a cardiac dysfunction that remarkably recapitulates the human disease.