Epigenetic reprogramming of human hearts found in congestive heart failure

This discovery may lead to personalized care for congestive heart failure, also known as ischemic cardiomyopathy.

adam wende mark pepinAdam Wende, left, Mark PepinCongestive heart failure is a terminal disease that affects nearly 6 million Americans. Yet its management is limited to symptomatic treatments because the causal mechanisms of congestive heart failure — including its most common form, ischemic cardiomyopathy — are not known. Ischemic cardiomyopathy is the result of restricted blood flow in coronary arteries, as occurs during a heart attack, which starves the heart muscle of oxygen.

Researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham have now described an underlying mechanism that reprograms the hearts of patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy, a process that differs from patients with other forms of heart failure, collectively known as dilated (non-ischemic) cardiomyopathies. This points the way toward future personalized care for ischemic cardiomyopathy.

The study used heart tissue samples collected at UAB during surgeries to implant small mechanical pumps alongside the hearts of patients with end-stage heart failure that assist in the pumping of blood. As a routine part of this procedure, a small piece of heart tissue is excised and ultimately discarded as medical waste. The current study acquired these samples from the left ventricles of five ischemic cardiomyopathy patients and six non-ischemic cardiomyopathy patients, all men between ages 49 and 70.

The research team, led by Adam Wende, Ph.D., assistant professor in the UAB Department of Pathology, found that epigenetic changes in ischemic cardiomyopathy hearts likely reprogram the heart’s metabolism and alter cellular remodeling in the heart. Epigenetics is a field that describes molecular modifications known to alter the activity of genes without changing their DNA sequence.

One well-established epigenetic change is the addition or removal of methyl groups to the cytosine bases of DNA. Generally, hyper-methylation is associated with reduction of gene expression, and conversely, hypo-methylation correlates with increased gene expression.

Wende and colleagues found an epigenetic signature in the heart of patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy that differed from the non-ischemic hearts. Furthermore, this signature was found to reflect a long-known metabolic change in ischemic cardiomyopathy, where the heart’s preference of metabolic fuel switches from using oxygen to produce energy in cells, as healthy hearts do, to an anaerobic metabolism that does not need oxygen. This anaerobic metabolic preference is seen in fetal hearts; however, after birth, the baby’s heart quickly changes to oxidative metabolism.

“Altogether, we believe that epigenetic changes encode a so-called ‘metabolic plasticity’ in failing hearts, the reversal of which may repair the ischemic and failing heart,” Wende said.

“Altogether, we believe that epigenetic changes encode a so-called ‘metabolic plasticity’ in failing hearts, the reversal of which may repair the ischemic and failing heart.”

The researchers found that increased DNA methylation correlated with reduced expression of genes involved in oxidative metabolism. The transcription factor KLF15 is an upstream regulator of metabolic gene expression, which the researchers found is suppressed by the epigenetic regulator EZH2. Conversely, the researchers also found hypo-methylation of anaerobic glycolytic metabolic genes.

This contribution by EZH2 offers a new molecular target for further mechanistic studies that may aid precision-based heart disease therapies. Of note, co-author Sooryanarayana Varambally, who has spent over 15 years studying this protein, has already made progress using small-molecular inhibitors to regulate EZH2 to treat various cancers.

The Wende-led study, now published in Nature – Laboratory Investigation, employed a wide array of bioinformatics tools. First author Mark Pepin used publicly available programs to create a fully automated computational pipeline, which is provided as an online supplement to the paper. This protocol, written in the R programming language, allowed the investigators to both analyze their multi-Omics datasets and compare their findings to those of animal-based studies and public data repositories. “Supplying the coding scripts,” Wende said, “is our way of demonstrating the rigor and reproducibility that should be expected of any bioinformatics study.”

Pepin is a sixth-year M.D.-Ph.D. student at UAB and is currently completing the Ph.D. portion of his training in the Medical Scientist Training Program.

The UAB team also performed cell culture experiments showing repression of KLF15 after EZH2 over-expression in rat cardiomyoblasts, and they demonstrated that EZH2 over-expression depended on EZH2’s having an intact SET catalytic domain.

Co-authors with Wende and Pepin on the paper, “Genome-wide DNA methylation encodes cardiac transcriptional reprogramming in human ischemic heart failure,” are Chae-Myeong Ha and Varambally, the UAB Department of Pathology’s Division of Molecular and Cellular Pathology; David K. Crossman, UAB Department of Genetics and the Heflin Center for Genomic Science; Silvio H. Litovsky, the UAB Department of Pathology’s Division of Anatomic Pathology; Joseph P. Barchue and Salpy V. Pamboukian, the UAB Department of Medicine’s Division of Cardiovascular Medicine; Nikolaos A. Diakos and Stavros G. Drakos, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Utah; and Steven M. Pogwizd, UAB Department of Biomedical Engineering and the UAB Department of Medicine’s Division of Cardiovascular Medicine.

Financial support was provided by National Institutes of Health grants DK076169, HL133011, TR001417, MD008620, HL135121, HL132067, HD071866 and HL137240; the American Heart Association Heart Failure Strategically Focused Research Network grant 16SFRN29020000; and the Nora Eccles Treadwell Foundation.