JOURNAL ARTICLE
RESEARCH SUPPORT, NON-U.S. GOV'T
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Ablation of toll-like receptor 4 attenuates aging-induced myocardial remodeling and contractile dysfunction through NCoRI-HDAC1-mediated regulation of autophagy.

Aging is usually accompanied with overt structural and functional changes as well as suppressed autophagy in the heart although the precise regulatory mechanisms are somewhat unknown. Here we evaluated the role of the innate proinflammatory mediator toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) in cardiac aging and the underlying mechanism with a focus on autophagy. Cardiac geometry and function were monitored in young or old wild-type (WT) and TLR4 knockout (TLR4-/- ) mice using echocardiography, IonOptix® edge-detection and fura-2 techniques. Levels of autophagy and mitophagy, nuclear receptor corepressor 1 (NCoR1) and histone deacetylase I (HDAC1) were examined using western blot. Transmission electronic microscopy (TEM) was employed to monitor myocardial ultrastructure. Our results revealed that TLR4 ablation alleviated advanced aging (24 months)-induced changes in myocardial remodeling (increased heart weight, chamber size, cardiomyocyte cross-sectional area), contractile function and intracellular Ca2+ handling as well as autophagy and mitophagy [Beclin-1, Atg5, LC3B, PTEN-induced putative kinase 1 (PINK1), Parkin and p62]. Aging downregulated levels of NCoR1 and HDAC1 as well as their interaction, the effects were significantly attenuated or negated by TLR4 ablation. Advanced aging disturbed myocardial ultrastructure as evidenced by loss of myofilament alignment and swollen mitochondria, which was obliterated by TLR4 ablation. Moreover, aging suppressed autophagy (GFP-LC3B puncta) in neonatal mouse cardiomyocytes, the effect of which was negated by the TLR4 inhibitor CLI-095. Inhibition of HDCA1 using apicidin cancelled off CLI095-induced beneficial response of GFP-LC3B puncta against aging. Our data collectively indicate a role for TLR4-mediated autophagy in cardiac remodeling and contractile dysfunction in aging through a HDAC1-NCoR1-dependent mechanism.

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