Journal article

A common gene signature of the right ventricle in failing rat and human hearts


Authors listJurida, Liane; Werner, Sebastian; Knapp, Fabienne; Niemann, Bernd; Li, Ling; Gruen, Dimitri; Wirth, Stefanie; Weber, Axel; Beuerlein, Knut; Liebetrau, Christoph; Wiedenroth, Christoph B.; Guth, Stefan; Kojonazarov, Baktybek; Jafari, Leili; Weissmann, Norbert; Guenther, Stefan; Braun, Thomas; Bartkuhn, Marek; Schermuly, Ralph T.; Dorfmueller, Peter; Yin, Xiaoke; Mayr, Manuel; Schmitz, M. Lienhard; Czech, Laureen; Schlueter, Klaus-Dieter; Schulz, Rainer; Rohrbach, Susanne; Kracht, Michael

Publication year2024

JournalNature Cardiovascular Research

Volume number3

Issue number7

eISSN2731-0590

Open access statusHybrid

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s44161-024-00485-1

PublisherSpringer Nature [academic journals on nature.com]


Abstract

The molecular mechanisms of progressive right heart failure are incompletely understood. In this study, we systematically examined transcriptomic changes occurring over months in isolated cardiomyocytes or whole heart tissues from failing right and left ventricles in rat models of pulmonary artery banding (PAB) or aortic banding (AOB). Detailed bioinformatics analyses resulted in the identification of gene signature, protein and transcription factor networks specific to ventricles and compensated or decompensated disease states. Proteomic and RNA-FISH analyses confirmed PAB-mediated regulation of key genes and revealed spatially heterogeneous mRNA expression in the heart. Intersection of rat PAB-specific gene sets with transcriptome datasets from human patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) led to the identification of more than 50 genes whose expression levels correlated with the severity of right heart disease, including multiple matrix-regulating and secreted factors. These data define a conserved, differentially regulated genetic network associated with right heart failure in rats and humans.

Using bulk heart transcriptomics of rat models of right and left ventricle failure, Jurida et al. examined transcriptional changes in cardiomyocytes during the progression of heart failure and the overlap with transcriptomics from humans with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH), identifying more than 50 genes whose expression levels correlate with the severity of right heart disease.




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleJurida, L., Werner, S., Knapp, F., Niemann, B., Li, L., Gruen, D., et al. (2024) A common gene signature of the right ventricle in failing rat and human hearts, Nature Cardiovascular Research, 3(7). https://doi.org/10.1038/s44161-024-00485-1

APA Citation styleJurida, L., Werner, S., Knapp, F., Niemann, B., Li, L., Gruen, D., Wirth, S., Weber, A., Beuerlein, K., Liebetrau, C., Wiedenroth, C., Guth, S., Kojonazarov, B., Jafari, L., Weissmann, N., Guenther, S., Braun, T., Bartkuhn, M., Schermuly, R., ...Kracht, M. (2024). A common gene signature of the right ventricle in failing rat and human hearts. Nature Cardiovascular Research. 3(7). https://doi.org/10.1038/s44161-024-00485-1



Keywords


GROWTH-FACTOR-BETAPRESSURE-OVERLOADPROENKEPHALINSET ENRICHMENT ANALYSISTCEAL7

Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 12:08