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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Cardiomyocyte-Specific Plakophilin-2 Loss Is Sufficient to Induce Aging and Senescence of Nonmyocytes: Relevance to Arrhythmogenic Cardiomyopathy.

Journal:
Journal of the American Heart Association
Year:
2026
Authors:
Bertoli, Giorgia et al.
Affiliation:
The Leon H. Charney Division of Cardiology New York University Grossman School of Medicine New York NY. · United States
Species:
rodent

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Pathogenic variants inare the most common cause of familial arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. This study tests whether plakophilin-2 (PKP2) deficiency only in cardiomyocytes is sufficient to provoke premature aging and proinflammatory senescence in nonmyocyte, cardiac resident cells. METHODS: We studied mice with cardiomyocyte-specific, tamoxifen-activated loss of PKP2 (cardiomyocyte-specific conditional knockout of plakophilin-2) using conventional and multiplex imaging, cytokine arrays, epigenetic clocks, spatial transcriptomics, expansion and structured illumination microscopy, and correlative data analysis. We examined nonmyocytes and cardiomyocytes for premature aging and senescence. RESULTS: We observed senescence-associated heterochromatin foci in nonmyocytes, predominantly in cells positive for α-smooth muscle actin staining. Cytokines in media of nonmyocyte cells were consistent with senescence-associated secretory phenotype. Epigenetic clocks identified premature aging. Multiplex immunohistochemistry showed nonmyocyte cells in niches, intermingled with cardiomyocytes. Spatial transcriptomics showed overrepresentation of senescence-associated secretory phenotype-related transcripts, predominantly in myocyte-rich areas of the left ventricle. Senescence-associated heterochromatin foci and increased epigenetic age were not found in cardiomyocytes from cardiomyocyte-specific conditional knockout of plakophilin-2 hearts, although we observed structural features associated with premature aging. Cross-reference analysis showed correlation between the cardiomyocyte-specific conditional knockout of plakophilin-2 cardiac proteome and that of mice 5 or 6 times their chronological age, as well as transcriptional signatures of neurodegenerative diseases. CONCLUSIONS: Loss of PKP2 expression only in adult cardiac myocytes is sufficient to induce proinflammatory senescence in nonmyocytes, and overall premature cardiac aging. This is the first study to intersect cellular senescence and premature aging with desmosomal arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathies. We speculate that cell-agnostic molecular signatures, biomarkers, and pharmacology of senescence and of neurodegenerative diseases may be relevant to diagnose or treat PKP2 arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/42047205/