PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

TIGAR deficiency enhances cardiac resilience through epigenetic programming of Parkin expression.

Journal:
JCI insight
Year:
2026
Authors:
Tang, Yan et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine
Species:
rodent

Abstract

Mitochondrial dysfunction devastates the heart in major cardiovascular diseases, yet the mechanisms governing mitochondrial quality control remain elusive. We discovered that TIGAR (TP53-induced glycolysis and apoptosis regulator) deficiency established profound cardiac protection through developmental epigenetic programming of Parkin expression. Using mice with whole-body and cardiomyocyte-specific TIGAR knockout, we demonstrated remarkable cardioprotection following myocardial infarction with maintained ejection fraction, and complete resistance to diet-induced cardiac hypertrophy despite comparable weight gain. TIGAR deficiency triggered dramatic increases in Parkin expression across all somatic tissues except testes, where Parkin levels remained extraordinarily high (100-fold greater than cardiac levels) regardless of TIGAR status, revealing tissue-specific regulatory mechanisms. This protection was entirely Parkin dependent, as double-knockout mice lost all cardioprotective benefits. Crucially, adult TIGAR manipulation failed to alter Parkin levels, demonstrating that this pathway operated exclusively during critical developmental windows to program lifelong cardiac resilience. Whole-genome bisulfite sequencing identified reduced DNA methylation in Prkn intron 10 as the key regulatory mechanism, with CRISPR deletion dramatically increasing Parkin expression in multiple cell lines. Our findings reveal how early cardiac metabolism programs lifelong cardiac function through epigenetic mechanisms, and identify developmental metabolic programming as a potential therapeutic target for preventing both ischemic heart disease and metabolic cardiomyopathy.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41746736/