MMI-0100 inhibits cardiac fibrosis in a mouse model overexpressing cardiac myosin binding protein C

Qinghang, Meng, Bidur, Bhandary, Hanna, Osinska, Jeanne, James, Na, Xu, Kritton, Shay-Winkler, James, Gulick, Monte S., Willis, Cynthia, Lander, Jeffrey, Robbins

Journal of the American Heart Association |

BACKGROUND Cardiac stress can trigger production of a 40-kDa peptide fragment derived from the amino terminus of the cardiac myosin-binding protein C. Cardiac stress, as well as cMyBP-C mutations, can trigger production of 1 such truncated protein fragment, a 40-kDa peptide fragment derived from the amino terminus of cMyBP-C. Genetic expression of this 40-kDa fragment in mouse cardiomyocytes (cMyBP-C(40k)) leads to cardiac disease, fibrosis, and death within the first year. Fibrosis can occur in many cardiovascular diseases, and mitogen-activated protein kinase--activated protein kinase-2 signaling has been implicated in a variety of fibrotic processes. Recent studies demonstrated that mitogen-activated protein kinase--activated protein kinase-2 inhibition using the cell-permeant peptide inhibitor MMI-0100 is protective in the setting of acute myocardial infarction. We hypothesized that MMI-0100 might also be protective in a chronic model of fibrosis, produced as a result of cMyBP-C(40k) cardiomyocyte expression. METHODS AND RESULTS Nontransgenic and cMyBP-C(40k) inducible transgenic mice were given MMI-0100 or PBS daily for 30 weeks. In control groups, long-term MMI-0100 was benign, with no measurable effects on cardiac anatomy, function, cell viability, hypertrophy, or probability of survival. In the inducible transgenic group, MMI-0100 treatment reduced cardiac fibrosis, decreased cardiac hypertrophy, and prolonged survival. CONCLUSIONS Pharmaceutical inhibition of mitogen-activated protein kinase--activated protein kinase-2 signaling via MMI-0100 treatment is beneficial in the context of fibrotic cMyBPC(40k) disease.