Doxorubicin induces wide-spread transcriptional changes in the myocardium of hearts distinguishing between mice with preserved and impaired cardiac function

Paul, Stamm, Ina, Kirmes, Alexander, Palmer, Michael, Molitor, Miroslava, Kvandova, Sanela, Kalinovic, Dominika, Mihalikova, George, Reid, Philip, Wenzel, Thomas, Münzel, Andreas, Daiber, Thomas, Jansen

Life Sciences |

Aims: Doxorubicin (DOX) is an important drug for the treatment of various tumor entities. However, the occurrence of heart failure limits its application. This study investigated differential gene expression profiles in the left and right ventricles of DOX treated mice with either preserved or impaired myocardial function. We provide new mechanistic insights into the pathophysiology of DOX-induced heart failure and have discovered pathways that counteract DOX-induced cardiotoxicity. Main methods: We used in total 48 male mice and applied a chronic low dose DOX administration (5 mg/kg per injection, in total 20 mg/kg over 4 weeks) to induce heart failure. Echocardiographic parameters were evaluated one week after the final dose and mice were separated according to functional parameters into doxorubicin responding and non-responding animals. Post mortem, measurements of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and gene expression profiling was performed in separated right and left hearts. Key findings: We detected significant ROS production in the left heart of the mice in response to DOX treatment, although interestingly, not in the right heart. We found that transcriptional changes differ between right and left heart correlating with the occurrence of myocardial dysfunction. Significance: Doxorubicin induces changes in gene expression in the entire heart of animals without necessarily impairing cardiac function. We identified a set of transcripts that are associated with DOX cardiotoxicity. These might represent promising targets to ameliorate DOX-induced heart failure. Moreover, our results emphasize that parameters of left and right heart function should be evaluated during standardized echocardiography in patients undergoing DOX therapy.