Hematopoietic loss of Y chromosome leads to cardiac fibrosis and heart failure mortality

Soichi Sano(University of Virginia), Keita Horitani(University of Virginia), Hayato Ogawa(University of Virginia), Jonatan Halvardson(Science for Life Laboratory), Nicholas W. Chavkin(University of Virginia), Ying Wang(University of Virginia), Miho Sano(University of Virginia), Jonas Mattisson(Science for Life Laboratory), Atsushi Hata(Chiba University), Marcus Danielsson(Science for Life Laboratory), Emiri Miura‐Yura(University of Virginia), Ammar Zaghlool(Science for Life Laboratory), Megan A. Evans(University of Virginia), Tove Fall(Science for Life Laboratory), Henry N. De Hoyos(University of Virginia), Johan Sundström(Uppsala University), Yoshimitsu Yura(University of Virginia), Anupreet Kour(University of Virginia), Yohei Arai(University of Virginia), Mark C. Thel(University of Virginia), Yuka Arai(University of Virginia), Josyf C. Mychaleckyj(University of Virginia), Karen K. Hirschi(University of Virginia), Lars A. Forsberg(Uppsala University), Kenneth Walsh(University of Virginia)
Science
July 14, 2022
Cited by 240Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Hematopoietic mosaic loss of Y chromosome (mLOY) is associated with increased risk of mortality and age-related diseases in men, but the causal and mechanistic relationships have yet to be established. Here, we show that male mice reconstituted with bone marrow cells lacking the Y chromosome display increased mortality and age-related profibrotic pathologies including reduced cardiac function. Cardiac macrophages lacking the Y chromosome exhibited polarization toward a more fibrotic phenotype, and treatment with a transforming growth factor β1-neutralizing antibody ameliorated cardiac dysfunction in mLOY mice. A prospective study revealed that mLOY in blood is associated with an increased risk for cardiovascular disease and heart failure-associated mortality. Together, these results indicate that hematopoietic mLOY causally contributes to fibrosis, cardiac dysfunction, and mortality in men.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis