Oxidative phosphorylation is required for cardiomyocyte re-differentiation and long-term fish heart regeneration

Autor/innen

  • Konstantinos Lekkos
  • Zhilian Hu
  • Phong D. Nguyen
  • Hessel Honkoop
  • Esra Sengul
  • Rita Alonaizan
  • Jana Koth
  • Jun Ying
  • Madeleine E. Lemieux
  • Alisha Kenward
  • Sean Keeley
  • Bastiaan Spanjaard
  • Brett W.C. Kennedy
  • Xin Sun
  • Katherine Banecki
  • Helen G. Potts
  • Gennaro Ruggiero
  • James Montgomery
  • Daniela Panáková
  • Jan Philipp Junker
  • Lisa C. Heather
  • Xiaonan Wang
  • Juan Manuel Gonzalez-Rosa
  • Jeroen Bakkers
  • Mathilda T.M. Mommersteeg

Journal

  • Nature Cardiovascular Research

Quellenangabe

  • Nat Cardiovasc Res 4 (10): 1363-1380

Zusammenfassung

  • In contrast to humans, fish can fully regenerate their hearts after cardiac injury. However, not all fish have the same regenerative potential, allowing comparative inter-species and intra-species analysis to identify the mechanisms controlling successful heart regeneration. Here we report a differential regenerative response to cardiac cryo-injury among different wild-type zebrafish strains. Correlating these data with single-cell and bulk RNA sequencing data, we identify oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) as a positive regulator of long-term regenerative outcome. OXPHOS levels, driven by glycolysis through the malate-aspartate shuttle, increase as soon as cardiomyocyte proliferation decreases, and this increase is required for cardiomyocyte re-differentiation and successful long-term regeneration. Reduced upregulation of OXPHOS in Astyanax mexicanus cavefish results in the absence of a dynamic temporal sarcomere gene expression program during cardiomyocyte re-differentiation. These findings challenge the assumption that OXPHOS inhibits regeneration and reveal targetable pathways to enhance heart repair in humans after myocardial infarction.


DOI

doi:10.1038/s44161-025-00718-x