Human model of primary carnitine deficiency cardiomyopathy reveals ferroptosis as a novel mechanism
Authors
- M. Loos
- B. Klampe
- T. Schulze
- X. Yin
- K. Theofilatos
- B.M. Ulmer
- C. Schulz
- C.S. Behrens
- T.D. van Bergen
- E. Adami
- H. Maatz
- M. Schweizer
- S. Brodesser
- B.V. Skryabin
- T.S. Rozhdestvensky
- S. Bodbin
- K. Stathopoulou
- T. Christ
- C. Denning
- N. Hübner
- M. Mayr
- F. Cuello
- T. Eschenhagen
- A. Hansen
Journal
- Stem Cell Reports
Citation
- Stem Cell Rep 18 (11): 2123-2137
Abstract
Primary carnitine deficiency (PCD) is an autosomal recessive monogenic disorder caused by mutations in SLC22A5. This gene encodes for OCTN2, which transports the essential metabolite carnitine into the cell. PCD patients suffer from muscular weakness and dilated cardiomyopathy. Two OCTN2-defective human induced pluripotent stem cell lines were generated, carrying a full OCTN2 knockout and a homozygous OCTN2 (N32S) loss-of-function mutation. OCTN2-defective genotypes showed lower force development and resting length in engineered heart tissue format compared with isogenic control. Force was sensitive to fatty acid-based media and associated with lipid accumulation, mitochondrial alteration, higher glucose uptake, and metabolic remodeling, replicating findings in animal models. The concordant results of OCTN2 (N32S) and -knockout emphasizes the relevance of OCTN2 for these findings. Importantly, genome-wide analysis and pharmacological inhibitor experiments identified ferroptosis, an iron- and lipid-dependent cell death pathway associated with fibroblast activation as a novel PCD cardiomyopathy disease mechanism.