Aortic valve disease (AVD) is a common condition with a progressive natural history, and presently, there are no pharmacologic treatment strategies. Elastic fiber fragmentation (EFF) is a hallmark of AVD, and increasing evidence implicates developmental elastic fiber assembly defects. Emilin1 is a glycoprotein necessary for elastic fiber assembly that is present in both developing and mature human and mouse aortic valves. The deficient mouse ( ) is a model of latent AVD, characterized by activated TGFβ/MEK/p-Erk signaling and upregulated elastase activity. aortic valves demonstrate early EFF and aberrant angiogenesis followed by late neovascularization and fibrosis. The objective of this study was to test the effectiveness of three different targeted therapies. Aged (12-14 months) mice were treated with refametinib (RDEA-119, MEK1/2 inhibitor), doxycycline (elastase inhibitor), or G6-31 (anti-VEGF-A mouse antibody) for 4 weeks. Refametinib- and doxycycline-treated mice markedly reduced MEK/p-Erk activation in valve tissue. Furthermore, both refametinib and doxycycline attenuated elastolytic cathepsin K, L, MMP-2, and MMP-9 activation, and abrogated macrophage and neutrophil infiltration in aortic valves. RNAseq analysis was performed in aortic valve tissue from adult (4 months) and aged (14 months) and age-matched wild-type control mice, and demonstrated upregulation of genes associated with MAPK/MEK/p-Erk signaling and elastases at the adult stage and inflammatory pathways at the aged stage controlling for age. These results suggest that Erk1/2 signaling is an important modulator of early elastase activation, and pharmacological inhibition using refametinib may be a promising treatment to halt AVD progression.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5350168 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.14814/phy2.13152 | DOI Listing |
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