Circadian Disruption During Fetal Development Promotes Pathological Cardiac Remodeling in Male Mice
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Disruption of circadian rhythms during fetal development may predispose mice to developing heart disease later in life. Here, we report that male, but not female, mice that had experienced chronic circadian disturbance (CCD) were more susceptible to pathological cardiac remodeling compared with mice that had developed under normal intrauterine conditions. CCD-treated males showed ventricular chamber dilatation, enhanced myocardial fibrosis, decreased contractility, higher rates of induced tachyarrhythmia, and elevated expression of biomarkers for heart failure and myocardial remodeling. CCD exposure also triggered sex-dependent changes in cardiac gene expression, including upregulation of the secretoglobin gene, , in males. Importantly, cardiac overexpression of was sufficient to induce myocardial hypertrophy in otherwise naive male mice. Our findings reveal that CCD exposure predisposes male mice to pathological remodeling of the heart later in life, likely as a consequence of SCGB1A1 upregulation.
SCGB1A1 as a novel biomarker and promising therapeutic target for the management of HNSCC.
Wang J, Xu Q, Yu J, Xu A, Yu L, Chen Z Oncol Lett. 2024; 28(5):527.
PMID: 39268163 PMC: 11391500. DOI: 10.3892/ol.2024.14660.