Role of plakophilin-2 expression on exercise-related progression of arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy: a translational study
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Exercise increases arrhythmia risk and cardiomyopathy progression in arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) patients, but the mechanisms remain unknown. We investigated transcriptomic changes caused by endurance training in mice deficient in plakophilin-2 (PKP2cKO), a desmosomal protein important for intercalated disc formation, commonly mutated in ARVC and controls.
Exercise alone caused transcriptional downregulation of genes coding intercalated disk proteins. The changes converged with those in sedentary and in exercised PKP2cKO mice. PKP2 loss caused cardiac contractile deficit, decreased muscle mass and increased functional/transcriptomic signatures of apoptosis, despite increased fractional shortening and calcium transient amplitude in single myocytes. Exercise accelerated cardiac dysfunction, an effect dampened by pre-training animals prior to PKP2-KO. Consistent with PKP2-dependent muscle mass deficit, cardiac dimensions in human athletes carrying PKP2 mutations were reduced, compared to matched controls.
We speculate that exercise challenges a cardiomyocyte “desmosomal reserve” which, if impaired genetically (e.g., PKP2 loss), accelerates progression of cardiomyopathy.
Contributors

Marina Cerrone
Author
New York University Langone Medical Center New York , United States of America

Grecia M Marrón-Liñares
Author

Chantal J M van Opbergen
Author
Amsterdam University Medical Centre (AUMC) Amsterdam , Netherlands (The)

Sarah Costa
Author

Mimount Bourfiss
Author

Marta Pérez-Hernández
Author

Florencia Schlamp
Author

Fabian Sanchis-Gomar
Author

Kabir Malkani
Author

Kamelia Drenkova
Author

Mingliang Zhang
Author

Xianming Lin
Author

Adriana Heguy
Author

Birgitta K Velthuis
Author

Niek H J Prakken
Author

Andre LaGerche
Author

Hugh Calkins
Author

Cynthia A James
Author

Mario Delmar
Author
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