Lack of MG53 in human heart precludes utility as a biomarker of myocardial injury or endogenous cardioprotective factor
Cardiovascular Research

Abstract
Mitsugumin-53 (MG53/TRIM72) is an E3-ubiquitin ligase that rapidly accumulates at sites of membrane injury and plays an important role in membrane repair of skeletal and cardiac muscle. MG53 has been implicated in cardiac ischaemia–reperfusion injury, and serum MG53 provides a biomarker of skeletal muscle injury in the
We performed Langendorff ischaemia–reperfusion injury on wild-type and dysferlin-null murine hearts, using dysferlin deficiency to effectively model more severe outcomes from cardiac ischaemia–reperfusion injury. MG53 released into the coronary effluent correlated strongly and significantly (
MG53 is an effective biomarker of myocardial injury and dysfunction in murine hearts. However, MG53 is not expressed in human heart and therefore does not hold utility as a clinical biomarker of myocardial injury. Although cardioprotective roles for endogenous myocardial MG53 cannot be extrapolated from rodents to humans, potential therapeutic application of recombinant MG53 for myocardial membrane injury prevails.
Contributors

Daniel M. Eckert
Author

Manuel Kenzler
Author

Joanne M. Hawkes
Author

Tanya L. Butler
Author

Bradley Ceely
Author

Kathryn N. North
Author

Frances A. Lemckert
Author

David S. Winlaw
Author

Adam Bournazos
Author

Jonathan R. Egan
Author

Sandra T. Cooper
Author
