Publication Date
12-5-2025
Journal
Circulation Research
DOI
10.1161/CIRCRESAHA.125.326480
PMID
41165345
Abstract
Background: Separation of the pulmonic and systemic circulation is essential for terrestrial life, and mammals have evolved distinct cardiac chambers with specialized structures and functions. Transcriptomics profiling revealed cellular heterogeneity between heart chambers. However, the mechanisms underlying chamber-specific transcriptomic and metabolic differences-and their functional significance-remain poorly understood. The Hippo/YAP (yes-associated protein) pathway is a conserved signaling network that regulates diverse cellular processes. The Hippo kinases inhibit YAP in cardiac fibroblasts (CF) to restrict fibrosis and inflammation. Nonetheless, how YAP regulates the metabolic microenvironment during homeostasis and fibroinflammation remains unclear.
Methods: We investigated YAP and glycolysis activity in the 4 cardiac chambers by scoring the expression of YAP target genes and glycolysis genes in human single-nucleus RNA sequencing data. To compare glucose uptake between the left and right atria, we measured isotope-labeled glucose uptake in isolated mouse atria. To study the role of YAP in CFs, we inactivated the Hippo kinases, Lats1 and Lats2, in mouse CFs and performed metabolic studies, snRNA-seq, single-nucleus assay for transposase-accessible chromatin with sequencing, and spatial transcriptomics.
Results: Metabolic and sequencing approaches revealed that Hippo-deficient CFs activated glycolysis to promote fibroinflammation. Inhibition of glycolysis or lactate production suppressed Hippo-deficient CF-induced fibrosis. Elevated YAP activity disrupted fibroblast lineage fidelity by inducing an osteochondroprogenitor cell state. Blocking macrophage expansion pharmacologically reduced Hippo-deficient CF proliferation and fibrosis. Sequencing and functional studies showed that macrophages secreted IGF1 (insulin-like growth factor 1) to activate IGF1 signaling in Hippo-deficient CFs to increase cell proliferation and fibrosis.
Conclusions: We discovered that right atrial CFs are more glycolytic and have higher YAP activity than CFs in other heart chambers. YAP activation in CFs induces glycolysis to drive fibrosis. YAP disrupts fibroblast lineage fidelity, driving them to a SOX9 (SRY-box transcription factor 9)-expressing osteochondroprogenitor cell state. Mechanistically, YAP activates the secretion of CSF1 (colony-stimulating factor 1) to promote macrophage expansion. Blocking macrophage expansion reduces Hippo-deficient CF proliferation, osteochondroprogenitor differentiation, and fibrosis, revealing that macrophages signal reciprocally to regulate CF cell states. Genomic and functional studies revealed that the upregulated IGF1 receptor in Hippo-deficient CFs enables them to receive macrophage-secreted IGF1, thereby further enhancing CF proliferation and fibrosis.
Keywords
Animals, Glycolysis, Fibroblasts, YAP-Signaling Proteins, Mice, Fibrosis, Humans, Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Inflammation, Male, Signal Transduction, Cells, Cultured, Hippo Signaling Pathway, Heart Atria, Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing, Cell Cycle Proteins, Mice, Knockout, fibroblast, fibrosis, glycolysis, hippo signaling pathway, inflammation
Published Open-Access
yes
Recommended Citation
Tsai, Chang-Ru; Liu, Lin; Zhao, Yi; et al., "YAP-Induced Glycolysis Drives Fibroinflammation and Disrupts Fibroblast Fidelity" (2025). Faculty, Staff and Students Publications. 6295.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/baylor_docs/6295