Toll-like receptor 3 orchestrates a conserved mechanism of heart regeneration

Manuel Fiegl, Bernhard Roehrs, Dominik Hau, Sophia Mair, Philipp Niederwanger, Dominik Regele,Lorenzo Merotto, Sonja Toechterle,Clemens Engler, Michael Graber,Elke Kirchmair, Veronika Niedrist, Lynn Muller, Leo Poelzl, Jakob Hirsch, Felix Naegele, Isidor Happacher, Simon Oberegger,Nikolaos Bonaros, Michael Grimm,Ivan Tancevski, Francesca Finotello,Dirk Meyer, Johannes Holfeld,Can Gollmann-Tepekoeylue

biorxiv(2024)

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摘要
The human’s heart responds to tissue damage with persistent fibrotic scarring. Unlike humans, zebrafish can repair cardiac injury and re-grow heart tissue throughout life. Recently, Toll-like receptor 3 ( Tlr3 ) was identified as an important mediator of cardiac regeneration in neonatal mice. However, no functional analysis of tlr3 knock-out mutant zebrafish in respect to cardiac regeneration has yet been performed. We hypothesize that TLR3 signalling plays a central, conserved role in driving cardiac regeneration upon injury. Therefore, we focused on tlr3 mediated cardiac regeneration in zebrafish, ultimately discovering an evolutionary conserved mechanism of heart repair. Using histological, behavioural, and RNA-Sequencing analysis, we uncovered a conserved mechanism of tlr3 mediated cardiac repair after myocardial injury. Upon myocardial cryoinjury subjection, survival is decreased in tlr3-/- fish as compared to wildtype controls. Tlr3-/- zebrafish fail to recruit immune cells to the injured ventricle, resulting in impaired DNA repair and transcriptional reprogramming of cardiomyocytes. Mechanistically, we uncover an evolutionary conserved mechanism of tlr3 activation in fibroblasts promoting monocyte migration towards an injured ventricular area. Our data reveal tlr3 as a novel therapeutic target to promote cardiac regeneration. Every experiment including human participants has been approved by the ethics committee of the Medical University of Innsbruck (Ref. Nr.: 1262/2023). All experiments including the use of laboratory animals have been approved by the federal ministry of education, science, and research of Austria (Ref. Nr.: 2020-0.345.504). ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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