CAMK2D causes heart failure in RBM20 cardiomyopathy
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Although heart disease can arise from different etiologies, current treatment is not tailored to the different underlying causes but is rather a one-size-fits-all approach. Importantly, not all patients benefit from this treatment regimen, which means the number needed to treat is very high.
Moreover, this makes clinical trials large and costly, limiting clinical translation. Thus, there is a high medical need to develop a first etiology-specific therapy. Mutations in RBM20, a splicing factor that targets multiple pivotal cardiac genes including TTN and CAMK2D, cause a clinically aggressive form of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) with a high risk of malignant ventricular arrhythmias. Here, we hypothesized that CAMK2D is the heart disease-causing target of RBM20. We crossed Camk2d - to Rbm20 -deficient mice and found that double knockout (DKO) mice were protected from heart failure and sudden cardiac death. Phosphorylation of multiple CAMK2D targets was increased in Rbm20 -deficient mouse hearts, which was reverted in DKO hearts, confirming that CAMK2D is not only misspliced but also overactivated. AAV9-mediated re-expression of single CAMK2D splice variants in DKO mice reintroduced cardiac dysfunction irrespective of the splice variant, unmasking that overactivation rather than missplicing underlies the detrimental phenotype. To test whether heart failure could pharmacologically be reversed, we treated heterozygous Rbm20 -R636Q knock-in (KI) mice with hesperadin, a potent CAMK2 inhibitor, which rescued both cardiac function and ventricular geometry. These data demonstrate that overactivation of CAMK2D underlies heart failure in RBM20 cardiomyopathy. Pharmacological inhibition of CAMK2D could therefore become the first cause-directed DCM therapy.