TRPV2 mediates stress resilience in mouse cardiomyocytes

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Abstract

The heart dynamically compensates for haemodynamic stress, but how this resilience forms during cardiac growth is not clear. Using a temporally inducible, cardiac-specific knockout in mice we show that the Transient receptor potential vanilloid family 2 (TRPV2) channel is crucial for the maturation of cardiomyocyte stress resilience. TRPV2 defects in growing hearts lead to small morphology, abnormal intercalated discs, weak contractility, and low expression of serum response factor and Insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) signalling. Individual cardiomyocytes of TRPV2-deficient hearts show reduced contractility with abnormal Ca2+ handling. In cultured neonatal cardiomyocytes, mechanical Ca2+ response, excitation–contraction coupling, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ content, actin formation, nuclear localisation of Myocyte enhancer factor 2c, and IGF-1 expression require TRPV2. TRPV2-deficient hearts show a defective response to dobutamine stress and no compensatory hypertrophic response to phenylephrine administration, but no stress response to pressure overload. These data suggest TRPV2 mediates the maturation of cardiomyocyte stress resilience, and will advance therapeutic interventions and drug discovery for heart disease.

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Dong, Y., Wang, G., Ujihara, Y., Chen, Y., Yoshida, M., Nakamura, K., … Katanosaka, Y. (2025). TRPV2 mediates stress resilience in mouse cardiomyocytes. Communications Biology, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-025-08167-9

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