- Hsu, Austin;
- Duan, Qiming;
- Day, Daniel S;
- Luo, Xin;
- McMahon, Sarah;
- Huang, Yu;
- Feldman, Zachary B;
- Jiang, Zhen;
- Zhang, Tinghu;
- Liang, Yanke;
- Alexanian, Michael;
- Padmanabhan, Arun;
- Brown, Jonathan D;
- Lin, Charles Y;
- Gray, Nathanael S;
- Young, Richard A;
- Bruneau, Benoit G;
- Haldar, Saptarsi M
Heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF) is associated with high mortality, highlighting an urgent need for new therapeutic strategies. As stress-activated cardiac signaling cascades converge on the nucleus to drive maladaptive gene programs, interdicting pathological transcription is a conceptually attractive approach for HFrEF therapy. Here, we demonstrate that CDK7/12/13 are critical regulators of transcription activation in the heart that can be pharmacologically inhibited to improve HFrEF. CDK7/12/13 inhibition using the first-in-class inhibitor THZ1 or RNAi blocks stress-induced transcription and pathologic hypertrophy in cultured rodent cardiomyocytes. THZ1 potently attenuates adverse cardiac remodeling and HFrEF pathogenesis in mice and blocks cardinal features of disease in human iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes. THZ1 suppresses Pol II enrichment at stress-transactivated cardiac genes and inhibits a specific pathologic gene program in the failing mouse heart. These data identify CDK7/12/13 as druggable regulators of cardiac gene transactivation during disease-related stress, suggesting that HFrEF features a critical dependency on transcription that can be therapeutically exploited.