Myocarditis is a prototypical inflammatory heart disease that results in cardiomyocyte loss and often leads to fibrotic remodeling of the myocardium, culminating in heart failure. Currently, treatments for acute and chronic myocardial inflammation have limited efficacy and vary from physical activity restriction, anti-inflammatory treatment in patients with pericardial involvement, general heart failure management to off-label use of immunosuppressive medications. Despite the identification of a number of pathways leading to myocardial inflammation, the elucidation of effective therapeutic intervention remains incomplete because the overarching molecular mechanisms that govern the balance between myocardial homeostasis and inflammation are incompletely understood.
Selective restoration of cellular homeostasis in the inflamed heart is therefore critical to facilitate treatment of myocardial inflammation, reduce cardiac fibrosis and ultimately prevent heart failure. The main goals of this project are to thoroughly dissect the pathological principles underlying cardiac inflammation and to target those molecular pathways that are at the core of the inflammatory process. The planned work will provide a detailed analysis of the molecular pathways that drive T cell-mediated myocarditis and inflammatory cardiomyopathy and delineate a straightforward path towards therapeutic intervention for these diseases.