Beating of the heart suppresses growth in cardiac cancers

AAAS | 04-23-2026
Human heart anatomy
Beating of the heart suppresses growth in cardiac cancers. Credit: © decade3d – Depositphotos

A new study published in Science reports that the heart’s constant beating may actively suppress tumor growth in cardiac tissues. Cellular pathways in these tissues alter gene regulation in cancer cells to keep them from proliferating. The findings shed light on the role of mechanical forces in protecting the heart from cancer. They may also pave the way to new cancer therapies based on mechanical stimulation.

Heart cancer is very rare in mammals. The adult human heart has a limited capacity for self-renewal, with cardiomyocytes regenerating at roughly 1% per year. One proposed explanation lies in the intense mechanical demands placed on heart tissues. These tissues must continuously pump blood against significant resistance. Such persistent strain appears to suppress the ability of heart cells to proliferate. According to Giulio Ciucci and colleagues, these pressures may also inhibit the proliferation of cancer cells in the heart. However, the mechanisms underlying this resistance remain unclear.

Using a genetically engineered mouse model, Ciucci et al. found that the heart is remarkably resistant to cancer-causing mutations, even when potent oncogenic changes were introduced. To understand why, the authors developed a transplantation model to reduce the heart’s mechanical workload. By grafting a donor heart into the neck of a compatible mouse, they created a “mechanically unloaded” organ. This organ remained perfused with blood but did not bear physiological strain.

After injecting human cancer cells directly into the heart muscle, they compared tumor behavior in the unloaded transplanted heart versus the animal’s native, mechanically active heart. Across their experiments, Ciucci et al. found that mechanical load consistently suppressed the growth of various cancer types. In contrast, unloading the heart promoted tumor cell proliferation within cardiac tissue

According to the findings, mechanical forces within the tissue reshape the cancer cell genome’s regulatory landscape. This influences whether cells can proliferate. Central to this process is Nesprin-2, a protein that transmits mechanical signals from the cell surface to the nucleus. Nesprin-2 is a component of the LINC complex. It senses the mechanical microenvironment of the heart and functionally alters chromatin structure and histone methylation. This reduces gene activity linked to tumor cell proliferation.

When Nesprin-2 was silenced in cancer cells, those cells regained the ability to grow in the mechanically active environment of the heart, forming tumors. In a related Perspective, Wyatt Paltzer and James Martin discuss the study and its findings in greater detail.


Source:

Materials provided by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS). Content may be edited for clarity, style, and length. For more details, including the full list of authors and their affiliations, please consult the journal article.


 

  Related Videos