Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a leading cause of heart failure around the world. Inherited mutations cause the left ventricle of the heart to enlarge, thinning the heart muscle wall and decreasing the overall function of the heart. In my research project, I will determine if disrupting fibroblast function by knocking out a key developmental signaling factor, p38, can improve, or even reverse, DCM disease characteristics. Specific Aim 1 will be to determine the effects of p38 knockout-induced fibroblast dysfunction on cardiomyocyte function and structural remodeling in late-stage DCM. The rationale is that myocytes in DCM have poor contraction and structurally remodel to longer, thinner morphologies, which occurs in our DCM mouse model around 4 months of age. I expect to see less of these characteristics with the p38 knockout. Specific Aim 2 will assess cardiac fibroblast proliferation and fibrosis in response to disabling cardiac fibroblast function late into the DCM disease process. The rationale is that studying and observing the dynamics of the fibroblast population is critical when understanding the effects of fibroblasts and the p38 knockout model on DCM. In previous studies, the Davis lab identified that cardiac fibroblasts maladaptively respond to inherited DCM mutations in cardiac myocytes, worsening the whole heart. I expect to see less fibroblast proliferation in the p38 model. P38 is essential for fibroblast signaling pathways and functionality, so by knocking it out I will be able to test if fibroblasts are a viable therapeutic target for patients with DCM.