Literature DB >> 15094356

Gap junction alterations in human cardiac disease.

Nicholas J Severs1, Steven R Coppen, Emmanuel Dupont, Hung-I Yeh, Yu-Shien Ko, Tsutomu Matsushita.   

Abstract

Gap junctions, assembled from connexins, form the cell-to-cell pathways for propagation of the precisely orchestrated patterns of current flow that govern the regular rhythm of the healthy heart. As in most tissues and organs, multiple connexin types are expressed in the heart; connexin43, connexin40 and connexin45 are found in distinctive combinations and relative quantities in different, functionally specialized subsets of cardiomyocyte. Alterations of gap junction organization and connexin expression are now well established as a consistent feature of human heart disease in which there is an arrhythmic tendency. These alterations may take the form of structural remodelling, involving disturbances in the distribution of gap junctions and/or alteration of the amount or type of connexin(s) expressed. In the diseased ventricles, the most consistent quantitative alteration involves heterogeneous reduction in connexin43 expression. In the atria, features of gap organization and connexin expression have been implicated in the initiation of atrial fibrillation and, once the condition becomes chronic, gap junction alterations associated with remodelling may contribute to persistence of the condition. By correlating data from studies on the human patient with those from animal and cell models, alterations in gap junctions and connexins have emerged as important factors to be considered in understanding the pro-arrhythmic substrate found in a variety of forms of heart disease.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15094356     DOI: 10.1016/j.cardiores.2003.12.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cardiovasc Res        ISSN: 0008-6363            Impact factor:   10.787


  98 in total

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Review 4.  Maturing human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes in human engineered cardiac tissues.

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Review 6.  Gap junction channels and cardiac impulse propagation.

Authors:  Thomas Desplantez; Emmanuel Dupont; Nicholas J Severs; Robert Weingart
Journal:  J Membr Biol       Date:  2007-07-28       Impact factor: 1.843

7.  Effect of nonuniform interstitial space properties on impulse propagation: a discrete multidomain model.

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8.  Investigation of connexin 43 uncoupling and prolongation of the cardiac QRS complex in preclinical and marketed drugs.

Authors:  M P Burnham; P M Sharpe; C Garner; R Hughes; C E Pollard; J Bowes
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2014-08-13       Impact factor: 8.739

9.  RXP-E: a connexin43-binding peptide that prevents action potential propagation block.

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Authors:  Alian Zhang; Huili Zhang; Shiyao Wu
Journal:  Inflamm Res       Date:  2009-09-23       Impact factor: 4.575

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