Literature DB >> 16679401

Cytoskeletal networks and the regulation of cardiac contractility: microtubules, hypertrophy, and cardiac dysfunction.

George Cooper1.   

Abstract

The cytoskeleton as classically defined for eukaryotic cells consists of three systems of protein filaments: the microtubules, the intermediate filaments, and the microfilaments. In mature striated muscle such as the heart of the adult mammal, these three types of cytoskeletal filaments are superimposed spatially on the myofilaments, a specialized system of contractile protein filaments. Each of these systems of protein filaments has the potential to respond in an adaptive or maladaptive manner during load-induced hypertrophic cardiac growth. However, the extent to which such hypertrophy is compensatory is also critically dependent on the type of hemodynamic overload that serves as the hypertrophic stimulus. Thus cardiac hypertrophy is not intrinsically maladaptive; rather, it is the nature of the inducing load rather than hypertrophy itself that is responsible, through effects on structural and/or regulatory proteins, for the frequent deterioration of initially compensatory hypertrophy into the congestive heart failure state. As one example reviewed here of this load specificity of maladaptation, increased microtubule network density is a persistent feature of severely pressure-overloaded, hypertrophied, and failing myocardium that imposes a primarily viscous load on active myofilaments during contraction.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16679401     DOI: 10.1152/ajpheart.00132.2006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol        ISSN: 0363-6135            Impact factor:   4.733


  34 in total

1.  Proteomic analysis reveals perturbed energy metabolism and elevated oxidative stress in hearts of rats with inborn low aerobic capacity.

Authors:  Jatin G Burniston; Jenna Kenyani; Jonathan M Wastling; Charles F Burant; Nathan R Qi; Lauren G Koch; Steven L Britton
Journal:  Proteomics       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 3.984

2.  Proliferating cardiac microtubules.

Authors:  George Cooper
Journal:  Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol       Date:  2009-06-19       Impact factor: 4.733

3.  INF1 is a novel microtubule-associated formin.

Authors:  Kevin G Young; Susan F Thurston; Sarah Copeland; Chelsea Smallwood; John W Copeland
Journal:  Mol Biol Cell       Date:  2008-09-24       Impact factor: 4.138

Review 4.  Cell cultures as models of cardiac mechanoelectric feedback.

Authors:  Yibing Zhang; Rajesh B Sekar; Andrew D McCulloch; Leslie Tung
Journal:  Prog Biophys Mol Biol       Date:  2008-02-16       Impact factor: 3.667

5.  Transient activation of PKC results in long-lasting detrimental effects on systolic [Ca2+]i in cardiomyocytes by altering actin cytoskeletal dynamics and T-tubule integrity.

Authors:  Ang Guo; Rong Chen; Yihui Wang; Chun-Kai Huang; Biyi Chen; William Kutschke; Jiang Hong; Long-Sheng Song
Journal:  J Mol Cell Cardiol       Date:  2018-01-04       Impact factor: 5.000

Review 6.  Mechanical modulation of cardiac microtubules.

Authors:  Ed White
Journal:  Pflugers Arch       Date:  2011-04-13       Impact factor: 3.657

7.  Detyrosinated microtubules buckle and bear load in contracting cardiomyocytes.

Authors:  Patrick Robison; Matthew A Caporizzo; Hossein Ahmadzadeh; Alexey I Bogush; Christina Yingxian Chen; Kenneth B Margulies; Vivek B Shenoy; Benjamin L Prosser
Journal:  Science       Date:  2016-04-22       Impact factor: 47.728

Review 8.  Cardiac microtubules in health and heart disease.

Authors:  Matthew A Caporizzo; Christina Yingxian Chen; Benjamin L Prosser
Journal:  Exp Biol Med (Maywood)       Date:  2019-08-09

Review 9.  A comprehensive review of the bioenergetics of fatty acid and glucose metabolism in the healthy and failing heart in nondiabetic condition.

Authors:  Ashish Gupta; Brian Houston
Journal:  Heart Fail Rev       Date:  2017-11       Impact factor: 4.214

10.  Local energetic regulation of sarcoplasmic and myosin ATPase is differently impaired in rats with heart failure.

Authors:  Frederic Joubert; James R Wilding; Dominique Fortin; Valérie Domergue-Dupont; Marta Novotova; Renée Ventura-Clapier; Vladimir Veksler
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2008-09-11       Impact factor: 5.182

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