Literature DB >> 16723792

Nuclear hypertrophy reflects increased biosynthetic activities in myocytes of human hypertrophic hearts.

Masahiko Koda1, Genzou Takemura, Hideshi Okada, Motoo Kanoh, Rumi Maruyama, Masayasu Esaki, Yiwen Li, Shusaku Miyata, Hiromitsu Kanamori, Longhu Li, Atsushi Ogino, Takehito Kondo, Shinya Minatoguchi, Takako Fujiwara, Hisayoshi Fujiwara.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The nucleus of the myocytes in human hypertrophic hearts is characterized by its bizarre shape and widespread clumping of chromatin. The functional significance has not been determined. METHODS AND
RESULTS: Left ventricular (LV) endomyocardial biopsies obtained from patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM, n=23), postmyocarditis (n=13), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM, n=21), apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (APH, n=11) and hypertensive heart disease (HHD, n=11), and from nonhypertrophic hearts (controls, n=14) were examined. Myocyte size and LV mass index were similar among the hypertrophic hearts, but the nuclear hypertrophy score (grade 0-3) was highest in hearts with systolic failure (DCM and postmyocarditis) and higher in those without it (HCM, APH, and HHD), compared with controls. So were biosynthetic activities such as DNA repair/synthesis, immunohistochemically assessed by proliferating cell nuclear antigen, transcription activity by spliceosome component of 35 kDa, and translation efficiency by 70 kDa S6 protein kinase. There were significant correlations between nuclear hypertrophy and each biosynthetic activity. Additionally, most of the proliferating cell nuclear antigen-positive nuclei co-expressed oxidative DNA damage markers.
CONCLUSION: A link is suggested between structural alteration and molecular biological events in the nuclei of myocytes from human hypertrophic hearts; the nuclear hypertrophy reflects increased biosynthetic activities of DNA repair/synthesis, transcription, and translation efficiency.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16723792     DOI: 10.1253/circj.70.710

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Circ J        ISSN: 1346-9843            Impact factor:   2.993


  10 in total

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2.  Smaller cardiac cell size and reduced extra-cellular collagen might be beneficial for hearts of Ames dwarf mice.

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7.  Pitx3 deficiency promotes age-dependent alterations in striatal medium spiny neurons.

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Review 8.  Regulation of chromatin structure in the cardiovascular system.

Authors:  Manuel Rosa-Garrido; Elaheh Karbassi; Emma Monte; Thomas M Vondriska
Journal:  Circ J       Date:  2013-04-10       Impact factor: 2.993

9.  Six1 is down-regulated in end-stage human dilated cardiomyopathy independently of Ezh2.

Authors:  Anika Tschirner; Sandra Palus; Roland Hetzer; Rudolf Meyer; Stefan D Anker; Jochen Springer
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10.  In situ nuclear DNA methylation in dilated cardiomyopathy: an endomyocardial biopsy study.

Authors:  Takatomo Watanabe; Hideshi Okada; Hiromitsu Kanamori; Nagisa Miyazaki; Akiko Tsujimoto; Chihiro Takada; Kodai Suzuki; Genki Naruse; Akihiro Yoshida; Takahide Nawa; Toshiki Tanaka; Masanori Kawasaki; Hiroyasu Ito; Shinji Ogura; Hiroyuki Okura; Takako Fujiwara; Hisayoshi Fujiwara; Genzou Takemura
Journal:  ESC Heart Fail       Date:  2020-01-23
  10 in total

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