Literature DB >> 20110410

Evidence for calreticulin attenuation of cardiac hypertrophy induced by pressure overload and soluble agonists.

Sylvia Papp1, Ewa Dziak, Golam Kabir, Peter Backx, Sophie Clement, Michal Opas.   

Abstract

While calreticulin has been shown to be critical for cardiac development, its role in cardiac pathology is unclear. Previous studies have shown the detrimental effects on the heart of sustained germline calreticulin overexpression, yet without calreticulin, the heart does not develop normally. Thus, carefully balanced calreticulin levels are required for the heart to develop and to function properly into adulthood. But what happens to calreticulin levels, and how is this regulated, during cardiac hypertrophy, during which the fetal gene program is reactivated, at least partially? Our working hypothesis was that c-Src, a kinase whose activity we previously found to be correlated with calreticulin expression, was involved with calreticulin in regulating the response to hypertrophic signals. Thus, we subjected adult mice to transverse aortic constriction to induce left ventricular hypertrophy. We found that aortic constriction caused calreticulin levels to increase, whereas those of c-Src fell with longer constriction time. We also examined the ability of embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes to respond to soluble hypertrophic agonists. Endothelin-1 treatment caused a significantly greater cell area increase of calreticulin-null cardiomyocytes, which had higher c-Src activity, compared with wild-type cells. c-Src inhibition abolished this difference. Greater c-Src activity may explain the efficacy with which calreticulin-null cells are able to induce the hypertrophic program, while cells containing calreticulin may be able to attenuate the hypertrophic response as a result of decreased c-Src activity. Thus, calreticulin may have a protective effect on the heart in the face of cardiac hypertrophy.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20110410      PMCID: PMC2832134          DOI: 10.2353/ajpath.2010.090392

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Pathol        ISSN: 0002-9440            Impact factor:   4.307


  32 in total

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4.  Complete heart block and sudden death in mice overexpressing calreticulin.

Authors:  K Nakamura; M Robertson; G Liu; P Dickie; K Nakamura; J Q Guo; H J Duff; M Opas; K Kavanagh; M Michalak
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Review 8.  Calreticulin, a multi-process calcium-buffering chaperone of the endoplasmic reticulum.

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9.  Kinase-dependent adhesion to fibronectin: regulation by calreticulin.

Authors:  Sylvia Papp; Eva Szabo; Hugh Kim; Christopher A McCulloch; Michal Opas
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5.  Effects of miRNA-455 on cardiac hypertrophy induced by pressure overload.

Authors:  Chuntao Wu; Shimin Dong; Yongjun Li
Journal:  Int J Mol Med       Date:  2015-02-18       Impact factor: 4.101

6.  Prediction of co-expression genes and integrative analysis of gene microarray and proteomics profile of Keshan disease.

Authors:  Sen Wang; Rui Yan; Bin Wang; Peiru Du; Wuhong Tan; Mikko J Lammi; Xiong Guo
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2018-01-10       Impact factor: 4.379

7.  c-Src kinase inhibits osteogenic differentiation via enhancing STAT1 stability.

Authors:  Zahra Alvandi; Michal Opas
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8.  Calreticulin Is Required for TGF-β-Induced Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition during Cardiogenesis in Mouse Embryonic Stem Cells.

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  8 in total

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