| Literature DB >> 25129123 |
Abstract
While the heart is a dynamic organ and one of its major functions is to provide the organism with sufficient blood supply, the regulatory feedback systems, which allow adaptation to hemodynamic changes, remain not well understood. Our current description of mechanosensation focuses on stretch-sensitive ion channels, cytoskeletal components, structures such as the sarcomeric Z-disc, costameres, caveolae, or the concept of tensegrity, but these models appear incomplete as the remarkable plasticity of the myocardium in response to biomechanical stress and heart rate variations remains unexplained. Signaling activity at membranes depends on their geometric parameters such as surface area and curvature, which links shape to information processing. In the heart, continuous cycles of contraction and relaxation reshape membrane morphology and hence affect cardio-mechanic signaling. This article provides a brief review on current models of mechanosensation and focuses on how signaling, cardiac myocyte dynamics, and membrane shape interact and potentially give rise to a self-organized system that uses shape to sense the extra- and intracellular environment. This novel concept may help to explain how changes in frequency, and thus membrane shape, affect cardiac plasticity. One of the conclusions is that hypertrophy and associated fibrosis, which have been considered as necessary to cope with increased wall stress, can also be seen as part of complex feedback systems which use local membrane inhomogeneity in different cardiac cell types to influence whole organphysiology and which are predicted to fine-tune and thus regulate membrane-mediated signaling.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25129123 PMCID: PMC4281353 DOI: 10.1007/s00424-014-1575-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pflugers Arch ISSN: 0031-6768 Impact factor: 3.657
Summary of current mechanosensory concepts and structures
| 1. Transmembrane proteins and membrane-associated complexes |
(a) mechanosensitive ion channels (i.e., some channels are activated, while others are inactivated by cell stretch) (b) integrins and the dystrophin-associated glycoprotein complex (c) structures: caveolae (d) enzymes: receptor tyrosine kinase (mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK)) |
| 2. Protein–protein interaction-mediated processes (posttranslational modifications) |
| 3. Sarcomere-related mechanosignaling, including titin (length sensor), actomyosin interaction, AMPK, and Z-disc (tension sensor) |
Summary of localized versus tensegrity-based models of signal transduction
| 1. Localized signal transduction (i.e., the signal is generated in close proximity to the perceived stimulus) |
| 2. Tensegrity (i.e., the stimulus is transmitted before being translated into a biochemical signal) |
Fig. 1a Heart failure is associated with an increase in wall stress as a result of increased cardiac dimensions and loss of wall thickness, which will stretch all myocardial cells, as schematically shown for a cardiac fibroblast. b Cardiac myocytes contract and enlarge periodically during systole and diastole, respectively. This will specifically affect cardiomyocyte membrane shapes: During systole costameres are more exposed to the cytosol, which will increase this type of signaling. Parts of the membranes between neighboring Z-discs bulge out and thus increase local membrane to volume ratios, which is predicted to decrease RTK-mediated signaling (and vice versa in diastole)