| Literature DB >> 27803896 |
Nobuyuki Itoh1, Hiroya Ohta2, Yoshiaki Nakayama2, Morichika Konishi2.
Abstract
The heart provides the body with oxygen and nutrients and assists in the removal of metabolic waste through the blood vessels of the circulatory system. It is the first organ to form during embryonic morphogenesis. FGFs with diverse functions in development, health, and disease are signaling proteins, mostly as paracrine growth factors or endocrine hormones. The human/mouse FGF family comprises 22 members. Findings obtained from mouse models and human diseases with FGF signaling disorders have indicated that several FGFs are involved in heart development, health, and disease. Paracrine FGFs including FGF8, FGF9, FGF10, and FGF16 act as paracrine signals in embryonic heart development. In addition, paracrine FGFs including FGF2, FGF9, FGF10, and FGF16 play roles as paracrine signals in postnatal heart pathophysiology. Although FGF15/19, FGF21, and FGF23 are typical endocrine FGFs, they mainly function as paracrine signals in heart development or pathophysiology. In heart diseases, serum FGF15/19 levels or FGF21 and FGF23 levels decrease or increase, respectively, indicating their possible roles in heart pathophysiology. FGF2 and FGF10 also stimulate the cardiac differentiation of cultured stem cells and cardiac reprogramming of cultured fibroblasts. These findings provide new insights into the roles of FGF signaling in the heart and potential therapeutic strategies for cardiac disorders.Entities:
Keywords: FGF; biomarker; development; differentiation; disease; heart
Year: 2016 PMID: 27803896 PMCID: PMC5067508 DOI: 10.3389/fcell.2016.00110
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Dev Biol ISSN: 2296-634X
Figure 1Mechanisms of action of paracrine and endocrine FGFs. (A) Paracrine FGFs specifically bind to the FGFR-heparan sulfate complex and activate FGFR tyrosine kinase. Endocrine FGFs specifically bind to the FGFR-Klotho complex and activate tyrosine kinase. This, in turn, induces the activation of intracellular pathways (Ornitz and Itoh, 2015; Brewer et al., 2016). (B) Paracrine FGFs are secreted local signals that act on nearby target cells by diffusion with functions in multiple developmental and pathophysiological processes. Endocrine FGFs are secreted endocrine signals that act on distant target cells through the bloodstream with multiple functions in metabolic and pathophysiological processes. FGFR-HS and FGFR-Klotho indicate the FGFR-heparan sulfate complex and FGFR-Klotho complex, respectively (Ornitz and Itoh, 2015; Brewer et al., 2016).
Figure 2Evolutionary relationships within the human FGF family. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that 22 members of the FGF family are classified into several subfamilies. Branch lengths are proportional to the evolutionary distance between each FGF. FGFs are also classified into paracrine, endocrine, and intracrine FGFs based on their mechanisms of action (Ornitz and Itoh, 2015; Brewer et al., 2016). FGF2, FGF3, FGF8, FGF9, FGF10, FGF15/19, FGF16, FGF21, and FGF23 play roles in heart development, health, and disease. This figure is adapted from Itoh et al. (2016).
Developmental roles of FGFs in the embryonic mouse heart.
| FGF8 | Loss-of-function | Defect in cardiac looping, the cardiac outflow tract, and anterior heart field development |
| Loss-of-function | Decrease in migratory cardiac neural crest survival | |
| FGF9 | Loss-of-function | Decrease in cardiomyocyte proliferation |
| FGF10 | Loss-of-function | Decrease in cardiomyocyte proliferation |
| Loss-of-function | Decrease in cardiac fibroblast migration | |
| FGF10/FGF3 | Loss-of-function | Defect in cardiovascular progenitor cell development |
| FGF10/FGF8 | Loss-of-function | Defect in outflow tract and right ventricle development |
| FGF15/19 | Loss-of-function | Defect in cardiac outflow tract development |
| FGF16 | Loss-of-function | Decrease in cardiomyocyte proliferation |
| Loss-of-function | Defect in chamber, atrial, and ventricular walls and trabeculation | |
Pathophysiological roles of FGFs in the postnatal mouse heart.
| FGF2 | Loss-of-function | Protection against induced cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis Promotion of cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury |
| Gain-of-function | Promotion of cardiac hypertrophy | |
| FGF9 | Gain-of-function | Improvement in heart function |
| Gain-of-function | Protection against heart injury | |
| FGF10 | Gain-of-function | Protection against heart injury |
| Gain-of-function | Promotion of cardiomyocyte proliferation | |
| FGF16 | Loss-of-function | Promotion of induced cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis |
| FGF21 | Loss-of-function | Promotion of induced cardiac hypertrophy and inflammation |
| FGF21 | Gain-of-function | Protection against cardiac dysfunction and inflammation |
| Loss-of-function | Promotion of cardiac dysfunction and inflammation | |
Pathophysiological roles of FGFs in the human heart.
| FGF2 | Gain-of-function | Promotion | Inflammatory pericardial disease |
| Gain-of-function | Promotion | Type 4 cardiorenal syndrome | |
| Gain-of-function | Protection | TGFβ1-induced cardiac remodeling | |
| FGF16 | Loss-of-function | Promotion | Myocardial infarction and atrial fibrillation |
| FGF21 | Gain-of-function | Atrial fibrillation with rheumatic heart disease | |
| FGF23 | Gain-of-function | Promotion | Left ventricular hypertrophy |
| FGF15/19 | Decrease | Coronary artery disease | |
| FGF21 | Increase | Coronary artery disease | |
| FGF23 | Increase | Acute decompensated heart failure | |
| Increase | Kawasaki syndrome | ||
| Increase | Left ventricular hypertrophy | ||
| Increase | Oncostatin-dependent heart disease | ||