| Literature DB >> 35047109 |
Michele Bevere1,2, Caterina Morabito1,2, Maria A Mariggiò1,2, Simone Guarnieri1,2.
Abstract
This review is aimed at providing an overview of the key hallmarks of cardiomyocytes in physiological and pathological conditions. The main feature of cardiac tissue is the force generation through contraction. This process requires a conspicuous energy demand and therefore an active metabolism. The cardiac tissue is rich of mitochondria, the powerhouses in cells. These organelles, producing ATP, are also the main sources of ROS whose altered handling can cause their accumulation and therefore triggers detrimental effects on mitochondria themselves and other cell components thus leading to apoptosis and cardiac diseases. This review highlights the metabolic aspects of cardiomyocytes and wanders through the main systems of these cells: (a) the unique structural organization (such as different protein complexes represented by contractile, regulatory, and structural proteins); (b) the homeostasis of intracellular Ca2+ that represents a crucial ion for cardiac functions and E-C coupling; and (c) the balance of Zn2+, an ion with a crucial impact on the cardiovascular system. Although each system seems to be independent and finely controlled, the contractile proteins, intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis, and intracellular Zn2+ signals are strongly linked to each other by the intracellular ROS management in a fascinating way to form a "functional tetrad" which ensures the proper functioning of the myocardium. Nevertheless, if ROS balance is not properly handled, one or more of these components could be altered resulting in deleterious effects leading to an unbalance of this "tetrad" and promoting cardiovascular diseases. In conclusion, this "functional tetrad" is proposed as a complex network that communicates continuously in the cardiomyocytes and can drive the switch from physiological to pathological conditions in the heart.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35047109 PMCID: PMC8763515 DOI: 10.1155/2022/7714542
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Intracellular sources of ROS and antioxidants.
Figure 2Structure of sarcomere with associated proteins.
Figure 3Input and output of Ca2+ signals (red and black arrows, respectively).
Figure 4Actors controlling Zn2+ homeostasis.
Zinc transporters and their functions in cardiomyocytes.
| Zinc transporters | Proposed pathways | Effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| ZnT-1 | Overexpression of ZnT-1 reduces caspase activation | Cardioprotective effect in HL-1 cells | [ |
| During hypoxia, ZnT-1 expression increases and intracellular Zn2+ rises | Cardioprotective effect in myocardial ischemia-reperfusion model | [ | |
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| ZnT-5 | Some stress proteins (c-fos and Cry61) are downregulated in hearts of Znt-5-mutant mice | Maturation of osteoblasts and maintenance of the cells involved in the cardiac conduction system | [ |
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| ZnT-7/ZIP7 | In hyperglycemia condition in vitro, Zn2+ increases due to changes in the expression levels of transporters (ZIP7 and ZnT7) and metallothioneins | Dyshomeostasis of Zn2+ can affect hyperglycemia/diabetes-associated cardiac dysfunction | [ |
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| ZnT-8 | In pancreatic | Controlling Zn2+ and insulin release | [ |
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| ZIP2 | In the presence of Zn2+ leak, the signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3) induces the overexpression of ZIP2 which, in turn, increases cellular Zn2+ uptake | Cardioprotective mechanism in response to ischemia/reperfusion injury | [ |
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| ZIP8 | In ZIP8-knockout mice, impairment of heart formation is proven | Endomyocardial trabeculation remodeling | [ |
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| ZIP14 | ZIP14-null mice show low cytosolic Zn2+ levels, hyperinsulinemia, increased body fat, and increased proinflammatory pathways | Glucose and insulin level control. Alterations of ZIP14 can lead to diabetes | [ |
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| Zinc transporters in rat hypertrophic hearts | Alterations of zinc transporters lead to [Zn2+] | Differential changes in the expression levels of zinc transporters can promote hypertrophic condition of the heart via increased [Zn2+] | [ |
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| Zinc transporters in heart failure | Alterations of zinc transporters' expression induce phosphorylation/activation of PKC, increase in [Zn2+] | The alteration of zinc homeostasis can promote heart failure | [ |
Main zinc-mediated antioxidant pathways.
| Antioxidant pathways | References |
|---|---|
| Binding to cysteines, Zn2+ protects proteins by oxidation | [ |
| Zn2+ binds to and activates MTF-1, promoting the expression of metallothioneins, ZnT-1, and other target genes (like selenoprotein-1, which encodes an antioxidant glutathione-binding protein) | [ |
| Zn2+ binds to Keap1 inducing the release and nuclear translocation of Nrf2 to activate the metal-response element | [ |
| Zn2+ is a structural component of antioxidant enzymes (like SOD) and affects glutamate-cysteine ligase expression thus increasing GSH production | [ |
| Zn2+ competing with other metals, such as iron and copper, at the binding sites modulates NOX activity | [ |
| Zn2+ enhances the glycemic control and insulin sensibility contributing to the decrease in ROS production under hyperglycemic conditions | [ |
Main anti-inflammation pathways.
| Anti-inflammation pathways | References |
|---|---|
| Zn2+ modulates NF- | [ |
| Zn2+ regulating the translocation and activity of hypoxic-inducible factor-1 | [ |
| Zn2+ is involved in modulating the activity of PPAR agonists and the anti-inflammatory markers | [ |