Literature DB >> 7929446

Regulation of heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor mRNA levels by hypertrophic stimuli in neonatal and adult rat cardiac myocytes.

M A Perrella1, T Mäki, S Prasad, D Pimental, K Singh, N Takahashi, M Yoshizumi, A Alali, S Higashiyama, R A Kelly.   

Abstract

Heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor (HB-EGF) is a recently characterized member of the EGF family of peptide signaling factors that acts as an early response gene to growth stimuli in vascular smooth muscle cells, as well as being a potent mitogen for these cells. As many of these growth stimuli also induce a hypertrophic response in heart muscle, we examined the regulation of HB-EGF mRNA abundance and function in primary cultures of neonatal rat ventricular myocytes and adult rat ventricular myocytes (ARVM). HB-EGF mRNA levels increased 40- and 6-fold in neonatal rat ventricular myocytes and ARVM, respectively, following a 2-4-h exposure to the alpha-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine, a known hypertrophic stimulus for these cells. Phenylephrine had no effect on HB-EGF mRNA stability, and induction of HB-EGF could be blocked completely by actinomycin D. HB-EGF mRNA abundance was also increased 15-fold in ARVM maintained in defined medium that had been induced to contract at 3 Hz by continual uniform electric field stimulation, a mechanical stimulus that we have shown preserves contractile function and induces cell growth in vitro. To determine whether cardiac myocytes would respond to exogenous HB-EGF, quiescent ARVM were exposed to defined medium conditioned by transfected COS MT cells overexpressing HB-EGF. These myocytes exhibited nearly a 2-fold increase in protein content at 24 h compared with unstimulated control ARVM exposed to medium conditioned by COS cells transfected with the plasmid vector alone. Thus, neonatal and adult cardiac muscle cells respond to both neurohumoral and mechanical growth stimuli with a marked increase in HB-EGF mRNA, which may act as an early response gene to facilitate hypertrophic growth in these cells.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1994        PMID: 7929446

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biol Chem        ISSN: 0021-9258            Impact factor:   5.157


  11 in total

1.  Essential role of obscurin in cardiac myofibrillogenesis and hypertrophic response: evidence from small interfering RNA-mediated gene silencing.

Authors:  Andrei B Borisov; Sarah B Sutter; Aikaterini Kontrogianni-Konstantopoulos; Robert J Bloch; Margaret V Westfall; Mark W Russell
Journal:  Histochem Cell Biol       Date:  2005-10-05       Impact factor: 4.304

2.  Contractile and cytoskeletal proteins in urinary bladder smooth muscle from rats treated with epidermal growth factor.

Authors:  L Vinte-Jensen; B Uvelius; E Nexø; A Arner
Journal:  Urol Res       Date:  1996

3.  Heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor contributes to reduced glomerular filtration rate during glomerulonephritis in rats.

Authors:  L Feng; G E Garcia; Y Yang; Y Xia; F B Gabbai; O W Peterson; J A Abraham; R C Blantz; C B Wilson
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  2000-02       Impact factor: 14.808

4.  Cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and degradation of connexin43 through spatially restricted autocrine/paracrine heparin-binding EGF.

Authors:  Jun Yoshioka; Robin N Prince; Hayden Huang; Scott B Perkins; Francisco U Cruz; Catherine MacGillivray; Douglas A Lauffenburger; Richard T Lee
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-07-14       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Mechanical stretch promotes fetal type II epithelial cell differentiation via shedding of HB-EGF and TGF-alpha.

Authors:  Yulian Wang; Benjamin S Maciejewski; Dariana Soto-Reyes; Hyeon-Soo Lee; David Warburton; Juan Sanchez-Esteban
Journal:  J Physiol       Date:  2009-02-23       Impact factor: 5.182

6.  Intestinal phenotype in mice overexpressing a heparin-binding EGF-like growth factor transgene in enterocytes.

Authors:  Chun-Liang Chen; Veela B Mehta; Hong-Yi Zhang; Dana Wu; Iyore Otabor; Andrei Radulescu; Osama N El-Assal; Jiexiong Feng; Yan Chen; Gail E Besner
Journal:  Growth Factors       Date:  2010-04       Impact factor: 2.511

7.  Role of transiently altered sarcolemmal membrane permeability and basic fibroblast growth factor release in the hypertrophic response of adult rat ventricular myocytes to increased mechanical activity in vitro.

Authors:  D Kaye; D Pimental; S Prasad; T Mäki; H J Berger; P L McNeil; T W Smith; R A Kelly
Journal:  J Clin Invest       Date:  1996-01-15       Impact factor: 14.808

8.  Insufficiency of pro-heparin-binding epidermal growth factor-like growth factor shedding enhances hypoxic cell death in H9c2 cardiomyoblasts via the activation of caspase-3 and c-Jun N-terminal kinase.

Authors:  Teruyoshi Uetani; Hironao Nakayama; Hideki Okayama; Takafumi Okura; Jitsuo Higaki; Hirofumi Inoue; Shigeki Higashiyama
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2009-02-04       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  Aberrant gene expression of heparanase in ventricular hypertrophy induced by monocrotaline in rats.

Authors:  Toshina Ishiguro-Oonuma; Masako Suemoto; Muneyoshi Okada; Kazuki Yoshioka; Yukio Hara; Kazuyoshi Hashizume; Keiichiro Kizaki
Journal:  J Vet Med Sci       Date:  2015-12-04       Impact factor: 1.267

Review 10.  Angiogenesis and angiocrines regulating heart growth.

Authors:  Karthik Amudhala Hemanthakumar; Riikka Kivelä
Journal:  Vasc Biol       Date:  2020-06-22
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.