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1.
Nitric oxide and promotion of cardiac myocyte apoptosis   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The removal of damaged, superfluous or energy-starved cells is essential for biological homeostasis, and occurs in every tissue type. Programmed cell death occurs through several closely regulated signal pathways, including apoptosis, in which cell components are broken down and packaged into small membrane-bound fragments that are then removed by neighbouring cells or phagocytes. This process is activated in the cardiac myocyte in response to a variety of stresses, including oxidative and nitrosative stress, and involves mitochondria-derived signals. Loss of cardiac myocytes through apoptosis has been shown to induce cardiomyopathy in a variety of gene-targeted animal models. Because cardiac myocytes have strictly limited ability to regenerate, sustained programmed cell death is likely to contribute to the development and progression of heart failure in a variety of myocardial diseases. At the same time, the cardiac myocyte possesses a number of mechanisms for defence against short-term haemodynamic and oxidative stresses. Our laboratory has recently examined the role of nitric oxide (NO) as a regulator of the programmed death of cardiac myocytes, and the potential contribution of NO and NO-dependent signalling to the loss of myocytes in heart failure. We will review the role of c-Jun N-terminal kinase in response to oxidative and nitrosative stress, and summarise evidence for its role as a cytoprotective mechanism. We will also review evidence implicating NO in the pathophysiology of heart failure, in the context of the extensive and sometimes contradictory body of research on NO and cell survival. (Mol Cell Biochem 263: 35–53, 2004)  相似文献   
2.
The skeletal alpha-actin gene encodes a major component of the embryonic cardiac sarcomere that is strongly and selectively re-induced during beta-adrenoceptor-mediated hypertrophy in neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. We present evidence that beta-adrenergic induction of this gene is mediated, not by cAMP, but by a calcium-dependent pathway involving ryanodine-sensitive calcium stores. Nifedipine-induced blockade of the plasma membrane L-type calcium entry channel prevented induction of skeletal alpha-actin mRNA by isoproterenol. Activation of calcium entry by the dihydropyridine agonist Bay K8644 independently induced skeletal alpha-actin mRNA, as did cholera toxin-mediated activation of Gs. Induction of skeletal alpha-actin mRNA by compounds that directly elevate cAMP was weak relative to their effects on other cAMP-dependent phenomena and required calcium entry. In addition, selective inhibition of protein kinase A with KT5720 did not block beta-adrenergic induction of skeletal alpha-actin. Calcium ionophore A23187 did not induce skeletal actin, but prevented its induction by isoproterenol. Ryanodine had bimodal effects: 10(-10) M ryanodine induced skeletal alpha-actin mRNA, whereas 10(-6) M ryanodine prevented skeletal actin induction by beta-adrenergic stimuli. We postulate that beta-adrenergic stimulation of skeletal alpha-actin mRNA requires G-protein-coupled calcium channel activation and compartmentalized calcium release in a manner independent of the cAMP/protein kinase A signal pathway.  相似文献   
3.

Rationale

The adult myocardium has been reported to harbor several classes of multipotent progenitor cells (CPCs) with tri-lineage differentiation potential. It is not clear whether c-kit+CPCs represent a uniform precursor population or a more complex mixture of cell types.

Objective

To characterize and understand vasculogenic heterogeneity within c-kit+presumptive cardiac progenitor cell populations.

Methods and Results

c-kit+, sca-1+ CPCs obtained from adult mouse left ventricle expressed stem cell-associated genes, including Oct-4 and Myc, and were self-renewing, pluripotent and clonogenic. Detailed single cell clonal analysis of 17 clones revealed that most (14/17) exhibited trilineage differentiation potential. However, striking morphological differences were observed among clones that were heritable and stable in long-term culture. 3 major groups were identified: round (7/17), flat or spindle-shaped (5/17) and stellate (5/17). Stellate morphology was predictive of vasculogenic differentiation in Matrigel. Genome-wide expression studies and bioinformatic analysis revealed clonally stable, heritable differences in stromal cell-derived factor-1 (SDF-1) expression that correlated strongly with stellate morphology and vasculogenic capacity. Endogenous SDF-1 production contributed directly to vasculogenic differentiation: both shRNA-mediated knockdown of SDF-1 and AMD3100, an antagonist of the SDF-1 receptor CXC chemokine Receptor-4 (CXCR4), reduced tube-forming capacity, while exogenous SDF-1 induced tube formation by 2 non-vasculogenic clones. CPCs producing SDF-1 were able to vascularize Matrigel dermal implants in vivo, while CPCs with low SDF-1 production were not.

Conclusions

Clonogenic c-kit+, sca-1+ CPCs are heterogeneous in morphology, gene expression patterns and differentiation potential. Clone-specific levels of SDF-1 expression both predict and promote development of a vasculogenic phenotype via a previously unreported autocrine mechanism.  相似文献   
4.
Mice over-expressing the α1−subunit (pore) of the L-type Ca2+ channel (α1CTG) by 4months (mo) of age exhibit an enlarged heart, hypertrophied myocytes, increased Ca2+ current and Ca2+ transient amplitude, but a normal SR Ca2+ load. With advancing age (8–11 mo), some mice demonstrate advanced hypertrophy but are not in congestive heart failure (NFTG), while others evolve to frank dilated congestive heart failure (FTG). We demonstrate that older NFTG myocytes exhibit a hypercontractile state over a wide range of stimulation frequencies, but maintain a normal SR Ca2+ load compared to age matched non-transgenic (NTG) myocytes. However, at high stimulation rates (2–4 Hz) signs of diastolic contractile failure appear in NFTG cells. The evolution of frank congestive failure in FTG is accompanied by a further increase in heart mass and myocyte size, and phospholamban and ryanodine receptor protein levels and phosphorylation become reduced. In FTG, the SR Ca2+ load increases and Ca2+ release following excitation, increases further. An enhanced NCX function in FTG, as reflected by an accelerated relaxation of the caffeine-induced Ca2+ transient, is insufficient to maintain a normal diastolic Ca2+ during high rates of stimulation. Although a high SR Ca2+ release following excitation is maintained, the hypercontractile state is not maintained at high rates of stimulation, and signs of both systolic and diastolic contractile failure appear. Thus, the dilated cardiomyopathy that evolves in this mouse model exhibits signs of both systolic and diastolic failure, but not a deficient SR Ca2+ loading or release, as occurs in some other cardiomyopathic models.  相似文献   
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The goal of the present study was to assess how genetic loss of microsomal prostaglandin E2 synthase-1 (mPGES-1) affects acute cardiac ischemic damage after coronary occlusion in mice. Wild type (WT), heterozygous (mPGES-1+/−), and homozygous (mPGES-1−/−) knockout mice were subjected to left coronary artery occlusion. At 24 h, myocardial infarct (MI) volume was measured histologically. Post-MI survival, plasma levels of creatine phosphokinase (CPK) and cardiac troponin-I, together with MI size, were similar in WT, mPGES-1+/− and mPGES-1−/− mice. In contrast, post-MI survival was reduced in mPGES-1−/− mice pretreated with I prostanoid receptor (IP) antagonist (12/16) compared with vehicle-treated controls (13/13 mPGES-1−/−) together with increased CPK and cardiac troponin-I release. The deletion of mPGES-1 in mice results in increased prostacyclin I2 (PGI2) formation and marginal effects on the circulatory prostaglandin E2 (PGE2) level. We conclude that loss of mPGES-1 results in increased PGI2 formation, and in contrast to inhibition of PGI2, without worsening acute cardiac ischemic injury.  相似文献   
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c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase (JNK), a member of the MAPK family of protein kinases, is a stress-response kinase that is activated by proinflammatory cytokines and growth factors coupled to membrane receptors or through nonreceptor pathways by stimuli such as heat shock, UV irradiation, protein synthesis inhibitors, and conditions that elevate the levels of reactive oxygen intermediates (ROI). Ischemia followed by reperfusion or hypoxia with reoxygenation represents a condition of high oxidative stress where JNK activation is associated with elevated ROI. We recently demonstrated that the activation of JNK by this condition is initiated by ROI generated by mitochondrial electron transport and involves sequential activation of the proline-rich kinase 2 and the small GTP-binding factors Rac-1 and Cdc42. Here we present evidence that protein kinase C (PKC) and transforming growth factor-beta-activated kinase-1 (TAK-1) are also components of this pathway. Inhibition of PKC with the broad-range inhibitor calphostin C, the PKC-alpha/beta-selective inhibitor Go9367, or adenovirus-expressing dominant-negative PKC-alpha blocked the phosphorylation of proline-rich kinase 2 and JNK. Reoxygenation activated the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase, TAK-1, and promoted the formation of a complex containing Rac-1, TAK-1, and JNK but not apoptosis-stimulating kinase-1 or p21-activated kinase-1, which was detected within the first 10 min of reoxygenation. These results identify two new components, PKC and TAK-1, that have not been previously described in this signaling pathway.  相似文献   
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