Advanced search×

Cellular and molecular pathways to myocardial necrosis and replacement fibrosis.

Heart Fail Rev 16(1):23-34 (2011) PMID 20405318

Fibrosis is a fundamental component of the adverse structural remodeling of myocardium present in the failing heart. Replacement fibrosis appears at sites of previous cardiomyocyte necrosis to preserve the structural integrity of the myocardium, but not without adverse functional consequences. The extensive nature of this microscopic scarring suggests cardiomyocyte necrosis is widespread and the loss of these contractile elements, combined with fibrous tissue deposition in the form of a stiff in-series and in-parallel elastic elements, contributes to the progressive failure of this normally efficient muscular pump. Cellular and molecular studies into the signal-transducer-effector pathway involved in cardiomyocyte necrosis have identified the crucial pathogenic role of intracellular Ca2+ overloading and subsequent induction of oxidative stress, predominantly confined within its mitochondria, to be followed by the opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore that leads to the destruction of these organelles and cells. It is now further recognized that Ca2+ overloading of cardiac myocytes and mitochondria serves as a prooxidant and which is counterbalanced by an intrinsically coupled Zn2+ entry serving as antioxidant. The prospect of raising antioxidant defenses by increasing intracellular Zn2+ with adjuvant nutriceuticals can, therefore, be preferentially exploited to uncouple this intrinsically coupled Ca2+ - Zn2+ dyshomeostasis. Hence, novel yet simple cardioprotective strategies may be at hand that deserve to be further explored.

DOI: 10.1007/s10741-010-9169-3
Version: za2963e q8za1 q8zb0 q8zc8 q8zde q8zea q8zfe q8zg8

Similar articles you may find interesting…

  1. Cationic pathway of pH regulation in larvae of Anopheles gambiae.

    J Exp Biol 211(Pt 6):957-68 (2008) PMID 18310121

    Anopheles gambiae larvae (Diptera: Culicidae) live in freshwater with low Na(+) concentrations yet they use Na(+) for alkalinization of the alimentary canal, for electrophoretic amino acid uptake and for nerve function. The metabolic pathway by which larvae accomplish these functions has anionic and...
  2. A new role for a classical gene: white transports cyclic GMP.

    J Exp Biol 211(Pt 6):890-9 (2008) PMID 18310115

    We show here via substrate competition and drug inhibition studies that cAMP transport - but not cGMP transport - requires the presence of di- or tri-carboxylates; and that transport of both cyclic nucleotides occurs via ATP binding cassette sub-family G2 (ABCG2), but not via ABC sub-family C (ABCC)...