Understanding the physiology of heart failure through cellular and in vivo models-towards targeting of complex mechanisms

2013 | journal article; overview

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Understanding the physiology of heart failure through cellular and in vivo models-towards targeting of complex mechanisms​
Lehnart, S. E. ​ (2013) 
Experimental Physiology98(3) pp. 622​-628​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1113/expphysiol.2012.068262 

Documents & Media

License

GRO License GRO License

Details

Authors
Lehnart, Stephan Elmar 
Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is a complex disease syndrome, which affects physiology at all levels, from the molecule to the whole organism. Following a causative insult, a maladaptive response occurs, which sustains cardiac remodelling and leads to a final common pathway of debilitating HF symptoms. In terms of mechanisms, distinct defects of excitation-contraction coupling compartments and organelles have been identified in cardiac samples of patients and animal models, which include changes in Ca(2+) transport proteins and T-tubules. From a physiological standpoint, the source of regulatory intracellular Ca(2+) is defined by ∼20,000 Ca(2+) release units per cardiac myocyte, which jointly modulate contractile force production. We and others have characterized key changes in protein and membrane components of Ca(2+) release units during HF in patient samples and transgenic models to gain insight into complex disease mechanisms. While earlier HF studies identified intracellular Ca(2+) release as a major cause of contractile dysfunction, electrical dysfunction has gained attention as an important mechanism of HF mortality. In parallel, high-resolution imaging techniques have become instrumental to understand HF mechanisms in the intact cell and tissue environment, supporting translation of novel diagnostic strategies. Indeed, the increased spatial and temporal resolution of different experimental imaging techniques addresses the vastly different scales of HF pathophysiology, to correlate experimental with clinical surrogate markers, and to extend mechanisms to early, often subtle changes in HF. This last goal, in particular, will be essential to translate novel pathophysiological insight back to the growing number of asymptomatic individuals at increased risk for HF development, who may benefit most from early therapeutic interventions.
Issue Date
2013
Journal
Experimental Physiology 
Project
SFB 1002: Modulatorische Einheiten bei Herzinsuffizienz 
SFB 1002 | A05: Molekulares Imaging von kardialen Calcium-Freisetzungsdomänen 
SFB 1002 | A09: Lokale molekulare Nanodomänen-Regulation der kardialen Ryanodin-Rezeptor-Funktion 
Working Group
RG Lehnart (Cellular Biophysics and Translational Cardiology Section) 
ISSN
1469-445X
eISSN
1469-445X
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media