Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Growth hormone (GH), secreted by the anterior pituitary into the circulation, binds to membrane receptors in target tissues to stimulate body growth; most of its effects is mediated by the insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1). In addition to promoting growth, GH has important metabolic actions. The syndrome of GH insensitivity (GHI) was first identified in 1966 by Laron et al. in three children with clinical phenotype characteristic of growth hormone deficiency but associated with elevated serum concentration of GH. Direct evidence of a GH receptor (GHR) abnormality was provided in 1989. More recently, molecular abnormalities in the postreceptor signalling mechanism were found. Mutations of signal transducer and activator of transcription 5b (Stat5b) were reported in patients with growth retardation and primary immunodeficiency. Mutations of the tyrosin phosphatase Shp2 were identified in patients affected by Noonan syndrome characterized by short stature, cardiopathy and increased risk of leukaemia. The unmasking of the molecular bases for these defects will contribute greatly to our future understanding of both normal and aberrant growth. Moreover, this knowledge should bring insight on cancerogenesis or immunodeficiency caused by cytokines resistance.
...
PMID:[New molecular mechanisms of growth hormone insensitivity]. 1820 12

Noonan syndrome (NS), the most common single-gene cause of congenital heart disease, is an autosomal dominant disorder that also features proportionate short stature, facial abnormalities, and an increased risk of myeloproliferative disease. Germline-activating mutations in PTPN11, which encodes the protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP2, cause about half of NS cases; other causative alleles include KRAS, SOS1, and RAF1 mutants. We showed previously that knock-in mice bearing the NS mutant Ptpn11(D61G) on a mixed 129S4/SvJae X C57BL6/J background exhibit all major NS features, including a variety of cardiac defects, with variable penetrance. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying NS cardiac defects and whether genetic background and/or the specific NS mutation contribute to the NS phenotype remained unclear. Here, using an inducible knock-in approach, we show that all cardiac defects in NS result from mutant Shp2 expression in the endocardium, not in the myocardium or neural crest. Furthermore, the penetrance of NS defects is affected by genetic background and the specific Ptpn11 allele. Finally, ex vivo assays and pharmacological approaches show that NS mutants cause cardiac valve defects by increasing Erk MAPK activation, probably downstream of ErbB family receptor tyrosine kinases, extending the interval during which cardiac endocardial cells undergo endocardial-mesenchymal transformation. Our data provide a mechanistic underpinning for the cardiac defects in this disorder.
...
PMID:Noonan syndrome cardiac defects are caused by PTPN11 acting in endocardium to enhance endocardial-mesenchymal transformation. 1925 46

LEOPARD syndrome (LS) is an autosomal dominant "RASopathy" that manifests with congenital heart disease. Nearly all cases of LS are caused by catalytically inactivating mutations in the protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTP), non-receptor type 11 (PTPN11) gene that encodes the SH2 domain-containing PTP-2 (SHP2). RASopathies typically affect components of the RAS/MAPK pathway, yet it remains unclear how PTPN11 mutations alter cellular signaling to produce LS phenotypes. We therefore generated knockin mice harboring the Ptpn11 mutation Y279C, one of the most common LS alleles. Ptpn11(Y279C/+) (LS/+) mice recapitulated the human disorder, with short stature, craniofacial dysmorphia, and morphologic, histologic, echocardiographic, and molecular evidence of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Heart and/or cardiomyocyte lysates from LS/+ mice showed enhanced binding of Shp2 to Irs1, decreased Shp2 catalytic activity, and abrogated agonist-evoked Erk/Mapk signaling. LS/+ mice also exhibited increased basal and agonist-induced Akt and mTor activity. The cardiac defects in LS/+ mice were completely reversed by treatment with rapamycin, an inhibitor of mTOR. Our results demonstrate that LS mutations have dominant-negative effects in vivo, identify enhanced mTOR activity as critical for causing LS-associated HCM, and suggest that TOR inhibitors be considered for treatment of HCM in LS patients.
...
PMID:Rapamycin reverses hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in a mouse model of LEOPARD syndrome-associated PTPN11 mutation. 2133 40

The identification of mutations in PTPN11 (encoding the protein tyrosine phosphatase Shp2) in families with congenital heart disease has facilitated mechanistic studies of various cardiovascular defects. However, the roles of normal and mutant Shp2 in the developing heart are still poorly understood. Furthermore, it remains unclear how Shp2 loss-of-function (LOF) mutations cause LEOPARD Syndrome (also termed Noonan Syndrome with multiple lentigines), which is characterized by congenital heart defects such as pulmonary valve stenosis and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). In normal hearts, Shp2 controls cardiomyocyte size by regulating signaling through protein kinase B (Akt) and mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR). We hypothesized that Shp2 LOF mutations dysregulate this pathway, resulting in HCM. For our studies, we chose the Shp2 mutation Q510E, a dominant-negative LOF mutation associated with severe early onset HCM. Newborn mice with cardiomyocyte-specific overexpression of Q510E-Shp2 starting before birth displayed increased cardiomyocyte sizes, heart-to-body weight ratios, interventricular septum thickness, and cardiomyocyte disarray. In 3-mo-old hearts, interstitial fibrosis was detected. Echocardiographically, ventricular walls were thickened and contractile function was depressed. In ventricular tissue samples, signaling through Akt/mTOR was hyperactivated, indicating that the presence of Q510E-Shp2 led to upregulation of this pathway. Importantly, rapamycin treatment started shortly after birth rescued the Q510E-Shp2-induced phenotype in vivo. If rapamycin was started at 6 wk of age, HCM was also ameliorated. We also generated a second mouse model in which cardiomyocyte-specific Q510E-Shp2 overexpression started after birth. In contrast to the first model, these mice did not develop HCM. In summary, our studies establish a role for mTOR signaling in HCM caused by Q510E-Shp2. Q510E-Shp2 overexpression in the cardiomyocyte population alone was sufficient to induce the phenotype. Furthermore, the pathomechanism was triggered pre- but not postnatally. However, postnatal rapamycin treatment could still reverse already established HCM, which may have important therapeutic implications.
...
PMID:The PTPN11 loss-of-function mutation Q510E-Shp2 causes hypertrophic cardiomyopathy by dysregulating mTOR signaling. 2205 53

Noonan syndrome (NS) is an autosomal dominant disorder caused by activating mutations in the PTPN11 gene encoding Shp2, which manifests in congenital heart disease, short stature, and facial dysmorphia. The complexity of Shp2 signaling is exemplified by the observation that LEOPARD syndrome (LS) patients possess inactivating PTPN11 mutations yet exhibit similar symptoms to NS. Here, we identify "protein zero-related" (PZR), a transmembrane glycoprotein that interfaces with the extracellular matrix to promote cell migration, as a major hyper-tyrosyl-phosphorylated protein in mouse and zebrafish models of NS and LS. PZR hyper-tyrosyl phosphorylation is facilitated in a phosphatase-independent manner by enhanced Src recruitment to NS and LS Shp2. In zebrafish, PZR overexpression recapitulated NS and LS phenotypes. PZR was required for zebrafish gastrulation in a manner dependent upon PZR tyrosyl phosphorylation. Hence, we identify PZR as an NS and LS target. Enhanced PZR-mediated membrane recruitment of Shp2 serves as a common mechanism to direct overlapping pathophysiological characteristics of these PTPN11 mutations.
...
PMID:PZR coordinates Shp2 Noonan and LEOPARD syndrome signaling in zebrafish and mice. 2486 67

Tightly regulated cellular signaling is critical for correct heart valve development, but how and why signaling is dysregulated in congenital heart disease is not very well known. We focused on protein tyrosine phosphatase Shp2, because mutations in this signaling modulator frequently cause valve malformations associated with Noonan syndrome or Noonan syndrome with multiple lentigines (NSML). To model NSML-associated valve disease, we targeted overexpression of Q510E-Shp2 to mouse endocardial cushions (ECs) using a Tie2-Cre-based approach. At midgestation, Q510E-Shp2 expression increased the size of atrioventricular ECs by 80%. To dissect the underlying cellular mechanisms, we explanted ECs from chick embryonic hearts and induced Q510E-Shp2 expression using adenoviral vectors. Valve cell outgrowth from cultured EC explants into surrounding matrix was significantly increased by Q510E-Shp2 expression. Because focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is a critical regulator of cell migration, we tested whether FAK inhibition counteracts the Q510E-Shp2-induced effects in explanted ECs. The FAK/src inhibitor PP2 normalized valve cell outgrowth from Q510E-Shp2-expressing ECs. Next, chick ECs were further dissociated to assess cell proliferation and migration. Valve cell proliferation was not increased by Q510E-Shp2 as determined by label incorporation. In contrast, valve cell migration as reflected in a wound-healing assay was increased by Q510E-Shp2 expression, indicating that increased migration is the predominant effect of Q510E-Shp2 expression in ECs. In conclusion, PP2-sensitive signaling mediates the pathogenic effects of Q510E-Shp2 on cell migration in EC explant cultures. This suggests a central role for FAK and provides new mechanistic insight into the molecular basis of valve defects in NSML.
...
PMID:The Q510E mutation in Shp2 perturbs heart valve development by increasing cell migration. 2535 17