Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cathepsins are cysteine proteases that participate in various types of tissue remodeling. However, their expressions during myocardial remodeling have not been examined. In this study, we investigated their expressions in the left ventricular (LV) myocardium of rats and humans with hypertension-induced LV hypertrophy or
heart failure
(HF). Real-time PCR and immunoblot analysis revealed that the abundance of
cathepsin S
mRNA or protein in the LV tissues was greater in rats or humans with HF than in those with hypertrophy or in control subjects. Immunostaining showed that
cathepsin S
was localized predominantly to cardiac myocytes and coronary vascular smooth muscle cells, but also overlapped in part with macrophages. Elastic lamina fragmentations significantly increased in the LV intramyocardial coronary arteries of HF rats. The amount of elastolytic activity in the extract of the LV myocardium was markedly increased for HF rats compared with controls, and this activity was mostly because of
cathepsin S
. Although the amount of elastin mRNA was increased in the LV myocardium of HF rats, the area of interstitial elastin was not. The expression of interleukin 1beta was increased in the LV myocardium of HF rats, and this cytokine was found to increase the expression and activity of
cathepsin S
in cultured neonatal cardiomyocytes. These results suggest that
cathepsin S
participates in pathological LV remodeling associated with hypertension-induced HF. This protease is, thus, a potential target for therapeutics aimed at preventing or reversing cardiac remodeling.
...
PMID:Elastolytic cathepsin induction/activation system exists in myocardium and is upregulated in hypertensive heart failure. 1698 59
Heart failure
(HF) remains a main cause of mortality worldwide. Risk stratification of patients with systolic chronic HF is critical to identify those who may benefit from advanced HF therapies. The aim of this study is to identify plasmatic proteins that could predict the early death (within 3 years) of HF patients with reduced ejection fraction hospitalized in CHRU de Lille. The subproteome targeted by an aptamer-based technology, the Slow Off-rate Modified Aptamer (SOMA) scan assay of 1310 proteins, was profiled in blood samples from 168 HF patients, and 203 proteins were significantly modulated between patients who died of cardiovascular death and patients who were alive after 3 years of HF evaluation (Wilcoxon test, FDR 5%). A molecular network was built using these 203 proteins, and the resulting network contained 2281 molecules assigned to 34 clusters annotated to biological pathways by Gene Ontology. This network model highlighted extracellular matrix organization as the main mechanism involved in early death in HF patients. In parallel, an adaptive Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) was performed on these 203 proteins, and six proteins were selected as candidates to predict early death in HF patients: complement C3,
cathepsin S
and F107B were decreased and MAPK5, MMP1 and MMP7 increased in patients who died of cardiovascular causes compared with patients living 3 years after HF evaluation. This proteomic signature of 6 circulating plasma proteins allows the identification of systolic HF patients with a risk of early death.
...
PMID:Circulating proteomic signature of early death in heart failure patients with reduced ejection fraction. 3184 16