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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (
ventricular dilatation
)
2,163
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Although previously it was believed that apoptosis could not occur in the terminally differentiated tissue, such as adult heart muscle cells, recent studies in endomyocardial biopsies from patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and in explanted hearts from patients with end-stage heart failure undergoing cardiac transplantation have demonstrated histologic evidence of apoptosis. Whereas neurohormonal activation during heart failure leads to compensatory hemodynamic alterations, coupled with
ventricular dilatation
, it induces transcription factors and myocyte hypertrophy. Persistent growth stimulation in terminally differentiated cells may lead paradoxically to apoptotic cell death. The apoptosis in cardiomyopathic hearts is associated with cytochrome c release from mitochondria to cytoplasm and activation of proteolytic
caspase-8
and -3. Although the caspases are duly processed, the fragmentation of the nuclear proteins (including DNA) is completed less frequently, and only a variable degree of fragmentation of cytoplasmic proteins (including contractile proteins) is observed. It is hypothesized that release of cytochrome c from mitochondria should interfere with energy production and lead to functional impairment and variable loss of contractile proteins in a living heart muscle cell should contribute to systolic dysfunction. Because a nuclear blueprint is retained, however, the dysfunctional cell may continue to exist and in favorable conditions, such as with LVAD support, the apoptotic process may subside. Potential feasibility of reversal of heart failure should renew efforts to develop more targeted pharmaceutical intervention within the apoptotic cascade and allow newer paradigm for the management of heart failure.
...
PMID:Apoptosis and the systolic dysfunction in congestive heart failure. Story of apoptosis interruptus and zombie myocytes. 1178 5
Blockade of angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1) signaling attenuates heart failure following myocardial infarction (MI), perhaps through reduction of fibrosis in the noninfarcted myocardium. However, its specific effect on the infarct tissue itself has not been fully clarified, which we examined in the present study. After MI induction in mice, treatment with the AT1 blocker olmesartan, beginning on the 3rd day post-MI, significantly improved survival (94%) 4 wk post-MI, compared with saline (53%) and hydralazine (73%). Olmesartan-treated mice also showed significant attenuation of left
ventricular dilatation
and dysfunction, as well as significantly greater infarct wall thickness, although the absolute size of the infarct scar was unchanged. In addition, significantly greater numbers of nonmyocytes (mainly vascular cells and myofibroblasts) were present within the infarct scar in olmesartan-treated hearts. Ten days post-MI, apoptosis among granulation tissue cells was significantly suppressed in the olmesartan-treated hearts, where expression of Fas, Bax, procaspase-3, and Daxx and activation of caspase-3, c-Jun NH(2)-terminal kinase, and c-Jun were all significantly attenuated. By contrast, expression of Fas ligand, Bcl-2, and Fas-associated death domain and activation of
caspase-8
were unaffected, suggesting olmesartan exerts a negative regulatory effect on the alternate pathway downstream of Fas receptor. In vitro, olmesartan dose-dependently inhibited Fas-mediated apoptosis in granulation tissue-derived myofibroblasts. The present study proposes this antiapoptotic effect as another important mechanism for an AT1 blocker in improving post-MI ventricular remodeling, as well as its antifibrotic effect, and also suggests a significant link between renin-angiotensin and Fas/Fas ligand systems in postinfarction hearts.
...
PMID:Inhibition of Fas-associated apoptosis in granulation tissue cells accompanies attenuation of postinfarction left ventricular remodeling by olmesartan. 1720 88
The development of cardiac hypertrophy in response to increased hemodynamic load and neurohormonal stress is initially a compensatory response that may eventually lead to
ventricular dilatation
and heart failure. Cellular FLICE-inhibitory protein (cFLIP) is a homologue of
caspase 8
without caspase activity that inhibits apoptosis initiated by death receptor signaling. Previous studies showed that cFLIP expression was markedly decreased in the ventricular myocardium of patients with end-stage heart failure. However, the critical role of cFLIP on cardiac remodeling remains unclear. To specifically determine the role of cFLIP in pathological cardiac remodeling, we used heterozygote cFLIP(+/-) mice and transgenic mice with cardiac-specific overexpression of the human cFLIP(L) gene. Our results demonstrated that the cFLIP(+/-) mice were susceptible to cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis through inhibition of mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase-extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 signaling, whereas the transgenic mice displayed the opposite phenotype in response to angiotensin II stimulation. These studies indicate that cFLIP protein is a crucial component of the signaling pathway involved in cardiac remodeling and heart failure.
...
PMID:Cellular FLICE-inhibitory protein protects against cardiac remodeling induced by angiotensin II in mice. 2964 79