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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P51532 (
transcriptional activator
)
6,546
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The PPAR gene pathway consists of interrelated genes that encode transcription factors, enzymes, and downstream targets which coordinately act to regulate cellular processes central to glucose and lipid metabolism. The pathway includes the PPAR genes themselves, other class II nuclear hormone receptor transcription factors within the PPAR family, PPAR co-activators, PPAR co-repressors, and downstream metabolic gene targets. This review focuses on the transcription factors that comprise the PPAR
transcriptional activator
complex--the PPARs (PPARalpha, PPARbeta, or PPARgamma), PPAR heterodimeric partners, such as RXRalpha, and PPAR co-activators, such as PPARgamma coactivator 1alpha (PGC-1alpha) and the estrogen-related receptors (ERRalpha, ERRbeta, and ERRgamma). These transcription factors have been implicated in the development of myocardial hypertrophy and
dilated cardiomyopathy
as well as response to myocardial ischemia/infarction and, by association, ischemic cardiomyopathy. Human expression studies and animal data are presented as the background for a discussion of the emerging field of pharmacogenetics as it applies to these genes and the consequent implications for the individualization of therapy for patients with heart failure.
...
PMID:PPAR transcriptional activator complex polymorphisms and the promise of individualized therapy for heart failure. 1899 7
Heart disease remains the leading cause of death worldwide, highlighting a pressing need to identify novel regulators of cardiomyocyte (CM) function that could be therapeutically targeted. The mammalian Hippo/Tead pathway is critical in embryonic cardiac development and perinatal CM proliferation. However, the requirement of Tead1, the transcriptional effector of this pathway, in the adult heart is unknown. Here, we show that tamoxifen-inducible adult CM-specific Tead1 ablation led to lethal acute-onset
dilated cardiomyopathy
, associated with impairment in excitation-contraction coupling. Mechanistically, we demonstrate Tead1 is a cell-autonomous, direct
transcriptional activator
of SERCA2a and SR-associated protein phosphatase 1 regulatory subunit, Inhibitor-1 (I-1). Thus, Tead1 deletion led to a decrease in SERCA2a and I-1 transcripts and protein, with a consequent increase in PP1-activity, resulting in accumulation of dephosphorylated phospholamban (Pln) and decreased SERCA2a activity. Global transcriptomal analysis in Tead1-deleted hearts revealed significant changes in mitochondrial and sarcomere-related pathways. Additional studies demonstrated there was a trend for correlation between protein levels of TEAD1 and I-1, and phosphorylation of PLN, in human nonfailing and failing hearts. Furthermore, TEAD1 activity was required to maintain PLN phosphorylation and expression of SERCA2a and I-1 in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived (iPS-derived) CMs. To our knowledge, taken together, this demonstrates a nonredundant, novel role of Tead1 in maintaining normal adult heart function.
...
PMID:Tead1 is required for maintaining adult cardiomyocyte function, and its loss results in lethal dilated cardiomyopathy. 2887 17