Cardiomyocyte cytoskeleton and myofibrillogenesis in healthy and diseased heart

被引:38
作者
Ehler E. [1 ]
Perriard J.-C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Institute of Cell Biology, ETH, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
关键词
Dilated cardiomyopathy; Intercalated disk; Muscle cytoskeleton; Myofibrillogenesis;
D O I
10.1023/A:1009861504264
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The unique cytoarchitecture of cardiomyocytes arises by complex interactions of different filamentous structures of the cytoskeleton. Intermediate filaments of the non-sarcomeric cytoskeleton are not essential for development but important for maintenance of myofibrils. Myofibrils consist of contractile proteins involved in force generation and the muscle cytoskeleton framework. The latter is essential for proper assembly and maintenance as well as for interaction with other cardiomyocytes or the extracellular matrix, thus being involved in force transmission. The information for sarcomere assembly is encoded in the proteins and some domains essential for faithful incorporation have been identified by epitope tagging experiments. Many KO mutations result in embryonic lethal phenotypes and new techniques e.g. using cardiomyocytes derived from ES cell-lines will have to be developed that allow to study such mutations in cardiomyocytes rather than whole organisms. Alterations in the expression levels of several proteins of the muscle cytoskeleton or impairment of their function by point mutations can result in increased mechanical stress in the cardiomyocytes which finally leads to cellular responses such as the development of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). MLP (muscle-LIM-protein) deficient mice develop DCM and changes in the mechanical coupling of cardiomyocytes result in alterations at the intercalated disks and enhanced accumulation of adherens junction proteins. Therefore, controlled interactions between proteins of the muscle cytoskeleton and contractile proteins are essential to ensure proper cardiac function and a more detailed insight in these processes might provide new tools to improve the contractile efficiency of the cardiomyocytes and thus working output in car diomyopathies.
引用
收藏
页码:259 / 269
页数:10
相关论文
共 66 条
[61]  
Turnacioglu, K.K., Mittal, B., Dabiri, G.A., Sanger, J.M., Sanger, J.W., An N-terminal fragment of titin coupled to green fluorescent protein localizes to the Z-bands in living muscle cells: Overexpression leads to myofibril disassembly (1997) Mol Biol Cell, 8, pp. 705-717
[62]  
Udd, B., Haravuori, H., Kalimo, H., Partanen, J., Pulkkinen, L., Paetau, A., Peltonen, L., Somer, H., Tibial muscular dystrophy - From clinical description to linkage on chromosome 2q31 (1998) Neuromuscul Disord, 8, pp. 327-332
[63]  
Van Der Ven, P., Bartsch, J., Gautel, M., Jockusch, H., Furst, D.O., A functional knock-out of titin results in defective myofibril assembly (2000) J Cell Sci, 113, pp. 1405-1414
[64]  
Vikstrom, K., Leinwand, L., Contractile protein mutations and heart disease (1996) Curr Opin Cell Biol, 8, pp. 97-105
[65]  
Von Arx, P., Bantle, S., Soldati, T., Perriard, J.C., Dominant negative effect of cytoplasmic actin isoproteins on cardiomyocyte cytoarchitecture and function (1995) J Cell Biol, 131, pp. 1759-1773
[66]  
Wang, S.M., Greaser, M.L., Schultz, E., Bulinski, J.C., Lin, J.J., Lessard, J.L., Studies on cardiac myofibrillogenesis with antibodies to titin, actin, tropomyosin, and myosin (1988) J Cell Biol, 107, pp. 1075-1083