Can the calcium-regulating hormones counteract the detrimental impact of pro-inflammatory damage-associated molecular patterns in the development of heart failure?
Satenik H AdamyanKnarik R HarutyunyanHermine T AbrahamyanDrastamat N KhudaverdyanSouren MkrtchianAnna S Ter-MarkosyanPublished in: Journal of investigative medicine : the official publication of the American Federation for Clinical Research (2021)
Growing evidence suggests an important role of the inflammatory component in heart failure (HF). Recent developments in this field indicate an ambiguous role that innate immunity plays in immune-driven HF. Damaged or stressed cells, cardiomyocytes, in particular, emit damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) including HMGB1, S100 A8/A9, HSP70, and other molecules, unfolding paracrine mechanisms that induce an innate immune response. Designed as an adaptive, regenerative reaction, innate immunity may nevertheless become overactivated and thus contribute to the development of HF by altering the pacemaker rhythm, contraction, and electromechanical coupling, presumably by impairing the calcium homeostasis. The current review will explore a hypothesis of the involvement of the calcium-regulating hormones such as parathyroid hormone and parathyroid hormone-related protein in counteracting the detrimental impact of the excess of DAMPs and therefore improving the functional cardiac characteristics especially in the acute phase of the disease.
Keyphrases
- heart failure
- immune response
- acute heart failure
- oxidative stress
- left ventricular
- induced apoptosis
- atrial fibrillation
- stem cells
- cell cycle arrest
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- heat shock protein
- dendritic cells
- single molecule
- toll like receptor
- room temperature
- heat stress
- cell death
- heat shock
- heart rate
- smooth muscle
- bone marrow
- tissue engineering