Extracellular vesicle-mediated bidirectional communication between heart and other organs.
Khatia GabisoniaMohsin KhanFabio Anastasio RecchiaPublished in: American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology (2022)
In recent years, a wealth of studies has identified various molecular species released by cardiac muscle under physiological and pathological conditions that exert local paracrine and/or remote endocrine effects. Conversely, humoral factors, principally produced by organs such as skeletal muscle, kidney, or adipose tissue, may affect the function and metabolism of normal and diseased hearts. Although this cross communication within cardiac tissue and between the heart and other organs is supported by mounting evidence, research on the role of molecular mediators carried by exosomes, microvesicles, and apoptotic bodies, collectively defined as extracellular vesicles (EVs), is at an early stage of investigation. Once released in the circulation, EVs can potentially reach any organ where they transfer their cargo of proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids that exert potent biological effects on recipient cells. Although there are a few cases where such signaling was clearly demonstrated, the results from many other studies can only be tentatively inferred based on indirect evidence obtained by infusing exogenous EVs in experimental animals or by adding them to cell cultures. This area of research is in rapid expansion and most mechanistic interpretations may change in the near future; hence, the present review on the role played by EV-carried mediators in the two-way communication between heart and skeletal muscle, kidneys, bone marrow, lungs, liver, adipose tissue, and brain is necessarily limited. Nonetheless, the available data are already unveiling new, intriguing, and ample scenarios in cardiac physiology and pathophysiology.
Keyphrases
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- early stage
- bone marrow
- heart failure
- left ventricular
- mesenchymal stem cells
- high fat diet
- immune response
- atrial fibrillation
- induced apoptosis
- single cell
- stem cells
- climate change
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- case control
- anti inflammatory
- electronic health record
- big data
- blood brain barrier
- lymph node
- cell therapy
- multiple sclerosis
- current status
- single molecule
- resting state
- artificial intelligence
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- rectal cancer
- cerebral ischemia