Ca2+ mishandling in heart failure: Potential targets.
Almudena Val-BlascoMarta Gil-FernándezAngélica RuedaLaetitia PereiraCarmen DelgadoTarik SmaniGema Ruiz HurtadoMaria Fernández-VelascoPublished in: Acta physiologica (Oxford, England) (2021)
Ca2+ mishandling is a common feature in several cardiovascular diseases such as heart failure (HF). In many cases, impairment of key players in intracellular Ca2+ homeostasis has been identified as the underlying mechanism of cardiac dysfunction and cardiac arrhythmias associated with HF. In this review, we summarize primary novel findings related to Ca2+ mishandling in HF progression. HF research has increasingly focused on the identification of new targets and the contribution of their role in Ca2+ handling to the progression of the disease. Recent research studies have identified potential targets in three major emerging areas implicated in regulation of Ca2+ handling: the innate immune system, bone metabolism factors and post-translational modification of key proteins involved in regulation of Ca2+ handling. Here, we describe their possible contributions to the progression of HF.