Biochemistry of the Endocrine Heart.
Jens Peter GøtzeEmil D BartelsTheodor W ShalmiLilian Andraud-DangJens F RehfeldPublished in: Biology (2022)
Production and release of natriuretic peptides and other vasoactive peptides are tightly regulated in mammalian physiology and involved in cardiovascular homeostasis. As endocrine cells, the cardiac myocytes seem to possess almost all known chemical necessities for translation, post-translational modifications, and complex peptide proteolysis. In several ways, intracellular granules in the cells contain not only peptides destined for secretion but also important granin molecules involved in maintaining a regulated secretory pathway. In this review, we will highlight the biochemical phenotype of the endocrine heart recapitulating that the cardiac myocytes are capable endocrine cells. Understanding the basal biochemistry of the endocrine heart in producing and secreting peptides to circulation could lead to new discoveries concerning known peptide products as well as hitherto unidentified cardiac peptide products. In perspective, studies on natriuretic peptides in the heart have shown that the post-translational phase of gene expression is not only relevant for human physiology but may prove implicated also in the development and, perhaps one day, cure of human cardiovascular disease.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- gene expression
- cardiovascular disease
- cell cycle arrest
- heart failure
- endothelial cells
- left ventricular
- amino acid
- atrial fibrillation
- dna methylation
- type diabetes
- signaling pathway
- transcription factor
- oxidative stress
- cell death
- metabolic syndrome
- cell proliferation
- pi k akt
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- coronary artery disease
- cardiovascular risk factors
- reactive oxygen species
- case control