TRPC Channels: Dysregulation and Ca2+ Mishandling in Ischemic Heart Disease.
Débora FalcónIsabel Galeano-OteroMarta Martín-BórnezMaría Fernández-VelascoIsabel Gallardo-CastilloJuan Antonio RosadoAntonio Ordóñez-FernándezTarik SmaniPublished in: Cells (2020)
Transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) channels are ubiquitously expressed in excitable and non-excitable cardiac cells where they sense and respond to a wide variety of physical and chemical stimuli. As other TRP channels, TRPC channels may form homo or heterotetrameric ion channels, and they can associate with other membrane receptors and ion channels to regulate intracellular calcium concentration. Dysfunctions of TRPC channels are involved in many types of cardiovascular diseases. Significant increase in the expression of different TRPC isoforms was observed in different animal models of heart infarcts and in vitro experimental models of ischemia and reperfusion. TRPC channel-mediated increase of the intracellular Ca2+ concentration seems to be required for the activation of the signaling pathway that plays minor roles in the healthy heart, but they are more relevant for cardiac responses to ischemia, such as the activation of different factors of transcription and cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, and angiogenesis. In this review, we highlight the current knowledge regarding TRPC implication in different cellular processes related to ischemia and reperfusion and to heart infarction.
Keyphrases
- vascular smooth muscle cells
- heart failure
- signaling pathway
- cardiovascular disease
- cerebral ischemia
- left ventricular
- induced apoptosis
- poor prognosis
- mental health
- acute myocardial infarction
- physical activity
- atrial fibrillation
- type diabetes
- acute ischemic stroke
- endothelial cells
- risk assessment
- transcription factor
- cell death
- long non coding rna
- cell cycle arrest
- binding protein
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- angiotensin ii
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- metabolic syndrome
- cell proliferation
- blood brain barrier
- liver fibrosis