Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Sense and stretchability: The role of titin and titin-associated proteins in myocardial stress-sensing and mechanical dysfunction

View through CrossRef
Abstract Mechanical stress signals transmitted through the heart walls during hemodynamic loading are sensed by the myocytes, which respond with changes in contractile performance and gene expression. External forces play an important role in physiological heart development and hypertrophy, but disruption of the well-balanced stress-sensing machinery causes mechanical dysregulation, cardiac remodelling, and heart failure. Nodal points of mechanosensing in the cardiomyocytes may reside in the Z-disk, I-band, and M-band regions of the sarcomeres. Longitudinal linkage of these regions is provided by the titin filament, and several ‘hot spots’ along this giant protein, in complex with some of its >20 ligands, may be pivotal to the myofibrillar stress or stretch response. This review outlines the known interaction partners of titin, highlights the putative stress/stretch-sensor complexes at titin's NH2 and COOH termini and their role in myopathies, and summarizes the known disease-associated mutations in those titin regions. Another focus is the elastic I-band titin section, which interacts with a diverse number of proteins and whose main function is as a determinant of diastolic distensibility and passive stiffness. The discussion centers on recent insights into the plasticity, mechanical role, and regulation of the elastic titin springs during cardiac development and in human heart disease. Titin and titin-based protein complexes are now recognized as integral parts of the mechanosensitive protein network and as critical components in cardiomyocyte stress/stretch signalling.
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Title: Sense and stretchability: The role of titin and titin-associated proteins in myocardial stress-sensing and mechanical dysfunction
Description:
Abstract Mechanical stress signals transmitted through the heart walls during hemodynamic loading are sensed by the myocytes, which respond with changes in contractile performance and gene expression.
External forces play an important role in physiological heart development and hypertrophy, but disruption of the well-balanced stress-sensing machinery causes mechanical dysregulation, cardiac remodelling, and heart failure.
Nodal points of mechanosensing in the cardiomyocytes may reside in the Z-disk, I-band, and M-band regions of the sarcomeres.
Longitudinal linkage of these regions is provided by the titin filament, and several ‘hot spots’ along this giant protein, in complex with some of its >20 ligands, may be pivotal to the myofibrillar stress or stretch response.
This review outlines the known interaction partners of titin, highlights the putative stress/stretch-sensor complexes at titin's NH2 and COOH termini and their role in myopathies, and summarizes the known disease-associated mutations in those titin regions.
Another focus is the elastic I-band titin section, which interacts with a diverse number of proteins and whose main function is as a determinant of diastolic distensibility and passive stiffness.
The discussion centers on recent insights into the plasticity, mechanical role, and regulation of the elastic titin springs during cardiac development and in human heart disease.
Titin and titin-based protein complexes are now recognized as integral parts of the mechanosensitive protein network and as critical components in cardiomyocyte stress/stretch signalling.

Related Results

Deleting Full Length Titin Versus the Titin M-Band Region Leads to Differential Mechanosignaling and Cardiac Phenotypes
Deleting Full Length Titin Versus the Titin M-Band Region Leads to Differential Mechanosignaling and Cardiac Phenotypes
Background: Titin is a giant elastic protein that spans the half-sarcomere from Z-disk to M-band. It acts as a molecular spring and mechanosensor and has been linked to...
Mechanobiology in cardiac mechanics
Mechanobiology in cardiac mechanics
AbstractThe contraction-relaxation cycle of the heart is one of the most robust mechanical systems in the body that adapts rapidly to the body’s needs by changing mechanical parame...
Cometary Physics Laboratory: spectrophotometric experiments
Cometary Physics Laboratory: spectrophotometric experiments
<p><strong><span dir="ltr" role="presentation">1. Introduction</span></strong&...
Molecular identification and localization of cellular titin, a novel titin isoform in the fibroblast stress fiber
Molecular identification and localization of cellular titin, a novel titin isoform in the fibroblast stress fiber
AbstractWe previously discovered a large titin‐like protein—c‐titin—in chicken epithelial brush border and human blood platelet extracts that binds α‐actinin and organizes arrays o...
Titin Gene ( TTN )
Titin Gene ( TTN )
Abstract The titin locus located on chromosome 2q24 in the human genome expresses about 100 kb full‐length mRNAs, that are transl...
A Semi‐Crystalline Polymer Semiconductor with Thin Film Stretchability Exceeding 200%
A Semi‐Crystalline Polymer Semiconductor with Thin Film Stretchability Exceeding 200%
AbstractDespite the emerging scientific interest in polymer‐based stretchable electronics, the trade‐off between the crystallinity and stretchability of intrinsically stretchable p...

Back to Top