Hipertrofia cardiaca: Eventos moleculares y celulares

Translated title of the contribution: Cardiac hypertrophy: Molecular and cellular events

Juan Eduardo Carreño, Felipe Apablaza, María Paz Ocaranza, Jorge E. Jalil*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cardiac hypertrophy is one of the main ways in which cardiomyocytes respond to mechanical and neurohormonal stimuli. It enables myocytes to increase their work output, which improves cardiac pump function. However, this compensatory mechanism can become overwhelmed by biomechanical stress, thereby resulting in heart failure, which is associated with high morbidity and mortality. The complex molecular pro cesses that lead to cardiomyocyte growth involve membrane receptors, second messengers, and transcription factors. The common final pathway of all these intracellular substances is gene expression, whose variations are being revealed in increasing detail. The genetic response is characterized by the re-expression of fetal genes, an event which is regarded as the molecular marker of pathologic cardiac hypertrophy, and which is absent in normal physiologic cardiac growth. The possibility of stopping or reversing pa thologic cardiac hypertrophy and, thereby, slowing the development of heart failure is a topic of considerable clinical interest and a large amount of relevant data has accumulated. The purpose of this review was to provide a schematic overview of current knowledge about the molecular pathogenesis of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, with special emphasis on new research topics and investigations.

Translated title of the contributionCardiac hypertrophy: Molecular and cellular events
Original languageSpanish
Pages (from-to)473-486
Number of pages14
JournalTechnische Sicherheit
Volume47
Issue number6
StatePublished - Jun 2006

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