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Emergence of Mechano-Sensitive Contraction Autoregulation in Cardiomyocytes

The heart has two intrinsic mechanisms to enhance contractile strength that compensate for increased mechanical load to help maintain cardiac output. When vascular resistance increases the ventricular chamber initially expands causing an immediate length-dependent increase of contraction force via t...

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Autores principales: Izu, Leighton, Shimkunas, Rafael, Jian, Zhong, Hegyi, Bence, Kazemi-Lari, Mohammad, Baker, Anthony, Shaw, John, Banyasz, Tamas, Chen-Izu, Ye
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8227646/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34072584
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life11060503
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author Izu, Leighton
Shimkunas, Rafael
Jian, Zhong
Hegyi, Bence
Kazemi-Lari, Mohammad
Baker, Anthony
Shaw, John
Banyasz, Tamas
Chen-Izu, Ye
author_facet Izu, Leighton
Shimkunas, Rafael
Jian, Zhong
Hegyi, Bence
Kazemi-Lari, Mohammad
Baker, Anthony
Shaw, John
Banyasz, Tamas
Chen-Izu, Ye
author_sort Izu, Leighton
collection PubMed
description The heart has two intrinsic mechanisms to enhance contractile strength that compensate for increased mechanical load to help maintain cardiac output. When vascular resistance increases the ventricular chamber initially expands causing an immediate length-dependent increase of contraction force via the Frank-Starling mechanism. Additionally, the stress-dependent Anrep effect slowly increases contraction force that results in the recovery of the chamber volume towards its initial state. The Anrep effect poses a paradox: how can the cardiomyocyte maintain higher contractility even after the cell length has recovered its initial length? Here we propose a surface mechanosensor model that enables the cardiomyocyte to sense different mechanical stresses at the same mechanical strain. The cell-surface mechanosensor is coupled to a mechano-chemo-transduction feedback mechanism involving three elements: surface mechanosensor strain, intracellular [Formula: see text] transient, and cell strain. We show that in this simple yet general system, contractility autoregulation naturally emerges, enabling the cardiomyocyte to maintain contraction amplitude despite changes in a range of afterloads. These nontrivial model predictions have been experimentally confirmed. Hence, this model provides a new conceptual framework for understanding the contractility autoregulation in cardiomyocytes, which contributes to the heart’s intrinsic adaptivity to mechanical load changes in health and diseases.
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spelling pubmed-82276462021-06-26 Emergence of Mechano-Sensitive Contraction Autoregulation in Cardiomyocytes Izu, Leighton Shimkunas, Rafael Jian, Zhong Hegyi, Bence Kazemi-Lari, Mohammad Baker, Anthony Shaw, John Banyasz, Tamas Chen-Izu, Ye Life (Basel) Article The heart has two intrinsic mechanisms to enhance contractile strength that compensate for increased mechanical load to help maintain cardiac output. When vascular resistance increases the ventricular chamber initially expands causing an immediate length-dependent increase of contraction force via the Frank-Starling mechanism. Additionally, the stress-dependent Anrep effect slowly increases contraction force that results in the recovery of the chamber volume towards its initial state. The Anrep effect poses a paradox: how can the cardiomyocyte maintain higher contractility even after the cell length has recovered its initial length? Here we propose a surface mechanosensor model that enables the cardiomyocyte to sense different mechanical stresses at the same mechanical strain. The cell-surface mechanosensor is coupled to a mechano-chemo-transduction feedback mechanism involving three elements: surface mechanosensor strain, intracellular [Formula: see text] transient, and cell strain. We show that in this simple yet general system, contractility autoregulation naturally emerges, enabling the cardiomyocyte to maintain contraction amplitude despite changes in a range of afterloads. These nontrivial model predictions have been experimentally confirmed. Hence, this model provides a new conceptual framework for understanding the contractility autoregulation in cardiomyocytes, which contributes to the heart’s intrinsic adaptivity to mechanical load changes in health and diseases. MDPI 2021-05-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8227646/ /pubmed/34072584 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life11060503 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Izu, Leighton
Shimkunas, Rafael
Jian, Zhong
Hegyi, Bence
Kazemi-Lari, Mohammad
Baker, Anthony
Shaw, John
Banyasz, Tamas
Chen-Izu, Ye
Emergence of Mechano-Sensitive Contraction Autoregulation in Cardiomyocytes
title Emergence of Mechano-Sensitive Contraction Autoregulation in Cardiomyocytes
title_full Emergence of Mechano-Sensitive Contraction Autoregulation in Cardiomyocytes
title_fullStr Emergence of Mechano-Sensitive Contraction Autoregulation in Cardiomyocytes
title_full_unstemmed Emergence of Mechano-Sensitive Contraction Autoregulation in Cardiomyocytes
title_short Emergence of Mechano-Sensitive Contraction Autoregulation in Cardiomyocytes
title_sort emergence of mechano-sensitive contraction autoregulation in cardiomyocytes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8227646/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34072584
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life11060503
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