收缩性
肥厚性心肌病
心脏病学
肌球蛋白
内科学
背景(考古学)
压力过载
心肌病
肌肉肥大
后负荷
收缩(语法)
舒张期
医学
心力衰竭
生物
血压
细胞生物学
古生物学
心肌肥大
作者
Vasco Sequeira,Christoph Maack,Gert‐Hinrich Reil,Jan‐Christian Reil
出处
期刊:Circulation Research
[Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer)]
日期:2024-01-05
卷期号:134 (1): 117-134
被引量:4
标识
DOI:10.1161/circresaha.123.323173
摘要
The Anrep effect is an adaptive response that increases left ventricular contractility following an acute rise in afterload. Although the mechanistic origin remains undefined, recent findings suggest a two-phase activation of resting myosin for contraction, involving strain-sensitive and posttranslational phases. We propose that this mobilization represents a transition among the relaxed states of myosin—specifically, from the super-relaxed (SRX) to the disordered-relaxed (DRX)—with DRX myosin ready to participate in force generation. This hypothesis offers a unified explanation that connects myosin’s SRX-DRX equilibrium and the Anrep effect as parts of a singular phenomenon. We underscore the significance of this equilibrium in modulating contractility, primarily studied in the context of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, the most common inherited cardiomyopathy associated with diastolic dysfunction, hypercontractility, and left ventricular hypertrophy. As we posit that the cellular basis of the Anrep effect relies on a two-phased transition of myosin from the SRX to the contraction-ready DRX configuration, any dysregulation in this equilibrium may result in the pathological manifestation of the Anrep phenomenon. For instance, in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypercontractility is linked to a considerable shift of myosin to the DRX state, implying a persistent activation of the Anrep effect. These valuable insights call for additional research to uncover a clinical Anrep fingerprint in pathological states. Here, we demonstrate through noninvasive echocardiographic pressure-volume measurements that this fingerprint is evident in 12 patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy before septal myocardial ablation. This unique signature is characterized by enhanced contractility, indicated by a leftward shift and steepening of the end-systolic pressure-volume relationship, and a prolonged systolic ejection time adjusted for heart rate, which reverses post-procedure. The clinical application of this concept has potential implications beyond hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, extending to other genetic cardiomyopathies and even noncongenital heart diseases with complex etiologies across a broad spectrum of left ventricular ejection fractions.
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