Cardiac Mechano-Electric Coupling: Acute Effects of Mechanical Stimulation on Heart Rate and Rhythm.

IF 29.9 1区 医学 Q1 PHYSIOLOGY
Physiological reviews Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-05-07 DOI:10.1152/physrev.00036.2019
T Alexander Quinn, Peter Kohl
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引用次数: 75

Abstract

The heart is vital for biological function in almost all chordates, including humans. It beats continually throughout our life, supplying the body with oxygen and nutrients while removing waste products. If it stops, so does life. The heartbeat involves precise coordination of the activity of billions of individual cells, as well as their swift and well-coordinated adaption to changes in physiological demand. Much of the vital control of cardiac function occurs at the level of individual cardiac muscle cells, including acute beat-by-beat feedback from the local mechanical environment to electrical activity (as opposed to longer term changes in gene expression and functional or structural remodeling). This process is known as mechano-electric coupling (MEC). In the current review, we present evidence for, and implications of, MEC in health and disease in human; summarize our understanding of MEC effects gained from whole animal, organ, tissue, and cell studies; identify potential molecular mediators of MEC responses; and demonstrate the power of computational modeling in developing a more comprehensive understanding of ‟what makes the heart tick.ˮ.

心脏机电耦合:机械刺激对心率和节律的急性影响。
心脏对包括人类在内的几乎所有脊索动物的生物功能都至关重要。它在我们的一生中不停地跳动,为身体提供氧气和营养,同时清除废物。如果它停止了,生命也停止了。心跳涉及数十亿单个细胞活动的精确协调,以及它们对生理需求变化的快速和良好协调的适应。许多心脏功能的重要控制发生在单个心肌细胞的水平上,包括从局部机械环境到电活动的急性逐次反馈(而不是基因表达和功能或结构重塑的长期变化)。这个过程被称为机电耦合(MEC)。在当前的综述中,我们提出了MEC在人类健康和疾病中的证据及其意义;总结我们从全动物、器官、组织和细胞研究中获得的MEC效应的理解;确定MEC反应的潜在分子介质;并展示了计算建模在开发更全面的理解“是什么让心脏跳动”方面的力量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Physiological reviews
Physiological reviews 医学-生理学
CiteScore
56.50
自引率
0.90%
发文量
53
期刊介绍: Physiological Reviews is a highly regarded journal that covers timely issues in physiological and biomedical sciences. It is targeted towards physiologists, neuroscientists, cell biologists, biophysicists, and clinicians with a special interest in pathophysiology. The journal has an ISSN of 0031-9333 for print and 1522-1210 for online versions. It has a unique publishing frequency where articles are published individually, but regular quarterly issues are also released in January, April, July, and October. The articles in this journal provide state-of-the-art and comprehensive coverage of various topics. They are valuable for teaching and research purposes as they offer interesting and clearly written updates on important new developments. Physiological Reviews holds a prominent position in the scientific community and consistently ranks as the most impactful journal in the field of physiology.
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