Registration for a live webinar on 'Innovative Vaccines and Viral Pathogenesis: Insights from Recent Monkeypox (Mpox) Research' is now open.
See webinar detailsWe noted you are experiencing viewing problems
-
Check with your IT department that JWPlatform, JWPlayer and Amazon AWS & CloudFront are not being blocked by your network. The relevant domains are *.jwplatform.com, *.jwpsrv.com, *.jwpcdn.com, jwpltx.com, jwpsrv.a.ssl.fastly.net, *.amazonaws.com and *.cloudfront.net. The relevant ports are 80 and 443.
-
Check the following talk links to see which ones work correctly:
Auto Mode
HTTP Progressive Download Send us your results from the above test links at access@hstalks.com and we will contact you with further advice on troubleshooting your viewing problems. -
No luck yet? More tips for troubleshooting viewing issues
-
Contact HST Support access@hstalks.com
-
Please review our troubleshooting guide for tips and advice on resolving your viewing problems.
-
For additional help, please don't hesitate to contact HST support access@hstalks.com
We hope you have enjoyed this limited-length demo
This is a limited length demo talk; you may
login or
review methods of
obtaining more access.
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- Ryanodine receptor/calcium release channel
- Cloning of the ryanodine receptor
- Two key functions of calstabin
- Heart failure: US statistics
- Growing HF epidemic
- Sudden death: a major health problem
- Normal regulation of the channel by calstabin
- The adrenergic signaling system
- PKA activates RyR2 via dissociation of calstabin
- Effects of exercise on a normal ryanodine receptor
- Roles for calstabin in the RyR channel complex
- Normal heart vs. failing heart
- Heart failure and cardiac arrhythmias (1)
- Ryanodine receptor signaling complex
- Treatment
- Response to myocardial injury
- Left ventricular assist device
- RyR2 is PKA hyperphosphorylated in failing hearts
- Defective RyR2 channel function in failing hearts
- Maladaptation of the fight or flight response
- PKA phosphorylation of a serine residue
- Heart failure induction in a mouse
- PDE4D3 is decreased in patients with heart failure
- Ageing of mice deficient in PDE4D3
- High levels of cAMP at the z-line in cardiac muscle
- PDE deficient mice
- PDE4D3 is the only isoform that is part of the RyR
- PDE4D deficiency is associated with arrhythmias
- PDE deficiency increases heart failure severity
- PDE deficiency renders the RyR leaky
- Early fatigue in heart failure skeletal muscle
- RyR2 mutations linked to exercise-induced SCD
- Mutant RyR2 from SCD are 'leakier'
- Calstabin2 null mice have exercise-induced SCD
- Beta blockers fix the leak in ryanodine receptor
- Therapeutics that 'fix SR Ca leak'
- Fixing the leak by enhancing calstabin2 binding
- JTV519 mechanism of action
- JTV519 re-bonds the calstabin to the RyR
- Skeletal muscle function also improved by JTV519
- JTV519 improves heart function in dogs
- JTV519 can prevent SCD in calstabin-deficient mice
- Normal HF vs. rare genetic disease
- Small compound enhances calstabin binding
- Heart failure and cardiac arrhythmias (2)
- Acknowledgements
Topics Covered
- Introduction to excitation-contraction coupling
- History of the field of EC coupling
- Introduction to the ryanodine receptor/calcium release channel (RyR2)
- Mechanisms that regulate the RyR2 channel during stress
- Defective regulation of RyR2 in heart failure
- Evidence that diastolic sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) calcium leak causes heart failure and arrhythmias in vivo
- Novel therapeutic approaches to treating heart failure and preventing sudden cardiac death by fixing the leak in RyR2 channels
Links
Series:
Categories:
Therapeutic Areas:
Talk Citation
Marks, A. (2007, October 1). Mechanism-based therapies for heart failure and cardiac arrhythmias [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved November 21, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/YDZO9530.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- Prof. Andrew Marks has not informed HSTalks of any commercial/financial relationship that it is appropriate to disclose.
Mechanism-based therapies for heart failure and cardiac arrhythmias
Published on October 1, 2007
47 min
A selection of talks on Cardiovascular & Metabolic
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, I am Dr. Andrew
Marks from Columbia University.
I would like to present
work from my laboratory
on mechanism-based
therapies for heart
failure and cardiac arrhythmias.
For the next 45 minutes or so, I
will review for you work that I
have done in the laboratory
over the past 20 years
that has focused on the ryanodine
receptor or cardiac calcium release
channel shown here, on
the right of this slide,
releasing small red balls that
represent the calcium that
drives muscle contraction.
0:34
This cartoon, adapted from a
review by Dr. Donald Bers published
in Nature in 2002, shows
the basic mechanisms
of excitation-contraction
coupling that
involve the ryanodine receptor.
What is shown in this picture
is a cartoon or representation
of a heart muscle cell.
The action potential electrically
activates the heart muscle
and causes a depolarization of
the muscle membrane, which opens
a calcium channel that is blocked by
the clinically-used calcium channel
blockers.
Calcium entry from
outside the cell then
activates the much larger
ryanodine receptor,
or calcium release
channel, which is located
on the sarcoplasmic reticulum,
and it is the release of calcium
from the sarcoplasmic reticulum
that raises the
concentration of calcium
in the muscle cell
approximately 10 times,
and this is the
signal that activates
the contraction of the
myofilaments to cause
the contraction of heart muscle.
A similar mechanism
works in skeletal muscle.
So this is the mechanism whereby the
electrical energy from the action
potential is translated
into a mechanical energy
that causes muscle contraction.
About 20 years ago, as
I will describe to you,
I discovered a small
regulatory protein
that we now call calstabin,
or calcium release channel
stabilizing binding protein,
and it is also known as the
FK binding protein or FKBP.
And this calstabin, or FKBP,
has several critically-important
functions in regulating the calcium
release channel that I will soon
describe to you and has become
an important therapeutic target
for both heart failure
and sudden cardiac death.