Integrins and the myocardium

RS Ross, TK Borg - Circulation research, 2001 - Am Heart Assoc
RS Ross, TK Borg
Circulation research, 2001Am Heart Assoc
Extracellular matrix provides a structural, chemical, and mechanical substrate that is
essential in cardiac development, growth, and responses to pathophysiological signals.
Transmembrane receptors termed integrins provide a dynamic interaction of environmental
cues and intracellular events. Integrins orchestrate multiple functions in the intact organism
including organogenesis, regulation of gene expression, cell proliferation, differentiation,
migration, and death. They are expressed in all cellular components of the cardiovascular …
Abstract
—Extracellular matrix provides a structural, chemical, and mechanical substrate that is essential in cardiac development, growth, and responses to pathophysiological signals. Transmembrane receptors termed integrins provide a dynamic interaction of environmental cues and intracellular events. Integrins orchestrate multiple functions in the intact organism including organogenesis, regulation of gene expression, cell proliferation, differentiation, migration, and death. They are expressed in all cellular components of the cardiovascular system, including the vasculature, blood, cardiac myocytes and nonmuscle cardiac cells. The focus of this review will be on the role of integrins in the myocardium. We will provide background on integrin structure and function, discuss how the expression of integrins is critical to the form and function of the developing and postnatal myocardium, and review the known data on integrins as signaling molecules in the heart. Finally, we will offer insights to the future research directions into this important family of extracellular matrix receptors in the myocardium.
Am Heart Assoc