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Perspectives

Role of β-Catenin in Adult Cardiac Remodeling

Laura Zelarayan, Christina Gehrke and Martin W. Bergmann

volume 6 | issue 17

1 September 2007
Pages: 2120 - 2126

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The adult heart has a uniform cellular response to adapt to injury after infarct or increased wall stress in chronic hypertension: hypertrophy of adult cardiomyocytes increases muscle fiber mass while at the same time apoptosis of cardiomyocytes may lead to further loss of contractile mass. The existence and quantitative amount of endogenous cardiac regeneration is currently under intense dispute, no clear picture has yet emerged. Recently, cardiac precursor cells and the signaling pathways controlling their differentiation in the adult organ have come into focus. In heart development, β-catenin was identified to play a biphasic role in cardiomyocyte differentiation. While initially WNT/β-catenin activation is required to commit mesenchymal cells to the cardiac lineage, downregulation of β-catenin is needed for cardiomyocyte differentiation at later stages. Recent genetic data published by our lab suggest β-catenin downregulation to be beneficial for adult cardiac remodeling. Here we discuss these data in the context of β-catenin´s role in adult cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, apoptosis and possibly regeneration.

Authors

Laura Zelarayan

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine; Berlin, Germany

Christina Gehrke

Charité Campus Buch & HELIOS Kliniken Berlin; Berlin, Germany

Martin W. Bergmann

Charité Campus Buch & HELIOS Kliniken Berlin; Berlin, Germany


This is an open-access article

 Download PDF

If the document does not open, please right-click on the link (control-click on a Macintosh) and select the option to save the file to disk.