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Circulation Research. 1999;84:122-124

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(Circulation Research. 1999;84:122-124.)
© 1999 American Heart Association, Inc.


Editorial

Troponin I, Stunning, Hypertrophy, and Failure of the Heart

R. John Solaro

From the Department of Physiology and Biophysics, College of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Ill.

Correspondence to R. John Solaro, PhD, Department of Physiology and Biophysics (M/C 901), College of Medicine, University of Illinois at Chicago, 835 S Wolcott Ave, Chicago, IL 60612-7342.


Key Words: troponin I • hypertrophy • heart failure

Two articles1 2 in this issue of Circulation Research point to the significance of the loss of cardiac troponin I (cTnI) from the cell, the altered structure of cTnI, and the altered function and interactions of cTnI as possible key events in hypertrophy and ischemia/reperfusion injury. These studies also provide strong evidence for the hypothesis of Kusuoka and Marban,3 who first suggested that stunning is associated with reversible breakdown and replacement of damaged myofilament proteins. Later work from Marban's laboratory4 identified cTnI proteolysis as the cause of the reversible cardiac dysfunction in stunning. The results reported by McDonough et al1 extend this and other observations,5 6 correlating altered thin-filament regulation with dysfunction resulting from cardiac stunning and more severe episodes of ischemia with and without reperfusion. In agreement with an earlier report5 suggesting that the proteolysis of cTnI occurred between residues 188 and 199, McDonough et al1 demonstrate that with moderate ischemia/reperfusion, cTnI is degraded at its C-terminal end by removal of 17 amino acids generating cTnI1–193. With longer durations of ischemia and ischemia/reperfusion, there is also an N-terminal truncation generating 2 other degraded forms of the protein (cTnI63–193 and cTnI73–193). What is also new and potentially important is evidence that cTnI1–193 forms a covalent complex with the N-terminus of cTnC, a region that contains the single regulatory Ca2+ binding domain, and with the C-terminal residues of TnT that are important in transducing the Ca2+ binding signal to tropomyosin (Tm). McDonough et al1 propose that this complex formation occurs through . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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