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Title: Regulation of gene expression in the endocrine heart. Author: Durocher D, Grépin C, Nemer M. Journal: Recent Prog Horm Res; 1998; 53():7-23; discussion 22-3. PubMed ID: 9769700. Abstract: Cardiac growth and contractility is profoundly altered in response to various hormones and neurotransmitters as well as by changes in electrolyte balance, blood volume, and blood pressure. In turn, the endocrine heart contributes to body homeostasis by secreting a number of biologically active peptide hormones that act on several target tissues. Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and B-type natiuretic peptide (BNP) are the major secretory products of the endocrine myocardium. These peptide hormones act on many target organs via guanylate cyclase-linked membrane receptors to produce natriuresis, diuresis, vasodilatation, and hypotension. ANP and BNP receptors are found on most organs involved in cardiovascular homeostasis (e.g., kidney, adrenal, vasculature, brain). They are also present in gonads and in pituitary, where they alter steroidogenesis and pituitary hormone secretion. Not surprisingly, changes in blood pressure, volume, or hormone status influence ANP and BNP expression, which is also altered in almost all diseases that affect cardiac function. Thus, studies of ANP and BNP gene expression are relevant for many clinical settings. Moreover, transcription of the ANP and BNP genes characterizes cardiac cells at very early stages of development and is tightly linked to cardiac growth--be it proliferation, as in the fetal heart, or trophic growth, as in postnatal ventricular hypertrophy. Thus, analysis of the molecular circuitry that controls ANP and BNP expression might shed important insight into the complex regulatory pathways that underlie normal and pathologic heart development. Indeed, over the past few years, we have analysed transcriptional control of the ANP and BNP genes in embryonic and postnatal cardiomyocytes and in cardiomyocytes treated with hormones and neurotransmitters that cause cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. These studies have lead to the identification of distinct cis-acting DNA elements that modulate basal and hormone-stimulated transcription. Most importantly, the work also resulted in the isolation and characterization of cardiac-specific transcription factors that play critical roles for cardiac cell differentiation and survival.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]