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An Invited Review following the Soujinkai Young Investigator Award: Modulating Calmodulin-Ryanodine Receptor Binding as a Strategy to Halt Pressure-Overload Induced Cardiac Hypertrophy

Medical Science & Innovation Volume 72 Issue 1-2 Page 1-5
published_at 2025-06
A050072000101.pdf
1.57 MB
Title
An Invited Review following the Soujinkai Young Investigator Award: Modulating Calmodulin-Ryanodine Receptor Binding as a Strategy to Halt Pressure-Overload Induced Cardiac Hypertrophy
Abstract
Cardiac hypertrophy is widely recognized as a significant risk factor contributing to adverse outcomes in individuals with cardiovascular conditions. The disruption of intracellular calcium ( Ca^{2+} ) balance has been implicated in the development of cardiac hypertrophy, though the precise mechanisms remain poorly understood. In this research, we explored whether hypertrophy induced by pressure overload may arise from the destabilization of the cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) triggered by the dissociation of calmodulin (CaM), leading to subsequent Ca^{2+} leakage. We also assessed whether genetically strengthening the binding affinity between CaM and RyR2 could potentially reverse this process. In the early phases of cardiac hypertrophy caused by pressure overload—when contractile function is still intact—we observed that RyR2 destabilization mediated by reactive oxygen species (ROS) coincides with impaired relaxation. Moreover, stabilizing RyR2 through enhanced CaM binding was found to completely inhibit hypertrophic signaling and improve survival rates. Our findings reveal a crucial connection between RyR2 destabilization and the progression of cardiac hypertrophy.
Creators Kohno Michiaki
Creators Kobayashi Shigeki
Affiliate Master Yamaguchi University
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Creators Yamamoto Takeshi
Affiliate Master Yamaguchi University
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Creators Yano Masafumi
Source Identifiers
Creator Keywords
calmodulin ryanodine receptor cardiac hypertrophy
Languages eng
Resource Type departmental bulletin paper
Publishers Yamaguchi University School of Medicine
Date Issued 2025-06
File Version Version of Record
Access Rights open access