Dilated cardiomyopathies (DCM) are due to progressive dilatation of the cardiac cavities and thinning of the ventricular walls and lead unavoidably to heart failure. They represent a major cause for heart transplantation and, therefore, defining an efficient symptomatic treatment for DCM remains a challenge. We have taken advantage of the hamster strain CHF147 that displays progressive cardiomyopathy leading to heart failure to test whether stimulation of a hypertrophic pathway could delay the process of dilatation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRegulation of thrombin activity may be required during skeletal muscle differentiation since the thrombin tissue inhibitor protease nexin-1 appears at the myotube stage before being localized at the neuromuscular synapse. Here, we have used a model of rat fetal myotube primary cultures to study the effect of thrombin on acetylcholine receptor (AChR) expression, which is enhanced at the myotube stage. Our results show that thrombin decreases both the number of surface AChRs (AChRn) and AChR alpha-subunit gene expression.
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