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Melusin Promotes a Protective Signal Transduction Cascade in Stressed Hearts
Author(s) -
Matteo Sorge,
Mara Brancaccio
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
frontiers in molecular biosciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.098
H-Index - 37
ISSN - 2296-889X
DOI - 10.3389/fmolb.2016.00053
Subject(s) - cascade , signal transduction , microbiology and biotechnology , chemistry , biophysics , transduction (biophysics) , biology , chromatography
Melusin is a chaperone protein selectively expressed in heart and skeletal muscles. Melusin expression levels correlate with cardiac function in pre-clinical models and in human patients with aortic stenosis. Indeed, previous studies in several animal models indicated that Melusin plays a broad cardioprotective role in different pathological conditions. Chaperone proteins, besides playing a role in protein folding, are also able to facilitate supramolecular complex formation and conformational changes due to activation/deactivation of signaling molecules. This role sets chaperone proteins as crucial regulators of intracellular signal transduction pathways. In particular Melusin activates AKT and ERK1/2 signaling, protects cardiomyocytes from apoptosis and induces a compensatory hypertrophic response in several pathological conditions. Therefore, selective delivery of the Melusin gene in heart via cardiotropic adenoviral associated virus serotype 9 (AAV9), may represent a new promising gene-therapy approach for different cardiac pathologies.

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