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      A mechanistic role for cardiac myocyte apoptosis in heart failure.

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          Abstract

          Heart failure is a common, lethal condition whose pathogenesis is poorly understood. Recent studies have identified low levels of myocyte apoptosis (80-250 myocytes per 10(5) nuclei) in failing human hearts. It remains unclear, however, whether this cell death is a coincidental finding, a protective process, or a causal component in pathogenesis. Using transgenic mice that express a conditionally active caspase exclusively in the myocardium, we demonstrate that very low levels of myocyte apoptosis (23 myocytes per 10(5) nuclei, compared with 1.5 myocytes per 10(5) nuclei in controls) are sufficient to cause a lethal, dilated cardiomyopathy. Interestingly, these levels are four- to tenfold lower than those observed in failing human hearts. Conversely, inhibition of cardiac myocyte death in this murine model largely prevents the development of cardiac dilation and contractile dysfunction, the hallmarks of heart failure. To our knowledge, these data provide the first direct evidence that myocyte apoptosis may be a causal mechanism of heart failure, and they suggest that inhibition of this cell death process may constitute the basis for novel therapies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Clin Invest
          The Journal of clinical investigation
          American Society for Clinical Investigation
          0021-9738
          0021-9738
          May 2003
          : 111
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Medicine (Molecular Cardiology), Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York 10461, USA.
          Article
          10.1172/JCI17664
          155051
          12750399
          f2df6267-1e51-492e-814b-b01eaeb6fe5c
          History

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