Medicine
Volume 38, Issue 7 , Pages 340-343, July 2010

Biochemistry and physiology of cardiac muscle

Alex Sirker MB BChir MRCP is a Specialist Registrar and Clinical Research Fellow at King's College London, UK. His research interest is the mechanisms and modulation of cardiac remodelling after myocardial infarction. Competing interests: none

Ajay M Shah FRCP FMedSci is BHF Professor of Cardiology and Director of the King's College London BHF Centre of Excellence, London, UK. His research interest is the pathophysiology of cardiac remodelling. Competing interests: none

Abstract 

The heart is composed of muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) that account for most of the heart mass and generate its pumping force. Other cell types (fibroblasts, vascular endothelial cells, vascular smooth muscle cells) and the extracellular matrix also play key roles in cardiac function, both in health and in disease. Excitation–contraction coupling links the electrical activation of cardiomyocytes to cellular contraction. Calcium is a key second messenger in this process; its entry into the cell triggers further calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, which then activates the contractile machinery. Subsequent reduction in calcium concentration brings about cardiac relaxation, which is necessary for the heart to re-fill. Calcium also regulates other critical processes in the heart including transcription of genes and the matching of energy supply from the mitochondria with cellular demand. In health, the contractile function of the heart is regulated by several factors, including its loading conditions, autonomic influences and many locally produced autocrine/paracrine agents. These factors alter contractile strength through two main mechanisms, namely the modulation of the calcium transient within cardiomyocytes and/or changes in myofilament sensitivity to calcium.

Keywords: calcium, cardiomyocyte, contractile function, excitation–contraction coupling, fibroblasts, myofilament

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PII: S1357-3039(10)00082-4

doi:10.1016/j.mpmed.2010.03.013

Medicine
Volume 38, Issue 7 , Pages 340-343, July 2010