Authors
Monte S Willis, Jonathan C Schisler, Andrea L Portbury, Cam Patterson
Publication date
2009/2/15
Source
Cardiovascular research
Volume
81
Issue
3
Pages
439-448
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
The assembly and maintenance of the cardiac sarcomere, which contains the basic contractile components of actin and myosin, are essential for cardiac function. While often described as a static structure, the sarcomere is actually dynamic and undergoes constant turnover, allowing it to adapt to physiological changes while still maintaining function. A host of new factors have been identified that play a role in the regulation of protein quality control in the sarcomere, including chaperones that mediate the assembly of sarcomere components and ubiquitin ligases that control their specific degradation. There is clear evidence of sarcomere disorganization in animal models lacking muscle-specific chaperone proteins, illustrating the importance of these molecules in sarcomere structure and function. Although ubiquitin ligases have been found within the sarcomere structure itself, the role of the ubiquitin proteasome …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MS Willis, JC Schisler, AL Portbury, C Patterson - Cardiovascular research, 2009