Ion channels

1

Genetic Models of Mechanotransduction: The Nematode Caenorhabditis elegans

http://physrev.physiology.org
Year of publication: 
2003
Journal name: 
Physiological Reviews
Mechanotransduction, the conversion of a mechanical stimulus into a biological response, constitutes the basis for a plethora of fundamental biological processes such as the senses of touch, balance, and hearing and contributes critically to development and homeostasis in all organisms. Despite this profound importance in biology, we know remarkably little about how mechanical input forces delivered to a cell are interpreted to an extensive repertoire of output physiological responses. Read more »
1

Mechanotransduction in Cardiac Myocytes

http://www3.interscience.wiley.com
Year of publication: 
2006
Journal name: 
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Cardiac myocytes react to diverse mechanical demands with a multitude of transient and long-term responses to normalize the cellular mechanical environment. Several stretch-activated signaling pathways have been identified, most prominently guanine nucleotide binding proteins (G-proteins), mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPK), Janus-associated kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK/STAT), protein kinase C (PKC), calcineurin, intracellular calcium regulation, and several autocrine and paracrine factors. Multiple levels of crosstalk exist between pathways. Read more »
ashleykita's picture
Created by ashleykita 37 weeks 4 days ago
Category: Cardiovascular   Tags:
1

Cellular mechanotransduction: putting all the pieces together again

http://www.fasebj.org
Year of publication: 
2006
Journal name: 
FASEB Journal
Analysis of cellular mechanotransduc- tion, the mechanism by which cells convert mechanical signals into biochemical responses, has focused on identification of critical mechanosensitive molecules and cellular components. Stretch-activated ion chan- nels, caveolae, integrins, cadherins, growth factor re- ceptors, myosin motors, cytoskeletal filaments, nuclei, extracellular matrix, and numerous other structures and signaling molecules have all been shown to contrib- ute to the mechanotransduction response. Read more »
4

Mechanosensitive ion channels: molecules of mechanotransduction

http://jcs.biologists.org
Year of publication: 
2004
Journal name: 
Journal of Cell Science
Cells respond to a wide variety of mechanical stimuli, ranging from thermal molecular agitation to potentially destructive cell swelling caused by osmotic pressure gradients. The cell membrane presents a major target of the external mechanical forces that act upon a cell, and mechanosensitive (MS) ion channels play a crucial role in the physiology of mechanotransduction. These detect and transduce external mechanical forces into electrical and/or chemical intracellular signals. Read more »
nguyen.olivia's picture
Created by nguyen.olivia 47 weeks 6 days ago – Made popular 37 weeks 1 day ago
Category: Other   Tags:

Search

User login