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TRAF2, an Innate Immune Sensor, Reciprocally Regulates Mitophagy and Inflammation to Maintain Cardiac Myocyte Homeostasis

Authors :
Xiucui Ma
David R. Rawnsley
Attila Kovacs
Moydul Islam
John T. Murphy
Chen Zhao
Minu Kumari
Layla Foroughi
Haiyan Liu
Kevin Qi
Aaradhya Diwan
Krzysztof Hyrc
Sarah Evans
Takashi Satoh
Brent A. French
Kenneth B. Margulies
Ali Javaheri
Babak Razani
Douglas L. Mann
Kartik Mani
Abhinav Diwan
Source :
JACC. Basic to translational science. 7(3)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Mitochondria are essential for cardiac myocyte function, but damaged mitochondria trigger cardiac myocyte death. Although mitophagy, a lysosomal degradative pathway to remove damaged mitochondria, is robustly active in cardiac myocytes in the unstressed heart, its mechanisms and physiological role remain poorly defined. We discovered a critical role for TRAF2, an innate immunity effector protein with E3 ubiquitin ligase activity, in facilitating physiological cardiac myocyte mitophagy in the adult heart, to prevent inflammation and cell death, and maintain myocardial homeostasis.

Details

ISSN :
2452302X
Volume :
7
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC. Basic to translational science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....647130cf8ff3be7b140d9df6c1821861