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Catecholamines and development of cardiac pacemaking: An intrinsically intimate relationship

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH
Volume 72, Issue 3, Pages 364-374

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cardiores.2006.08.013

Keywords

epinephrine; norepinephrine; cardiac development; pacemaker

Funding

  1. NHLBI NIH HHS [HL 78716] Funding Source: Medline

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A generation ago, a melding of imagination and experimental evidence led to the hypothesis that catecholamines were essential in establishing basal cardiac pacemaking rhythm. Subsequent discoveries of depolarizing pacemaker currents and viable adult catecholamine-deficient animals raised serious doubts about the necessity of catecholamines in pacemaking. However, the findings that catecholamines are produced in pacemaking regions prior to innervation, and that they are required for embryonic survival during a defined critical period of embryonic development have revitalized the original hypothesis. Recent results have further suggested that intrinsic cardiac adrenergic cells can differentiate into pacemaking myocytes, and that protein kinase A, a prominent downstream mediator of p-adrenergic signaling, is required for pacemaking activity. Here, we discuss how catecholamines and the intrinsic cardiac adrenergic cells that produce them may influence ontological development of cardiac pacemaking. (c) 2006 European Society of Cardiology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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