Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2935883 International Journal of Cardiology 2006 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Progressive cardiac dilatation and pump failure of unknown etiology has been termed idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). During recent years a large body of data has accumulated indicating that functionally active antibodies or autoantibodies being able to recognize and to stimulate the cardiac β1-adrenergic receptor (anti-β1-AR) may play an important role in the initiation and/or clinical course of DCM. Recent experiments in rats even point towards a cause-and-effect relation between stimulatory anti-β1-AR antibodies and DCM. Immunization of rats against the second extracellular loop of the human β1-adrenergic receptor (100% sequence-identity between human and rat) resulted in both development of stimulatory anti-β1-AR antibodies and development of progressive cardiac dilatation and dysfunction. Isogenic transfer of stimulatory anti-β1-AR from cardiomyopathic into healthy inbread animals reproduced the disease, hence providing conclusive proof for a β1-receptor-directed autoimmune attack as a possible cause of cardiomyopathy. This kind of cardiomyopathy is now referred to as anti-β1-AR-induced dilated immune-cardiomyopathy (DiCM).The following article reviews recent evidence obtained from experimental animal-models implying a significant role of the cardiac β1-adrenergic receptor as a pathophysiologically and clinically relevant autoantigen also in human DCM.

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