Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8311797 | Clinica Chimica Acta | 2014 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Eventually, the current body of evidence regarding myostatin's significant involvement in different entities of the cachexia syndrome is summarized. Activin type-2 receptor antagonism and/or inhibitory myostatin antibodies have emerged as a promising therapeutic approach to treat the cachexia syndrome although the general applicability of this therapeutic approach to the human clinical situation has still to be demonstrated.
Keywords
ChFActivin receptor IIBp70 S6 kinaseTLLGASPNF-ĸBFLRGMSTNActRIIBALK5p70 S6KLTBPMEF-2LAPGSK-3βIGF-1TGF-βGDFPI3KmTORERKAktinsulin-like growth factor-1Chronic obstructive pulmonary diseaseCOPDtransforming growth factor-βtumor necrosis factor-αforkhead Box OGrowth differentiation factorTNF-αFoxOphosphatidylinositol-3 kinaseMetabolismBMPInsulin resistanceMyostatinheart failureBone morphogenetic proteinprotein kinase Blatency-associated peptideMyostatin geneCachexiaextracellular signal-regulated kinaseglycogen synthase kinase-3
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Authors
Thomas Bernd Dschietzig,