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Over the last 20 years, the scientific progresses in molecular biology and genetics in combination with the increasing use in the clinical setting of contrast-enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) for morpho-functional imaging and structural myocardial tissue characterization have provided important new insights into our understanding of the distinctive aspects of cardiomyopathy, regarding both the genetic and biologic background and the clinical phenotypic features. This has led to the need of an appropriate revision and upgrading of current nosographic framework and pathobiological categorization of heart muscle disorders. This article proposes a new definition and classification of cardiomyopathies that rely on the combination of the distinctive pathobiological basis (genetics, molecular biology and pathology) and the clinical phenotypic pattern (morpho-functional and structural features), leading to the proposal of three different disease categories, each of either genetic or non-genetic etiology and characterized by a combined designation based on both "anatomic" and "functional" features, i.e., hypertrophic/restrictive (H/RC), dilated/hypokinetic (D/HC) and scarring/arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (S/AC). The clinical application of the newly proposed classification approach in the real-world practice appears crucial to design a targeted clinical management and evaluation of outcomes of affected patients. Although current treatment of cardiomyopathies is largely palliative and based on drugs, catheter ablation, device or surgical interventions aimed to prevent and manage heart failure and malignant arrhythmias, better knowledge of basic mechanisms involved in the onset and progression of pathobiologically different heart muscle diseases may allow to the development of disease-specific curative therapy.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2024.132571 | DOI Listing |
Nat Commun
August 2025
Department of Integrative Structural and Computational Biology, The Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, CA, USA.
Influenza viruses evolve rapidly, driving seasonal epidemics and posing global pandemic threats. While neuraminidase (NA) has emerged as a vaccine target, shared molecular features of NA antibody responses are still not well understood. Here, we describe cryo-electron microscopy structures of the broadly protective human antibody DA03E17, which was previously identified from an H1N1-infected donor, in complex with NA from A/H1N1, A/H3N2, and B/Victoria-lineage viruses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRes Sq
July 2025
Drukier Institute for Children's Health, Department of Pediatrics, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
First described as original antigenic sin (OAS), which is deleterious, or now immune imprinting, which also accounts for beneficial effects, it is clear that immune responses to viruses tend to be biased by previous exposure to similar strains. Various non-exclusive models for the basis of imprinting include that it results from unique features of childhood immunity; it is driven by pre-existing serum antibodies via epitope masking; or it occurs as a byproduct of residual memory following viral antigenic evolution. To understand the basis and impact of imprinting from influenza, we characterized the B cell responses of young children upon consecutive first infections with divergent H1N1 and H3N2 influenza viruses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Pulm Med
September 2025
University of Maryland-Institute for Health Computing and the Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Purpose Of Review: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) is a specific but heterogeneous disease defined foremost by elevated pulmonary artery pressure, typically occurring due to pulmonary vascular fibroproliferative, plexigenic, or thrombotic remodelling. The heterogenous clinical and pathobiological basis of PH poses challenges and opportunities for optimizing treatment alignment to individual patients.
Recent Findings: Advancing precision medicine through personalized treatment pathways in PH is particularly timely owing to persistent morbidity and shortened lifespan reported for patients despite an expanding armamentarium of pharmacotherapeutics, particularly for pulmonary arterial hypertension.
Dis Model Mech
July 2025
Department of Optometry and Vision Science, Vision Science Research Center, School of Optometry, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA.
Dehydrodolichyl diphosphate synthase complex subunit (DHDDS) is required for protein glycosylation in eukaryotes, and variants. Surprisingly, three variant alleles (K42E/K42E, T206A/K42E and R98W/K42E) have been reported to cause retinitis pigmentosa 59 (RP59). Because T206A only has been reported to occur heterozygously with K42E, we generated homozygous and hererozygous mutants - i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExpert Rev Respir Med
August 2025
Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences, University 'Magna Græcia' of Catanzaro, Catanzaro, Italy.
Background: Airway eosinophilic inflammation is a key pathobiologic trait of severe asthma, a complex chronic disease which affects about 5-10% of asthmatic patients worldwide. Therefore, an in-depth knowledge of the immunopathologic mechanisms underlying severe eosinophilic asthma (SEA) is essential to understand the beneficial effects of currently available, eosinophil-targeted anti-asthma treatments, as well as to develop new therapeutic strategies.
Areas Covered: This narrative review article aims to provide a concise coverage of the pathophysiology of severe eosinophilic asthma, followed by an updated overview of current and newly emerging therapeutic approaches capable of counteracting airway eosinophilic inflammation.