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1  increase in size occurs at the level of the cardiac myocyte.
2 s specificity to calcineurin function in the cardiac myocyte.
3 res during differentiation and maturation of cardiac myocytes.
4 l calcium concentration were observed in rat cardiac myocytes.
5 tracrine control of respiration by NO within cardiac myocytes.
6 nished delayed aftercontractions in HRC null cardiac myocytes.
7 y couples the cycling of Ca(2+) and Na(+) in cardiac myocytes.
8 otein is mechanically active in skeletal and cardiac myocytes.
9 y to cell death in embryonic fibroblasts and cardiac myocytes.
10 e form of HCO3(-), impairs O2/CO2 balance in cardiac myocytes.
11 cium and mitochondria-dependent apoptosis in cardiac myocytes.
12 channel function is exquisitely regulated in cardiac myocytes.
13 ural backbone for coordinated contraction of cardiac myocytes.
14 in of beta-adrenergic stimulation in beating cardiac myocytes.
15  to study the biology of newly forming adult cardiac myocytes.
16 ophysiology in left versus right ventricular cardiac myocytes.
17 rodomain Ca(2+)-contraction coupling in live cardiac myocytes.
18  for driving maturation of stem cell-derived cardiac myocytes.
19 zation are crucial in the proper function of cardiac myocytes.
20 ide new insights into mechanotransduction in cardiac myocytes.
21 atastrophe, a previously unreported event in cardiac myocytes.
22 arvalbumin's EF-hand motif alter function of cardiac myocytes.
23 ncreases heart rate and the contractility of cardiac myocytes.
24 l strain at the subsarcomere level in living cardiac myocytes.
25 strophe was also confirmed in isolated adult cardiac myocytes.
26 lecule that rescues the disease phenotype in cardiac myocytes.
27  on depolarized mitochondria in neonatal rat cardiac myocytes.
28 ndent ryanodine receptor activation in adult cardiac myocytes.
29 romatin state on transcriptional activity in cardiac myocytes.
30 ht into the regulation of gene expression in cardiac myocytes.
31 onents of the adaptive ER stress response in cardiac myocytes.
32 293 cells expressing HERG channel and native cardiac myocytes.
33 n beta-adrenoreceptor signal transduction in cardiac myocytes.
34 n contrast to results obtained from purified cardiac myocytes.
35  disrupts excitation-contraction coupling in cardiac myocytes.
36 rganization and cellular stress responses in cardiac myocytes.
37 merged as a component of Ca(2+) signaling in cardiac myocytes.
38 and disturbs mitochondrial ultrastructure in cardiac myocytes.
39 nses have been studied in detail in isolated cardiac myocytes.
40 1+/-1.5 Mbp were identified in control human cardiac myocytes.
41 ld type) or a mutant LMNA (D300N) protein in cardiac myocytes.
42 n or fission and are seemingly static within cardiac myocytes.
43 ts function is during hypertrophic growth of cardiac myocytes.
44 t is triggered in post-mitotic cells such as cardiac myocytes.
45 n of beta1 adrenergic receptors (betaARs) on cardiac myocytes.
46  expression in response to cardiac stress in cardiac myocytes.
47  electron microscopy we identified, in adult cardiac myocytes, a Na(V)1.5 subpopulation in close prox
48                                           In cardiac myocytes, action potentials are initiated by an
49 sitive potassium channels (KATP channels) in cardiac myocytes adjust contractile function to compensa
50 subcellular distribution and preservation in cardiac myocytes after cell isolation are not well docum
51  activity within the myofilament fraction of cardiac myocytes after exposure to NCA revealed activati
52 at these candidate loci in neonatal cultured cardiac myocytes after in utero exposure to diesel exhau
53 rt IGF-1 as a potential strategy to increase cardiac myocyte and coronary vascular endowment at birth
54 ial duration and mitochondrial energetics to cardiac myocyte and whole-heart contractile function.
55 he cytoplasm and the mitochondrial matrix in cardiac myocytes and can be exploited to answer question
56 atment elevated both cAMP and cGMP levels in cardiac myocytes and cardiac fibroblasts, consistent wit
57 om comparing static mitochondrial biology in cardiac myocytes and dynamic mitochondrial biology in ne
58  Further experimentation with isolated adult cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts from double-knockout im
59 axis mediates fibrotic responses commonly in cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts induced by physico-chem
60 w, we summarize mechanoregulated pathways in cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts that lead to altered ge
61                 We used isolated adult mouse cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts, as well as preclinical
62      Using membranes prepared from adult rat cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts, we found that MMP14 ac
63 agnitude and translocation of ERK1/2 between cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts.
64  the functional role of Golgi betaARs in rat cardiac myocytes and found they activate Golgi localized
65 gical processes such as spontaneous beats in cardiac myocytes and glucose-dependent ATP increase in p
66 asm and the mitochondrial matrix of isolated cardiac myocytes and in Langendorff-perfused hearts base
67 d and used to determine the EGSH in isolated cardiac myocytes and in Langendorff-perfused hearts.
68 n ER stress, ERAD, and viability in cultured cardiac myocytes and in the mouse heart, in vivo.
69 lial cells and vascular smooth muscle cells, cardiac myocytes and inflammatory cells, like monocyte/m
70 ransitions in isolated murine and guinea pig cardiac myocytes and mitochondria.
71 ss response on ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) in cardiac myocytes and mouse hearts.
72 emonstrating concomitant isolation of viable cardiac myocytes and nonmyocytes from the same adult mou
73 ution microscopy, we demonstrate that in rat cardiac myocytes and other cell types mitochondrial PDE2
74 at miR-29 promotes pathologic hypertrophy of cardiac myocytes and overall cardiac dysfunction.
75 mic globular hemoprotein highly expressed in cardiac myocytes and oxidative skeletal myofibers.
76 plex electrophysiology protocols from single cardiac myocytes and then used to tune model parameters
77  flow and delivery of nutrients to the local cardiac myocytes and to augment ATP production by their
78  action potential conduction, contraction of cardiac myocytes, and actin filament-based movement of c
79 ched in the adipocytes, smooth muscle cells, cardiac myocytes, and immune cells.
80 cilia and the intercalated disks of isolated cardiac myocytes, and performed targeted patch-clamp rec
81 (2)AR) signals through both G(s) and G(i) in cardiac myocytes, and the G(i) pathway counteracts the G
82 oplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca release events in cardiac myocytes, and they have a typical duration of 20
83 e cardiac collagen volume fraction (CVF) and cardiac myocyte apoptosis index in aFGF-NP+UTMD group re
84 s group showed similar results (MCD, CVF and cardiac myocyte apoptosis index) to other aFGF treatment
85  free mitochondrial calcium concentration in cardiac myocytes are largely unknown.
86               Changes in redox potentials of cardiac myocytes are linked to several cardiovascular di
87                              Near term fetal cardiac myocytes are more sensitive than younger myocyte
88 ellular calcium (Ca(2+)) cycling dynamics in cardiac myocytes are spatiotemporally generated by stoch
89 ch contraction and haemodynamic disturbance, cardiac myocytes are subjected to fluid shear stress as
90 larized mitochondria in resting neonatal rat cardiac myocytes, as well as in those treated with TNF o
91 arizing current passed by Kv11.1 channels in cardiac myocytes, as well as the current passed in respo
92          Development of myocardial fibrosis, cardiac myocyte atrophy and loss of sarcomeric proteins
93 was studied in LV muscle strips and isolated cardiac myocytes before and after elimination of titin-b
94 eatment protects cultured neonatal and adult cardiac myocytes, but not Mfn1 knockout cells, from stre
95 g transcription factor 6alpha (ATF6alpha) in cardiac myocytes, but the roles of ATF6alpha or the rela
96 , nNOS is the most relevant source for NO in cardiac myocytes, but this nNOS is not located in mitoch
97 nd that amylin deposition negatively affects cardiac myocytes by inducing sarcolemmal injury, generat
98                       We followed changes in cardiac myocyte Ca(2+) and Na(+) regulation from the for
99                                           In cardiac myocytes Ca(2+) is a crucial regulator of contra
100  cell types within the myocardium, including cardiac myocytes, cardiac fibroblasts and vascular smoot
101 could find no evidence to support a burst of cardiac myocyte cell cycle activity at postnatal day 15.
102 n T-Cre;CyclinA2-LacZ-EGFP mice, we examined cardiac myocyte cell cycle activity during embryogenesis
103                                   Discerning cardiac myocyte cell cycle behavior is challenging owing
104 tanding of the molecular circuitry governing cardiac myocyte cell cycle regulation is required.
105 -specific cell cycle reporter for studies of cardiac myocyte cell cycle regulation.
106                                        While cardiac myocyte cell diameter regressed to the level of
107 ifferent cAMP pools have opposing effects on cardiac myocyte cell size.
108  heart; however, the endogenous structure of cardiac myocyte chromatin has never been determined.
109                                           In cardiac myocytes, clusters of type-2 ryanodine receptors
110                      The function of ZO-1 in cardiac myocytes (CM) is largely unknown.
111  mechanical signals in many cells, including cardiac myocytes (CM).
112                        In the beating heart, cardiac myocytes (CMs) contract in a coordinated fashion
113                 RATIONALE: During each beat, cardiac myocytes (CMs) generate the mechanical output ne
114 art require strong and stable connections of cardiac myocytes (CMs) with the extracellular matrix (EC
115   LADs encompass ~20% of the genome in human cardiac myocytes comprised several hundred coding and no
116                                        While cardiac myocytes contain several isoforms of NO synthase
117 gulates actin-myosin interaction and thereby cardiac myocyte contraction and relaxation.
118                                              Cardiac myocyte contraction is caused by Ca(2+) binding
119 as accompanied by increased cell cohesion in cardiac myocyte cultures and murine heart slices.
120 3A (PDE3A) gene encodes a PDE that regulates cardiac myocyte cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) le
121  human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiac myocytes deficient in SCN5A.
122 actor-kappaB signaling was also activated in cardiac myocytes derived from a patient with ACM.
123 ed the capabilities of our device to support cardiac myocytes derived from human induced pluripotent
124 um release activity (n=14, P<0.013) in human cardiac myocytes derived from induced pluripotent stem c
125 ling hMSCs were cocultured with normal human cardiac myocytes derived from induced pluripotent stem c
126 ling hMSCs prevented Ca2+ alternans in human cardiac myocytes derived from induced pluripotent stem c
127 pontaneous calcium release activity in human cardiac myocytes derived from induced pluripotent stem c
128 ed novel pathways regulated by TBX5 in human cardiac myocyte development.
129 y, we modeled the anatomical structures in a cardiac myocyte diad, to predict the effects of anatomic
130  TAC hearts revealed significantly increased cardiac myocyte diameter and mild fibrosis.
131 mal mouse hearts, but were upregulated after cardiac myocyte-directed Drp1 gene deletion in adult mic
132 s, indicating that the function of miR-29 in cardiac myocytes dominates over that in non-myocyte cell
133  and membrane potential (DeltaPsim) in adult cardiac myocytes during cyclic sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca
134 rriers to diffusion that are expected in the cardiac myocyte dyadic space, cAMP compartmentation did
135 mediated by a reduction in the expression of cardiac myocyte enhancer factor 2a.
136 Our data demonstrated that right ventricular cardiac myocytes exhibited reduced cell cycle activity r
137 ) and DNA sequencing were performed in adult cardiac myocytes following development of pressure overl
138 ntially expressed with beta2 in T-tubules of cardiac myocytes, forming alpha2beta2 heterodimers.
139 n cardiac myocytes from wild-type but not in cardiac myocytes from ATF6 knockout mice.
140                 At the cellular level, adult cardiac myocytes from Dusp8 gene-deleted mice were thick
141 ural and functional investigation of SOCE in cardiac myocytes from healthy mice (wild type; WT) and f
142                                 Single adult cardiac myocytes from mice treated with AAV9-M7.8L showe
143 le-cell and single-nucleus transcriptomes of cardiac myocytes from murine HF models and human patient
144 ng in ACM models in vitro and in vivo and in cardiac myocytes from patient induced pluripotent stem c
145 e in the field focusing on the withdrawal of cardiac myocytes from the cell cycle during the transiti
146 ADP-AM failed to enhance Ca(2+) responses in cardiac myocytes from Tpcn2(-/-) mice, unlike myocytes f
147 ical ER stressor, tunicamycin, and by I/R in cardiac myocytes from wild-type but not in cardiac myocy
148 nol-induced increase in Ca(2+) transients in cardiac myocytes from WT but not CD38(-/-) mice.
149 her important signalling enzymes determining cardiac myocyte function and phenotype.
150 a(2+) concentration regulate many aspects of cardiac myocyte function.
151 al analyses revealed interactions within the cardiac myocyte genome at 5-kb resolution, enabling exam
152 ng and ER proteostasis are challenged during cardiac myocyte growth.
153                   We unexpectedly found that cardiac myocyte GSK-3 is essential for cardiac homeostas
154          Together, our findings suggest that cardiac myocyte GSK-3 is required to maintain normal car
155 space with restricted diffusion for Na(+) in cardiac myocytes has been inferred from a transient peak
156                Stretching single ventricular cardiac myocytes has been shown experimentally to activa
157  adult hearts containing mostly post-mitotic cardiac myocytes have lost this ability.
158 irectly to test this is problematic, because cardiac myocytes have many Gq-coupled receptors.
159                                              Cardiac myocytes have multiple cell autonomous mechanism
160 nary artery smooth muscle cells (HCASMC) and cardiac myocytes (HCM), leading to upregulation of antio
161  human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiac myocytes (hiPSC-CM) demonstrated that ERRgamma a
162 hers' expression as well as transcription in cardiac myocytes; however, only Hmgb2 does so in a manne
163 t of specific inhibition of selected PDEs on cardiac myocyte hypertrophic growth.
164 rse aortic constriction and exercise-induced cardiac myocyte hypertrophy and impaired cardiac functio
165 hosphatase calcineurin is a key regulator of cardiac myocyte hypertrophy in disease.
166                        ZBTB17 also regulated cardiac myocyte hypertrophy in vitro and in vivo in a ca
167                  We report that asymmetrical cardiac myocyte hypertrophy is modulated by SRF (serum r
168 eel exercise, both of which promote adaptive cardiac myocyte hypertrophy with preserved cardiac funct
169 olgi resident beta1ARs prevents NE dependent cardiac myocyte hypertrophy.
170 thm telemetry, optical mapping, and isolated cardiac myocyte imaging were used to quantify arrhythmia
171  characterized by asymmetrical growth of the cardiac myocyte in mainly width or length, respectively.
172 thesized that similar effects would occur in cardiac myocytes in a lipophilicity-dependent manner bet
173  DCM, Tp53 gene was conditionally deleted in cardiac myocytes in mice expressing the LMNA(D300N) prot
174 iRNAs in vivo develop into mature functional cardiac myocytes in situ, and whether reprogramming lead
175  cycle activity relative to left ventricular cardiac myocytes in the immediate perinatal period.
176 n, we modeled the Holt-Oram syndrome in iPSC-cardiac myocytes in vitro and uncovered novel pathways r
177               Targeted deletion of miR-29 in cardiac myocytes in vivo also prevents cardiac hypertrop
178  that CASK localizes at lateral membranes of cardiac myocytes, in association with dystrophin.
179 ted by processes that extend well beyond the cardiac myocyte, including important roles for pericardi
180 earts, supporting long-term reprogramming of cardiac myocytes induced by hypoxia during critical peri
181                             NCA treatment of cardiac myocytes induced translocation of PKA and phosph
182 s, uncover a novel contributing mechanism to cardiac myocyte injury in type 2 diabetes, and suggest a
183  fibroblasts from double-knockout implicated cardiac myocytes intrinsic factors responsible for obser
184                    The ultrastructure of the cardiac myocyte is remarkable for the high density of mi
185 efractoriness of calcium (Ca(2+)) release in cardiac myocytes is an important factor in determining w
186      About 99% of the cytoplasmic calcium in cardiac myocytes is bound to buffers, and their properti
187                              Gq signaling in cardiac myocytes is classically considered toxic.
188 ably, dynamic CpG and non-CpG methylation in cardiac myocytes is confined to A compartments.
189 achieving gene expression in the majority of cardiac myocytes is essential.
190 )plasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA) in cardiac myocytes is modulated by an inhibitory interacti
191 parts of the calcium signalling apparatus in cardiac myocytes is unknown.
192 le NO synthases (NOSs) are also expressed in cardiac myocytes, it is unclear whether they control res
193                                              Cardiac myocyte KLF5 is a transcriptional regulator of P
194 een attributed to perturbed Ca2+ handling in cardiac myocytes leading to spontaneous Ca2+ release and
195       Induction of O2 (-) production in H9C2 cardiac myocytes led to the release of a transferable fa
196 orter, whereas DUSP8 overexpression promoted cardiac myocyte lengthening with a loss of thickness.
197                                       At the cardiac myocyte level, colon ascendens stent peritonitis
198  correlated with higher expression of mature cardiac myocyte markers.
199 RRalpha and gamma are critical regulators of cardiac myocyte maturation, serving as transcriptional a
200 dings demonstrate the pivotal roles of local cardiac myocyte metabolism and K(ATP) channels and the m
201                    Mechanistically, we found cardiac myocyte miR-29 to de-repress Wnt signaling by di
202 e show that ATM is found endogenously within cardiac myocyte mitochondria under normoxic conditions a
203 ce with established cardiomyopathy, restored cardiac myocyte mitochondrial membrane potential and fla
204                                              Cardiac myocyte mitochondrial metabolic activity was ass
205                                              Cardiac myocyte model systems have been developed to stu
206 rogram responsible for modulating changes in cardiac myocyte morphology that occur secondary to patho
207 ngestive heart failure typically arises from cardiac myocyte necrosis/apoptosis, associated with the
208                                              Cardiac myocytes normally initiate action potentials in
209                                              Cardiac myocyte nuclear and cellular RNA expression prof
210                        The aim was to purify cardiac myocyte nuclei from hearts of different species
211        High sorting purity was confirmed for cardiac myocyte nuclei isolated from mice, rats, and hum
212  cardiac tissue samples were used to isolate cardiac myocyte nuclei.
213                         Here, we report that cardiac myocytes of heterozygous mice carrying a catecho
214 ing a maximal +34-mV shift in neonatal mouse cardiac myocytes or Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells ex
215 ar concordant or discordant Ca2+alternans in cardiac myocytes or spatially concordant or discordant C
216 unit KChIP2, which regulates Kv4 channels in cardiac myocytes, partially relieved Kv4.3 but not Kv4.2
217                                              Cardiac myocyte passive tension was significantly increa
218 A with selective inhibitor TP-10, attenuated cardiac myocyte pathological hypertrophy induced by Angi
219                           We report enhanced cardiac myocyte performance by acute titration of cardia
220 hrine, and isoproterenol, but did not affect cardiac myocyte physiological hypertrophy induced by IGF
221                              To (re)initiate cardiac myocyte proliferation in adult mammalian hearts,
222 an amphibians leading to the hypothesis that cardiac myocyte proliferation is a major driver of heart
223  function after cardiac damage, induction of cardiac myocyte proliferation is an attractive therapeut
224 ors and the thiol-oxidizing agent diamide on cardiac myocyte protein phosphorylation and oxidation.
225 data suggest that the NCA-mediated effect on cardiac myocyte protein phosphorylation orchestrates alt
226 onatal mouse hearts containing proliferating cardiac myocytes regenerate even extensive injuries, whe
227  containing ubiquitin-tagged proteins within cardiac myocytes related to proteasome dysfunction and i
228 f DNA methylation in embryonic stem cells or cardiac myocytes, respectively, does not alter genome-wi
229            We generated transgenic mice with cardiac myocyte-restricted expression of Grx1-roGFP2 tar
230      Mechanistically, loss of GSK-3 in adult cardiac myocytes resulted in induction of mitotic catast
231                              mtDNA damage in cardiac myocytes resulting from increased oxidative stre
232            In vitro REEP5 depletion in mouse cardiac myocytes results in SR/ER membrane destabilizati
233 diac myocyte translatome by purifying tagged cardiac myocyte ribosomes from cardiac lysates and subje
234                                         In a cardiac myocyte, RyRs group into clusters of variable si
235                                 How does the cardiac myocyte sense changes in preload or afterload?
236 2+) spark initiation after Ca(2+) release in cardiac myocytes should inhibit further Ca(2+) release d
237                              Double-knockout cardiac myocytes showed cell cycle progression resulting
238 erged de novo into terminally differentiated cardiac myocytes, smooth muscle and vascular endothelial
239                 These effects were lost upon cardiac myocyte-specific Atf6 deletion in the heart, dem
240           Our data highlight advantages of a cardiac myocyte-specific cell cycle reporter for studies
241                                              Cardiac myocyte-specific CIP4 gene deletion in mice atte
242                                              Cardiac myocyte-specific deletion of Atf6 (ATF6 cKO [con
243                                              Cardiac myocyte-specific expression of LMNA(D300N), asso
244 ctor, in the lethal cardiomyopathy evoked by cardiac myocyte-specific interruption of dynamin-related
245 iPLA2gamma in cardiac myocytes, we generated cardiac myocyte-specific iPLA2gamma knock-out (CMiPLA2ga
246  iPLA2gamma, germ-line iPLA2gamma(-/-) mice, cardiac myocyte-specific iPLA2gamma transgenic mice, and
247                                 We generated cardiac myocyte-specific Klf5 knockout mice that showed
248 xpression profiles and epigenetic marks in a cardiac myocyte-specific manner.
249             We generated tamoxifen-inducible cardiac myocyte-specific mice lacking both GSK-3 isoform
250                                      A novel cardiac myocyte-specific Speg conditional knockout (MCM-
251 ated to defects of subcellular components in cardiac myocytes, specifically in the dyadic cleft, whic
252                 We conclude that titin-based cardiac myocyte stiffening acutely after MI is partly me
253             METHODS AND Knockdown of ATF6 in cardiac myocytes subjected to I/R increased reactive oxy
254                         Knockdown of ATF6 in cardiac myocytes subjected to I/R increased reactive oxy
255 into our previous local-control model of the cardiac myocyte that describes excitation-contraction co
256 e uniquely-adapted membrane invaginations in cardiac myocytes that facilitate the synchronous release
257 nal-regulated kinases 1/2 signaling in adult cardiac myocytes that then alters the length-width growt
258                                           In cardiac myocytes, the activation of inner membrane pores
259 of the sarcomere, the structural unit of the cardiac myocytes, the Frank-Starling mechanism consists
260 mtDNA repair machinery has been described in cardiac myocytes, the regulation of this repair has been
261                                 In wild-type cardiac myocytes, the selective alpha-1A agonist A61603-
262                                           In cardiac myocytes, there are several Ca(2+) -sensitive po
263 lays a central role in Ca(2+) homeostasis in cardiac myocytes through regulation of the sarco(endo)pl
264                  Notch activation reprograms cardiac myocytes to an induced Purkinje-like state chara
265 tective effects of RF-RDN acting directly on cardiac myocytes to attenuate cell death and protect aga
266                          Using permeabilized cardiac myocytes to eliminate any contribution of plasma
267 sor anchored onto the myofilaments in rabbit cardiac myocytes to examine PKA activity at the myofilam
268    This work provides structural evidence in cardiac myocytes to indicate the formation of microdomai
269             STIM1 can associate with Orai in cardiac myocytes to produce a Ca(2+) influx pathway that
270 on is closely associated with the ability of cardiac myocytes to proliferate.
271 m of AC, commonly recognized as a disease of cardiac myocytes, to include nonmyocyte cells in the hea
272    After pressure overload, we monitored the cardiac myocyte translatome by purifying tagged cardiac
273 d sarcomere strain were also imaged in paced cardiac myocytes under mechanical load, revealing sponta
274 itochondrial permeability transition pore in cardiac myocytes under stress.
275            Spontaneous calcium (Ca) waves in cardiac myocytes underlie delayed afterdepolarizations (
276 (2+) spark (LCS) activity in intact isolated cardiac myocytes using fast confocal line scanning with
277                               In ventricular cardiac myocytes (VCM), Gbeta5 deficiency provided subst
278 a phosphaturic hormone that directly targets cardiac myocytes via FGF receptor (FGFR) 4 thereby induc
279 ump activity regulate internal Ca release in cardiac myocytes via Na/Ca exchange.
280 st that CO induces arrhythmias in guinea pig cardiac myocytes via the ONOO(-)-mediated inhibition of
281 cal in inhibiting mitochondrial function and cardiac myocyte viability using SAMbetaA, a rationally-d
282       Expression of miR-184 in the heart and cardiac myocyte was developmentally downregulated and wa
283                         The number of EdU(+) cardiac myocytes was increased in CBSC- versus vehicle-
284 T2 p.R173W) in patient-specific iPSC-derived cardiac myocytes, we demonstrated that the knockout stra
285 ifically identify the roles of iPLA2gamma in cardiac myocytes, we generated cardiac myocyte-specific
286 tion or the patch-clamp technique in beating cardiac myocytes, we identified a neuronal NO synthase (
287 r determine the impact of hyperamylinemia on cardiac myocytes, we investigated human myocardium, comp
288 ial fission was conditionally interrupted in cardiac myocytes, we propose several new concepts that m
289 armacological inhibition of iNOS in isolated cardiac myocytes, we reveal that an increase of expressi
290                                              Cardiac myocytes were isolated with yields comparable to
291                             Freshly isolated cardiac myocytes were loaded with the Ca(2+)-indicator f
292                                     Cultured cardiac myocytes were subjected to different stresses in
293                                              Cardiac myocytes were the most commonly used cell type (
294 ), was delivered into acutely isolated mouse cardiac myocytes, where either one- and two-photon uncag
295 e length-width growth dynamics of individual cardiac myocytes, which further alters contractility, ve
296 catalase gene and were shown to bind ATF6 in cardiac myocytes, which increased catalase promoter acti
297 epresent a subcellular sarcomeric space in a cardiac myocyte with varying detail.
298                                 Treatment of cardiac myocytes with CTRP9 protein led to suppression o
299                           Stimulation of the cardiac myocytes with isoprenaline, angiotensin II, or e
300                 Membrane permeabilization of cardiac myocytes with saponin and/or Triton X-100 increa

 
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