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Differential Gene Expression in Pathological and Physiological Cardiac HypertrophyCrampton, Matthew S, n/a January 2006 (has links)
Cardiac hypertrophy defines an adaptive process brought about in response to sustained increases in haemodynamic work. Cardiomyocytes undergo an initial compensatory phase in which enlargement and contractility alterations normalise wall stress and maintain adequate perfusion of organs. In pathological hypertrophy, this deteriorates to a decompensated state characterised by ventricular dysfunction and predisposition to heart failure. In contrast, physiological hypertrophy and associated enhanced cardiac functioning arising from chronic exercise training does not progress to heart failure. Determination of the molecular pathways underlying myocardial hypertrophy remains a challenge for cardiovascular research. The objective of the work presented in this thesis was to identify genes differentially expressed during pathological and physiological hypertrophy in order to enhance our knowledge of the mechanistic processes involved. A reverse Northern hybridisation method was applied to profile the expression of specifically selected genes in the hypertrophic models examined. Functional categories represented in the gene panel assembled included cardiac contractile and cytoskeletal markers, matrix metalloproteinases, vasoactive pathway factors, calcium handling genes, ion channels, cardiac regulatory factors, signalling pathway intermediates, apoptotic factors and histone deacetylases. In order to investigate pathological hypertrophy, a deoxycorticosterone acetate-salt (DOCA-salt) rat model was utilised. DOCA-salt treated rats used in this study demonstrated a 1.4-fold increase in heart weight to body weight ratio compared to controls. Impaired cardiac function indicative of a decompensated pathological phenotype in the DOCA-salt treated group was demonstrated by way of decreased chamber size, impaired myocardial compliance and significantly reduced cardiac output. Reverse Northern hybridisation analysis of 95 selected genes identified a number of candidates with differential expression in hearts of DOCA-salt treated rats. Increased gene expression was demonstrated for the collagenase MMP1 and stress-activated signal transduction factor Sin1. In contrast, the sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase SERCA-2 and anti-apoptotic factor BCL2l-10 genes exhibited decreased expression. To investigate changes in gene expression associated with physiological hypertrophy, use was made of an endurance run-trained rat model. The run-trained rats used in this study demonstrated a 24.1% increase in heart weight to body weight ratio and improvements in performance consistent with physiological cardiac adaptation. These performance indicators included improvements in systolic volume, cardiac output, myocardial compliance and bio-energetic function. Reverse Northern hybridisation expression analysis of 56 genes identified a number of differentially expressed mRNA transcripts in run-trained hypertrophied hearts. Four genes shown to demonstrate reduced expression in the run-trained rat model were interleukin-1 receptor associated kinase (IRAK1) and the developmentally expressed transcription factors Nkx-2.3, dHAND, and IRX-2. Based upon the reverse Northern hybridisation results, four genes were selected for Western blotting analysis of rat cardiac tissue. Of these, MMP1 and a putative isoform of Sin1 exhibited increased levels in DOCA-salt treated hypertrophic left ventricular tissue, results that correlate with the findings of increased mRNA expression for these two genes. Therefore, this study identified MMP1 and Sin1 as candidates involved in pathological but not physiological hypertrophy. This finding is in accord with other recent investigations demonstrating that pathological hypertrophy and physiological hypertrophy are associated with distinct molecular phenotypes. An aside to the major objective of identifying genes differentially regulated in left ventricular hypertrophy involved the application of the P19CL6 cell in vitro model of cardiomyogenesis to compare protein expression during hypertrophy and development. The Sin1 isoform, found to be up-regulated during DOCA-salt induced hypertrophy, was also shown to be more abundant in differentiating, than non-differentiating, P19CL6 cells. This result is consistent with the developing paradigm that implicates 'fetal' genes in the hypertrophic remodelling process.
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Molecular insights into the biological role / mechanisms of GATA-4 and FOG-2 in normal cardiac function and in cardiac hypertrophy.Philips, Alana Sara, Clinical School - St George Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, UNSW January 2007 (has links)
The regulation of cardiac-specific genes such as GATA-4 and its co-factor FOG-2 is paramount for normal heart development and function. Indeed, those mechanisms that regulate GATA-4 and FOG-2 function, such as nuclear transport and the post-translational modification of SUMOylation, are of critical importance for cardiogenesis. Therefore the aims of this study were to: i) elucidate the nuclear transport mechanisms of GATA-4; ii) determine the function of SUMOylation on the biological activity of both GATA-4 and FOG-2; and iii) examine how these mechanisms impact on the role of GATA-4 and FOG-2 in cardiac hypertrophy. Firstly, we characterised a non-classical nuclear localisation signal that mediates active import of GATA-4 in both HeLa cells and cardiac myocytes. Fine mapping studies revealed four crucial residues within this region that interacted with importin ?? to mediate GATA-4 import via the non-classical import pathway. In addition, a cardiac myocyte-specific CRM1-dependent nuclear export signal, which consists of three essential leucine residues, was identified. We also investigated the residues of GATA-4 that are responsible for its DNAbinding activity and therefore transcriptional control of cardiac-specific genes. Secondly, we demonstrated that SUMOylation of both GATA-4 and FOG-2 is exclusively carried out by SUMO-2/3. Moreover, SUMOylation is involved in the nuclear localisation of both GATA-4 and FOG-2 in cardiac myocytes as well as the transcriptional regulation of cardiac-specific genes, such as cardiac troponin I. Finally, and perhaps most biologically significant, we showed that nuclear transport as well as SUMOylation of GATA-4 is imperative for the ability of GATA-4 to induce cardiac hypertrophy. Moreover, it was determined that FOG-2 SUMOylation is involved in the ability of FOG-2 to protect against cardiac hypertrophy. In conclusion, the current study provides detailed information on the nuclear transport pathways of GATA-4 as well as the SUMOylation of both GATA-4 and FOG-2 and the role these two mechanisms play in gene transcription and cardiac hypertrophy.
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Matrix metalloproteinase-2 mediates angiotensin II-induced hypertensionOdenbach, Jeffrey 06 1900 (has links)
Angiotensin II signals cardiovascular disease through metalloproteinases including MMP-2, MMP-7 and ADAM-17/TACE. We hypothesized that these metalloproteinases regulate each other at the transcriptional level. Further, MMP-2, being a major gelatinase in cardiac and vascular tissue, could mediate angiotensin II-induced cardiovascular disease.
We studied the development of hypertension (by tail cuff plethysmography), cardiac hypertrophy (by M-mode echocardiography and qRT-PCR analysis of hypertrophy marker genes) and fibrosis (by collagen staining and qRT-PCR analysis of fibrosis marker genes) in mice receiving angiotensin II.
Angiotensin II induced hypertension, cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis which correlated with an upregulation of MMP-2. Downregulation of MMP-2 by pharmacological inhibition and RNA interference attenuated hypertension but not cardiac hypertrophy or fibrosis. Downregulation of MMP-7 or ADAM-17/TACE by RNA interference attenuated angiotensin II-induced MMP-2 upregulation as well as hypertension, cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis.
We conclude that MMP-2 selectively mediates angiotensin II-induced hypertension under the transcriptional control of MMP-7 and ADAM-17/TACE.
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Cardiac hypertrophy : transcription patterns, hypertrophicprogression and extracellular signalling / Hjärthypertrofi : transkriptionsmönster, hypertrofisk progression och extracellulär signaleringGennebäck, Nina January 2012 (has links)
Background: The aim of this thesis was to study transcription patterns and extracellular signalling of the hypertrophic heart to better understand the mechanisms initiating, controlling and maintaining cardiac hypertrophy. Cardiac hypertrophy is a risk factor for cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Hypertrophy of the myocardium is a state, independent of underlying disease, where the myocardium strives to compensate for an increased workload. This remodelling of the heart includes physiological changes induced by a changed gene expression, alteration of the extracellular matrix and diverse cell-to-cell signalling. Shedding microvesicles and exosomes are membrane released vesicles derived from the plasma membrane, which can mediate messages between cells and induce various cell-related processes in target cells. Methods and materials: Two different microarray studies on different materials were performed. In the first study, cardiac myectomies from 8 patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM) and 5 controls without cardiac disease were used. In the second study, myocardial tissue from 6 aorta ligated and 6 sham operated (controls) rats at three different time points (1, 6 and 42 days post-surgically) were analysed. To reveal differences in gene expression the materials were analyzed with Illumina whole genome microarray and multivariate data analysis (PCA and OPLS-DA). Cultured cardiomyocytes (HL-1) were incubated with and without growth factors (TGF-β2 or PDGF BB). Microvesicles and exosomes were collected and isolated after differential centrifugations and ultracentrifugations of the cell culture medium. The microvesicles and exosomes were characterized with dynamic light scattering (DLS), flow cytometry, western blot, electron microscopy and Illumina whole genome microarray. Results: The two different microarray studies revealed differentially expressed gene transcripts and groups of transcripts. When comparing HOCM patients to controls significant down-regulation of the MYH6 gene transcript and two immediate early genes (IEGs, EGR1 and FOS), as well as significant up-regulation of the ACE2, JAK2 and HDAC5 gene transcripts were found. In the rat model, 5 gene groups showed interesting clustering after multivariate data analysis (OPLS-DA) associated with the hypertrophic development: “Atherosclerosis”, “ECM and adhesion molecules”, “Fatty acid metabolism”, “Glucose metabolism” and “Mitochondria”. The shedding microvesicles were rounded vesicles, 40-300 nm in size and surrounded by a bilayered membrane. Chromosomal DNA sequences were identified in the microvesicles. The microvesicles could be taken up by fibroblasts resulting in an altered gene expression in the fibroblasts. The exosomes from cultured cardiomyocytes (incubated with TGF-β2 or PDGF BB) had an average diameter of 50-80 nm, similar to the unstimulated control exosomes. A large, for all cardiomyocyte derived exosomes, common pool of mRNA seems stable and a smaller pool varied in mRNA content according to treatment of the cardiomyocyte. Of the common mRNA about 14% were ribosomal, 14% were of unknown locus and 5% connected to the function of the mitochondria. Conclusions: The microarray studies showed that transcriptional regulation at a stable stage of the hypertrophic development is a balance of pro and anti hypertrophic mechanisms and that diverse gene groups are differently regulated at different time points in the hypertrophic progression. OPLS-DA is a very useful and powerful tool when analyzing gene expression data, especially in finding clusters of gene groups not seen with traditional statistics. The extracellular vesicle studies suggests that microvesicles and exosomes released from cardiomyocytes contain DNA and can be involved in events in target cells by facilitating an array of processes including gene expression changes. Different treatment of the cardiomyocyte influence the content of the exosome produced, indicating that the signal function of the exosome might vary according to the state of the cardiomyocyte. / Bakgrund: Syftet med den här avhandlingen var att studera transkriptions-mönster och extracellulär signalering vid hjärthypertrofi för att bättre förstå de mekanismer som startar, styr och underhåller tillväxten. Hjärthypertrofi, onormal tillväxt av hjärtmuskeln, är en riskfaktor för andra hjärt-kärlsjukdomar och dödlighet. Hypertrofi av hjärtmuskeln är ett tillstånd, oberoende av bakomliggande sjukdom, där hjärtmuskeln strävar efter att kompensera för ökad arbetsbelastning. Denna omställning av hjärtat innefattar fysiologiska förändringar orsakade av ett förändrat genuttryck, modifiering av miljön utanför cellen och ändrad cell-till-cell signalering. Mikrovesiklar och exosomer är små membranomslutna bubblor som frisätts från cellmembranet, ut i cellens omgivning. De kan förmedla budskap mellan celler och påverka olika processer i målceller. Metoder och material: Avhandlingen innefattar två olika microarraystudier på olika material. I den första studien användes hjärtbiopsier från 8 patienter med hypertrofisk obstruktiv kardiomyopati (HOCM) och 5 kontroller utan hjärtsjukdom. I det andra projektet användes hjärtvävnad från 6 aortaligerade och 6 skenopererade (kontroller) råttor vid tre olika tidpunkter (1, 6 och 42 dagar efter kirurgiskt ingrepp). För att påvisa skillnader i genuttryck analyserades proverna med Illumina helgenom microarray och multivariat dataanalys. Avhandlingens andra del innehåller två studier om mikrovesiklar och exosomer. Odlade hjärtmuskelceller (HL-1) stimulerades med tillväxt-faktorer (TGF-β2 eller PDGF BB) och ostimulerade celler användes som kontroll. Mikrovesiklar och exosomer renades fram med centrifugeringar och ultracentrifugering av cellodlingsmediet för att sedan karakteriseras med olika metoder för att studera storlek, ytmarkörer och innehåll. Illumina helgenom microarray användes för att studera microvesiklarnas och exosomernas mRNA innehåll. Resultat: I de två olika microarraystudierna hittades gentranskript och grupper av gentranskript som skiljde sig mellan kontroller och den hypertrofa hjärtvävnaden. När HOCM patientproverna jämfördes med kontroller hittades nedreglering av MYH6, EGR1 och FOS samt uppreglering av ACE2, JAK2 och HDAC5. Efter multivariat dataanalys av materialet från råtta, hittades 5 grupper av gentranskript med intressanta mönster som kunde kopplas till den hypertrofiska utvecklingen av hjärtmuskeln: "Ateroskleros", "ECM och adhesionsmolekyler", "Fettsyrametabolism", "Glukosmetabolis-men" och "Mitokondrien". Mikrovesiklarna hade en diameter på 40-300 nm och innehöll kromosomala DNA-sekvenser. När mikrovesiklarna överfördes till en annan celltyp (fibroblaster) resulterade det i ett förändrat genuttryck i fibroblasterna. Exosomer från hjärtmuskelcellerna som odlats med eller utan tillväxtfaktor hade en diameter på 50-80 nm. En stor pool av olika gentranskript var gemensam för alla exosomer oavsett stimulering eller ej. En mindre pool av gentranskript varierade i innehåll mellan de stimulerade och ostimulerade hjärtmuskelcellerna. I den gemensamma gentranskript poolen var ca 14 % ribosomala, ca 14 % var okända och ca 5 % var associerade till mitokondrien och dess funktion. Slutsats: Microarraystudierna visade att transkriptionsreglering i ett stabilt skede av hypertrofiutvecklingen är en balans mellan pro- och anti-hypertrofiska mekanismer och att olika gengrupper var olika reglerade vid olika tidpunkter i hjärtmuskeltillväxten. OPLS-DA är ett mycket användbart och kraftfullt verktyg när man analyserar genexpressionsdata, särskilt för att hitta grupper av gen-transkript som är svåra att upptäcka med traditionell statistik. Microvesikel- och exosomstudierna visade att mikrovesiklar och exosomer som frisätts från hjärtmuskelceller innehåller både DNA och RNA och kan vara inblandade i händelserna i målceller genom att underlätta en rad processer, inklusive ändringar av genuttryck. Olika stimulering av hjärtmuskelcellen kan påverka innehållet i exosomernas som produceras, vilket indikerar att exosomernas signalfunktion kan variera beroende på hjärtmuskelcellens tillstånd.
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Characterizing Rho Kinase Activity Using a Novel PET Tracer in Hypertrophied CardiomyocytesMoreau, Steven 06 June 2012 (has links)
Cardiac hypertrophy is a compensatory response to increased work load or stress on the heart, but over time can lead to heart failure and death. The molecular mechanisms underlying this disease are still not completely understood, however the Rho/Rho kinase pathway has been shown to play a role. N-[11C]-methyl-hydroxyfasudil, a PET radiotracer, binds to active Rho kinase and could be a possible tracer for hypertrophy. Hypertrophy was induced in vitro using the β-adrenergic receptor agonist isoproterenol to evaluate optimal Rho kinase activity. Rho kinase activity data was correlated to N-[11C]-methyl-hydroxyfasudil binding. Cardiac hypertrophy was verified with an increase in nuclear size (1.74 fold) and cell size (~2 fold), activation of hypertrophic signalling pathways, and increased Rho kinase activity (1.64 fold). This correlated to a 10.3% increase in N-[11C]-methyl-hydroxyfasudil binding. This data suggests that N-[11C]-methyl-hydroxyfasudil may be useful as a radiotracer for detecting cardiac hypertrophy and merits further in vivo investigation.
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Aerobinio pajėgumo sąsaja su širdies struktūra ir funkcija / The Relation of Aerobic Capacity with Cardiac Structure and FunctionBogdelis, Andrius 10 May 2006 (has links)
Subject of the study. Aerobic capacity and cardiac structure and function of healthy young males. Background. Data regarding the relationship between the parameters of aerobic capacity (such as maximal oxygen uptake or anaerobic threshold) and cardiac structure as well as function remain sparse and controversial. Aim. To determine how the parameters of aerobic capacity are correlated with those of cardiac structure and function. Objectives: 1. To determine the correlation between anaerobic thresholds and myocardial structure. 2. To determine how strongly the maximal oxygen uptake and cardiac structure are correlated. 3. To determine the correlation of indices of aerobic capacity to the parameters of myocardial function at rest. Hypothesis. Cardiac structure and function of healthy young men is directly linked not only to maximal oxygen uptake but anaerobic thresholds as well. Conclusions. The direct correlation of the parameters of concentric cardiac hypertrophy with aerobic capacity (anaerobic thresholds as well as maximal oxygen uptake) indices was detected. However, we failed to detect a significant correlation between indices of eccentric cardiac hypertrophy or myocardial function and aerobic capacity.
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Ištvermės lavinamosios treniruotės įtaka sportininkų širdies kairiojo skilvelio struktūrai bei funkcijai / Impact of the endurance exercise training on structure and function of left ventricular myocardiumBisikirskas, Valdas 16 May 2006 (has links)
Key-words: echocardiography, cardiac hypertrophy, aerobic capacity.
Subject of the study. Endurance athletes' left ventricular morphofunction.
Background. Whether left ventricular structure and function depend on the mode of the regularly performed endurance exercise is not conclusive. If it depended indeed, specialists in sports medicine, exercise physiologist, as well as athletic coaches would have a great possibility to design the architecture and predict the function of athletes' and possibly certain type of patients myocardium in response to aerobic exercise of different kind.
Aim. To determine the peculiarities of the left ventricular structure and function between athletes of different endurance sports.
Objectives:
1. To compare endurance athletes' left ventricular structure and function with that of healthy sedentaries.
2. To compare left ventricular structure between athletes of different endurance sports.
3. To compare left ventricular function between athletes of different endurance sports.
Hypothesis. Distance-running- and swimming-induced haemodynamic overload triggers more substantial eccentric left ventricular remodelling when compared with canoe-kayak- and road-cycling-training. Regular paddling induces concentric left ventricular hypertrophic adaptation to similar extent as road cyclists' performed loads. Either mode of endurance exercise training has negative effect upon myocardial function.
Conclusions. Myocardial mass is significantly greater in endurance... [to full text]
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Matrix metalloproteinase-2 mediates angiotensin II-induced hypertensionOdenbach, Jeffrey Unknown Date
No description available.
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THE ROLE OF THE L-TYPE CALCIUM CHANNEL AND ITS CARBOXYL-TERMINUSByse, Miranda Jean 01 January 2010 (has links)
In the heart, the primary role of the L-type calcium channel (LTCC) CaV1.2 is to conduct calcium into cardiomyocytes and initiate contraction. However, part of the CaV1.2 channel itself, the cleaved carboxyl-terminus (CCt) can also localize to the nucleus and regulate gene transcription. Therefore, the goal of this dissertation project was to determine the role and regulation of CCt in the embryonic and adult heart. The global hypothesis of my dissertation project is that CCt localizes to the nucleus in embryonic and adult cardiomyocytes via a calcium-mediated mechanism and regulates transcription. A model of pharmacological LTCC block-induced perturbation of murine embryonic heart development was first utilized to study the role of CCt. Pharmacological block at embryonic day 10 perturbed cardiogenesis and increased CaV1.2 expression. This result was not mimicked by removal of extracellular calcium or inhibition of calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Co-currently, pharmacological block decreased CCt nuclear localization in embryonic cardiomyocytes. At the transcriptional level, CCt suppressed the CaV1.2 promoter. This indicated that the observed upregulation of CaV1.2 induced by pharmacological block may be caused by nuclear localization of the transcriptional repressor, CCt. Therefore, the conclusion was made that pharmacological LTCC block perturbed embryonic cardiogenesis by decreasing nuclear localization of the transcription factor CCt; implying a role for CCt in embryonic heart development. Next, CCt regulation was studied in the adult heart. Similar to the embryonic heart, pharmacological LTCC block decreased nuclear localization of CCt. Inhibition of the calcium activated phosphatase calcineurin also decreased CCt nuclear localization. To determine a role for CCt in the adult heart, CCt nuclear localization was measured in response to hypertrophic stimuli. Serum-induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy significantly increased nuclear localization of CCt. In conclusion, this dissertation supports the hypothesis that CCt localizes to the nucleus in embryonic and adult cardiomyocytes, and that this regulation is mediated by calcium entry into the cardiomyocyte. Furthermore, data from this dissertation suggests that CCt nuclear localization may play an important role in embryonic heart development and adult cardiac hypertrophy.
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Characterizing Rho Kinase Activity Using a Novel PET Tracer in Hypertrophied CardiomyocytesMoreau, Steven 06 June 2012 (has links)
Cardiac hypertrophy is a compensatory response to increased work load or stress on the heart, but over time can lead to heart failure and death. The molecular mechanisms underlying this disease are still not completely understood, however the Rho/Rho kinase pathway has been shown to play a role. N-[11C]-methyl-hydroxyfasudil, a PET radiotracer, binds to active Rho kinase and could be a possible tracer for hypertrophy. Hypertrophy was induced in vitro using the β-adrenergic receptor agonist isoproterenol to evaluate optimal Rho kinase activity. Rho kinase activity data was correlated to N-[11C]-methyl-hydroxyfasudil binding. Cardiac hypertrophy was verified with an increase in nuclear size (1.74 fold) and cell size (~2 fold), activation of hypertrophic signalling pathways, and increased Rho kinase activity (1.64 fold). This correlated to a 10.3% increase in N-[11C]-methyl-hydroxyfasudil binding. This data suggests that N-[11C]-methyl-hydroxyfasudil may be useful as a radiotracer for detecting cardiac hypertrophy and merits further in vivo investigation.
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