11 results on '"Repetti GG"'
Search Results
2. Mechanism based therapies enable personalised treatment of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
- Author
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Margara F, Psaras Y, Wang ZJ, Schmid M, Doste R, Garfinkel AC, Repetti GG, Seidman JG, Seidman CE, Rodriguez B, Toepfer CN, and Bueno-Orovio A
- Subjects
- Humans, Mutation, Myosin Heavy Chains genetics, Troponin T metabolism, Troponin I genetics, Precision Medicine, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic genetics, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic therapy, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic metabolism
- Abstract
Cardiomyopathies have unresolved genotype-phenotype relationships and lack disease-specific treatments. Here we provide a framework to identify genotype-specific pathomechanisms and therapeutic targets to accelerate the development of precision medicine. We use human cardiac electromechanical in-silico modelling and simulation which we validate with experimental hiPSC-CM data and modelling in combination with clinical biomarkers. We select hypertrophic cardiomyopathy as a challenge for this approach and study genetic variations that mutate proteins of the thick (MYH7
R403Q/+ ) and thin filaments (TNNT2R92Q/+ , TNNI3R21C/+ ) of the cardiac sarcomere. Using in-silico techniques we show that the destabilisation of myosin super relaxation observed in hiPSC-CMs drives disease in virtual cells and ventricles carrying the MYH7R403Q/+ variant, and that secondary effects on thin filament activation are necessary to precipitate slowed relaxation of the cell and diastolic insufficiency in the chamber. In-silico modelling shows that Mavacamten corrects the MYH7R403Q/+ phenotype in agreement with hiPSC-CM experiments. Our in-silico model predicts that the thin filament variants TNNT2R92Q/+ and TNNI3R21C/+ display altered calcium regulation as central pathomechanism, for which Mavacamten provides incomplete salvage, which we have corroborated in TNNT2R92Q/+ and TNNI3R21C/+ hiPSC-CMs. We define the ideal characteristics of a novel thin filament-targeting compound and show its efficacy in-silico. We demonstrate that hybrid human-based hiPSC-CM and in-silico studies accelerate pathomechanism discovery and classification testing, improving clinical interpretation of genetic variants, and directing rational therapeutic targeting and design., (© 2022. The Author(s).)- Published
- 2022
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3. A 77-Year-Old Woman With Capillary Hypoxia and Perioral Cyanosis.
- Author
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Hodson DZ, Repetti GG, Hoesterey DT, Jeon Y, Bachour K, Mempin RL, Wang TS, and Levine M
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- Humans, Female, Aged, Respiratory Function Tests, Oxygen, Dyspnea diagnosis, Dyspnea etiology, Oximetry, Hypoxia diagnosis, Hypoxia etiology
- Abstract
Case Presentation: A 77-year-old woman with asthma, hypothyroidism, irritable bowel syndrome, overactive bladder, and multiple rheumatologic conditions was sent from the clinic to the ED for evaluation of hypoxia. In the clinic, she reported dizziness without shortness of breath and was noted to have perioral cyanosis with an oxygen saturation measured by pulse oximetry (Spo
2 ) of 80%. She was given a nonrebreather mask delivering oxygen at 8 L/min, but the Spo2 remained at 77% to 82%. In the ED, the patient reported intermittent shortness of breath, 2 to 3 days of mild left lower extremity swelling, and a brief episode of lightheadedness earlier in the day that had since resolved. She denied fevers/chills, upper respiratory symptoms, and chest pain. She had been referred to the pulmonology clinic 3 years earlier to evaluate mild hypoxia with Spo2 readings in the low 90% range, but pulmonary function testing failed to identify an etiology. There was no history of VTE. Her rheumatologic conditions included osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, Sjögren's syndrome, and fibromyalgia., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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4. LncRNAs in Inflammation: Lessons From a Preclinical Investigation of Mexis Therapy in Atherosclerosis.
- Author
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Salisbury DA, Kallapur A, Repetti GG, Fraga J, Kim J, Wu X, and Sallam T
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- 2022
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5. Epicardially Placed Bioengineered Cardiomyocyte Xenograft in Immune-Competent Rat Model of Heart Failure.
- Author
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Chinyere IR, Bradley P, Uhlorn J, Eason J, Mohran S, Repetti GG, Daugherty S, Koevary JW, Goldman S, and Lancaster JJ
- Abstract
Background: Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) are under preclinical investigation as a cell-based therapy for heart failure post-myocardial infarction. In a previous study, tissue-engineered cardiac grafts were found to improve hosts' cardiac electrical and mechanical functions. However, the durability of effect, immune response, and in vitro properties of the tissue graft remained uncharacterized. This present study is aimed at confirming the graft therapeutic efficacy in an immune-competent chronic heart failure (CHF) model and providing evaluation of the in vitro properties of the tissue graft., Methods: hiPSC-CMs and human dermal fibroblasts were cultured into a synthetic bioabsorbable scaffold. The engineered grafts underwent epicardial implantation in infarcted immune-competent male Sprague-Dawley rats. Plasma samples were collected throughout the study to quantify antibody titers. At the study endpoint, all cohorts underwent echocardiographic, hemodynamic, electrophysiologic, and histopathologic assessments., Results: The epicardially placed tissue graft therapy improved ( p < 0.05) in vivo and ex vivo cardiac function compared to the untreated CHF cohort. Total IgM and IgG increased for both the untreated and graft-treated CHF cohorts. An immune response to the grafts was detected after seven days in graft-treated CHF rats only. In vitro , engineered grafts exhibited responsiveness to beta-adrenergic receptor agonism/antagonism and SERCA inhibition and elicited complex molecular profiles., Conclusions: This hiPSC-CM-derived cardiac graft improved systolic and diastolic cardiac function in immune-competent CHF rats. The improvements were detectable at seven weeks post-graft implantation despite an antibody response beginning at week one and peaking at week three. This suggests that non-integrating cell-based therapy delivered by a bioengineered tissue graft for ischemic cardiomyopathy is a viable treatment option., Competing Interests: The work outlined in this report was the basis for forming the commercial entity Avery Therapeutics, Inc. Drs. Goldman, Koevary, Lancaster, and Ms. Sherry Daugherty have disclosed a financial interest in Avery Therapeutics to the University of Arizona. In addition, the University of Arizona has a financial interest in Avery Therapeutics. These interests have been reviewed and are being managed by the University of Arizona in accordance with its policies on outside interests. All other authors have no relevant conflicts to disclose., (Copyright © 2021 Ikeotunye Royal Chinyere et al.)
- Published
- 2021
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6. CalTrack: High-Throughput Automated Calcium Transient Analysis in Cardiomyocytes.
- Author
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Psaras Y, Margara F, Cicconet M, Sparrow AJ, Repetti GG, Schmid M, Steeples V, Wilcox JAL, Bueno-Orovio A, Redwood CS, Watkins HC, Robinson P, Rodriguez B, Seidman JG, Seidman CE, and Toepfer CN
- Subjects
- Animals, Automation, Laboratory, Cells, Cultured, Guinea Pigs, Humans, Kinetics, Mutation, Missense, Troponin I genetics, Troponin I metabolism, Workflow, Algorithms, Calcium metabolism, Calcium Signaling, High-Throughput Screening Assays, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells metabolism, Microscopy, Fluorescence, Myocytes, Cardiac metabolism
- Abstract
[Figure: see text].
- Published
- 2021
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7. Discordant clinical features of identical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy twins.
- Author
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Repetti GG, Kim Y, Pereira AC, Ingles J, Russell MW, Lakdawala NK, Ho CY, Day S, Semsarian C, McDonough B, DePalma SR, Quiat D, Green EM, Seidman CE, and Seidman JG
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Child, Preschool, Female, Follow-Up Studies, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic genetics, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic metabolism, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic physiopathology, Echocardiography, Epigenesis, Genetic, Heart Ventricles metabolism, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Muscle Proteins genetics, Muscle Proteins metabolism, Twins, Monozygotic
- Abstract
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a disease of heart muscle, which affects ∼1 in 500 individuals and is characterized by increased left ventricular wall thickness. While HCM is caused by pathogenic variants in any one of eight sarcomere protein genes, clinical expression varies considerably, even among patients with the same pathogenic variant. To determine whether background genetic variation or environmental factors drive these differences, we studied disease progression in 11 pairs of monozygotic HCM twins. The twin pairs were followed for 5 to 14 y, and left ventricular wall thickness, left atrial diameter, and left ventricular ejection fraction were collected from echocardiograms at various time points. All nine twin pairs with sarcomere protein gene variants and two with unknown disease etiologies had discordant morphologic features of the heart, demonstrating the influence of nonhereditable factors on clinical expression of HCM. Whole genome sequencing analysis of the six monozygotic twins with discordant HCM phenotypes did not reveal notable somatic genetic variants that might explain their clinical differences. Discordant cardiac morphology of identical twins highlights a significant role for epigenetics and environment in HCM disease progression., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing interest.
- Published
- 2021
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8. Genetic Studies of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Singaporeans Identify Variants in TNNI3 and TNNT2 That Are Common in Chinese Patients.
- Author
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Pua CJ, Tham N, Chin CWL, Walsh R, Khor CC, Toepfer CN, Repetti GG, Garfinkel AC, Ewoldt JF, Cloonan P, Chen CS, Lim SQ, Cai J, Loo LY, Kong SC, Chiang CWK, Whiffin N, de Marvao A, Lio PM, Hii AA, Yang CX, Le TT, Bylstra Y, Lim WK, Teo JX, Padilha K, Silva GV, Pan B, Govind R, Buchan RJ, Barton PJR, Tan P, Foo R, Yip JWL, Wong RCC, Chan WX, Pereira AC, Tang HC, Jamuar SS, Ware JS, Seidman JG, Seidman CE, and Cook SA
- Subjects
- Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic diagnosis, China, Female, Gene Frequency, Genetic Association Studies, Haplotypes, Heart Ventricles physiopathology, Heterozygote, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Odds Ratio, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Risk, Singapore, Asian People genetics, Cardiomyopathy, Hypertrophic genetics, Troponin I genetics, Troponin T genetics
- Abstract
Background: To assess the genetic architecture of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in patients of predominantly Chinese ancestry., Methods: We sequenced HCM disease genes in Singaporean patients (n=224) and Singaporean controls (n=3634), compared findings with additional populations and White HCM cohorts (n=6179), and performed in vitro functional studies., Results: Singaporean HCM patients had significantly fewer confidently interpreted HCM disease variants (pathogenic/likely pathogenic: 18%, P <0.0001) but an excess of variants of uncertain significance (24%, P <0.0001), as compared to Whites (pathogenic/likely pathogenic: 31%, excess of variants of uncertain significance: 7%). Two missense variants in thin filament encoding genes were commonly seen in Singaporean HCM (TNNI3:p.R79C, disease allele frequency [AF]=0.018; TNNT2:p.R286H, disease AF=0.022) and are enriched in Singaporean HCM when compared with Asian controls (TNNI3:p.R79C, Singaporean controls AF=0.0055, P =0.0057, genome aggregation database-East Asian AF=0.0062, P =0.0086; TNNT2:p.R286H, Singaporean controls AF=0.0017, P <0.0001, genome aggregation database-East Asian AF=0.0009, P <0.0001). Both these variants have conflicting annotations in ClinVar and are of low penetrance (TNNI3:p.R79C, 0.7%; TNNT2:p.R286H, 2.7%) but are predicted to be deleterious by computational tools. In population controls, TNNI3:p.R79C carriers had significantly thicker left ventricular walls compared with noncarriers while its etiological fraction is limited (0.70 [95% CI, 0.35-0.86]) and thus TNNI3:p.R79C is considered variant of uncertain significance. Mutant TNNT2:p.R286H iPSC-CMs (induced pluripotent stem cells derived cardiomyocytes) show hypercontractility, increased metabolic requirements, and cellular hypertrophy and the etiological fraction (0.93 [95% CI, 0.83-0.97]) support the likely pathogenicity of TNNT2:p.R286H., Conclusions: As compared with Whites, Chinese HCM patients commonly have low penetrance risk alleles in TNNT2 or TNNI3 but exhibit few clinically actionable HCM variants overall. This highlights the need for greater study of HCM genetics in non-White populations.
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- 2020
- Full Text
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9. Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Cardiomyocyte Patch in Rats With Heart Failure.
- Author
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Lancaster JJ, Sanchez P, Repetti GG, Juneman E, Pandey AC, Chinyere IR, Moukabary T, LaHood N, Daugherty SL, and Goldman S
- Subjects
- Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Fibroblasts transplantation, Humans, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Ventricular Function, Left, Heart Failure therapy, Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells transplantation, Myocytes, Cardiac transplantation, Surgical Mesh, Tissue Engineering, Tissue Scaffolds
- Abstract
Background: To treat chronic heart failure (CHF), we developed a robust, easy to handle bioabsorbable tissue-engineered patch embedded with human neonatal fibroblasts and human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs). This patch was implanted on the epicardial surface of the heart covering the previously infarcted tissue., Methods: Sprague-Dawley rats (6-8 weeks old) underwent sham surgery (n = 12) or left coronary artery ligation (n = 45). CHF rats were randomized 3 weeks after ligation to CHF control with sham thoracotomy (n = 21), or a fibroblasts/hiPSC-CMs patch (n = 24) was implanted. All sham surgery rats also underwent a sham thoracotomy. At 3 weeks after randomization, hemodynamics, echocardiography, electrophysiologic, and cell survival studies were performed., Results: Patch-treated rats had decreased (P < .05) left ventricular-end diastolic pressure and the time constant of left ventricular relaxation (Tau), increased anterior wall thickness in diastole, and improved echocardiography-derived indices of diastolic function (E/e' [ratio of early peak flow velocity to early peak LV velocity] and e'/a' [ratio of early to late peak left ventricular velocity]). All rats remained in normal sinus rhythm, with no dysrhythmias. Rats treated with the patch showed improved electrical activity. Transplanted hiPSC-CMs were present at 7 days but not detected at 21 days after implantation. The patch increased (P < .05) gene expression of vascular endothelial growth factor, angiopoietin 1, gap junction α-1 protein (connexin 43), β-myosin heavy 7, and insulin growth factor-1 expression in the infarcted heart., Conclusions: Epicardial implantation of a fibroblasts/hiPSC-CMs patch electrically enhanced conduction, lowered left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, and improved diastolic function in rats with CHF. These changes were associated with increases in cytokine expression., (Copyright © 2019 The Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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10. Novel Therapies for Prevention and Early Treatment of Cardiomyopathies.
- Author
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Repetti GG, Toepfer CN, Seidman JG, and Seidman CE
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- Animals, Cardiomyopathies diagnosis, Cardiomyopathies genetics, Cardiomyopathies physiopathology, Cardiovascular Agents adverse effects, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Humans, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Phenotype, Prognosis, Risk Factors, Cardiomyopathies therapy, Cardiovascular Agents therapeutic use, Genetic Therapy adverse effects, Genetic Therapy mortality
- Abstract
Heritable cardiomyopathies are a class of heart diseases caused by variations in a number of genetic loci. Genetic variants on one allele lead to either a degraded protein, which causes a haploinsufficiency of that protein, or a nonfunctioning protein that subverts the molecular system within which the protein works. Over years, both of these mechanisms eventually lead to diseased heart tissue and symptoms of a failing heart. Most cardiomyopathy treatments repurpose heart failure drugs to manage these symptoms and avoid adverse outcomes. There are few therapies that correct the underlying pathogenic genetic or molecular mechanism. This review will reflect on this unmet clinical need in genetic cardiomyopathies and consider a variety of therapies that address the mechanism of disease rather than patient symptoms. These therapies are genetic, targeting a defective gene or transcript, or ameliorating a genetic insufficiency. However, there are also a number of small molecules under exploration that modulate downstream faulty protein products affected in cardiomyopathies.
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- 2019
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11. Large-Scale Production of Mature Neurons from Human Pluripotent Stem Cells in a Three-Dimensional Suspension Culture System.
- Author
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Rigamonti A, Repetti GG, Sun C, Price FD, Reny DC, Rapino F, Weisinger K, Benkler C, Peterson QP, Davidow LS, Hansson EM, and Rubin LL
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- Biomarkers metabolism, Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor pharmacology, Cell Differentiation drug effects, Ciliary Neurotrophic Factor pharmacology, Glial Cell Line-Derived Neurotrophic Factor pharmacology, Humans, Microtubule-Associated Proteins genetics, Microtubule-Associated Proteins metabolism, Nerve Net physiology, Neurogenesis genetics, Neurons classification, Neurons cytology, Neurons metabolism, Observer Variation, Pluripotent Stem Cells cytology, Pluripotent Stem Cells metabolism, Repressor Proteins genetics, Repressor Proteins metabolism, Reproducibility of Results, Smad Proteins antagonists & inhibitors, Smad Proteins genetics, Smad Proteins metabolism, Spheroids, Cellular cytology, Spheroids, Cellular drug effects, Spheroids, Cellular metabolism, T-Box Domain Proteins genetics, T-Box Domain Proteins metabolism, Tumor Suppressor Proteins genetics, Tumor Suppressor Proteins metabolism, Cell Culture Techniques, Nerve Net cytology, Neurogenesis drug effects, Neurons drug effects, Pluripotent Stem Cells drug effects
- Abstract
Human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) offer a renewable source of cells that can be expanded indefinitely and differentiated into virtually any type of cell in the human body, including neurons. This opens up unprecedented possibilities to study neuronal cell and developmental biology and cellular pathology of the nervous system, provides a platform for the screening of chemical libraries that affect these processes, and offers a potential source of transplantable cells for regenerative approaches to neurological disease. However, defining protocols that permit a large number and high yield of neurons has proved difficult. We present differentiation protocols for the generation of distinct subtypes of neurons in a highly reproducible manner, with minimal experiment-to-experiment variation. These neurons form synapses with neighboring cells, exhibit spontaneous electrical activity, and respond appropriately to depolarization. hPSC-derived neurons exhibit a high degree of maturation and survive in culture for up to 4-5 months, even without astrocyte feeder layers., (Copyright © 2016 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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