112 results on '"Jensen BC"'
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2. BIN1 is reduced and Cav1.2 trafficking is impaired in human failing cardiomyocytes.
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Hong TT, Smyth JW, Chu KY, Vogan JM, Fong TS, Jensen BC, Fang K, Halushka MK, Russell SD, Colecraft H, Hoopes CW, Ocorr K, Chi NC, Shaw RM, Hong, Ting-Ting, Smyth, James W, Chu, Kevin Y, Vogan, Jacob M, Fong, Tina S, and Jensen, Brian C
- Abstract
Background: Heart failure is a growing epidemic, and a typical aspect of heart failure pathophysiology is altered calcium transients. Normal cardiac calcium transients are initiated by Cav1.2 channels at cardiac T tubules. Bridging integrator 1 (BIN1) is a membrane scaffolding protein that causes Cav1.2 to traffic to T tubules in healthy hearts. The mechanisms of Cav1.2 trafficking in heart failure are not known.Objective: To study BIN1 expression and its effect on Cav1.2 trafficking in failing hearts.Methods: Intact myocardium and freshly isolated cardiomyocytes from nonfailing and end-stage failing human hearts were used to study BIN1 expression and Cav1.2 localization. To confirm Cav1.2 surface expression dependence on BIN1, patch-clamp recordings were performed of Cav1.2 current in cell lines with and without trafficking-competent BIN1. Also, in adult mouse cardiomyocytes, surface Cav1.2 and calcium transients were studied after small hairpin RNA-mediated knockdown of BIN1. For a functional readout in intact heart, calcium transients and cardiac contractility were analyzed in a zebrafish model with morpholino-mediated knockdown of BIN1.Results: BIN1 expression is significantly decreased in failing cardiomyocytes at both mRNA (30% down) and protein (36% down) levels. Peripheral Cav1.2 is reduced to 42% by imaging, and a biochemical T-tubule fraction of Cav1.2 is reduced to 68%. The total calcium current is reduced to 41% in a cell line expressing a nontrafficking BIN1 mutant. In mouse cardiomyocytes, BIN1 knockdown decreases surface Cav1.2 and impairs calcium transients. In zebrafish hearts, BIN1 knockdown causes a 75% reduction in calcium transients and severe ventricular contractile dysfunction.Conclusions: The data indicate that BIN1 is significantly reduced in human heart failure, and this reduction impairs Cav1.2 trafficking, calcium transients, and contractility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2012
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3. Multifaceted roles of neutrophils in cardiac disease.
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Morrissey S, Kirkland LG, Phillips TK, Levit RD, Hopke A, and Jensen BC
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Neutrophils, the most abundant leukocytes in human blood, have long been recognized as critical first responders in the innate immune system's defense against pathogens. Some of the more notable innate anti-microbial properties of neutrophils include generation of superoxide free radicals like myeloperoxidase (MPO), production of proteases that reshape the extracellular matrix allowing for easier access to infected tissues, and release of neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), extruded pieces of DNA that ensnare bacterial and fungi. These mechanisms developed to provide neutrophils with a vast array of specialized functions to provide the host defense against infection in an acute setting. However, emerging evidence over the past few decades has revealed a far more complex and nuanced role for these neutrophil-driven processes in various chronic conditions, particularly in cardiovascular diseases. The pathophysiology of cardiac diseases involves a complex interplay of hemodynamic, neurohumoral, and inflammatory factors. Neutrophils, as key mediators of inflammation, contribute significantly to this intricate network. Their involvement extends far beyond their classical role in pathogen clearance, encompassing diverse functions that can both exacerbate tissue damage and contribute to repair processes. Here we consider the contributions of neutrophils to myocardial infarction, heart failure, cardiac arrhythmias and non-ischemic cardiomyopathies. Understanding these complex interactions is crucial for developing novel therapeutic strategies aimed at modulating neutrophil functions in these highly morbid cardiac diseases., (Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for Leukocyte Biology 2025.)
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- 2025
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4. Unmasking Primary Carnitine Deficiency as a Mimic of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy.
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Stafford SG, Sang CJ 3rd, Jensen BC, Sivak JA, and Weickert TT
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Primary carnitine deficiency may mimic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and be mistakenly attributed to genotype-negative sarcomeric protein dysfunction in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Although rare, timely diagnosis may have significant implications on management and should prompt testing of family members., Competing Interests: Dr Jensen has received research funding from grants R01 HL140067 and R01 HL165294. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (© 2024 The Authors.)
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- 2024
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5. Depressive symptoms are associated with clinical outcomes in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.
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Sherwood A, Blumenthal JA, Mentz RJ, Koch GG, Rogers JG, Chang PP, Chien C, Adams KF Jr, Rose-Jones LJ, Jensen BC, Donahue M, Johnson KS, and Hinderliter AL
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- Aged, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Biomarkers blood, Follow-Up Studies, Hospitalization, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Survival Rate trends, Depression epidemiology, Heart Failure physiopathology, Heart Failure psychology, Heart Failure complications, Stroke Volume physiology
- Abstract
Aims: The objective of this study was to examine associations between elevated depressive symptoms and increased risk of adverse clinical events patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF), as well as the potential contribution of health behaviours., Methods and Results: One hundred forty-two men and women with HFrEF were enrolled through heart failure (HF) clinics and followed over time. At baseline and 6 months, depressive symptoms were assessed by the Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) and HFrEF disease activity by B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP). The Self-Care of Heart Failure Index (SCHFI) was used to assess HF self-care behaviours. Proportional hazards regression models assessed the contribution of depressive symptoms and HFrEF disease biomarkers on death or cardiovascular hospitalization. Over a median follow-up period of 4 years, 42 patients (30%) died, and 84 (60%) had cardiovascular hospitalizations. A 10-point higher baseline BDI-II score was associated with a 35% greater risk of death or cardiovascular hospitalization. Higher baseline BDI-II scores were associated with poorer HF self-care maintenance behaviours (R = -0.30, P < 0.001) and fewer daily steps (R = -0.19, P = 0.04), suggesting that elevated depressive symptoms may diminish important health behaviours. Increases in plasma BNP over 6 months were associated with worse outcomes. Changes in BDI-II and plasma BNP over 6 months were positively related (R = 0.25, P = 0.004)., Conclusions: This study confirms that elevated depressive symptoms are associated with an increased likelihood of adverse clinical outcomes in patients with HFrEF. Poor health behaviours may contribute to the adverse association of elevated depressive symptoms with the increased hazard of adverse clinical outcomes., (© 2024 The Authors. ESC Heart Failure published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of European Society of Cardiology.)
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- 2024
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6. In situ-crosslinked Zippersomes enhance cardiac repair by increasing accumulation and retention.
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Jasiewicz NE, Mei KC, Oh HM, Bonacquisti EE, Chaudhari A, Byrum C, Jensen BC, and Nguyen J
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Mesenchymal stem cell (MSC)-derived extracellular vesicles (EVs) are a promising treatment for myocardial infarction (MI), but their therapeutic efficacy is limited by inefficient accumulation at the target site. A minimally invasive MSC EV therapy that enhances EV accumulation at the disease site and extends EV retention could significantly improve post-infarct cardiac regeneration. Here, we show that EVs decorated with the next-generation of high-affinity (HiA) heterodimerizing leucine zippers, termed HiA Zippersomes, amplify targetable surface areas through in situ crosslinking and exhibited ~7-fold enhanced accumulation within the infarcted myocardium in mice after 3 days and continued to be retained up to Day 21, surpassing the performance of unmodified EVs. After MI in mice, HiA Zippersomes increase the ejection fraction by 53% and 100% compared with unmodified EVs and phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), respectively. This notable improvement in cardiac function played a crucial role in restoring healthy heart performance. HiA Zippersomes also robustly decrease infarct size by 52% and 60% compared with unmodified EVs and PBS, respectively, thus representing a promising platform for minimally invasive vesicle delivery to the infarcted heart compared to intramyocardial injections., (© 2024 The Author(s). Bioengineering & Translational Medicine published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Institute of Chemical Engineers.)
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- 2024
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7. Novel Insights into Post-Myocardial Infarction Cardiac Remodeling through Algorithmic Detection of Cell-Type Composition Shifts.
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Gural B, Kirkland L, Hockett A, Sandroni P, Zhang J, Rosa-Garrido M, Swift SK, Chapski D, Flinn MA, O'Meara CC, Vondriska TM, Patterson M, Jensen BC, and Rau CD
- Abstract
Background: Recent advances in single cell sequencing have led to an increased focus on the role of cell-type composition in phenotypic presentation and disease progression. Cell-type composition research in the heart is challenging due to large, frequently multinucleated cardiomyocytes that preclude most single cell approaches from obtaining accurate measurements of cell composition. Our in silico studies reveal that ignoring cell type composition when calculating differentially expressed genes (DEGs) can have significant consequences. For example, a relatively small change in cell abundance of only 10% can result in over 25% of DEGs being false positives., Methods: We have implemented an algorithmic approach that uses snRNAseq datasets as a reference to accurately calculate cell type compositions from bulk RNAseq datasets through robust data cleaning, gene selection, and multi-sample cross-subject and cross-cell-type deconvolution. We applied our approach to cardiomyocyte-specific α1A adrenergic receptor (CM-α1A-AR) knockout mice. 8-12 week-old mice (either WT or CM-α1A-KO) were subjected to permanent left coronary artery (LCA) ligation or sham surgery (n=4 per group). Transcriptomes from the infarct border zones were collected 3 days later and analyzed using our algorithm to determine cell-type abundances, corrected differential expression calculations using DESeq2, and validated these findings using RNAscope., Results: Uncorrected DEGs for the CM-α1A-KO X LCA interaction term featured many cell-type specific genes such as Timp4 (fibroblasts) and Aplnr (cardiomyocytes) and overall GO enrichment for terms pertaining to cardiomyocyte differentiation (P=3.1E-4). Using our algorithm, we observe a striking loss of cardiomyocytes and gain in fibroblasts in the α1A-KO + LCA mice that was not recapitulated in WT + LCA animals, although we did observe a similar increase in macrophage abundance in both conditions. This recapitulates prior results that showed a much more severe heart failure phenotype in CM-α1A-KO + LCA mice. Following correction for cell-type, our DEGs now highlight a novel set of genes enriched for GO terms such as cardiac contraction (P=3.7E-5) and actin filament organization (P=6.3E-5)., Conclusions: Our algorithm identifies and corrects for cell-type abundance in bulk RNAseq datasets opening new avenues for research on novel genes and pathways as well as an improved understanding of the role of cardiac cell types in cardiovascular disease.
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- 2024
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8. Navigating cancer therapy induced cardiotoxicity: From pathophysiology to treatment innovations.
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Tetterton-Kellner J, Jensen BC, and Nguyen J
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- Humans, Drug Delivery Systems, Animals, Cardiotoxicity etiology, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Neoplasms drug therapy
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Every year, more than a million people in the United States undergo chemotherapy or radiation therapy for cancer, as estimated by the CDC. While chemotherapy has been an instrumental tool for treating cancer, it also causes severe adverse effects. The more commonly acknowledged adverse effects include hair loss, fatigue, and nausea, but a more severe and longer lasting side effect is cardiotoxicity. Cardiotoxicity, or heart damage, is a common complication of cancer treatments. It can range from mild to severe, and it can affect some patients temporarily or others permanently, even after they are cured of cancer. Dexrazoxane is the only FDA-approved drug for treating anthracycline induced cardiotoxicity, but it also has drawbacks and adverse effects. There is no other type of chemotherapy induced cardiotoxicity that has an approved treatment option. In this review, we discuss the pathophysiology of chemotherapeutic-induced cardiotoxicity, methods and guidelines of diagnosis, methods of treatment and mitigation, and current drug delivery approaches in therapeutic development., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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9. (Less) Time and Energy: Toward a Better Understanding of the Chronology of Anthracycline-Induced Cardiotoxicity.
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Kirkland LG and Jensen BC
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Competing Interests: Dr Jensen is supported by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute grants R01HL165294 and 2R01HL140067. Dr Kirkland has reported that he has no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.
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- 2024
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10. The alpha-1A adrenergic receptor regulates mitochondrial oxidative metabolism in the mouse heart.
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Sandroni PB, Schroder MA, Hawkins HT, Bailon JD, Huang W, Hagen JT, Montgomery M, Hong SJ, Chin AL, Zhang J, Rodrigo MC, Kim B, Simpson PC, Schisler JC, Ellis JM, Fisher-Wellman KH, and Jensen BC
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- Animals, Mice, Fatty Acids metabolism, Mice, Knockout, Mitochondria metabolism, Oxidative Stress, Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-1 metabolism, Myocardial Contraction, Myocardial Infarction metabolism
- Abstract
Aims: The sympathetic nervous system regulates numerous critical aspects of mitochondrial function in the heart through activation of adrenergic receptors (ARs) on cardiomyocytes. Mounting evidence suggests that α1-ARs, particularly the α1A subtype, are cardioprotective and may mitigate the deleterious effects of chronic β-AR activation by shared ligands. The mechanisms underlying these adaptive effects remain unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that α1A-ARs adaptively regulate cardiomyocyte oxidative metabolism in both the uninjured and infarcted heart., Methods: We used high resolution respirometry, fatty acid oxidation (FAO) enzyme assays, substrate-specific electron transport chain (ETC) enzyme assays, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and proteomics to characterize mitochondrial function comprehensively in the uninjured hearts of wild type and α1A-AR knockout mice and defined the effects of chronic β-AR activation and myocardial infarction on selected mitochondrial functions., Results: We found that isolated cardiac mitochondria from α1A-KO mice had deficits in fatty acid-dependent respiration, FAO, and ETC enzyme activity. TEM revealed abnormalities of mitochondrial morphology characteristic of these functional deficits. The selective α1A-AR agonist A61603 enhanced fatty-acid dependent respiration, fatty acid oxidation, and ETC enzyme activity in isolated cardiac mitochondria. The β-AR agonist isoproterenol enhanced oxidative stress in vitro and this adverse effect was mitigated by A61603. A61603 enhanced ETC Complex I activity and protected contractile function following myocardial infarction., Conclusions: Collectively, these novel findings position α1A-ARs as critical regulators of cardiomyocyte metabolism in the basal state and suggest that metabolic mechanisms may underlie the protective effects of α1A-AR activation in the failing heart., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest B.C.J. and P.C.S. are inventors on a patent (US PR 62/300,549) for using an α1A-AR agonist to treat heart failure., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier Ltd.)
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- 2024
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11. Novel Pan-ERR Agonists Ameliorate Heart Failure Through Enhancing Cardiac Fatty Acid Metabolism and Mitochondrial Function.
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Xu W, Billon C, Li H, Wilderman A, Qi L, Graves A, Rideb JRDC, Zhao Y, Hayes M, Yu K, Losby M, Hampton CS, Adeyemi CM, Hong SJ, Nasiotis E, Fu C, Oh TG, Fan W, Downes M, Welch RD, Evans RM, Milosavljevic A, Walker JK, Jensen BC, Pei L, Burris T, and Zhang L
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- Mice, Animals, Cardiomegaly metabolism, Mitochondria metabolism, Myocytes, Cardiac metabolism, Receptors, Estrogen genetics, Receptors, Estrogen metabolism, Fatty Acids metabolism, Heart Failure
- Abstract
Background: Cardiac metabolic dysfunction is a hallmark of heart failure (HF). Estrogen-related receptors ERRα and ERRγ are essential regulators of cardiac metabolism. Therefore, activation of ERR could be a potential therapeutic intervention for HF. However, in vivo studies demonstrating the potential usefulness of ERR agonist for HF treatment are lacking, because compounds with pharmacokinetics appropriate for in vivo use have not been available., Methods: Using a structure-based design approach, we designed and synthesized 2 structurally distinct pan-ERR agonists, SLU-PP-332 and SLU-PP-915. We investigated the effect of ERR agonist on cardiac function in a pressure overload-induced HF model in vivo. We conducted comprehensive functional, multi-omics (RNA sequencing and metabolomics studies), and genetic dependency studies both in vivo and in vitro to dissect the molecular mechanism, ERR isoform dependency, and target specificity., Results: Both SLU-PP-332 and SLU-PP-915 significantly improved ejection fraction, ameliorated fibrosis, and increased survival associated with pressure overload-induced HF without affecting cardiac hypertrophy. A broad spectrum of metabolic genes was transcriptionally activated by ERR agonists, particularly genes involved in fatty acid metabolism and mitochondrial function. Metabolomics analysis showed substantial normalization of metabolic profiles in fatty acid/lipid and tricarboxylic acid/oxidative phosphorylation metabolites in the mouse heart with 6-week pressure overload. ERR agonists increase mitochondria oxidative capacity and fatty acid use in vitro and in vivo. Using both in vitro and in vivo genetic dependency experiments, we show that ERRγ is the main mediator of ERR agonism-induced transcriptional regulation and cardioprotection and definitively demonstrated target specificity. ERR agonism also led to downregulation of cell cycle and development pathways, which was partially mediated by E2F1 in cardiomyocytes., Conclusions: ERR agonists maintain oxidative metabolism, which confers cardiac protection against pressure overload-induced HF in vivo. Our results provide direct pharmacologic evidence supporting the further development of ERR agonists as novel HF therapeutics., Competing Interests: Disclosures Dr Zhang is a cofounder of and consultant for Pelagos Pharmaceuticals Inc. The other authors report no conflicts of interest.
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- 2024
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12. Cardiomyocyte Alpha-1A Adrenergic Receptors Mitigate Postinfarct Remodeling and Mortality by Constraining Necroptosis.
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Zhang J, Sandroni PB, Huang W, Gao X, Oswalt L, Schroder MA, Lee S, Shih YI, Huang HS, Swigart PM, Myagmar BE, Simpson PC, Rossi JS, Schisler JC, and Jensen BC
- Abstract
Clinical studies have shown that α1-adrenergic receptor antagonists (α-blockers) are associated with increased heart failure risk. The mechanism underlying that hazard and whether it arises from direct inhibition of cardiomyocyte α1-ARs or from systemic effects remain unclear. To address these issues, we created a mouse with cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of the α1A-AR subtype and found that it experienced 70% mortality within 7 days of myocardial infarction driven, in part, by excessive activation of necroptosis. We also found that patients taking α-blockers at our center were at increased risk of death after myocardial infarction, providing clinical correlation for our translational animal models., Competing Interests: This study has been supported by BCJ: NIH/NHLBI R01HL140067; American Heart Association 17GRNT33710008; and the Hugh A. McAllister Research Foundation. Drs Simpson and Jensen are inventors on a patent (US PR 62/300,549) for using an α1A-AR agonist to treat heart failure. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose., (© 2024 The Authors.)
- Published
- 2023
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13. Cardiovascular Outcomes of α-Blockers vs 5-α Reductase Inhibitors for Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia.
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Zhang J, Latour CD, Olawore O, Pate V, Friedlander DF, Stürmer T, Jonsson Funk M, and Jensen BC
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- United States epidemiology, Male, Humans, Aged, 5-alpha Reductase Inhibitors adverse effects, Cohort Studies, Medicare, Adrenergic alpha-Antagonists adverse effects, Prostatic Hyperplasia drug therapy, Prostatic Hyperplasia epidemiology, Cardiovascular System, Heart Failure
- Abstract
Importance: The most prescribed class of medications for benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) is α-blockers (ABs). However, the cardiovascular safety profile of these medications among patients with BPH is not well understood., Objective: To compare the safety of ABs vs 5-α reductase inhibitors (5-ARIs) for risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes., Design, Setting, and Participants: This active comparator, new-user cohort study was conducted using insurance claims data from a 20% random sample of Medicare beneficiaries from 2007 to 2019 to evaluate the 1-year risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes. Males aged 66 to 90 years were indexed into the cohort at new use of an AB or 5-ARI. Twelve months of continuous enrollment and at least 1 diagnosis code for BPH within 12 months prior to initiation were required. Data were analyzed from January 2007 through December 2019., Exposures: Exposure was defined by a qualifying prescription fill for an AB or 5-ARI after at least 12 months without a prescription for these drug classes., Main Outcomes and Measures: Follow-up began at a qualified refill for the study drug. Primary study outcomes were hospitalization for heart failure (HF), composite major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE; hospitalization for stroke, myocardial infarction, or death), composite MACE or hospitalization for HF, and death. Inverse probability of treatment and censoring-weighted 1-year risks, risk ratios (RRs), and risk differences (RDs) were estimated for each outcome., Results: Among 189 868 older adult males, there were 163 829 patients initiating ABs (mean [SD] age, 74.6 [6.2] years; 579 American Indian or Alaska Native [0.4%], 5890 Asian or Pacific Islander [3.6%], 9179 Black [5.6%], 10 610 Hispanic [6.5%], and 133 510 non-Hispanic White [81.5%]) and 26 039 patients initiating 5-ARIs (mean [SD] age, 75.3 [6.4] years; 76 American Indian or Alaska Native [0.3%], 827 Asian or Pacific Islander [3.2%], 1339 Black [5.1%], 1656 Hispanic [6.4%], and 21 605 non-Hispanic White [83.0%]). ABs compared with 5-ARIs were associated with an increased 1-year risk of MACE (8.95% [95% CI, 8.81%-9.09%] vs 8.32% [95% CI, 7.92%-8.72%]; RR = 1.08 [95% CI, 1.02-1.13]; RD per 1000 individuals = 6.26 [95% CI, 2.15-10.37]), composite MACE and HF (RR = 1.07; [95% CI, 1.03-1.12]; RD per 1000 individuals = 7.40 [95% CI, 2.88-11.93 ]), and death (RR = 1.07; [95% CI, 1.01-1.14]; RD per 1000 individuals = 3.85 [95% CI, 0.40-7.29]). There was no difference in risk for HF hospitalization alone., Conclusions and Relevance: These results suggest that ABs may be associated with an increased risk of adverse cardiovascular outcomes compared with 5-ARIs. If replicated with more detailed confounder data, these results may have important public health implications given these medications' widespread use.
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- 2023
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14. On Your MARCKS…Get Set…Go: The Race to Explore Myristoylation in HF Is Underway.
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Keepers BP and Jensen BC
- Abstract
Competing Interests: The authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose.
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- 2023
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15. Association of Depression Symptoms and Biomarkers of Risk on Clinical Outcomes in HFrEF.
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Sherwood A, Blumenthal JA, Mentz RJ, Koch GG, Rogers JG, Chang PP, Chien C, Adams KF Jr, Rose-Jones LJ, Jensen BC, Johnson KS, and Hinderliter AL
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Background: Prior studies have demonstrated an association of depression with adverse clinical outcomes in patients with HFrEF, but the possible mechanisms responsible for the association are not unserstood., Methods: 142 men and women with HFrEF were enrolled through HF clinics and followed over time. At baseline and 6-months, depression was assessed by the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II) and disease activity by B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP). Proportional Hazards Regression Models assessed the contribution of depressive symptoms and HFrEF disease biomarkers on death or cardiovascular hospitalization., Results: Over a median follow-up period of 4 years, 42 patients (30%) died, and 84 (60%) had cardiovascular hospitalizations. A 10-point higher baseline BDI-II score was associated with a 35% higher hazard of death or cardiovascular hospitalization. Greater baseline BDI-II scores were associated with poorer HF self-care maintenance (R=-0.30, p<0.001) and fewer daily steps (R=-0.19, p=0.04), suggesting that depression may adversely affect important health behaviors. Increases in plasma BNP over 6 months were associated with worse outcomes. Changes in BDI-II score and plasma BNP over 6 months were positively correlated (R=0.25, p=0.004)., Conclusions: This study underscores the importance of elevated depression symptoms and their association with an increased likelihood of adverse clinical outcomes in patients with HFrEF. Health behaviors may play a greater role than direct biobehavioral pathways in the adverse effects of depression on the HF disease trajectory and resultant clinical outcomes.
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- 2023
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16. Clonal Hematopoiesis and the Heart: a Toxic Relationship.
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Jensen JL, Easaw S, Anderson T, Varma Y, Zhang J, Jensen BC, and Coombs CC
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- Mice, Animals, Humans, Clonal Hematopoiesis genetics, Hematopoiesis genetics, Hematopoietic Stem Cells metabolism, Mutation, Heart Failure, Atherosclerosis
- Abstract
Purpose of Review: Clonal hematopoiesis (CH) refers to the expansion of hematopoietic stem cell clones and their cellular progeny due to somatic mutations, mosaic chromosomal alterations (mCAs), or copy number variants which naturally accumulate with age. CH has been linked to increased risk of blood cancers, but CH has also been linked to adverse cardiovascular outcomes., Recent Findings: A combination of clinical outcome studies and mouse models have offered strong evidence that CH mutations either correlate with or cause atherosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, chronic kidney disease, heart failure, pulmonary hypertension, aortic aneurysm, myocardial infarction, stroke, aortic stenosis, poor outcomes following transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) or orthotopic heart transplant, death or need of renal replacement therapy secondary to cardiogenic shock, death from cardiovascular causes at large, and enhance anthracycline cardiac toxicity. Mechanistically, some adverse outcomes are caused by macrophage secretion of IL-1β and IL-6, neutrophil invasion of injured myocardium, and T-cell skewing towards inflammatory phenotypes. CH mutations lead to harmful inflammation and arterial wall invasion by bone marrow-derived cells resulting in poor cardiovascular health and outcomes. Blockade of IL-1β or JAK2 signaling are potential avenues for preventing CH-caused cardiovascular morbidity and mortality., (© 2023. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2023
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17. ZipperCells Exhibit Enhanced Accumulation and Retention at the Site of Myocardial Infarction.
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Jasiewicz NE, Mei KC, Oh HM, Chansoria P, Hendy DA, Bonacquisti EE, Bachelder EM, Ainslie KM, Yin H, Qian L, Jensen BC, and Nguyen J
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- Humans, Myocardial Infarction therapy, Mesenchymal Stem Cells, Mesenchymal Stem Cell Transplantation methods
- Abstract
There has been extensive interest in cellular therapies for the treatment of myocardial infarction, but bottlenecks concerning cellular accumulation and retention remain. Here, a novel system of in situ crosslinking mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) for the formation of a living depot at the infarct site is reported. Bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells that are surface decorated with heterodimerizing leucine zippers, termed ZipperCells, are engineered. When delivered intravenously in sequential doses, it is demonstrated that ZipperCells can migrate to the infarct site, crosslink, and show ≈500% enhanced accumulation and ≈600% improvement in prolonged retention at 10 days after injection compared to unmodified MSCs. This study introduces an advanced approach to creating noninvasive therapeutics depots using cellular crosslinking and provides the framework for future scaffold-free delivery methods for cardiac repair., (© 2022 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
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- 2023
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18. An essential Trypanosoma brucei protein kinase: a functional analysis of regulation and the identification of inhibitors.
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Parsons M, Parsons B, Dean M, DeRocher AE, Islam Z, Maly DJ, and Jensen BC
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Introduction: The protein serine/threonine kinase AEK1 is essential in the pathogenic stage of Trypanosoma brucei, the causative agent of African trypanosomiasis. AEK1 is a member of the AGC protein kinase family, although it is not closely related to a specific human AGC kinase. Our previous chemical genetic studies showed that targeted inhibition of AEK1 in parasites expressing analog-sensitive AEK1 blocked parasite growth and enhanced survival of infected mice., Methods: To further validate AEK1 as a drug target, we used the chemical genetic system to determine the effect of a 24 hour loss of AEK1 activity on cell viability at the clonal level. A panel of 429 protein kinase inhibitors were screened against the wild-type protein for binding, using time-resolved fluorescence energy transfer (TR-FRET). The role of phosphorylation sites and motifs was probed by determining whether expression of proteins harboring mutations in these sequences could rescue AEK1 conditional knockout parasites. To determine the effect that mutations in the phosphosites have on the kinase activity of cellular AEK1 we compared the in vitro kinase activity of mutant and wild-type proteins immunoprecipitated from parasite lysates using the exogenous substrate MBP. Finally, the tagged AEK1 protein was localized by deconvolution microscopy., Results: After a 24 hour exposure to an AEK1 inhibitory analog in the chemical genetic system, less than five percent of the remaining live cells can clonally expand, further validating AEK1 as a drug target. In the AEK1 inhibitor screening assay, we identified 17 hit compounds. Complementation studies showed that of the two known phosphorylation sites in the activation loop; mutation of one abolished function while mutation of the other had no discernable effect. Mutation of the other two AEK1 phosphosites gave intermediate phenotypes. Mutations in either the hydrophobic motif at the C-terminus of the protein or in the region of AEK1 predicted to bind the hydrophobic motif were also required for function. All parasites with defective AEK1 showed reduced proliferation and defects in cytokinesis, although the tested mutations differed in terms of the extent of cell death. Kinase activity of immunoprecipitated AEK1 phosphosite mutants largely paralleled the effects seen in complementation studies, although the mutation of the phosphosite adjacent to the hydrophobic motif had a greater impact on activity than predicted by the complementation studies. AEK1 was localized to cytoplasmic puncta distinct from glycosomes and acidocalcisomes., Discussion: The rapid loss of viability of cells inhibited for AEK1 supports the idea that a short course of treatment that target AEK1 may be sufficient for treatment of people or animals infected with T. brucei. Key regulatory elements between AEK1 and its closest mammalian homolog appear to be largely conserved despite the vast evolutionary distance between mammals and T. brucei. The presence of AEK1 in cytoplasmic puncta raises the possibility that its localization may also play a role in functional activity.
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- 2023
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19. Association of QTc Formula With the Clinical Management of Patients With Cancer.
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Richardson DR, Parish PC, Tan X, Fabricio J, Andreini CL, Hicks CH, Jensen BC, Muluneh B, and Zeidner JF
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- Adult, Male, Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Aged, Heart Rate, Cohort Studies, Retrospective Studies, Long QT Syndrome chemically induced, Long QT Syndrome diagnosis, Neoplasms drug therapy
- Abstract
Importance: Monitoring of the corrected QT interval (QTc) for patients with cancer receiving chemotherapy is not standardized. Selection of QTc formula may be associated with adverse event grading and chemotherapy delivery., Objective: To describe the association of QTc formula selection with adverse event grading and chemotherapy delivery., Design, Setting, and Participants: This retrospective observational cohort study used data from January 2010 to April 2020 and included adult patients seen at the University of North Carolina Cancer Hospital who had an electrocardiogram (ECG) performed., Exposures: Adjusted QTc using the Bazett, Fridericia, and Framingham formulae., Main Outcomes and Measures: The main outcome was QTc prolongation using the Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events (CTCAE). Consistency between formulae was evaluated. Subsequently, appropriateness of clinical management due to prolonged QTc was assessed for a subset of patients being treated with chemotherapy agents associated with a prolonged QT interval. We hypothesized that use of the Bazett formula would be associated with higher rates of QTc prolongation and inappropriate modifications to chemotherapy., Results: A total of 19 955 ECGs from 6881 adult patients (3055 [44.4%] women, 3826 [55.6%] men; median [IQR] age at first ECG, 60 [47-68] years) were analyzed. The percentage of ECGs with grade 3 QTc prolongation differed by formula (all patients: Framingham, 1.8%; Fridericia, 2.8%; and Bazett, 9.0%; patients receiving QT-prolonging chemotherapy [2340 ECGs]: Framingham, 2.7%; Fridericia, 4.5%; and Bazett, 12.5%). The Bazett formula resulted in a median QTc value 26.4 milliseconds higher than Fridericia and 27.8 milliseconds higher than Framingham. Of the 1786 ECGs classified as grade 3 by Bazett, 1446 (81.0%) were grade 2 or less by either Fridericia or Framingham. A total of 5 of 28 (17.9%) evaluated clinical changes associated with prolonged QTc were deemed inappropriate when using either Fridericia or Framingham formula., Conclusions and Relevance: Findings of this cohort study suggest that the Bazett formula resulted in higher QTc values associated with a 3-fold increase in grade 3 CTCAE toxic effects compared with other common formulae. Use of the Bazett formula likely was associated with inappropriate changes in clinical management. These data support the use of a standard QTc formula (such as Fridericia or Framingham) for QTc correction in oncology.
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- 2022
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20. Adrenergic Receptor Regulation of Mitochondrial Function in Cardiomyocytes.
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Sandroni PB, Fisher-Wellman KH, and Jensen BC
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- Adrenergic beta-Agonists pharmacology, Mitochondria, Myocardium metabolism, Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-1 metabolism, Receptors, Adrenergic, beta metabolism, Myocardial Contraction, Myocytes, Cardiac
- Abstract
Abstract: Adrenergic receptors (ARs) are G protein-coupled receptors that are stimulated by catecholamines to induce a wide array of physiological effects across tissue types. Both α1- and β-ARs are found on cardiomyocytes and regulate cardiac contractility and hypertrophy through diverse molecular pathways. Acute activation of cardiomyocyte β-ARs increases heart rate and contractility as an adaptive stress response. However, chronic β-AR stimulation contributes to the pathobiology of heart failure. By contrast, mounting evidence suggests that α1-ARs serve protective functions that may mitigate the deleterious effects of chronic β-AR activation. Here, we will review recent studies demonstrating that α1- and β-ARs differentially regulate mitochondrial biogenesis and dynamics, mitochondrial calcium handling, and oxidative phosphorylation in cardiomyocytes. We will identify potential mechanisms of these actions and focus on the implications of these findings for the modulation of contractile function in the uninjured and failing heart. Collectively, we hope to elucidate important physiological processes through which these well-studied and clinically relevant receptors stimulate and fuel cardiac contraction to contribute to myocardial health and disease., Competing Interests: The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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21. Localization of Epigenetic Markers in Leishmania Chromatin.
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McDonald JR, Jensen BC, Sur A, Wong ILK, Beverley SM, and Myler PJ
- Abstract
Eukaryotes use histone variants and post-translation modifications (PTMs), as well as DNA base modifications, to regulate DNA replication/repair, chromosome condensation, and gene expression. Despite the unusual organization of their protein-coding genes into large polycistronic transcription units (PTUs), trypanosomatid parasites also employ a "histone code" to control these processes, but the details of this epigenetic code are poorly understood. Here, we present the results of experiments designed to elucidate the distribution of histone variants and PTMs over the chromatin landscape of Leishmania tarentolae . These experiments show that two histone variants (H2A.Z and H2B.V) and three histone H3 PTMs (H3K4me3, H3K16ac, and H3K76me3) are enriched at transcription start sites (TSSs); while a histone variant (H3.V) and the trypanosomatid-specific hyper-modified DNA base J are located at transcription termination sites (TTSs). Reduced nucleosome density was observed at all TTSs and TSSs for RNA genes transcribed by RNA polymerases I (RNAPI) or RNAPIII; as well as (to a lesser extent) at TSSs for the PTUs transcribed by RNAPII. Several PTMs (H3K4me3, H3K16ac H3K20me2 and H3K36me3) and base J were enriched at centromeres, while H3K50ac was specifically associated with the periphery of these centromeric sequences. These findings significantly expand our knowledge of the epigenetic markers associated with transcription, DNA replication and/or chromosome segregation in these early diverging eukaryotes and will hopefully lay the groundwork for future studies to elucidate how they control these fundamental processes.
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- 2022
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22. Free fatty acid receptor 4 responds to endogenous fatty acids to protect the heart from pressure overload.
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Murphy KA, Harsch BA, Healy CL, Joshi SS, Huang S, Walker RE, Wagner BM, Ernste KM, Huang W, Block RC, Wright CD, Tintle N, Jensen BC, Wells QS, Shearer GC, and O'Connell TD
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- Animals, Eicosapentaenoic Acid pharmacology, Fatty Acids, Humans, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Oxylipins, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled genetics, Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled metabolism, Fatty Acids, Nonesterified, Heart Failure genetics, Heart Failure prevention & control
- Abstract
Aims: Free fatty acid receptor 4 (Ffar4) is a G-protein-coupled receptor for endogenous medium-/long-chain fatty acids that attenuates metabolic disease and inflammation. However, the function of Ffar4 in the heart is unclear. Given its putative beneficial role, we hypothesized that Ffar4 would protect the heart from pathologic stress., Methods and Results: In mice lacking Ffar4 (Ffar4KO), we found that Ffar4 is required for an adaptive response to pressure overload induced by transverse aortic constriction (TAC), identifying a novel cardioprotective function for Ffar4. Following TAC, remodelling was worsened in Ffar4KO hearts, with greater hypertrophy and contractile dysfunction. Transcriptome analysis 3-day post-TAC identified transcriptional deficits in genes associated with cytoplasmic phospholipase A2α signalling and oxylipin synthesis and the reduction of oxidative stress in Ffar4KO myocytes. In cultured adult cardiac myocytes, Ffar4 induced the production of the eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA)-derived, pro-resolving oxylipin 18-hydroxyeicosapentaenoic acid (18-HEPE). Furthermore, the activation of Ffar4 attenuated cardiac myocyte death from oxidative stress, while 18-HEPE rescued Ffar4KO myocytes. Systemically, Ffar4 maintained pro-resolving oxylipins and attenuated autoxidation basally, and increased pro-inflammatory and pro-resolving oxylipins, including 18-HEPE, in high-density lipoproteins post-TAC. In humans, Ffar4 expression decreased in heart failure, while the signalling-deficient Ffar4 R270H polymorphism correlated with eccentric remodelling in a large clinical cohort paralleling changes observed in Ffar4KO mice post-TAC., Conclusion: Our data indicate that Ffar4 in cardiac myocytes responds to endogenous fatty acids, reducing oxidative injury, and protecting the heart from pathologic stress, with significant translational implications for targeting Ffar4 in cardiovascular disease., (Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author(s) 2021. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2022
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23. Novel Mechanisms of Anthracycline-Induced Cardiovascular Toxicity: A Focus on Thrombosis, Cardiac Atrophy, and Programmed Cell Death.
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Antoniak S, Phungphong S, Cheng Z, and Jensen BC
- Abstract
Anthracycline antineoplastic agents such as doxorubicin are widely used and highly effective component of adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer and curative regimens for lymphomas, leukemias, and sarcomas. The primary dose-limiting adverse effect of anthracyclines is cardiotoxicity that typically manifests as cardiomyopathy and can progress to the potentially fatal clinical syndrome of heart failure. Decades of pre-clinical research have explicated the complex and multifaceted mechanisms of anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity. It is well-established that oxidative stress contributes to the pathobiology and recent work has elucidated important central roles for direct mitochondrial injury and iron overload. Here we focus instead on emerging aspects of anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity that may have received less attention in other recent reviews: thrombosis, myocardial atrophy, and non-apoptotic programmed cell death., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2022 Antoniak, Phungphong, Cheng and Jensen.)
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- 2022
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24. Coronary Artery Calcifications and Cardiac Risk After Radiation Therapy for Stage III Lung Cancer.
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Wang K, Malkin HE, Patchett ND, Pearlstein KA, Heiling HM, McCabe SD, Deal AM, Mavroidis P, Oakey M, Fenoli J, Lee CB, Klein JL, Jensen BC, Stinchcombe TE, Marks LB, and Weiner AA
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- Heart Diseases epidemiology, Humans, Neoplasm Staging, Prospective Studies, Radiotherapy adverse effects, Risk, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung pathology, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung radiotherapy, Coronary Artery Disease epidemiology, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Lung Neoplasms radiotherapy
- Abstract
Purpose: Heart dose and heart disease increase the risk for cardiac toxicity associated with radiation therapy. We hypothesized that computed tomography (CT) coronary calcifications are associated with cardiac toxicity and may help ascertain baseline heart disease., Methods and Materials: We analyzed the cumulative incidence of cardiac events in patients with stage III non-small cell lung cancer receiving median 74 Gy on prospective dose-escalation trials. Events were defined as symptomatic effusion, pericarditis, unstable angina, infarction, significant arrhythmia, and/or heart failure. Coronary calcifications were delineated on simulation CTs using radiation software program (130 HU threshold). Calcifications were defined as "none," "low," and "high," with median volume dividing low and high., Results: Of 109 patients, 26 had cardiac events at median 26 months (range, 1-84 months) after radiation therapy. Median follow-up in surviving patients was 8.8 years (range, 2.3-17.3). On simulation CTs, 64 patients (59%) had coronary calcifications with median volume 0.2 cm
3 (range, 0.01-8.3). Only 16 patients (15%) had baseline coronary artery disease. Cardiac events occurred in 7% (3 of 45), 29% (9 of 31), and 42% (14 of 33) of patients with no, low, and high calcifications, respectively. Calcification burden was associated with cardiac toxicity on univariate (low vs none: hazard ratio [HR] 5.0, P = .015; high vs none: HR 8.1, P < .001) and multivariate analyses (low vs none: HR 7.0, P = .005, high vs none: HR 10.6, P < .001, heart mean dose: HR 1.1/Gy, P < .001). Four-year competing risk-adjusted event rates for no, low, and high calcifications were 4%, 23%, and 34%, respectively., Conclusions: The presence of coronary calcifications is a cardiac risk factor that can identify high-risk patients for medical referral and help guide clinicians before potentially cardiotoxic cancer treatments., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2022
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25. Chemotherapy-associated cardiomyopathy: Mechanisms of toxicity and cardioprotective strategies.
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Veeder JA, Hothem LN, Cipriani AE, Jensen BC, and Rodgers JE
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- Clinical Trials as Topic, Humans, Cardiomyopathies chemically induced, Cardiomyopathies prevention & control, Cardiotoxicity prevention & control
- Abstract
Objective: To describe the proposed mechanisms of chemotherapy-associated cardiomyopathy (CAC) and potential cardioprotective therapies for CAC including a comprehensive review of existing systematic analyses, guideline recommendations, and ongoing clinical trials., Data Sources: A literature search of MEDLINE was performed (from 1990 to June 2020) using the following search terms: anthracycline, trastuzumab, cardiomyopathy, cardiotoxicity, primary prevention, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI), angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB), beta blocker, dexrazoxane (DEX) as well as using individual names from select therapeutic categories., Study Selection and Data Extraction: Existing English language systematic analyses and guidelines were considered., Data Synthesis: The mechanisms of CAC are multifaceted, but various cardioprotective therapies target many of these pathways. To date, anthracyclines and HER-2 targeted therapies have been the focus of cardioprotective trials to date as they are the most commonly implicated therapies in CAC. While traditional neurohormonal antagonists (ACEIs, ARBs, and beta blockers) and DEX performed favorably in many small clinical trials, the quality of available evidence remains limited. Hence, major guidelines lack consensus on an approach to primary prevention of CAC. Given the uncertain role of preventive therapy, monitoring for a symptomatic or asymptomatic decline in LV function is imperative with prompt evaluation should this occur. Numerous ongoing randomized controlled trials seek to either confirm the findings of these previous studies or identify new therapeutic agents to prevent CAC. Clinical implications are derived from the available literature as well as current guideline recommendations for CAC cardioprotection., Conclusion: At this time, no single therapy has a clear cardioprotective benefit in preventing CAC nor is any therapy strongly recommended by current guidelines. Additional studies are needed to determine the optimal preventative regimens., (© 2021 Pharmacotherapy Publications, Inc.)
- Published
- 2021
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26. Refractory ventricular arrhythmia in a patient with Lamin A/C (LMNA) cardiomyopathy successfully treated with thoracic bilateral stellate ganglionectomy.
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Okeagu E, Abid A, Jensen BC, Caranasos TG, and Syed FF
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- 2021
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27. Drug Target Validation of the Protein Kinase AEK1, Essential for Proliferation, Host Cell Invasion, and Intracellular Replication of the Human Pathogen Trypanosoma cruzi.
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Chiurillo MA, Jensen BC, and Docampo R
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- Chagas Disease genetics, Chagas Disease parasitology, Cytokinesis, Cytosol, Gene Editing, Gene Knockdown Techniques, Humans, Life Cycle Stages, Cell Proliferation, Protein Kinases genetics, Protein Kinases metabolism, Trypanosoma cruzi genetics, Trypanosoma cruzi metabolism
- Abstract
Protein phosphorylation is involved in several key biological roles in the complex life cycle of Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiological agent of Chagas disease, and protein kinases are potential drug targets. Here, we report that the AGC essential kinase 1 ( TcAEK1 ) exhibits a cytosolic localization and a higher level of expression in the replicative stages of the parasite. A CRISPR/Cas9 editing technique was used to generate ATP analog-sensitive TcAEK1 gatekeeper residue mutants that were selectively and acutely inhibited by bumped kinase inhibitors (BKIs). Analysis of a single allele deletion cell line ( TcAEK1- SKO), and gatekeeper mutants upon treatment with inhibitor, showed that epimastigote forms exhibited a severe defect in cytokinesis. Moreover, we also demonstrated that TcAEK1 is essential for epimastigote proliferation, trypomastigote host cell invasion, and amastigote replication. We suggest that TcAEK1 is a pleiotropic player involved in cytokinesis regulation in T. cruzi and thus validate TcAEK1 as a drug target for further exploration. The gene editing strategy we applied to construct the ATP analog-sensitive enzyme could be appropriate for the study of other proteins of the T. cruzi kinome. IMPORTANCE Chagas disease affects 6 to 7 million people in the Americas, and its treatment has been limited to drugs with relatively high toxicity and low efficacy in the chronic phase of the infection. New validated targets are needed to combat this disease. In this work, we report the chemical and genetic validation of the protein kinase AEK1, which is essential for cytokinesis and infectivity, using a novel gene editing strategy.
- Published
- 2021
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28. The Effects of 16 Weeks of Exercise Training on Neutrophil Functions in Breast Cancer Survivors.
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Bartlett DB, Hanson ED, Lee JT, Wagoner CW, Harrell EP, Sullivan SA, Bates LC, Alzer MS, Amatuli DJ, Deal AM, Jensen BC, MacDonald G, Deal MA, Muss HB, Nyrop KA, and Battaglini CL
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Biomarkers blood, Breast Neoplasms diagnosis, Breast Neoplasms immunology, Case-Control Studies, Female, GPI-Linked Proteins blood, Humans, Interleukin-6 blood, Interleukin-8 blood, Leukocyte Count, Middle Aged, Neutrophils metabolism, Phagocytosis, Phenotype, Reactive Oxygen Species metabolism, Receptors, IgG blood, Receptors, Interleukin-8B blood, Time Factors, Toll-Like Receptor 2 blood, Toll-Like Receptor 4 blood, Treatment Outcome, Breast Neoplasms therapy, Cancer Survivors, Immunity, Innate, Neutrophils immunology, Resistance Training
- Abstract
Following therapy, breast cancer survivors (BCS) have an increased risk of infections because of age and cancer dysregulation of inflammation and neutrophil functions. Neutrophil functions may be improved by exercise training, although limited data exist on exercise and neutrophil functions in BCS.Sixteen BCS [mean age: 56 (SD 11) years old] completed 16 weeks of community-based exercise training and a 45-minute acute bout of cycling before (Base) and after (Final) the exercise training program. Exercise training consisted of 3 x 40 - 60 minute mixed mode aerobic exercises, comprising 10 - 30 minutes aerobic and 30 minutes resistance training. At Base and Final, we took BCS blood samples before (PRE), immediately after (POST), and 1 hour after (1Hr) acute exercise to determine neutrophil counts, phenotype, bacterial killing, IL-6, and IL-8 levels. Eleven healthy, age- and physical activity levels-matched women (Control) completed the acute bout of exercise once as a healthy response reference. Resting Responses. BCS and Controls had similar Base PRE absolute neutrophil counts [mean (SD): 3.3 (1.9) v 3.1 (1.2) x 10
9 /L, p=0.801], but BCS had lower bacterial phagocytosis [3991 (1233) v 4881 (417) MFI, p=0.035] and higher oxidative killing [6254 (1434) v 4709 (1220) MFI, p=0.005], lower CD16 [4159 (1785) v 7018 (1240) MFI, p<0.001], lower CXCR2 [4878 (1796) v 6330 (1299) MFI, p=0.032] and higher TLR2 [98 (32) v 72 (17) MFI, p=0.022] expression, while IL-6 [7.4 (5.4) v 4.0 (2.7) pg/mL, p=0.079] levels were marginally higher and IL-8 [6.0 (4.7) v 7.9 (5.0) pg/mL, p=0.316] levels similar. After 16 weeks of training, compared to Controls, BCS Final PRE phagocytosis [4510 (738) v 4881 (417) MFI, p=0.146] and TLR2 expression [114 (92) v 72 (17) MFI, p=0.148] were no longer different. Acute Exercise Responses. As compared to Controls, at Base, BCS phagocytic Pre-Post response was lower [mean difference, % (SD): 12% (26%), p=0.042], CD16 Pre-Post response was lower [12% (21%), p=0.016] while CD16 Pre-1Hr response was higher [13% (25%), p=0.022], TLR2 Pre-Post response was higher [15% (4%) p=0.002], while IL-8 Pre-Post response was higher [99% (48%), p=0.049]. As compared to Controls, following 16 weeks of training BCS phagocytic Pre-Post response [5% (5%), p=0.418], CD16 Pre-1Hr response [7% (7%), p=0.294], TLR2 Pre-Post response [6% (4%), p=0.092], and IL-8 Pre-Post response [1% (9%), p=0.087] were no longer different. Following cancer therapy, BCS may have impaired neutrophil functions in response to an acute bout of exercise that are partially restored by 16 weeks of exercise training. The improved phagocytosis of bacteria in BCS may represent an exercise-induced intrinsic improvement in neutrophil functions consistent with a reduced risk of infectious disease., Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier NCT03760536., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Bartlett, Hanson, Lee, Wagoner, Harrell, Sullivan, Bates, Alzer, Amatuli, Deal, Jensen, MacDonald, Deal, Muss, Nyrop and Battaglini.)- Published
- 2021
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29. Unusual features and localization of the membrane kinome of Trypanosoma brucei.
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Jensen BC, Vaney P, Flaspohler J, Coppens I, and Parsons M
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- Cell Membrane metabolism, Endoplasmic Reticulum metabolism, Epitopes immunology, Epitopes metabolism, Humans, Microscopy, Immunoelectron, Models, Molecular, Protein Conformation, Protein Domains, Protein Kinases immunology, Protozoan Proteins chemistry, Protozoan Proteins metabolism, Protein Kinases chemistry, Protein Kinases metabolism, Trypanosoma brucei brucei metabolism
- Abstract
In many eukaryotes, multiple protein kinases are situated in the plasma membrane where they respond to extracellular ligands. Ligand binding elicits a signal that is transmitted across the membrane, leading to activation of the cytosolic kinase domain. Humans have over 100 receptor protein kinases. In contrast, our search of the Trypanosoma brucei kinome showed that there were only ten protein kinases with predicted transmembrane domains, and unlike other eukaryotic transmembrane kinases, seven are predicted to bear multiple transmembrane domains. Most of the ten kinases, including their transmembrane domains, are conserved in both Trypanosoma cruzi and Leishmania species. Several possess accessory domains, such as Kelch, nucleotide cyclase, and forkhead-associated domains. Surprisingly, two contain multiple regions with predicted structural similarity to domains in bacterial signaling proteins. A few of the protein kinases have previously been localized to subcellular structures such as endosomes or lipid bodies. We examined the localization of epitope-tagged versions of seven of the predicted transmembrane kinases in T. brucei bloodstream forms and show that five localized to the endoplasmic reticulum. The last two kinases are enzymatically active, integral membrane proteins associated with the flagellum, flagellar pocket, or adjacent structures as shown by both fluorescence and immunoelectron microscopy. Thus, these kinases are positioned in structures suggesting participation in signal transduction from the external environment., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
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- 2021
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30. Exercise training partially rescues impaired mucosal associated invariant t-cell mobilization in breast cancer survivors compared to healthy older women.
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Hanson ED, Bates LC, Harrell EP, Bartlett DB, Lee JT, Wagoner CW, Alzer MS, Amatuli DJ, Jensen BC, Deal AM, Muss HB, Nyrop KA, and Battaglini CL
- Subjects
- Aged, CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes, Exercise, Female, Humans, Breast Neoplasms therapy, Cancer Survivors, Mucosal-Associated Invariant T Cells
- Abstract
Exercise may attenuate immunosenescence with aging that appears to be accelerated following breast cancer treatment, although limited data on specific cell types exists and acute and chronic exercise have been investigated independently in older adults., Purpose: To determine the mucosal associated invariant T (MAIT) cell response to acute exercise before (PRE) and after (POST) 16 weeks of exercise training in breast cancer survivors (BCS) and healthy older women (CON)., Methods: Age-matched BCS and CON performed 45 min of intermittent cycling at 60% peak power output wattage. Blood samples were obtained at rest, immediately (0 h) and 1 h after exercise to determine MAIT cell counts, frequency, and intracellular cytokine expression., Results: At PRE, MAIT cell counts were greater in CON (137%) than BCS at 0 h (46%, p < 0.001), with increased MAIT cell frequency in CON but not BCS. TNFα
+ and IFNγ+ MAIT cell counts increased at 0 h by ~120% in CON (p < 0.001), while BCS counts and frequencies were unchanged. Similar deficits were observed in CD3+ and CD3+ CD8+ cells. At POST, exercise-induced mobilization and egress of MAIT cell counts and frequency showed trends towards improvement in BCS that approached levels in CON. Independent of group, TNFα frequency trended to improve (p = 0.053)., Conclusions: MAIT mobilization in older BCS following acute exercise was attenuated; however, exercise training may partially rescue these initial deficits, including greater sensitivity to mitogenic stimulation. Using acute exercise before and after interventions provides a unique approach to identify age- and cancer-related immuno-dysfunction that is less apparent at rest., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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31. Impact of community-based exercise program participation on aerobic capacity in women with and without breast cancer.
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Lee JT, Wagoner CW, Sullivan SA, Amatuli DJ, Nyrop KA, Hanson ED, Stoner L, Jensen BC, Muss HB, and Battaglini CL
- Abstract
Background: Evidence for exercise as an efficacious strategy to improve aerobic capacity of breast cancer survivors (BCS) has come largely from intervention studies conducted in laboratory settings. There is an increasing need to translate to community-type settings, but the efficacy of those interventions using gold standard evaluation is not well-established., Aim: To investigate whether similar improvement in aerobic capacity (maximal oxygen consumption [VO
2 ]) measured with gold standard testing can be achieved through a community-based setting in BCS., Methods: A peak cardiopulmonary exercise test (VO2peak ), 6-min walk test (6MWT), and timed up and go test (TUG) were assessed pre- and post-16 wk of progressive intensity aerobic and strength training exercise at a community center., Results: The sample consisted of 31 early BCS (< 1 year since treatment completion) and 15 controls (CTLs). Both groups significantly improved VO2peak (+1.2 mL/kg/min; P = 0.030), 6MWT (+35 meters; P < 0.001), and TUG (-0.44 s; P < 0.01) following training. Both groups improved peak cycling power during the cardiopulmonary exercise test with BCS improving by +10 watts more than the CTLs ( P = 0.020). Average exercise attendance was 71% (34 of 48 possible days), but compliant days averaged only 60% of total days for aerobic, and < 40% for strength in both groups., Conclusion: Community-based exercise programs can be an effective strategy to improve aerobic capacity and physical function for early-stage BCS but potentially not to the same extent observed in laboratory-based randomized controlled trials. Further research is needed to explore barriers and facilitators of exercise engagement in community-based centers to maximize training benefits for adults with cancer., Competing Interests: Conflict-of-interest statement: The authors do not have any conflict of interest disclaimers., (©The Author(s) 2021. Published by Baishideng Publishing Group Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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32. Exercise-induced modulation of monocytes in breast cancer survivors.
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Khosravi N, Hanson ED, Farajivafa V, Evans WS, Lee JT, Danson E, Wagoner CW, Harrell EP, Sullivan SA, Nyrop KA, Muss HB, Bartlett DB, Jensen BC, Haghighat S, Shamsi MM, and Battaglini CL
- Abstract
Background: Exercise training reduces inflammation in breast cancer survivors; however, the mechanism is not fully understood., Objectives: The effects of acute and chronic exercise on monocyte toll-like receptor (TLR2 and 4) expression and intracellular cytokine production were examined in sedentary breast cancer survivors., Methods: Eleven women with stage I, II, or III breast cancer within one year of treatment completion performed an acute, intermittent aerobic exercise trial. Blood samples were obtained before, immediately, and 1 h after a 45-min acute exercise trial that was performed before and after 16 weeks of combined aerobic and resistance. LPS-stimulated intracellular IL-1ß, TNF, and IL-6 production, and TLR2 and TLR4 expression were evaluated in CD14
+ CD16- and CD14+ CD16+ monocytes using flow cytometry., Results: Exercise training decreased IL-1ß+ CD14+ CD16- proportion (24.6%, p=0.016), IL-1ß+ CD14+ CD16- mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) (-9989, p=0.014), IL-1ß+ CD14+ CD16+ MFI (-11101, p=0.02), and IL-6+ CD14+ CD16- proportion (16.9%, P=0.04). TLR2 and TLR4 expression did not change following exercise training but decreased 1 h after acute exercise in CD14+ CD16- (-63, p=0.002) and CD14+ CD16+ (-18, p=0.006) monocytes, respectively. Immediately after the acute exercise, both monocyte subgroup cell concentration increased, with CD14+ CD16+ concentrations being decreased at 1 h post without changes in intracellular cytokine production., Conclusions: Exercise training reduced monocyte intracellular pro-inflammatory cytokine production, especially IL-1ß, although these markers did not change acutely. While acute exercise downregulated the expression of TLR2 and TLR4 on monocytes, this was not sustained over the course of training. These results suggest that the anti-inflammatory effect of combined aerobic and resistance exercise training in breast cancer survivors may be, in part, due to reducing resting monocyte pro-inflammatory cytokine production., Competing Interests: None., (© 2021 Published by Elsevier Inc.)- Published
- 2021
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33. Chromatin-Associated Protein Complexes Link DNA Base J and Transcription Termination in Leishmania .
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Jensen BC, Phan IQ, McDonald JR, Sur A, Gillespie MA, Ranish JA, Parsons M, and Myler PJ
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- Chromatin metabolism, DNA, Protozoan metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, RNA, Messenger, Chromatin genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins genetics, DNA-Binding Proteins metabolism, Leishmania genetics, Protozoan Proteins genetics, Transcription Termination, Genetic
- Abstract
Unlike most other eukaryotes, Leishmania and other trypanosomatid protozoa have largely eschewed transcriptional control of gene expression, relying instead on posttranscriptional regulation of mRNAs derived from polycistronic transcription units (PTUs). In these parasites, a novel modified nucleotide base (β-d-glucopyranosyloxymethyluracil) known as J plays a critical role in ensuring that transcription termination occurs only at the end of each PTU, rather than at the polyadenylation sites of individual genes. To further understand the biology of J-associated processes, we used tandem affinity purification (TAP) tagging and mass spectrometry to reveal proteins that interact with the glucosyltransferase performing the final step in J synthesis. These studies identified four proteins reminiscent of subunits in the PTW/PP1 complex that controls transcription termination in higher eukaryotes. Moreover, bioinformatic analyses identified the DNA-binding subunit of Leishmania PTW/PP1 as a novel J-binding protein (JBP3), which is also part of another complex containing proteins with domains suggestive of a role in chromatin modification/remodeling. Additionally, JBP3 associates (albeit transiently and/or indirectly) with the trypanosomatid equivalent of the PAF1 complex involved in the regulation of transcription in other eukaryotes. The downregulation of JBP3 expression levels in Leishmania resulted in a substantial increase in transcriptional readthrough at the 3' end of most PTUs. We propose that JBP3 recruits one or more of these complexes to the J-containing regions at the end of PTUs, where they halt the progression of the RNA polymerase. This decoupling of transcription termination from the splicing of individual genes enables the parasites' unique reliance on polycistronic transcription and posttranscriptional regulation of gene expression. IMPORTANCE Leishmania parasites cause a variety of serious human diseases, with no effective vaccine and emerging resistance to current drug therapy. We have previously shown that a novel DNA base called J is critical for transcription termination at the ends of the polycistronic gene clusters that are a hallmark of Leishmania and related trypanosomatids. Here, we describe a new J-binding protein (JBP3) associated with three different protein complexes that are reminiscent of those involved in the control of transcription in other eukaryotes. However, the parasite complexes have been reprogrammed to regulate transcription and gene expression in trypanosomatids differently than in the mammalian hosts, providing new opportunities to develop novel chemotherapeutic treatments against these important pathogens., (Copyright © 2021 Jensen et al.)
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- 2021
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34. Cardiac α1A-adrenergic receptors: emerging protective roles in cardiovascular diseases.
- Author
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Zhang J, Simpson PC, and Jensen BC
- Subjects
- Adrenergic alpha-1 Receptor Agonists therapeutic use, Adrenergic alpha-1 Receptor Antagonists adverse effects, Animals, Cardiovascular Diseases drug therapy, Cardiovascular Diseases physiopathology, Humans, Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-1 drug effects, Signal Transduction, Sympathetic Nervous System physiopathology, Cardiovascular Diseases metabolism, Heart innervation, Myocardium metabolism, Receptors, Adrenergic, alpha-1 metabolism, Sympathetic Nervous System metabolism
- Abstract
α1-Adrenergic receptors (ARs) are catecholamine-activated G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) that are expressed in mouse and human myocardium and vasculature, and play essential roles in the regulation of cardiovascular physiology. Though α1-ARs are less abundant in the heart than β1-ARs, activation of cardiac α1-ARs results in important biologic processes such as hypertrophy, positive inotropy, ischemic preconditioning, and protection from cell death. Data from the Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent Heart Attack Trial (ALLHAT) indicate that nonselectively blocking α1-ARs is associated with a twofold increase in adverse cardiac events, including heart failure and angina, suggesting that α1-AR activation might also be cardioprotective in humans. Mounting evidence implicates the α1A-AR subtype in these adaptive effects, including prevention and reversal of heart failure in animal models by α1A agonists. In this review, we summarize recent advances in our understanding of cardiac α1A-ARs.
- Published
- 2021
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35. Doxorubicin induces cardiomyocyte apoptosis and atrophy through cyclin-dependent kinase 2-mediated activation of forkhead box O1.
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Xia P, Chen J, Liu Y, Fletcher M, Jensen BC, and Cheng Z
- Subjects
- Animals, Apoptosis drug effects, Atrophy chemically induced, Atrophy pathology, Cardiotoxicity etiology, Cardiotoxicity pathology, Disease Models, Animal, Doxorubicin adverse effects, Forkhead Box Protein O1 antagonists & inhibitors, Gene Expression Regulation drug effects, Heart drug effects, Heart physiopathology, Humans, Mice, Myocytes, Cardiac drug effects, Myocytes, Cardiac pathology, Neoplasms complications, Neoplasms drug therapy, Neoplasms genetics, Quinolones pharmacology, Signal Transduction drug effects, Atrophy genetics, Cardiotoxicity genetics, Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 2 genetics, Forkhead Box Protein O1 genetics, Muscle Proteins genetics, Tripartite Motif Proteins genetics, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases genetics
- Abstract
Recent clinical investigations indicate that anthracycline-based chemotherapies induce early decline in heart mass in cancer patients. Heart mass decline may be caused by a decrease in cardiac cell number because of increased cell death or by a reduction in cell size because of atrophy. We previously reported that an anthracycline, doxorubicin (DOX), induces apoptotic death of cardiomyocytes by activating cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2). However, the signaling pathway downstream of CDK2 remains to be characterized, and it is also unclear whether the same pathway mediates cardiac atrophy. Here we demonstrate that DOX exposure induces CDK2-dependent phosphorylation of the transcription factor forkhead box O1 (FOXO1) at Ser-249, leading to transcription of its proapoptotic target gene, Bcl-2-interacting mediator of cell death (Bim). In cultured cardiomyocytes, treatment with the FOXO1 inhibitor AS1842856 or transfection with FOXO1-specific siRNAs protected against DOX-induced apoptosis and mitochondrial damage. Oral administration of AS1842856 in mice abrogated apoptosis and prevented DOX-induced cardiac dysfunction. Intriguingly, pharmacological FOXO1 inhibition also attenuated DOX-induced cardiac atrophy, likely because of repression of muscle RING finger 1 (MuRF1), a proatrophic FOXO1 target gene. In conclusion, DOX exposure induces CDK2-dependent FOXO1 activation, resulting in cardiomyocyte apoptosis and atrophy. Our results identify FOXO1 as a promising drug target for managing DOX-induced cardiotoxicity. We propose that FOXO1 inhibitors may have potential as cardioprotective therapeutic agents during cancer chemotherapy., (© 2020 Xia et al.)
- Published
- 2020
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36. Two weeks of lower body resistance training enhances cycling tolerability to improve precision of maximal cardiopulmonary exercise testing in sedentary middle-aged females.
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Wagoner CW, Hanson ED, Ryan ED, Brooks R, Wood WA, Jensen BC, Lee JT, Coffman EM, and Battaglini CL
- Subjects
- Exercise Test, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Oxygen Consumption, Prospective Studies, Exercise Tolerance, Resistance Training, Sedentary Behavior
- Abstract
It is not uncommon for sedentary individuals to cite leg fatigue as the primary factor for test termination during a cardiopulmonary exercise test (CPET) on a cycle ergometer. The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of 2 weeks of lower body resistance training (RT) on cardiopulmonary capacity in sedentary middle-aged females. Additionally, the impact of RT on muscle strength was evaluated. Following familiarization, 28 women (18 exercise group, 10 control group) completed a maximal CPET on a cycle ergometer to determine peak oxygen uptake and leg extensor strength assessed using isokinetic dynamometry. Participants in the exercise group performed 2 weeks (6 sessions) of lower body RT, which comprised leg press, leg curl, and leg extension exercises. A 2-way repeated-measures ANOVA was used to evaluate the difference in changes of peak oxygen uptake and peak torque (PT). Peak oxygen uptake significantly improved from 22.2 ± 4.5 mL·kg
-1 ·min-1 to 24.3 ± 4.4 mL·kg-1 ·min-1 (10.8%, p < 0.05) as well as PT from 83.1 ± 25.4 Nm to 89.0 ± 29.7 Nm (6.1%, p < 0.05) in the exercise group with no change in the control group. These findings provide initial evidence that 2 weeks of lower body RT prior to a CPET may be a helpful preconditioning strategy to achieve a more accurate peak oxygen uptake during testing, enhancing tolerability to a CPET by improving lower body strength.- Published
- 2019
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37. Trials and Tribulations of Corrected QT Interval Monitoring in Oncology: Rationale for a Practice-Changing Standardized Approach.
- Author
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Muluneh B, Richardson DR, Hicks C, Jensen BC, and Zeidner JF
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Male, Neoplasms physiopathology, Risk Factors, Electrocardiography methods, Neoplasms diagnostic imaging
- Published
- 2019
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38. Doxorubicin Exposure Causes Subacute Cardiac Atrophy Dependent on the Striated Muscle-Specific Ubiquitin Ligase MuRF1.
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Willis MS, Parry TL, Brown DI, Mota RI, Huang W, Beak JY, Sola M, Zhou C, Hicks ST, Caughey MC, D'Agostino RB Jr, Jordan J, Hundley WG, and Jensen BC
- Subjects
- Animals, Antineoplastic Agents administration & dosage, Cardiotoxicity diagnostic imaging, Cardiotoxicity etiology, Cardiotoxicity genetics, Cardiotoxicity metabolism, Disease Models, Animal, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Doxorubicin administration & dosage, Echocardiography, Gene Expression, Heart diagnostic imaging, Heart Failure diagnostic imaging, Heart Failure genetics, Heart Failure metabolism, Humans, Injections, Intraperitoneal, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Muscle Proteins metabolism, Muscular Atrophy diagnostic imaging, Muscular Atrophy genetics, Muscular Atrophy metabolism, Myocardium metabolism, Myocardium pathology, Myocytes, Cardiac drug effects, Myocytes, Cardiac metabolism, Tripartite Motif Proteins metabolism, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases metabolism, Up-Regulation, Antineoplastic Agents adverse effects, Doxorubicin adverse effects, Heart drug effects, Heart Failure chemically induced, Muscle Proteins genetics, Muscular Atrophy chemically induced, Tripartite Motif Proteins genetics, Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases genetics
- Abstract
Background Anthracycline chemotherapeutics, such as doxorubicin, are used widely in the treatment of numerous malignancies. The primary dose-limiting adverse effect of anthracyclines is cardiotoxicity that often presents as heart failure due to dilated cardiomyopathy years after anthracycline exposure. Recent data from animal studies indicate that anthracyclines cause cardiac atrophy. The timing of onset and underlying mechanisms are not well defined, and the relevance of these findings to human disease is unclear. Methods and Results Wild-type mice were sacrificed 1 week after intraperitoneal administration of doxorubicin (1-25 mg/kg), revealing a dose-dependent decrease in cardiac mass ( R
2 =0.64; P<0.0001) and a significant decrease in cardiomyocyte cross-sectional area (336±29 versus 188±14 µm2 ; P<0.0001). Myocardial tissue analysis identified a dose-dependent upregulation of the ubiquitin ligase, MuRF1 (muscle ring finger-1; R2 =0.91; P=0.003) and a molecular profile of muscle atrophy. To investigate the determinants of doxorubicin-induced cardiac atrophy, we administered doxorubicin 20 mg/kg to mice lacking MuRF1 (MuRF1-/- ) and wild-type littermates. MuRF1-/- mice were protected from cardiac atrophy and exhibited no reduction in contractile function. To explore the clinical relevance of these findings, we analyzed cardiac magnetic resonance imaging data from 70 patients in the DETECT-1 cohort and found that anthracycline exposure was associated with decreased cardiac mass evident within 1 month and persisting to 6 months after initiation. Conclusions Doxorubicin causes a subacute decrease in cardiac mass in both mice and humans. In mice, doxorubicin-induced cardiac atrophy is dependent on MuRF1. These findings suggest that therapies directed at preventing or reversing cardiac atrophy might preserve the cardiac function of cancer patients receiving anthracyclines.- Published
- 2019
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39. Practical guidance on the use of sacubitril/valsartan for heart failure.
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Sauer AJ, Cole R, Jensen BC, Pal J, Sharma N, Yehya A, and Vader J
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Aminobutyrates adverse effects, Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists adverse effects, Biphenyl Compounds, Comorbidity, Cost of Illness, Drug Combinations, Evidence-Based Medicine, Heart Failure mortality, Heart Failure physiopathology, Humans, Middle Aged, Morbidity trends, Mortality trends, Practice Guidelines as Topic, Stroke Volume drug effects, Tetrazoles adverse effects, Treatment Outcome, Valsartan, Ventricular Dysfunction, Left physiopathology, Aminobutyrates therapeutic use, Angiotensin Receptor Antagonists therapeutic use, Heart Failure drug therapy, Tetrazoles therapeutic use
- Abstract
Sacubitril/valsartan is a first-in-class angiotensin receptor-neprilysin inhibitor (ARNI) that has been recommended in clinical practice guidelines to reduce morbidity and mortality in patients with chronic, symptomatic heart failure (HF) with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF). This review provides an overview of ARNI therapy, proposes strategies to improve the implementation of sacubitril/valsartan in clinical practice, and provides clinicians with evidence-based, practical guidance on the use of sacubitril/valsartan in patients with HFrEF. Despite evidence demonstrating the benefits of ARNI therapy over standard of care, only a fraction of eligible patients takes sacubitril/valsartan. Barriers preventing the prescription of sacubitril/valsartan in eligible patients may include practitioners' unfamiliarity with ARNIs, safety concerns, and payer reimbursement issues. The optimal implementation of sacubitril/valsartan in clinical practice has the potential to reduce the overall burden of HF. Throughout this review, we describe our experience with sacubitril/valsartan, including strategies for the management of adverse events and common patient concerns. In addition, a strategy for the gradual introduction of sacubitril/valsartan using a treatment sequence scheme is proposed.
- Published
- 2019
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40. Correction to: Quantitative trait mapping in Diversity Outbred mice identifies two genomic regions associated with heart size.
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Shorter JR, Huang W, Beak JY, Hua K, Gatti DM, de Villena FP, Pomp D, and Jensen BC
- Abstract
The original article has been published with an incorrect text in Materials and Methods section. The corrected text should read as.
- Published
- 2019
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41. Adrenomedullin Induces Cardiac Lymphangiogenesis After Myocardial Infarction and Regulates Cardiac Edema Via Connexin 43.
- Author
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Trincot CE, Xu W, Zhang H, Kulikauskas MR, Caranasos TG, Jensen BC, Sabine A, Petrova TV, and Caron KM
- Subjects
- Adrenomedullin genetics, Animals, Cells, Cultured, Connexin 43 genetics, Disease Models, Animal, Edema, Cardiac genetics, Edema, Cardiac physiopathology, Edema, Cardiac prevention & control, Female, Gap Junctions metabolism, Humans, Lymphatic Vessels physiopathology, Male, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Mice, Transgenic, Myocardial Infarction genetics, Myocardial Infarction physiopathology, Pericardium physiopathology, Signal Transduction, Ventricular Function, Left, Adrenomedullin metabolism, Connexin 43 metabolism, Edema, Cardiac metabolism, Lymphangiogenesis, Lymphatic Vessels metabolism, Myocardial Infarction metabolism, Myocardium metabolism, Pericardium metabolism
- Abstract
Rationale: Cardiac lymphangiogenesis contributes to the reparative process post-myocardial infarction, but the factors and mechanisms regulating it are not well understood., Objective: To determine if epicardial-secreted factor AM (adrenomedullin; Adm=gene) improves cardiac lymphangiogenesis post-myocardial infarction via lateralization of Cx43 (connexin 43) in cardiac lymphatic vasculature., Methods and Results: Firstly, we identified sex-dependent differences in cardiac lymphatic numbers in uninjured mice using light-sheet microscopy. Using a mouse model of Adm
hi/hi ( Adm overexpression) and permanent left anterior descending ligation to induce myocardial infarction, we investigated cardiac lymphatic structure, growth, and function in injured murine hearts. Overexpression of Adm increased lymphangiogenesis and cardiac function post-myocardial infarction while suppressing cardiac edema and correlated with changes in Cx43 localization. Lymphatic function in response to AM treatment was attenuated in mice with a lymphatic-specific Cx43 deletion. In vitro experiments in cultured human lymphatic endothelial cells identified a novel mechanism to improve gap junction coupling by pharmaceutically targeting Cx43 with verapamil. Finally, we show that connexin protein expression in cardiac lymphatics is conserved between mouse and human., Conclusions: AM is an endogenous, epicardial-derived factor that drives reparative cardiac lymphangiogenesis and function via Cx43, and this represents a new therapeutic pathway for improving myocardial edema after injury.- Published
- 2019
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42. Managing Clonal Hematopoiesis in Patients With Solid Tumors.
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Bolton KL, Gillis NK, Coombs CC, Takahashi K, Zehir A, Bejar R, Garcia-Manero G, Futreal A, Jensen BC, Diaz LA Jr, Gupta D, Mantha S, Klimek V, Papaemmanuil E, Levine R, and Padron E
- Subjects
- Humans, Precancerous Conditions blood, Precancerous Conditions genetics, Hematopoiesis genetics, Neoplasms blood, Neoplasms genetics
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The nuclear receptor RORα protects against angiotensin II-induced cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure.
- Author
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Beak JY, Kang HS, Huang W, Myers PH, Bowles DE, Jetten AM, and Jensen BC
- Subjects
- Angiotensin II toxicity, Animals, Cardiomegaly etiology, Cardiomegaly genetics, Cells, Cultured, Female, Fibroblasts drug effects, Fibroblasts metabolism, Heart Failure etiology, Heart Failure genetics, Humans, Interleukin-6 metabolism, Mice, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Middle Aged, Mitochondria, Heart metabolism, Myocardial Contraction, Myocytes, Cardiac drug effects, Myocytes, Cardiac metabolism, Myocytes, Cardiac physiology, Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 1, Group F, Member 1 genetics, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, STAT3 Transcription Factor metabolism, Cardiomegaly metabolism, Heart Failure metabolism, Loss of Function Mutation, Nuclear Receptor Subfamily 1, Group F, Member 1 metabolism
- Abstract
The nuclear receptor retinoic acid-related orphan receptor-α (RORα) regulates numerous critical biological processes, including central nervous system development, lymphocyte differentiation, and lipid metabolism. RORα has been recently identified in the heart, but very little is known about its role in cardiac physiology. We sought to determine whether RORα regulates myocardial hypertrophy and cardiomyocyte survival in the context of angiotensin II (ANG II) stimulation. For in vivo characterization of the function of RORα in the context of pathological cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure, we used the "staggerer" (RORα
sg/sg ) mouse, which harbors a germline mutation encoding a truncated and globally nonfunctional RORα. RORαsg/sg and wild-type littermate mice were infused with ANG II or vehicle for 14 days. For in vitro experiments, we overexpressed or silenced RORα in neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVMs) and human cardiac fibroblasts exposed to ANG II. RORαsg/sg mice developed exaggerated myocardial hypertrophy and contractile dysfunction after ANG II treatment. In vitro gain- and loss-of-function experiments were consistent with the discovery that RORα inhibits ANG II-induced pathological hypertrophy and cardiomyocyte death in vivo. RORα directly repressed IL-6 transcription. Loss of RORα function led to enhanced IL-6 expression, proinflammatory STAT3 activation (phopho-STAT3 Tyr705 ), and decreased mitochondrial number and function, oxidative stress, hypertrophy, and death of cardiomyocytes upon ANG II exposure. RORα was less abundant in failing compared with nonfailing human heart tissue. In conclusion, RORα protects against ANG II-mediated pathological hypertrophy and heart failure by suppressing the IL-6-STAT3 pathway and enhancing mitochondrial function. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Mice lacking retinoic acid-related orphan receptor-α (RORα) develop exaggerated cardiac hypertrophy after angiotensin II infusion. Loss of RORα leads to enhanced IL-6 expression and NF-κB nuclear translocation. RORα maintains mitochondrial function and reduces oxidative stress after angiotensin II. The abundance of RORα is reduced in failing mouse and human hearts.- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
44. Effect of 6-min Walk Test on pro-BNP Levels in Patients with Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension.
- Author
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Pathak V, Aris R, Jensen BC, Huang W, and Ford HJ
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Time Factors, Hypertension, Pulmonary blood, Natriuretic Peptide, Brain blood, Peptide Fragments blood, Walk Test
- Abstract
Background: Plasma pro-BNP (brain natriuretic peptide) levels are often elevated in response to right ventricular (RV) volume and pressure overload, parameters potentially affected by exercise. Plasma pro-BNP levels change in association with long-term changes in pulmonary hemodynamics, thereby serving as a potential biomarker in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). The 6-min Walk Test (6MWT) and pro-BNP level are often checked in a single office visit. There is no universal standard for measuring Pro-BNP levels relative to the timing of the 6MWT. Based on the studies in normal subjects indicating that pro-BNP levels changes after exercise, we hypothesized that the pro-BNP might rise after the 6MWT in PAH patients, potentially impacting clinical decisions., Methods: Patients at our center with WHO Group 1 PAH on active therapy at a stable dose for 30 days or more were enrolled. After resting the patient for 30 min, blood was drawn for baseline pro-BNP and a 6MWT was performed. Pro-BNP levels were drawn immediately after the 6MWT and 1 and 2 h later. Pro-BNP was measured using a commercially available ELISA kit. The levels before exercise and after exercise were compared using student's paired t tests., Results: There were 17 females and 3 male subjects. The mean age was 53 ± 11 years. Seven patients had systemic lupus erythematosus-related PAH, six had idiopathic PAH, three had scleroderma, three had portopulmonary hypertension, and one had HIV-related PAH. The mean PA pressure was 50 ± 15 mmHg with a mean pulmonary vascular resistance of 10 ± 4 Wood units. The majority of the patients were on multimodality PAH therapy, including parenteral prostacyclins. Mean 6MWT distance was 377 ± 140 m. In 14/20 patients, the pro-BNP level increased immediately after the 6MWT; in 12/20 patients, the pro-BNP level was elevated at 1 h post exercise. In the majority of the patients, the pro-BNP fell to baseline 2 h post 6MWT., Conclusion: There appears to be a trend of pro-BNP level increasing immediately after exercise and continuing to be elevated at 1 h. Pro-BNP levels then return to baseline at 2 h post 6MWT.
- Published
- 2018
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45. Quantitative trait mapping in Diversity Outbred mice identifies two genomic regions associated with heart size.
- Author
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Shorter JR, Huang W, Beak JY, Hua K, Gatti DM, de Villena FP, Pomp D, and Jensen BC
- Subjects
- Animals, Cholesterol genetics, Cholesterol metabolism, Chromosome Mapping, Diet adverse effects, Female, Genomics, Genotype, Haplotypes, Male, Mice, Phenotype, Genetic Variation, Heart anatomy & histology, Organ Size genetics, Quantitative Trait Loci genetics
- Abstract
Heart size is an important factor in cardiac health and disease. In particular, increased heart weight is predictive of adverse cardiovascular outcomes in multiple large community-based studies. We use two cohorts of Diversity Outbred (DO) mice to investigate the role of genetics, sex, age, and diet on heart size. DO mice (n = 289) of both sexes from generation 10 were fed a standard chow diet, and analyzed at 12-15 weeks of age. Another cohort of female DO mice (n = 258) from generation 11 were fed either a high-fat, cholesterol-containing (HFC) diet or a low-fat, high-protein diet, and analyzed at 24-25 weeks. We did not observe an effect of diet on body or heart weight in generation 11 mice, although we previously reported an effect on other cardiovascular risk factors, including cholesterol, triglycerides, and insulin. We do observe a significant genetic effect on heart weight in this population. We identified two quantitative trait loci for heart weight, one (Hwtf1) at a genome-wide significance level of p ≤ 0.05 on MMU15 and one (Hwtf2) at a genome-wide suggestive level of p ≤ 0.1 on MMU10, that together explain 13.3% of the phenotypic variance. Hwtf1 contained collagen type XXII alpha 1 chain (Col22a1), and the NZO/HlLtJ and WSB/EiJ haplotypes were associated with larger hearts. This is consistent with heart tissue Col22a1 expression in DO founders and SNP patterns within Hwtf1 for Col22a1. Col22a1 has been previously associated with cardiac fibrosis in mice, suggesting that Col22a1 may be involved in pathological cardiac hypertrophy.
- Published
- 2018
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46. Clinical Evidence Supports a Protective Role for CXCL5 in Coronary Artery Disease.
- Author
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Ravi S, Schuck RN, Hilliard E, Lee CR, Dai X, Lenhart K, Willis MS, Jensen BC, Stouffer GA, Patterson C, and Schisler JC
- Subjects
- Aged, Chemokine CXCL5 genetics, Coronary Artery Disease genetics, Female, Humans, Male, Chemokine CXCL5 blood, Coronary Artery Disease blood
- Abstract
Our goal was to measure the association of CXCL5 and molecular phenotypes associated with coronary atherosclerosis severity in patients at least 65 years old. CXCL5 is classically defined as a proinflammatory chemokine, but its role in chronic inflammatory diseases, such as coronary atherosclerosis, is not well defined. We enrolled individuals who were at least 65 years old and undergoing diagnostic cardiac catheterization. Coronary artery disease (CAD) severity was quantified in each subject via coronary angiography by calculating a CAD score. Circulating CXCL5 levels were measured from plasma, and both DNA genotyping and mRNA expression levels in peripheral blood mononuclear cells were quantified via microarray gene chips. We observed a negative association of CXCL5 levels with CAD at an odds ratio (OR) of 0.46 (95% CI, 0.27-0.75). Controlling for covariates, including sex, statin use, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, obesity, self-reported race, smoking, and diabetes, the OR was not significantly affected [OR, 0.54 (95% CI, 0.31-0.96)], consistent with a protective role for CXCL5 in coronary atherosclerosis. We also identified 18 genomic regions with expression quantitative trait loci of genes correlated with both CAD severity and circulating CXCL5 levels. Our clinical findings are consistent with the emerging link between chemokines and atherosclerosis and suggest new therapeutic targets for CAD., (Copyright © 2017 American Society for Investigative Pathology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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47. Effects of the kinase inhibitor sorafenib on heart, muscle, liver and plasma metabolism in vivo using non-targeted metabolomics analysis.
- Author
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Jensen BC, Parry TL, Huang W, Beak JY, Ilaiwy A, Bain JR, Newgard CB, Muehlbauer MJ, Patterson C, Johnson GL, and Willis MS
- Subjects
- Animals, Liver metabolism, Mice, Mice, Inbred Strains, Muscle, Skeletal metabolism, Niacinamide chemistry, Niacinamide pharmacology, Phenylurea Compounds chemistry, Plasma metabolism, Protein Kinase Inhibitors chemistry, Sorafenib, Tissue Distribution, Heart drug effects, Liver drug effects, Metabolomics, Muscle, Skeletal drug effects, Niacinamide analogs & derivatives, Phenylurea Compounds pharmacology, Plasma drug effects, Protein Kinase Inhibitors pharmacology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: The human kinome consists of roughly 500 kinases, including 150 that have been proposed as therapeutic targets. Protein kinases regulate an array of signalling pathways that control metabolism, cell cycle progression, cell death, differentiation and survival. It is not surprising, then, that new kinase inhibitors developed to treat cancer, including sorafenib, also exhibit cardiotoxicity. We hypothesized that sorafenib cardiotoxicity is related to its deleterious effects on specific cardiac metabolic pathways given the critical roles of protein kinases in cardiac metabolism., Experimental Approach: FVB/N mice (10 per group) were challenged with sorafenib or vehicle control daily for 2 weeks. Echocardiographic assessment of the heart identified systolic dysfunction consistent with cardiotoxicity in sorafenib-treated mice compared to vehicle-treated controls. Heart, skeletal muscle, liver and plasma were flash frozen and prepped for non-targeted GC-MS metabolomics analysis., Key Results: Compared to vehicle-treated controls, sorafenib-treated hearts exhibited significant alterations in 11 metabolites, including markedly altered taurine/hypotaurine metabolism (25-fold enrichment), identified by pathway enrichment analysis., Conclusions and Implications: These studies identified alterations in taurine/hypotaurine metabolism in the hearts and skeletal muscles of mice treated with sorafenib. Interventions that rescue or prevent these sorafenib-induced changes, such as taurine supplementation, may be helpful in attenuating sorafenib-induced cardiac injury., (© 2017 The British Pharmacological Society.)
- Published
- 2017
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48. Heart dosimetric analysis of three types of cardiac toxicity in patients treated on dose-escalation trials for Stage III non-small-cell lung cancer.
- Author
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Wang K, Pearlstein KA, Patchett ND, Deal AM, Mavroidis P, Jensen BC, Lipner MB, Zagar TM, Wang Y, Lee CB, Eblan MJ, Rosenman JG, Socinski MA, Stinchcombe TE, and Marks LB
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung pathology, Female, Heart radiation effects, Humans, Lung Neoplasms pathology, Male, Middle Aged, Prospective Studies, Radiometry methods, Radiotherapy, Conformal adverse effects, Radiotherapy, Conformal methods, Retrospective Studies, Carcinoma, Non-Small-Cell Lung radiotherapy, Cardiotoxicity etiology, Lung Neoplasms radiotherapy, Radiation Injuries etiology
- Abstract
Background and Purpose: To assess associations between radiation dose/volume parameters for cardiac subvolumes and different types of cardiac events in patients treated on radiation dose-escalation trials., Material and Methods: Patients with Stage III non-small-cell lung cancer received dose-escalated radiation (median 74 Gy) using 3D-conformal radiotherapy on six prospective trials from 1996 to 2009. Volumes analyzed included whole heart, left ventricle (LV), right atrium (RA), and left atrium (LA). Cardiac events were divided into three categories: pericardial (symptomatic effusion and pericarditis), ischemia (myocardial infarction and unstable angina), and arrhythmia. Univariable competing risks analysis was used., Results: 112 patients were analyzed, with median follow-up 8.8 years for surviving patients. Nine patients had pericardial, seven patients had ischemic, and 12 patients had arrhythmic events. Pericardial events were correlated with whole heart, RA, and LA dose (eg, heart-V30 [p=0.024], RA-V30 [p=0.013], and LA-V30 [p=0.001]), but not LV dose. Ischemic events were correlated with LV and whole heart dose (eg, LV-V30 [p=0.012], heart-V30 [p=0.048]). Arrhythmic events showed borderline significant associations with RA, LA, and whole heart dose (eg, RA-V30 [p=0.082], LA-V30 [p=0.076], heart-V30 [p=0.051]). Cardiac events were associated with decreased survival on univariable analysis (p=0.008, HR 2.09), but only disease progression predicted for decreased survival on multivariable analysis., Conclusions: Cardiac events were heterogeneous and associated with distinct heart subvolume doses. These data support the hypothesis of distinct etiologies for different types of radiation-associated cardiotoxicity., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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49. Kinome and Transcriptome Profiling Reveal Broad and Distinct Activities of Erlotinib, Sunitinib, and Sorafenib in the Mouse Heart and Suggest Cardiotoxicity From Combined Signal Transducer and Activator of Transcription and Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Inhibition.
- Author
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Stuhlmiller TJ, Zawistowski JS, Chen X, Sciaky N, Angus SP, Hicks ST, Parry TL, Huang W, Beak JY, Willis MS, Johnson GL, and Jensen BC
- Subjects
- Animals, Cardiotoxicity, Cells, Cultured, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Echocardiography, ErbB Receptors metabolism, Fatty Acids metabolism, Female, Heart diagnostic imaging, Heart Diseases diagnostic imaging, Heart Diseases enzymology, Heart Diseases genetics, Mice, Molecular Targeted Therapy, Myocardial Contraction drug effects, Myocytes, Cardiac drug effects, Myocytes, Cardiac enzymology, Niacinamide toxicity, Oxidation-Reduction, Protein Interaction Maps, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, STAT3 Transcription Factor genetics, STAT3 Transcription Factor metabolism, Signal Transduction, Sorafenib, Sunitinib, Time Factors, Antineoplastic Agents toxicity, ErbB Receptors antagonists & inhibitors, Erlotinib Hydrochloride toxicity, Gene Expression Profiling, Heart drug effects, Heart Diseases chemically induced, Indoles toxicity, Myocardium enzymology, Niacinamide analogs & derivatives, Phenylurea Compounds toxicity, Protein Kinase Inhibitors toxicity, Proteomics, Pyrroles toxicity, STAT3 Transcription Factor antagonists & inhibitors
- Abstract
Background: Most novel cancer therapeutics target kinases that are essential to tumor survival. Some of these kinase inhibitors are associated with cardiotoxicity, whereas others appear to be cardiosafe. The basis for this distinction is unclear, as are the molecular effects of kinase inhibitors in the heart., Methods and Results: We administered clinically relevant doses of sorafenib, sunitinib (cardiotoxic multitargeted kinase inhibitors), or erlotinib (a cardiosafe epidermal growth factor receptor inhibitor) to mice daily for 2 weeks. We then compared the effects of these 3 kinase inhibitors on the cardiac transcriptome using RNAseq and the cardiac kinome using multiplexed inhibitor beads coupled with mass spectrometry. We found unexpectedly broad molecular effects of all 3 kinase inhibitors, suggesting that target kinase selectivity does not define either the molecular response or the potential for cardiotoxicity. Using in vivo drug administration and primary cardiomyocyte culture, we also show that the cardiosafety of erlotinib treatment may result from upregulation of the cardioprotective signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 pathway, as co-treatment with erlotinib and a signal transducer and activator of transcription inhibitor decreases cardiac contractile function and cardiomyocyte fatty acid oxidation., Conclusions: Collectively our findings indicate that preclinical kinome and transcriptome profiling may predict the cardiotoxicity of novel kinase inhibitors, and suggest caution for the proposed therapeutic strategy of combined signal transducer and activator of transcription/epidermal growth factor receptor inhibition for cancer treatment., (© 2017 The Authors. Published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wiley.)
- Published
- 2017
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50. Cardiovascular Effects of the MEK Inhibitor, Trametinib: A Case Report, Literature Review, and Consideration of Mechanism.
- Author
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Banks M, Crowell K, Proctor A, and Jensen BC
- Subjects
- Aged, Heart Failure physiopathology, Humans, Male, Melanoma diagnosis, Melanoma drug therapy, Stroke Volume drug effects, Stroke Volume physiology, Heart Failure chemically induced, Heart Failure diagnosis, Protein Kinase Inhibitors adverse effects, Pyridones adverse effects, Pyrimidinones adverse effects
- Abstract
The MEK inhibitor trametinib was approved in 2013 for the treatment of unresectable or metastatic melanoma with a BRAF V600E mutation, the most common pathogenic mutation in melanoma. Trametinib blocks activation of ERK1/2, inhibiting cell proliferation in melanoma. ERK1/2 also protects against multiple types of cardiac insult in mouse models. Trametinib improves survival in melanoma patients, but evidence of unanticipated cardiotoxicity is emerging. Here we describe the case of a patient with metastatic melanoma who developed acute systolic heart failure after trametinib treatment and present the results of the literature review prompted by this case. A patient with no cardiac history presented with a 6.5-mm skin lesion and was found to have metastatic BRAF V600E melanoma. Combination treatment with trametinib and the BRAF inhibitor, dabrafenib, was initiated. The patient's pre-treatment ejection fraction was 55-60%. His EF declined after 13 days and that was 40% 1 month after treatment. Two months after initiating trametinib, he developed dyspnea and fatigue. We conducted a chart review in the electronic medical record. We conducted a PubMed search using trametinib/adverse effects AND ("heart failure" OR "left ventricular dysfunction" OR hypertension OR cardiotoxicity OR mortality). We also queried the FDA Adverse Events Reporting System for reports of cardiomyopathy, ejection fraction decrease, and left ventricular dysfunction associated with trametinib between January 1, 2013, and July 20, 2017. The literature search retrieved 19 articles, including clinical trials and case reports. Early clinical experience with the MEK inhibitor trametinib suggests that its clinical efficacy may be compromised by cardiotoxicity. Further studies in humans and animals are required to determine the extent of this adverse effect, as well as its underlying mechanisms.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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