38 research outputs found

    The role of PI3K and NADPH oxidases in vasculogenesis/angiogenesis of mouse embryonic stem cells

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    The impact of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and Phosphoinositide 3 kinase (PI3K) in vascular differentiating of embryonic stem (ES) cells is largely unknown. Here we show that silencing PI3K catalytic subunit p110Ī± and NOX1 using short hairpin RNA (shRNA) or inhibition of Rac1 significantly abolished the superoxide (O2-) production stimulated by vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in mouse ES cells and in ES cell-derived Flk-1+ vascular progenitor cells. Moreover, silencing p110Ī± or inhibition the Rac1 arrested vascular development at initial stages of vasculogenesis in embryoid bodies even under VEGF treatment. In sorted Flk-1 positive ES cells tube-like structure formation on matrigel and cell migration in the scratch migration assay were totally impaired in absence of p110Ī±, whereas silencing NOX1 in ES cells caused a significant reduction in the PECAM-1 positive area, branching points, cell migration and tube length upon VEGF treatment. However, vascular differentiation markers were still produced in shRNA VEGF treated NOX1 knock down ES cells. The efficiency of silencing the p110Ī± catalytic subunit of PI3K and NOX1 to inhibit angiogenesis/vasculogenesis were investigated for their capacity to inhibit tumor-induced angiogenesis in confrontation cultures consisting of embryoid bodies and multicellular DU-145 prostate tumor spheroids. Interestingly, we found that silencing p110Ī± can strongly inhibited the vascularization of multicellular tumor spheroids in confrontation cultures. These findings provide direct evidence that the activity of p110Ī± in endothelial cells is essential in vasculogenesis/angiogenesis and suggest that p110Ī± and their downstream signalling cascade may represent promising therapeutic targets for the treatment of numerous human diseases that involve aberrant neovascularization

    Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell as a Disease Modeling and Drug Development Platformā€”A Cardiac Perspective

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    A comprehensive understanding of the pathophysiology and cellular responses to drugs in human heart disease is limited by species differences between humans and experimental animals. In addition, isolation of human cardiomyocytes (CMs) is complicated because cells obtained by biopsy do not proliferate to provide sufficient numbers of cells for preclinical studies in vitro. Interestingly, the discovery of human-induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) has opened up the possibility of generating and studying heart disease in a culture dish. The combination of reprogramming and genome editing technologies to generate a broad spectrum of human heart diseases in vitro offers a great opportunity to elucidate gene function and mechanisms. However, to exploit the potential applications of hiPSC-derived-CMs for drug testing and studying adult-onset cardiac disease, a full functional characterization of maturation and metabolic traits is required. In this review, we focus on methods to reprogram somatic cells into hiPSC and the solutions for overcome immaturity of the hiPSC-derived-CMs to mimic the structure and physiological properties of the adult human CMs to accurately model disease and test drug safety. Finally, we discuss how to improve the culture, differentiation, and purification of CMs to obtain sufficient numbers of desired types of hiPSC-derived-CMs for disease modeling and drug development platform

    Long-Chain and Very Long-Chain Ceramides Mediate Doxorubicin-Induced Toxicity and Fibrosis

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    Doxorubicin (Dox) is a chemotherapeutic agent with cardiotoxicity associated with profibrotic effects. Dox increases ceramide levels with pro-inflammatory effects, cell death, and fibrosis. The purpose of our study was to identify the underlying ceramide signaling pathways. We aimed to characterize the downstream effects on cell survival, metabolism, and fibrosis. Human fibroblasts (hFSF) were treated with 0.7 ĀµM of Dox or transgenically overexpressed ceramide synthase 2 (FLAG-CerS2). Furthermore, cells were pre-treated with MitoTempo (MT) (2 h, 20 ĀµM) or Fumonisin B1 (FuB) (4 h, 100 ĀµM). Protein expression was measured by Western blot or immunofluorescence (IF). Ceramide levels were determined with mass spectroscopy (MS). Visualizations were conducted using laser scanning microscopy (LSM) or electron microscopy. Mitochondrial activity was measured using seahorse analysis. Dox and CerS2 overexpression increased CerS2 protein expression. Coherently, ceramides were elevated with the highest peak for C24:0. Ceramide- induced mitochondrial ROS production was reduced with MT or FuB preincubation. Mitochondrial homeostasis was reduced and accompanied by reduced ATP production. Our data show that the increase in pro-inflammatory ceramides is an essential contributor to Dox side-effects. The accumulation of ceramides resulted in a lipotoxic shift and subsequently mitochondrial structural and functional damage, which was partially reversible following inhibition of ceramide synthesis

    Metabolomic Profiling in Patients with Heart Failure and Exercise Intolerance: Kynurenine as a Potential Biomarker

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    Aims: Metabolic and structural perturbations in skeletal muscle have been found in patients with heart failure (HF) both with preserved (HFpEF) and reduced (HFrEF) ejection fraction in association with reduced muscle endurance (RME). We aimed in the current study to create phenotypes for patients with RME and HFpEF compared to RME HFrEF according to their metabolomic profiles and to test the potential of Kynurenine (Kyn) as a marker for RME. Methods: Altogether, 18 HFrEF, 17 HFpEF, and 20 healthy controls (HC) were prospectively included in the current study. The following tests were performed on all participants: isokinetic muscle function tests, echocardiography, spiroergometry, and varied blood tests. Liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry was used to quantify metabolites in serum. Results: Except for aromatic and branched amino acids (AA), patients with HF showed reduced AAs compared to HC. Further perturbations were elevated concentrations of Kyn and acylcarnitines (ACs) in HFpEF and HFrEF patients ( p < 0.05). While patients with HFpEF and RME presented with reduced concentrations of ACs (long- and medium-chains), those with HFrEF and RME had distorted AAs metabolism ( p < 0.05). With an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.83, Kyn shows potential as a marker in HF and RME (specificity 70%, sensitivity 83%). In a multiple regression model consisting of short-chain-ACs, spermine, ornithine, glutamate, and Kyn, the latest was an independent predictor for RME (95% CI: āˆ’13.01, āˆ’3.30, B: āˆ’8.2 per 1 ĀµM increase, p = 0.001). Conclusions: RME in patients with HFpEF vs. HFrEF proved to have different metabolomic profiles suggesting varied pathophysiology. Kyn might be a promising biomarker for patients with HF and RME

    Mimicry of a constitutively active preā€“B cell receptor in acute lymphoblastic leukemia cells

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    Preā€“B cells undergo apoptosis unless they are rescued by preā€“B cell receptorā€“dependent survival signals. We previously showed that the BCR-ABL1 kinase that is expressed in preā€“B lymphoblastic leukemia bypasses selection for preā€“B cell receptorā€“dependent survival signals. Investigating possible interference of BCR-ABL1 with preā€“B cell receptor signaling, we found that neither SYK nor SLP65 can be phosphorylated in response to preā€“B cell receptor engagement. Instead, Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) is constitutively phosphorylated by BCR-ABL1. Activated BTK is essential for survival signals that otherwise would arise from the preā€“B cell receptor, including activation of PLCĪ³1, autonomous Ca(2+) signaling, STAT5-phosphorylation, and up-regulation of BCLX (L). Inhibition of BTK activity specifically induces apoptosis in BCR-ABL1 (+) leukemia cells to a similar extent as inhibition of BCR-ABL1 kinase activity itself. However, BCR-ABL1 cannot directly bind to full-length BTK. Instead, BCR-ABL1 induces the expression of a truncated splice variant of BTK that acts as a linker between the two kinases. As opposed to full-length BTK, truncated BTK lacks kinase activity yet can bind to BCR-ABL1 through its SRC-homology domain 3. Acting as a linker, truncated BTK enables BCR-ABL1ā€“dependent activation of full-length BTK, which initiates downstream survival signals and mimics a constitutively active preā€“B cell receptor
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