25 research outputs found

    Infectious diseases in allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation: prevention and prophylaxis strategy guidelines 2016

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    Transcoronary gene transfer of SERCA2a increases coronary blood flow and decreases cardiomyocyte size in a type 2 diabetic rat model

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    The Otsuka Long-Evans Tokushima fatty rat is an animal model of Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM), which is characterized by diastolic dysfunction associated with decreased sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA2a). The aim of this study was to examine whether gene transfer of SERCA2a can influence coronary blood flow and cardiomyocyte diameter in this model. DM rats were injected with adenovirus carrying SERCA2a (DM+SERCA) or beta-galactosidase gene (DM+betaGal). Coronary blood flow was measured in cross-circulated excised hearts 3 days after infection. Although in all groups coronary blood flow remained unchanged even if left ventricular (LV) volume or intracoronary Ca(2+) infusion was increased, the DM+SERCA group showed a sustained increase in coronary blood flow compared with the other groups. This result suggests that the sustained high coronary blood flow is a specific response in SERCA2a-overexpressed hearts. Although the LV weight-to-body weight ratio (LV/BW) and cardiomyocyte diameter were higher in the DM and DM+betaGal groups than in the non-DM group, in the DM+SERCA group, these measurements were restored to non-DM size. The percentages of collagen area in the three DM groups was significantly higher than results shown in non-DM rats, and there were no significant differences in collagen area percentage among the three DM groups. These results suggest that a lowered LV/BW by SERCA2a overexpression is due mainly to reduced size of cardiomyocytes without any changes in collagen area percentage. In conclusion, in DM failing hearts, SERCA2a gene transfer can increase coronary blood flow and reduce cardiomyocyte size without reduction in collagen production

    Restoration of mechanical and energetic function in failing aortic-banded rat hearts by gene transfer of calcium cycling proteins

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    The aim of this study was to examine whether short- and long-term gene transfer of Ca(2+) handling proteins restore left ventricular (LV) mechanoenergetics in aortic banding-induced failing hearts. Aortic-banded rats received recombinant adenoviruses carrying sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SERCA2a) (Banding+SERCA), parvalbumin (Banding+Parv) or beta-galactosidase (Banding+betagal), or an adeno-associated virus carrying SERCA2a (Banding+AAV.SERCA) by a catheter-based technique. LV mechanoenergetic function was measured in cross-circulated hearts. "Banding", "Banding+betagal" and "Banding+saline" groups showed lower end-systolic pressure at 0.1 ml intraballoon water (ESP(0.1)), higher end-diastolic pressure at 0.1 ml intraballoon water (EDP(0.1)) and slower LV relaxation rate, compared with "Normal" and "Sham". However, "Banding+SERCA" and "Banding+Parv" showed high ESP(0.1), low EDP(0.1) and fast LV relaxation rate. In "Banding", "Banding+betagal" and "Banding+saline", slope of relation between cardiac oxygen consumption and systolic pressure-volume area, O(2) cost of total mechanical energy, was twice higher than normal value, whereas slope in "Baning+SERCA" and "Banding+Parv" was similar to normal value. Furthermore, O(2) cost of LV contractility in the 3 control banding groups was approximately 3 times higher than normal value, whereas O(2) cost of contractility in "Banding+SERCA", "Banding+AAV.SERCA" and "Banding+Parv" was as low as normal value. Thus, high O(2) costs of total mechanical energy and of LV contractility in failing hearts indicate energy wasting both in chemomechanical energy transduction and in calcium handling. Improved calcium handling by both short- and long-term overexpression of SERCA2a and parvalbumin transforms the inefficient energy utilization into a more efficient state. Therefore enhancement of calcium handling either by resequestration into the SR or by intracellular buffering improves not only mechanical but energetic function in failing hearts

    Exploiting Cameleon Probes to Investigate Organelles Ca2+ Handling

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    Calcium ion (Ca2+) is a ubiquitous intracellular messenger able to generate versatile intracellular signals that modulate a large variety of functions in virtually every cell type. Chemical and genetic biosensors, targeted to different subcellular compartments, have been developed and continuously improved to monitor Ca2+ dynamics in living cells. Here we describe the usage of F\uf6rster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based Cameleon probes to investigate Ca2+ influx across the plasma membrane (PM) or Ca2+ release from the main intracellular Ca2+ store, the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)
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