13 research outputs found

    Variable cardiac myosin binding protein-C expression in the myofilaments due to MYBPC3 mutations in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

    Get PDF
    Background: Mutations in MYBPC3 are the most common cause of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). These mutations produce dysfunctional protein that is quickly degraded and not incorporated in the myofilaments. Most patients are heterozygous and allelic expression differs between cells. We hypothesized that this would lead to cell-to-cell variation in cardiac myosin binding protein-C (cMyBP-C, encoded by MYBPC3 gene) protein levels. Methods: Twelve HCM patients were included (six had no sarcomere mutations (HCMsmn) and served as the control group and six harbored mutations in the MYBPC3 gene (MYBPC3mut). Western blot and RNA sequencing analysis of cardiac tissue lysates were performed to detect overall cMyBP-C protein and mRNA levels. Cellular expression of cMyBP-C and α-actin was obtained by immunofluorescence staining. Quantification of cell-to-cell variation of cMyBP-C expression between cardiomyocytes was measured by determining the ratio of cMyBP-C:α-actin stained area of each cell. Results: Protein and mRNA analysis revealed significantly reduced cMyBP-C levels in MYBPC3mutpatients compared with HCMsmnpatients (0.73 ± 0.09 vs. 1.0 ± 0.15, p <.05; 162.3 ± 16.4 vs. 326.2 ± 41.9 RPKM, p =.002), without any sign of truncated proteins. Immunofluorescence staining of individual cardiomyocytes in HCMsmnpatients demonstrated homogenous and equal cMyBP-C:α-actin staining ratio. In contrast, MYBPC3mutpatients demonstrated inhomogeneous staining patterns with a large intercellular variability per patient. Coefficient of variance for cMyBP-C/α-actin staining for each patient showed a significant difference between both groups (17.30 ± 4.08 vs. 5.18 ± 0.65% in MYBPC3mutvs. HCMsmn, p =.02). Conclusion: This is the first study to demonstrate intercellular variation of myofilament cMyBP-C protein expression within the myocardium from HCM patients with heterozygous MYBPC3 mutations

    Constructing bilayer and volumetric atrial models at scale.

    Get PDF
    To enable large in silico trials and personalized model predictions on clinical timescales, it is imperative that models can be constructed quickly and reproducibly. First, we aimed to overcome the challenges of constructing cardiac models at scale through developing a robust, open-source pipeline for bilayer and volumetric atrial models. Second, we aimed to investigate the effects of fibres, fibrosis and model representation on fibrillatory dynamics. To construct bilayer and volumetric models, we extended our previously developed coordinate system to incorporate transmurality, atrial regions and fibres (rule-based or data driven diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)). We created a cohort of 1000 biatrial bilayer and volumetric models derived from computed tomography (CT) data, as well as models from MRI, and electroanatomical mapping. Fibrillatory dynamics diverged between bilayer and volumetric simulations across the CT cohort (correlation coefficient for phase singularity maps: left atrial (LA) 0.27 ± 0.19, right atrial (RA) 0.41 ± 0.14). Adding fibrotic remodelling stabilized re-entries and reduced the impact of model type (LA: 0.52 ± 0.20, RA: 0.36 ± 0.18). The choice of fibre field has a small effect on paced activation data (less than 12 ms), but a larger effect on fibrillatory dynamics. Overall, we developed an open-source user-friendly pipeline for generating atrial models from imaging or electroanatomical mapping data enabling in silico clinical trials at scale (https://github.com/pcmlab/atrialmtk)

    Using a respiratory navigator significantly reduces variability when quantifying left ventricular torsion with cardiovascular magnetic resonance

    Get PDF
    BACKGROUND: Left ventricular (LV) torsion is an important indicator of cardiac function that is limited by high inter-test variability (50% of the mean value). We hypothesized that this high inter-test variability is partly due to inconsistent breath-hold positions during serial image acquisitions, which could be significantly improved by using a respiratory navigator for cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) based quantification of LV torsion. METHODS: We assessed respiratory-related variability in measured LV torsion with two distinct experimental protocols. First, 17 volunteers were recruited for CMR with cine displacement encoding with stimulated echoes (DENSE) in which a respiratory navigator was used to measure and then enforce variability in end-expiratory position between all LV basal and apical acquisitions. From these data, we quantified the inter-test variability of torsion in the absence and presence of enforced end-expiratory position variability, which established an upper bound for the expected torsion variability. For the second experiment (in 20 new, healthy volunteers), 10 pairs of cine DENSE basal and apical images were each acquired from consecutive breath-holds and consecutive navigator-gated scans (with a single acceptance position). Inter-test variability of torsion was compared between the breath-hold and navigator-gated scans to quantify the variability due to natural breath-hold variation. To demonstrate the importance of these variability reductions, we quantified the reduction in sample size required to detect a clinically meaningful change in LV torsion with the use of a respiratory navigator. RESULTS: The mean torsion was 3.4 ± 0.2°/cm. From the first experiment, enforced variability in end-expiratory position translated to considerable variability in measured torsion (0.56 ± 0.34°/cm), whereas inter-test variability with consistent end-expiratory position was 57% lower (0.24 ± 0.16°/cm, p < 0.001). From the second experiment, natural respiratory variability from consecutive breath-holds translated to a variability in torsion of 0.24 ± 0.10°/cm, which was significantly higher than the variability from navigator-gated scans (0.18 ± 0.06°/cm, p = 0.02). By using a respiratory navigator with DENSE, theoretical sample sizes were reduced from 66 to 16 and 26 to 15 as calculated from the two experiments. CONCLUSIONS: A substantial portion (22-57%) of the inter-test variability of LV torsion can be reduced by using a respiratory navigator to ensure a consistent breath-hold position between image acquisitions
    corecore