16 research outputs found
Versican is induced in infiltrating monocytes in myocardial infarction
Versican, a large chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan, plays a role in conditions such as wound healing and tissue remodelling. To test the hypothesis that versican expression is transiently upregulated and plays a role in the infarcted heart, we examined its expression in a rat model of myocardial infarction. Northern blot analysis demonstrated increased expression of versican mRNA. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR analysis revealed that versican mRNA began to increase as early as 6 h and reached its maximal level 2 days after coronary artery ligation. Versican mRNA then gradually decreased, while the mRNA of decorin, another small proteoglycan, increased thereafter. Versican mRNA was localized in monocytes, as indicated by CD68-positive staining, around the infarct tissue. The induction of versican mRNA was accelerated by ischemia/reperfusion (I/R), which was characterized by massive cell infiltration and enhanced inflammatory response. To examine the alteration of versican expression in monocytes/macrophages, we isolated human peripheral blood mononuclear cells and stimulated them with granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF). Stimulation of mononuclear cells with GM-CSF increased the expression of versican mRNA as well as cytokine induction. The production of versican by monocytes in the infarct area represents a novel finding of the expression of an extracellular matrix gene by monocytes in the infarcted heart. We suggest that upregulation of versican in the infarcted myocardium may have a role in the inflammatory reaction, which mediates subsequent chemotaxis in the infarcted heart
Pre-Angioplasty Instantaneous Wave-Free Ratio Pullback Predicts Hemodynamic Outcome In Humans With Coronary Artery Disease: Primary Results of the International Multicenter iFR GRADIENT Registry.
The authors sought to evaluate the accuracy of instantaneous wave-Free Ratio (iFR) pullback measurements to predict post-percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) physiological outcomes, and to quantify how often iFR pullback alters PCI strategy in real-world clinical settings.This article is freely available via Open Access. Please click on the Additional Link above to access the full-text via the publisher's site
Distinct Responses to Mechanical Grinding and Hydrostatic Pressure in Luminescent Chromism of Tetrathiazolylthiophene
Luminescent
mechanochromism has been intensively studied in the
past few years. However, the difference in the anisotropic grinding
and the isotropic compression is not clearly distinguished in many
cases, in spite of the importance of this discrimination for the application
of such mechanochromic materials. We now report the distinct luminescent
responses of a new organic fluorophore, tetrathiazolylthiophene, to
these stresses. The multichromism is achieved over the entire visible
region using the single fluorophore. The different mechanisms of a
blue shift by grinding crystals and of a red shift under hydrostatic
pressure are fully investigated, which includes a high-pressure single-crystal
X-ray diffraction analysis. The anisotropic and isotropic modes of
mechanical loading suppress and enhance the excimer formation, respectively,
in the 3D hydrogen-bond network