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Archive for the ‘Human Sensation and Cellular Transduction: Physiology and Therapeutics’ Category

Exercise and Physical Activity: Vertical Impacts need to exceed 4g to be Bone Protective

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

The study is summerized in the NYT FITNESS Section, 3/7/2014

Why High-Impact Exercise Is Good for Your Bones

By GRETCHEN REYNOLDS

 

Original Research Article

Front. Endocrinol., 03 March 2014 | doi: 10.3389/fendo.2014.00020

Physical activity and bone: may the force be with you

imageJonathan H. Tobias1*, imageVirginia Gould1imageLuke Brunton1imageKevin Deere1imageJoern Rittweger2imageMatthijs Lipperts3 and imageBernd Grimm3

  • 1Musculoskeletal Research Unit, University of Bristol School of Clinical Sciences, Avon Orthopaedic Centre, Southmead Hospital, Bristol, UK
  • 2German Aerospace Center, Institute of Aerospace Medicine, Cologne, Germany
  • 3Atrium Medical Centre, AHORSE Foundation, Heerlen, Netherlands

Physical activity (PA) is thought to play an important role in preventing bone loss and osteoporosis in older people. However, the type of activity that is most effective in this regard remains unclear. Objectively measured PA using accelerometers is an accurate method for studying relationships between PA and bone and other outcomes. We recently used this approach in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) to examine relationships between levels of vertical impacts associated with PA and hip bone mineral density (BMD). Interestingly, vertical impacts >4g, though rare, largely accounted for the relationship between habitual levels of PA and BMD in adolescents. However, in a subsequent pilot study where we used the same method to record PA levels in older people, no >4g impacts were observed. Therefore, to the extent that vertical impacts need to exceed a certain threshold in order to be bone protective, such a threshold is likely to be considerably lower in older people as compared with adolescents. Further studies aimed at identifying such a threshold in older people are planned, to provide a basis for selecting exercise regimes in older people which are most likely to be bone protective.

http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00020/full#sthash.TrgXpF8b.dpuf

PA and Older People’s Bone Health

Hip fracture is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in older people, leading to loss of independence, and a huge economic burden through both direct medical costs and social sequelae (7). It is thought that age related declines in the intensity and quantity of PA contribute to this increase in risk of osteoporotic fracture, and that promotion of PA in older people helps to maintain bone mass: epidemiological studies report that risk of hip fracture is reduced in older adults who remain more physically active (8); walking for leisure is associated with reduced hip fracture risk (911). Therefore, although increased PA in the elderly leads to greater exposure to falls risk, it would seem that any tendency for this to increase fracture risk is outweighed by other benefits and that the net effect is a reduction in fracture risk. As well as benefits in terms of bone mass as described below, PA may also reduce the risk of falls through specific muscle-strengthening and balance-training activities, which preserve muscle strength, delaying sarcopenia, and maintaining neuromuscular function necessary to keep balance and react to a fall.

In terms of effects on bone mass, PA may stimulate bone formation and thus improve bone mineral density (BMD), which is strongly related to hip fracture risk (12), through exposing the skeleton to mechanical strain (defined as deformation of bone per unit length in response to loading). An important physiological link exists between exercise and bone, as demonstrated by findings from animal studies over 30 years ago that the skeleton is exquisitely responsive to mechanical strain; bone loss caused by immobilization was prevented by only four loading cycles per day (13). Though related to fracture risk, there is little evidence that walking interventions improve BMD, as judged by findings of a recent meta-analysis (14). In contrast, protocols that combined jogging, walking, and stair climbing consistently improve hip BMD in older people (15). Interventions to increase aerobic activities, high impact exercises, “odd-impact” exercise loading, and resistance training (designed to increase bone loading through increased muscle strength) also improve hip BMD in this group (1519). However, the optimum type of activity for improving BMD remains unknown, and it is unclear whether a specific strain needs to be exceeded. Moreover, other aspects of impacts may also be important, such as movement frequency. In addition, specific activities may affect BMD at certain sites in preference to others, which may be important if improved BMD is to translate into reduced fracture risk which is the primary goal, in light of evidence that hip fracture risk is related to thinning of a specific portion of the femoral neck (20).

http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00020/full#sthash.TrgXpF8b.dpuf

Future Research Questions

Taken together, these pilot studies suggest that not surprisingly, older individuals are exposed to considerably lower g-forces compared to adolescents and premenopausal women. For example, there was virtually a complete lack of higher impacts at the level suggested to be required for optimal bone development in adolescents. Due to the small size of the pilot studies presented here, and the selective nature of their recruitment, our findings are not necessarily generalizable to the wider population; in the Vertical Impacts and Bone in the Elderly (VIBE) study, we are in the process of extending our studies to characterize vertical impacts in much larger population-based cohorts of older people. Assuming our findings are at least partly representative of the level of vertical forces to which older people are exposed, impacts within lower g ranges which we recorded may well exert some protective effect on the skeleton. Loss of these low impacts may represent an important contribution to the development of osteoporosis in later life. The skeleton of older individuals may be more sensitive to low impacts compared to children and younger adults for several reasons. For example, lower g-forces may be needed to preserve bone, as opposed to stimulate its acquisition during peak bone mass attainment. In children and adolescents, bone accrual is achieved by a process of bone modeling involving a combination of longitudinal growth and periosteal expansion; it may well be that these physiological processes are regulated by a different level of strain, compared to bone remodeling responsible for preservation of bone in the mature skeleton. Furthermore, a given level of impact will produce greater strains in older people, due to their reduced bone strength.

Therefore, although a dose–response relationship between impact level and BMD may still exist in older people, this is likely to be shifted to the left. Defining such relationships will be key to identifying the types of activity that are likely to be the most effective in preventing bone loss and osteoporosis in older individuals. An important caveat is that exposure to such forces must be safe and without risk of injury. If forces between 1.8 and 2.1g, in the upper range of that observed in older participants performing an aerobics class, are found to be bone protective, it seems highly unlikely that these are sufficient to cause injury by themselves. However, performing such activities without supervision or appropriate training, or in the presence of co-morbidities affecting musculoskeletal or neurological function, may lead to a significant risk of falls and fractures. Therefore, having found which activities are likely to be bone protective, an important goal in their evaluation will be to ensure they can be delivered safely as well as effectively. 

http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00020/full#sthash.TrgXpF8b.dpuf

REFERENCES

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http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00020/full

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4. Fox KR, Hillsdon M, Sharp D, Cooper AR, Coulson JC, Davis M, et al. Neighbourhood deprivation and physical activity in UK older adults. Health Place (2011) 17:633–40. doi:10.1016/j.healthplace.2011.01.002

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5. Stathi A, Gilbert H, Fox KR, Coulson J, Davis M, Thompson JL. Determinants of neighborhood activity of adults age 70 and over: a mixed-methods study. J Aging Phys Act (2012) 20:148–70.

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6. Lee IM, Shiroma EJ, Lobelo F, Puska P, Blair SN, Katzmarzyk PT. Effect of physical inactivity on major non-communicable diseases worldwide: an analysis of burden of disease and life expectancy. Lancet (2012) 380:219–29. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61031-9

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7. Burge RT. The cost of osteoporotic fractures in the UK: projections for 2000-2020. J Med Econ (2001) 4:51–62. doi:10.1159/000176049

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8. Moayyeri A. The association between physical activity and osteoporotic fractures: a review of the evidence and implications for future research. Ann Epidemiol (2008) 18:827–35. doi:10.1016/j.annepidem.2008.08.007

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9. Feskanich D, Willett W, Colditz G. Walking and leisure-time activity and risk of hip fracture in postmenopausal women. JAMA (2002) 288:2300–6. doi:10.1001/jama.288.18.2300

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10. Moayyeri A, Besson H, Luben RN, Wareham NJ, Khaw KT. The association between physical activity in different domains of life and risk of osteoporotic fractures. Bone (2010) 47:693–700. doi:10.1016/j.bone.2010.06.023

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11. Cummings SR, Nevitt MC, Browner WS, Stone K, Fox K, Ensrud KE, et al. Group ftSoOFR. 1995. Risk factors for hip fracture in white women. N Engl J Med (1995) 332:767–73. doi:10.1056/NEJM199503233321202

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12. Cummings SR, Black DM, Nevitt MC, Browner W, Cauley J, Ensrud K, et al. Bone density at various sites for prediction of hip fractures. Lancet (1993) 341:72–5. doi:10.1016/0140-6736(93)92555-8

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13. Rubin LT, Lanyon CE. Regulation of bone formation by applied dynamic loads. J. Bone Joint Surg. (1984) 66A:397–402.

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14. Martyn-St James M, Carroll S. Meta-analysis of walking for preservation of bone mineral density in postmenopausal women. Bone (2008) 43:521–31. doi:10.1016/j.bone.2008.05.012

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15. Martyn-St James M, Carroll S. A meta-analysis of impact exercise on postmenopausal bone loss: the case for mixed loading exercise programmes. Br J Sports Med (2009) 43:898–908. doi:10.1136/bjsm.2008.052704

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16. Bemben DA, Bemben MG. Dose-response effect of 40 weeks of resistance training on bone mineral density in older adults. Osteoporos Int (2011) 22:179–86. doi:10.1007/s00198-010-1182-9

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17. Nikander R, Kannus P, Dastidar P, Hannula M, Harrison L, Cervinka T, et al. Targeted exercises against hip fragility. Osteoporos Int (2009) 20:1321–8. doi:10.1007/s00198-008-0785-x

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18. Martyn-St James M, Carroll S. Effects of different impact exercise modalities on bone mineral density in premenopausal women: a meta-analysis. J Bone Miner Metab (2010) 28:251–67. doi:10.1007/s00774-009-0139-6

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19. Marques EA, Wanderley F, Machado L, Sousa F, Viana JL, Moreira-Goncalves D, et al. Effects of resistance and aerobic exercise on physical function, bone mineral density, OPG and RANKL in older women. Exp Gerontol (2011) 46(7):524–32. doi:10.1016/j.exger.2011.02.005

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20. Johannesdottir F, Poole KE, Reeve J, Siggeirsdottir K, Aspelund T, Mogensen B, et al. Distribution of cortical bone in the femoral neck and hip fracture: a prospective case-control analysis of 143 incident hip fractures; the AGES-REYKJAVIK Study. Bone (2011) 48:1268–76. doi:10.1016/j.bone.2011.03.776

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21. Lorentzon M, Mellstrom D, Ohlsson C. Association of amount of physical activity with cortical bone size and trabecular volumetric BMD in young adult men: the GOOD study. J Bone Miner Res (2005) 20:1936–43. doi:10.1359/JBMR.050709

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22. Boyer KA, Kiratli BJ, Andriacchi TP, Beaupre GS. Maintaining femoral bone density in adults: how many steps per day are enough? Osteoporos Int (2011) 22:2981–8. doi:10.1007/s00198-011-1538-9

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23. Sayers A, Mattocks C, Deere K, Ness A, Riddoch C, Tobias JH. Habitual levels of vigorous, but not moderate or light, physical activity is positively related to cortical bone mass in adolescents. J Clin Endocrinol Metab (2011) 96:E793–802. doi:10.1210/jc.2010-2550

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24. Mattocks C, Leary S, Ness A, Deere K, Saunders J, Tilling K, et al. Calibration of an accelerometer during free-living activities in children. Int J Pediatr Obes (2007) 2:218–26.

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25. Vainionpaa A, Korpelainen R, Vihriala E, Rinta-Paavola A, Leppaluoto J, Jamsa T. Intensity of exercise is associated with bone density change in premenopausal women. Osteoporos Int (2006) 17:455–63. doi:10.1007/s00198-005-0005-x

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26. Deere K, Sayers A, Rittweger J, Tobias J. Habitual levels of high, but not moderate or low, impact activity are positively related to hip BMD and geometry: results from a population-based study of adolescents. J Bone Miner Res (2012) 27:1887–95. doi:10.1002/jbmr.1631

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27. Sievanen H. Bone: impact loading-nature’s way to strengthen bone. Nat Rev Endocrinol (2012) 8:391–3. doi:10.1038/nrendo.2012.88

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28. Deere K, Sayers A, Rittweger J, Tobias JH. A cross-sectional study of the relationship between cortical bone and high-impact activity in young adult males and females. J Clin Endocrinol Metab (2012) 97:3734–43. doi:10.1210/jc.2012-1752

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29. Nilsson M, Ohlsson C, Mellstrom D, Lorentzon M. Previous sport activity during childhood and adolescence is associated with increased cortical bone size in young adult men. J Bone Miner Res (2009) 24:125–33. doi:10.1359/jbmr.080909

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30. Deere K, Sayers A, Davey Smith G, Rittweger J, Tobias JH. High impact activity is related to lean but not fat mass: findings from a population-based study in adolescents. Int J Epidemiol (2012) 41:1124–31. doi:10.1093/ije/dys073

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31. Riddoch CJ, Leary SD, Ness AR, Blair SN, Deere K, Mattocks C, et al. Prospective associations between objective measures of physical activity and fat mass in 12-14 year old children: the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC). BMJ (2009) 339:b4544. doi:10.1136/bmj.b4544

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– See more at: http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fendo.2014.00020/full#sthash.TrgXpF8b.dpuf

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Richard Lifton, MD, PhD of Yale University & Howard Hughes Medical Institute: Recipient of 2014 Breakthrough Prizes Awarded in Life Sciences for the Discovery of Genes and Biochemical Mechanisms that cause Hypertension

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Article ID #118: Richard Lifton, MD, PhD of Yale University and Howard Hughes Medical Institute: Recipient of 2014 Breakthrough Prizes Awarded in Life Sciences for the Discovery of Genes and Biochemical Mechanisms that cause Hypertension. Published on 3/3/2014

WordCloud Image Produced by Adam Tubman

 

Yale’s Lifton receives $3 million science prize at gala Silicon Valley ceremony

Friday, December 13, 2013

Bill Hathaway / 203-432-1322

Read this article on YaleNews

Richard Lifton, Sterling Professor of Genetics and chair of the Department of Genetics, has received a $3 million Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, created by top Silicon Valley entrepreneurs.

Lifton was one of eight scientists honored Dec. 12 with $21 million in prizes at gala ceremonies hosted by actor Kevin Spacey in Mountain View, California. Celebrities — including Conan O’Brien, Glenn Close, Rob Lowe, and Michael C. Hall — handed out awards to six winners of the life sciences prizes and two co-winners of the Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics.

“Scientists should be celebrated as heroes, and we are honored to be part of today’s celebration,” said Google co-founder Sergey Brin and his wife, biologist and entrepreneur Anne Wojcicki, two of the event’s sponsors.

Lifton, who is also an investigator for the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, was recognized for his pioneering work to identify the genetic and biochemical underpinnings of hypertension, a disease that affects more than 1 billion people worldwide and that contributes to 17 million deaths annually from heart attack and stroke. Lifton and his colleagues identified patients around the world with exceptionally high or low blood pressure due to single gene mutations. They identified the mutated genes and established their role in salt reabsorption by the kidney and regulation of blood pressure. The work gave scientific rationale to limit dietary salt intake and suggested rational combinations of antihypertensive medications and development of new therapies.

Other sponsors of the event are Chinese internet entrepreneur Jack Ma and Cathy Zhang; Russian entrepreneur and venture capitalist Yuri Milner and his wife, Julia Milner; and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan.

At the end of the ceremonies, which will be televised on the Science Channel at 9 p.m. on Jan. 27, Milner and Zuckerberg announced the creation of a $3 million Breakthrough Prize in Mathematics that will be awarded next year.

Additional information on the prizes can be found atwww.breakthroughprizeinlifesciences.org or www.fundamentalphysicsprize.org.


SOURCE

http://www.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/prnewswire/press_releases/California/2013/12/13/NY33121

THE DISCOVERY

Laliotis MD, Zhang J, Volkman HM, Kahle KT, Hoffmann, KE, Toka HR, Nelson-Williams C, Ellison, DH, Flavell, R, Booth, CJ, Lu Y, Geller, DS, Lifton, RP. Wnk4 controls blood pressure and potassium homeostasis via regulation of mass and activity of the distal convoluted tubule. Nature Genetics, in press

Earlier Research Results on this discovey
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Jan 21;100(2):680-4. Epub 2003 Jan 6.

Molecular pathogenesis of inherited hypertension with hyperkalemia: the Na-Cl cotransporter is inhibited by wild-type but not mutant WNK4.

Wilson FH1Kahle KTSabath ELalioti MDRapson AKHoover RSHebert SCGamba GLifton RP.

Abstract

Mutations in the serine-threonine kinases WNK1 and WNK4 [with no lysine (K) at a key catalytic residue] cause pseudohypoaldosteronism type II (PHAII), a Mendelian disease featuring hypertension, hyperkalemia, hyperchloremia, and metabolic acidosis. Both kinases are expressed in the distal nephron, although the regulators and targets of WNK signaling cascades are unknown. The Cl(-) dependence of PHAII phenotypes, their sensitivity to thiazide diuretics, and the observation that they constitute a “mirror image” of the phenotypes resulting from loss of function mutations in the thiazide-sensitive Na-Cl cotransporter (NCCT) suggest that PHAII may result from increased NCCT activity due to altered WNK signaling. To address this possibility, we measured NCCT-mediated Na(+) influx and membrane expression in the presence of wild-type and mutant WNK4 by heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. Wild-type WNK4 inhibits NCCT-mediated Na-influx by reducing membrane expression of the cotransporter ((22)Na-influx reduced 50%, P < 1 x 10(-9), surface expression reduced 75%, P < 1 x 10(-14) in the presence of WNK4). This inhibition depends on WNK4 kinase activity, because missense mutations that abrogate kinase function prevent this effect. PHAII-causing missense mutations, which are remote from the kinase domain, also prevent inhibition of NCCT activity, providing insight into the pathophysiology of the disorder. The specificity of this effect is indicated by the finding that WNK4 and the carboxyl terminus of NCCT coimmunoprecipitate when expressed in HEK 293T cells. Together, these findings demonstrate that WNK4 negatively regulates surface expression of NCCT and implicate loss of this regulation in the molecular pathogenesis of an inherited form of hypertension.

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SOURCE

LISTEN TO AUDIO TAPE by Prof. Richard Lifton

http://streaming.yale.edu/opa/podcasts/audio/schools/health_and_medicine/lifton_092007.mp3

January 27, 2014
Richard Lifton

Yale’s Richard Lifton is one of eight world-changing researchers whose work is celebrated during a program airing tonight (Jan. 27) on the Science Channel at 9 p.m. EST.

Lifton, Sterling Professor of Genetics and chair of the Department of Genetics, received a $3 million Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, created by top Silicon Valley entrepreneurs.

The Science Channel program features the Dec. 12 ceremony where Lifton and others received their prize. The festivities were hosted by actor Kevin Spacey and featured such celebrities as Conan O’Brien, Glenn Close, Rob Lowe, and Michael C. Hall, as well as tech leaders Mark Zuckerberg, Larry Page, Sergey Brin, Anne Wojcicki, Jimmy Wales, and Yuri Milner.

SOURCE

http://news.yale.edu/2014/01/27/tonight-lifton-honored-star-studded-ceremony

Yale consortium awarded $6 million to study therapies for vascular disease

Tuesday, January 21, 2014


Contact

Helen Dodson / 203-436-3984

Stacey Buba / 203-432-1333

Read this article on YaleNews

An international research team spearheaded by William C. Sessa, the Alfred Gilman Professor of Pharmacology and professor of medicine (cardiology), has been awarded a $6 million Transatlantic Networks of Excellence grant from the Fondation Leducq in France.

Sessa will be the U.S. coordinator for the consortium as it explores the mechanisms of secreted microRNAs and microRNA-based therapies for vascular disease. Sessa will be joined by a European coordinator, Dr. Thomas Thum, director of the Institute for Molecular and Translational Therapeutic Strategies at Hanover Medical School in Germany, and five investigators including recent Yale recruit, Carlos Fenandez-Hernando, associate professor of comparative medicine. The grant will be distributed over five years.

Sessa is director of the vascular biology and therapeutics program and vice chairman of pharmacology at Yale School of Medicine.

Sessa has long worked at the intersection of pharmacology and cardiovascular disease. He is on the scientific advisory board of the William Harvey Research Institute and NIHR Biomedical Research Unit in London, and also served on the joint strategy committee for the Yale-UCL collaborative in cardiovascular research.

“I am grateful to Fondation Leducq for funding this new international collaboration to find new and effective ways to treat a disease that kills millions of people each year,” Sessa said. “We have assembled a fantastic team of world class scientists to tackle the basic questions of how microRNAs are packaged and transferred between cells, and their therapeutic potential in vascular diseases.”

Fondation Leducq is a French non-profit health research foundation. Its mission is to improve human health through international efforts to combat cardiovascular disease. To this end, Fondation Leducq created the Transatlantic Networks of Excellence in Cardiovascular Research Program, which is designed to promote collaborative research involving centers in North America and Europe in the areas of cardiovascular and neurovascular disease.

Yale has had two previous Leducq grants — to Dr. Richard Lifton, chair of genetics, and Dr. Michael Simons, director of the Yale Cardiovascular Research Center.

SOURCE

http://bbs.yale.edu/about/article.aspx?id=6569

International Activity

  • YALE-UCL Collaborative
    London, United Kingdom (2011)
    Dr. Lifton is on the Joint Strategy Committee for the Yale-UCL Collaborative, an alliance which will provide opportunities for high-level scientific research, clinical and educational collaboration across the institutions involved: Yale University, Yale School of Medicine, Yale-New Haven Hospital and UCL (University College London) and UCL Partners
  • Transatlantic Network on Hypertension-Renal Salt Handling in the Control of Blood Pressure
    France (2007)
    Drs Hebert and Lifton will join leading researchers in Switzerland, France and Mexico in a transatlantic collaboration aimed at pinpointing the kidney’s role in high blood pressure.

Education & Training

M.D.
Stanford University (1982)
Ph.D.
Stanford University (1986)

Honors & Recognition

  • National Academy of Sciences
  • The Basic Science Prize
    American Heart Association
  • Homer Smith Award
    American Society of Nephrology
  • MSD International Award
    International Society of Hypertension

Research Interests

Molecular genetics of common human diseases


Research Summary

The common human diseases that account for the vast majority of morbidity and mortality in human populations are known to have underlying inherited components. Advances in human genetics have made the identification of genetic variants contributing to these traits feasible. Such identification promises to revolutionize the diagnostic and therapeutic approaches to these disorders. We have focused on cardiovascular and renal disease. To date, we have identified mutations underlying more than 20 human diseases; these include a host of diseases that define molecular determinants of hypertension, stroke and heart attack. We have gone on from these starting points to use biochemistry and animal models to define the physiologic mechanisms linking genotype and phenotype. These findings have provided new insight into normal and disease biology, are identifying new pathways underlying disease pathogenesis, and are identifying new targets for development of novel therapeutics.

Extensive Research Description

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of death world-wide. Epidemiologic studies have identified hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes and smoking as major risk factors. By investigation of rare families recruited from around the world that segregate single genes with large effect, we have identified genes that contribute to these traits, putting a molecular face on their pathogenesis. For example, we have identified mutations in 8 genes that cause high blood pressure (hypertension) and another 8 that cause low blood pressure. These mutations all converge on a final common pathway, the regulation of net salt reabsorption in the kidney. These findings have established the key role of variation in renal salt handling in blood pressure variation, and have led to changes in the approach to treatment of this disease in the general population. They have also identified new therapeutic targets that are predicted to have greater efficacy with reduced side effects. Finally, they have identified new signaling pathways involved in the regulation of blood pressure homeostasis. We have taken similar approaches to another common disease, osteoporosis, with the identification of gain of function mutations in LRP5, a component of the Wnt signaling pathway, in development of high bone density. This finding has led to intensive efforts to identify small molecules that impact this pathway to protect against and/or reverse osteoporosis in the general population. Ongoing studies use both emerging and novel approaches to identification of genes that contribute to disease burden in the population, and to understanding the pathways that link genes to disease. Mutations that affect blood pressure in humans. A diagram of a nephron, the filtering unit of the kidney, is shown. The molecular pathways mediating NaCl reabsorption in individual renal cells along the nephron are shown, along with the pathway of the renin-angiotensin system, a major regulator of renal salt reabsorption. Inherited diseases affecting these pathways are indicated, with hypertensive disorders in red and hypotensive disorders in blue. From Lifton, Gharavi, and Geller. Cell, 104:545-556, 2001.


Selected Publications

  • Mani, A., et al. (2007). LRP6 mutation in a family with early coronary disease and metabolic risk factors. Science 315:1278-82.
  • Ring, A.M., et al. (2007). An SGK1 site in WNK4 regulates Na+ channel and K+ channel activity and has implications for aldosterone signaling and K+ homeostasis. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (USA) 104:4025-9.
  • Lalioti MD, Zhang J, Volkman HM, Kahle KT, Hoffmann, KE, Toka HR, Nelson-Williams C, Ellison, DH, Flavell, R, Booth, CJ, Lu Y, Geller, DS, Lifton, RP. Wnk4 controls blood pressure and potassium homeostasis via regulation of mass and activity of the distal convoluted tubule. Nature Genetics, in press.
  • Wilson FH, Hariri A, Farhi A, Zhao H, Peterson K, Toka HR, Nelson- Williams C, Raja KM, Kashgarian M, Shulman GI, Scheinman SJ, Lifton RP. A cluster of metabolic defects caused by mutation in a mitochondrial tRNA. Science, 306:1190-94, 2004.
  • Boyden LM, Mao J, Belsky J, Mitzner L, Farhi A, Mitnick MA, Wu D, Insogna K, Lifton RP. High bone density due to a mutation in LDL-receptor-related protein 5. New Engl J Med. 346:1513-1521, 2002.
  • Wilson FH, Disse-Nicodème S, Choate KA, Ishikawa K, Nelson-Williams C, Desitter I, Gunel M, Milford DV, Lipkin GW, Achard JM, Feely MP, Dussol B, Berland Y, Unwin RJ, Mayan H, Simon DB, Farfel Z, Jeunemaitre X, Lifton RP. Human Hypertension Caused by Mutations in WNK Kinases. Science, 293:1107-1112, 2001.
  • Lifton RP, Gharavi A, Geller DS. Molecular mechanisms of human hypertension. Cell, 104:545-556, 2001.
  • Geller DS, Farhi A, Pinkerton N, Fradley M, Moritz M, Spitzer A, Meinke G, Tsai TF, Sigler P, Lifton RP. Activating mineralocorticoid receptor mutation in hypertension exacerbated by pregnancy. Science, 289:119-123, 2000.
  • Simon DB, Lu Y, Choate KA, Velazquez H, Al-Sabban E, Praga M, Casari G, Bettinelli A, Colussi G, Rodriguez-Soriano J, McCredie D, Milford D, Sanjad S, Lifton RP. Paracellin-1, a renal tight junction protein required for paracellular Mg2+ reabsorption. Science, 285:103-106, 1999.

SOURCE
http://bbs.yale.edu/people/richard_lifton-3.profile

PubMed Results: 10

Select item 225138461.

Protein phosphatase 1 modulates the inhibitory effect of With-no-Lysine kinase 4 on ROMK channels.

Lin DH, Yue P, Rinehart J, Sun P, Wang Z, Lifton R, Wang WH.

Am J Physiol Renal Physiol. 2012 Jul 1;303(1):F110-9. doi: 10.1152/ajprenal.00676.2011. Epub 2012 Apr 18.

PMID:

22513846

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

Free PMC Article

Related citations

Select item 165287062.

Haplotype analysis in the presence of informatively missing genotype data.

Liu N, Beerman I, Lifton R, Zhao H.

Genet Epidemiol. 2006 May;30(4):290-300.

PMID:

16528706

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

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Select item 165282533.

Familial aggregation of primary glomerulonephritis in an Italian population isolate: Valtrompia study.

Izzi C, Sanna-Cherchi S, Prati E, Belleri R, Remedio A, Tardanico R, Foramitti M, Guerini S, Viola BF, Movilli E, Beerman I, Lifton R, Leone L, Gharavi A, Scolari F.

Kidney Int. 2006 Mar;69(6):1033-40.

PMID:

16528253

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

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Select item 127823554.

Mice lacking the B1 subunit of H+ -ATPase have normal hearing.

Dou H, Finberg K, Cardell EL, Lifton R, Choo D.

Hear Res. 2003 Jun;180(1-2):76-84.

PMID:

12782355

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

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Select item 113430495.

Glucocorticoid-remediable aldosteronism is associated with severe hypertension in early childhood.

Dluhy RG, Anderson B, Harlin B, Ingelfinger J, Lifton R.

J Pediatr. 2001 May;138(5):715-20.

PMID:

11343049

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

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Select item 102327426.

Elevated ambulatory blood pressure in 20 subjects with Williams syndrome.

Broder K, Reinhardt E, Ahern J, Lifton R, Tamborlane W, Pober B.

Am J Med Genet. 1999 Apr 23;83(5):356-60.

PMID:

10232742

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

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Select item 97986657.

Coincident acute myelogenous leukemia and ischemic heart disease: use of the cardioprotectant dexrazoxane during induction chemotherapy.

Woodlock TJ, Lifton R, DiSalle M.

Am J Hematol. 1998 Nov;59(3):246-8.

PMID:

9798665

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

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Select item 95012578.

In vivo phosphorylation of the epithelial sodium channel.

Shimkets RA, Lifton R, Canessa CM.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1998 Mar 17;95(6):3301-5.

PMID:

9501257

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

Free PMC Article

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Select item 91562619.

Autotransplantation for relapsed or refractory non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma (NHL): long-term follow-up and analysis of prognostic factors.

Rapoport AP, Lifton R, Constine LS, Duerst RE, Abboud CN, Liesveld JL, Packman CH, Eberly S, Raubertas RF, Martin BA, Flesher WR, Kouides PA, DiPersio JF, Rowe JM.

Bone Marrow Transplant. 1997 May;19(9):883-90.

PMID:

9156261

[PubMed – indexed for MEDLINE]

Free Article

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Elastin Arteriopathy: The Genetics of Supravalvular Aortic Stenosis

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Supravalvular Aortic Stenosis Elastin Arteriopathy

Giuseppe Merla, PhD, Nicola Brunetti-Pierri, MD, Pasquale Piccolo, PhD, Lucia Micale, PhD and Maria Nicla Loviglio, PhD, MSc

Author Affiliations

From the Medical Genetics Unit, IRCCS Casa Sollievo Della Sofferenza Hospital, San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy (G.M., L.M., M.N.L.); Telethon Institute of Genetics and Medicine, Napoli, Italy (N.B-P., P.P.); Department of Pediatrics, Federico II University of Naples, Naples, Italy (N.B-P.); and CIG Center for Integrative Genomics, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland (M.N.L.).

Correspondence to Giuseppe Merla, PhD, Medical Genetics Unit, IRCCS Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza, viale Cappuccini, 71013 San Giovanni Rotondo, Italy. E-mailg.merla@operapadrepio.it

Abstract

Supravalvular aortic stenosis is a systemic elastin (ELN) arteriopathy that disproportionately affects the supravalvular aorta. ELN arteriopathy may be present in a nonsyndromic condition or in syndromic conditions such as Williams–Beuren syndrome. The anatomic findings include congenital narrowing of the lumen of the aorta and other arteries, such as branches of pulmonary or coronary arteries. Given the systemic nature of the disease, accurate evaluation is recommended to establish the degree and extent of vascular involvement and to plan appropriate interventions, which are indicated whenever hemodynamically significant stenoses occur. ELN arteriopathy is genetically heterogeneous and occurs as a consequence of haploinsufficiency of the ELN gene on chromosome 7q11.23, owing to either microdeletion of the entire chromosomal region or ELN point mutations. Interestingly, there is a prevalence of premature termination mutations resulting in null alleles among ELN point mutations. The identification of the genetic defect in patients with supravalvular aortic stenosis is essential for a definitive diagnosis, prognosis, and genetic counseling.

SOURCE:

Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics.2012; 5: 692-696

doi: 10.1161/ CIRCGENETICS.112.962860

 

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Physiologist, Professor Lichtstein, Chair in Heart Studies at The Hebrew University elected Dean of the Faculty of Medicine at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Professor David Lichtstein Elected Dean of Hebrew University’s Faculty of Medicine

December 2, 2013

Jerusalem — Professor David Lichtstein has been elected dean of the Faculty of Medicine at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Professor Lichtstein is the Walter & Greta Stiel Chair in Heart Studies at The Hebrew University. He replaces Professor Eran Leitersdorf, who recently completed his four-year term as dean.

According to Professor Lichtstein, “The Hebrew University’s Faculty of Medicine is devoted to creating innovative teaching, research and patient care programs that will meet the demands of 21st century health care. As global health care moves towaProfessor David Lichtsteinrd prevention, wellness and cost effectiveness, we are adapting how we train the next generation of physicians, nurses, pharmacists and biomedical researchers. Through fruitful collaborations between preclinical and clinical faculty, we are also translating basic biomedical insights into clinical treatments. Thus, the Faculty of Medicine is well-positioned to maintain its leading role in the scientific community of Israel and the world.”

Professor Lichtstein was born in Lodz, Poland, and immigrated to Israel with his family in 1957. As a student at The Hebrew University, he completed a Bachelor’s degree in Physiology and Zoology in 1970, followed by a Master’s degree in Physiology in 1972 and a Ph.D. in Physiology in 1977. He joined the Department of Physiology of The Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical School in 1980 as a lecturer, and received full professorship in 1994. Prof. Lichtstein has held many roles at The Hebrew University and its Faculty of Medicine, including Chairman of the Neurobiology Teaching Division, Chairman of the Department of Physiology, Chairman of the Institute for Medical Sciences and, until recently, Chairman of the Faculty of Medicine. From 2007 to 2011, Professor Lichtstein was the Jacob Gitlin Chair in Physiology at The Hebrew University. In 2011 he was named the Walter & Greta Stiel Chair in Heart Studies at The Hebrew University. He also served as the President of the Israel Society for Physiology and Pharmacology from 1996 to 1999.

From 1977-1979 Professor Lichtstein was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the Roche Institute of Molecular Biology in New Jersey. He was a visiting scientist at the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (1985-1986) and the Eye Institute (1997-1998) at the National Institutes of Health in Maryland, and a visiting professor at the Toledo School of Medicine in Ohio (2007).

Professor. Lichtstein’s main research focus is the regulation of ion transport across the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells. His work led to the discovery that specific steroids that were known to be present in plants and amphibians are actually normal constituents of the human body and have crucial roles, such as the regulation of cell viability, heart contractility, blood pressure and brain function. His research has implications for the fundamental understanding of body functions, as well as for several pathological states such as heart failure, hypertension and neurological and psychiatric diseases.

SOURCE

http://www.afhu.org/professor-david-lichtstein-elected-dean-hebrew-universitys-faculty-medicine

Field of Study

Regulation of ion transport across the plasma membrane:
The primary focus of the research in my laboratory is the regulation of ion transport across the plasma membrane of eukaryotic cells. In particular, we study the main transport system for sodium and potassium, the sodium-potassium-ATPase, and its regulation by cardiac steroids.
Specific areas of interest:
Identification of endogenous cardiac steroids in mammalian tissue; The biological consequences of the interaction of cardiac steroids with the sodium-potassium-ATPase; Biosynthesis of the cardiac steroids in the adrenal gland; Effects of endogenous sodium-potassium-ATPase inhibitors on cell differentiation; Determination of the levels of endogenous sodium-potassium-ATPase inhibitors in pathological states, including hypertension, preeclampsia; malignancies (cancer) and manic depressive illnesses; Involvement of the sodium-potassium–ATPase/cardiac steroids system in depressive disorders; Involvement of the sodium-potassium-ATPase/cardiac steroids system in cardiac function; Involvement of intestinal signals in the regulation of phosphate homeostasis; Volume regulation and its involvement in the mitogenic response.
Cardiac Steroids and the Na+, K+-ATPase and Cardiac Steroids
Cardiac steroids, such as ouabain, digoxin and bufalin are hormones synthesized by and released from the adrenal gland and the hypothalamus. These compounds, the structure of which resembles that of plant and amphibian and butterfly steroids, interact only with the plasma membrane Na+, K+-ATPase (Figure 1). This interaction elicits numerous specific biological responses affecting the function of cells and organs.
Topics Currently under investigation include
Cardiac Steroids
  • Ouabain
  • Bufalin
  • Dogoxin
Involvement of the sodium-potassium–ATPase/cardiac steroids system in depressive disorders
Depressive disorders, including major depression, dysthymia and bipolar disorder, are a serious and devastating group of diseases that have a major impact on the patients’ quality of life, and pose a significant concern for public health. The etiology of depressive disorders remains unclear. The Monoaminergic Hypothesis, suggesting that alterations in monoamine metabolism in the brain are responsible for the etiology of depressive disorders, is now recognized as insufficient to explain by itself the complex etiology of these diseases. Data from our and other laboratories has provided initial evidence that endogenous cardiac steroids and their only established receptor, the Na+, K+-ATPase, are involved in the mechanism underlining depressive disorders, and BD in particular. Our study (Biol. Psychiatry. 60:491-499, 2006) has proven that Na+, K+-ATPase and DLC are involved in depressive disorders particularly in manic-depression. We have also shown that specific genetic alterations in the Na+, K+-ATPase α isoforms are associated with bipolar disorders (Biol. Psychiatry, 65:985-991, 2009). Our recent study in this project (Eur. Neuropsychopharmacol. 22:72-729, 2012) showed that drugs affecting the Na+, K+-ATPase/cardiac steroids system are beneficial for the treatment of depression. Hence our work is in accordance to the proposition that mal functioning of the Na+, K+-ATPase/cardiac steroids system may be involved in manifestation of depressive disorders and identify new compounds as potential drug for the treatment of these maladies.
Involvement of the sodium-potassium-ATPase/cardiac steroids system in cardiac function
The classical and best documented effect of cardiac steroids, as their name implies, is to increase the force of contraction of heart muscle. Indeed, cardiac steroids were widely used in Western and Eastern clinical practices for the treatment of heart failure and atrial fibrillation. Despite extensive research, the mechanism underlying cardiac steroids actions have not been fully elucidated. The dogmatic explanation for cardiac steroids-induced increase in heart contractility is that the inhibition of Na+, K+-ATPase by the steroids causes an increase in intracellular Na+ which, in turn, attenuates the Na+/Ca++ exchange, resulting in an increased intracellular Ca++ concentration, and hence greater contractility. However, recent observations led to the hypothesis that the ability of cardiac steroids to modulate a number of intracellular signaling processes may be responsible for both short- and long-term changes in CS action on cardiac function. We are addressing this hypothesis using the zebrafish model and our ability to quantify heart function in-vivo. Heart contractility measurements were performed using a series of software tools for the analysis of high-speed video microscopic images, allowing the determination of ventricular heart diameter and perimeter during both diastole and systole. The ejection fraction (EF) and fractional area changes (FAC) were calculated from these measurements, providing two independent parameters of heart contractility (see attached movie bellow). We are currently testing the effect of cardiac steroids in the presence and absence of intracellular signaling pathways (MAP, AKT, IP3R) inhibitors. Reduction in the steroids ability to increase the force of contraction will serve as the first evidence, in-vivo, for the participation of the signaling processes in the molecular mechanisms responsible for the action of cardiac steroids on heart muscle.
Laboratory Techniques
We employ a broad range of preparations and techniques. These include isolated organs (arterial rings, smooth and cardiac muscle strips) and isolated nerve endings, as well as primary and established tissue-cultured cells. Our studies involve the application of biochemical and immunological techniques (transport and enzymatic activity measurements, RIA, ELISA), molecular biological techniques (e.g., Western and Northern blotting, and PCR), protein purification (HPLC), cellular techniques muscle contractility, cell proliferation and differentiation’ in-vivo measurements of heart contractility and blood flow in Zebrafish and behavior measurements in rodents.

Biography

Education
1970
B.Sc. in Physiology and Zoology, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
1970-1972 M.Sc. in Physiology, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel.
1973-1977
Ph.D., Department of Physiology, Hebrew University Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel. (Thesis: “Increased Production of Gamma Aminobutyryl choline in Cerebral Cortex Caused by Afferent Electrical Stimulation” (Thesis Advisors: Prof. J. Dobkin and Prof. J. Magnes).
1977-1979
Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Physiological Chemistry and Pharmacology, Roche Institute of Molecular Biology, Nutley, New Jersey, U.S.A.
Positions held

1970-1972
Teaching and Research Assistant, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
1972-1974 Assistant Instructor, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
1975-1977 Instructor, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
1977-1979
Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of Physiological Chemistry and Pharmacology, Roche Institute of Molecular Biology, Nutley, New Jersey, U.S.A.
1979-1983
Lecturer, (REVSON fellowship) Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
1981 (summer)
Visiting Scientist, Department of Physiological Chemistry and Pharmacology, Roche Institute of Molecular Biology, Nutley, New Jersey, USA
1983-1987 Senior Lecturer, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel.
1985-1986
Visiting Scientist, Laboratory of Theoretical and Physical Biology, NICHD, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
1988-1994 Associate Professor, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
1994-present Professor of Physiology, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem, Israel
1997-1998 Visiting Scientist, Laboratory of Mechanisms of Ocular Diseases, NEI, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
2007 (summer)
Visiting Professor, Department of Physiology, Pharmacology, Metabolism and cardiovascular Sciences, Medical Center University of Toledo, Toledo, Ohio, USA
2007-2011 Jacob Gitlin Chair in Physiology, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
2011-present ​Walter & Greta Stiel Chair in Heart Studies, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
Professional Membership
1979-present International Society of Neurochemistry
1979-present Israel Society for Physiological and Pharmacological
1980-present Society of Neurosciences (Europe)
1986-present The American Society of Hypertension
1992-present Israeli Society for Neurosciences
1999-present The American Physiological Society
Editorial Tasks
Serving as a Reviewer for the scientific journals:
American Journal of Hypertension Journal of Neural Transmission
American Journal of Physiology Journal of Neurochemistry
Apoptosis Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications Life Sciences
Basic Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology NANO
Brain Research Neurochemistry International
Bioconjugate Chemistry Neuroscience
Cell Calcium Neurotoxicity Research
Clinical Science Pathophysiology
Endocrinology Physiology and Behavior
European Neuropsychopharmacology PNAS
General and Comparative Endocrinology Psychiatry Research
Hypertension Translational Research
Journal of Cell Sciences
University and Other Activities
1982-1985 Chairman of the Neurobiology Teaching Division, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
1988-1994 Elected representative of the Senior Lecturers and Associate Professors for the University Senate
1989-1997 Member of the admission committee of the Medical School, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
1990-1996 Member of the Committee for cellular biology of the graduate studies, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
1992-1996 Member of the Teaching Committee, Faculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
1992-1996
Chairman, Department of Physiology, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem
1994-1997 Member of the Committee for graduate studies, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
1992-2002
Member of the Management Committee of The Institute for Medical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
1996-1999
President of the Israel Society for Physiology and Pharmacology
1998- 2002 Chairman, Institute of Medical Sciences, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem
1999-2002 Member of the Planning and Development Committee of the Faculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
2007–Present Elected representative of the Professors for the executive University Senate
2008-2012 Member of the Planning and Development Committee of the Faculty of Medicine, The Hebrew University, Jerusalem
2008-2012 Chairman, Institute for Medical Research Israel-Canada, The Hebrew University, Hadassah Medical School, Jerusalem
2009 – Present Elected member of the Senate to the Executive Committee of the Hebrew University

PUBLICATIONS 2006 – 2012

Search By:  Author Abeles, M Abramovitch, R Allweis, C Altuvia, S Amedi, A Amster-Choder, O Anglister, L Aqeilan, RI Aronovitch, Y Bachrach, U Baniyash, M Barak, V Barenholz, Y Bar-Shalita, T Bar-Shavit, R Bar-Shavit, Z Bar-Tana, J Becker, Y Behar, O Ben-Ishay, Z Benita, S Ben-Neriah, Y Benny, O Ben-Or, S Ben-porath, I Ben-Sasson, S Ben-Sasson, SZ Ben-Shaul, Y Ben-Yehuda, S Bercovier, H Berger, M Bergman, H Bergman, Y Berry, E Bialer, M Binshtok, AM Blum, G Brandes, R Brautbar, C Breuer, E Cedar, H Chevion, M Chinitz, D Citri, N Cohen, A Cohen, E Deutsch, J Dikstein, S Domb, A Dor, Y Dror, OE Dzikowski, R Elkin, M Engelberg-Kulka, H Even-Ram, S Eyal, S Fainsod, A Feintuch, U Friedlander, y Friedman, M Gallily, R Gatt, S Gerlitz, O Gertz, SD Gibson, D Glaser, G Goelman, G Goldberg, I Goldberg, JA Goldblum, A Golenser, J Golomb, G Golos, A Gordon, A Gorinstein, S Gorodetsky, R Granot, Z Greenblatt, CL Greenwald, T Gross, E Grover, N Gutman, Y Hahn-Markowitz, J Hamburger, J Hanani, M Hanski, E Hartman-Maeir, A Hellman, A Hochner, H Hoffman, A Honigman, A Horowitz, M Ilani, A Inbal, A Jaffe, CL Jarrous, N Kaempfer, R Kalcheim, C Kanner, BI Kapitulnik, J Karni, R Katz, E Katzav, S Katz-Brull, R Katzhendler, J Kedar, E Keren, N Keshet, E Klar, A Kohen, R Konijn, A Kotler, M Langer, D Laskov, R Lazarovici, P Levi-Schaffer, F Lev-Tov, A Lichtstein, D Liebergall, M Lorberboum-Galski, H Magen, H Mandelboim, O Manor, O Margalit, H Matok, I Mechoulam, R Meiri, H Melloul, D Meyuhas, O Minke, B Mishani, E Mitrani-Rosenbaum, S Mumcuoglu, K Naor, D Naveh-Many, T Neumark, Y Nussinovitch, I Oppenheim, A Ornoy, A Panet, A Paroush, Z Parush, S Peled, A Pikarsky, E Pines, O Priel, A Prut, Y Rachmilewitz, J Rahamimoff, H Ravid, S Razin, A Razin, E Razin, S Reich, R Reshef, L Richter, E Ringel, I Rokem, JS Rom, M Ron, A Rosen, H Rosenshine, I Rotenberg-Shpigelman, S Rotshenker, S Rottem, S Rubinstein, A Samueloff, S Samuni, A Sasson, S Schlein, Y Schlesinger, M Schueler-Furman, O Sharon, D Sharon, R Shaulian, E Shlomai, J Shmueli, A Shohami, E Shtarkshall, R Shurki, A Simon, I Smith, P Sohmer, H Sperling, D Steinitz, M Stern-Bach, Y Tal, M Taraboulos, A Ta-Shma, R Tirosh, B Touitou, E Trachtenberg, S Traub, R Treinin, M Tsvelikhovsky, D Vaadia, E Warburg, A Weinstock, M  Weintraub, N Weiss, D Weiss, R Wiener, R Wormser, U Yaari, Y Yagen, B Yaka, R yanai, J Yavin, E Yedgar, S Yefenof, E Yisraeli, JK Yochman, A Yogev, D Yosselson-Superstine, S Zajicek, G Zakay-Rones, Z  Sort By:  Year Descending Year Ascending  Text:
Dvela, M., Rosen, H., Ben-Ami, H. C., Lichtstein, D.
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology, 302(2), C442-52, 2012
Goldstein, I., Lax, E., Gispan-Herman, I., Ovadia, H., Rosen, H., Yadid, G., Lichtstein, D.
European neuropsychopharmacology : the journal of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology, 22(1), 72-9, 2012
Nesher, M., Shpolansky, U., Viola, N., Dvela, M., Buzaglo, N., Cohen Ben-Ami, H., Rosen, H., Lichtstein, D.
British journal of pharmacology, 160(2), 346-54, 2010
Guttmann-Rubinstein, L., Lichtstein, D., Ilani, A., Gal-Moscovici, A., Scherzer, P., Rubinger, D.
Hormone and metabolic research = Hormon- und Stoffwechselforschung = Hormones et metabolisme, 42(4), 230-6, 2010
Jaiswal, M. K., Dvela, M., Lichtstein, D., Mallick, B. N.
Journal of sleep research, 19(1 Pt 2), 183-91, 2010
Nesher, M., Dvela, M., Igbokwe, V. U., Rosen, H., Lichtstein, D.
American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology, 297(6), H2026-34, 2009
Goldstein, I., Lerer, E., Laiba, E., Mallet, J., Mujaheed, M., Laurent, C., Rosen, H., Ebstein, R. P., Lichtstein, D.
Biological psychiatry, 65(11), 985-91, 2009
Nesher, M., Vachutinsky, Y., Fridkin, G., Schwarz, Y., Sasson, K., Fridkin, M., Shechter, Y., Lichtstein, D.
Bioconjugate chemistry, 19(1), 342-8, 2008
Dvela, M., Rosen, H., Feldmann, T., Nesher, M., Lichtstein, D.
Pathophysiology : the official journal of the International Society for Pathophysiology / ISP, 14(3-4), 159-66, 2007
Feldmann, T., Glukmann, V., Medvenev, E., Shpolansky, U., Galili, D., Lichtstein, D., Rosen, H.
American journal of physiology. Cell physiology, 293(3), C885-96, 2007
Chirinos, J. A., Corrales-Medina, V. F., Garcia, S., Lichtstein, D. M., Bisno, A. L., Chakko, S.
Clinical rheumatology, 26(4), 590-5, 2007
Lichtstein, D. M., Arteaga, R. B.
The American journal of the medical sciences, 332(2), 103-5, 2006
Morla, D., Alazemi, S., Lichtstein, D.
Journal of general internal medicine, 21(7), C11-3, 2006
Chirinos, J. A., Corrales, V. F., Lichtstein, D. M.
Clinical rheumatology, 25(1), 111-2, 2006
Deutsch, J., Jang, H. G., Mansur, N., Ilovich, O., Shpolansky, U., Galili, D., Feldman, T., Rosen, H., Lichtstein, D.
Journal of medicinal chemistry, 49(2), 600-6, 2006
Goldstein, I., Levy, T., Galili, D., Ovadia, H., Yirmiya, R., Rosen, H., Lichtstein, D.
Biological psychiatry, 60(5), 491-9, 2006
Chirinos, J. A., Garcia, J., Alcaide, M. L., Toledo, G., Baracco, G. J., Lichtstein, D. M.
American journal of cardiovascular drugs : drugs, devices, and other interventions, 6(1), 9-14, 2006
Rosen, H., Glukmann, V., Feldmann, T., Fridman, E., Lichtstein, D.
Cellular and molecular biology (Noisy-le-Grand, France), 52(8), 78-86, 2006

SOURCE

https://medicine.ekmd.huji.ac.il/En/Publications/publications/Pages/default.aspx?aut=Lichtstein,%20D

 

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Heroes in Medical Research: Dr. Carmine Paul Bianchi Pharmacologist, Leader, and Mentor

Writer/Curator: Stephen J. Williams, Ph.D.

Article ID #83: Heroes in Medical Research: Dr. Carmine Paul Bianchi Pharmacologist, Leader, and Mentor. Published on 10/29/2013

WordCloud Image Produced by Adam Tubman

Past articles in this Heroes in Medical Research series had focused on those seemingly small discoveries, sometimes gained serendipitously and through careful observation and experimentation, which led to some of our most important breakthroughs of our time.  I have tried to make the posts more about the people and less about the discoveries

However, though seminal discoveries are so important to the future of science (and should be celebrated), equally if not MORE IMPORTANT is the MENTORING of future scientists and the PROMOTION of fields of study.  One person who exemplified these values was Dr. Carmine Paul Bianchi, who had recently just passed away this August, and will be sorely missed in the field of pharmacology and toxicology.

For those who were not familiar with Dr. Bianchi I have curated some pertinent information about his work as a scientist, professor and Chairman in pharmacology, and leader and spokesperson for the field of pharmacology.  He was one of the founders of the Mid-Atlantic Pharmacology Society and was an advocate and influential in the careers of many pharmacologists and toxicologists.

Comments from fellow colleagues are very welcome (in comment section at end of post)

The following is separated in 3 sections:

  • An obituary from the Philadelphia Inquirer
  •  A section of the history of the Pharmacology Department at Thomas Jefferson University where Dr. Bianchi was Chairman
  • A few important textbooks and scientific articles he had authored

 

Carmine Paul Bianchi, 86, pharmacology professor

Paul Bianchi

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Carmine Paul Bianchi

By Bonnie L. Cook, Inquirer Staff Writer

Posted: August 20, 2013

Carmine Paul Bianchi, 86, of Boothwyn, a professor of pharmacology in Philadelphia for many years, died Tuesday, Aug. 13, of a digestive ailment at Taylor Hospice House in Ridley Park.

Born in Newark, N.J., and raised in Maplewood, Dr. Bianchi served as an Army surgical technician in Tilton General Hospital at Fort Dix from 1945 to 1947.

He earned a bachelor’s degree in chemistry from Columbia University in 1950, a master’s in physiology and biochemistry from Rutgers University in 1953, and a doctorate in physiology and physical chemistry in 1956 from Rutgers.

In the 1950s, he did research at Rutgers and was a public health fellow and visiting scientist at the National Institutes of Health in Maryland.

From 1961 to 1976, he held a number of jobs in the department of pharmacology in the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. That culminated in his being named professor of pharmacology.

Dr. Bianchi left in 1976 for Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson University, where he became pharmacology professor and chairman of the pharmacology department from 1976 to 1987. In 1987, he stepped down from the chairmanship but remained professor of pharmacology. He retired in 1997 as professor emeritus.

Dr. Bianchi was a member of many professional groups, including the New York Academy of Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

He was a leader and author in pharmacology, helping edit an industry journal and making himself available for consultation to medical examiners and experts in toxicology.

He wrote or contributed to three books and 200 scientific papers and lectured widely. He enjoyed mentoring medical and graduate students.

His family called Dr. Bianchi “a true renaissance man” who was as comfortable discussing English, history, and politics as he was the sciences.

 

 

 

The following was taken from a history of  Department of Pharmacology  at Thomas Jefferson University  and can be viewed at: http://jdc.jefferson.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1008&context=wagner2

 

 

Carmine Paul Bianchi, Ph.D;

Third Chairman (1976-1986)

The new Chairman of the Department, effective

July 1, 1976, was Carmine Paul Bianchi, Ph.D.

(Figure 8-3) from the University of Pennsylvania

School of Medicine, where he had been Professor

of Pharmacology since [969 and a member of the

faculty of that Department since 1961.

Dr. Bianchi was born on April 9, [927, in

Newark, New Jersey. After receiving his diploma

at Columbia High School in 1945, he spent two

years in the Army Medical Corps as Technical Sgt.

Fourth Grade. He then attended Columbia

University, where he majored in chemistry and

obtained the B.A. degree in 1950. Like Dr.

Gruber, the first Chairman of the Pharmacology

Department at Jefferson, Bianchi earned his Ph.D.

in physiology. He pursued his graduate studies at

Rutgers University, supplementing his physiology

major with a biochemistry minor for the M.S.

degree in [953 and with a physical chemistry minor

for the Ph.D. degree in 1956. Dr. Bianchi then

spent several years at the National Institutes of

Health-two years as a Public Health Fellow and

one as a Visiting Scientist. Following that he was

Assistant Member of the Institute for Muscle

Disease in New York for one year. In 1961 Dr.

Bianchi became classified professionally as a

pharmacologist by becoming an Associate in the

Department of Pharmacology at the University of

Pennsylvania School of Medicine. There he

advanced to Professorship in 1969 and remained

until he came to Jefferson. The evolution of Dr.

Bianchi’s career from physiology to pharmacology

was the logical result of his investigations of the

effect of various drugs on the metabolism and

distribution of some of the important elements of

the body, notably calcium. His major field of

interest became classified and remained in

electrolyte pharmacology.

Throughout his career Dr. Bianchi has been

very active in the affairs of outside professional

organizations. He is a member of the American

Society for Pharmacology and Experimental

Therapeutics, the American Physiological Society,

the American Chemical Society, and the

International Society of Toxicology, to name

only a few. He served as President of both the

Philadelphia Physiological Society and the John

Morgan Society in the same year (1973-1974), and

of the Philadelphia Chapter of the Society for

Neuroscience (1979-1980). He gave much time

and valuable services as Field Editor for the

Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental

Therapeutics ([970-1979) and as a member of the

Pharmacology Section of the National Board of

Medical Examiners (1981-1985).

After Dr. Bianchi became Chairman no

immediate changes in the general structure and

activities of the Department took place. He

enlarged the Department and filled vacancies

occasioned by the retirement of some faculty

members. The didactic schedules and subject

matter offered to the medical and graduate

students underwent only minor annual changes.

Research activities were augmented by the

addition of Dr. Bianchi’s specialty in electrolyte

pharmacology and the appointments of new staff

members for investigations in that and related

flelds. Through the following decade there was a

marked change in the faculty structure of the

Department. The [975 Jefferson catalogue, for

example, listed 15 faculty appointments in

Pharmacology, of which eight were on a primary

full-time basis with offices and laboratories in the

Department. In 1985 there were 36 faculty

appointments of which eight were on a primary

full-time basis. The large increase in the total

number of faculty resulted from adjunct

appointments from outside organizations and from

secondary appointments of faculty members of the

Clinical Departments at Jefferson. This expansion

reflected a broadening of interests and interactions

on both the scientific and clinical fronts in clinical

pharmacology and clinical toxicology.

A notable addition to the faculty of the

Department in 1978 was Dr. Hyman Menduke

as Professor of Pharmacology

(Biostatistics). After receiving his Ph.D. in

Economic Statistics at the University of

Pennsylvania, Menduke came to Jefferson in 1953

as Assistant Professor of Biostatistics with no

official Departmental affiliation until 1963, when

he was appointed Professor of Preventive

Medicine (Biostatistics). When Dr. Menduke first

came to Jefferson he gave a ten-hour course in

biostatistics to the second-year medical students in

time provided during their pharmacology course.

Through the years his offerings expanded to a

12-hour course for freshman medical students and

introductory and advanced courses for graduate

students. An early and valuable contribution was a

series of individual conferences with graduate

students on the statistical planning of their

research problems and the later analysis of their

data.

 

The interests and activities of the Department in

research in toxicology have been emphasized.

Toxicology continued as an important part of the

research program after Dr. Bianchi became

Chairman in 1976, although under his direction

the major emphasis in research became redirected

toward the general areas of cell pharmacology and

neuropharmacology.

In accord with its continuing research and

teaching activities in toxicology, the Department

starting in 1977 organized a series of annual

workshops on Industrial Toxicology sponsored by

the College of Graduate Studies. These were

four-day symposia on important toxicologic

problems in industry and the general environment,

presented by toxicologically involved Jefferson

faculty and by invited experts from other

universities, industry, and government.

In 1979 the Department was awarded a training

grant in Industrial and Environmental Toxicology

by the National Institute of Environmental Health

Sciences. The purpose of this award was to

provide postdoctoral training in toxicology for

individuals who had previously received their

Ph.D. degrees in other sciences. Ten M.S. degrees

were subsequently awarded in this program

through the years from 1981 to 1986.

On December 14, 1978, a full day’s workshop

with outside invited experts was held to discuss

the formation of a Toxicology Center and the

establishment of a Chair in Toxicology-Pathology

to broaden the base of research and training in

toxicology at Jefferson. It was envisioned that the

Center would be an administrative Division within

the Department of Pharmacology, with research

participation from other basic science departments

and the Department of Medicine. Although funds

accumulated in support of a Toxicology Center,

disagreements developed relating to the

administrative base of the Center.

 

A few articles from Dr. Bianchi showing the diversity of his research interests including calcium mobilization, neurotoxicology, and cellular metabolism and physiology.

Muscle fatigue and the role of transverse tubules.

Bianchi CP, Narayan S.

Science. 1982 Jan 15;215(4530):295-6. No abstract available.

 

Effect of adenosine on oxygen uptake and electrolyte content of frog sartorius muscle.

Prosdocimi M, Bianchi CP.

J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1981 Jul;218(1):92-6.

 

The effect of diazepam on tension and electrolyte distribution in frog muscle.

Degroof RC, Bianchi CP, Narayan S.

Eur J Pharmacol. 1980 Aug 29;66(2-3):193-9.

 

Steady state maintenance of electrolytes in the spinal cord of the frog.

Bianchi CP, Erulkar SD.

J Neurochem. 1979 Jun;32(6):1671-7. No abstract available.

An in-vitro model of anesthetic hypertonic hyperpyrexia, halothane–caffeine-induced muscle contractures: prevention of contracture by procainamide.

Strobel GE, Bianchi CP.

Anesthesiology. 1971 Nov;35(5):465-73. No abstract available.

 

The effects of psychoactive agents on calcium uptake by preparations of rat brain mitochondria.

Tjioe S, Haugaard N, Bianchi CP.

J Neurochem. 1971 Nov;18(11):2171-8. No abstract available.

 

The effect of veratridine on sodium-sensitive radiocalcium uptake in frog sartorius muscle.

Johnson P, Bianchi CP.

Eur J Pharmacol. 1971 Sep;16(1):90-9. No abstract available.

 

The function of ATP in Ca2+ uptake by rat brain mitochondria.

Tjioe S, Bianchi CP, Haugaard N.

Biochim Biophys Acta. 1970 Sep 1;216(2):270-3. No abstract availabl

 

The effects of pH gradients on the uptake and distribution of C14-procaine and lidocaine in intact and desheathed sciatic nerve trunks.

Strobel GE, Bianchi CP.

J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 1970 Mar;172(1):18-32. No abstract available

 

 

More articles by CP Bianchi  can be found at: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Bianchi%20CP[auth]

The following is one of the seminal books Dr. Bianchi authored:

 

Role of Calcium Channels of the Sarcolemma and the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum in Skeletal Muscle Functions

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2F978-1-4615-3362-7_17/lookinside/000.png

AND

Advances in General and Cellular Pharmacology (1976)

Toshio Narahashi; Carmine Paul Bianchi

The author of the Advances in General and Cellular Pharmacology is Toshio Narahashi; Carmine Paul Bianchi – very good writer. You can download this e-book absolutely for free. This ebook’s ISBN number is 9781461582007. if you were searching for for free download of kindle books, google books, free pdf books, pdf ebooks, e-books, pdf files or pdf ebooks just stay here for a while, download what you wanted for free and enjoy!

Advances in General and Cellular Pharmacology – Toshio Narahashi; Carmine Paul Bianchi – PDF Free Download Ebook also for Kindle

 

Other articles in this series published on this site include:

Heroes in Medical Research: Dr. Robert Ting, Ph.D. and Retrovirus in AIDS and Cancer

Heroes in Medical Research: Barnett Rosenberg and the Discovery of Cisplatin

Volume Two: Interviews with Scientific Leaders

 

 

Read Full Post »

aprotinin-sequence.Par.0001.Image.260

aprotinin-sequence.Par.0001.Image.260 (Photo credit: redondoself)

English: Protein folding: amino-acid sequence ...

Protein folding: amino-acid sequence of bovine BPTI (basic pancreatic trypsin inhibitor) in one-letter code, with its folded 3D structure represented by a stick model of the mainchain and sidechains (in gray), and the backbone and secondary structure by a ribbon colored blue to red from N- to C-terminus. 3D structure from PDB file 1BPI, visualized in Mage and rendered in Raster3D. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The Effects of Aprotinin on Endothelial Cell Coagulant Biology

Author: Demet Sag, PhD

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Effects of Aprotinin on Endothelial Cell Coagulant Biology

Demet Sag, PhD*†, Kamran Baig, MBBS, MRCS; James Jaggers, MD, Jeffrey H. Lawson, MD, PhD

Departments of Surgery and Pathology (J.H.L.) Duke University Medical Center Durham, NC  27710

Correspondence and Reprints:

                             Jeffrey H. Lawson, M.D., Ph.D.

                              Departments of Surgery & Pathology

                              DUMC Box 2622

                              Durham, NC  27710

                              (919) 681-6432 – voice

                              (919) 681-1094 – fax

                              lawso006@mc.duke.edu

*Current Address: Demet SAG, PhD

                          3830 Valley Centre Drive Suite 705-223, San Diego, CA 92130

Support:

Word Count: 4101 Journal Subject Heads:  CV surgery, endothelial cell activationAprotinin, Protease activated receptors,

Potential Conflict of Interest:         None

Abstract

Introduction:  Cardiopulmonary bypass is associated with a systemic inflammatory response syndrome, which is responsible for excessive bleeding and multisystem dysfunction. Endothelial cell activation is a key pathophysiological process that underlies this response. Aprotinin, a serine protease inhibitor has been shown to be anti-inflammatory and also have significant hemostatic effects in patients undergoing CPB. We sought to investigate the effects of aprotinin at the endothelial cell level in terms of cytokine release (IL-6), tPA release, tissue factor expression, PAR1 + PAR2 expression and calcium mobilization. Methods:  Cultured Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVECS) were stimulated with TNFa for 24 hours and treated with and without aprotinin (200KIU/ml + 1600KIU/ml). IL-6 and tPA production was measured using ELISA. Cellular expression of Tissue Factor, PAR1 and PAR2 was measured using flow cytometry. Intracellular calcium mobilization following stimulation with PAR specific peptides and agonists (trypsin, thrombin, Human Factor VIIa, factor Xa) was measured using fluorometry with Fluo-3AM. Results: Aprotinin at the high dose (1600kIU/mL), 183.95 ± 13.06mg/mL but not low dose (200kIU/mL) significantly reduced IL-6 production from TNFa stimulated HUVECS (p=0.043). Aprotinin treatment of TNFa activated endothelial cells significantly reduce the amount of tPA released in a dose dependent manner (A200 p=0.0018, A1600 p=0.033). Aprotinin resulted in a significant downregulation of TF expression to baseline levels. At 24 hours, we found that aprotinin treatment of TNFa stimulated cells resulted in a significant downregulation of PAR-1 expression. Aprotinin significantly inhibited the effects of the protease thrombin upon PAR1 mediated calcium release. The effects of PAR2 stimulatory proteases such as human factor Xa, human factor VIIa and trypsin on calcium release was also inhibited by aprotinin. Conclusion:  We have shown that aprotinin has direct anti-inflammatory effects on endothelial cell activation and these effects may be mediated through inhibition of proteolytic activation of PAR1 and PAR2. Abstract word count: 297

INTRODUCTION   Each year it is estimated that 350,000 patients in the United States, and 650,000 worldwide undergo cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). Despite advances in surgical techniques and perioperative management the morbidity and mortality of cardiac surgery related to the systemic inflammatory response syndrome(SIRS), especially in neonates is devastatingly significant. Cardiopulmonary bypass exerts an extreme challenge upon the haemostatic system as part of the systemic inflammatory syndrome predisposing to excessive bleeding as well as other multisystem dysfunction (1). Over the past decade major strides have been made in the understanding of the pathophysiology of the inflammatory response following CPB and the role of the vascular endothelium has emerged as critical in maintaining cardiovascular homeostasis (2).

CPB results in endothelial cell activation and initiation of coagulation via the Tissue Factor dependent pathway and consumption of important clotting factors. The major stimulus for thrombin generation during CPB has been shown to be through the tissue factor dependent pathway. As well as its effects on the fibrin and platelets thrombin has been found to play a role in a host of inflammatory responses in the vascular endothelium. The recent discovery of the Protease-Activated Receptors (PAR), one of which through which thrombin acts (PAR-1) has stimulated interest that they may provide a vital link between inflammation and coagulation (3).

Aprotinin is a nonspecific serine protease inhibitor that has been used for its ability to reduce blood loss and preserve platelet function during cardiac surgery procedures requiring cardiopulmonary bypass and thus the need for subsequent blood and blood product transfusions. However there have been concerns that aprotinin may be pro-thrombotic, especially in the context of coronary artery bypass grafting, which has limited its clinical use. These reservations are underlined by the fact that the mechanism of action of aprotinin has not been fully understood. Recently aprotinin has been shown to exert anti-thrombotic effects mediated by blocking the PAR-1 (4). Much less is known about its effects on endothelial cell activation, especially in terms of Tissue Factor but it has been proposed that aprotinin may also exert protective effects at the endothelial level via protease-activated receptors (PAR1 and PAR2). In this study we simulated in vitro the effects of endothelial cell activation during CPB by stimulating Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVECs) with a proinflammatory cytokine released during CPB, Tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF-a) and characterize the effects of aprotinin treatment on TF expression, PAR1 and PAR2 expression, cytokine release IL-6 and tPA secretion.  In order to investigate the mechanism of action of aprotinin we studied its effects on PAR activation by various agonists and ligands.

These experiments provide insight into the effects of aprotinin on endothelial related coagulation mechanisms in terms of Tissue Factor expression and indicate it effects are mediated through Protease-Activated Receptors (PAR), which are seven membrane spanning proteins called G-protein coupled receptors (GPCR), that link coagulant and inflammatory pathways. Therefore, in this study we examine the effects of aprotinin on the human endothelial cell coagulation biology by different-dose aprotinin, 200 and 1600units.  The data demonstrates that aprotinin appears to directly alter endothelial expression of inflammatory cytokines, tPA and PAR receptor expression following treatment with TNF.  The direct mechanism of action is unknown but may act via local protease inhibition directly on endothelial cells.  It is hoped that with improved understanding of the mechanisms of action of aprotinin, especially an antithrombotic effect at the endothelial level the fears of prothrombotic tendency may be lessened and its use will become more routine.  

METHODS Human Umbilical Vein Endothelial Cells (HUVECS) used as our model to study the effects of endothelial cell activation on coagulant biology. In order to simulate the effects of cardiopulmonary bypass at the endothelial cell interface we stimulated the cells with the proinflammatory cytokine TNFa. In the study group the HUVECs were pretreated with low (200kIU/mL) and high (1600kIU/mL) dosages of aprotinin prior to stimulation with TNFa and complement activation fragments. The effects of TNFa stimulation upon endothelial Tissue Factor expression, PAR1 and PAR2 expression, and tPA and IL6 secretion were determined and compared between control and aprotinin treated cells. In order to delineate whether aprotinin blocks PAR activation via its protease inhibition properties we directly activated PAR1 and PAR2 using specific agonist ligands such thrombin (PAR1), trypsin, Factor VIIa, Factor Xa (PAR2) in the absence and presence of aprotinin.

Endothelial Cell Culture HUVECs were supplied from Clonetics. The cells were grown in EBM-2 containing 2MV bullet kit, including 5% FBS, 100-IU/ml penicillin, 0.1mg/mL streptomycin, 2mmol/L L-glutamine, 10 U/ml heparin, 30µg/mL EC growth supplement (ECGS). Before the stimulation cells were starved in 0.1%BSA depleted with FBS and growth factors for 24 hours. Cells were sedimented at 210g for 10 minutes at 4C and then resuspended in culture media. The HUVECs to be used will be between 3 and 5 passages.

Assay of IL-6 and tPA production Levels of IL-6 were measured with an ELISA based kit (RDI, MN) according to the manufacturers instructions. tPA was measured using a similar kit (American Diagnostica).

  Flow Cytometry The expression of transmembrane proteins PAR1, PAR2 and tissue factor were measured by single color assay as FITC labeling agent. Prepared suspension of cells disassociated trypsin free cell disassociation solution (Gibco) to be labeled. First well washed, and resuspended into “labeling buffer”, phosphate buffered saline (PBS) containing 0.5% BSA plus 0.1% NaN3, and 5% fetal bovine serum to block Fc and non-specific Ig binding sites. Followed by addition of 5mcl of antibody to approx. 1 million cells in 100µl labeling buffer and incubate at 4C for 1 hour. After washing the cells with 200µl with wash buffer, PBS + 0.1% BSA + 0.1% NaN3, the cells were pelletted at 1000rpm for 2 mins. Since the PAR1 and PAR2 were directly labeled with FITC these cells were fixed for later analysis by flow cytometry in 500µl PBS containing 1%BSA + 0.1% NaN3, then add equal volume of 4% formalin in PBS. For tissue factor raised in mouse as monoclonal primary antibody, the pellet resuspended and washed twice more as before, and incubated at 4C for 1 hour addition of 5µl donkey anti-mouse conjugated with FITC secondary antibody directly to the cell pellets at appropriate dilution in labeling buffer. After the final wash three times, the cell pellets were resuspended thoroughly in fixing solution. These fixed and labeled cells were then stored in the dark at 4C until there were analyzed. On analysis, scatter gating was used to avoid collecting data from debris and any dead cells. Logarithmic amplifiers for the fluorescence signal were used as this minimizes the effects of different sensitivities between machines for this type of data collection.  

Intracellular Calcium Measurement

Measured the intracellular calcium mobilization by Fluo-3AM. HUVECs were grown in calcium and phenol free EBM basal media containing 2MV bullet kit. Then the cell cultures were starved with the same media by 0.1% BSA without FBS for 24 hour with or without TNFa stimulation presence or absence of aprotinin (200 and 1600KIU/ml). Next the cells were loaded with Fluo-3AM 5µg/ml containing agonists, PAR1 specific peptide SFLLRN-PAR1 inhibitor, PAR2 specific peptide SLIGKV-PAR2 inhibitor, human alpha thrombin, trypsin, factor VIIa, factor Xa for an hour at 37C in the incubation chamber. Finally the media was replaced by Flou-3AM free media and incubated for another 30 minutes in the incubation chamber. The readings were taken at fluoromatic bioplate reader. For comparison purposes readings were taken before and during Fluo-3AM loading as well.  

RESULTS Aprotinin reduces IL-6 production from activated/stimulated HUVECS The effects of aprotinin analyzed on HUVEC for the anti-inflammatory effects of aprotinin at cultured HUVECS with high and low doses.  Figure 1 shows that TNF-a stimulated a considerable increase in IL-6 production, 370.95 ± 109.9 mg/mL.   If the drug is used alone the decrease of IL-6 at the low dose is 50% that is 183.95 ng/ml and with the high dose of 20% that is 338.92 from 370.95ng/ml being compared value.  TNFa-aprotinin results in reduction of the IL-6 expression from 370.95ng/ml to 58.6 (6.4fold) fro A200 and 75.85 (4.9 fold) ng/ml, for A1600.  After the treatment the cells reach to the below baseline limit of IL-6 expression. Aprotinin at the high dose (1600kIU/mL), 183.95 ± 13.06mg/mL but not low dose (200kIU/mL) significantly reduced IL-6 production from TNF-a stimulated HUVECS (p=0.043).  Therefore, the aprotinin prevents inflammation as well as loss of blood.  

Aprotinin reduces tPA production from stimulated HUVECS Whether aprotinin exerted part of its fibrinolytic effects through inhibition of tPA mediated plasmin generation examined by the effects on TNFa stimulated HUVECS. Figure 2 also demonstrates that the amount of tPA released from HUVECS under resting, non-stimulated conditions incubated with aprotinin are significantly different. Figure 2 represents that the resting level of tPA released from non-stimulated cells significantly, by 100%, increase following TNF-a stimulation for 24 hours.  After application of aprotinin alone at two doses the tPA level goes down 25% of TNFa stimulated cells.  However, aprotinin treatment of TNF-a activated endothelial cells significantly lower the amount of tPA release in a dose dependent manner that is low dose decreased 25 but high dose causes 50% decrease of tPA expression (A200 p=0.0018, A1600 p=0.033) This finding suggests that aprotinin exerts a direct inhibitory effect on endothelial cell tPA production.

Aprotinin and receptor expression on activated HUVECS

TF is expressed when the cell in under stress such as TNFa treatments. The stimulated HUVECs with TNF-a tested for the expression of PAR1, PAR2, and tissue factor by single color flow cytometry through FITC labeled detection antibodies at 1, 3, and 24hs.

 

Tissue Factor expression is reduced:

Figure 3 demonstrates that there is a fluctuation of TF expression from 1 h to 24h that the TF decreases at first hour after aprotinin application 50% and 25%, A1600 and A200 respectively.  Then at 3 h the expression come back up 50% more than the baseline.  Finally, at 24h the expression of TF becomes almost as same as baseline.  Moreover, TNFa stimulated cells remains 45% higher than baseline after at 3h as well as at 24h.

PAR1 decreased:
Figure 4 demonstrates that aprotinin reduces the PAR1 expression 80% at 24h but there is no affect at 1 and 3 h intervals for both doses.

During the treatment with aprotinin only high dose at 1 hour time interval decreases the PAR1 expression on the cells. This data explains that ECCB is affected due to the expression of PAR1 is lowered by the high dose of aprotinin.

PAR2 is decreased by aprotinin:

  Figure 5 shows the high dose of aprotinin reduces the PAR2 expression close to 25% at 1h, 50% at 3h and none at 24h.  This pattern is exact opposite of PAR1 expression.  Figure 5 demonstrates the 50% decrease at 3h interval only.  Does that mean aprotinin affecting the inflammation first and then coagulation?

This suggests that aprotinin may affect the PAR2 expression at early and switched to PAR1 reduction later time intervals.  This fluctuation can be normal because aprotinin is not a specific inhibitor for proteases.  This approach make the aprotinin work better the control bleeding and preventing the inflammation causing cytokine such as IL-6.

Aprotinin inhibits Calcium fluxes induced by PAR1/2 specific agonists

  The specificity of aprotinin’s actions upon PAR studied the effects of the agent on calcium release following proteolytic and non-proteolytic stimulation of PAR1 and PAR2. Figure 6A (Figure 6) shows the stimulation of the cells with the PAR1 specific peptide (SFLLRN) results in release of calcium from the cells. Pretreatment of the cells with aprotinin has no significant effect on PAR1 peptide stimulated calcium release. This suggests that aprotinin has no effect upon the non-proteolytic direct activation of the PAR 1 receptor. Yet, Figure 6B (Figure 6) demonstrates human alpha thrombin does interact with the drug as a result the calcium release drops below base line after high dose (A1600) aprotinin used to zero but low dose does not show significant effect on calcium influx. Figure 7 demonstrates the direct PAR2 and indirect PAR2 stimulation by hFVIIa, hFXa, and trypsin of cells.  Similarly, at Figure 7A aprotinin has no effect upon PAR2 peptide stimulated calcium release, however, at figures 7B, C, and D shows that PAR2 stimulatory proteases Human Factor Xa, Human Factor VIIa and Trypsin decreases calcium release. These findings indicate that aprotinin’s mechanism of action is directed towards inhibiting proteolytic cleavage and hence subsequent activation of the PAR1 and PAR2 receptor complexes.  The binding site of the aprotinin on thrombin possibly is not the peptide sequence interacting with receptors.

Measurement of calcium concentration is essential to understand the mechanism of aprotinin on endothelial cell coagulation and inflammation because these mechanisms are tightly controlled by presence of calcium.  For example, activation of PAR receptors cause activation of G protein q subunit that leads to phosphoinositol to secrete calcium from endoplasmic reticulum into cytoplasm or activation of DAG to affect Phospho Lipase C (PLC). In turn, certain calcium concentration will start the serial formation of chain reaction for coagulation.  Therefore, treatment of the cells with specific factors, thrombin receptor activating peptides (TRAPs), human alpha thrombin, trypsin, human factor VIIa, and human factor Xa, would shed light into the effect of aprotinin on the formation of complexes for pro-coagulant activity.    DISCUSSION   There are two fold of outcomes to be overcome during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB):  mechanical stress and the contact of blood with artificial surfaces results in the activation of pro- and anticoagulant systems as well as the immune response leading to inflammation and systemic organ failure.  This phenomenon causes the “postperfusion-syndrome”, with leukocytosis, increased capillary permeability, accumulation of interstitial fluid, and organ dysfunction.  CPB is also associated with a significant inflammatory reaction, which has been related to complement activation, and release of various inflammatory mediators and proteolytic enzymes. CPB induces an inflammatory state characterized by tumor necrosis factor-alpha release. Aprotinin, a low molecular-weight peptide inhibitor of trypsin, kallikrein and plasmin has been proposed to influence whole body inflammatory response inhibiting kallikrein formation, complement activation and neutrophil activation (5, 6). But shown that aprotinin has no significant influence on the inflammatory reaction to CPB in men.  Understanding the endothelial cell responses to injury is therefore central to appreciating the role that dysfunction plays in the preoperative, operative, and postoperative course of nearly all cardiovascular surgery patients.  Whether aprotinin increases the risk of thrombotic complications remains controversial.   The anti-inflammatory properties of aprotinin in attenuating the clinical manifestations of the systemic inflammatory response following cardiopulmonary bypass are well known(15) 16)  However its mechanisms and targets of action are not fully understood. In this study we have investigated the actions of aprotinin at the endothelial cell level. Our experiments showed that aprotinin reduced TNF-a induced IL-6 release from cultured HUVECS. Thrombin mediates its effects through PAR-1 receptor and we found that aprotinin reduced the expression of PAR-1 on the surface of HUVECS after 24 hours incubation. We then demonstrated that aprotinin inhibited endothelial cell PAR proteolytic activation by thrombin (PAR-1), trypsin, factor VII and factor X (PAR-2) in terms of less release of Ca preventing the activation of coagulation.  So aprotinin made cells produce less receptor, PAR1, PAR2, and TF as a result there would be less Ca++ release.    Our findings provide evidence for anti-inflammatory as well as anti-coagulant properties of aprotinin at the endothelial cell level, which may be mediated through its inhibitory effects on proteolytic activation of PARs.   IL6   Elevated levels of IL-6 have been shown to correlate with adverse outcomes following cardiac surgery in terms of cardiac dysfunction and impaired lung function(Hennein et al 1992). Cardiopulmonary bypass is associated with the release of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6, IL-8 and TNF-a.  IL-6 is produced by T-cells, endothelial cells as a result monocytes and plasma levels of this cytokine tend to increase during CPB (21, 22). In some studies aprotinin has been shown to reduce levels of IL-6 post CPB(23) Hill(5). Others have failed to demonstrate an inhibitory effect of aprotinin upon pro-inflammatory cytokines following CPB(24) (25).  Our experiments showed that aprotinin significantly reduced the release of IL-6 from TNF-a stimulated endothelial cells, which may represent an important target of its anti-inflammatory properties. Its has been shown recently that activation of HUVEC by PAR-1 and PAR-2 agonists stimulates the production of IL-6(26). Hence it is possible that the effects of aprotinin in reducing IL-6 may be through targeting activation of such receptors.   TPA   Tissue Plasminogen activator is stored, ready made, in endothelial cells and it is released at its highest levels just after commencing CPB and again after protamine administration. The increased fibrinolytic activity associated with the release of tPA can be correlated to the excessive bleeding postoperatively. Thrombin is thought to be the major stimulus for release of t-PA from endothelial cells. Aprotinin’s haemostatic properties are due to direct inhibition of plasmin, thereby reducing fibrinolytic activity as well as inhibiting fibrin degradation.  Aprotinin has not been shown to have any significant effect upon t-PA levels in patients post CPB(27), which would suggest that aprotinin reduced fibrinolytic effects are not the result of inhibition of t-PA mediated plasmin generation. Our study, however demonstrates that aprotinin inhibits the release of t-PA from activated endothelial cells, which may represent a further haemostatic mechanism at the endothelial cell level.   TF   Resting endothelial cells do not normally express tissue factor on their cell surface. Inflammatory mediators released during CPB such as complement (C5a), lipopolysaccharide, IL-6, IL-1, TNF-a, mitogens, adhesion molecules and hypoxia may induce the expression of tissue factor on endothelial cells and monocytes. The expression of TF on activated endothelial cells activates the extrinsic pathway of coagulation, ultimately resulting in the generation of thrombin and fibrin. Aprotinin has been shown to reduce the expression of TF on monocytes in a simulated cardiopulmonary bypass circuit (28).

We found that treatment of activated endothelial cells with aprotinin significantly reduced the expression of TF after 24 hours. This would be expected to result in reduced thrombin generation and represent an additional possible anticoagulant effect of aprotinin. In a previous study from our laboratory we demonstrated that there were two peaks of inducible TF activity on endothelial cells, one immediately post CPB and the second at 24 hours (29). The latter peak is thought to be responsible for a shift from the initial fibrinolytic state into a procoagulant state.  In addition to its established early haemostatic and coagulant effect, aprotinin may also have a delayed anti-coagulant effect through its inhibition of TF mediated coagulation pathway. Hence its effects may counterbalance the haemostatic derangements, i.e. first bleeding then thrombosis caused by CPB. The anti-inflammatory effects of aprotinin may also be related to inhibition of TF and thrombin generation. PARs  

It has been suggested that aprotinin may target PAR on other cells types, especially endothelial cells. We investigated the role of PARs in endothelial cell activation and whether they can be the targets for aprotinin.  In recent study by Day group(30) demonstrated that endothelial cell activation by thrombin and downstream inflammatory responses can be inhibited by aprotinin in vitro through blockade of protease-activated receptor 1. Our results provide a new molecular basis to help explain the anti-inflammatory properties of aprotinin reported clinically.    The finding that PAR-2 can also be activated by the coagulation enzymes factor VII and factor X indicates that PAR may represent the link between inflammation and coagulation.  PAR-2 is believed to play an important role in inflammatory response. PAR-2 are widely expressed in the gastrointestinal tract, pancreas, kidney, liver, airway, prostrate, ovary, eye of endothelial, epithelial, smooth muscle cells, T-cells and neutrophils. Activation of PAR-2 in vivo has been shown to be involved in early inflammatory processes of leucocyte recruitment, rolling, and adherence, possibly through a mechanism involving platelet-activating factor (PAF)   We investigated the effects of TNFa stimulation on PAR-1 and PAR-2 expression on endothelial cells. Through functional analysis of PAR-1 and PAR-2 by measuring intracellular calcium influx we have demonstrated that aprotinin blocks proteolytic cleavage of PAR-1 by thrombin and activation of PAR-2 by the proteases trypsin, factor VII and factor X.  This confirms the previous findings on platelets of an endothelial anti-thrombotic effect through inhibition of proteolysis of PAR-1. In addition, part of aprotinin’s anti-inflammatory effects may be mediated by the inhibition of serine proteases that activate PAR-2. There have been conflicting reports regarding the regulation of PAR-1 expression by inflammatory mediators in cultured human endothelial cells. Poullis et al first showed that thrombin induced platelet aggregation was mediated by via the PAR-1(4) and demonstrated that aprotinin inhibited the serine protease thrombin and trypsin induced platelet aggregation. Aprotinin did not block PAR-1 activation by the non-proteolytic agonist peptide, SFLLRN indicating that the mechanism of action was directed towards inhibiting proteolytic cleavage of the receptor. Nysted et al showed that TNF did not affect mRNA and cell surface protein expression of PAR-1 (35), whereas Yan et al showed downregulation of PAR-1 mRNA levels (36). Once activated PAR1 and PAR2 are rapidly internalized and then transferred to lysosomes for degradation.

Endothelial cells contain large intracellular pools of preformed receptors that can replace the cleaved receptors over a period of approximately 2 hours, thus restoring the capacity of the cells to respond to thrombin. In this study we found that after 1-hour stimulation with TNF there was a significant upregulation in PAR-1 expression. However after 3 hours and 24 hours there was no significant change in PAR-1 expression suggesting that cleaved receptors had been internalized and replenished. Aprotinin was interestingly shown to downregulate PAR-1 expression on endothelial cells at 1 hour and increasingly more so after 24 hours TNF stimulation. These findings may suggest an effect of aprotinin on inhibiting intracellular cycling and synthesis of PAR-1.    

Conclusions   Our study has identified the anti-inflammatory and coagulant effects of aprotinin at the endothelial cell level. All together aprotinin affects the ECCB by reducing the t-PA, IL-6, PAR1, PAR 2, TF expressions. Our data correlates with the previous foundlings in production of tPA (7, (8) 9) 10), and  decreased IL-6 levels (11) during coronary artery bypass graft surgery (12-14). We have importantly demonstrated that aprotinin may target proteolytic activation of endothelial cell associated PAR-1 to exert a possible anti-inflammatory effect. This evidence should lessen the concerns of a possible prothrombotic effect and increased incidence of graft occlusion in coronary artery bypass patients treated with aprotinin. Aprotinin may also inhibit PAR-2 proteolytic activation, which may represent a key mechanism for attenuating the inflammatory response at the critical endothelial cell level. Although aprotinin has always been known as a non-specific protease inhibitor we would suggest that there is growing evidence for a PAR-ticular mechanism of action.  

REFERENCES

1.         Levy, J. H., and Tanaka, K. A. Inflammatory response to cardiopulmonary bypass. Ann Thorac Surg. 75: S715-720, 2003.

2.         Verrier, E. D., and Morgan, E. N. Endothelial response to cardiopulmonary bypass surgery. Ann Thorac Surg. 66: S17-19; discussion S25-18, 1998.

3.         Cirino, G., Napoli, C., Bucci, M., and Cicala, C. Inflammation-coagulation network: are serine protease receptors the knot? Trends Pharmacol Sci. 21: 170-172, 2000. 4.         Poullis, M., Manning, R., Laffan, M., Haskard, D. O., Taylor, K. M., and Landis, R. C. The antithrombotic effect of aprotinin: actions mediated via the proteaseactivated receptor 1. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 120: 370-378, 2000.

5.         Hill, G. E., Alonso, A., Spurzem, J. R., Stammers, A. H., and Robbins, R. A. Aprotinin and methylprednisolone equally blunt cardiopulmonary bypass-induced inflammation in humans. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 110: 1658-1662, 1995.

6.         Hill, G. E., Pohorecki, R., Alonso, A., Rennard, S. I., and Robbins, R. A. Aprotinin reduces interleukin-8 production and lung neutrophil accumulation after cardiopulmonary bypass. Anesth Analg. 83: 696-700, 1996. 7.         Lu, H., Du Buit, C., Soria, J., Touchot, B., Chollet, B., Commin, P. L., Conseiller, C., Echter, E., and Soria, C. Postoperative hemostasis and fibrinolysis in patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass with or without aprotinin therapy. Thromb Haemost. 72: 438-443, 1994.

8.         de Haan, J., and van Oeveren, W. Platelets and soluble fibrin promote plasminogen activation causing downregulation of platelet glycoprotein Ib/IX complexes: protection by aprotinin. Thromb Res. 92: 171-179, 1998.

9.         Erhardtsen, E., Bregengaard, C., Hedner, U., Diness, V., Halkjaer, E., and Petersen, L. C. The effect of recombinant aprotinin on t-PA-induced bleeding in rats. Blood Coagul Fibrinolysis. 5: 707-712, 1994.

10.       Orchard, M. A., Goodchild, C. S., Prentice, C. R., Davies, J. A., Benoit, S. E., Creighton-Kemsford, L. J., Gaffney, P. J., and Michelson, A. D. Aprotinin reduces cardiopulmonary bypass-induced blood loss and inhibits fibrinolysis without influencing platelets. Br J Haematol. 85: 533-541, 1993.

11.       Tassani, P., Augustin, N., Barankay, A., Braun, S. L., Zaccaria, F., and Richter, J. A. High-dose aprotinin modulates the balance between proinflammatory and anti-inflammatory responses during coronary artery bypass graft surgery. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth.14: 682-686, 2000.

12.       Asehnoune, K., Dehoux, M., Lecon-Malas, V., Toueg, M. L., Gonieaux, M. H., Omnes, L., Desmonts, J. M., Durand, G., and Philip, I. Differential effects of aprotinin and tranexamic acid on endotoxin desensitization of blood cells induced by circulation through an isolated extracorporeal circuit. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 16: 447-451, 2002.

13.       Dehoux, M. S., Hernot, S., Asehnoune, K., Boutten, A., Paquin, S., Lecon-Malas, V., Toueg, M. L., Desmonts, J. M., Durand, G., and Philip, I. Cardiopulmonary bypass decreases cytokine production in lipopolysaccharide-stimulated whole blood cells: roles of interleukin-10 and the extracorporeal circuit. Crit Care Med. 28: 1721-1727, 2000.

14.       Greilich, P. E., Brouse, C. F., Rinder, C. S., Smith, B. R., Sandoval, B. A., Rinder, H. M., Eberhart, R. C., and Jessen, M. E. Effects of epsilon-aminocaproic acid and aprotinin on leukocyte-platelet adhesion in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. Anesthesiology. 100: 225-233, 2004.

15.       Mojcik, C. F., and Levy, J. H. Aprotinin and the systemic inflammatory response after cardiopulmonary bypass. Ann Thorac Surg. 71: 745-754, 2001.

16.       Landis, R. C., Asimakopoulos, G., Poullis, M., Haskard, D. O., and Taylor, K. M. The antithrombotic and antiinflammatory mechanisms of action of aprotinin. Ann Thorac Surg. 72: 2169-2175, 2001.

17.       Asimakopoulos, G., Kohn, A., Stefanou, D. C., Haskard, D. O., Landis, R. C., and Taylor, K. M. Leukocyte integrin expression in patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass. Ann Thorac Surg. 69: 1192-1197, 2000.

18.       Landis, R. C., Asimakopoulos, G., Poullis, M., Thompson, R., Nourshargh, S., Haskard, D. O., and Taylor, K. M. Effect of aprotinin (trasylol) on the inflammatory and thrombotic complications of conventional cardiopulmonary bypass surgery. Heart Surg Forum. 4 Suppl 1: S35-39, 2001.

19.       Asimakopoulos, G., Thompson, R., Nourshargh, S., Lidington, E. A., Mason, J. C., Ratnatunga, C. P., Haskard, D. O., Taylor, K. M., and Landis, R. C. An anti-inflammatory property of aprotinin detected at the level of leukocyte extravasation. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 120: 361-369, 2000.

20.       Asimakopoulos, G., Lidington, E. A., Mason, J., Haskard, D. O., Taylor, K. M., and Landis, R. C. Effect of aprotinin on endothelial cell activation. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 122: 123-128, 2001.

21.       Butler, J., Chong, G. L., Baigrie, R. J., Pillai, R., Westaby, S., and Rocker, G. M. Cytokine responses to cardiopulmonary bypass with membrane and bubble oxygenation. Ann Thorac Surg. 53: 833-838, 1992.

22.       Hennein, H. A., Ebba, H., Rodriguez, J. L., Merrick, S. H., Keith, F. M., Bronstein, M. H., Leung, J. M., Mangano, D. T., Greenfield, L. J., and Rankin, J. S. Relationship of the proinflammatory cytokines to myocardial ischemia and dysfunction after uncomplicated coronary revascularization. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 108: 626-635, 1994.

23.       Diego, R. P., Mihalakakos, P. J., Hexum, T. D., and Hill, G. E. Methylprednisolone and full-dose aprotinin reduce reperfusion injury after cardiopulmonary bypass. J Cardiothorac Vasc Anesth. 11: 29-31, 1997.

24.       Ashraf, S., Tian, Y., Cowan, D., Nair, U., Chatrath, R., Saunders, N. R., Watterson, K. G., and Martin, P. G. “Low-dose” aprotinin modifies hemostasis but not proinflammatory cytokine release. Ann Thorac Surg. 63: 68-73, 1997.

25.       Schmartz, D., Tabardel, Y., Preiser, J. C., Barvais, L., d’Hollander, A., Duchateau, J., and Vincent, J. L. Does aprotinin influence the inflammatory response to cardiopulmonary bypass in patients? J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 125: 184-190, 2003.

26.       Chi, L., Li, Y., Stehno-Bittel, L., Gao, J., Morrison, D. C., Stechschulte, D. J., and Dileepan, K. N. Interleukin-6 production by endothelial cells via stimulation of protease-activated receptors is amplified by endotoxin and tumor necrosis factor-alpha. J Interferon Cytokine Res. 21: 231-240, 2001.

27.       Ray, M. J., and Marsh, N. A. Aprotinin reduces blood loss after cardiopulmonary bypass by direct inhibition of plasmin. Thromb Haemost. 78: 1021-1026, 1997.

28.       Khan, M. M., Gikakis, N., Miyamoto, S., Rao, A. K., Cooper, S. L., Edmunds, L. H., Jr., and Colman, R. W. Aprotinin inhibits thrombin formation and monocyte tissue factor in simulated cardiopulmonary bypass. Ann Thorac Surg. 68: 473-478, 1999.

29.       Jaggers, J. J., Neal, M. C., Smith, P. K., Ungerleider, R. M., and Lawson, J. H. Infant cardiopulmonary bypass: a procoagulant state. Ann Thorac Surg. 68: 513-520, 1999.

30.       Day, J. R., Taylor, K. M., Lidington, E. A., Mason, J. C., Haskard, D. O., Randi, A. M., and Landis, R. C. Aprotinin inhibits proinflammatory activation of endothelial cells by thrombin through the protease-activated receptor 1. J Thorac Cardiovasc Surg. 131: 21-27, 2006.

31.       Vergnolle, N. Proteinase-activated receptor-2-activating peptides induce leukocyte rolling, adhesion, and extravasation in vivo. J Immunol. 163: 5064-5069, 1999.

32.       Vergnolle, N., Hollenberg, M. D., Sharkey, K. A., and Wallace, J. L. Characterization of the inflammatory response to proteinase-activated receptor-2 (PAR2)-activating peptides in the rat paw. Br J Pharmacol. 127: 1083-1090, 1999.

33.       McLean, P. G., Aston, D., Sarkar, D., and Ahluwalia, A. Protease-activated receptor-2 activation causes EDHF-like coronary vasodilation: selective preservation in ischemia/reperfusion injury: involvement of lipoxygenase products, VR1 receptors, and C-fibers. Circ Res. 90: 465-472, 2002.

34.       Maree, A., and Fitzgerald, D. PAR2 is partout and now in the heart. Circ Res. 90: 366-368, 2002.

35.       Nystedt, S., Ramakrishnan, V., and Sundelin, J. The proteinase-activated receptor 2 is induced by inflammatory mediators in human endothelial cells. Comparison with the thrombin receptor. J Biol Chem. 271: 14910-14915, 1996.

36.       Yan, W., Tiruppathi, C., Lum, H., Qiao, R., and Malik, A. B. Protein kinase C beta regulates heterologous desensitization of thrombin receptor (PAR-1) in endothelial cells. Am J Physiol. 274: C387-395, 1998.

37.       Shinohara, T., Suzuki, K., Takada, K., Okada, M., and Ohsuzu, F. Regulation of proteinase-activated receptor 1 by inflammatory mediators in human vascular endothelial cells. Cytokine. 19: 66-75, 2002.

FIGURES

Figure 1: IL-6 production following TNF-a stimulation Figure 1

Figure 2:  tPA production following TNF-a stimulation Figure 2

Figure 3:  Tissue Factor Expression on TNF-a stimulated HUVECS Figure 3

Figure 4:  PAR-1 Expression on TNF-a stimulated HUVECS Figure 4

Figure 5:  PAR-2 Expression on TNF-a stimulated HUVECS Figure 5

Figure 6:  Calcium Fluxes following PAR1 Activation Figure 6

Figure 7:  Calcium Fluxes following PAR2 Activation Figure 7

 

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From NHGRI

Online Research Resources Developed at NHGRI
Software, databases and research project Web sites from NHGRI’s Division of Intramural Research (DIR).

NHGRI Reports and Publications

The NHGRI Genome Sequencing Program (GSP) 
Genome sequencing projects currently in production and funded by NHGRI.

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The Completed Human Sequence:
Other Federal Agencies Involved in Genomics
Human Genome Sequence Assemblies and Other Genomic Data Resources

 

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(Listed in order of total sequence contributed to the draft human sequence published February 15, 2001, Nature, 409:860-921)

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  • InterPro protein sequence analysis & classification [ebi.ac.uk]
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Transposon-mediated Gene Therapy improves Pulmonary Hemodynamics and attenuates Right Ventricular Hypertrophy: eNOS gene therapy reduces Pulmonary vascular remodeling and Arterial wall hyperplasia

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

Sleeping Beauty-mediated eNOS gene therapy attenuates monocrotaline-induced pulmonary hypertension in rats

  1. Li Liu*,
  2. Hanzhong Liu,
  3. Gary Visner and
  4. Bradley S. Fletcher,1

  1. *Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, College of Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida, USA;

  2.  

  3. Division of Pulmonary Medicine, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; and

  4.  

  5. Medical Research Service, Department of Veteran Affairs Medical Center, Gainesville, Florida, USA
  1. Correspondence: 1Correspondence: Department of Pharmacology and Therapeutics, 1600 S.W. Archer Rd., Box 100267, University of Florida, College of Medicine, Gainesville, FL 32610-0267, USA. E-mail: bsf@pharmacology.ufl.edu

DISCUSSION

Despite the diverse origins of etiology of pulmonary hypertension, the various disorders share similar histological and pathological findings, including endothelial dysfunction and the proliferation of SMCs resulting in vascular remodelingin situ thrombus formation with obliteration of distal arterioles, and an inflammatory type reaction (2) . Treatment strategies for PH have relied on the use of vasodilators (e.g., calcium-channel blockers, prostacyclin) or phosphodiesterase inhibitors (e.g., sildenafil), which promote smooth muscle relaxation (4) . While pharmacological agents can be effective, potential drawbacks include the need for continuous i.v. infusion of prostacyclin derivatives or the use of nonselective vasodilators with potential side effects (3) . Inhaled NO has also been used as a treatment in patients with PH (41) ; however, its shortcomings include minimal response rates (∼10%), expense, the need for sophisticated delivery systems, and rebound hypertension (42) . These obstacles limit the therapeutic potential of the pharmacological approaches and suggest that alternative treatment modalities should be investigated.

As an alternative to simply promoting vasodilatation, an ideal strategy would be to combat the pathological processes that drive the increased pulmonary vascular resistance and loss of pulmonary microvasculature. This includes SMC proliferation and vascular remodeling, oxidative stress, inflammatory responses, and abnormal levels of vasoconstrictive molecules such as endothelin-1 (ET-1) (43) and certain prostanoids (44 , 45) .

Gene therapy, especially multigene delivery, offers the possibility to overcome some of these pathological factors by using proteins or other genetic elements, such as RNA interference (RNAi), which target key regulators of vascular tone and regeneration. A growing body of literature points to the importance of endothelial-derived NO in promoting endothelial health and regulating vascular tone and regeneration.

Therefore, overexpression of eNOS, potentially in combination with inhibitors of expression of vasoconstrictor molecules (such as ET-1), is a therapeutic strategy that may reverse some of the pathological changes associated with late-stage PH.

In the present study, a severe model of PH (monocrotaline-induced) was used to test the ability of a nonviral approach to alleviate the pathological events leading to PH. Intravenous gene delivery of plasmid DNA complexed to the synthetic polymer polyethylenimine tends to transfect endothelial cells and type II pneumocytes within the lung (31 , 32 , 46) . Although endothelial cells would be ideal targets, we chose to use a very active nonspecific promoter to obtain the highest level of eNOS expression possible within the lung tissue. Using the CMV-driven eNOS transposon, we could demonstrate increased eNOS protein and nitrate production in vivo following gene transfer. In theory, increased NO production should lead to SMC relaxation, vasodilatation, and a reduction in PABP, which was observed in the hemodynamic studies (Fig. 3) .

However, a key factor in PH progression is increased pulmonary resistance due to SMC proliferation, intimal wall hyperplasia, and increased wall thickness. The histological data suggest that transposon-based eNOS expression prevented this hyperplasia and vascular remodeling. As NO has the ability to both inhibit SMCs proliferation and induce apoptosis (15 , 47 , 48) , it was unclear if the improvement in vascular remodeling was the result of growth inhibition or apoptotic effects of NO on SMCs. Tunnel assays on the histological sections revealed no significant difference in the amount of apoptosis in gene therapy-treated animals (data not shown), suggesting the effect was more on inhibition of SMC proliferation. Taken together, these results suggest that the

transposon-based approach can increase pulmonary NO production, reduce PABP, and attenuate right ventricular hypertrophy by preventing SMC proliferation and vascular remodeling.

Although SB has been used in other animal paradigms, this is the first report of using SB-mediated gene delivery to treat PH. Benefits of this approach, compared with several previous studies using adenovirus, include its nonviral delivery method, lack of inflammatory responses to viral components, cost-effectiveness, and ability to promote sustained therapeutic transgene expression. Given that SB transposons integrate within the host genome, there is some concern this approach may induce tumorigenic mutations, as has been seen with retrovirus (49) . Although this concern may be valid, SB is still considered one of the safest integrating vectors because of its near-random nature of integration (50) .

The problems associated with SB-mediated insertional mutagenesis could be overcome through the development of transposases with site-specific integration (51) . Lastly, clinically relevant delivery methods of plasmid DNA are still needed. Although the polymer PEI has recently been used in humans (52) , the efficiency of nonviral gene transfer could be improved through the synthesis more effective liposomes (e.g., cationic polymers and lipid) or lipoplexes with reduced toxicity. These complexes must be stable within plasma, transfect the pulmonary vasculature efficiently, and be able to navigate the cytoplasm to deliver the plasmid cargo to the nucleus. Given that few long-term treatment options,

other than lung transplantation, are available for PH, the success of this nonviral gene-based approach to attenuate the pathological processes driving PH warrants further investigations.

REFERENCES

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  2. Hampl, V., Herget, J. (2000) Role of nitric oxide in the pathogenesis of chronic pulmonary hypertension. Physiol. Rev. 80,1337-1372
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  4. Strange, J. W., Wharton, J., Phillips, P. G., Wilkins, M. R. (2002) Recent insights into the pathogenesis and therapeutics of pulmonary hypertension. Clin. Sci. (Lond). 102,253-268
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  7. Champion, H. C., Bivalacqua, T. J., Greenberg, S. S., Giles, T. D., Hyman, A. L., Kadowitz, P. J. (2002) Adenoviral gene transfer of endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) partially restores normal pulmonary arterial pressure in eNOS-deficient mice. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 99,13248-13253Epub 12002 Sep 13217
  8. Kouyoumdjian, C., Adnot, S., Levame, M., Eddahibi, S., Bousbaa, H., Raffestin, B. (1994) Continuous inhalation of nitric oxide protects against development of pulmonary hypertension in chronically hypoxic rats. J. Clin. Invest. 94,578-584
  9. Roberts, J. D., Jr, Chiche, J. D., Weimann, J., Steudel, W., Zapol, W. M., Bloch, K. D. (2000) Nitric oxide inhalation decreases pulmonary artery remodeling in the injured lungs of rat pups. Circ. Res. 87,140-145
  10. Champion, H. C., Bivalacqua, T. J., D’Souza, F. M., Ortiz, L. A., Jeter, J. R., Toyoda, K., Heistad, D. D., Hyman, A. L., Kadowitz, P. J. (1999) Gene transfer of endothelial nitric oxide synthase to the lung of the mouse in vivo. Effect on agonist-induced and flow-mediated vascular responses. Circ. Res. 84,1422-1432
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  12. Champion, H. C., Bivalacqua, T. J., Toyoda, K., Heistad, D. D., Hyman, A. L., Kadowitz, P. J. (2000) In vivo gene transfer of prepro-calcitonin gene-related peptide to the lung attenuates chronic hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension in the mouse. Circulation 101,923-930
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  16. Von der Leyen, H. E., Dzau, V. J. (2001) Therapeutic potential of nitric oxide synthase gene manipulation. Circulation 103,2760-2765
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http://www.fasebj.org/content/20/14/2594.full

http://www.fasebj.org/cgi/doi/10.1096/fj.06-6254fje

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Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

 

  • Original Article

HYPERTENSIONAHA.113.00859 Published online before print May 20, 2013,doi: 10.1161/​HYPERTENSIONAHA.113.00859

Serum Uric Acid Level, Longitudinal Blood Pressure, Renal Function, and Long-Term Mortality in Treated Hypertensive Patients
  1. Jesse Dawson,
  2. Panniyammakal Jeemon,
  3. Lucy Hetherington,
  4. Caitlin Judd,
  5. Claire Hastie,
  6. Christin Schulz,
  7. William Sloan,
  8. Scott Muir,
  9. Alan Jardine,
  10. Gordon McInnes,
  11. David Morrison,
  12. Anna Dominiczak,
  13. Sandosh Padmanabhan,
  14. Matthew Walters

+Author Affiliations


  1. From the Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences (J.D., P.J., L.H., C.J., C.H., C.S., S.M., A.J., G.M., A.D., S.P., M.W.), West of Scotland Cancer Surveillance Unit (W.S., D.M.), College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, United Kingdom.
  1. Correspondence to Matthew Walters, Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, College of Medical, Veterinary & Life Sciences, Western Infirmary, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G11 6NT, United Kingdom. E-mail matthew.walters@glasgow.ac.uk; or Sandosh Padmanabhan, BHF Glasgow Cardiovascular Research Centre, Institute of Cardiovascular and Medical Sciences, 126 University Pl, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8TA, United Kingdom. E-mail Sandosh.padmanabhan@glasgow.ac.uk

Abstract

Uric acid may have a role in the development of hypertension and renal dysfunction. We explored the relationship among longitudinal blood pressure, renal function, and cardiovascular outcomes in a large cohort of patients with treated hypertension. We used data from the Glasgow Blood Pressure Clinic database. Patients with a baseline measure of serum uric acid and longitudinal measures of blood pressure and renal function were included. Mortality data were obtained from the General Register Office for Scotland. Generalized estimating equations were used to explore the relationship among quartiles of serum uric acid, blood pressure, and estimated glomerular filtration rate. Cox proportional hazard models were developed to assess mortality relationships. In total, 6984 patients were included. Serum uric acid level did not influence the longitudinal changes in systolic or diastolic blood pressure but was related to change in glomerular filtration rate. In comparison with patients in the first quartile of serum uric acid, the relative decrease in glomerular filtration rate in the fourth was 10.7 (95% confidence interval, 7.9–13.6 mL/min per 1.73 m2) in men and 12.2 (95% confidence interval, 9.2–15.2 mL/min per 1.73 m2) in women. All-cause and cardiovascular mortality differed across quartiles of serum uric acid in women only (P<0.001; hazard ratios for all-cause mortality 1.38 [95% confidence interval, 1.14–1.67] for the fourth quartile of serum uric acid compared with the first). Serum uric acid level was not associated with longitudinal blood pressure control in adults with treated hypertension but was related to decline in renal function and mortality in women.

Key Words:

  • Received February 19, 2013.
  • Revision received April 23, 2013.
  • Accepted April 23, 2013.

http://hyper.ahajournals.org/content/early/2013/05/20/HYPERTENSIONAHA.113.00859.abstract.html?papetoc

 

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MIT Skoltech Initiative: 61 Experts from 20 different Countries identified 120 Universities in the field of Entrepreneurship and Innovation

MIT Skoltech Initiative: 61 Experts from 20 different Countries identified 120 Universities in the field of Entrepreneurship and Innovation

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

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The Technion – Israel Institute of Technology was today ranked 6th in the world by a survey conducted by MIT. The study evaluated entrepreneurship and innovation in higher education institutions worldwide. The ranking was compiled by 61 experts from 20 different countries. It identified 120 universities which demonstrate “a decisive impact and significant contribution in the field of entrepreneurship and innovation.”

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Technion followed MIT, Stanford, Cambridge, Imperial College and Oxford, but preceded the University of San Diego, Berkeley, ETH Swiss and the National University of Singapore. The report also placed  Israel 3rd  in terms of entrepreneurship and innovation, after the US and the UK, but ahead of Sweden, Singapore, Germany, the Netherlands, China and Canada.The survey, which was carried out in partnership with the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology in Russia, also placed the Technion first in the category of universities that create or support technological innovation even though they operate in a challenging environment.Instituting an institutional E&I culture – for entrepreneurship and innovation – is considered among experts as the essential ingredient for sustaining a successful system. In this respect, the Technion is mentioned as an institution that possesses the ethos of aspiration and achievement.This is the first stage (out of three) in the comprehensive survey. In his reaction to these most favorable results, Technion President Professor Peretz Lavie said, “Technion’s position among the top ten leading universities in the world in the areas of innovation and entrepreneurship brings us closer to fulfilling our mission goals: to be counted among the top ten leading universities in the world. This is not the first time the Technion has earned international acclaim such as this,” he continued. “The university’s contribution to Israel’s advanced technology industry is recognized around the world. Not by coincidence did we prevail in the New York City’s tender last year to establish a scientific-engineering research center in partnership with Cornell University. The city’s mayor, Michael Bloomberg, said then that the Technion is the only university in the world capable of successfully turning the economic tide of an entire country, from exporters of citrus fruit to a global center for advanced industry and an authority of knowledge. To date, 61 experts from around the world have endorsed this statement.”

VIEW VIDEO – OUTSTANDING  predictions!!

Inventors, Novel Prize Winners & Technology Leaders: IIT

The Technion-Israel Institute of Technology is a major source of the innovation and brainpower that drives the Israeli economy, and a key to Israel’s reputation as the world’s “Start-Up Nation.” Its three Nobel Prize winners exemplify academic excellence.

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