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Dive into the research topics where Adam B. Stein is active.

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Featured researches published by Adam B. Stein.


Stroke | 2004

Delayed adaptation of the heart to stress: Late preconditioning

Adam B. Stein; Xian Liang Tang; Yiru Guo; Yu-Ting Xuan; Buddhadeb Dawn; Roberto Bolli

The early phase of preconditioning (PC) lasts 2 to 3 hours and protects against myocardial infarction, but not against stunning. In contrast, the late phase of PC lasts for 3 to 4 days and protects against both myocardial stunning and infarction, making this phenomenon more clinically relevant. Late PC is a genetic reprogramming of the heart that involves the activation of several stress-responsive genes, which ultimately results in the development of a cardioprotective phenotype. Sublethal ischemic insults release chemical signals (nitric oxide [NO], adenosine, and reactive oxygen species) that trigger a series of signaling events (eg, activation of protein kinase C, Src protein tyrosine kinases, Janus kinases 1/2, and nuclear factor-&kgr;B) and culminates in increased synthesis of inducible NO synthase, cyclooxygenase-2, heme oxygenase-1, aldose reductase, Mn superoxide dismutase, and probably other cardioprotective proteins. In addition to ischemia, heat stress, exercise, and cytokines can also induce a similar series of events. Perhaps most importantly, many pharmacologic agents (eg, NO donors, adenosine receptor agonists, endotoxin derivatives, or opioid receptor agonists) can mimic the effects of ischemia in inducing the late phase of PC, suggesting that this phenomenon might be exploited therapeutically. The purpose of this review is to summarize the mechanisms that underlie the late phase of ischemic PC.


Circulation Research | 2006

Postinfarct Cytokine Therapy Regenerates Cardiac Tissue and Improves Left Ventricular Function

Buddhadeb Dawn; Yiru Guo; Arash Rezazadeh; Yiming Huang; Adam B. Stein; Greg Hunt; Sumit Tiwari; Jai Varma; Yan Gu; Sumanth D. Prabhu; Jan Kajstura; Piero Anversa; Suzanne T. Ildstad; Roberto Bolli

We systematically investigated the comparative efficacy of three different cytokine regimens, administered after a reperfused myocardial infarction, in regenerating cardiac tissue and improving left ventricular (LV) function. Wild-type (WT) mice underwent a 30-minute coronary occlusion followed by reperfusion and received vehicle, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)+Flt-3 ligand (FL), G-CSF+stem cell factor (SCF), or G-CSF alone starting 4 hours after reperfusion. In separate experiments, chimeric mice generated by reconstitution of radioablated WT mice with bone marrow from enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) transgenic mice underwent identical protocols. Mice were euthanized 5 weeks later. Echocardiographically, LV function was improved in G-CSF+FL– and G-CSF+SCF–treated but not in G-CSF–treated mice, whereas LV end-diastolic dimensions were smaller in all three groups. Morphometrically, cytokine-treated hearts had smaller LV diameter and volume. Numerous EGFP-positive cardiomyocytes, capillaries, and arterioles were noted in the infarcted region in cytokine-treated chimeric mice treated with G-CSF+FL or G-CSF+SCF, but the numbers were much smaller in G-CSF–treated mice. G-CSF+FL therapy mobilized bone marrow–derived cells exhibiting increased expression of surface antigens (CD62L and CD11a) that facilitate homing. We conclude that postinfarct cytokine therapy with G-CSF+FL or G-CSF+SCF limits adverse LV remodeling and improves LV performance by promoting cardiac regeneration and probably also by exerting other beneficial actions unrelated to regeneration, and that G-CSF alone is less effective.


Basic Research in Cardiology | 2007

Effects of anesthesia on echocardiographic assessment of left ventricular structure and function in rats

Adam B. Stein; Sumit Tiwari; Paul Thomas; Greg Hunt; Cemil Levent; Marcus F. Stoddard; Xian-Liang Tang; Roberto Bolli; Buddhadeb Dawn

Echocardiography is an essential diagnostic tool for accurate noninvasive assessment of cardiac structure and function in vivo. However, the use of anesthetic agents during echocardiographic studies is associated with alterations in cardiac anatomical and functional parameters. We sought to systematically compare the effects of three commonly used anesthetic agents on echocardiographic measurements of left ventricular (LV) systolic and diastolic function, LV dimensions, and LV mass in rats. Adult male Fischer 344 rats underwent echocardiographic studies under pentobarbital (PB, 25 mg/kg i.p.) (group I, n = 25), inhaled isoflurane (ISF, 1.5%) (group II, n = 25),or ketamine/xylazine (K/X, 37 mg/kg ketamine and 7 mg/kg xylazine i.p.) (group III, n = 25) anesthesia in a cross-over design. Echocardiography was also performed in an additional group of unanesthetized conscious rats (group IV, n = 5). Postmortem studies were performed to validate echocardiographic assessment of LV dimension and mass. Rats in group I exhibited significantly higher LV ejection fraction, fractional shortening, fractional area change, velocity of circumferential fiber shortening corrected for heart rate, and heart rate as compared with groups II and III. LV end-diastolic volume, end-diastolic diameter, and cross-sectional area in diastole were significantly smaller in group I compared with groups II and III. Cardiac output was significantly lower in group III compared with groups I and II. Postmortem LV mass measurements correlated well with echocardiographic estimation of LV mass for all anesthetic agents, and the correlation was best with PB anesthesia. Limited echocardiographic data obtained in conscious rats were similar to those obtained under PB anesthesia.We conclude that compared with ISF and K/X anesthesia, PB anesthesia at a lower dose yields echocardiographic LV structural and functional data similar to those obtained in conscious rats. In addition, PB anesthesia also facilitates more accurate estimation of LV mass.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2011

A murine model of inducible, cardiac-specific deletion of STAT3: its use to determine the role of STAT3 in the upregulation of cardioprotective proteins by ischemic preconditioning.

Roberto Bolli; Adam B. Stein; Yiru Guo; Ou Li Wang; Gregg Rokosh; Buddhadeb Dawn; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Yanqing Zhu; Yu-Ting Xuan

Pharmacological studies have shown that signal transducers and activators of transcription (STATs) are necessary for the delayed cardioprotection of ischemic preconditioning (PC). However, pharmacologic STAT inhibitors are not specific; furthermore, the individual role of STAT3 in late PC remains unknown. The objectives of the study were (i) to create an inducible, cardiac-specific STAT3 knockout mouse; (ii) to verify whether STAT3 deletion has any adverse effects in the short term (~1 month); and (iii) to use this novel tool to evaluate the role of STAT3 in the PC-induced upregulation of cardioprotective and anti-apoptotic proteins. We created an inducible, cardiomyocyte-restricted STAT3 deficient mouse (MCM TG:STAT3(flox/flox)) by interbreeding STAT3(flox/flox) mice and tamoxifen-inducible MCM TG mice. Treatment of MCM TG:STAT3(flox/flox) mice with tamoxifen resulted in deletion of STAT3 specifically in cardiac myocytes, concomitant with abrogation of ischemic PC-induced Tyr-705 and Ser-727 phosphorylation of STAT3 and increased STAT3 DNA-binding activity. In vehicle-treated MCM TG:STAT3(flox/flox) mice, ischemic PC increased the expression of cardioprotective (COX-2 and HO-1) and anti-apoptotic (e.g., Mcl-1, Bcl-x(L), c-FLIP(L), c-FLIP(S)) proteins 24h later; in contrast, in tamoxifen-treated MCM TG:STAT3(flox/flox) mice this increase was completely absent. Deletion of STAT3 had no apparent adverse effects on LV structure or function after 35 days. We have developed a novel inducible, cardiomyocyte-restricted STAT3 deficient mouse that can be used to specifically interrogate the role of this transcription factor in cardiovascular pathophysiology in vivo. Our data demonstrate, for the first time, that recruitment of STAT3 plays an obligatory role in the upregulation of cardioprotective and anti-apoptotic proteins and suggest that STAT3 activation is important in inhibiting both the death receptor pathway (which is modulated by c-FLIP(L) and c-FLIP(S)) and the mitochondrial pathway (which is mediated by Mcl-1 and Bcl-x(L)).


Basic Research in Cardiology | 2004

Hypercholesterolemia blunts NO donor-induced late preconditioning against myocardial infarction in conscious rabbits

Xian Liang Tang; Adam B. Stein; Gregg Shirk; Roberto Bolli

Although NO donors have been shown to confer late preconditioning (PC) against myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury in healthy rabbits, it is unknown whether concurrent systemic disorders affect NO donor-induced cardioprotection. Since many patients with coronary artery disease have hypercholesterolemia (HC), we examined the effect of this condition on late PC induced by the NO donor diethylenetriamine/nitric oxide (DETA/ NO). Chronically instrumented rabbits were fed a normal diet (normocholesterolemia, NC) or a diet enriched with 1% cholesterol (HC) for 4 weeks. Plasma cholesterol levels were significantly elevated and the arterial pressure response to the endothelium-dependent vasodilator bradykinin was blunted in cholesterol diet-fed rabbits. Conscious rabbits underwent a 30-minute coronary occlusion followed by 3 days of reperfusion. When NC rabbits were pretreated with DETA/NO (0.1 mg/kg, i. v. × 4, group II, n = 7) 24 hours before the 30-minute occlusion, infarct size was reduced by 52% (29.7 ± 3.4% versus 62.4 ± 4.0% of the region at risk in NC controls [group I, n = 5], P < 0.05), indicating that DETA/NO induced a late PC effect against myocardial infarction. In contrast, when HC rabbits were pretreated with the same dose of DETA/NO (group IV, n = 6), infarct size was not significantly reduced (61.0 ± 5.7% versus 68.1 ± 4.5% of the region at risk in HC [group III, n = 5], P = NS), suggesting that DETA/NO failed to induce a delayed cardioprotective effect. These data demonstrate, for the first time, that HC blunts NO donor-induced late PC against myocardial infarction, implying that the inhibitory effects of HC on ischemia-induced and NO donor-induced late PC are caused by disruption of biochemical pathways distal to the generation of NO that triggers these adaptations.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2009

The beneficial effects of postinfarct cytokine combination therapy are sustained during long-term follow-up

Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Adam B. Stein; Yiru Guo; Sumit Tiwari; Greg Hunt; Robert J. Vincent; Yiming Huang; Arash Rezazadeh; Suzanne T. Ildstad; Buddhadeb Dawn; Roberto Bolli

We have previously reported that administration of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)+Flt-3 ligand (FL) or G-CSF+stem cell factor (SCF) improves left ventricular (LV) function and halts LV remodeling at 35 d after myocardial infarction (MI). In the current study, we investigated whether these beneficial effects are sustained in the long term - an issue of fundamental importance for clinical translation. Mice undergoing a 30-min coronary occlusion followed by reperfusion received vehicle (group I), G-CSF+FL (group II), G-CSF+SCF (group III), or G-CSF alone (group IV) starting 4 h after reperfusion and were euthanized 48 wk later. LV structure and function were assessed by serial echocardiography before and at 48 h and 4, 8, 16, 32, and 48 wk after MI. During follow-up, mice in group I exhibited worsening of LV function and progressive LV remodeling. Compared with group I, both groups II and III exhibited improved LV EF at 4 wk after MI; however, only in group II was this improvement sustained at 48 wk. Group II was also the only group in which the decrease in infarct wall thickening fraction, the LV dilatation, and the increase in LV mass were attenuated vs. group I. We conclude that the beneficial effect of G-CSF+FL on postinfarction LV dysfunction and remodeling is sustained for at least 11 months, and thus is likely to be permanent. In contrast, the effect of G-CSF+SCF was not sustained beyond the first few weeks, and G-CSF alone is ineffective. To our knowledge, this is the first long-term study of cytokines in postinfarction LV remodeling. The results reveal heretofore unknown differential actions of cytokines and have important translational implications.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Cardiac stem cells delivered intravascularly traverse the vessel barrier, regenerate infarcted myocardium, and improve cardiac function

Buddhadeb Dawn; Adam B. Stein; Konrad Urbanek; Marcello Rota; Brian Whang; Raffaella Rastaldo; Daniele Torella; Xian Liang Tang; Arash Rezazadeh; Jan Kajstura; Annarosa Leri; Greg Hunt; Jai Varma; Sumanth D. Prabhu; Piero Anversa; Roberto Bolli


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2004

Administration of a CO-releasing molecule at the time of reperfusion reduces infarct size in vivo

Yiru Guo; Adam B. Stein; Wen Jian Wu; Wei Tan; Xiaoping Zhu; Qian Hong Li; Buddhadeb Dawn; Roberto Motterlini; Roberto Bolli


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2005

Administration of a CO-releasing molecule induces late preconditioning against myocardial infarction

Adam B. Stein; Yiru Guo; Wei Tan; Wen Jian Wu; Xiaoping Zhu; Qianhong Li; Cheng Luo; Buddhadeb Dawn; Tony R. Johnson; Roberto Motterlini; Roberto Bolli


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2004

Tumor necrosis factor-α does not modulate ischemia/reperfusion injury in naïve myocardium but is essential for the development of late preconditioning

Buddhadeb Dawn; Yiru Guo; Arash Rezazadeh; Ou Li Wang; Adam B. Stein; Greg Hunt; Jai Varma; Yu-Ting Xuan; Wen Jian Wu; Wei Tan; Xiaoping Zhu; Roberto Bolli

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Roberto Bolli

University of Louisville

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Yiru Guo

University of Louisville

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Wei Tan

University of Louisville

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Xiaoping Zhu

University of Louisville

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Greg Hunt

University of Louisville

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Sumit Tiwari

University of Louisville

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Wen Jian Wu

University of Louisville

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