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Featured researches published by Adam Jacques.


Circulation Research | 2009

Evidence From Human Myectomy Samples That MYBPC3 Mutations Cause Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Through Haploinsufficiency

Steven B. Marston; O’Neal Copeland; Adam Jacques; Karen Livesey; Victor Tsang; William J. McKenna; Shapour Jalilzadeh; Sebastian Carballo; Charles Redwood; Hugh Watkins

Rationale: Most sarcomere gene mutations that cause hypertrophic cardiomyopathy are missense alleles that encode dominant negative proteins. The potential exceptions are mutations in the MYBPC3 gene (encoding cardiac myosin-binding protein-C [MyBP-C]), which frequently encode truncated proteins. Objective: We sought to determine whether there was evidence of haploinsufficiency in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy caused by MYBPC3 mutations by comparing left ventricular muscle from patients undergoing surgical myectomy with samples from donor hearts. Methods and Results: MyBP-C protein and mRNA levels were quantitated using immunoblotting and RT-PCR. Nine of 37 myectomy samples had mutations in MYBPC3: 2 missense alleles (Glu258Lys, Arg502Trp) and 7 premature terminations. No specific truncated MyBP-C peptides were detected in whole muscle homogenates of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy tissue. However, the overall level of MyBP-C in myofibrils was significantly reduced (P<0.0005) in tissue containing either a truncation or missense MYBPC3 mutation: 0.76±0.03 compared with 1.00±0.05 in donor and 1.01±0.06 in non-MYBPC3 mutant myectomies. Conclusions: The absence of any detectable truncated MyBP-C argues against its incorporation in the myofiber and any dominant negative effect. In contrast, the lowered relative level of full length protein in both truncation and missense MYBPC3 mutations argues strongly that haploinsufficiency is sufficient to cause the disease.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2008

Myosin binding protein C phosphorylation in normal, hypertrophic and failing human heart muscle

Adam Jacques; O'Neal Copeland; Andrew E. Messer; Clare E. Gallon; Katie King; William J. McKenna; Victor Tsang; Steven B. Marston

Phosphorylation of myosin binding protein C (MyBP-C) was investigated in intraventricular septum samples taken from patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy undergoing surgical septal myectomy. These samples were compared with donor heart muscle, as a well-characterised control tissue, and with end-stage failing heart muscle. MyBP-C was partly purified from myofibrils using a modification of the phosphate-EDTA extraction of Hartzell and Glass. MyBP-C was separated by SDS-PAGE and stained for phosphoproteins using Pro-Q Diamond followed by total protein staining using Coomassie Blue. Relative phosphorylation level was determined from the ratio of Pro-Q Diamond to Coomassie Blue staining of MyBP-C bands as measured by densitometry. We compared 9 myectomy samples and 9 failing heart samples with 9 donor samples. MyBP-C phosphorylation in pathological muscle was lower than in donor (myectomy 40+/-2% of donor, P<0.0001; failing 45+/-3% of donor, P<0.0001). 6 myectomy samples were identified with MYBPC3 mutations, one with MYH7 mutation and two remained unknown, but there was no correlation between MYBPC3 mutation and MyBP-C phosphorylation level. In order to determine the number of phosphorylated sites in human cardiac MyBP-C samples, we phosphorylated the recombinant MyBP-C fragment, C0-C2 (1-453) with PKA using (gamma32)P-ATP up to 3.5 mol Pi/mol C0-C2. This measurement of phosphorylation was used to calibrate measurements of phosphorylation in SDS-PAGE using Pro-Q Diamond stain. The level of phosphorylation in donor heart MyBP-C was calculated to be 4.6+/-0.6 mol Pi/mol and 2.0+/-0.3 mol Pi/mol in myectomy samples. We conclude that MyBP-C is a highly phosphorylated protein in vivo and that diminished MyBP-C phosphorylation is a feature of both end-stage heart failure and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.


Cardiovascular Research | 2008

The molecular phenotype of human cardiac myosin associated with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy

Adam Jacques; N Briceno; Andrew E. Messer; Clare E. Gallon; S Jalilzadeh; E Garcia; G Kikonda-Kanda; J Goddard; Sian E. Harding; Hugh Watkins; Mt Esteban; Victor Tsang; William J. McKenna; Steven B. Marston

Abstract Aim The aim of the study was to compare the functional and structural properties of the motor protein, myosin, and isolated myocyte contractility in heart muscle excised from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy patients by surgical myectomy with explanted failing heart and non-failing donor heart muscle. Methods Myosin was isolated and studied using an in vitro motility assay. The distribution of myosin light chain-1 isoforms was measured by two-dimensional electrophoresis. Myosin light chain-2 phosphorylation was measured by sodium dodecyl sulphate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis using Pro-Q Diamond phosphoprotein stain. Results The fraction of actin filaments moving when powered by myectomy myosin was 21% less than with donor myosin (P = 0.006), whereas the sliding speed was not different (0.310 ± 0.034 for myectomy myosin vs. 0.305 ± 0.019 µm/s for donor myosin in six paired experiments). Failing heart myosin showed 18% reduced motility. One myectomy myosin sample produced a consistently higher sliding speed than donor heart myosin and was identified with a disease-causing heavy chain mutation (V606M). In myectomy myosin, the level of atrial light chain-1 relative to ventricular light chain-1 was 20 ± 5% compared with 11 ± 5% in donor heart myosin and the level of myosin light chain-2 phosphorylation was decreased by 30–45%. Isolated cardiomyocytes showed reduced contraction amplitude (1.61 ± 0.25 vs. 3.58 ± 0.40%) and reduced relaxation rates compared with donor myocytes (TT50% = 0.32 ± 0.09 vs. 0.17 ± 0.02 s). Conclusion Contractility in myectomy samples resembles the hypocontractile phenotype found in end-stage failing heart muscle irrespective of the primary stimulus, and this phenotype is not a direct effect of the hypertrophy-inducing mutation. The presence of a myosin heavy chain mutation causing hypertrophic cardiomyopathy can be predicted from a simple functional assay.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2010

Normal passive viscoelasticity but abnormal myofibrillar force generation in human hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Anita C. Hoskins; Adam Jacques; Sonya C. Bardswell; William J. McKenna; Victor Tsang; Cristobal G. dos Remedios; Elisabeth Ehler; Kim Adams; Shapour Jalilzadeh; Metin Avkiran; Hugh Watkins; Charles Redwood; Steven B. Marston; Jonathan C. Kentish

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy, increased ventricular stiffness and impaired diastolic filling. We investigated to what extent myocardial functional defects can be explained by alterations in the passive and active properties of human cardiac myofibrils. Skinned ventricular myocytes were prepared from patients with obstructive HCM (two patients with MYBPC3 mutations, one with a MYH7 mutation, and three with no mutation in either gene) and from four donors. Passive stiffness, viscous properties, and titin isoform expression were similar in HCM myocytes and donor myocytes. Maximal Ca2+-activated force was much lower in HCM myocytes (14 ± 1 kN/m2) than in donor myocytes (23 ± 3 kN/m2; P < 0.01), though cross-bridge kinetics (ktr) during maximal Ca2+ activation were 10% faster in HCM myocytes. Myofibrillar Ca2+ sensitivity in HCM myocytes (pCa50 = 6.40 ± 0.05) was higher than for donor myocytes (pCa50 = 6.09 ± 0.02; P < 0.001) and was associated with reduced phosphorylation of troponin-I (ser-23/24) and MyBP-C (ser-282) in HCM myocytes. These characteristics were common to all six HCM patients and may therefore represent a secondary consequence of the known and unknown underlying genetic variants. Some HCM patients did however exhibit an altered relationship between force and cross-bridge kinetics at submaximal Ca2+ concentrations, which may reflect the primary mutation. We conclude that the passive viscoelastic properties of the myocytes are unlikely to account for the increased stiffness of the HCM ventricle. However, the low maximum Ca2+-activated force and high Ca2+ sensitivity of the myofilaments are likely to contribute substantially to any systolic and diastolic dysfunction, respectively, in hearts of HCM patients.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2009

Functional Analysis of a Unique Troponin C Mutation, GLY159ASP, that Causes Familial Dilated Cardiomyopathy, Studied in Explanted Heart Muscle

Emma Dyer; Adam Jacques; Anita C. Hoskins; Douglas G. Ward; Clare E. Gallon; Andrew E. Messer; Juan Pablo Kaski; Michael Burch; Jonathan C. Kentish; Steven B. Marston

Background—Familial dilated cardiomyopathy can be caused by mutations in the proteins of the muscle thin filament. In vitro, these mutations decrease Ca2+ sensitivity and cross-bridge turnover rate, but the mutations have not been investigated in human tissue. We studied the Ca2+-regulatory properties of myocytes and troponin extracted from the explanted heart of a patient with inherited dilated cardiomyopathy due to the cTnC G159D mutation. Methods and Results—Mass spectroscopy showed that the mutant cTnC was expressed approximately equimolar with wild-type cTnC. Contraction was compared in skinned ventricular myocytes from the cTnC G159D patient and nonfailing donor heart. Maximal Ca2+-activated force was similar in cTnC G159D and donor myocytes, but the Ca2+ sensitivity of cTnC G159D myocytes was higher (EC50 G159D/donor=0.60). Thin filaments reconstituted with skeletal muscle actin and human cardiac tropomyosin and troponin were studied by in vitro motility assay. Thin filaments containing the mutation had a higher Ca2+ sensitivity (EC50 G159D/donor=0.55±0.13), whereas the maximally activated sliding speed was unaltered. In addition, the cTnC G159D mutation blunted the change in Ca2+ sensitivity when TnI was dephosphorylated. With wild-type troponin, Ca2+ sensitivity was increased (EC50 P/unP=4.7±1.9) but not with cTnC G159D troponin (EC50 P/unP=1.2±0.1). Conclusions—We propose that uncoupling of the relationship between phosphorylation and Ca2+ sensitivity could be the cause of the dilated cardiomyopathy phenotype. The differences between these data and previous in vitro results show that native phosphorylation of troponin I and troponin T and other posttranslational modifications of sarcomeric proteins strongly influence the functional effects of a mutation.


Cardiovascular Research | 2013

Myofibrillar Ca2+-Sensitivity Is Uncoupled From Troponin I Phosphorylation In Hypertrophic Obstructive Cardiomyopathy Due To Abnormal Troponin T

Christopher R. Bayliss; Adam Jacques; Man-Ching Leung; Douglas G. Ward; Charles Redwood; Clare E. Gallon; O'Neal Copeland; William J. McKenna; Cristobal G. dos Remedios; Steven B. Marston; Andrew E. Messer

AIMS We studied the relationship between myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity and troponin I (TnI) phosphorylation by protein kinase A at serines 22/23 in human heart troponin isolated from donor hearts and from myectomy samples from patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM). METHODS AND RESULTS We used a quantitative in vitro motility assay. With donor heart troponin, Ca(2+) sensitivity is two- to three-fold higher when TnI is unphosphorylated. In the myectomy samples from patients with HOCM, the mean level of TnI phosphorylation was low: 0.38 ± 0.19 mol Pi/mol TnI compared with 1.60 ± 0.19 mol Pi/mol TnI in donor hearts, but no difference in myofilament Ca(2+) sensitivity was observed. Thus, troponin regulation of thin filament Ca(2+) sensitivity is abnormal in HOCM hearts. HOCM troponin (0.29 mol Pi/mol TnI) was treated with protein kinase A to increase the level of phosphorylation to 1.56 mol Pi/mol TnI. No difference in EC(50) was found in thin filaments containing high and low TnI phosphorylation levels. This indicates that Ca(2+) sensitivity is uncoupled from TnI phosphorylation in HOCM heart troponin. Coupling could be restored by replacing endogenous troponin T (TnT) with the recombinant TnT T3 isoform. No difference in Ca(2+) sensitivity was observed if TnI was exchanged into HOCM heart troponin or if TnT was exchanged into the highly phosphorylated donor heart troponin. Comparison of donor and HOCM heart troponin by mass spectrometry and with adduct-specific antibodies did not show any differences in TnT isoform expression, phosphorylation or any post-translational modifications. CONCLUSION An abnormality in TnT is responsible for uncoupling myofibrillar Ca(2+) sensitivity from TnI phosphorylation in the septum of HOCM patients.


Seminars in Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia | 2006

A commentary on clinical trials in chronic heart failure.

Philip A. Poole-Wilson; Alexander R. Lyon; Adam Jacques

Heart failure is a common condition and becoming more common. Many treatments have been evaluated in large clinical trials during the last few decades. These trials can be criticized but do provide an evidence base for treatment, probably greater than for most other clinical conditions. Weaknesses exist in relation to age, ejection fraction, and gender. Most trials have included patients 10 years younger than those in the general population. There is little evidence for efficacy in patients with a near normal ejection fraction. Few women have been included in trials.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2007

Troponin phosphorylation and regulatory function in human heart muscle: Dephosphorylation of Ser23/24 on troponin I could account for the contractile defect in end-stage heart failure

Andrew E. Messer; Adam Jacques; Steven B. Marston


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2006

Fatal hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and nemaline myopathy associated with ACTA1 K336E mutation.

Adele D’Amico; Claudio Graziano; Giuseppe Pacileo; Stefania Petrini; Kristen J. Nowak; Renata Boldrini; Adam Jacques; Juan-Juan Feng; Berardino Porfirio; Caroline Sewry; Filippo M. Santorelli; Giuseppe Limongelli; Enrico Bertini; Nigel G. Laing; Steven B. Marston


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2006

Evidence for reduced troponin I phosphorylation and altered troponin function in patients with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy

Adam Jacques; Andrew E. Messer; Victor Tsang; William J. McKenna; Steven B. Marston

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Steven B. Marston

National Institutes of Health

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Andrew E. Messer

National Institutes of Health

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Victor Tsang

Imperial College London

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