Adrianus J. Bakermans
Eindhoven University of Technology
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Featured researches published by Adrianus J. Bakermans.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Peter Savadjiev; Gustav J. Strijkers; Adrianus J. Bakermans; Emmanuel Piuze; Steven W. Zucker; Kaleem Siddiqi
Heart wall myofibers wind as helices around the ventricles, strengthening them in a manner analogous to the reinforcement of concrete cylindrical columns by spiral steel cables [Richart FE, et al. (1929) Univ of Illinois, Eng Exp Stn Bull 190]. A multitude of such fibers, arranged smoothly and regularly, contract and relax as an integrated functional unit as the heart beats. To orchestrate this motion, fiber tangling must be avoided and pumping should be efficient. Current models of myofiber orientation across the heart wall suggest groupings into sheets or bands, but the precise geometry of bundles of myofibers is unknown. Here we show that this arrangement takes the form of a special minimal surface, the generalized helicoid [Blair DE, Vanstone JR (1978) Minimal Submanifolds and Geodesics 13–16], closing the gap between individual myofibers and their collective wall structure. The model holds across species, with a smooth variation in its three curvature parameters within the myocardial wall providing tight fits to diffusion magnetic resonance images from the rat, the dog, and the human. Mathematically it explains how myofibers are bundled in the heart wall while economizing fiber length and optimizing ventricular ejection volume as they contract. The generalized helicoid provides a unique foundation for analyzing the fibrous composite of the heart wall and should therefore find applications in heart tissue engineering and in the study of heart muscle diseases.
Circulation-cardiovascular Imaging | 2011
Adrianus J. Bakermans; Tom R. Geraedts; Michel van Weeghel; Simone Denis; Maria J. Ferraz; Johannes M. F. G. Aerts; Jan Aten; Klaas Nicolay; Sander M. Houten; Jeanine J. Prompers
Background— Lipotoxicity may be a key contributor to the pathogenesis of cardiac abnormalities in mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid &bgr;-oxidation (FAO) disorders. Few data are available on myocardial lipid levels and cardiac performance in FAO deficiencies. The purpose of this animal study is to assess fasting-induced changes in cardiac morphology, function, and triglyceride (TG) storage as a consequence of FAO deficiency in a noninvasive fashion. Methods and Results— MRI and proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H-MRS) were applied in vivo in long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCAD) knockout (KO) mice and wild-type (WT) mice (n=8 per genotype). Fasting was used to increase the hearts dependency on FAO for maintenance of energy homeostasis. In vivo data were complemented with ex vivo measurements of myocardial lipids. Left ventricular (LV) mass was higher in LCAD KO mice compared with WT mice (P<0.05), indicating LV myocardial hypertrophy. Myocardial TG content was higher in LCAD KO mice at baseline (P<0.001) and further increased in fasted LCAD KO mice (P<0.05). Concomitantly, LV ejection fraction (P<0.01) and diastolic filling rate (P<0.01) decreased after fasting, whereas these functional parameters did not change in fasted WT mice. Myocardial ceramide content was higher in fasted LCAD KO mice compared with fasted WT mice (P<0.05). Conclusions— Using a noninvasive approach, this study reveals accumulation of myocardial TG in LCAD KO mice. Toxicity of accumulating lipid metabolites such as ceramides may be responsible for the fasting-induced impairment of cardiac function observed in the LCAD KO mouse.
Cardiovascular Research | 2013
Adrianus J. Bakermans; Michael S. Dodd; Klaas Nicolay; Jeanine J. Prompers; Damian J. Tyler; Sander M. Houten
AIMS The aim of this animal study is to assess fasting-induced changes in myocardial substrate metabolism and energy status as a consequence of mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid β-oxidation deficiency, using magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). METHODS AND RESULTS Carbon-13 ((13)C) MRS of hyperpolarized [1-(13)C]pyruvate was used to assess in vivo pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity in fed and fasted wild-type (WT) mice and long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase knockout (LCAD KO) mice. PDH activity decreased after fasting in both genotypes, but was 2.7-fold higher in fasted LCAD KO mice compared with fasted WT mice. Incorporation of the (13)C label into the myocardial malate and aspartate pools in fasted LCAD KO mice demonstrates enhanced activity of anaplerotic pathways in fasted LCAD KO hearts. These findings were corroborated by ex vivo assays revealing partially depleted pools of citric acid cycle intermediates in fasted LCAD KO myocardium, suggesting an increased, but unmet need for anaplerosis. The in vivo myocardial energy status, assessed using phosphorous-31 ((31)P) MRS, was lower in fasted LCAD KO mice than in fasted WT mice. CONCLUSION This study revealed that the heart of fasted LCAD KO mice has an elevated reliance on glucose oxidation, in combination with an unmet demand for myocardial anaplerosis. Due to a lack of substrate availability, the sustained myocardial glucose uptake and PDH activity in LCAD KO mice are ineffective to maintain metabolic homeostasis during fasting, which is reflected by an impaired myocardial energy status in fasted LCAD KO mice.
Progress in Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy | 2015
Adrianus J. Bakermans; Desiree Abdurrachim; Rik P. M. Moonen; Abdallah G. Motaal; Jeanine J. Prompers; Gustav J. Strijkers; Katrien Vandoorne; Klaas Nicolay
The use of MR imaging and spectroscopy for studying cardiovascular disease processes in small animals has increased tremendously over the past decade. This is the result of the remarkable advances in MR technologies and the increased availability of genetically modified mice. MR techniques provide a window on the entire timeline of cardiovascular disease development, ranging from subtle early changes in myocardial metabolism that often mark disease onset to severe myocardial dysfunction associated with end-stage heart failure. MR imaging and spectroscopy techniques play an important role in basic cardiovascular research and in cardiovascular disease diagnosis and therapy follow-up. This is due to the broad range of functional, structural and metabolic parameters that can be quantified by MR under in vivo conditions non-invasively. This review describes the spectrum of MR techniques that are employed in small animal cardiovascular disease research and how the technological challenges resulting from the small dimensions of heart and blood vessels as well as high heart and respiratory rates, particularly in mice, are tackled.
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2015
Adrianus J. Bakermans; Desiree Abdurrachim; Tom R. Geraedts; Sander M. Houten; Klaas Nicolay; Jeanine J. Prompers
Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H‐MRS) for quantitative in vivo assessment of mouse myocardial metabolism requires accurate acquisition timing to minimize motion artifacts and corrections for T1‐dependent partial saturation effects. In this study, mouse myocardial water and metabolite T1 relaxation time constants were quantified.
international conference on functional imaging and modeling of heart | 2013
Emmanuel Piuze; Herve Lombaert; Jon Sporring; Gustav J. Strijkers; Adrianus J. Bakermans; Kaleem Siddiqi
Studies of intra-species cardiac fiber variability tend to focus on first-order measures such as local fiber orientation. Recent work has shown that myofibers bundle locally into a particular type of minimal surface, the generalized helicoid model (GHM), which is described by three biologically meaningful curvature parameters. In order to allow intra-species comparisons, a typical strategy is to divide the parameters of the generalized helicoid by heart diameter. This normalization does not compensate for variability in myocardial shape between subjects and makes interpretation of intra-species results difficult. This paper proposes to use an atlas of rat and dog myocardium, obtained using diffeomorphic groupwise Log-demons, to register all hearts in a common reference shape to perform the normalization. In this common space the GHM is estimated for all hearts and compared using an improved fitting method. Our results demonstrate improved consistency between GHM curvatures within a species and support a direct relation between myocardial shape and fiber curvature in the heart.
NMR in Biomedicine | 2015
Adrianus J. Bakermans; Desiree Abdurrachim; Bastiaan J. van Nierop; Anneke Koeman; Inge van der Kroon; Antonius Baartscheer; Cees A. Schumacher; Gustav J. Strijkers; Sander M. Houten; Coert J. Zuurbier; Klaas Nicolay; Jeanine J. Prompers
31P MRS provides a unique non‐invasive window into myocardial energy homeostasis. Mouse models of cardiac disease are widely used in preclinical studies, but the application of 31P MRS in the in vivo mouse heart has been limited. The small‐sized, fast‐beating mouse heart imposes challenges regarding localized signal acquisition devoid of contamination with signal originating from surrounding tissues. Here, we report the implementation and validation of three‐dimensional image‐selected in vivo spectroscopy (3D ISIS) for localized 31P MRS of the in vivo mouse heart at 9.4 T. Cardiac 31P MR spectra were acquired in vivo in healthy mice (n = 9) and in transverse aortic constricted (TAC) mice (n = 8) using respiratory‐gated, cardiac‐triggered 3D ISIS. Localization and potential signal contamination were assessed with 31P MRS experiments in the anterior myocardial wall, liver, skeletal muscle and blood. For healthy hearts, results were validated against ex vivo biochemical assays. Effects of isoflurane anesthesia were assessed by measuring in vivo hemodynamics and blood gases. The myocardial energy status, assessed via the phosphocreatine (PCr) to adenosine 5′‐triphosphate (ATP) ratio, was approximately 25% lower in TAC mice compared with controls (0.76 ± 0.13 versus 1.00 ± 0.15; P < 0.01). Localization with one‐dimensional (1D) ISIS resulted in two‐fold higher PCr/ATP ratios than measured with 3D ISIS, because of the high PCr levels of chest skeletal muscle that contaminate the 1D ISIS measurements. Ex vivo determinations of the myocardial PCr/ATP ratio (0.94 ± 0.24; n = 8) confirmed the in vivo observations in control mice. Heart rate (497 ± 76 beats/min), mean arterial pressure (90 ± 3.3 mmHg) and blood oxygen saturation (96.2 ± 0.6%) during the experimental conditions of in vivo 31P MRS were within the normal physiological range. Our results show that respiratory‐gated, cardiac‐triggered 3D ISIS allows for non‐invasive assessments of in vivo mouse myocardial energy homeostasis with 31P MRS under physiological conditions. Copyright
Frontiers in Physiology | 2017
Adrianus J. Bakermans; Jason N. Bazil; Aart J. Nederveen; Gustav J. Strijkers; S. Matthijs Boekholdt; Daniel A. Beard; Jeroen A. L. Jeneson
Phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS) is a unique non-invasive imaging modality for probing in vivo high-energy phosphate metabolism in the human heart. We investigated whether current 31P-MRS methodology would allow for clinical applications to detect exercise-induced changes in (patho-)physiological myocardial energy metabolism. Hereto, measurement variability and repeatability of three commonly used localized 31P-MRS methods [3D image-selected in vivo spectroscopy (ISIS) and 1D ISIS with 1D chemical shift imaging (CSI) oriented either perpendicular or parallel to the surface coil] to quantify the myocardial phosphocreatine (PCr) to adenosine triphosphate (ATP) ratio in healthy humans (n = 8) at rest were determined on a clinical 3 Tesla MR system. Numerical simulations of myocardial energy homeostasis in response to increased cardiac work rates were performed using a biophysical model of myocardial oxidative metabolism. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was modeled by either inefficient sarcomere ATP utilization or decreased mitochondrial ATP synthesis. The effect of creatine depletion on myocardial energy homeostasis was explored for both conditions. The mean in vivo myocardial PCr/ATP ratio measured with 3D ISIS was 1.57 ± 0.17 with a large repeatability coefficient of 40.4%. For 1D CSI in a 1D ISIS-selected slice perpendicular to the surface coil, the PCr/ATP ratio was 2.78 ± 0.50 (repeatability 42.5%). With 1D CSI in a 1D ISIS-selected slice parallel to the surface coil, the PCr/ATP ratio was 1.70 ± 0.56 (repeatability 43.7%). The model predicted a PCr/ATP ratio reduction of only 10% at the maximal cardiac work rate in normal myocardium. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy led to lower PCr/ATP ratios for high cardiac work rates, which was exacerbated by creatine depletion. Simulations illustrated that when conducting cardiac 31P-MRS exercise stress testing with large measurement error margins, results obtained under pathophysiologic conditions may still lie well within the 95% confidence interval of normal myocardial PCr/ATP dynamics. Current measurement precision of localized 31P-MRS for quantification of the myocardial PCr/ATP ratio precludes the detection of the changes predicted by computational modeling. This hampers clinical employment of 31P-MRS for diagnostic testing and risk stratification, and warrants developments in cardiac 31P-MRS exercise stress testing methodology.
NMR in Biomedicine | 2015
Adrianus J. Bakermans; Desiree Abdurrachim; Bastiaan J. van Nierop; Anneke Koeman; Inge van der Kroon; Antonius Baartscheer; Cees A. Schumacher; Gustav J. Strijkers; Sander M. Houten; Coert J. Zuurbier; Klaas Nicolay; Jeanine J. Prompers
31P MRS provides a unique non‐invasive window into myocardial energy homeostasis. Mouse models of cardiac disease are widely used in preclinical studies, but the application of 31P MRS in the in vivo mouse heart has been limited. The small‐sized, fast‐beating mouse heart imposes challenges regarding localized signal acquisition devoid of contamination with signal originating from surrounding tissues. Here, we report the implementation and validation of three‐dimensional image‐selected in vivo spectroscopy (3D ISIS) for localized 31P MRS of the in vivo mouse heart at 9.4 T. Cardiac 31P MR spectra were acquired in vivo in healthy mice (n = 9) and in transverse aortic constricted (TAC) mice (n = 8) using respiratory‐gated, cardiac‐triggered 3D ISIS. Localization and potential signal contamination were assessed with 31P MRS experiments in the anterior myocardial wall, liver, skeletal muscle and blood. For healthy hearts, results were validated against ex vivo biochemical assays. Effects of isoflurane anesthesia were assessed by measuring in vivo hemodynamics and blood gases. The myocardial energy status, assessed via the phosphocreatine (PCr) to adenosine 5′‐triphosphate (ATP) ratio, was approximately 25% lower in TAC mice compared with controls (0.76 ± 0.13 versus 1.00 ± 0.15; P < 0.01). Localization with one‐dimensional (1D) ISIS resulted in two‐fold higher PCr/ATP ratios than measured with 3D ISIS, because of the high PCr levels of chest skeletal muscle that contaminate the 1D ISIS measurements. Ex vivo determinations of the myocardial PCr/ATP ratio (0.94 ± 0.24; n = 8) confirmed the in vivo observations in control mice. Heart rate (497 ± 76 beats/min), mean arterial pressure (90 ± 3.3 mmHg) and blood oxygen saturation (96.2 ± 0.6%) during the experimental conditions of in vivo 31P MRS were within the normal physiological range. Our results show that respiratory‐gated, cardiac‐triggered 3D ISIS allows for non‐invasive assessments of in vivo mouse myocardial energy homeostasis with 31P MRS under physiological conditions. Copyright
NMR in Biomedicine | 2015
Adrianus J. Bakermans; Desiree Abdurrachim; Bastiaan J. van Nierop; Anneke Koeman; Inge van der Kroon; Antonius Baartscheer; Cees A. Schumacher; Gustav J. Strijkers; Sander M. Houten; Coert J. Zuurbier; Klaas Nicolay; Jeanine J. Prompers
31P MRS provides a unique non‐invasive window into myocardial energy homeostasis. Mouse models of cardiac disease are widely used in preclinical studies, but the application of 31P MRS in the in vivo mouse heart has been limited. The small‐sized, fast‐beating mouse heart imposes challenges regarding localized signal acquisition devoid of contamination with signal originating from surrounding tissues. Here, we report the implementation and validation of three‐dimensional image‐selected in vivo spectroscopy (3D ISIS) for localized 31P MRS of the in vivo mouse heart at 9.4 T. Cardiac 31P MR spectra were acquired in vivo in healthy mice (n = 9) and in transverse aortic constricted (TAC) mice (n = 8) using respiratory‐gated, cardiac‐triggered 3D ISIS. Localization and potential signal contamination were assessed with 31P MRS experiments in the anterior myocardial wall, liver, skeletal muscle and blood. For healthy hearts, results were validated against ex vivo biochemical assays. Effects of isoflurane anesthesia were assessed by measuring in vivo hemodynamics and blood gases. The myocardial energy status, assessed via the phosphocreatine (PCr) to adenosine 5′‐triphosphate (ATP) ratio, was approximately 25% lower in TAC mice compared with controls (0.76 ± 0.13 versus 1.00 ± 0.15; P < 0.01). Localization with one‐dimensional (1D) ISIS resulted in two‐fold higher PCr/ATP ratios than measured with 3D ISIS, because of the high PCr levels of chest skeletal muscle that contaminate the 1D ISIS measurements. Ex vivo determinations of the myocardial PCr/ATP ratio (0.94 ± 0.24; n = 8) confirmed the in vivo observations in control mice. Heart rate (497 ± 76 beats/min), mean arterial pressure (90 ± 3.3 mmHg) and blood oxygen saturation (96.2 ± 0.6%) during the experimental conditions of in vivo 31P MRS were within the normal physiological range. Our results show that respiratory‐gated, cardiac‐triggered 3D ISIS allows for non‐invasive assessments of in vivo mouse myocardial energy homeostasis with 31P MRS under physiological conditions. Copyright