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Featured researches published by Amrith Rodrigues.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

Cholesterol Efflux Capacity, High-Density Lipoprotein Function, and Atherosclerosis

Amit Khera; Marina Cuchel; Margarita de la Llera-Moya; Amrith Rodrigues; Megan F. Burke; Kashif Jafri; Benjamin French; Julie A. Phillips; Megan Mucksavage; Robert L. Wilensky; Emile R. Mohler; George H. Rothblat; Daniel J. Rader

BACKGROUND High-density lipoprotein (HDL) may provide cardiovascular protection by promoting reverse cholesterol transport from macrophages. We hypothesized that the capacity of HDL to accept cholesterol from macrophages would serve as a predictor of atherosclerotic burden. METHODS We measured cholesterol efflux capacity in 203 healthy volunteers who underwent assessment of carotid artery intima-media thickness, 442 patients with angiographically confirmed coronary artery disease, and 351 patients without such angiographically confirmed disease. We quantified efflux capacity by using a validated ex vivo system that involved incubation of macrophages with apolipoprotein B-depleted serum from the study participants. RESULTS The levels of HDL cholesterol and apolipoprotein A-I were significant determinants of cholesterol efflux capacity but accounted for less than 40% of the observed variation. An inverse relationship was noted between efflux capacity and carotid intima-media thickness both before and after adjustment for the HDL cholesterol level. Furthermore, efflux capacity was a strong inverse predictor of coronary disease status (adjusted odds ratio for coronary disease per 1-SD increase in efflux capacity, 0.70; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.59 to 0.83; P<0.001). This relationship was attenuated, but remained significant, after additional adjustment for the HDL cholesterol level (odds ratio per 1-SD increase, 0.75; 95% CI, 0.63 to 0.90; P=0.002) or apolipoprotein A-I level (odds ratio per 1-SD increase, 0.74; 95% CI, 0.61 to 0.89; P=0.002). Additional studies showed enhanced efflux capacity in patients with the metabolic syndrome and low HDL cholesterol levels who were treated with pioglitazone, but not in patients with hypercholesterolemia who were treated with statins. CONCLUSIONS Cholesterol efflux capacity from macrophages, a metric of HDL function, has a strong inverse association with both carotid intima-media thickness and the likelihood of angiographic coronary artery disease, independently of the HDL cholesterol level. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and others.).


The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology | 2015

Association of HDL cholesterol efflux capacity with incident coronary heart disease events: a prospective case-control study.

Danish Saleheen; Robert A. Scott; Sundas Javad; Wei Zhao; Amrith Rodrigues; Antonino Picataggi; Daniya Lukmanova; Megan Mucksavage; Robert Luben; Jeffery T. Billheimer; John J. P. Kastelein; S. Matthijs Boekholdt; Kay-Tee Khaw; Nicholas J. Wareham; Daniel J. Rader

Summary Background Although HDL cholesterol concentrations are strongly and inversely associated with risk of coronary heart disease, interventions that raise HDL cholesterol do not reduce risk of coronary heart disease. HDL cholesterol efflux capacity—a prototypical measure of HDL function—has been associated with coronary heart disease after adjusting for HDL cholesterol, but its effect on incident coronary heart disease risk is uncertain. Methods We measured cholesterol efflux capacity and assessed its relation with vascular risk factors and incident coronary heart disease events in a nested case-control sample from the prospective EPIC-Norfolk study of 25 639 individuals aged 40–79 years, assessed in 1993–97 and followed up to 2009. We quantified cholesterol efflux capacity in 1745 patients with incident coronary heart disease and 1749 control participants free of any cardiovascular disorders by use of a validated ex-vivo radiotracer assay that involved incubation of cholesterol-labelled J774 macrophages with apoB-depleted serum from study participants. Findings Cholesterol efflux capacity was positively correlated with HDL cholesterol concentration (r=0·40; p<0·0001) and apoA-I concentration (r=0·22; p<0·0001). It was also inversely correlated with type 2 diabetes (r=–0·18; p<0·0001) and positively correlated with alcohol consumption (r=0·12; p<0·0001). In analyses comparing the top and bottom tertiles, cholesterol efflux capacity was significantly and inversely associated with incident coronary heart disease events, independent of age, sex, diabetes, hypertension, smoking and alcohol use, waist:hip ratio, BMI, LDL cholesterol concentration, log-triglycerides, and HDL cholesterol or apoA-I concentrations (odds ratio 0·64, 95% CI 0·51–0·80). After a similar multivariable adjustment the risk of incident coronary heart disease was 0·80 (95% CI 0·70–0·90) for a per-SD change in cholesterol efflux capacity. Interpretation HDL cholesterol efflux capacity might provide an alternative mechanism for therapeutic modulation of the HDL pathway beyond HDL cholesterol concentration to help reduce risk of coronary heart disease. Funding US National Institutes of Health, UK Medical Research Council, Cancer Research UK.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

Loss-of-function variants in endothelial lipase are a cause of elevated HDL cholesterol in humans

Andrew C. Edmondson; Robert J. Brown; Sekar Kathiresan; L. Adrienne Cupples; Serkalem Demissie; Alisa K. Manning; Majken K. Jensen; Eric B. Rimm; Jian Wang; Amrith Rodrigues; Vaneeta Bamba; Sumeet A. Khetarpal; Megan L. Wolfe; Mingyao Li; Muredach P. Reilly; Jens Aberle; David Evans; Robert A. Hegele; Daniel J. Rader

Elevated plasma concentrations of HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) are associated with protection from atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Animal models indicate that decreased expression of endothelial lipase (LIPG) is inversely associated with HDL-C levels, and genome-wide association studies have identified LIPG variants as being associated with HDL-C levels in humans. We hypothesized that loss-of-function mutations in LIPG may result in elevated HDL-C and therefore performed deep resequencing of LIPG exons in cases with elevated HDL-C levels and controls with decreased HDL-C levels. We identified a significant excess of nonsynonymous LIPG variants unique to cases with elevated HDL-C. In vitro lipase activity assays demonstrated that these variants significantly decreased endothelial lipase activity. In addition, a meta-analysis across 5 cohorts demonstrated that the low-frequency Asn396Ser variant is significantly associated with increased HDL-C, while the common Thr111Ile variant is not. Functional analysis confirmed that the Asn396Ser variant has significantly decreased lipase activity both in vitro and in vivo, while the Thr111Ile variant has normal lipase activity. Our results establish that loss-of-function mutations in LIPG lead to increased HDL-C levels and support the idea that inhibition of endothelial lipase may be an effective mechanism to raise HDL-C.


Atherosclerosis | 2012

Abnormal lipoprotein particles and cholesterol efflux capacity in patients with psoriasis

Nehal N. Mehta; Ron C. Li; Parasuram Krishnamoorthy; YiDing Yu; William Farver; Amrith Rodrigues; Anna Raper; Mackenzie Wilcox; Amanda Baer; Stephanie DerOhannesian; Megan L. Wolfe; Muredach P. Reilly; Daniel J. Rader; Abby VanVoorhees; Joel M. Gelfand

OBJECTIVES Psoriasis is a Th-1/17 mediated inflammatory disease associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Inflammation may modulate lipoprotein particle number and directly impair HDL functions, in particular reverse cholesterol transport (RCT). We sought to study how chronic in vivo inflammation modulates lipoprotein particle composition using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) and HDL efflux in psoriasis. METHODS AND RESULTS We prospectively enrolled a consecutive sample of patients with psoriasis (n = 122) and compared lipoprotein and metabolic risk factors to patients without psoriasis (n = 134). Fasting lipids, insulin, glucose were measured by standard assays, and lipoprotein concentration and size were measured by NMR. In a random subset (n = 100 each group), HDL efflux capacity was quantified using a validated ex vivo system involving the incubation of macrophages with apolipoprotein B-depleted serum from patients. Traditional lipid concentrations were similar in both groups except for HDL concentration which was lower in psoriasis (43 mg/dl (36-58) vs 50 (42-62), p < 0.01). However, NMR showed an atherogenic profile in psoriasis similar to that observed in diabetes, with significant increase in LDL particle concentration [1210.5 (1002-1498) vs 1115 (935-1291), p = 0.02] with decrease in LDL size [20.6 (20.3-21.1) vs 21.3 (20.6-21.1), p < 0.001] beyond CV risk factors and HOMA-IR (p = 0.001). Finally, HDL efflux capacity was lower in psoriasis compared to controls in fully adjusted models (beta -0.14, p = 0.001). CONCLUSIONS These data support a more atherogenic lipoprotein profile by NMR and decreased HDL efflux capacity in psoriasis patients compared to controls beyond CVD risk factors. The abnormal lipoprotein particle composition and HDL efflux capacity in psoriasis may provide a link between psoriasis and CVD.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2015

High-Density Lipoprotein (HDL) Phospholipid Content and Cholesterol Efflux Capacity Are Reduced in Patients With Very High HDL Cholesterol and Coronary Disease

Anandita P. Agarwala; Amrith Rodrigues; Marjorie Risman; Mary G. McCoy; Kevin Trindade; Liming Qu; Marina Cuchel; Jeffrey T. Billheimer; Daniel J. Rader

Objective—Plasma levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) are strongly inversely associated with coronary artery disease (CAD), and high HDL-C is generally associated with reduced risk of CAD. Extremely high HDL-C with CAD is an unusual phenotype, and we hypothesized that the HDL in such individuals may have an altered composition and reduced function when compared with controls with similarly high HDL-C and no CAD. Approach and Results—Fifty-five subjects with very high HDL-C (mean, 86 mg/dL) and onset of CAD at the age of ≈60 years with no known risk factors for CAD (cases) were identified through systematic recruitment. A total of 120 control subjects without CAD, matched for race, sex, and HDL-C level (controls), were identified. In all subjects, HDL composition was analyzed and HDL cholesterol efflux capacity was assessed. HDL phospholipid composition was significantly lower in cases (92±37 mg/dL) than in controls (109±43 mg/dL; P=0.0095). HDL cholesterol efflux capacity was significantly lower in cases (1.96±0.39) than in controls (2.11±0.43; P=0.04). Conclusions—In people with very high HDL-C, reduced HDL phospholipid content and cholesterol efflux capacity are associated with the paradoxical development of CAD.


Circulation Research | 2015

Functional Analysis and Transcriptomic Profiling of iPSC-Derived Macrophages and Their Application in Modeling Mendelian Disease

Hanrui Zhang; Chenyi Xue; Rhia Shah; Kate Bermingham; Christine Hinkle; Wenjun Li; Amrith Rodrigues; Jennifer Tabita-Martinez; John S. Millar; Marina Cuchel; Evanthia E. Pashos; Ying Liu; Ruilan Yan; Wenli Yang; Sager J. Gosai; Daniel VanDorn; Stella T. Chou; Brian D. Gregory; Edward E. Morrisey; Mingyao Li; Daniel J. Rader; Muredach P. Reilly

RATIONALE An efficient and reproducible source of genotype-specific human macrophages is essential for study of human macrophage biology and related diseases. OBJECTIVE To perform integrated functional and transcriptome analyses of human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived macrophages (IPSDMs) and their isogenic human peripheral blood mononuclear cell-derived macrophage (HMDM) counterparts and assess the application of IPSDM in modeling macrophage polarization and Mendelian disease. METHODS AND RESULTS We developed an efficient protocol for differentiation of IPSDM, which expressed macrophage-specific markers and took up modified lipoproteins in a similar manner to HMDM. Like HMDM, IPSDM revealed reduction in phagocytosis, increase in cholesterol efflux capacity and characteristic secretion of inflammatory cytokines in response to M1 (lipopolysaccharide+interferon-γ) activation. RNA-Seq revealed that nonpolarized (M0) as well as M1 or M2 (interleukin-4) polarized IPSDM shared transcriptomic profiles with their isogenic HMDM counterparts while also revealing novel markers of macrophage polarization. Relative to IPSDM and HMDM of control individuals, patterns of defective cholesterol efflux to apolipoprotein A-I and high-density lipoprotein-3 were qualitatively and quantitatively similar in IPSDM and HMDM of patients with Tangier disease, an autosomal recessive disorder because of mutations in ATP-binding cassette transporter AI. Tangier disease-IPSDM also revealed novel defects of enhanced proinflammatory response to lipopolysaccharide stimulus. CONCLUSIONS Our protocol-derived IPSDM are comparable with HMDM at phenotypic, functional, and transcriptomic levels. Tangier disease-IPSDM recapitulated hallmark features observed in HMDM and revealed novel inflammatory phenotypes. IPSDMs provide a powerful tool for study of macrophage-specific function in human genetic disorders as well as molecular studies of human macrophage activation and polarization.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2016

Cholesterol efflux capacity of high-density lipoprotein correlates with survival and allograft vasculopathy in cardiac transplant recipients

Ali Javaheri; Maria Molina; Payman Zamani; Amrith Rodrigues; Eric Novak; Susan Chambers; Patricia Stutman; Wilhelmina Maslanek; Mary Williams; Scott M. Lilly; Peter S. Heeger; Mohamed H. Sayegh; Anil Chandraker; David M. Briscoe; Kevin P. Daly; Randall C. Starling; David Ikle; Jason D. Christie; J. Eduardo Rame; Lee R. Goldberg; Jeffrey T. Billheimer; Daniel J. Rader

BACKGROUND Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) is a major cause of mortality after cardiac transplantation. High-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol efflux capacity (CEC) is inversely associated with coronary artery disease. In 2 independent studies, we tested the hypothesis that reduced CEC is associated with mortality and disease progression in CAV. METHODS We tested the relationship between CEC and survival in a cohort of patients with CAV (n = 35). To determine whether reduced CEC is associated with CAV progression, we utilized samples from the Clinical Trials in Organ Transplantation 05 (CTOT05) study to determine the association between CEC and CAV progression and status at 1 year (n = 81), as assessed by average change in maximal intimal thickness (MIT) on intravascular ultrasound. RESULTS Multivariable Cox proportional hazard models demonstrated that higher levels of CEC were associated with improved survival (hazard ratio 0.26, 95% confidence interval 0.11 to 0.63) per standard deviation CEC, p = 0.002). Patients who developed CAV had reduced CEC at baseline and 1-year post-transplant. We observed a significant association between pre-transplant CEC and the average change in MIT, particularly among patients who developed CAV at 1 year (β = -0.59, p = 0.02, R2 = 0.35). CONCLUSION Reduced CEC is associated with disease progression and mortality in CAV patients. These findings suggest the hypothesis that interventions to increase CEC may be useful in cardiac transplant patients for prevention or treatment of CAV.


Circulation | 2014

Abstract 19753: Hdl Cholesterol Efflux Capacity is Inversely Associated With Incident Chd Events Independent of Hdl-c and Apoa-i Concentrations

Danish Saleheen; Robert A. Scott; Sunda Javad; Wei Zhao; Amrith Rodrigues; Antonino Picataggi; Daniya Lukmanova; Megan Mucksavage; Robert Luben; Kay-Tee Khaw; Jeffery T. Billheimer; Nicholas J. Wareham; Daniel J. Rader


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2016

Abstract 387: Regulation of Apolipoprotein B Secretion by Hepatic Sortilin is Dependent on Secretory Stress

Donna M. Conlon; Amrith Rodrigues; Alanna Strong; Nicholas J. Hand; Daniel J. Rader


Atherosclerosis | 2015

Coronary artery disease-protective A43T variant in APOC3 alters circulating ApoC-III levels in vivo

Sumeet A. Khetarpal; A. Varshini; Daniel B. Larach; Jennifer Tabita-Martinez; J. McParland; Mary G. McCoy; Amrith Rodrigues; Daniel Kiss; Paolo Zanoni; Megan Mucksavage; John S. Millar; Marina Cuchel; Sissel Lund-Katz; Michael C. Phillips; S. Kathiresan; Daniel J. Rader

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Daniel J. Rader

University of Pennsylvania

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Marina Cuchel

University of Pennsylvania

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Megan Mucksavage

University of Pennsylvania

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Daniya Lukmanova

University of Pennsylvania

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Paolo Zanoni

University of Pennsylvania

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Ali Javaheri

University of Pennsylvania

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