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Dive into the research topics where Arkady Rutkovskiy is active.

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Featured researches published by Arkady Rutkovskiy.


Medical science monitor basic research | 2016

Osteoblast Differentiation at a Glance.

Arkady Rutkovskiy; Kåre-Olav Stensløkken; Ingvar Jarle Vaage

Ossification is a tightly regulated process, performed by specialized cells called osteoblasts. Dysregulation of this process may cause inadequate or excessive mineralization of bones or ectopic calcification, all of which have grave consequences for human health. Understanding osteoblast biology may help to treat diseases such as osteogenesis imperfecta, calcific heart valve disease, osteoporosis, and many others. Osteoblasts are bone-building cells of mesenchymal origin; they differentiate from mesenchymal progenitors, either directly or via an osteochondroprogenitor. The direct pathway is typical for intramembranous ossification of the skull and clavicles, while the latter is a hallmark of endochondral ossification of the axial skeleton and limbs. The pathways merge at the level of preosteoblasts, which progress through 3 stages: proliferation, matrix maturation, and mineralization. Osteoblasts can also differentiate into osteocytes, which are stellate cells populating narrow interconnecting passages within the bone matrix. The key molecular switch in the commitment of mesenchymal progenitors to osteoblast lineage is the transcription factor cbfa/runx2, which has multiple upstream regulators and a wide variety of targets. Upstream is the Wnt/Notch system, Sox9, Msx2, and hedgehog signaling. Cofactors of Runx2 include Osx, Atf4, and others. A few paracrine and endocrine factors serve as coactivators, in particular, bone morphogenetic proteins and parathyroid hormone. The process is further fine-tuned by vitamin D and histone deacetylases. Osteoblast differentiation is subject to regulation by physical stimuli to ensure the formation of bone adequate for structural and dynamic support of the body. Here, we provide a brief description of the various stimuli that influence osteogenesis: shear stress, compression, stretch, micro- and macrogravity, and ultrasound. A complex understanding of factors necessary for osteoblast differentiation paves a way to introduction of artificial bone matrices.


Shock | 2011

Cecal ligation and puncture sepsis is associated with attenuated expression of adenylyl cyclase 9 and increased mir142-3p

Petter K. Risøe; Una Ryg; Yun Yong Wang; Arkady Rutkovskiy; Bård Smedsrød; Guro Valen; Maria K. Dahle

The host inflammatory response in sepsis may be resolved by endogenous anti-inflammatory immune cell responses, avoiding fatal pathogenesis, organ injury, and death. The intracellular signaling mediator cyclic 3&vprime;5&vprime;-adenosine monophosphate is a potent modulator of inflammatory responses and initiates the polarization of immune cells in a direction that suppresses inflammatory activation. Cyclic 3&vprime;5&vprime;-adenosine monophosphate is enzymatically produced by adenylyl cyclases (ACs). The expression of ACs is previously shown to be reduced in rat organs after in vivo endotoxemia, concurrent with the progressing systemic inflammation. In the present study, tissue AC gene expression and regulation are explored in a rat model of cecal ligation and puncture (CLP) sepsis. Eighteen hours after CLP operation, expression of several AC isoforms in the liver, spleen, and kidney was reduced, significantly so for AC9 in all tissues. AC9 expression is regulated by the microRNA miR142-3p in T cells. When microRNA was extracted and amplified for miR142-3p expression, it was increasingly expressed 18 h after CLP. A correlation between increased miR142-3p and decreased AC9 expression was found in the liver, kidney, and spleen, and when hepatocytes, Kupffer cells (KCs), and liver sinusoidal endothelial cells were isolated after CLP, reduced AC expression and increased miR142-3p expression were found in KCs and liver sinusoidal endothelial cells. Transfecting a miR142-3p inhibitor probe in rat KCs abolished LPS-mediated AC9 inhibition in vitro. These results indicate that CLP leads to miR142-3p-mediated AC9 reduction in liver macrophages, which may further limit cyclic 3&vprime;5&vprime;-adenosine monophosphate signaling and the ability of macrophages to resolve the proinflammatory response.


Life Sciences | 2014

Expression of bone morphogenetic protein 4 and its receptors in the remodeling heart.

Xueping Wu; Julia Sagave; Arkady Rutkovskiy; Fred Haugen; Anton Baysa; Ståle Nygård; Gabor Czibik; Christen P. Dahl; Lars Gullestad; Jarle Vaage; Guro Valen

AIMS Heart failure is associated with activation of fetal gene programs. Bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) regulate embryonic development through interaction with BMP receptors (BMPRs) on the cell surface. We investigated if the expression of BMP4 and its receptors BMPR1a and BMPR2 were activated in post-infarction remodeling and heart failure. MAIN METHODS Left ventricular biopsies were taken from explanted hearts of patients with end-stage heart failure due to dilated cardiomyopathy (CMP; n=15) or ischemic heart disease (CAD; n=9), and compared with homograft control preparations from organ donors deceased due to non-cardiac causes (n=7). Other samples were taken from patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG; n=11). Mice were subjected to induced infarction by permanent coronary artery ligation or sham operation, and hearts were sampled serially thereafter (n=7 at each time point). KEY FINDINGS Human and mouse hearts expressed BMP4 and both receptor subtypes. CABG and CMP patients had increased expression of mRNA encoding for BMP4, but unchanged protein. Mouse hearts had increased BMP4 precursor protein 24h after infarction. BMPR1a protein decreased in CAD patients and initially in postinfarcted mouse hearts, but increased again in the latter after two weeks. Human recombinant BMP4 promoted survival after H2O2 injury in HL-1 cells, and also protected adult mouse cardiomyocytes against hypoxia-reoxygenation injury. SIGNIFICANCE Adult hearts express BMP4, the mRNA increasingly so in patients with coronary artery disease with good cardiac function. BMPRs are downregulated in cardiac remodeling and failure. Recombinant BMP4 has protective effects on cultured cardiomyocytes.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2013

Aquaporin-1 in cardiac endothelial cells is downregulated in ischemia, hypoxia and cardioplegia.

Arkady Rutkovskiy; Marte Bliksøen; Vigdis Hillestad; Mubashar Amin; Gabor Czibik; Guro Valen; Jarle Vaage; Mahmood Amiry-Moghaddam; Kåre-Olav Stensløkken

Aquaporin-1 (AQP1) is expressed in human and mouse hearts, but little is known about its cellular and subcellular localization and regulation. The aim of this study was to investigate the localization of AQP1 in the mouse heart and to determine the effects of ischemia and hypoxia on its expression. Mouse myocardial cells were freshly isolated and split into cardiomyocyte and non-cardiomyocyte fractions. Isolated, Langendorff-perfused C57Bl6 mouse hearts (n=46) were harvested with no intervention, subjected to 35min of ischemia or ischemia followed by 60min of reperfusion. Eleven mouse hearts were perfusion-fixed for electron microscopy. Forty C57Bl6 mice were exposed to normobaric hypoxia for one or two weeks (n=12). Needle biopsies of human left ventricular myocardium were sampled (n=30) during coronary artery bypass surgery before cardioplegia and after 30min of reperfusion. Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) were subjected to 4h of hypoxia with reoxygenation for either 4 or 24h. AQP1 expression was studied by electron microscopy with immunogold labeling, Western blot, and qPCR. Expression of miR-214 and miR-320 in HUVECs with hypoxia was studied with qPCR. HUVECs were then transfected with precursors and inhibitors of miR-214. AQP1 expression was confined to cardiac endothelial cells, with no signal in cardiomyocytes or cardiac fibroblasts. Immunogold electron microscopy showed AQP1 expression in endothelial caveolae with equal distribution along the basal and apical membranes. Ischemia and reperfusion tended to decrease AQP1 mRNA expression in mouse hearts by 37±9% (p=0.06), while glycosylated AQP1 protein was reduced by 16±9% (p=0.03). No difference in expression was found between ischemia alone and ischemia-reperfusion. In human left ventricles AQP1 mRNA expression was reduced following cardioplegia and reperfusion (p=0.008). Hypoxia in mice reduced AQP1 mRNA expression by 20±7% (p<0.0001), as well as both glycosylated (-47±10%, p=0.03) and glycan-free protein (-34±16%, p=0.05). Hypoxia and reoxygenation in HUVECs downregulated glycan-free AQP1 protein (-34±24%, p=0.04) and upregulated miR-214 (+287±52%, p<0.05). HUVECs transfected with anti-miR-214 had increased glycosylated (1.5 fold) and glycan-free (2 fold) AQP1. AQP1 in mouse hearts is localized to endothelial cell membranes and caveolae. Cardioplegia, ischemia and hypoxia decrease AQP1 mRNA as well as total protein expression and glycosylation, possibly regulated by miR-214.


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2017

Valve Interstitial Cells: The Key to Understanding the Pathophysiology of Heart Valve Calcification

Arkady Rutkovskiy; Anna Malashicheva; Gareth J. Sullivan; Maria Bogdanova; Anna Kostareva; Kåre-Olav Stensløkken; Arnt E. Fiane; Jarle Vaage

Aortic valve stenosis due to calcification of the valve leaflets is the most common valve disease in the developed world. It is the third leading cause of cardiovascular disease.[1][1] Risk factors include male gender, smoking, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, high levels of circulating lipids, and


Human Immunology | 2015

Higher TNFα responses in young males compared to females are associated with attenuation of monocyte adenylyl cyclase expression.

Petter K. Risøe; Arkady Rutkovskiy; Joanna Ågren; Ingrid Benedicte Moss Kolseth; Signe Flood Kjeldsen; Guro Valen; Jarle Vaage; Maria K. Dahle

Tumor necrosis factor α (TNFα) expression is strongly attenuated by the intracellular signaling mediator cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), which is synthesized by adenylyl cyclase (AC) enzymes. We have compared AC regulation and TNFα production in male and female monocytes, and characterized the role of monocyte AC isoforms in TNFα regulation. Males and females, age groups 20-30 years and 50-70 years donated blood for this study. In lipopolysaccharide-stimulated blood from young male donors, we observed significantly higher TNFα responses (6h, p=0.03) compared to females of the same age, a difference not observed in the older donors. Rapid down-regulation of the monocyte AC isoforms AC4, AC7 and AC9 were observed in young males. AC-directed siRNA experiments in the human monocyte cell line THP-1 demonstrated that AC7 and AC9 knock-down significantly induced TNFα release (p=0.01 for both isoforms). These data indicate that the stronger TNFα-responses in young males may be partly associated with male-specific down-regulation of adenylyl cyclases.


Physiological Genomics | 2012

Per-unit-living tissue normalization of real-time RT-PCR data in ischemic rat hearts

Stian Ellefsen; Marte Bliksøen; Arkady Rutkovskiy; Ida Beitnes Johansen; Mari-Liis Kaljusto; Göran E. Nilsson; Jarle Vaage; Kåre-Olav Stensløkken

In studies of gene expression in acute ischemic heart tissue, internal reference genes need to show stable expression per-unit-living tissue to hinder dead cells from biasing real-time RT-PCR data. Until now, this important issue has not been appropriately investigated. We hypothesized that the expression of seven internal reference genes would show stable per-unit-living tissue expression in Langendorff-perfused rat hearts subjected to ischemia-reperfusion. This was found for cyclophilin A, GAPDH, RPL-32, and PolR2A mRNA, with GAPDH showing the highest degree of stability (R = 0.11), suggesting unchanged rates of mRNA transcription in live cells and complete degradation of mRNA from dead cells. The infarct size-dependent degradation of GAPDH was further supported by a close correlation between changes in GAPDH mRNA and changes in RNA quality measured as RNA integrity number (R = 0.90, P < 0.05). In contrast, β-actin and 18S rRNA showed stable expression per-unit-weight tissue and a positive correlation with infarct size (R = 0.61 and R = 0.77, P < 0.05 for both analyses). The amount of total RNA extracted per-unit-weight tissue did not differ between groups despite wide variation in infarct size (7.1-50.1%). When β-actin expression was assessed using four different normalization strategies, GAPDH and geNorm provided appropriate per-unit-living expression, while 18S and total RNA resulted in marked underestimations. In studies of ischemic tissues, we recommend using geometric averaging of carefully selected reference genes for normalization of real-time RT-PCR data. A marked shift in the mRNA/rRNA ratio renders rRNA as useless for normalization purposes.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Serglycin in Quiescent and Proliferating Primary Endothelial Cells

Trine M. Reine; Tram Thu Vuong; Arkady Rutkovskiy; Astri Jeanette Meen; Jarle Vaage; Trond Jenssen; Svein Olav Kolset

Proteoglycans are fundamental components of the endothelial barrier, but the functions of the proteoglycan serglycin in endothelium are less described. Our aim was to describe the roles of serglycin in processes relevant for endothelial dysfunction. Primary human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) were cultured in vitro and the expression of proteoglycans was investigated. Dense cell cultures representing the quiescent endothelium coating the vasculature was compared to sparse activated cell cultures, relevant for diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular disease. Secretion of 35S- proteoglycans increased in sparse cultures, and we showed that serglycin is a major component of the cell-density sensitive proteoglycan population. In contrast to the other proteoglycans, serglycin expression and secretion was higher in proliferating compared to quiescent HUVEC. RNAi silencing of serglycin inhibited proliferation and wound healing, and serglycin expression and secretion was augmented by hypoxia, mechanical strain and IL-1β induced inflammation. Notably, the secretion of the angiogenic chemokine CCL2 resulting from IL-1β activation, was increased in serglycin knockdown cells, while angiopoietin was not affected. Both serglycin and CCL2 were secreted predominantly to the apical side of polarized HUVEC, and serglycin and CCL2 co-localized both in perinuclear areas and in vesicles. These results suggest functions for serglycin in endothelial cells trough interactions with partner molecules, in biological processes with relevance for diabetic complications, cardiovascular disease and cancer development.


Acta Physiologica | 2017

Mode of perfusion influences infarct size, coronary flow and stress kinases in the isolated mouse heart

Marte Bliksøen; Arkady Rutkovskiy; John T. Vaage; Kåre-Olav Stensløkken

The isolated, retrogradely perfused heart (modified Langendorff model) is a widely used method in experimental heart research. The presence of an intraventricular balloon is necessary to get functional measurements. We have previously shown that the balloon induces phosphorylation of some suggested cardioprotective mitogen‐activated protein kinases (MAPK): P38‐MAPK, ERK 1/2 and JNK. We hypothesized that the balloon could influence cardioprotection, protect against ischaemia reperfusion injury and interfere with coronary flow.


European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery | 2011

Hyperoxia during early reperfusion does not increase ischemia/reperfusion injury.

Lars Henrik Mariero; Arkady Rutkovskiy; Kåre-Olav Stensløkken; Jarle Vaage

OBJECTIVE Oxygen is routinely administered to patients undergoing acute myocardial infarction as well as during revascularization procedures and cardiac surgery. Because reactive oxygen species are mediators of ischemia/reperfusion injury, increased oxygen availability might theoretically aggravate myocardial injury during reperfusion. We hypothesized that ventilation with a hyperoxic gas at start of reperfusion might increase ischemia/reperfusion injury. METHODS Rats were anesthetized with isoflurane and ventilated with 40% oxygen. The animals were subjected to 40 min of regional myocardial ischemia and 120 min of reperfusion. In the test group, rats (n=11) were ventilated with a normobaric hyperoxic gas (95% O2) during the last 10 min of ischemia and the first 10 min of reperfusion. Control rats (n=14) were ventilated with 40% O2 throughout the experiments. Due to irreversible reperfusion arrhythmias, one animal in the hyperoxia group and six animals in the control group were excluded. Hearts (n=8 in the control group and n=10 in the test group) were harvested for measurement of infarct size. RESULTS The incidence of lethal arrhythmias was 1/11 in the test group and 6/14 in the control group (p=0.06). Reperfusion with normobaric hyperoxia did not influence infarct size (20±8% of area at risk) compared with the normoxia group (24±8% and of area at risk), respectively (mean±SD, p>0.2). CONCLUSION Normobaric hyperoxia during early reperfusion did not increase ischemia/reperfusion injury.

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Jarle Vaage

Oslo University Hospital

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Lars Gullestad

Oslo University Hospital

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