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Dive into the research topics where Arun H. S. Kumar is active.

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Featured researches published by Arun H. S. Kumar.


Nature | 2013

Interactome map uncovers phosphatidylserine transport by oxysterol-binding proteins

Kenji Maeda; Kanchan Anand; Antonella Chiapparino; Arun H. S. Kumar; Mattia Poletto; Marko Kaksonen; Anne-Claude Gavin

The internal organization of eukaryotic cells into functionally specialized, membrane-delimited organelles of unique composition implies a need for active, regulated lipid transport. Phosphatidylserine (PS), for example, is synthesized in the endoplasmic reticulum and then preferentially associates—through mechanisms not fully elucidated—with the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. Lipids can travel via transport vesicles. Alternatively, several protein families known as lipid-transfer proteins (LTPs) can extract a variety of specific lipids from biological membranes and transport them, within a hydrophobic pocket, through aqueous phases. Here we report the development of an integrated approach that combines protein fractionation and lipidomics to characterize the LTP–lipid complexes formed in vivo. We applied the procedure to 13 LTPs in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae: the six Sec14 homology (Sfh) proteins and the seven oxysterol-binding homology (Osh) proteins. We found that Osh6 and Osh7 have an unexpected specificity for PS. In vivo, they participate in PS homeostasis and the transport of this lipid to the plasma membrane. The structure of Osh6 bound to PS reveals unique features that are conserved among other metazoan oxysterol-binding proteins (OSBPs) and are required for PS recognition. Our findings represent the first direct evidence, to our knowledge, for the non-vesicular transfer of PS from its site of biosynthesis (the endoplasmic reticulum) to its site of biological activity (the plasma membrane). We describe a new subfamily of OSBPs, including human ORP5 and ORP10, that transfer PS and propose new mechanisms of action for a protein family that is involved in several human pathologies such as cancer, dyslipidaemia and metabolic syndrome.


Hypertension | 2010

Oxidative Stress and Endothelial Dysfunction in Aortas of Aged Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats by NOX1/2 Is Reversed by NADPH Oxidase Inhibition

Sven Wind; Knut Beuerlein; Melanie E. Armitage; Ashraf Taye; Arun H. S. Kumar; Daniel Janowitz; Christina Neff; Ajay M. Shah; Kirstin Wingler; Harald Schmidt

Arterial hypertension is associated with increased levels of reactive oxygen species, which may scavenge endothelium-derived NO and thereby diminish its vasorelaxant effects. However, the quantitatively relevant source of reactive oxygen species is unclear. Thus, this potential pathomechanism is not yet pharmacologically targetable. Several enzymatic sources of reactive oxygen species have been suggested: uncoupled endothelial NO synthase, xanthine oxidase, and NADPH oxidases. Here we show that increased reactive oxygen species formation in aortas of 12- to 14-month–old spontaneously hypertensive rats versus age-matched Wistar Kyoto rats is inhibited by the specific NADPH oxidase inhibitor VAS2870 but neither by the xanthine oxidase inhibitor oxypurinol nor the NO synthase inhibitor NG-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester. NADPH oxidase activity, as well as protein expression of its catalytic subunits, NOX1 and NOX2, was increased in the aortas of spontaneously hypertensive rats, whereas the expression of NOX4 protein, the most abundant NOX isoform, was not significantly changed. Impaired acetylcholine-induced relaxation of spontaneously hypertensive rat aortas was significantly improved by VAS2870. In conclusion, NOX1 and NOX2 but not NOX4 proteins are increased in aged spontaneously hypertensive rat aortas. Importantly, these NOX isoforms, in particular, ectopic expression of NOX1 in endothelial cells, appear to affect vascular function in an NADPH oxidase inhibitor-reversible manner. NADPH oxidases may, thus, be a novel target for the treatment of systemic hypertension.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2010

Clinical Potential of Adult Vascular Progenitor Cells

Arun H. S. Kumar; Noel M. Caplice

Cell therapy to treat vascular and cardiovascular diseases has evolved over the past decade with improved understanding of progenitor cell mobilization, recruitment, and differentiation. The beneficial effects seen in several preclinical studies have prompted translation of adult vascular progenitor therapy to clinical trials. To date, progenitor cells isolated from bone marrow and peripheral blood have been tested in the context of acute myocardial infarction and chronic ischemic cardiomyopathy, with moderate benefit. This therapeutic effect occurs despite a relatively small number of injected progenitor cells and short-term residence in the target zone. Thus, indirect benefits, such as paracrine factors released from these cells, have been suggested as significant contributors to therapeutic efficacy. Several additional vascular progenitors of endothelial, smooth muscle, mesenchymal, and cardiac origin have been identified that may contribute to vasculogenesis. Indeed, a unifying paradigm for the most effective cell therapy strategies to date appears to be robust support of angiogenesis. Here we discuss a number of progenitor cells that currently show potential as cardiovascular therapeutics, either singly or in combination. We look at emerging cell types and disease targets that may be exploited for therapeutic benefit and future strategies that may maximize clinical efficacy.


Stem Cells and Development | 2008

Progenitor Cell Therapy in a Porcine Acute Myocardial Infarction Model Induces Cardiac Hypertrophy, Mediated by Paracrine Secretion of Cardiotrophic Factors Including TGFβ1

Brendan Doyle; Paul Sorajja; Brian Hynes; Arun H. S. Kumar; Phillip A. Araoz; Paul G. Stalboerger; Dylan V. Miller; Cynthia Reed; Jeffrey Schmeckpeper; Shaohua Wang; Chunsheng Liu; Andre Terzic; David G. Kruger; Stephen J. Riederer; Noel M. Caplice

Administration of endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) is a promising therapy for post-infarction cardiac repair. However, the mechanisms that underlie apparent beneficial effects on myocardial remodeling are unclear. In a porcine model of acute myocardial infarction, we investigated the therapeutic effects of a mixed population of culture modified peripheral blood mononuclear cells (termed hereafter porcine EPC). Porcine EPC were isolated using methods identical to those previously adopted for harvest of EPC in human cell therapy studies. In addition the therapeutic effects of paracrine factors secreted by these cells was evaluated in vitro and in vivo. Intracoronary injection of autologous porcine EPC was associated with increased infarct territory mass and improved regional ventricular systolic function at 2 months compared to control. Treatment with conditioned media derived from autologous EPC was associated with similar improved effects on infarct territory mass and function. Histologic analysis of the infarct territory revealed significantly increased cardiomyocyte size in EPC and conditioned media treated groups, when compared to controls. A paracrine EPC effect was also verified in a pure myocardial preparation in which cardiomyocytes devoid of fibroblast, neuronal and vascular elements directly responded by increasing cell mass when exposed to the same conditioned media. Analysis of conditioned media revealed elevated levels of TGFbeta1 (human 267.3+/-11.8 pg/ml, porcine 57.1+/-6.1 pg/ml), a recognized mediator of hypertrophic signaling in the heart. Neutralizing antibodies to TGFbeta1 attenuated the pro-hypertrophic effect of conditioned media, and use of recombinant TGFbeta1 added to fresh media replicated the pro-hypertrophic effects of conditioned media in vitro. These data demonstrate the potential of paracrine factors secreted from endothelial progenitor cells to induce cardiomyocyte hypertrophy contributing to increased infarct territory LV mass, with favorable medium term effects on regional function following myocardial infarction.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2010

Effect of apocynin on NADPH oxidase-mediated oxidative stress-LOX-1-eNOS pathway in human endothelial cells exposed to high glucose

Ashraf Taye; Adel Saad; Arun H. S. Kumar; Henning Morawietz

Hyperglycemia-induced generation of reactive oxygen species contributes to the development of proatherogenic changes and vasculopathy in diabetes. NADPH oxidase has been recognized as a major source of reactive oxygen species in the vasculature and the lectin-like oxLDL receptor-1 (LOX-1) appears to play a crucial role in the pathogenesis of diabetic endothelial dysfunction. The present study aimed to examine the relationships between the hyperglycemia-mediated NADPH oxidase-LOX-1 pathway activation and nitric oxide-mediated endothelial function. In addition, we investigated effect of the NADPH oxidase inhibitor, apocynin on these consequences. In human umbilical artery endothelial cells (HUAECs), the effect of high glucose on expressional regulations and functional consequences of NADPH oxidase subunits, LOX-1 and endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), in the absence and presence of apocynin (10 micromol/l) were evaluated. HUAECs were cultured under normal (5.5 mmol/l) or high glucose (30mmol/l) concentrations for 48 h in the absence and presence of apocynin. Our results showed that high glucose significantly enhanced the activity and the protein expression of NADPH oxidase subunits, Nox2 and p47(phox). High glucose markedly increased LOX-1 mRNA level and this was functionally reflected on the augmented uptake of Dil-labelled LDL (5 micromol/l, 3h) by HUAECs. Furthermore, high glucose attenuated eNOS protein and total nitrite levels. However, apocynin inhibited all these changes. Collectively, our study demonstrates that high glucose-induced oxidative stress via NADPH oxidase activation and this contributed to LOX-1 upregulation and eNOS downregulation in human endothelial cells. Apocynin efficiently reversed these consequences, suggesting its potential role as a vasculoprotective agent.


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Bone marrow-derived CX3CR1 progenitors contribute to neointimal smooth muscle cells via fractalkine CX3CR1 interaction

Arun H. S. Kumar; Pat Metharom; Jeff Schmeckpeper; Sharon Weiss; Kenneth Martin; Noel M. Caplice

Smooth muscle cells play a major role in numerous vascular diseases that contribute to remodeling, repair after injury, and arteriogenesis, and the source of these cells is thought to lie within the vessel wall and the circulating blood. Currently, the precise origin and mechanism of differentiation of extravascular smooth muscle progenitor cells (SPCs) is unclear. We show here that the CX3CR1 mononuclear cell population of murine bone marrow provides a source of SPCs that contributes to smooth muscle cells within the neointimal plaque after vascular injury. Moreover, CX3CR1‐fractal‐kine (FKN) interaction in vivo is essential for smooth muscle cell differentiation of bone marrow‐derived progenitor cells at the vessel wall level. Functional competence of bone marrow‐derived CX3CR1 positive cells to interact with FKN is also crucial in part for neointima formation following vascular injury. Finally, in a pure preparation of bone marrow‐derived CX3CR1 positive cells, we show that in vitro smooth muscle cell differentiation increases markedly in the presence of FKN. Our data highlight a novel functional relationship between the myeloid and vascular systems and in the context of vascular injury and repair underscores a key chemokine‐receptor pathway that may regulate cell fate when smooth muscle cell differentiation is required.—Kumar, A. H. S., Metharom, P., Schmeckpeper, J., Weiss, S., Martin, K., Caplice, N. M. Bone marrow‐derived CX3CR1 progenitors contribute to neointimal smooth muscle cells via fractalkine CX3CR1 interaction. FASEB J. 24, 81–92 (2010). www.fasebj.org


European Heart Journal | 2013

Potent endothelial progenitor cell-conditioned media-related anti-apoptotic, cardiotrophic, and pro-angiogenic effects post-myocardial infarction are mediated by insulin-like growth factor-1

Brian Hynes; Arun H. S. Kumar; John F. O'Sullivan; Chirlei K. Buneker; Anne-Laure Leblond; Sharon Weiss; Jeffrey Schmeckpeper; Kenneth Martin; Noel M. Caplice

AIMS We have previously reported the cardioprotective effects of endothelial progenitor cell (EPC)-conditioned media (CM) therapy post-myocardial infarction (MI). In the present study, we have determined the insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) contribution to EPC CM effects on cardiomyocyte survival, contractility, and angiogenesis in vivo. METHODS AND RESULTS Conditioned media from porcine EPC were administered intracoronary in the presence and absence of specific neutralizing antibodies to IGF-1 or control IgG in a porcine model of MI. X-vivo (non-conditioned) medium was used as a control. Functional, histological, and biochemical parameters were evaluated at 24 h and 8-week post-therapy. Conditioned media therapy significantly abrogated infarct zone (IZ) apoptosis, hypocontractility, and impaired left ventricular (LV) relaxation observed in control infarcts acutely (24 h post-MI). At 8 weeks following treatment, CM therapy augmented LV contractility and relaxation, IZ angiogenesis and inhibited infarct size expansion, wall expansion, and wall thinning. All of these acute and chronic beneficial effects of CM therapy were vitiated by neutralizing antibodies to IGF-1 but not by control IgG. Moreover, the addition of neutralizing IGF-1 antibody to control medium had no effect on these structural or functional changes in the heart post-treatment. CONCLUSION Insulin-like growth factor-1 within the EPC CM mediates potent acute myocardial repair and chronic remodelling effects post-MI. These findings may provide a rationale for comparative trials of specific growth factors vs. current progenitor cell strategies.


Burns | 2011

Deficiency of CX3CR1 delays burn wound healing and is associated with reduced myeloid cell recruitment and decreased sub-dermal angiogenesis

Anthony J.P. Clover; Arun H. S. Kumar; Noel M. Caplice

The development of a good blood supply is a key step in burn wound healing and appears to be regulated in part by myeloid cells. CX3CR1 positive cells have recently been identified as myeloid cells with a potential role in angiogenesis. The role of functional CX3CR1 system in burn wound healing is not previously investigated. A 2% contact burn was induced in CX3CR1(+/gfp) and CX3CR1(gfp/gfp) mice. These transgenic mice facilitate the tracking of CX3CR1 cells (CX3CR1(+/gfp)) and allow evaluation of the consequence of CX3CR1 functional knockout (CX3CR1(gfp/gfp)) on burn wound healing. The progression of wound healing was monitored before tissue was harvested and analyzed at day 6 and day 12 for migration of CX3CR1 cells into burn wound. Deficiency of a functional CX3CR1 system resulted in decreased recruitment of CX3CR1 positive cells into the burn wound associated with decreased myeloid cell recruitment (p<0.001) and reduced maintenance of new vessels (p<0.001). Burn wound healing was prolonged (p<0.05). Our study is the first to establish a role for CX3CR1 in burn wound healing which is associated with sub-dermal angiogenesis. This chemokine receptor pathway may be attractive for therapeutic manipulation as it could increase sub dermal angiogenesis and thereby improve time to healing.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Systemic and Cardiac Depletion of M2 Macrophage through CSF-1R Signaling Inhibition Alters Cardiac Function Post Myocardial Infarction

Anne-Laure Leblond; Kerstin Klinkert; Kenneth Martin; Elizebeth C. Turner; Arun H. S. Kumar; Tara C. Browne; Noel M. Caplice

The heart hosts tissue resident macrophages which are capable of modulating cardiac inflammation and function by multiple mechanisms. At present, the consequences of phenotypic diversity in macrophages in the heart are incompletely understood. The contribution of cardiac M2-polarized macrophages to the resolution of inflammation and repair response following myocardial infarction remains to be fully defined. In this study, the role of M2 macrophages was investigated utilising a specific CSF-1 receptor signalling inhibition strategy to achieve their depletion. In mice, oral administration of GW2580, a CSF-1R kinase inhibitor, induced significant decreases in Gr1lo and F4/80hi monocyte populations in the circulation and the spleen. GW2580 administration also induced a significant depletion of M2 macrophages in the heart after 1 week treatment as well as a reduction of cardiac arginase1 and CD206 gene expression indicative of M2 macrophage activity. In a murine myocardial infarction model, reduced M2 macrophage content was associated with increased M1-related gene expression (IL-6 and IL-1β), and decreased M2-related gene expression (Arginase1 and CD206) in the heart of GW2580-treated animals versus vehicle-treated controls. M2 depletion was also associated with a loss in left ventricular contractile function, infarct enlargement, decreased collagen staining and increased inflammatory cell infiltration into the infarct zone, specifically neutrophils and M1 macrophages. Taken together, these data indicate that CSF-1R signalling is critical for maintaining cardiac tissue resident M2-polarized macrophage population, which is required for the resolution of inflammation post myocardial infarction and, in turn, for preservation of ventricular function.


Journal of Nutrition | 2014

Exopolysaccharide-Producing Probiotic Lactobacilli Reduce Serum Cholesterol and Modify Enteric Microbiota in ApoE-Deficient Mice

Lis E. E. London; Arun H. S. Kumar; Rebecca Wall; Pat G. Casey; Orla O'Sullivan; Fergus Shanahan; Colin Hill; Paul D. Cotter; Gerald F. Fitzgerald; R. Paul Ross; Noel M. Caplice; Catherine Stanton

BACKGROUND Probiotic bacteria have been associated with a reduction in cardiovascular disease risk, a leading cause of death and disability. OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to assess the impact of dietary administration of exopolysaccharide-producing probiotic Lactobacillus cultures on lipid metabolism and gut microbiota in apolipoprotein E (apoE)-deficient mice. METHODS First, we examined lipid metabolism in response to dietary supplementation with recombinant β-glucan-producing Lactobacillus paracasei National Food Biotechnology Centre (NFBC) 338 expressing the glycosyltransferase (Gtf) gene from Pediococcus parvulus 2.6 (GTF), and naturally exopolysaccharide-producing Lactobacillus mucosae Dairy Product Culture Collection (DPC) 6426 (DPC 6426) compared with the non-β-glucan-producing isogenic control strain Lactobacillus paracasei NFBC 338 (PNZ) and placebo (15% wt:vol trehalose). Second, we examined the effects on the gut microbiota of dietary administration of DPC 6426 compared with placebo. Probiotic Lactobacillus strains at 1 × 10(9) colony-forming units/d per animal were administered to apoE(-/-) mice fed a high-fat (60% fat)/high-cholesterol (2% wt:wt) diet for 12 wk. At the end of the study, aortic plaque development and serum, liver, and fecal variables involved in lipid metabolism were analyzed, and culture-independent microbial analyses of cecal content were performed. RESULTS Total cholesterol was reduced in serum (P < 0.001; ∼33-50%) and liver (P < 0.05; ∼30%) and serum triglyceride concentrations were reduced (P < 0.05; ∼15-25%) in mice supplemented with GTF or DPC 6426 compared with the PNZ or placebo group, respectively. In addition, dietary intervention with GTF led to increased amounts of fecal cholesterol excretion (P < 0.05) compared with all other groups. Compositional sequencing of the gut microbiota revealed a greater prevalence of Porphyromonadaceae (P = 0.001) and Prevotellaceae (P = 0.001) in the DPC 6426 group and lower proportions of Clostridiaceae (P < 0.05), Peptococcaceae (P < 0.001), and Staphylococcaceae (P < 0.01) compared with the placebo group. CONCLUSION Ingestion of exopolysaccharide-producing lactobacilli resulted in seemingly favorable improvements in lipid metabolism, which were associated with changes in the gut microbiota of mice.

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Pat Metharom

University College Cork

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David Kilroy

University College Dublin

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Derek Whelan

University College Cork

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G.M. Kelly

University College Cork

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