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Featured researches published by Attila Feher.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2014

Age-related impairment of conducted dilation in human coronary arterioles.

Attila Feher; Zuzana Broskova; Zsolt Bagi

Conducted vasodilation is essential to coordinate vascular resistance along distances to ensure adequate tissue perfusion. We hypothesized that conducted vasodilation of coronary resistance arteries declines with age. Coronary arterioles were dissected from right atrial appendage of patients (n = 27) undergoing cardiac surgery. Arterioles (~100 μm) were cannulated and pressurized (80 mmHg), and developed spontaneous myogenic tone. Conducted vasodilation was initiated by locally administering the endothelium-dependent agonist bradykinin (BK; 100 μM) ejected from a glass micropipette (~3 μm tip opening, positioned in close proximity to the vessel wall). Diameter changes were measured at local and upstream sites (500 and 1,000 μm from the stimulus) with videomicroscopy. Local administration of BK elicited vasodilation, the magnitude of which increased with the duration of stimulus (69 ± 6, 81 ± 6, 90 ± 2%, after 1, 3, and 5 × 100 ms, respectively). BK-induced dilation remained substantial at upstream sites (500 μm: 53 ± 7%; 1,000 μm: 46 ± 9%). The gap junction uncoupler carbenoxolone or 18-α-glycyrrhetinic acid did not affect local responses, but diminished conducted vasodilation. Inhibitors of small/intermediate conductance calcium-activated potassium channels (SKCa/IKCa), apamin and TRAM34, reduced dilations both at local and remote sites. We found that conducted dilation, but not the local response, was significantly reduced in older (≥64 yr) patients. The nitric oxide (NO) synthesis inhibitor N(ω)-nitro-l-arginine methyl ester did not affect local responses, but markedly reduced conducted dilation in younger (<64 yr) individuals. Collectively, we show that human coronary arterioles exhibit SKCa/IKCa-mediated hyperpolarization spread through gap junctions, which contributes to conducted vasodilation initiated by focal application of BK. We demonstrate that conducted dilation declines with age, likely due to reduced NO availability, which plays a permissive role in propagating longitudinal vasomotor signaling.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2013

Selective Up-Regulation of Arginase-1 in Coronary Arteries of Diabetic Patients

Zsolt Bagi; Attila Feher; Huijuan Dou; Zuzana Broskova

Coronary artery disease (CAD) remains the leading cause of death in the Western societies. Diabetes mellitus (DM) is one of the highly prevalent diseases, which remarkably accelerates the development of CAD. Experimental evidence indicates that decreased bioavailability of coronary endothelial nitric oxide (NO) contributes to the development of CAD in DM. There are recent studies showing that a selective impairment of NO synthesis occurs in coronary arteries of DM patients, which is mainly due to the limited availability of endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) precursor, l-arginine. Importantly, these studies demonstrated that DM, independent of the presence of CAD, leads to selective up-regulation of arginase-1. Arginase-1 seems to play an important role in limiting l-arginine availability in the close proximity of eNOS in vessels of DM patients. This brief review examines recent clinical studies demonstrating the pathological role of vascular arginase-1 in human diabetes. Whether arginase-1, which is crucial in the synthesis of various fundamental polyamines in the body, will represent a potent therapeutic target for prevention of DM-associated CAD is still debated.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2015

Caveolin-1 prevents sustained angiotensin II-induced resistance artery constriction and obesity-induced high blood pressure

Istvan Czikora; Attila Feher; Rudolf Lucas; David Fulton; Zsolt Bagi

The type 1 angiotensin II (ANG II) receptor (AT1R) undergoes internalization following stimulation by ANG II. Internalization reduces cell surface AT1Rs, and it is required for AT1R resensitization. In this process AT1R may interact with caveolin-1 (Cav1), the main scaffolding protein of caveolae. We hypothesized that the interaction between Cav1 and AT1R delays AT1R resensitization and thereby prevents sustained ANG II-induced resistance artery (RA) constriction under normal conditions and in experimental obesity. In rat and mouse skeletal muscle RA (diameter: ∼90-120 μm) ANG II-induced constrictions were reduced upon repeated (30-min apart) administrations. Upon disruption of caveolae with methyl-β-cyclodextrin or in RA of Cav1 knockout mice, repeated ANG II applications resulted in essentially maintained constrictions. In vascular smooth muscle cells, AT1R interacted with Cav1, and the degree of cell surface interactions was reduced by long-term (15-min), but not short-term (2-min), exposure to ANG II. When Cav1 was silenced, the amount of membrane-associated AT1R was significantly reduced by a short-term ANG II exposure. Moreover, Cav1 knockout mice fed a high-fat diet exhibited augmented and sustained RA constriction to ANG II and had elevated systemic blood pressure, when compared with normal or high-fat fed wild-type mice. Thus, Cav1, through a direct interaction, delays internalization and subsequent resensitization of AT1R. We suggest that this mechanism prevents sustained ANG II-induced RA constriction and elevated systemic blood pressure in diet-induced obesity.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2017

Role of Adipose Tissue Endothelial ADAM17 in Age-Related Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction

Huijuan Dou; Attila Feher; Alec Davila; Maritza J. Romero; Vijay Patel; Vinayak Kamath; Monika Gooz; R. Daniel Rudic; Rudolf Lucas; David Fulton; Neal L. Weintraub; Zsolt Bagi

Objective— A disintegrin and metalloproteinase ADAM17 (tumor necrosis factor-&agr; [TNF]–converting enzyme) regulates soluble TNF levels. We tested the hypothesis that aging-induced activation in adipose tissue (AT)-expressed ADAM17 contributes to the development of remote coronary microvascular dysfunction in obesity. Approach and Results— Coronary arterioles (CAs, ≈90 µm) from right atrial appendages and mediastinal AT were examined in patients (aged: 69±11 years, BMI: 30.2±5.6 kg/m2) who underwent open heart surgery. CA and AT were also studied in 6-month and 24-month lean and obese mice fed a normal or high-fat diet. We found that obesity elicited impaired endothelium-dependent CA dilations only in older patients and in aged high-fat diet mice. Transplantation of AT from aged obese, but not from young or aged, mice increased serum cytokine levels, including TNF, and impaired CA dilation in the young recipient mice. In patients and mice, obesity was accompanied by age-related activation of ADAM17, which was attributed to vascular endothelium–expressed ADAM17. Excess, ADAM17-shed TNF from AT arteries in older obese patients was sufficient to impair CA dilation in a bioassay in which the AT artery was serially connected to a CA. Moreover, we found that the increased activity of endothelial ADAM17 is mediated by a diminished inhibitory interaction with caveolin-1, owing to age-related decline in caveolin-1 expression in obese patients and mice or to genetic deletion of caveolin-1. Conclusions— The present study indicates that aging and obesity cooperatively reduce caveolin-1 expression and increase vascular endothelial ADAM17 activity and soluble TNF release in AT, which may contribute to the development of remote coronary microvascular dysfunction in older obese patients.


Diabetes | 2014

Peroxynitrite Disrupts Endothelial Caveolae Leading to eNOS Uncoupling and Diminished Flow-Mediated Dilation in Coronary Arterioles of Diabetic Patients

James Cassuto; Huijuan Dou; Istvan Czikora; Andras Szabo; Vijay Patel; Vinayak Kamath; Eric J. Belin de Chantemèle; Attila Feher; Maritza J. Romero; Zsolt Bagi


Journal of Cardiothoracic Surgery | 2013

Obesity and statins are both independent predictors of enhanced coronary arteriolar dilation in patients undergoing heart surgery

James Cassuto; Attila Feher; Ling Lan; Vijay Patel; Vinayak Kamath; Daniel C. Anthony; Zsolt Bagi


The FASEB Journal | 2014

ADAM17 mediates TNF release from pericardial adipose tissue arteries to remotely impair coronary dilation in patients with type 2 diabetes (1071.5)

Huijuan Dou; Attila Feher; Maritza J. Romero; Zsolt Bagi


The FASEB Journal | 2014

Peroxynitrite disrupts endothelial caveolae leading to eNOS uncoupling and diminished flow-mediated dilation in coronary arterioles of diabetic patients (1082.3)

Zsolt Bagi; Attila Feher; James Cassuto


Archive | 2014

CALL FOR PAPERS Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Aging-New Mechanisms and Insights Age-related impairment of conducted dilation in human coronary arterioles

Attila Feher; Zuzana Broskova; Zsolt Bagi


Archive | 2010

regulation in coronary arteries after chronic occlusion Effects of exercise training on cellular mechanisms of endothelial nitric oxide synthase

James W. E. Rush; Mark E. Harold; Laughlin Mark; Andrew S. Thompson; Kyle K. Henderson; Christopher R. Woodman; Aaron K. Bunker; M. Harold Laughlin; Attila Feher; Ibolya Rutkai; Timea Beleznai; Zoltan Ungvari; Anna Csiszar; István Édes; Zsolt Bagi; Minglong Zhou; Robert J. Widmer; Weiqiao Xie; A. Jimmy Widmer; Michael W. Miller; Friedhelm Schroeder; Janet L. Parker

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Zsolt Bagi

New York Medical College

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Huijuan Dou

Georgia Regents University

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James Cassuto

Georgia Regents University

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Maritza J. Romero

Georgia Regents University

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Vijay Patel

Georgia Regents University

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Vinayak Kamath

Georgia Regents University

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Zuzana Broskova

Georgia Regents University

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David Fulton

Georgia Regents University

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Istvan Czikora

Georgia Regents University

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Rudolf Lucas

Georgia Regents University

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