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Dive into the research topics where Aya Matsumoto is active.

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Featured researches published by Aya Matsumoto.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2012

Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase p110α Is a Master Regulator of Exercise-Induced Cardioprotection and PI3K Gene Therapy Rescues Cardiac Dysfunction

Kate L. Weeks; Xiao-Ming Gao; Xiao-Jun Du; Esther J.H. Boey; Aya Matsumoto; Bianca C. Bernardo; Helen Kiriazis; Nelly Cemerlang; Joon Win Tan; Yow Keat Tham; Thomas F. Franke; Hongwei Qian; Marie A. Bogoyevitch; Elizabeth A. Woodcock; Mark A. Febbraio; Paul Gregorevic; Julie R. McMullen

Background—Numerous molecular and biochemical changes have been linked with the cardioprotective effects of exercise, including increases in antioxidant enzymes, heat shock proteins, and regulators of cardiac myocyte proliferation. However, a master regulator of exercise-induced protection has yet to be identified. Here, we assess whether phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) p110&agr; is essential for mediating exercise-induced cardioprotection, and if so, whether its activation independent of exercise can restore function of the failing heart. Methods and Results—Cardiac-specific transgenic (Tg) mice with elevated or reduced PI3K(p110&agr;) activity (constitutively active PI3K [caPI3K] and dominant negative PI3K, respectively) and non-Tg controls were subjected to 4 weeks of exercise training followed by 1 week of pressure overload (aortic-banding) to induce pathological remodeling. Aortic-banding in untrained non-Tg controls led to pathological cardiac hypertrophy, depressed systolic function, and lung congestion. This phenotype was attenuated in non-Tg controls that had undergone exercise before aortic-banding. Banded caPI3K mice were protected from pathological remodeling independent of exercise status, whereas exercise provided no protection in banded dominant negative PI3K mice, suggesting that PI3K is necessary for exercise-induced cardioprotection. Tg overexpression of heat shock protein 70 could not rescue the phenotype of banded dominant negative PI3K mice, and deletion of heat shock protein 70 from banded caPI3K mice had no effect. Next, we used a gene therapy approach (recombinant adeno-associated viral vector 6) to deliver caPI3K expression cassettes to hearts of mice with established cardiac dysfunction caused by aortic-banding. Mice treated with recombinant adeno-associated viral 6-caPI3K vectors had improved heart function after 10 weeks. Conclusions—PI3K(p110&agr;) is essential for exercise-induced cardioprotection and delivery of caPI3K vector can improve function of the failing heart.


Nature Communications | 2014

The small-molecule BGP-15 protects against heart failure and atrial fibrillation in mice

Geeta Sapra; Yow Keat Tham; Nelly Cemerlang; Aya Matsumoto; Helen Kiriazis; Bianca C. Bernardo; Darren C. Henstridge; Jenny Y.Y. Ooi; Pretorius L; Esther J.H. Boey; Lim L; Junichi Sadoshima; Peter J. Meikle; Natalie Mellet; Elizabeth A. Woodcock; Marasco S; Tomomi Ueyama; Xiao-Jun Du; Mark A. Febbraio; McMullen

Heart failure (HF) and atrial fibrillation (AF) share common risk factors, frequently coexist and are associated with high mortality. Treatment of HF with AF represents a major unmet need. Here we show that a small molecule, BGP-15, improves cardiac function and reduces arrhythmic episodes in two independent mouse models, which progressively develop HF and AF. In these models, BGP-15 treatment is associated with increased phosphorylation of the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF1R), which is depressed in atrial tissue samples from patients with AF. Cardiac-specific IGF1R transgenic overexpression in mice with HF and AF recapitulates the protection observed with BGP-15. We further demonstrate that BGP-15 and IGF1R can provide protection independent of phosphoinositide 3-kinase-Akt and heat-shock protein 70; signalling mediators often defective in the aged and diseased heart. As BGP-15 is safe and well tolerated in humans, this study uncovers a potential therapeutic approach for HF and AF.


Physiological Reports | 2014

Altering the redox state of skeletal muscle by glutathione depletion increases the exercise‐activation of PGC‐1α

Natalie Strobel; Aya Matsumoto; Jonathan M. Peake; Susan A. Marsh; Tina Tinkara Peternelj; David Briskey; Robert G. Fassett; Jeff S. Coombes; Glenn D. Wadley

We investigated the relationship between markers of mitochondrial biogenesis, cell signaling, and antioxidant enzymes by depleting skeletal muscle glutathione with diethyl maleate (DEM) which resulted in a demonstrable increase in oxidative stress during exercise. Animals were divided into six groups: (1) sedentary control rats; (2) sedentary rats + DEM; (3) exercise control rats euthanized immediately after exercise; (4) exercise rats + DEM; (5) exercise control rats euthanized 4 h after exercise; and (6) exercise rats + DEM euthanized 4 h after exercise. Exercising animals ran on the treadmill at a 10% gradient at 20 m/min for the first 30 min. The speed was then increased every 10 min by 1.6 m/min until exhaustion. There was a reduction in total glutathione in the skeletal muscle of DEM treated animals compared to the control animals (P < 0.05). Within the control group, total glutathione was higher in the sedentary group compared to after exercise (P < 0.05). DEM treatment also significantly increased oxidative stress, as measured by increased plasma F2–isoprostanes (P < 0.05). Exercising animals given DEM showed a significantly greater increase in peroxisome proliferator activated receptor γ coactivator‐1α (PGC–1α) mRNA compared to the control animals that were exercised (P < 0.05). This study provides novel evidence that by lowering the endogenous antioxidant glutathione in skeletal muscle and inducing oxidative stress through exercise, PGC‐1α gene expression was augmented. These findings further highlight the important role of exercise induced oxidative stress in the regulation of mitochondrial biogenesis.


The Journal of Physiology | 2016

Sex differences in response to miRNA-34a therapy in mouse models of cardiac disease: identification of sex-, disease- and treatment-regulated miRNAs

Bianca C. Bernardo; Jenny Y.Y. Ooi; Aya Matsumoto; Yow Keat Tham; Saloni Singla; Helen Kiriazis; Natalie L. Patterson; Junichi Sadoshima; Susanna Obad; Ruby C.Y. Lin; Julie R. McMullen

MicroRNA (miRNA)‐based therapies are in development for numerous diseases, including heart disease. Currently, very limited basic information is available on the regulation of specific miRNAs in male and female hearts in settings of disease. The identification of sex‐specific miRNA signatures has implications for translation into the clinic and suggests the need for customised therapy. In the present study, we found that a miRNA‐based treatment inhibiting miRNA‐34a (miR‐34a) was more effective in females in a setting of moderate dilated cardiomyopathy than in males. Furthermore, the treatment showed little benefit for either sex in a setting of more severe dilated cardiomyopathy associated with atrial fibrillation. The results highlight the importance of understanding the effect of miRNA‐based therapies in cardiac disease settings in males and females.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018

Distinct lipidomic profiles in models of physiological and pathological cardiac remodeling, and potential therapeutic strategies

Y. Tham; Kevin Huynh; Natalie A. Mellett; Darren C. Henstridge; Helen Kiriazis; Jenny Y.Y. Ooi; Aya Matsumoto; Natalie L. Patterson; Junichi Sadoshima; Peter J. Meikle; Julie R. McMullen

Cardiac myocyte membranes contain lipids which remodel dramatically in response to heart growth and remodeling. Lipid species have both structural and functional roles. Physiological and pathological cardiac remodeling have very distinct phenotypes, and the identification of molecular differences represent avenues for therapeutic interventions. Whether the abundance of specific lipid classes is different in physiological and pathological models was largely unknown. The aim of this study was to determine whether distinct lipids are regulated in settings of physiological and pathological remodeling, and if so, whether modulation of differentially regulated lipids could modulate heart size and function. Lipidomic profiling was performed on cardiac-specific transgenic mice with 1) physiological cardiac hypertrophy due to increased Insulin-like Growth Factor 1 (IGF1) receptor or Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase (PI3K) signaling, 2) small hearts due to depressed PI3K signaling (dnPI3K), and 3) failing hearts due to dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). In hearts of dnPI3K and DCM mice, several phospholipids (plasmalogens) were decreased and sphingolipids increased compared to mice with physiological hypertrophy. To assess whether restoration of plasmalogens could restore heart size or cardiac function, dnPI3K and DCM mice were administered batyl alcohol (BA; precursor to plasmalogen biosynthesis) in the diet for 16weeks. BA supplementation increased a major plasmalogen species (p18:0) in the heart but had no effect on heart size or function. This may be due to the concurrent reduction in other plasmalogen species (p16:0 and p18:1) with BA. Here we show that lipid species are differentially regulated in settings of physiological and pathological remodeling. Restoration of lipid species in the failing heart warrants further examination.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2012

PI3K(p110α) Is a Master Regulator of Exercise-Induced Cardioprotection and PI3K Gene Therapy Rescues Cardiac Dysfunction

Kate L. Weeks; Xiao-Ming Gao; Xiao-Jun Du; Esther J.H. Boey; Aya Matsumoto; Bianca C. Bernardo; Helen Kiriazis; Nelly Cemerlang; Joon Win Tan; Yow Keat Tham; Thomas F. Franke; Hongwei Qian; Marie A. Bogoyevitch; Elizabeth A. Woodcock; Mark A. Febbraio; Paul Gregorevic; Julie R. McMullen

Background—Numerous molecular and biochemical changes have been linked with the cardioprotective effects of exercise, including increases in antioxidant enzymes, heat shock proteins, and regulators of cardiac myocyte proliferation. However, a master regulator of exercise-induced protection has yet to be identified. Here, we assess whether phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) p110&agr; is essential for mediating exercise-induced cardioprotection, and if so, whether its activation independent of exercise can restore function of the failing heart. Methods and Results—Cardiac-specific transgenic (Tg) mice with elevated or reduced PI3K(p110&agr;) activity (constitutively active PI3K [caPI3K] and dominant negative PI3K, respectively) and non-Tg controls were subjected to 4 weeks of exercise training followed by 1 week of pressure overload (aortic-banding) to induce pathological remodeling. Aortic-banding in untrained non-Tg controls led to pathological cardiac hypertrophy, depressed systolic function, and lung congestion. This phenotype was attenuated in non-Tg controls that had undergone exercise before aortic-banding. Banded caPI3K mice were protected from pathological remodeling independent of exercise status, whereas exercise provided no protection in banded dominant negative PI3K mice, suggesting that PI3K is necessary for exercise-induced cardioprotection. Tg overexpression of heat shock protein 70 could not rescue the phenotype of banded dominant negative PI3K mice, and deletion of heat shock protein 70 from banded caPI3K mice had no effect. Next, we used a gene therapy approach (recombinant adeno-associated viral vector 6) to deliver caPI3K expression cassettes to hearts of mice with established cardiac dysfunction caused by aortic-banding. Mice treated with recombinant adeno-associated viral 6-caPI3K vectors had improved heart function after 10 weeks. Conclusions—PI3K(p110&agr;) is essential for exercise-induced cardioprotection and delivery of caPI3K vector can improve function of the failing heart.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2012

Phosphoinositide 3-Kinase p110α Is a Master Regulator of Exercise-Induced Cardioprotection and PI3K Gene Therapy Rescues Cardiac DysfunctionClinical Perspective

Kate L. Weeks; Xiao-Ming Gao; Xiao-Jun Du; Esther J.H. Boey; Aya Matsumoto; Bianca C. Bernardo; Helen Kiriazis; Nelly Cemerlang; Joon Win Tan; Yow Keat Tham; Thomas F. Franke; Hongwei Qian; Marie A. Bogoyevitch; Elizabeth A. Woodcock; Mark A. Febbraio; Paul Gregorevic; Julie R. McMullen

Background—Numerous molecular and biochemical changes have been linked with the cardioprotective effects of exercise, including increases in antioxidant enzymes, heat shock proteins, and regulators of cardiac myocyte proliferation. However, a master regulator of exercise-induced protection has yet to be identified. Here, we assess whether phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) p110&agr; is essential for mediating exercise-induced cardioprotection, and if so, whether its activation independent of exercise can restore function of the failing heart. Methods and Results—Cardiac-specific transgenic (Tg) mice with elevated or reduced PI3K(p110&agr;) activity (constitutively active PI3K [caPI3K] and dominant negative PI3K, respectively) and non-Tg controls were subjected to 4 weeks of exercise training followed by 1 week of pressure overload (aortic-banding) to induce pathological remodeling. Aortic-banding in untrained non-Tg controls led to pathological cardiac hypertrophy, depressed systolic function, and lung congestion. This phenotype was attenuated in non-Tg controls that had undergone exercise before aortic-banding. Banded caPI3K mice were protected from pathological remodeling independent of exercise status, whereas exercise provided no protection in banded dominant negative PI3K mice, suggesting that PI3K is necessary for exercise-induced cardioprotection. Tg overexpression of heat shock protein 70 could not rescue the phenotype of banded dominant negative PI3K mice, and deletion of heat shock protein 70 from banded caPI3K mice had no effect. Next, we used a gene therapy approach (recombinant adeno-associated viral vector 6) to deliver caPI3K expression cassettes to hearts of mice with established cardiac dysfunction caused by aortic-banding. Mice treated with recombinant adeno-associated viral 6-caPI3K vectors had improved heart function after 10 weeks. Conclusions—PI3K(p110&agr;) is essential for exercise-induced cardioprotection and delivery of caPI3K vector can improve function of the failing heart.


Circulation-heart Failure | 2012

Phosphoinositide 3-kinase p110{alpha} is a master regulator of exercise-induced cardioprotection and PI3K gene therapy rescues cardiac dysfunction

Kate L. Weeks; Xiao-Ming Gao; Xiao-Jun Du; Esther J.H. Boey; Aya Matsumoto; Bianca C. Bernardo; Helen Kiriazis; Nelly Cemerlang; Joon Win Tan; Yow Keat Tham; Thomas F. Franke; Hongwei Qian; Marie A. Bogoyevitch; Elizabeth A. Woodcock; Mark A. Febbraio; Paul Gregorevic; Julie R. McMullen

Background—Numerous molecular and biochemical changes have been linked with the cardioprotective effects of exercise, including increases in antioxidant enzymes, heat shock proteins, and regulators of cardiac myocyte proliferation. However, a master regulator of exercise-induced protection has yet to be identified. Here, we assess whether phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) p110&agr; is essential for mediating exercise-induced cardioprotection, and if so, whether its activation independent of exercise can restore function of the failing heart. Methods and Results—Cardiac-specific transgenic (Tg) mice with elevated or reduced PI3K(p110&agr;) activity (constitutively active PI3K [caPI3K] and dominant negative PI3K, respectively) and non-Tg controls were subjected to 4 weeks of exercise training followed by 1 week of pressure overload (aortic-banding) to induce pathological remodeling. Aortic-banding in untrained non-Tg controls led to pathological cardiac hypertrophy, depressed systolic function, and lung congestion. This phenotype was attenuated in non-Tg controls that had undergone exercise before aortic-banding. Banded caPI3K mice were protected from pathological remodeling independent of exercise status, whereas exercise provided no protection in banded dominant negative PI3K mice, suggesting that PI3K is necessary for exercise-induced cardioprotection. Tg overexpression of heat shock protein 70 could not rescue the phenotype of banded dominant negative PI3K mice, and deletion of heat shock protein 70 from banded caPI3K mice had no effect. Next, we used a gene therapy approach (recombinant adeno-associated viral vector 6) to deliver caPI3K expression cassettes to hearts of mice with established cardiac dysfunction caused by aortic-banding. Mice treated with recombinant adeno-associated viral 6-caPI3K vectors had improved heart function after 10 weeks. Conclusions—PI3K(p110&agr;) is essential for exercise-induced cardioprotection and delivery of caPI3K vector can improve function of the failing heart.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2015

Glutathione depletion and acute exercise increase O-GlcNAc protein modification in rat skeletal muscle

Tina Tinkara Peternelj; Susan A. Marsh; Natalie Strobel; Aya Matsumoto; David Briskey; Vincent J. Dalbo; Patrick S. Tucker; Jeff S. Coombes


Sports Medicine, Arthroscopy, Rehabilitation, Therapy & Technology | 2015

Validity of treadmill- and track-based individual calibration methods for estimating free-living walking speed and VO2 using the Actigraph accelerometer

Anthony Barnett; Ester Cerin; Corneel Vandelanotte; Aya Matsumoto; David G. Jenkins

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Helen Kiriazis

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Julie R. McMullen

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Mark A. Febbraio

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Xiao-Jun Du

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Xiao-Ming Gao

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Yow Keat Tham

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Bianca C. Bernardo

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Nelly Cemerlang

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Esther J.H. Boey

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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