Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brian O. Bingen is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brian O. Bingen.


Cardiovascular Research | 2014

Light-induced termination of spiral wave arrhythmias by optogenetic engineering of atrial cardiomyocytes

Brian O. Bingen; Marc C. Engels; Martin J. Schalij; Wanchana Jangsangthong; Zeinab Neshati; Iolanda Feola; Dirk L. Ypey; Saïd F.A. Askar; Alexander V. Panfilov; Daniël A. Pijnappels; Antoine A.F. de Vries

AIMS Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac arrhythmia and often involves reentrant electrical activation (e.g. spiral waves). Drug therapy for AF can have serious side effects including proarrhythmia, while electrical shock therapy is associated with discomfort and tissue damage. Hypothetically, forced expression and subsequent activation of light-gated cation channels in cardiomyocytes might deliver a depolarizing force sufficient for defibrillation, thereby circumventing the aforementioned drawbacks. We therefore investigated the feasibility of light-induced spiral wave termination through cardiac optogenetics. METHODS AND RESULTS Neonatal rat atrial cardiomyocyte monolayers were transduced with lentiviral vectors encoding light-activated Ca(2+)-translocating channelrhodopsin (CatCh; LV.CatCh∼eYFP↑) or eYFP (LV.eYFP↑) as control, and burst-paced to induce spiral waves rotating around functional cores. Effects of CatCh activation on reentry were investigated by optical and multi-electrode array (MEA) mapping. Western blot analyses and immunocytology confirmed transgene expression. Brief blue light pulses (10 ms/470 nm) triggered action potentials only in LV.CatCh∼eYFP↑-transduced cultures, confirming functional CatCh-mediated current. Prolonged light pulses (500 ms) resulted in reentry termination in 100% of LV.CatCh∼eYFP↑-transduced cultures (n = 31) vs. 0% of LV.eYFP↑-transduced cultures (n = 11). Here, CatCh activation caused uniform depolarization, thereby decreasing overall excitability (MEA peak-to-peak amplitude decreased 251.3 ± 217.1 vs. 9.2 ± 9.5 μV in controls). Consequently, functional coresize increased and phase singularities (PSs) drifted, leading to reentry termination by PS-PS or PS-boundary collisions. CONCLUSION This study shows that spiral waves in atrial cardiomyocyte monolayers can be terminated effectively by a light-induced depolarizing current, produced by the arrhythmogenic substrate itself, upon optogenetic engineering. These results provide proof-of-concept for shockless defibrillation.


Cardiovascular Research | 2012

Connexin43 silencing in myofibroblasts prevents arrhythmias in myocardial cultures: Role of maximal diastolic potential

Saı̈d F.A. Askar; Brian O. Bingen; Jim Swildens; Dirk L. Ypey; Arnoud van der Laarse; Douwe E. Atsma; Katja Zeppenfeld; Martin J. Schalij; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Daniël A. Pijnappels

AIMS Arrhythmogenesis in cardiac fibrosis remains incompletely understood. Therefore, this study aims to investigate how heterocellular coupling between cardiomyocytes (CMCs) and myofibroblasts (MFBs) affects arrhythmogeneity of fibrotic myocardial cultures. Potentially, this may lead to the identification of novel anti-arrhythmic strategies. METHODS AND RESULTS Co-cultures of neonatal rat CMCs and MFBs in a 1:1 ratio were used as a model of cardiac fibrosis, with purified CMC cultures as control. Arrhythmogeneity was studied at day 9 of culture by voltage-sensitive dye mapping. Heterocellular coupling was reduced by transducing MFBs with lentiviral vectors encoding shRNA targeting connexin43 (Cx43) or luciferase (pLuc) as control. In fibrotic cultures, conduction velocity (CV) was lowered (11.2 ± 1.6 cm/s vs. 23.9 ± 2.1 cm/s; P < 0.0001), while action potential duration and ectopic activity were increased. Maximal diastolic membrane potential (MDP) of CMCs was less negative in fibrotic cultures. In fibrotic cultures, (n = 30) 30.0% showed spontaneous re-entrant tachyarrhythmias compared with 5% in controls (n = 60). Cx43 silencing in MFBs made the MDP in CMCs more negative, increased excitability and CV by 51% (P < 0.001), and reduced action potential duration and ectopic activity (P < 0.01), thereby reducing re-entry incidence by 40% compared with pLuc-silenced controls. Anti-arrhythmic effects of Cx43 down-regulation in MFBs was reversed by depolarization of CMCs through I(k1) inhibition or increasing extracellular [K(+)]. CONCLUSION Arrhythmogeneity of fibrotic myocardial cultures is mediated by Cx43 expression in MFBs. Reduced expression of Cx43 causes a more negative MDP of CMCs. This preserves CMC excitability, limits prolongation of repolarization and thereby strongly reduces the incidence of spontaneous re-entrant tachyarrhythmias.


Cardiovascular Research | 2011

Antiproliferative treatment of myofibroblasts prevents arrhythmias in vitro by limiting myofibroblast-induced depolarization

Saı̈d F.A. Askar; Arti A. Ramkisoensing; Martin J. Schalij; Brian O. Bingen; Jim Swildens; Arnoud van der Laarse; Douwe E. Atsma; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Dirk L. Ypey; Daniël A. Pijnappels

AIMS Cardiac fibrosis is associated with increased incidence of cardiac arrhythmias, but the underlying proarrhythmic mechanisms remain incompletely understood and antiarrhythmic therapies are still suboptimal. This study tests the hypothesis that myofibroblast (MFB) proliferation leads to tachyarrhythmias by altering the excitability of cardiomyocytes (CMCs) and that inhibition of MFB proliferation would thus lower the incidence of such arrhythmias. METHODS AND RESULTS Endogenous MFBs in neonatal rat CMC cultures proliferated freely or under control of different dosages of antiproliferative agents (mitomycin-C and paclitaxel). At Days 4 and 9, arrhythmogeneity of these cultures was studied by optical and multi-electrode mapping. Cultures were also studied for protein expression and electrophysiological properties. MFB proliferation slowed conduction from 15.3 ± 3.5 cm/s (Day 4) to 8.8 ± 0.3 cm/s (Day 9) (n = 75, P < 0.01), whereas MFB numbers increased to 37.4 ± 1.7 and 62.0 ± 2%. At Day 9, 81.3% of these cultures showed sustained spontaneous reentrant arrhythmias. However, only 2.6% of mitomycin-C-treated cultures (n = 76, P < 0.0001) showed tachyarrhythmias, and ectopic activity was decreased. Arrhythmia incidence was drug-dose dependent and strongly related to MFB proliferation. Paclitaxel treatment yielded similar results. CMCs were functionally coupled to MFBs and more depolarized in cultures with ongoing MFB proliferation in which only L-type Ca(2+)-channel blockade terminated 100% of reentrant arrhythmias, in contrast to Na(+) blockade (36%, n = 12). CONCLUSION Proliferation of MFBs in myocardial cultures gives rise to spontaneous, sustained reentrant tachyarrhythmias. Antiproliferative treatment of such cultures prevents the occurrence of arrhythmias by limiting MFB-induced depolarization, conduction slowing, and ectopic activity. This study could provide a rationale for a new treatment option for cardiac arrhythmias.


Circulation | 2013

Atrium-Specific Kir3.x Determines Inducibility, Dynamics and Termination of Fibrillation by Regulating Restitution-Driven Alternans

Brian O. Bingen; Zeinab Neshati; Saïd F.A. Askar; Ivan V. Kazbanov; Dirk L. Ypey; Alexander V. Panfilov; Martin J. Schalij; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Daniël A. Pijnappels

Background— Atrial fibrillation is the most common cardiac arrhythmia. Ventricular proarrhythmia hinders pharmacological atrial fibrillation treatment. Modulation of atrium-specific Kir3.x channels, which generate a constitutively active current (IK,ACh-c) after atrial remodeling, might circumvent this problem. However, it is unknown whether and how IK,ACh-c contributes to atrial fibrillation induction, dynamics, and termination. Therefore, we investigated the effects of IK,ACh-c blockade and Kir3.x downregulation on atrial fibrillation. Methods and Results— Neonatal rat atrial cardiomyocyte cultures and intact atria were burst paced to induce reentry. To study the effects of Kir3.x on action potential characteristics and propagation patterns, cultures were treated with tertiapin or transduced with lentiviral vectors encoding Kcnj3- or Kcnj5-specific shRNAs. Kir3.1 and Kir3.4 were expressed in atrial but not in ventricular cardiomyocyte cultures. Tertiapin prolonged action potential duration (APD; 54.7±24.0 to 128.8±16.9 milliseconds; P<0.0001) in atrial cultures during reentry, indicating the presence of IK,ACh-c. Furthermore, tertiapin decreased rotor frequency (14.4±7.4 to 6.6±2.0 Hz; P<0.05) and complexity (6.6±7.7 to 0.6±0.8 phase singularities; P<0.0001). Knockdown of Kcnj3 or Kcnj5 gave similar results. Blockade of IK,ACh-c prevented/terminated reentry by prolonging APD and changing APD and conduction velocity restitution slopes, thereby altering the probability of APD alternans and rotor destabilization. Whole-heart mapping experiments confirmed key findings (eg, >50% reduction in atrial fibrillation inducibility after IK,ACh-c blockade). Conclusions— Atrium-specific Kir3.x controls the induction, dynamics, and termination of fibrillation by modulating APD and APD/conduction velocity restitution slopes in atrial tissue with IK,ACh-c. This study provides new molecular and mechanistic insights into atrial tachyarrhythmias and identifies Kir3.x as a promising atrium-specific target for antiarrhythmic strategies.


Cardiovascular Research | 2013

Prolongation of minimal action potential duration in sustained fibrillation decreases complexity by transient destabilization

Brian O. Bingen; Saı̈d F.A. Askar; Martin J. Schalij; Ivan V. Kazbanov; Dirk L. Ypey; Alexander V. Panfilov; Daniël A. Pijnappels

AIMS Sustained ventricular fibrillation (VF) is maintained by multiple stable rotors. Destabilization of sustained VF could be beneficial by affecting VF complexity (defined by the number of rotors). However, underlying mechanisms affecting VF stability are poorly understood. Therefore, the aim of this study was to correlate changes in arrhythmia complexity with changes in specific electrophysiological parameters, allowing a search for novel factors and underlying mechanisms affecting stability of sustained VF. METHODS AND RESULTS Neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocyte monolayers and Langendorff-perfused adult rat hearts were exposed to increasing dosages of the gap junctional uncoupler 2-aminoethoxydiphenyl borate (2-APB) to induce arrhythmias. Ion channel blockers/openers were added to study effects on VF stability. Electrophysiological parameters were assessed by optical mapping and patch-clamp techniques. Arrhythmia complexity in cardiomyocyte cultures increased with increasing dosages of 2-APB (n > 38), leading to sustained VF: 0.0 ± 0.1 phase singularities/cm(2) in controls vs. 0.0 ± 0.1, 1.0 ± 0.9, 3.3 ± 3.2, 11.0 ± 10.1, and 54.3 ± 21.7 in 5, 10, 15, 20, and 25 µmol/L 2-APB, respectively. Arrhythmia complexity inversely correlated with wavelength. Lengthening of wavelength during fibrillation could only be induced by agents (BaCl(2)/BayK8644) increasing the action potential duration (APD) at maximal activation frequencies (minimal APD); 123 ± 32%/117 ± 24% of control. Minimal APD prolongation led to transient VF destabilization, shown by critical wavefront collision leading to rotor termination, followed by significant decreases in VF complexity and activation frequency (52%/37%). These key findings were reproduced ex vivo in rat hearts (n = 6 per group). CONCLUSION These results show that stability of sustained fibrillation is regulated by minimal APD. Minimal APD prolongation leads to transient destabilization of fibrillation, ultimately decreasing VF complexity, thereby providing novel insights into anti-fibrillatory mechanisms.


Cardiovascular Research | 2013

Similar arrhythmicity in hypertrophic and fibrotic cardiac cultures caused by distinct substrate-specific mechanisms

Saïd F.A. Askar; Brian O. Bingen; Martin J. Schalij; Jim Swildens; Douwe E. Atsma; Cindy I. Schutte; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Katja Zeppenfeld; Dirk L. Ypey; Daniël A. Pijnappels

AIMS Cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis are associated with potentially lethal arrhythmias. As these substrates often occur simultaneously in one patient, distinguishing between pro-arrhythmic mechanisms is difficult. This hampers understanding of underlying pro-arrhythmic mechanisms and optimal treatment. This study investigates and compares arrhythmogeneity and underlying pro-arrhythmic mechanisms of either cardiac hypertrophy or fibrosis in in vitro models. METHODS AND RESULTS Fibrosis was mimicked by free myofibroblast (MFB) proliferation in neonatal rat ventricular monolayers. Cultures with inhibited MFB proliferation were used as control or exposed to phenylephrine to induce hypertrophy. At Day 9, cultures were studied with patch-clamp and optical-mapping techniques and assessed for protein expression. In hypertrophic (n = 111) and fibrotic cultures (n = 107), conduction and repolarization were slowed. Triggered activity was commonly found in these substrates and led to high incidences of spontaneous re-entrant arrhythmias [67.5% hypertrophic, 78.5% fibrotic vs. 2.9% in controls (n = 102)] or focal arrhythmias (39.1, 51.7 vs. 8.8%, respectively). Kv4.3 and Cx43 protein expression levels were decreased in hypertrophy but unaffected in fibrosis. Depolarization of cardiomyocytes (CMCs) was only found in fibrotic cultures (-48 ± 7 vs. -66 ± 7 mV in control, P < 0.001). L-type calcium-channel blockade prevented arrhythmias in hypertrophy, but caused conduction block in fibrosis. Targeting heterocellular coupling by low doses of gap-junction uncouplers prevented arrhythmias by accelerating repolarization only in fibrotic cultures. CONCLUSION Cultured hypertrophic or fibrotic myocardial tissues generated similar focal and re-entrant arrhythmias. These models revealed electrical remodelling of CMCs as a pro-arrhythmic mechanism of hypertrophy and MFB-induced depolarization of CMCs as a pro-arrhythmic mechanism of fibrosis. These findings provide novel mechanistic insight into substrate-specific arrhythmicity.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Constitutively Active Acetylcholine-Dependent Potassium Current Increases Atrial Defibrillation Threshold by Favoring Post-Shock Re-Initiation

Brian O. Bingen; Saïd F.A. Askar; Zeinab Neshati; Iolanda Feola; Alexander V. Panfilov; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Daniël A. Pijnappels

Electrical cardioversion (ECV), a mainstay in atrial fibrillation (AF) treatment, is unsuccessful in up to 10–20% of patients. An important aspect of the remodeling process caused by AF is the constitutive activition of the atrium-specific acetylcholine-dependent potassium current (IK,ACh → IK,ACh-c), which is associated with ECV failure. This study investigated the role of IK,ACh-c in ECV failure and setting the atrial defibrillation threshold (aDFT) in optically mapped neonatal rat cardiomyocyte monolayers. AF was induced by burst pacing followed by application of biphasic shocks of 25–100 V to determine aDFT. Blocking IK,ACh-c by tertiapin significantly decreased DFT, which correlated with a significant increase in wavelength during reentry. Genetic knockdown experiments, using lentiviral vectors encoding a Kcnj5-specific shRNA to modulate IK,ACh-c, yielded similar results. Mechanistically, failed ECV was attributed to incomplete phase singularity (PS) removal or reemergence of PSs (i.e. re-initiation) through unidirectional propagation of shock-induced action potentials. Re-initiation occurred at significantly higher voltages than incomplete PS-removal and was inhibited by IK,ACh-c blockade. Whole-heart mapping confirmed our findings showing a 60% increase in ECV success rate after IK,ACh-c blockade. This study provides new mechanistic insight into failing ECV of AF and identifies IK,ACh-c as possible atrium-specific target to increase ECV effectiveness, while decreasing its harmfulness.


Cardiovascular Research | 2015

Forced fusion of human ventricular scar cells with cardiomyocytes suppresses arrhythmogenicity in a co-culture model

Marc C. Engels; Saïd F.A. Askar; Wanchana Jangsangthong; Brian O. Bingen; Iolanda Feola; Jia Liu; Rupamanjari Majumder; Michel I.M. Versteegh; Jerry Braun; Robert J.M. Klautz; Dirk L. Ypey; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Daniël A. Pijnappels

AIMS Fibrosis increases arrhythmogenicity in myocardial tissue by causing structural and functional disruptions in the cardiac syncytium. Forced fusion of fibroblastic cells with adjacent cardiomyocytes may theoretically resolve these disruptions. Therefore, the electrophysiological effects of such electrical and structural integration of fibroblastic cells into a cardiac syncytium were studied. METHODS AND RESULTS Human ventricular scar cells (hVSCs) were transduced with lentiviral vectors encoding enhanced green fluorescent protein alone (eGFP↑-hVSCs) or together with the fusogenic vesicular stomatitis virus G protein (VSV-G/eGFP↑-hVSCs) and subsequently co-cultured (1:4 ratio) with neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes (NRVMs) in confluent monolayers yielding eGFP↑- and VSV-G/eGFP↑-co-cultures, respectively. Cellular fusion was induced by brief exposure to pH = 6.0 medium. Optical mapping experiments showed eGFP↑-co-cultures to be highly arrhythmogenic [43.3% early afterdepolarization (EAD) incidence vs. 7.7% in control NRVM cultures, P < 0.0001], with heterogeneous prolongation of action potential (AP) duration (APD). Fused VSV-G/eGFP↑-co-cultures displayed markedly lower EAD incidence (4.6%, P < 0.001) than unfused co-cultures, associated with decreases in APD, APD dispersion, and decay time of cytosolic Ca(2+) waves. Heterokaryons strongly expressed connexin43 (Cx43). Also, maximum diastolic potential in co-cultures was more negative after fusion, while heterokaryons exhibited diverse mixed NRVM/hVSC whole-cell current profiles, but consistently showed increased outward Kv currents compared with NRVMs or hVSCs. Inhibition of Kv channels by tetraethylammonium chloride abrogated the anti-arrhythmic effects of fusion in VSV-G/eGFP↑-co-cultures raising EAD incidence from 7.9 to 34.2% (P < 0.001). CONCLUSION Forced fusion of cultured hVSCs with NRVMs yields electrically functional heterokaryons and reduces arrhythmogenicity by preventing EADs, which is, at least partly, attributable to increased repolarization force.


Cardiovascular Research | 2013

Response to the letter by Wolkowicz et al.

Brian O. Bingen; Saïd F.A. Askar; Martin J. Schalij; Antoine A.F. de Vries; Daniël A. Pijnappels

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Prolongation of minimal action potential duration in sustained fibrillation decreases complexity by transient destabilization


Cardiovascular Research | 2014

288Termination of reentrant tachyarrhythmias by light: from electroshock towards shockless cardioversion by cardiac optogenetics

Brian O. Bingen; Marc C. Engels; Zeinab Neshati; Iolanda Feola; Dirk L. Ypey; Alexander V. Panfilov; Sfa Askar; M. J. Schalij; Daniël A. Pijnappels; Aaf De Vries

Collaboration


Dive into the Brian O. Bingen's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniël A. Pijnappels

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dirk L. Ypey

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antoine A.F. de Vries

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Martin J. Schalij

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Saïd F.A. Askar

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Iolanda Feola

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Zeinab Neshati

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daniël A. Pijnappels

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Douwe E. Atsma

Leiden University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge