Christina Rowlands
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Christina Rowlands.
Cardiovascular Research | 2013
Markus B. Sikkel; Thomas P. Collins; Christina Rowlands; Mit Shah; Peter O'Gara; Alan J. Williams; Sian E. Harding; Alexander R. Lyon; Kenneth T. MacLeod
Aims Ca2+ waves are thought to be important in the aetiology of ventricular tachyarrhythmias. There have been conflicting results regarding whether flecainide reduces Ca2+ waves in isolated cardiomyocytes. We sought to confirm whether flecainide inhibits waves in the intact cardiomyocyte and to elucidate the mechanism. Methods and results We imaged spontaneous sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release events in healthy adult rat cardiomyocytes. Variation in stimulation frequency was used to produce Ca2+ sparks or waves. Spark frequency, wave frequency, and wave velocity were reduced by flecainide in the absence of a reduction of SR Ca2+ content. Inhibition of INa via alternative pharmacological agents (tetrodotoxin, propafenone, or lidocaine) produced similar changes. To assess the contribution of INa to spark and wave production, voltage clamping was used to activate contraction from holding potentials of −80 or −40 mV. This confirmed that reducing Na+ influx during myocyte stimulation is sufficient to reduce waves and that flecainide only causes Ca2+ wave reduction when INa is active. It was found that Na+/Ca2+-exchanger (NCX)-mediated Ca2+ efflux was significantly enhanced by flecainide and that the effects of flecainide on wave frequency could be reversed by reducing [Na+]o, suggesting an important downstream role for NCX function. Conclusion Flecainide reduces spark and wave frequency in the intact rat cardiomyocyte at therapeutically relevant concentrations but the mechanism involves INa reduction rather than direct ryanodine receptor (RyR2) inhibition. Reduced INa results in increased Ca2+ efflux via NCX across the sarcolemma, reducing Ca2+ concentration in the vicinity of the RyR2.
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2013
Weihua Song; Petr G. Vikhorev; Mavin N Kashyap; Christina Rowlands; Michael A. Ferenczi; R. C. Woledge; Kenneth T. MacLeod; Steven B. Marston; Nancy A. Curtin
We compared the contractile performance of papillary muscle from a mouse model of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy [α-cardiac actin (ACTC) E99K mutation] with nontransgenic (non-TG) littermates. In isometric twitches, ACTC E99K papillary muscle produced three to four times greater force than non-TG muscle under the same conditions independent of stimulation frequency and temperature, whereas maximum isometric force in myofibrils from these muscles was not significantly different. ACTC E99K muscle relaxed slower than non-TG muscle in both papillary muscle (1.4×) and myofibrils (1.7×), whereas the rate of force development after stimulation was the same as non-TG muscle for both electrical stimulation in intact muscle and after a Ca²⁺ jump in myofibrils. The EC₅₀ for Ca²⁺ activation of force in myofibrils was 0.39 ± 0.33 μmol/l in ACTC E99K myofibrils and 0.80 ± 0.11 μmol/l in non-TG myofibrils. There were no significant differences in the amplitude and time course of the Ca²⁺ transient in myocytes from ACTC E99K and non-TG mice. We conclude that hypercontractility is caused by higher myofibrillar Ca²⁺ sensitivity in ACTC E99K muscles. Measurement of the energy (work + heat) released in actively cycling heart muscle showed that for both genotypes, the amount of energy turnover increased with work done but with decreasing efficiency as energy turnover increased. Thus, ACTC E99K mouse heart muscle produced on average 3.3-fold more work than non-TG muscle, and the cost in terms of energy turnover was disproportionately higher than in non-TG muscles. Efficiency for ACTC E99K muscle was in the range of 11-16% and for non-TG muscle was 15-18%.
Journal of Biophotonics | 2016
Markus B. Sikkel; Sunil Kumar; Vincent Maioli; Christina Rowlands; Fabiana Gordon; Sian E. Harding; Alexander R. Lyon; Kenneth T. MacLeod; Christopher Dunsby
Oblique plane microscopy (OPM) is a form of light sheet microscopy that uses a single high numerical aperture microscope objective for both fluorescence excitation and collection. In this paper, measurements of the relative collection efficiency of OPM are presented. An OPM system incorporating two sCMOS cameras is then introduced that enables single isolated cardiac myocytes to be studied continuously for 22 seconds in two dimensions at 667 frames per second with 960 × 200 pixels and for 30 seconds with 960 × 200 × 20 voxels at 25 volumes per second. In both cases OPM is able to record in two spectral channels, enabling intracellular calcium to be studied via the probe Fluo‐4 AM simultaneously with the sarcolemma and transverse tubule network via the membrane dye Cellmask Orange. The OPM system was then applied to determine the spatial origin of spontaneous calcium waves for the first time and to measure the cell transverse tubule structure at their point of origin. Further results are presented to demonstrate that the OPM system can also be used to study calcium spark parameters depending on their relationship to the transverse tubule structure. figureWiley-VCH Verlag & Co.KGaA
Cardiovascular Research | 2017
Markus B. Sikkel; Darrel P. Francis; James Howard; Fabiana Gordon; Christina Rowlands; Nicholas S. Peters; Alexander R. Lyon; Sian E. Harding; Kenneth T. MacLeod
Abstract Aims It is generally accepted that post-MI heart failure (HF) changes a variety of aspects of sarcoplasmic reticular Ca2+ fluxes but for some aspects there is disagreement over whether there is an increase or decrease. The commonest statistical approach is to treat data collected from each cell as independent, even though they are really clustered with multiple likely similar cells from each heart. In this study, we test whether this statistical assumption of independence can lead the investigator to draw conclusions that would be considered erroneous if the analysis handled clustering with specific statistical techniques (hierarchical tests). Methods and results Ca2+ transients were recorded in cells loaded with Fura-2AM and sparks were recorded in cells loaded with Fluo-4AM. Data were analysed twice, once with the common statistical approach (assumption of independence) and once with hierarchical statistical methodologies designed to allow for any clustering. The statistical tests found that there was significant hierarchical clustering. This caused the common statistical approach to underestimate the standard error and report artificially small P values. For example, this would have led to the erroneous conclusion that time to 50% peak transient amplitude was significantly prolonged in HF. Spark analysis showed clustering, both within each cell and also within each rat, for morphological variables. This means that a three-level hierarchical model is sometimes required for such measures. Standard statistical methodologies, if used instead, erroneously suggest that spark amplitude is significantly greater in HF and spark duration is reduced in HF. Conclusion Ca2+ fluxes in isolated cardiomyocytes show so much clustering that the common statistical approach that assumes independence of each data point will frequently give the false appearance of statistically significant changes. Hierarchical statistical methodologies need a little more effort, but are necessary for reliable conclusions. We present cost-free simple tools for performing these analyses.
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2017
Christina Rowlands; Thomas Owen; Saheed Lawal; Shuangyi Cao; Samata S. Pandey; Hsiang-Yu Yang; Weihua Song; Ross Wilkinson; Anita Alvarez-Laviada; Katja Gehmlich; Steven B. Marston; Kenneth T. MacLeod
Patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, particularly young adults, can die from arrhythmia, but the mechanism underlying abnormal rhythm formation remains unknown. C57Bl6 × CBA/Ca mice carrying a cardiac actin ( ACTC) E99K (Glu99Lys) mutation reproduce many aspects of human hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, including increased myofilament Ca2+ sensitivity and sudden death in a proportion (up to 40%) of young (28-40 day old) animals. We studied the hearts of transgenic (TG; ACTC E99K) mice and their non-TG (NTG) littermates when they were in their vulnerable period (28-40 days old) and when they were adult (8-12 wk old). Ventricular myocytes were isolated from the hearts of TG and NTG mice at these two time points. We also examined the hearts of mice that died suddenly (SCD). SCD animals had approximately four times more collagen compared with age-matched NTG mice, yet myocyte cell size was normal. Young TG mice had double the collagen content of NTG mice. Contraction and Ca2+ transients were greater in cells from young TG mice compared with their NTG littermates but not in cells from adult mice (TG or NTG). Cells from young TG mice had a greater propensity for Ca2+ waves than NTG littermates, and, despite similar sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ content, a proportion of these cells had larger Ca2+ spark mass. We found that the probability of SCD in young TG mice was increased when the mutation was expressed in animals with a CBA/Ca2+ background and almost eliminated in mice bred on a C57Bl6 background. The latter TG mice had normal cellular Ca2+ homeostasis. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Mice with the actin Glu99Lys hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutation ( ACTC E99K) are prone to sudden cardiac death around 40 days, associated with increased Ca2+ transients, spark mass, and fibrosis. However, adult survivors have normal Ca2+ transients and spark density accompanied by hypertrophy. Penetrance of the sudden cardiac death phenotype depends on the genetic background of the mouse. Listen to this articles corresponding podcast at http://ajpheart.podbean.com/e/calcium-regulation-in-e99k-mouse-heart/ .
Journal of Biophotonics | 2017
Markus B. Sikkel; Sunil Kumar; Vincent Maioli; Christina Rowlands; Fabiana Gordon; Sian E. Harding; Alexander R. Lyon; Kenneth T. MacLeod; Christopher Dunsby
In the article by M.B. Sikkel et al. (doi: 10.1002/jbio.201500193), published in J. Biophotonics 9, 311-323 (2016), an error occurred in the computer code that was used to generate Figure 3. This erratum is published to correct Figure 3, the calculated value of tgeom and the experimentally determined value of toptics in the text of the article.
Heart | 2013
Markus B. Sikkel; Christina Rowlands; Sian E. Harding; Alexander R. Lyon; Kenneth T. MacLeod
Aim Ca2+ waves are thought to be important in the aetiology of ventricular tachyarrhythmias. There is some evidence that INa blocking agents can reduce spontaneous sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ release via effects on the RyR. We tested the hypothesis that direct modulation of INa may also be important in altering SR Ca2+ release. Methods and Results Imaging of spontaneous SR Ca2+ release events in healthy adult rat cardiomyocytes was performed. Variation in frequency of stimulation was used to produce Ca2+ sparks or waves. When SR Ca2+ content was held constant, spark frequency, wave frequency and wave velocity were reduced by a variety of INa blockers (including flecainide, lidocaine, propafenone and TTX). To assess the contribution of INa to spark and wave production voltage clamping was used to activate contraction from holding potentials of -80mV or -40mV. This confirmed that reducing Na+ influx during myocyte stimulation is sufficient to reduce waves and that such agents only cause Ca2+ wave reduction when INa is active. It was found that Na+/Ca2+-exchanger (NCX)-mediated Ca2+ efflux was significantly enhanced by INa blockade and that the effects of INa blockade on wave frequency could be reversed by reducing [Na+]o, suggesting an important downstream role for NCX function in the changes in SR Ca2+ release. Veratridine, an INa activator, increased wave frequency and the effects were abrogated by increasing [Na]o during the wave-detection period. Conclusions Our results show, for the first time, that reducing Na+ influx reduces spontaneous SR Ca2+ release. We have also shown that alterations in [Na+]i modulate wave frequency through alterations in NCX function. A reduction in INa, for example, can increase the [Na+]o:[Na+]i gradient, hence causing more effective Ca2+ efflux at resting membrane potentials. This not only suggests a clear mechanism for the reduction in waves seen with INa blockers, but also emphasises the detrimental effects of high [Na]i seen in disease states such as heart failure. It also allows us to understand an alternative way in which INa blockers exert their antiarrhythmic actions.
Cardiovascular Research | 2013
Markus B. Sikkel; Thomas P. Collins; Christina Rowlands; Mit Shah; Peter O'Gara; Alan J. Williams; Sian E. Harding; Alexander R. Lyon; Kenneth T. MacLeod
Biophysical Journal | 2014
Hung-Yen Ke; Thomas P. Collins; Anita Alvarez-Laviada; Christina Rowlands; Kenneth T. MacLeod
Biophysical Journal | 2014
Christina Rowlands; S. B. Marston; Kenneth T. MacLeod