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Dive into the research topics where Daniel Bernstein is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel Bernstein.


Science | 1996

Cardiovascular Regulation in Mice Lacking α2-Adrenergic Receptor Subtypes b and c

Richard E. Link; Kavin Desai; Lutz Hein; Mary E. Stevens; Andrzej Chruscinski; Daniel Bernstein; Gregory S. Barsh; Brian K. Kobilka

α2-Adrenergic receptors (α2ARs) are essential components of the neural circuitry regulating cardiovascular function. The role of specific α2AR subtypes (α2a, α2b, and α2c) was characterized with hemodynamic measurements obtained from strains of genetically engineered mice deficient in either α2b or α2c receptors. Stimulation of α2b receptors in vascular smooth muscle produced hypertension and counteracted the clinically beneficial hypotensive effect of stimulating α2a receptors in the central nervous system. There were no hemodynamic effects produced by disruption of the α2c subtype. These results provide evidence for the clinical efficacy of more subtype-selective α2AR drugs.


Nature | 2014

A long noncoding RNA protects the heart from pathological hypertrophy

Pei Han; Wei Li; Chiou Hong Lin; Jin Yang; Ching Shang; Sylvia T. Nurnberg; Kevin K. Jin; Weihong Xu; Chieh-Yu Lin; Chien Jung Lin; Yiqin Xiong; Huan Chieh Chien; Bin Zhou; Euan A. Ashley; Daniel Bernstein; Peng Sheng Chen; Huei sheng Vincent Chen; Thomas Quertermous; Ching Pin Chang

The role of long noncoding RNA (lncRNA) in adult hearts is unknown; also unclear is how lncRNA modulates nucleosome remodelling. An estimated 70% of mouse genes undergo antisense transcription, including myosin heavy chain 7 (Myh7), which encodes molecular motor proteins for heart contraction. Here we identify a cluster of lncRNA transcripts from Myh7 loci and demonstrate a new lncRNA–chromatin mechanism for heart failure. In mice, these transcripts, which we named myosin heavy-chain-associated RNA transcripts (Myheart, or Mhrt), are cardiac-specific and abundant in adult hearts. Pathological stress activates the Brg1–Hdac–Parp chromatin repressor complex to inhibit Mhrt transcription in the heart. Such stress-induced Mhrt repression is essential for cardiomyopathy to develop: restoring Mhrt to the pre-stress level protects the heart from hypertrophy and failure. Mhrt antagonizes the function of Brg1, a chromatin-remodelling factor that is activated by stress to trigger aberrant gene expression and cardiac myopathy. Mhrt prevents Brg1 from recognizing its genomic DNA targets, thus inhibiting chromatin targeting and gene regulation by Brg1. It does so by binding to the helicase domain of Brg1, a domain that is crucial for tethering Brg1 to chromatinized DNA targets. Brg1 helicase has dual nucleic-acid-binding specificities: it is capable of binding lncRNA (Mhrt) and chromatinized—but not naked—DNA. This dual-binding feature of helicase enables a competitive inhibition mechanism by which Mhrt sequesters Brg1 from its genomic DNA targets to prevent chromatin remodelling. A Mhrt–Brg1 feedback circuit is thus crucial for heart function. Human MHRT also originates from MYH7 loci and is repressed in various types of myopathic hearts, suggesting a conserved lncRNA mechanism in human cardiomyopathy. Our studies identify a cardioprotective lncRNA, define a new targeting mechanism for ATP-dependent chromatin-remodelling factors, and establish a new paradigm for lncRNA–chromatin interaction.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Delayed Onset of Inflammation in Protease-Activated Receptor-2-Deficient Mice

Jonathan R. Lindner; Mark L. Kahn; Shaun R. Coughlin; Gilberto R. Sambrano; Eric Schauble; Daniel Bernstein; Dan Foy; Ali Hafezi-Moghadam; Klaus Ley

Endothelial surface expression of P-selectin and subsequent leukocyte rolling in venules can be induced by mast cell-derived histamine and binding of thrombin to protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR1). We hypothesized that activation of endothelial PAR2 by mast cell tryptase or other proteases also contributes to inflammatory responses. Leukocyte rolling flux and rolling velocity were assessed by intravital microscopy of the cremaster muscles of wild-type mice following perivenular micropipette injections of a control (LSIGRL) or PAR2-activating (SLIGRL) oligopeptide. Injection of SLIGRL increased mean rolling leukocyte flux fraction from 34 ± 11 to 71 ± 24% (p < 0.05) and decreased mean rolling velocity from 63 ± 29 to 32 ± 2 μm/s (p < 0.05). No significant changes occurred with control peptide injection. To further evaluate the role of PAR2 in inflammatory responses, PAR2-deficient mice were generated by gene targeting and homologous recombination. Perivenular injections of SLIGRL resulted in only a small increase in rolling leukocyte flux fraction (from 21 ± 8 to 30 ± 2%) and no change in rolling velocity. Leukocyte rolling after surgical trauma was assessed in 9 PAR2-deficient and 12 wild-type mice. Early (0–15 min) after surgical trauma, the mean leukocyte rolling flux fraction was lower (10 ± 3 vs 30 ± 6%, p < 0.05) and mean rolling velocity was higher (67 ± 46 vs 52 ± 36 μm/s, p < 0.01) in PAR2-deficient compared with control mice. The defect in leukocyte rolling in PAR2-deficient mice did not persist past 30 min following surgical trauma. These results indicate that activation of PAR2 produces microvascular inflammation by rapid induction of P-selectin-mediated leukocyte rolling. In the absence of PAR2, the onset of inflammation is delayed.


Circulation | 2006

Outcome of Listing for Cardiac Transplantation for Failed Fontan A Multi-Institutional Study

Daniel Bernstein; David C. Naftel; Clifford Chin; Linda J. Addonizio; P. Gamberg; Elizabeth D. Blume; Daphne T. Hsu; Charles E. Canter; James K. Kirklin; W.R. Morrow

Background— The Fontan procedure is a successful palliation for children with single-ventricle physiology; however, many will eventually require heart transplantation. The purpose of this study was to determine risk factors for death awaiting transplantation and to examine results after transplantation in Fontan patients. Methods and Results— A retrospective, multi-institutional review was performed of 97 Fontan patients <18 years of age listed at 17 Pediatric Heart Transplant Study centers from 1993 to 2001. Mean age at listing was 9.7 years (0.5 to 17.9 years); 25% were <4 years old; 53% were United Network for Organ Sharing status 1; 18% required ventilator support. Pretransplantation survival was 78% at 6 months and 74% at 12 months and was similar to 243 children with other congenital heart disease (CHD) and 747 children without congenital heart disease (No-CHD), who were also awaiting transplantation. Patients who were younger, status 1, had shorter interval since Fontan, or were on a ventilator were more likely to die while waiting. At 6 months, the probability of receiving a transplant was similar for status 1 and 2 (65% versus 68%); however, the probability of death was higher for status 1 (22% versus 5%). Seventy patients underwent transplantation. Survival was 76% at 1 year, 70% at 3 years, and 68% at 5 years, slightly less than CHD and No-CHD patients. Causes of death included infection (30%), graft failure (17%), rejection (13%), sudden death (13%), and graft coronary artery disease (9%). Protein-losing enteropathy (present in 34 patients) resolved in all who survived >30 days after transplantation. Conclusions— Heart transplantation is an effective therapy for pediatric patients with a failed Fontan. Although early posttransplantation survival is slightly lower than other patients with CHD, long-term results are encouraging, and protein-losing enteropathy can be expected to resolve.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

FK506 activates BMPR2, rescues endothelial dysfunction, and reverses pulmonary hypertension

Edda Spiekerkoetter; Xuefei Tian; Jie Cai; Rachel K. Hopper; Deepti Sudheendra; Caiyun G. Li; Nesrine El-Bizri; Hirofumi Sawada; Roxanna Haghighat; Roshelle Chan; Leila Haghighat; Vinicio de Jesus Perez; Lingli Wang; Sushma Reddy; Mingming Zhao; Daniel Bernstein; David E. Solow-Cordero; Philip A. Beachy; Thomas J. Wandless; Peter ten Dijke; Marlene Rabinovitch

Dysfunctional bone morphogenetic protein receptor-2 (BMPR2) signaling is implicated in the pathogenesis of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). We used a transcriptional high-throughput luciferase reporter assay to screen 3,756 FDA-approved drugs and bioactive compounds for induction of BMPR2 signaling. The best response was achieved with FK506 (tacrolimus), via a dual mechanism of action as a calcineurin inhibitor that also binds FK-binding protein-12 (FKBP12), a repressor of BMP signaling. FK506 released FKBP12 from type I receptors activin receptor-like kinase 1 (ALK1), ALK2, and ALK3 and activated downstream SMAD1/5 and MAPK signaling and ID1 gene regulation in a manner superior to the calcineurin inhibitor cyclosporine and the FKBP12 ligand rapamycin. In pulmonary artery endothelial cells (ECs) from patients with idiopathic PAH, low-dose FK506 reversed dysfunctional BMPR2 signaling. In mice with conditional Bmpr2 deletion in ECs, low-dose FK506 prevented exaggerated chronic hypoxic PAH associated with induction of EC targets of BMP signaling, such as apelin. Low-dose FK506 also reversed severe PAH in rats with medial hypertrophy following monocrotaline and in rats with neointima formation following VEGF receptor blockade and chronic hypoxia. Our studies indicate that low-dose FK506 could be useful in the treatment of PAH.


Nature | 2015

Epicardial FSTL1 reconstitution regenerates the adult mammalian heart

Ke Wei; Vahid Serpooshan; Cecilia Hurtado; Marta Diez-Cuñado; Mingming Zhao; Sonomi Maruyama; Wenhong Zhu; Giovanni Fajardo; Michela Noseda; Kazuto Nakamura; Xueying Tian; Qiaozhen Liu; Andrew H.-J. Wang; Yuka Matsuura; Paul J. Bushway; Wenqing Cai; Alex Savchenko; Morteza Mahmoudi; Michael D. Schneider; Maurice J.B. van den Hoff; Manish J. Butte; Phillip C. Yang; Kenneth Walsh; Bin Zhou; Daniel Bernstein; Mark Mercola; Pilar Ruiz-Lozano

The elucidation of factors that activate the regeneration of the adult mammalian heart is of major scientific and therapeutic importance. Here we found that epicardial cells contain a potent cardiogenic activity identified as follistatin-like 1 (Fstl1). Epicardial Fstl1 declines following myocardial infarction and is replaced by myocardial expression. Myocardial Fstl1 does not promote regeneration, either basally or upon transgenic overexpression. Application of the human Fstl1 protein (FSTL1) via an epicardial patch stimulates cell cycle entry and division of pre-existing cardiomyocytes, improving cardiac function and survival in mouse and swine models of myocardial infarction. The data suggest that the loss of epicardial FSTL1 is a maladaptive response to injury, and that its restoration would be an effective way to reverse myocardial death and remodelling following myocardial infarction in humans.


Nature Medicine | 2016

Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes recapitulate the predilection of breast cancer patients to doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity

Paul W. Burridge; Yong Fuga Li; Elena Matsa; Haodi Wu; Sang Ging Ong; Arun Sharma; Alexandra Holmström; Alex C.Y. Chang; Michael Coronado; Antje D. Ebert; Joshua W. Knowles; Melinda L. Telli; Ronald M. Witteles; Helen M. Blau; Daniel Bernstein; Russ B. Altman; Joseph C. Wu

Doxorubicin is an anthracycline chemotherapy agent effective in treating a wide range of malignancies, but it causes a dose-related cardiotoxicity that can lead to heart failure in a subset of patients. At present, it is not possible to predict which patients will be affected by doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity (DIC). Here we demonstrate that patient-specific human induced pluripotent stem cell–derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs) can recapitulate the predilection to DIC of individual patients at the cellular level. hiPSC-CMs derived from individuals with breast cancer who experienced DIC were consistently more sensitive to doxorubicin toxicity than hiPSC-CMs from patients who did not experience DIC, with decreased cell viability, impaired mitochondrial and metabolic function, impaired calcium handling, decreased antioxidant pathway activity, and increased reactive oxygen species production. Taken together, our data indicate that hiPSC-CMs are a suitable platform to identify and characterize the genetic basis and molecular mechanisms of DIC.


Circulation | 1998

Limb Blood Flow During Exercise Is Dependent on Nitric Oxide

Andrew J. Maxwell; Eric Schauble; Daniel Bernstein; John P. Cooke

BACKGROUND We have recently reported that hypercholesterolemia reduces aerobic exercise capacity in mice and that this is associated with a reduced endothelium-dependent vasodilator function, endothelium-derived nitric oxide (EDNO) production, and urinary nitrate excretion. These findings led us to test the hypothesis that EDNO production contributes significantly to limb blood flow during exercise and to determine whether loss of EDNO production is responsible for the decline in exercise capacity observed in hypercholesterolemia. METHODS AND RESULTS Twelve-week-old wild-type (E+; n=9) and apoE-deficient (E-; n=9) C57BL/6J mice were treadmill-tested to measure indices defining exercise capacity on a metabolic chamber-enclosed treadmill capable of measuring oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide excretion. Urine was collected before and after treadmill exercise for determination of vascular NO production assessed by urinary nitrate excretion. The wild-type mice were then given nitro-L-arginine (E+LNA) in the drinking water (6 mg/dL) for 4 days before undergoing a second treadmill testing and urinary nitrate measurement. An additional set of 12-week-old wild-type mice was divided into 2 groups: 1 receiving regular water (E+; n=8) and 1 administered LNA for 4 days (E+LNA; n=8). These mice, along with an additional set of E mice (n=8), underwent treadmill testing to determine maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max). The mice were then cannulated such that the tip of the tubing was positioned in the ascending aorta. Fluorescent microspheres (20000) were infused into the carotid cannula while the mice were sedentary and again while approaching VO2max. When the mice were euthanized, the running muscles were collected and fluorescence intensity was measured to determine the peak-exercise redistribution of blood flow to the running muscles (expressed as percentage of total cardiac output, %COrm) during both states. Both E+LNA and E- mice demonstrated a markedly reduced postexercise urinary nitrate excretion, aerobic capacity, and %COrm at VO2max compared with E+. CONCLUSIONS EDNO contributes significantly to limb blood flow during exercise. Conditions that reduce EDNO production disturb the hyperemic response to exercise, resulting in a reduced exercise capacity.


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

Circulating Cell-Free DNA Enables Noninvasive Diagnosis of Heart Transplant Rejection

Iwijn De Vlaminck; Hannah A. Valantine; Thomas M. Snyder; Calvin Strehl; Garrett Cohen; Helen Luikart; Norma F. Neff; Jennifer Okamoto; Daniel Bernstein; Dana Weisshaar; Stephen R. Quake; Kiran K. Khush

In a prospective cohort study of heart transplant recipients, sequencing-based quantification of donor-derived DNA in plasma of recipients noninvasively diagnosed transplant rejection. Donor DNA Indicates Transplant Rejection Not all heart transplants succeed, but early detection of organ rejection could spare the patient severe adverse events and graft dysfunction. De Vlaminck et al. devised a noninvasive, sequencing-based method to monitor and predict rejection, relying on the presence of donor DNA in recipient blood plasma. The fraction of donor DNA is naturally elevated 1 day after transplant (because organ transplants are essentially genome transplants), and these levels decline exponentially over the course of the week, if the organ is accepted. The authors noted that patients who rejected their new heart had high levels of donor DNA even months after transplant. In a prospective trial, elevated donor DNA was detected months before the rejection episode, suggesting that such noninvasive analysis tools could be used in lieu of an invasive biopsy, to let doctors know which patients are likely to reject their transplanted organ. Monitoring allograft health is an important component of posttransplant therapy. Endomyocardial biopsy is the current gold standard for cardiac allograft monitoring but is an expensive and invasive procedure. Proof of principle of a universal, noninvasive diagnostic method based on high-throughput screening of circulating cell-free donor-derived DNA (cfdDNA) was recently demonstrated in a small retrospective cohort. We present the results of a prospective cohort study (65 patients, 565 samples) that tested the utility of cfdDNA in measuring acute rejection after heart transplantation. Circulating cell-free DNA was purified from plasma and sequenced (mean depth, 1.2 giga–base pairs) to quantify the fraction of cfdDNA. Through a comparison with endomyocardial biopsy results, we demonstrate that cfdDNA enables diagnosis of acute rejection after heart transplantation, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.83 and sensitivity and specificity that are comparable to the intrinsic performance of the biopsy itself. This noninvasive genome transplant dynamics approach is a powerful and informative method for routine monitoring of allograft health without incurring the risk, discomfort, and expense of an invasive biopsy.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2009

Endogenous regulation of cardiovascular function by apelin-APJ

David Charo; Michael Y Ho; Giovanni Fajardo; Masataka Kawana; Ramendra K. Kundu; Ahmad Y. Sheikh; Thomas P Finsterbach; Nicholas J. Leeper; Kavita V Ernst; Mary M. Chen; Yen-Dong Ho; Hyung J. Chun; Daniel Bernstein; Euan A. Ashley; Thomas Quertermous

Studies have shown significant cardiovascular effects of exogenous apelin administration, including the potent activation of cardiac contraction. However, the role of the endogenous apelin-APJ pathway is less clear. To study the loss of endogenous apelin-APJ signaling, we generated mice lacking either the ligand (apelin) or the receptor (APJ). Apelin-deficient mice were viable, fertile, and showed normal development. In contrast, APJ-deficient mice were not born in the expected Mendelian ratio, and many showed cardiovascular developmental defects. Under basal conditions, both apelin and APJ null mice that survived to adulthood manifested modest decrements in contractile function. However, with exercise stress both mutant lines demonstrated consistent and striking decreases in exercise capacity. To explain these findings, we explored the role of autocrine signaling in vitro using field stimulation of isolated left ventricular cardiomyocytes lacking either apelin or APJ. Both groups manifested less sarcomeric shortening and impaired velocity of contraction and relaxation with no difference in calcium transient. Taken together, these results demonstrate that endogenous apelin-APJ signaling plays a modest role in maintaining basal cardiac function in adult mice with a more substantive role during conditions of stress. In addition, an autocrine pathway seems to exist in myocardial cells, the ablation of which reduces cellular contraction without change in calcium transient. Finally, differences in the developmental phenotype between apelin and APJ null mice suggest the possibility of undiscovered APJ ligands or ligand-independent effects of APJ.

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James K. Kirklin

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Charles E. Canter

Washington University in St. Louis

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