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Dive into the research topics where Danielle M. Trappanese is active.

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Featured researches published by Danielle M. Trappanese.


Circulation Research | 2014

Transient Receptor Potential Channels Contribute to Pathological Structural and Functional Remodeling After Myocardial Infarction

Catherine A. Makarewich; Hongyu Zhang; Jennifer Davis; Robert N. Correll; Danielle M. Trappanese; Nicholas E. Hoffman; Constantine D. Troupes; Remus Berretta; Hajime Kubo; Muniswamy Madesh; Xiongwen Chen; Erhe Gao; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Steven R. Houser

Rationale: The cellular and molecular basis for post–myocardial infarction (MI) structural and functional remodeling is not well understood. Objective: Our aim was to determine if Ca2+ influx through transient receptor potential canonical (TRPC) channels contributes to post-MI structural and functional remodeling. Methods and Results: TRPC1/3/4/6 channel mRNA increased after MI in mice and was associated with TRPC-mediated Ca2+ entry. Cardiac myocyte–specific expression of a dominant-negative (loss-of-function) TRPC4 channel increased basal myocyte contractility and reduced hypertrophy and cardiac structural and functional remodeling after MI while increasing survival in mice. We used adenovirus-mediated expression of TRPC3/4/6 channels in cultured adult feline myocytes to define mechanistic aspects of these TRPC-related effects. TRPC3/4/6 overexpression in adult feline myocytes induced calcineurin (Cn)-nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT)–mediated hypertrophic signaling, which was reliant on caveolae targeting of TRPCs. TRPC3/4/6 expression in adult feline myocytes increased rested state contractions and increased spontaneous sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ sparks mediated by enhanced phosphorylation of the ryanodine receptor. TRPC3/4/6 expression was associated with reduced contractility and response to catecholamines during steady-state pacing, likely because of enhanced sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ leak. Conclusions: Ca2+ influx through TRPC channels expressed after MI activates pathological cardiac hypertrophy and reduces contractility reserve. Blocking post-MI TRPC activity improved post-MI cardiac structure and function.


Circulation Research | 2014

Sorafenib Cardiotoxicity Increases Mortality After Myocardial Infarction

Jason M. Duran; Catherine A. Makarewich; Danielle M. Trappanese; Polina Gross; Sharmeen Husain; Jonathan Dunn; Hind Lal; Thomas E Sharp; Timothy Starosta; Ronald J. Vagnozzi; Remus Berretta; Mary F. Barbe; Daohai Yu; Erhe Gao; Hajime Kubo; Thomas Force; Steven R. Houser

Rationale: Sorafenib is an effective treatment for renal cell carcinoma, but recent clinical reports have documented its cardiotoxicity through an unknown mechanism. Objective: Determining the mechanism of sorafenib-mediated cardiotoxicity. Methods and Results: Mice treated with sorafenib or vehicle for 3 weeks underwent induced myocardial infarction (MI) after 1 week of treatment. Sorafenib markedly decreased 2-week survival relative to vehicle-treated controls, but echocardiography at 1 and 2 weeks post MI detected no differences in cardiac function. Sorafenib-treated hearts had significantly smaller diastolic and systolic volumes and reduced heart weights. High doses of sorafenib induced necrotic death of isolated myocytes in vitro, but lower doses did not induce myocyte death or affect inotropy. Histological analysis documented increased myocyte cross-sectional area despite smaller heart sizes after sorafenib treatment, further suggesting myocyte loss. Sorafenib caused apoptotic cell death of cardiac- and bone-derived c-kit+ stem cells in vitro and decreased the number of BrdU+ (5-bromo-2’-deoxyuridine+) myocytes detected at the infarct border zone in fixed tissues. Sorafenib had no effect on infarct size, fibrosis, or post-MI neovascularization. When sorafenib-treated animals received metoprolol treatment post MI, the sorafenib-induced increase in post-MI mortality was eliminated, cardiac function was improved, and myocyte loss was ameliorated. Conclusions: Sorafenib cardiotoxicity results from myocyte necrosis rather than from any direct effect on myocyte function. Surviving myocytes undergo pathological hypertrophy. Inhibition of c-kit+ stem cell proliferation by inducing apoptosis exacerbates damage by decreasing endogenous cardiac repair. In the setting of MI, which also causes large-scale cell loss, sorafenib cardiotoxicity dramatically increases mortality.


Circulation Research | 2017

Cortical Bone Stem Cell Therapy Preserves Cardiac Structure and Function After Myocardial InfarctionNovelty and Significance

Thomas E Sharp; Giana J. Schena; Alexander R. Hobby; Timothy Starosta; Remus Berretta; Markus Wallner; Giulia Borghetti; Polina Gross; Daohai Yu; Jaslyn Johnson; Eric Feldsott; Danielle M. Trappanese; Amir Toib; Joseph E. Rabinowitz; Jon C. George; Hajime Kubo; Sadia Mohsin; Steven R. Houser

Rationale: Cortical bone stem cells (CBSCs) have been shown to reduce ventricular remodeling and improve cardiac function in a murine myocardial infarction (MI) model. These effects were superior to other stem cell types that have been used in recent early-stage clinical trials. However, CBSC efficacy has not been tested in a preclinical large animal model using approaches that could be applied to patients. Objective: To determine whether post-MI transendocardial injection of allogeneic CBSCs reduces pathological structural and functional remodeling and prevents the development of heart failure in a swine MI model. Methods and Results: Female Göttingen swine underwent left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion, followed by reperfusion (ischemia–reperfusion MI). Animals received, in a randomized, blinded manner, 1:1 ratio, CBSCs (n=9; 2×107 cells total) or placebo (vehicle; n=9) through NOGA-guided transendocardial injections. 5–ethynyl–2′deoxyuridine (EdU)—a thymidine analog—containing minipumps were inserted at the time of MI induction. At 72 hours (n=8), initial injury and cell retention were assessed. At 3 months post-MI, cardiac structure and function were evaluated by serial echocardiography and terminal invasive hemodynamics. CBSCs were present in the MI border zone and proliferating at 72 hours post-MI but had no effect on initial cardiac injury or structure. At 3 months, CBSC-treated hearts had significantly reduced scar size, smaller myocytes, and increased myocyte nuclear density. Noninvasive echocardiographic measurements showed that left ventricular volumes and ejection fraction were significantly more preserved in CBSC-treated hearts, and invasive hemodynamic measurements documented improved cardiac structure and functional reserve. The number of EdU+ cardiac myocytes was increased in CBSC- versus vehicle- treated animals. Conclusions: CBSC administration into the MI border zone reduces pathological cardiac structural and functional remodeling and improves left ventricular functional reserve. These effects reduce those processes that can lead to heart failure with reduced ejection fraction.


JACC: Basic to Translational Science | 2017

Protein Kinase C Inhibition With Ruboxistaurin Increases Contractility and Reduces Heart Size in a Swine Model of Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction

Thomas E Sharp; Hajime Kubo; Remus Berretta; Timothy Starosta; Markus Wallner; Giana J. Schena; Alexander R. Hobby; Daohai Yu; Danielle M. Trappanese; Jon C. George; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Steven R. Houser

Visual Abstract


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2017

Remodeling of repolarization and arrhythmia susceptibility in a myosin-binding protein C knockout mouse model

Amir Toib; Chen Zhang; Giulia Borghetti; Xiaoxiao Zhang; Markus Wallner; Yijun Yang; Constantine D. Troupes; Hajime Kubo; Thomas E Sharp; Eric Feldsott; Remus Berretta; Neil Zalavadia; Danielle M. Trappanese; Shavonn C Harper; Polina Gross; Xiongwen Chen; Sadia Mohsin; Steven R. Houser

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is one of the most common genetic cardiac diseases and among the leading causes of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in the young. The cellular mechanisms leading to SCD in HCM are not well known. Prolongation of the action potential (AP) duration (APD) is a common feature predisposing hypertrophied hearts to SCD. Previous studies have explored the roles of inward Na+ and Ca2+ in the development of HCM, but the role of repolarizing K+ currents has not been defined. The objective of this study was to characterize the arrhythmogenic phenotype and cellular electrophysiological properties of mice with HCM, induced by myosin-binding protein C (MyBPC) knockout (KO), and to test the hypothesis that remodeling of repolarizing K+ currents causes APD prolongation in MyBPC KO myocytes. We demonstrated that MyBPC KO mice developed severe hypertrophy and cardiac dysfunction compared with wild-type (WT) control mice. Telemetric electrocardiographic recordings of awake mice revealed prolongation of the corrected QT interval in the KO compared with WT control mice, with overt ventricular arrhythmias. Whole cell current- and voltage-clamp experiments comparing KO with WT mice demonstrated ventricular myocyte hypertrophy, AP prolongation, and decreased repolarizing K+ currents. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis revealed decreased mRNA levels of several key K+ channel subunits. In conclusion, decrease in repolarizing K+ currents in MyBPC KO ventricular myocytes contributes to AP and corrected QT interval prolongation and could account for the arrhythmia susceptibility.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Ventricular myocytes isolated from the myosin-binding protein C knockout hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mouse model demonstrate decreased repolarizing K+ currents and action potential and QT interval prolongation, linking cellular repolarization abnormalities with arrhythmia susceptibility and the risk for sudden cardiac death in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Nuquantus: Machine learning software for the characterization and quantification of cell nuclei in complex immunofluorescent tissue images

Polina Gross; Erdem Varol; Markus Wallner; Danielle M. Trappanese; Thomas E Sharp; Timothy Starosta; Jason M. Duran; Sarah Koller; Christos Davatzikos; Steven R. Houser

Determination of fundamental mechanisms of disease often hinges on histopathology visualization and quantitative image analysis. Currently, the analysis of multi-channel fluorescence tissue images is primarily achieved by manual measurements of tissue cellular content and sub-cellular compartments. Since the current manual methodology for image analysis is a tedious and subjective approach, there is clearly a need for an automated analytical technique to process large-scale image datasets. Here, we introduce Nuquantus (Nuclei quantification utility software) - a novel machine learning-based analytical method, which identifies, quantifies and classifies nuclei based on cells of interest in composite fluorescent tissue images, in which cell borders are not visible. Nuquantus is an adaptive framework that learns the morphological attributes of intact tissue in the presence of anatomical variability and pathological processes. Nuquantus allowed us to robustly perform quantitative image analysis on remodeling cardiac tissue after myocardial infarction. Nuquantus reliably classifies cardiomyocyte versus non-cardiomyocyte nuclei and detects cell proliferation, as well as cell death in different cell classes. Broadly, Nuquantus provides innovative computerized methodology to analyze complex tissue images that significantly facilitates image analysis and minimizes human bias.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2016

Regulation of mitogen-activated protein kinase by protein kinase C and mitogen-activated protein kinase phosphatase-1 in vascular smooth muscle

Danielle M. Trappanese; Sarah Sivilich; Hillevi Ets; Farah Kako; Michael V. Autieri; Robert S. Moreland

Vascular smooth muscle contraction is primarily regulated by phosphorylation of myosin light chain. There are also modulatory pathways that control the final level of force development. We tested the hypothesis that protein kinase C (PKC) and mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinase modulate vascular smooth muscle activity via effects on MAP kinase phosphatase-1 (MKP-1). Swine carotid arteries were mounted for isometric force recording and subjected to histamine stimulation in the presence and absence of inhibitors of PKC [bisindolylmaleimide-1 (Bis)], MAP kinase kinase (MEK) (U0126), and MKP-1 (sanguinarine) and flash frozen for measurement of MAP kinase, PKC-potentiated myosin phosphatase inhibitor 17 (CPI-17), and caldesmon phosphorylation levels. CPI-17 was phosphorylated in response to histamine and was inhibited in the presence of Bis. Caldesmon phosphorylation levels increased in response to histamine stimulation and were decreased in response to MEK inhibition but were not affected by the addition of Bis. Inhibition of PKC significantly increased p42 MAP kinase, but not p44 MAP kinase. Inhibition of MEK with U0126 inhibited both p42 and p44 MAP kinase activity. Inhibition of MKP-1 with sanguinarine blocked the Bis-dependent increase of MAP kinase activity. Sanguinarine alone increased MAP kinase activity due to its effects on MKP-1. Sanguinarine increased MKP-1 phosphorylation, which was inhibited by inhibition of MAP kinase. This suggests that MAP kinase has a negative feedback role in inhibiting MKP-1 activity. Therefore, PKC catalyzes MKP-1 phosphorylation, which is reversed by MAP kinase. Thus the fine tuning of vascular contraction is due to the concerted effort of PKC, MAP kinase, and MKP-1.


Basic Research in Cardiology | 2015

Chronic β1-adrenergic blockade enhances myocardial β3-adrenergic coupling with nitric oxide-cGMP signaling in a canine model of chronic volume overload: new insight into mechanisms of cardiac benefit with selective β1-blocker therapy

Danielle M. Trappanese; Yuchuan Liu; Ryan McCormick; Alessandro Cannavo; Gayani Nanayakkara; Marina M. Baskharoun; Harish Jarrett; Felix Woitek; D. Michael Tillson; A. Ray Dillon; Fabio A. Recchia; Jean-Luc Balligand; Steven R. Houser; Walter J. Koch; Louis J. Dell’Italia; Emily J. Tsai


Circulation Research | 2016

Acute Catecholamine Exposure Causes Reversible Myocyte Injury Without Cardiac Regeneration

Markus Wallner; Jason M. Duran; Sadia Mohsin; Constantine D. Troupes; Davy Vanhoutte; Giulia Borghetti; Ronald J. Vagnozzi; Polina Gross; Daohai Yu; Danielle M. Trappanese; Hajime Kubo; Amir Toib; Thomas E Sharp; Shavonn C Harper; Michael A Volkert; Timothy Starosta; Eric Feldsott; Remus Berretta; Tao Wang; Mary F. Barbe; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Steven R. Houser


Circulation Research | 2017

Cortical Bone Stem Cell Therapy Preserves Cardiac Structure and Function After Myocardial Infarction

Thomas E Sharp; Giana J. Schena; Alexander R. Hobby; Timothy Starosta; Remus Berretta; Markus Wallner; Giulia Borghetti; Polina Gross; Daohai Yu; Jaslyn Johnson; Eric Feldsott; Danielle M. Trappanese; Amir Toib; Joseph E. Rabinowitz; Jon C. George; Hajime Kubo; Sadia Mohsin; Steven R. Houser

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