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Dive into the research topics where Dawn Pedrotty is active.

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Featured researches published by Dawn Pedrotty.


The Lancet | 2005

Blood vessels engineered from human cells

Melissa Poh; Matthew J. Boyer; Amy Solan; Shannon L. M. Dahl; Dawn Pedrotty; Soma S. R. Banik; J. Andrew McKee; Rebecca Y. Klinger; Christopher M. Counter; Laura E. Niklason

Tissue engineering has made considerable progress in the past decade, but advances have stopped short of clinical application for most tissues. We postulated that an obstacle in engineering human tissues is the limited replicative capacity of adult somatic cells. To test this hypothesis, the effectiveness of telomerase expression to extend cellular lifespan was assessed in a model of human vascular tissue engineering. Telomerase expression in vascular cells isolated from elderly patients enabled the successful culture of engineered autologous blood vessels. Engineered vessels may one day provide a source of bypass conduit for patients with atherosclerotic disease.


Cardiovascular Research | 2009

Cardiac fibroblast paracrine factors alter impulse conduction and ion channel expression of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes

Dawn Pedrotty; Rebecca Y. Klinger; Robert D. Kirkton; Nenad Bursac

AIMS The pathological proliferation of cardiac fibroblasts (CFs) in response to heart injury results in fibrosis, which correlates with arrhythmia generation and heart failure. Here we systematically examined the effect of fibroblast-derived paracrine factors on electrical propagation in cardiomyocytes. METHODS AND RESULTS Neonatal rat cardiac monolayers were exposed for 24 h to media conditioned by CFs. Optical mapping, sharp microelectrode recordings, quantitative RT-PCR, and immunostaining were used to assess the changes in the propagation and shape of the action potential and underlying changes in gene and protein expression. The fibroblast paracrine factors produced a 52% reduction in cardiac conduction velocity, a 217% prolongation of action potential duration, a 64% decrease of maximum capture rate, a 21% increase in membrane resting potential, and an 80% decrease of action potential upstroke velocity. These effects were dose dependent and partially reversible with removal of the conditioned media. No fibroblast proliferation, cardiomyocyte apoptosis, or decreased connexin-43 expression, phosphorylation, and function were found in conditioned cardiac cultures. In contrast, the expression of the fast sodium, inward rectifying potassium, and transient outward potassium channels were, respectively, reduced 3.8-, 6.6-fold, and to undetectable levels. The expression of beta-myosin heavy chain increased 17.4-fold. No electrophysiological changes were observed from media conditioned by CFs in the presence of cardiomyocytes. CONCLUSION Paracrine factors from neonatal CFs alone produced significant electrophysiological changes in neonatal rat cardiomyocytes resembling those found in several cardiac pathologies.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2008

Structural coupling of cardiomyocytes and noncardiomyocytes: quantitative comparisons using a novel micropatterned cell pair assay.

Dawn Pedrotty; Rebecca Y. Klinger; Nima Badie; Sara Hinds; Ara Kardashian; Nenad Bursac

Well-controlled studies of the structural and functional interactions between cardiomyocytes and other cells are essential for understanding heart pathophysiology and for the further development of safe and efficient cell therapies. We established a novel in vitro assay composed of a large number of individual micropatterned cell pairs with reproducible shape, size, and region of cell-cell contact. This assay was applied to quantify and compare the frequency of expression and distribution of electrical (connexin43) and mechanical (N-cadherin) coupling proteins in 5,000 cell pairs made of cardiomyocytes (CMs), cardiac fibroblasts (CFs), skeletal myoblasts (SKMs), and mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs). We found that for all cell pair types, side-side contacts between two cells formed 4.5-14.3 times more often than end-end contacts. Both connexin43 and N-cadherin were expressed in all homotypic CM pairs but in only 13.4-91.6% of pairs containing noncardiomyocytes, where expression was either junctional (at the site of cell-cell contact) or diffuse (inside the cytoplasm). CM expression was exclusively junctional in homotypic pairs but predominantly diffuse in heterotypic pairs. Noncardiomyocyte homotypic pairs exhibited diffuse expression 1.7-8.7 times more often than junctional expression, which was increased 2.6-4.4 times in heterotypic pairs. Junctional connexin43 and N-cadherin expression, respectively, were found in 38.6 +/- 7.3 and 39.6 +/- 6.2% of CM-MSC pairs, 21.9 +/- 5.0 and 13.6 +/- 1.9% of CM-SKM pairs, and in only 3.8-9.6% of CM-CF pairs. Measured frequencies of protein expression and distribution were stable for at least 4 days. Described studies in micropatterned cell pairs shed new light on cellular interactions relevant for cardiac function and cell therapies.


Cell Transplantation | 2004

Clonal population of adult stem cells: life span and differentiation potential.

Mitchel Seruya; Shah A; Dawn Pedrotty; du Laney T; Melgiri R; McKee Ja; Young He; Laura E. Niklason

Adult stem cells derived from bone marrow, connective tissue, and solid organs can exhibit a range of differentiation potentials. Some controversy exists regarding the classification of mesenchymal stem cells as bona fide stem cells, which is in part derived from the limited ability to propagate true clonal populations of precursor cells. We isolated putative mesenchymal stem cells from the connective tissue of an adult rat (rMSC), and generated clonal populations via three rounds of dilutional cloning. The replicative potential of the clonal rMSC line far exceeded Hayflicks limit of 50–70 population doublings. The high capacity for self-renewal in vitro correlated with telomerase activity, as demonstrated by telomerase repeat amplification protocol (TRAP) assay. Exposure to nonspecific differentiation culture medium revealed multilineage differentiation potential of rMSC clones. Immunostaining confirmed the appearance of mesodermal phenotypes, including adipocytes possessing lipid-rich vacuoles, chondrocytes depositing pericellular type II collagen, and skeletal myoblasts expressing MyoD1. Importantly, the spectrum of differentiation capability was sustained through repeated passaging. Furthermore, serum-free conditions that led to high-efficiency smooth muscle differentiation were identified. rMSCs plated on collagen IV-coated surfaces and exposed to transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) differentiated into a homogeneous population expressing α-actin and calponin. Hence, clonogenic analysis confirmed the presence of a putative MSC population derived from the connective tissue of rat skeletal muscle. The ability to differentiate into a smooth muscle cell (SMC) phenotype, combined with a high proliferative capacity, make such a connective tissue-derived MSC population ideal for applications in vascular tissue construction.


Current Opinion in Anesthesiology | 2003

Angiogenesis therapies for cardiovascular disease.

Dawn Pedrotty; Laura E. Niklason

Purpose of review The purpose was to summarize the findings of the proangiogenic clinical trials using protein and gene therapy, with analysis of the problems and an interpretation of the results. Recent findings Recent findings include several new large clinical trials, using both gene and protein therapies. There has been development of new basic science concepts, especially with regard to endothelial activation and stabilization of newly formed microvessels. This review provides a critical analysis of the most recent clinical trials, both in efforts to understand the pitfalls of earlier clinical trials, and also to focus on requirements for future studies. Summary This article reviews many of the clinical trials utilizing proangiogenic therapy, assesses the pitfalls seen within the current trials, and discusses the conclusions drawn and the future of angiogenesis therapy.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2014

Quantifying Electrical Interactions between Cardiomyocytes and Other Cells in Micropatterned Cell Pairs

Hung Nguyen; Nima Badie; Luke C. McSpadden; Dawn Pedrotty; Nenad Bursac

Micropatterning is a powerful technique to control cell shape and position on a culture substrate. In this chapter, we describe the method to reproducibly create large numbers of micropatterned heterotypic cell pairs with defined size, shape, and length of cell-cell contact. These cell pairs can be utilized in patch clamp recordings to quantify electrical interactions between cardiomyocytes and non-cardiomyocytes.


IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Magazine | 2005

Cellular/tissue engineering - Cardiomyoplasty: The prospect of human stem cells

Dawn Pedrotty; Nenad Bursac

Currently, the largest ongoing effort in cellular and tissue cardiomyoplasty therapies is the search for a suitable cell source. The following are the desirable attributes of an ideal cell source: 1) autologous (not requiring immune suppression), 2) able to substantially proliferate in vitro, 3) having a similar function when compared to host cardiomyocytes, and 4) able to couple with the host cells electrically and mechanically. A number of cell types have been attempted for cellular and tissue engineering therapies in the heart.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2005

Engineering skeletal myoblasts: roles of three-dimensional culture and electrical stimulation

Dawn Pedrotty; Jennifer Koh; Bryce H. Davis; Doris A. Taylor; Patrick D. Wolf; Laura E. Niklason


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2018

SYNCOPE RESULTING FROM ROTATIONAL VERTEBROBASILAR INSUFFICIENCY (BOW HUNTER'S SYNDROME)

Dawn Pedrotty; Suraj Kapa


Circulation | 2017

Abstract 18218: Prevalence And Significance of a Right Bundle Branch Block in Patients Without Cardiovascular Disease Undergoing an Exercise Stress Test

Dawn Pedrotty; Thomas G. Allison; Suraj Kapa

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Doris A. Taylor

The Texas Heart Institute

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