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Dive into the research topics where Eckard Picht is active.

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Featured researches published by Eckard Picht.


Circulation Research | 2006

Hypercontractile Female Hearts Exhibit Increased S-Nitrosylation of the L-Type Ca2+ Channel α1 Subunit and Reduced Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury

Junhui Sun; Eckard Picht; Kenneth S. Ginsburg; Donald M. Bers; Charles Steenbergen; Elizabeth Murphy

Mechanisms underlying gender differences in cardiovascular disease are poorly understood. We found previously that, under hypercontractile conditions, female hearts exhibit significantly less ischemia/reperfusion injury than males. Here we show that male wild-type (WT) mouse hearts pretreated with 10 nmol/L isoproterenol before ischemia exhibited increased injury versus female hearts, but this relative protection in females was absent in eNOS−/− and nNOS−/− hearts. In isoproterenol-treated female versus male hearts, there was also more endothelial NO synthase (eNOS) associated with cardiomyocyte caveolin-3, and more neuronal NOS (nNOS) translocation to caveolin-3 during ischemia/reperfusion. S-nitrosothiol (SNO) formation was increased in isoproterenol-treated ischemic/reperfused hearts in all mouse genotypes, but only in WT mice was SNO content significantly higher in females than males. Using the biotin switch method, we identified the L-type Ca2+ channel &agr;1 subunit as the predominant S-nitrosylated protein in membrane fractions, and following isoproterenol and ischemia/reperfusion male/female differences in SNO were seen only in WT hearts, but not in constitutive NOS−/− genotypes. The isoproterenol-induced increase in L-type Ca2+ current (ICa) was smaller in females versus in males, but NOS blockade increased ICa in females. This gender difference in ICa in isoproterenol-treated myocytes (and abolition on NOS inhibition) was mirrored exactly in Ca2+ transients and SR Ca2+ contents. In conclusion, these data suggest that eNOS and nNOS both play roles in the gender differences observed in ischemia/reperfusion injury under adrenergic stimulation, and also demonstrate increased S-nitrosylation of the L-type Ca2+ channels in female cardiomyocytes.


Circulation Research | 2006

Cardiac Alternans Do Not Rely on Diastolic Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium Content Fluctuations

Eckard Picht; Jaime DeSantiago; Lothar A. Blatter; Donald M. Bers

Cardiac alternans are thought to be a precursor to life-threatening arrhythmias. Previous studies suggested that alterations in sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ content are either causative or not associated with myocyte Ca2+ alternans. However, those studies used indirect measures of SR Ca2+. Here we used direct continuous measurement of intra-SR free [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]SR) (using Fluo5N) during frequency-dependent Ca2+ alternans in rabbit ventricular myocytes. We tested the hypothesis that alternating [Ca2+]SR is required for Ca2+ alternans. Amplitudes of [Ca2+]SR depletions alternated in phase with cytosolic Ca2+ transients and contractions. Some cells showed clear alternation in diastolic [Ca2+]SR during alternans, with higher [Ca2+]SR before the larger SR Ca2+ releases. However, the extent of SR Ca2+ release during the small beats was smaller than expected for the modest decrease in [Ca2+]SR. In other cells, clear Ca2+ alternans was observed without alternations in diastolic [Ca2+]SR. Additionally, alternating cells were observed, in which diastolic [Ca2+]SR fluctuations occurred interspersed by depletions in which the amplitude was unrelated to the preceding diastolic [Ca2+]SR. In all forms of alternans, the SR Ca2+ release rate was higher during large depletions than during small depletions. Although [Ca2+]SR exerts major influence on SR Ca2+ release, alternations in [Ca2+]SR are not required for Ca2+ alternans to occur. Rather, it seems likely that some other factor, such as ryanodine receptor availability after a prior beat (eg, recovery from inactivation), is of greater importance in initiating frequency-induced Ca2+ alternans. However, once such a weak SR Ca2+ release occurs, it can result in increased [Ca2+]SR and further enhance SR Ca2+ release at the next beat. In this way, diastolic [Ca2+]SR alternans can enhance frequency-induced Ca2+ alternans, even if they initiate by other means.


Circulation Research | 2008

Termination of Cardiac Ca2+ Sparks: Role of Intra-SR [Ca2+], Release Flux, and Intra-SR Ca2+ Diffusion

Aleksey V. Zima; Eckard Picht; Donald M. Bers; Lothar A. Blatter

Ca2+ release from cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) via ryanodine receptors (RyRs) is regulated by dyadic cleft [Ca2+] and intra-SR free [Ca2+] ([Ca2+]SR). Robust SR Ca2+ release termination is important for stable excitation–contraction coupling, and partial [Ca2+]SR depletion may contribute to release termination. Here, we investigated the regulation of SR Ca2+ release termination of spontaneous local SR Ca2+ release events (Ca2+ sparks) by [Ca2+]SR, release flux, and intra-SR Ca2+ diffusion. We simultaneously measured Ca2+ sparks and Ca2+ blinks (localized elementary [Ca2+]SR depletions) in permeabilized ventricular cardiomyocytes over a wide range of SR Ca2+ loads and release fluxes. Sparks terminated via a [Ca2+]SR-dependent mechanism at a fixed [Ca2+]SR depletion threshold independent of the initial [Ca2+]SR and release flux. Ca2+ blink recovery depended mainly on intra-SR Ca2+ diffusion rather than SR Ca2+ uptake. Therefore, the large variation in Ca2+ blink recovery rates at different release sites occurred because of differences in the degree of release site interconnection within the SR network. When SR release flux was greatly reduced, long-lasting release events occurred from well-connected junctions. These junctions could sustain release because local SR Ca2+ release and [Ca2+]SR refilling reached a balance, preventing [Ca2+]SR from depleting to the termination threshold. Prolonged release events eventually terminated at a steady [Ca2+]SR, indicative of a slower, [Ca2+]SR-independent termination mechanism. These results demonstrate that there is high variability in local SR connectivity but that SR Ca2+ release terminates at a fixed [Ca2+]SR termination threshold. Thus, reliable SR Ca2+ release termination depends on tight RyR regulation by [Ca2+]SR.


Circulation Research | 2010

Kinetics of FKBP12.6 Binding to Ryanodine Receptors in Permeabilized Cardiac Myocytes and Effects on Ca Sparks

Tao Guo; Razvan L. Cornea; Sabine Huke; Emmanuel Camors; Yi Yang; Eckard Picht; Bradley R. Fruen; Donald M. Bers

Rationale: FK506-binding proteins FKBP12.6 and FKBP12 are associated with cardiac ryanodine receptors (RyR2), and cAMP-dependent protein kinase A (PKA)-dependent phosphorylation of RyR2 was proposed to interrupt FKBP12.6-RyR2 association and activate RyR2. However, the function of FKBP12.6/12 and role of PKA phosphorylation in cardiac myocytes are controversial. Objective: To directly measure in situ binding of FKBP12.6/12 to RyR2 in ventricular myocytes, with simultaneous Ca sparks measurements as a RyR2 functional index. Methods and Results: We used permeabilized rat and mouse ventricular myocytes, and fluorescently-labeled FKBP12.6/12. Both FKBP12.6 and FKBP12 concentrate at Z-lines, consistent with RyR2 and Ca spark initiation sites. However, only FKBP12.6 inhibits resting RyR2 activity. Assessment of fluorescent FKBP binding in myocyte revealed a high FKBP12.6-RyR2 affinity (Kd=0.7±0.1 nmol/L) and much lower FKBP12-RyR2 affinity (Kd=206±70 nmol/L). Fluorescence recovery after photobleach confirmed this Kd difference and showed that it is mediated by koff. RyR2 phosphorylation by PKA did not alter binding kinetics or affinity of FKBP12.6/12 for RyR2. Using quantitative immunoblots, we determined endogenous [FKBP12] in intact myocytes is ≈1 &mgr;mol/L (similar to [RyR]), whereas [FKBP12.6] is ≤150 nmol/L. Conclusions: Only 10% to 20% of endogenous myocyte RyR2s have FKBP12.6 associated, but virtually all myocyte FKBP12.6 is RyR2-bound (because of very high affinity). FKBP12.6 but not FKBP12 inhibits basal RyR2 activity. PKA-dependent RyR2 phosphorylation has no significant effect on binding of either FKBP12 or 12.6 to RyR2 in myocytes.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

Akt regulates L-type Ca 2+ channel activity by modulating Ca vα1 protein stability

Daniele Catalucci; Deng Hong Zhang; Jaime DeSantiago; Franck Aimond; Guillaume Barbara; Jean Chemin; Désiré Bonci; Eckard Picht; Francesca Rusconi; Nancy D. Dalton; Kirk L. Peterson; Sylvain Richard; Donald M. Bers; Joan Heller Brown; Gianluigi Condorelli

The insulin IGF-1–PI3K–Akt signaling pathway has been suggested to improve cardiac inotropism and increase Ca2+ handling through the effects of the protein kinase Akt. However, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unknown. In this study, we provide evidence for an unanticipated regulatory function of Akt controlling L-type Ca2+ channel (LTCC) protein density. The pore-forming channel subunit Cavα1 contains highly conserved PEST sequences (signals for rapid protein degradation), and in-frame deletion of these PEST sequences results in increased Cavα1 protein levels. Our findings show that Akt-dependent phosphorylation of Cavβ2, the LTCC chaperone for Cavα1, antagonizes Cavα1 protein degradation by preventing Cavα1 PEST sequence recognition, leading to increased LTCC density and the consequent modulation of Ca2+ channel function. This novel mechanism by which Akt modulates LTCC stability could profoundly influence cardiac myocyte Ca2+ entry, Ca2+ handling, and contractility.


Circulation Research | 2011

Dynamic Calcium Movement Inside Cardiac Sarcoplasmic Reticulum During Release

Eckard Picht; Aleksey V. Zima; Thomas R. Shannon; Alexis M. Duncan; Lothar A. Blatter; Donald M. Bers

Rationale: Intra–sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) free [Ca] ([Ca]SR) provides the driving force for SR Ca release and is a key regulator of SR Ca release channel gating during normal SR Ca release or arrhythmogenic spontaneous Ca release events. However, little is known about [Ca]SR spatiotemporal dynamics. Objective: To directly measure local [Ca]SR with subsarcomeric spatiotemporal resolution during both normal global SR Ca release and spontaneous Ca sparks and to evaluate the quantitative implications of spatial [Ca]SR gradients. Methods and Results: Intact and permeabilized rabbit ventricular myocytes were subjected to direct simultaneous measurement of cytosolic [Ca] and [Ca]SR and FRAP (fluorescence recovery after photobleach). We found no detectable [Ca]SR gradients between SR release sites (junctional SR) and Ca uptake sites (free SR) during normal global Ca release, clear spatiotemporal [Ca]SR gradients during isolated Ca blinks, faster intra-SR diffusion in the longitudinal versus transverse direction, 3- to 4-fold slower diffusion of fluorophores in the SR than in cytosol, and that intra-SR Ca diffusion varies locally, dependent on local SR connectivity. A computational model clarified why spatiotemporal gradients are more detectable in isolated local releases versus global releases and provides a quantitative framework for understanding intra-SR Ca diffusion. Conclusions: Intra-SR Ca diffusion is rapid, limiting spatial [Ca]SR gradients during excitation–contraction coupling. Spatiotemporal [Ca]SR gradients are apparent during Ca sparks, and these observations constrain models of dynamic Ca movement inside the SR. This has important implications for myocyte SR Ca handling, synchrony, and potentially arrhythmogenic spontaneous contraction.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2009

Mitochondrial free calcium regulation during sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium release in rat cardiac myocytes

Tatyana N. Andrienko; Eckard Picht; Donald M. Bers

Cardiac mitochondria can take up Ca(2+), competing with Ca(2+) transporters like the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+)-ATPase. Rapid mitochondrial [Ca(2+)] transients have been reported to be synchronized with normal cytosolic [Ca(2+)](i) transients. However, most intra-mitochondrial free [Ca(2+)] ([Ca(2+)](mito)) measurements have been uncalibrated, and potentially contaminated by non-mitochondrial signals. Here we measured calibrated [Ca(2+)](mito) in single rat myocytes using the ratiometric Ca(2+) indicator fura-2 AM and plasmalemmal permeabilization by saponin (to eliminate cytosolic fura-2). The steady-state [Ca(2+)](mito) dependence on [Ca(2+)](i) (with 5 mM EGTA) was sigmoid with [Ca(2+)](mito)<[Ca(2+)](i) for [Ca(2+)](i) below 475 nM. With low [EGTA] (50 microM) and 150 nM [Ca(2+)](i) (+/-15 mM Na(+)) cyclical spontaneous SR Ca(2+) release occurred (5-15/min). Changes in [Ca(2+)](mito) during individual [Ca(2+)](i) transients were small ( approximately 2-10 nM/beat), but integrated gradually to steady-state. Inhibition SR Ca(2+) handling by thapsigargin, 2 mM tetracaine or 10 mM caffeine all stopped the progressive rise in [Ca(2+)](mito) and spontaneous Ca(2+) transients (confirming that SR Ca(2+) releases caused the [Ca(2+)](mito) rise). Confocal imaging of local [Ca(2+)](mito) (using rhod-2) showed that [Ca(2+)](mito) rose rapidly with a delay after SR Ca(2+) release (with amplitude up to 10 nM), but declined much more slowly than [Ca(2+)](i) (time constant 2.8+/-0.7 s vs. 0.19+/-0.06 s). Total Ca(2+) uptake for larger [Ca(2+)](mito) transients was approximately 0.5 micromol/L cytosol (assuming 100:1 mitochondrial Ca(2+) buffering), consistent with prior indirect estimates from [Ca(2+)](i) measurements, and corresponds to approximately 1% of the SR Ca(2+) uptake during a normal Ca(2+) transient. Thus small phasic [Ca(2+)](mito) transients and gradually integrating [Ca(2+)](mito) signals occur during repeating [Ca(2+)](i) transients.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2007

SparkMaster: automated calcium spark analysis with ImageJ

Eckard Picht; Aleksey V. Zima; Lothar A. Blatter; Donald M. Bers


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2007

CaMKII inhibition targeted to the sarcoplasmic reticulum inhibits frequency-dependent acceleration of relaxation and Ca2+ current facilitation.

Eckard Picht; Jaime DeSantiago; Sabine Huke; Marcia A. Kaetzel; John R. Dedman; Donald M. Bers


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

Akt regulates L-type Ca2+ channel activity by modulating Cavα1 protein stability

Daniele Catalucci; Deng Hong Zhang; Jaime DeSantiago; Franck Aimond; Guillaume Barbara; Jean Chemin; Désiré Bonci; Eckard Picht; Francesca Rusconi; Nancy D. Dalton; Kirk L. Peterson; Sylvain Richard; Donald M. Bers; Joan Heller Brown; Gianluigi Condorelli

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Donald M. Bers

University of California

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Jaime DeSantiago

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Lothar A. Blatter

Rush University Medical Center

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Aleksey V. Zima

Loyola University Chicago

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John R. Dedman

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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