Edvin Johansson
AstraZeneca
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Featured researches published by Edvin Johansson.
Diabetes | 2015
Lydia M. Le Page; Oliver J. Rider; Andrew Lewis; Vicky Ball; Kieran Clarke; Edvin Johansson; Carolyn A. Carr; Lisa C. Heather; Damian J. Tyler
Although diabetic cardiomyopathy is widely recognized, there are no specific treatments available. Altered myocardial substrate selection has emerged as a candidate mechanism behind the development of cardiac dysfunction in diabetes. As pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) activity appears central to the balance of substrate use, we aimed to investigate the relationship between PDH flux and myocardial function in a rodent model of type 2 diabetes and to explore whether or not increasing PDH flux, with dichloroacetate, would restore the balance of substrate use and improve cardiac function. All animals underwent in vivo hyperpolarized [1-13C]pyruvate magnetic resonance spectroscopy and echocardiography to assess cardiac PDH flux and function, respectively. Diabetic animals showed significantly higher blood glucose levels (10.8 ± 0.7 vs. 8.4 ± 0.5 mmol/L), lower PDH flux (0.005 ± 0.001 vs. 0.017 ± 0.002 s-1), and significantly impaired diastolic function (transmitral early diastolic peak velocity/early diastolic myocardial velocity ratio [E/E′] 12.2 ± 0.8 vs. 20 ± 2), which are in keeping with early diabetic cardiomyopathy. Twenty-eight days of treatment with dichloroacetate restored PDH flux to normal levels (0.018 ± 0.002 s-1), reversed diastolic dysfunction (E/E′ 14 ± 1), and normalized blood glucose levels (7.5 ± 0.7 mmol/L). The treatment of diabetes with dichloroacetate therefore restored the balance of myocardial substrate selection, reversed diastolic dysfunction, and normalized blood glucose levels. This suggests that PDH modulation could be a novel therapy for the treatment and/or prevention of diabetic cardiomyopathy.
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 2014
M Zurek; Edvin Johansson; F Risse; Daniel F. Alamidi; Lars E. Olsson; Paul D. Hockings
A segmented inversion‐recovery module combined with the 2D ultrashort echo time radial technique is proposed that allows accurate pixel level T1 mapping of mouse lung in vivo.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Magdalena Zurek; Louise Sladen; Edvin Johansson; Marita Olsson; Sonya Jackson; Hui Zhang; Gaell Mayer; Paul D. Hockings
Purpose A magnetic resonance imaging method is presented that allows for the simultaneous assessment of oxygen delivery, oxygen uptake, and parenchymal density. The technique is applied to a mouse model of porcine pancreatic elastase (PPE) induced lung emphysema in order to investigate how structural changes affect lung function. Method Nine-week-old female C57BL6 mice were instilled with saline or PPE at days 0 and 7. At day 19, oxygen delivery, oxygen uptake, and lung density were quantified from T1 and proton-density measurements obtained via oxygen-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (OE-MRI) using an ultrashort echo-time imaging sequence. Subsequently, the lungs were sectioned for histological observation. Blood-gas analyses and pulmonary functional tests via FlexiVent were performed in separate cohorts. Principal Findings PPE-challenged mice had reduced density when assessed via MRI, consistent with the parenchyma loss observed in the histology sections, and an increased lung compliance was detected via FlexiVent. The oxygenation levels, as assessed via the blood-gas analysis, showed no difference between PPE-challenged animals and control. This finding was mirrored in the global MRI assessments of oxygen delivery and uptake, where the changes in relaxation time indices were matched between the groups. The heterogeneity of the same parameters however, were increased in PPE-challenged animals. When the oxygenation status was investigated in regions of varying density, a reduced oxygen-uptake was found in low-density regions of PPE-challenged mice. In high-density regions the uptake was higher than that of regions of corresponding density in control animals. The oxygen delivery was proportional to the oxygen uptake in both groups. Conclusions The proposed method allowed for the regional assessment of the relationship between lung density and two aspects of lung function, the oxygen delivery and uptake. When compared to global indices of lung function, an increased sensitivity for detecting heterogeneous lung disorders was found. This indicated that the technique has potential for early detection of lung dysfunction–before global changes occur.
Molecular therapy. Methods & clinical development | 2018
Leif Carlsson; Jonathan Clarke; Christopher Y. T. Yen; Francine Gregoire; Tamsin Albery; Martin Billger; Ann-Charlotte Egnell; Li-Ming Gan; Karin Jennbacken; Edvin Johansson; Gunilla Linhardt; Sofia Martinsson; Muhammad Waqas Sadiq; Nevin Witman; Qing-Dong Wang; Chien-Hsi Chen; Yu‐Ping Wang; Susan Lin; Barry Ticho; Patrick C.H. Hsieh; Kenneth R. Chien; Regina Fritsche-Danielson
mRNA can direct dose-dependent protein expression in cardiac muscle without genome integration, but to date has not been shown to improve cardiac function in a safe, clinically applicable way. Herein, we report that a purified and optimized mRNA in a biocompatible citrate-saline formulation is tissue specific, long acting, and does not stimulate an immune response. In small- and large-animal, permanent occlusion myocardial infarction models, VEGF-A 165 mRNA improves systolic ventricular function and limits myocardial damage. Following a single administration a week post-infarction in mini pigs, left ventricular ejection fraction, inotropy, and ventricular compliance improved, border zone arteriolar and capillary density increased, and myocardial fibrosis decreased at 2 months post-treatment. Purified VEGF-A mRNA establishes the feasibility of improving cardiac function in the sub-acute therapeutic window and may represent a new class of therapies for ischemic injury.
PLOS ONE | 2018
Anastassia Karageorgis; Stephen C. Lenhard; Brittany Yerby; Mikael Forsgren; Serguei Liachenko; Edvin Johansson; Mark Pilling; Richard A. Peterson; Xi Yang; Dominic P. Williams; Sharon Ungersma; Ryan E. Morgan; Kim L.R. Brouwer; Beat M. Jucker; Paul D. Hockings
Drug-induced liver injury (DILI) is a leading cause of acute liver failure and transplantation. DILI can be the result of impaired hepatobiliary transporters, with altered bile formation, flow, and subsequent cholestasis. We used gadoxetate dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI), combined with pharmacokinetic modelling, to measure hepatobiliary transporter function in vivo in rats. The sensitivity and robustness of the method was tested by evaluating the effect of a clinical dose of the antibiotic rifampicin in four different preclinical imaging centers. The mean gadoxetate uptake rate constant for the vehicle groups at all centers was 39.3 +/- 3.4 s-1 (n = 23) and 11.7 +/- 1.3 s-1 (n = 20) for the rifampicin groups. The mean gadoxetate efflux rate constant for the vehicle groups was 1.53 +/- 0.08 s-1 (n = 23) and for the rifampicin treated groups was 0.94 +/- 0.08 s-1 (n = 20). Both the uptake and excretion transporters of gadoxetate were statistically significantly inhibited by the clinical dose of rifampicin at all centers and the size of this treatment group effect was consistent across the centers. Gadoxetate is a clinically approved MRI contrast agent, so this method is readily transferable to the clinic. Conclusion: Rate constants of gadoxetate uptake and excretion are sensitive and robust biomarkers to detect early changes in hepatobiliary transporter function in vivo in rats prior to established biomarkers of liver toxicity.
Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance | 2016
Edvin Johansson; Tamsin Albery; Malin Palmér; Sven Månssonx
Background MRI cardiac T2-mapping visualizes edema and has been used for tissue characterization in settings such as myocarditis and ischemia. Clinically it is typically performed via spin-echo based techniques, but preclinically, the high heart rates of rats and mice make such approaches sensitive to motion. Successful implementations instead employ T2-preparation followed by a segmented gradient-echo readout (Beyers et al. MRM 2012, Coolen et al. MRM 2014). It is argued here that when full coverage of the left ventricle myocardium (LVM) is needed, such techniques benefit from applying phase encoding in the slice direction as opposed to using a multi-slice approach.
Magnetic Resonance Imaging | 2012
Sven Månsson; Pernilla Peterson; Edvin Johansson
Archive | 2016
Edvin Johansson; Alaina L. Garland; Arunava Ghosh; Robert Tarran; Annika Åstrand; Martin Hemmerling; Cecilia Wingren; Jelena Pesic
Circulation | 2016
Leif Carlsson; Chris Y.T. Yen; Yu‐Ping Wang; RenHao Lin; Annie H Lo; Chien-Hsi Chen; Jonathan Clarke; Tamsin Albery; Madeleine Antonsson; Karin Jennbacken; Edvin Johansson; Gunilla Linhardt; Sofia Martinsson; Malin Palmér; Karen Woods; Kenneth R. Chien; Patrick C.H. Hsieh; Regina Fritsche-Danielson
Diabetic Medicine | 2015
L M Le Page; Oliver J. Rider; Andrew Lewis; Vicky Ball; Kieran Clarke; Edvin Johansson; Carolyn A. Carr; Lisa C. Heather; Damian J. Tyler