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Dive into the research topics where Erik Schaefer is active.

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Featured researches published by Erik Schaefer.


Circulation Research | 2004

Nuclear Targeting of Akt Enhances Kinase Activity and Survival of Cardiomyocytes

Isao Shiraishi; Jaime Melendez; Youngkeun Ahn; Maryanne Skavdahl; Elizabeth Murphy; Sara Welch; Erik Schaefer; Kenneth Walsh; Anthony Rosenzweig; Daniele Torella; Daria Nurzynska; Jan Kajstura; Annarosa Leri; Piero Anversa; Mark A. Sussman

Abstract— Heart failure is associated with death of cardiomyocytes leading to loss of contractility. Previous studies using membrane-targeted Akt (myristolated-Akt), an enzyme involved in antiapoptotic signaling, showed inhibition of cell death and prevention of pathogenesis induced by cardiomyopathic stimuli. However, recent studies by our group have found accumulation of activated Akt in the nucleus, suggesting that biologically relevant target(s) of Akt activity may be located there. To test this hypothesis, a targeted Akt construct was created to determine the antiapoptotic action of nuclear Akt accumulation. Nuclear localization of the adenovirally encoded Akt construct was confirmed by confocal microscopy. Cardiomyocytes expressing nuclear-targeted Akt showed no evidence of morphological remodeling such as altered myofibril density or hypertrophy. Nuclear-targeted Akt significantly elevated levels of phospho-Akt and kinase activity and inhibited apoptosis as effectively as myristolated-Akt in hypoxia-induced cell death. Transgenic overexpression of nuclear-targeted Akt did not result in hypertrophic remodeling, altered cardiomyocyte DNA content or nucleation, or enhanced phosphorylation of typical cytoplasmic Akt substrates, yet transgenic hearts were protected from ischemia-reperfusion injury. Gene array analyses demonstrated changes in the transcriptional profile of Akt/nuc hearts compared with nontransgenic controls distinct from prior characterizations of Akt expression in transgenic hearts. Collectively, these experiments show that targeting of Akt to the nucleus mediates inhibition of apoptosis without hypertrophic remodeling, opening new possibilities for therapeutic applications of nuclear-targeted Akt to inhibit cell death associated with heart disease.


Nature Medicine | 2007

Pim-1 regulates cardiomyocyte survival downstream of Akt

John Muraski; Marcello Rota; Yu Misao; Jenna Fransioli; Christopher T. Cottage; Natalie Gude; Grazia Esposito; Francesca Delucchi; Michael L. Arcarese; Roberto Alvarez; Sailay Siddiqi; Gregory Emmanuel; Weitao Wu; Kimberlee Fischer; Joshua J. Martindale; Christopher C. Glembotski; Annarosa Leri; Jan Kajstura; Nancy S. Magnuson; Anton Berns; Remus M Beretta; Steven R. Houser; Erik Schaefer; Piero Anversa; Mark A. Sussman

The serine-threonine kinases Pim-1 and Akt regulate cellular proliferation and survival. Although Akt is known to be a crucial signaling protein in the myocardium, the role of Pim-1 has been overlooked. Pim-1 expression in the myocardium of mice decreased during postnatal development, re-emerged after acute pathological injury in mice and was increased in failing hearts of both mice and humans. Cardioprotective stimuli associated with Akt activation induced Pim-1 expression, but compensatory increases in Akt abundance and phosphorylation after pathological injury by infarction or pressure overload did not protect the myocardium in Pim-1–deficient mice. Transgenic expression of Pim-1 in the myocardium protected mice from infarction injury, and Pim-1 expression inhibited cardiomyocyte apoptosis with concomitant increases in Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL protein levels, as well as in Bad phosphorylation levels. Relative to nontransgenic controls, calcium dynamics were significantly enhanced in Pim-1–overexpressing transgenic hearts, associated with increased expression of SERCA2a, and were depressed in Pim-1–deficient hearts. Collectively, these data suggest that Pim-1 is a crucial facet of cardioprotection downstream of Akt.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2000

Altered focal adhesion regulation correlates with cardiomyopathy in mice expressing constitutively active rac1

Mark A. Sussman; Sara Welch; Angela Walker; Raisa Klevitsky; Timothy E. Hewett; Robert L. Price; Erik Schaefer; Karen Yager

The ras family of small GTP-binding proteins exerts powerful effects upon cell structure and function. One member of this family, rac, induces actin cytoskeletal reorganization in nonmuscle cells and hypertrophic changes in cultured cardiomyocytes. To examine the effect of rac1 activation upon cardiac structure and function, transgenic mice were created that express constitutively activated rac1 specifically in the myocardium. Transgenic rac1 protein was expressed at levels comparable to endogenous rac levels, with activation of the rac1 signaling pathway resulting in two distinct cardiomyopathic phenotypes: a lethal dilated phenotype associated with neonatal activation of the transgene and a transient cardiac hypertrophy seen among juvenile mice that resolved with age. Neither phenotype showed myofibril disarray and hypertrophic hearts were hypercontractilein working heart analyses. The rac1 target p21-activated kinase translocated from a cytosolic to a cytoskeletal distribution, suggesting that rac1 activation was inducing focal adhesion reorganization. Corroborating results showed altered localizations of src in dilated cardiomyopathy and paxillin in both cardiomyopathic phenotypes. This study, the first examination of rac1-mediated cardiac effects in vivo, demonstrates that dilation and hypertrophy can share a common molecular origin and presents evidence that both timing and concurrent signaling from multiple pathways can influence cardiac remodeling.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005

Atrial natriuretic peptide promotes cardiomyocyte survival by cGMP-dependent nuclear accumulation of zyxin and Akt

Takahiro Kato; John Muraski; Yan Chen; Yasuyuki Tsujita; Jason A. Wall; Christopher C. Glembotski; Erik Schaefer; Mark A. Sussman

This study delineates a mechanism for antiapoptotic signaling initiated by atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) stimulation leading to elevation of cGMP levels and subsequent nuclear accumulation of Akt kinase associated with zyxin, a cytoskeletal LIM-domain protein. Nuclear targeting of zyxin induces resistance to cell death coincident with nuclear accumulation of activated Akt. Nuclear translocation of zyxin triggered by cGMP also promotes nuclear Akt accumulation. Additional supportive evidence for nuclear accumulation of zyxin-enhancing cardiomyocyte survival includes the following: (a) promotion of zyxin nuclear localization by cardioprotective stimuli; (b) zyxin association with phospho-Akt473 induced by cardioprotective stimuli; and (c) recruitment of zyxin to the nucleus by activated nuclear-targeted Akt as well as recruitment of Akt by nuclear-targeted zyxin. Nuclear accumulation of zyxin requires both Akt activation and nuclear localization. Potentiation of cell survival is sensitive to stimulation intensity with high-level induction by ANP or cGMP signaling leading to apoptotic cell death rather than enhancing resistance to apoptotic stimuli. Myocardial nuclear accumulation of zyxin and Akt responds similarly in vivo following treatment of mice with ANP or cGMP. Thus, zyxin and activated Akt participate in a cGMP-dependent signaling cascade leading from ANP receptors to nuclear accumulation of both molecules. Nuclear accumulation of zyxin and activated Akt may represent a fundamental mechanism that facilitates nuclear-signal transduction and potentiates cell survival.


Circulation Research | 2002

Cardiac-Specific IGF-1 Expression Attenuates Dilated Cardiomyopathy in Tropomodulin-Overexpressing Transgenic Mice

Sara Welch; David M. Plank; Sandra A. Witt; Betty J. Glascock; Erik Schaefer; Stefano Chimenti; Anna Maria Andreoli; Federica Limana; Annarosa Leri; Jan Kajstura; Piero Anversa; Mark A. Sussman

To test the hypothesis that early interventional treatment with insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) alleviates subsequent development of dilated cardiomyopathy, cardiac-specific IGF-1 expression was introduced by selective cross-breeding into a transgenic mouse model of heart failure that displays phenotypic characteristics of severe dilation. Hemodynamic, structural, and cellular parameters of the heart were compared between nontransgenic, tropomodulin-overexpressing cardiomyopathic, and the hybrid tropomodulin/IGF-1-overexpressing mice. Beneficial effects of IGF-1 were apparent by multiple indices of cardiac structure and function, including normalization of heart mass, anatomy, hemodynamics, and apoptosis. IGF-1 expression also acted as a proliferative stimulus as evidenced by calculated increases in myocyte number as well as expression of Ki67, a nuclear marker of cellular replication. Cellular analyses revealed that IGF-1 inhibited characteristic cardiomyocyte elongation in dilated hearts and restored calcium dynamics comparable to that observed in normal cells. Collectively, these results provide novel information regarding the ability of IGF-1 to inhibit progression of cardiomyopathic disease in a defined model system and suggest that heart failure may benefit from early interventional IGF-1 treatment.


Science | 2008

Activation of FOXO1 by Cdk1 in cycling cells and postmitotic neurons.

Zengqiang Yuan; Esther B. E. Becker; Paola Merlo; Tomoko Yamada; Sara DiBacco; Yoshiyuki Konishi; Erik Schaefer; Azad Bonni

Activation of cyclin-dependent kinase 1 (Cdk1) has been linked to cell death of postmitotic neurons in brain development and disease. We found that Cdk1 phosphorylated the transcription factor FOXO1 at Ser249 in vitro and in vivo. The phosphorylation of FOXO1 at Ser249 disrupted FOXO1 binding with 14-3-3 proteins and thereby promoted the nuclear accumulation of FOXO1 and stimulated FOXO1-dependent transcription, leading to cell death in neurons. In proliferating cells, Cdk1 induced FOXO1 Ser249 phosphorylation at the G2/M phase of the cell cycle, resulting in FOXO1-dependent expression of the mitotic regulator Polo-like kinase (Plk). These findings define a conserved signaling link between Cdk1 and FOXO1 that may have a key role in diverse biological processes, including the degeneration of postmitotic neurons.


Stem Cells | 2008

Evolution of the c-kit-Positive Cell Response to Pathological Challenge in the Myocardium

Jenna Fransioli; Brandi Bailey; Natalie Gude; Christopher T. Cottage; John Muraski; Gregory Emmanuel; Weitao Wu; Roberto Alvarez; Marta Rubio; Sergio Ottolenghi; Erik Schaefer; Mark A. Sussman

Cumulative evidence indicates that myocardium responds to growth or injury by recruitment of stem and/or progenitor cells that participate in repair and regenerative processes. Unequivocal identification of this population has been hampered by lack of reagents or markers specific to the recruited population, leading to controversies regarding the nature of these cells. Use of a transgenic mouse expressing green fluorescent protein driven by the c‐kit promoter allows for unambiguous identification of this cell population. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) driven by the c‐kit promoter labels a fraction of the c‐kit+ cells recognized by antibody labeling for c‐kit protein. Expression of GFP by the c‐kit promoter and accumulation of GFP‐positive cells in the myocardium is relatively high at birth compared with adult and declines between postnatal weeks 1 and 2, which tracks in parallel with expression of c‐kit protein and c‐kit‐positive cells. Acute cardiomyopathic injury by infarction prompts increased expression of both GFP protein and GFP‐labeled cells in the region of infarction relative to remote myocardium. Similar increases were observed for c‐kit protein and cells with a slightly earlier onset and decline relative to the GFP signal. Cells coexpressing GFP, c‐kit, and cardiogenic markers were apparent at 1–2 weeks postinfarction. Cardiac‐resident c‐kit+ cell cultures derived from the transgenic line express GFP that is diminished in parallel with c‐kit by induction of differentiation. The use of genetically engineered mice validates and extends the concept of c‐kit+ cells participating in the response to myocardial injury.


Circulation Research | 2006

Akt Promotes Increased Cardiomyocyte Cycling and Expansion of the Cardiac Progenitor Cell Population

Natalie Gude; John Muraski; Marta Rubio; Jan Kajstura; Erik Schaefer; Piero Anversa; Mark A. Sussman

Activation of Akt is associated with enhanced cell cycling and cellular proliferation in nonmyocytes, but this effect of nuclear Akt accumulation has not been explored in the context of the myocardium. Cardiac-specific expression of nuclear-targeted Akt (Akt/nuc) in transgenics prolongs postnatal cell cycling as evidenced by increased numbers of Ki67+ cardiomyocytes at 2 to 3 weeks after birth. Similarly, nuclear-targeting of Akt promotes expansion of the presumptive cardiac progenitor cell population as assessed by immunolabeling for c-kit in combination with myocyte-specific markers Nkx 2.5 or MEF 2C. Increases in pro-proliferative cytokines, including tumor-necrosis superfamily 8, interleukin-17e, and hepatocyte growth factor, were found in nuclear-targeted Akt myocardial samples. Concurrent signaling mediated by paracrine factors downstream of Akt/nuc expression may be responsible for phenotypic effects of nuclear-targeted Akt in the myocardium, including enhanced cell proliferation and expansion of the stem cell population.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Pim-1 kinase antagonizes aspects of myocardial hypertrophy and compensation to pathological pressure overload

John Muraski; Kimberlee Fischer; Weitao Wu; Christopher T. Cottage; Pearl Quijada; Matt Mason; Shabana Din; Natalie Gude; Roberto Alvarez; Marcello Rota; Jan Kajstura; Zeping Wang; Erik Schaefer; Xiongen Chen; Scott MacDonnel; Nancy S. Magnuson; Stephen R. Houser; Piero Anversa; Mark A. Sussman

Pim-1 kinase exerts potent cardioprotective effects in the myocardium downstream of AKT, but the participation of Pim-1 in cardiac hypertrophy requires investigation. Cardiac-specific expression of Pim-1 (Pim-WT) or the dominant-negative mutant of Pim-1 (Pim-DN) in transgenic mice together with adenoviral-mediated overexpression of these Pim-1 constructs was used to delineate the role of Pim-1 in hypertrophy. Transgenic overexpression of Pim-1 protects mice from pressure-overload-induced hypertrophy relative to wild-type controls as evidenced by improved hemodynamic function, decreased apoptosis, increases in antihypertrophic proteins, smaller myocyte size, and inhibition of hypertrophic signaling after challenge. Similarly, Pim-1 overexpression in neonatal rat cardiomyocyte cultures inhibits hypertrophy induced by endothelin-1. On the cellular level, hearts of Pim-WT mice show enhanced incorporation of BrdU into myocytes and a hypercellular phenotype compared to wild-type controls after hypertrophic challenge. In comparison, transgenic overexpression of Pim-DN leads to dilated cardiomyopathy characterized by increased apoptosis, fibrosis, and severely depressed cardiac function. Furthermore, overexpression of Pim-DN leads to reduced contractility as evidenced by reduced Ca2+ transient amplitude and decreased percentage of cell shortening in isolated myocytes. These data support a pivotal role for Pim-1 in modulation of hypertrophy by impacting responses on molecular, cellular, and organ levels.


Circulation Research | 2008

Myocardial Induction of Nucleostemin in Response to Postnatal Growth and Pathological Challenge

Sailay Siddiqi; Natalie Gude; Toru Hosoda; John Muraski; Marta Rubio; Gregory Emmanuel; Jenna Fransioli; Serena Vitale; Carola Parolin; Domenico D'Amario; Erik Schaefer; Jan Kajstura; Annarosa Leri; Piero Anversa; Mark A. Sussman

Stem cell–specific proteins and regulatory pathways that determine self-renewal and differentiation have become of fundamental importance in understanding regenerative and reparative processes in the myocardium. One such regulatory protein, named nucleostemin, has been studied in the context of stem cells and several cancer cell lines, where expression is associated with proliferation and maintenance of a primitive cellular phenotype. We find nucleostemin is present in young myocardium and is also induced following cardiomyopathic injury. Nucleostemin expression in cardiomyocytes is induced by fibroblast growth factor-2 and accumulates in response to Pim-1 kinase activity. Cardiac stem cells also express nucleostemin that is diminished in response to commitment to a differentiated phenotype. Overexpression of nucleostemin in cultured cardiac stem cells increases proliferation while preserving telomere length, providing a mechanistic basis for potential actions of nucleostemin in promotion of cell survival and proliferation as seen in other cell types.

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Mark A. Sussman

San Diego State University

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Jan Kajstura

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Piero Anversa

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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John Muraski

San Diego State University

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Natalie Gude

San Diego State University

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Annarosa Leri

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Gregory Emmanuel

San Diego State University

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Jenna Fransioli

San Diego State University

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Roberto Alvarez

San Diego State University

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