Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Evangelia G. Kranias is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Evangelia G. Kranias.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2003

Phospholamban: a crucial regulator of cardiac contractility.

David H. MacLennan; Evangelia G. Kranias

Heart failure is a major cause of death and disability. Impairments in blood circulation that accompany heart failure can be traced, in part, to alterations in the activity of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ pump that are induced by its interactions with phospholamban, a reversible inhibitor. If phospholamban becomes superinhibitory or chronically inhibitory, contractility is diminished, inducing dilated cardiomyopathy in mice and humans. In mice, phospholamban seems to encumber an otherwise healthy heart, but humans with a phospholamban-null genotype develop early-onset dilated cardiomyopathy.


Circulation Research | 1994

Targeted ablation of the phospholamban gene is associated with markedly enhanced myocardial contractility and loss of beta-agonist stimulation.

Wusheng Luo; Ingrid L. Grupp; Judy M. Harrer; Sathivel Ponniah; Gunter Grupp; John J. Duffy; Thomas Doetschman; Evangelia G. Kranias

Phospholamban is the regulator of the Ca(2+)-ATPase in cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), and it has been suggested to be an important determinant in the inotropic responses of the heart to beta-adrenergic stimulation. To determine the role of phospholamban in vivo, the gene coding for this protein was targeted in murine embryonic stem cells, and mice deficient in phospholamban were generated. The phospholamban-deficient mice showed no gross developmental abnormalities but exhibited enhanced myocardial performance without changes in heart rate. The time to peak pressure and the time to half-relaxation were significantly shorter in phospholamban-deficient mice compared with their wild-type homozygous littermates as assessed in work-performing mouse heart preparations under identical venous returns, afterloads, and heart rates. The first derivatives of intraventricular pressure (+/- dP/dt) were also significantly elevated, and this was associated with an increase in the affinity of the SR Ca(2+)-ATPase for Ca2+ in the phospholamban-deficient hearts. Baseline levels of these parameters in the phospholamban-deficient hearts were equal to those observed in hearts of wild-type littermates maximally stimulated with the beta-agonist isoproterenol. These findings indicate that phospholamban acts as a critical repressor of basal myocardial contractility and may be the key phosphoprotein in mediating the hearts contractile responses to beta-adrenergic agonists.


Nature Medicine | 2004

PKC-α regulates cardiac contractility and propensity toward heart failure

Julian C. Braz; Kimberly N. Gregory; Anand Pathak; Wen Zhao; Bogachan Sahin; Raisa Klevitsky; Thomas F. Kimball; John N. Lorenz; Angus C. Nairn; Stephen B. Liggett; Ilona Bodi; Su Wang; Arnold Schwartz; Edward G. Lakatta; Jeffrey Robbins; Timothy E. Hewett; James A. Bibb; Margaret V. Westfall; Evangelia G. Kranias; Jeffery D. Molkentin

The protein kinase C (PKC) family of serine/threonine kinases functions downstream of nearly all membrane-associated signal transduction pathways. Here we identify PKC-α as a fundamental regulator of cardiac contractility and Ca2+ handling in myocytes. Hearts of Prkca-deficient mice are hypercontractile, whereas those of transgenic mice overexpressing Prkca are hypocontractile. Adenoviral gene transfer of dominant-negative or wild-type PKC-α into cardiac myocytes enhances or reduces contractility, respectively. Mechanistically, modulation of PKC-α activity affects dephosphorylation of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase-2 (SERCA-2) pump inhibitory protein phospholamban (PLB), and alters sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ loading and the Ca2+ transient. PKC-α directly phosphorylates protein phosphatase inhibitor-1 (I-1), altering the activity of protein phosphatase-1 (PP-1), which may account for the effects of PKC-α on PLB phosphorylation. Hypercontractility caused by Prkca deletion protects against heart failure induced by pressure overload, and against dilated cardiomyopathy induced by deleting the gene encoding muscle LIM protein (Csrp3). Deletion of Prkca also rescues cardiomyopathy associated with overexpression of PP-1. Thus, PKC-α functions as a nodal integrator of cardiac contractility by sensing intracellular Ca2+ and signal transduction events, which can profoundly affect propensity toward heart failure.


Cell | 1999

Chronic Phospholamban–Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Calcium ATPase Interaction Is the Critical Calcium Cycling Defect in Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Susumu Minamisawa; Masahiko Hoshijima; Guoxiang Chu; Christopher A. Ward; Konrad Frank; Yusu Gu; Maryann E. Martone; Yibin Wang; John Ross; Evangelia G. Kranias; Wayne R. Giles; Kenneth R. Chien

Dilated cardiomyopathy and end-stage heart failure result in multiple defects in cardiac excitation-contraction coupling. Via complementation of a genetically based mouse model of dilated cardiomyopathy, we now provide evidence that progressive chamber dilation and heart failure are dependent on a Ca2+ cycling defect in the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum. The ablation of a muscle-specific sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase (SERCA2a) inhibitor, phospholamban, rescued the spectrum of phenotypes that resemble human heart failure. Inhibition of phospholamban-SERCA2a interaction via in vivo expression of a phospholamban point mutant dominantly activated the contractility of ventricular muscle cells. Thus, interfering with phospholamban-SERCA2a interaction may provide a novel therapeutic approach for preventing the progression of dilated cardiomyopathy.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

Human phospholamban null results in lethal dilated cardiomyopathy revealing a critical difference between mouse and human

Kobra Haghighi; Fotis Kolokathis; Luke Pater; Roy A. Lynch; Michio Asahi; Anthony O. Gramolini; Guo-Chang Fan; Dimitris Tsiapras; Harvey S. Hahn; Stamatis Adamopoulos; Stephen B. Liggett; Gerald W. Dorn; David H. MacLennan; Dimitrios Th. Kremastinos; Evangelia G. Kranias

In human disease and experimental animal models, depressed Ca(2+) handling in failing cardiomyocytes is widely attributed to impaired sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) function. In mice, disruption of the PLN gene encoding phospholamban (PLN) or expression of dominant-negative PLN mutants enhances SR and cardiac function, but effects of PLN mutations in humans are unknown. Here, a T116G point mutation, substituting a termination codon for Leu-39 (L39stop), was identified in two families with hereditary heart failure. The heterozygous individuals exhibited hypertrophy without diminished contractile performance. Strikingly, both individuals homozygous for L39stop developed dilated cardiomyopathy and heart failure, requiring cardiac transplantation at ages 16 and 27. An over 50% reduction in PLN mRNA and no detectable PLN protein were noted in one explanted heart. The expression of recombinant PLN-L39stop in human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells and adult rat cardiomyocytes showed no PLN inhibition of SR Ca(2+)-ATPase and the virtual absence of stable PLN expression; where PLN was expressed, it was misrouted to the cytosol or plasma membrane. These findings describe a naturally-occurring loss-of-function human PLN mutation (PLN null). In contrast to reported benefits of PLN ablation in mouse heart failure, humans lacking PLN develop lethal dilated cardiomyopathy.


Nature Medicine | 1998

Fibroblast growth factor 2 control of vascular tone

Ming Zhou; Roy L. Sutliff; Richard J. Paul; John N. Lorenz; James B. Hoying; Christian C. Haudenschild; Moying Yin; J. Douglas Coffin; Ling Kong; Evangelia G. Kranias; Wusheng Luo; Gregory P. Boivin; John J. Duffy; Sharon A. Pawlowski; Thomas Doetschman

Vascular tone control is essential in blood pressure regulation, shock, ischemia-reperfusion, inflammation, vessel injury/repair, wound healing, temperature regulation, digestion, exercise physiology, and metabolism. Here we show that a well-known growth factor, FCF2, long thought to be involved in many developmental and homeostatic processes, including growth of the tissue layers of vessel walls, functions in vascular tone control. Fgf2 knockout mice are morphologically normal and display decreased vascular smooth muscle contractility, low blood pressure and thrombocytosis. Following intra-arterial mechanical injury, FGF2-deficient vessels undergo a normal hyperplastic response. These results force us to reconsider the function of FGF2 in vascular development and homeostasis in terms of vascular tone control.


Circulation Research | 1996

Phospholamban: A Prominent Regulator of Myocardial Contractility

Kimberly L. Koss; Evangelia G. Kranias

Our understanding of the role of phospholamban in cardiac physiology has evolved over the past two decades to the point where this protein is now understood to be a critical repressor of myocardial contractility. Phospholamban, through its inhibitory effects on the affinity of the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ pump for Ca2+, represses both the rates of relaxation and contraction in the mammalian heart. These inhibitory effects can be relieved through (1) phospholamban phosphorylation, (2) down-regulation of phospholamban gene expression, and (3) disruption of the phospholamban-Ca(2+)-ATPase interaction. Thus, genetic approaches and pharmacological interventions, designed to relieve the phospholamban inhibitory action on the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ pump and myocardial relaxation, may prove valuable in reversing the effects of several diseases in the mammalian heart. Such interventions could be designed to inhibit the phospholamban phosphatase, stabilize the phosphorylated state of phospholamban, interrupt the phospholamban-Ca(2+)-ATPase interaction, decrease phospholamban transcription, or disrupt phospholamban mRNA stability. Development of such therapeutic strategies to target phospholamban will be an important future goal for the clinical improvement of contractility in the failing heart.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1996

Cardiac-specific overexpression of phospholamban alters calcium kinetics and resultant cardiomyocyte mechanics in transgenic mice.

Vivek J. Kadambi; Sathivel Ponniah; Judy M. Harrer; Brian D. Hoit; G W Dorn nd; Richard A. Walsh; Evangelia G. Kranias

Phospholamban is the regulator of the cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca(2+)-ATPase activity and an important modulator of basal contractility in the heart. To determine whether all the SR Ca(2+)-ATPase enzymes are subject to regulation by phospholamban in vivo, transgenic mice were generated which overexpressed phospholamban in the heart, driven by the cardiac-specific alpha-myosin heavy chain promoter. Quantitative immunoblotting revealed a twofold increase in the phospholamban protein levels in transgenic hearts compared to wild type littermate hearts. The transgenic mice showed no phenotypic alterations and no changes in heart/body weight, heart/lung weight, and cardiomyocyte size. Isolated unloaded cardiac myocytes from transgenic mice exhibited diminished shortening fraction (63%) and decreased rates of shortening (64%) and relengthening (55%) compared to wild type (100%) cardiomyocytes. The decreases in contractile parameters of transgenic cardiomyocytes reflected decreases in the amplitude (83%) of the Ca2+ signal and prolongation (131%) in the time for decay of the Ca2+ signal, which was associated with a decrease in the apparent affinity of the SR Ca(2+)-ATPase for Ca2+ (56%), compared to wild type (100%) cardiomyocytes. In vivo analysis of left ventricular systolic function using M mode and pulsed-wave Doppler echocardiography revealed decreases in fractional shortening (79%) and the normalized mean velocity of circumferential shortening (67%) in transgenic mice compared to wild type (100%) mice. The differences in contractile parameters and Ca2+ kinetics in transgenic cardiomyocytes and the depressed left ventricular systolic function in transgenic mice were abolished upon isoproterenol stimulation. These findings indicate that a fraction of the Ca(2+)-ATPases in native SR is not under regulation by phospholamban. Expression of additional phospholamban molecules results in: (a) inhibition of SR Ca2+ transport; (b) decreases in systolic Ca2+ levels and contractile parameters in ventricular myocytes; and (c) depression of basal left ventricular systolic function in vivo.


Circulation Research | 2012

Modulation of Cardiac Contractility by the Phopholamban/SERCA2a Regulatome

Evangelia G. Kranias; Roger J. Hajjar

Heart disease remains the leading cause of death and disability in the Western world. Current therapies aim at treating the symptoms rather than the subcellular mechanisms, underlying the etiology and pathological remodeling in heart failure. A universal characteristic, contributing to the decreased contractile performance in human and experimental failing hearts, is impaired calcium sequestration into the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). SR calcium uptake is mediated by a Ca2+-ATPase (SERCA2), whose activity is reversibly regulated by phospholamban (PLN). Dephosphorylated PLN is an inhibitor of SERCA and phosphorylation of PLN relieves this inhibition. However, the initial simple view of a PLN/SERCA regulatory complex has been modified by our recent identification of SUMO, S100 and the histidine-rich Ca-binding protein as regulators of SERCA activity. In addition, PLN activity is regulated by 2 phosphoproteins, the inhibitor-1 of protein phosphatase 1 and the small heat shock protein 20, which affect the overall SERCA-mediated Ca-transport. This review will highlight the regulatory mechanisms of cardiac contractility by the multimeric SERCA/PLN-ensemble and the potential for new therapeutic avenues targeting this complex by using small molecules and gene transfer methods.


Circulation Research | 1995

In Vivo Echocardiographic Detection of Enhanced Left Ventricular Function in Gene-Targeted Mice With Phospholamban Deficiency

Brian D. Hoit; Saeb F. Khoury; Evangelia G. Kranias; Nancy Ball; Richard A. Walsh

We evaluated the ability of M-mode and Doppler echocardiography to assess left ventricular (LV) function reliably and repeatedly in mice and tested whether these techniques could detect physiological alterations in phospholamban (PLB)-deficient mice. Anesthetized wild-type mice (n = 7) and mice deficient in PLB (n = 8) were studied with two-dimensional guided M-mode and Doppler echocardiography using a 9-MHz imaging and 5- to 7.5-MHz Doppler transducer. Data were acquired in the baseline state and after intraperitoneal isoproterenol administration (2.0 micrograms/g IP). Interobserver and intraobserver variability and reproducibility were excellent. PLB-deficient mice were associated with significant (P < .05) increases in several physiological parameters (mean +/- SD) compared with wild-type control mice: normalized mean velocity of circumferential shortening (7.7 +/- 2.1 versus 5.5 +/- 1.0 circ/sec), peak aortic velocity (105 +/- 13 versus 75 +/- 9.2 cm/s), mean aortic acceleration (57 +/- 16 versus 31 +/- 4 m/s2), and peak early-diastolic transmitral velocity (80.0 +/- 7.2 versus 66.9 +/- 7.7 cm/s). LV dimensions, shortening fractions, heart rates, late diastolic transmitral (A) velocities, and early to late (E/A) diastolic velocity ratios were similar in both groups. Isoproterenol administration resulted in significant increases in Doppler indices of ventricular function in control but not PLB-deficient mice. These findings indicate that assessment of LV function can be performed noninvasively in mice under varying physiological conditions and that PLB regulates basal LV function in vivo.

Collaboration


Dive into the Evangelia G. Kranias's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guo-Chang Fan

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kobra Haghighi

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guoxiang Chu

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Brian D. Hoit

Case Western Reserve University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Albrecht Schmidt

Medical University of Graz

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Vivek J. Kadambi

Millennium Pharmaceuticals

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Wen Zhao

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Despina Sanoudou

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gerald W. Dorn

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Roger J. Hajjar

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge