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Dive into the research topics where Ferenc Ruzsnavszky is active.

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Featured researches published by Ferenc Ruzsnavszky.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2012

Structure‐activity relationships of vanilloid receptor agonists for arteriolar TRPV1

Ágnes Czikora; Erzsébet Lizanecz; P Bakó; Ibolya Rutkai; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; János Magyar; Róbert Pórszász; T Kark; Andrea Facskó; Zoltán Papp; István Édes; Attila Tóth

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) plays a role in the activation of sensory neurons by various painful stimuli and is a therapeutic target. However, functional TRPV1 that affect microvascular diameter are also expressed in peripheral arteries and we attempted to characterize this receptor.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2015

Contribution of ion currents to beat-to-beat variability of action potential duration in canine ventricular myocytes

Norbert Szentandrássy; Kornél Kistamás; Bence Hegyi; Balázs Horváth; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; Krisztina Váczi; János Magyar; Tamás Bányász; András Varró; Péter P. Nánási

Although beat-to-beat variability (short-term variability, SV) of action potential duration (APD) is considered as a predictor of imminent cardiac arrhythmias, the underlying mechanisms are still not clear. In the present study, therefore, we aimed to determine the role of the major cardiac ion currents, APD, stimulation frequency, and changes in the intracellular Ca2+ concentration ([Ca2+]i) on the magnitude of SV. Action potentials were recorded from isolated canine ventricular cardiomyocytes using conventional microelectrode techniques. SV was an exponential function of APD, when APD was modified by current injections. Drug effects were characterized as relative SV changes by comparing the drug-induced changes in SV to those in APD according to the exponential function obtained with current pulses. Relative SV was increased by dofetilide, HMR 1556, nisoldipine, and veratridine, while it was reduced by BAY K8644, tetrodotoxin, lidocaine, and isoproterenol. Relative SV was also increased by increasing the stimulation frequency and [Ca2+]i. In summary, relative SV is decreased by ion currents involved in the negative feedback regulation of APD (ICa, IKs, and IKr), while it is increased by INa and Ito. We conclude that drug-induced effects on SV should be evaluated in relation with the concomitant changes in APD. Since relative SV was decreased by ion currents playing critical role in the negative feedback regulation of APD, blockade of these currents, or the beta-adrenergic pathway, may carry also some additional proarrhythmic risk in addition to their well-known antiarrhythmic action.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2012

Role of action potential configuration and the contribution of Ca2+ and K+ currents to isoprenaline-induced changes in canine ventricular cells

Norbert Szentandrássy; V. Farkas; László Bárándi; Bence Hegyi; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; Balázs Horváth; Tamás Bányász; János Magyar; Ildikó Márton; Péter P. Nánási

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Although isoprenaline (ISO) is known to activate several ion currents in mammalian myocardium, little is known about the role of action potential morphology in the ISO‐induced changes in ion currents. Therefore, the effects of ISO on action potential configuration, L‐type Ca2+ current (ICa), slow delayed rectifier K+ current (IKs) and fast delayed rectifier K+ current (IKr) were studied and compared in a frequency‐dependent manner using canine isolated ventricular myocytes from various transmural locations.


Marine Drugs | 2013

Tetrodotoxin Blockade on Canine Cardiac L-Type Ca2+ Channels Depends on pH and Redox Potential

Bence Hegyi; István Komáromi; Kornél Kistamás; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; Krisztina Váczi; Balázs Horváth; János Magyar; Tamás Bányász; Péter P. Nánási; Norbert Szentandrássy

Tetrodotoxin (TTX) is believed to be one of the most selective inhibitors of voltage-gated fast Na+ channels in excitable tissues. Recently, however, TTX has been shown to block L-type Ca2+ current (ICa) in canine cardiac cells. In the present study, the TTX-sensitivity of ICa was studied in isolated canine ventricular myocytes as a function of (1) channel phosphorylation, (2) extracellular pH and (3) the redox potential of the bathing medium using the whole cell voltage clamp technique. Fifty-five micromoles of TTX (IC50 value obtained under physiological conditions) caused 60% ± 2% inhibition of ICa in acidic (pH = 6.4), while only a 26% ± 2% block in alkaline (pH = 8.4) milieu. Similarly, the same concentration of TTX induced 62% ± 6% suppression of ICa in a reductant milieu (containing glutathione + ascorbic acid + dithiothreitol, 1 mM each), in contrast to the 31% ± 3% blockade obtained in the presence of a strong oxidant (100 μM H2O2). Phosphorylation of the channel protein (induced by 3 μM forskolin) failed to modify the inhibiting potency of TTX; an IC50 value of 50 ± 4 μM was found in forskolin. The results are in a good accordance with the predictions of our model, indicating that TTX binds, in fact, to the selectivity filter of cardiac L-type Ca channels.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2013

Effects of pioglitazone on cardiac ion currents and action potential morphology in canine ventricular myocytes

Kornél Kistamás; Norbert Szentandrássy; Bence Hegyi; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; Krisztina Váczi; László Bárándi; Balázs Horváth; Andrea Szebeni; János Magyar; Tamás Bányász; Valéria Kecskeméti; Péter P. Nánási

Despite its widespread therapeutical use there is little information on the cellular cardiac effects of the antidiabetic drug pioglitazone in larger mammals. In the present study, therefore, the concentration-dependent effects of pioglitazone on ion currents and action potential configuration were studied in isolated canine ventricular myocytes using standard microelectrode, conventional whole cell patch clamp, and action potential voltage clamp techniques. Pioglitazone decreased the maximum velocity of depolarization and the amplitude of phase-1 repolarization at concentrations ≥3 μM. Action potentials were shortened by pioglitazone at concentrations ≥10 μM, which effect was accompanied with significant reduction of beat-to-beat variability of action potential duration. Several transmembrane ion currents, including the transient outward K(+) current (Ito), the L-type Ca(2+) current (ICa), the rapid and slow components of the delayed rectifier K(+) current (IKr and IKs, respectively), and the inward rectifier K(+) current (IK1) were inhibited by pioglitazone under conventional voltage clamp conditions. Ito was blocked significantly at concentrations ≥3 μM, ICa, IKr, IKs at concentrations ≥10 μM, while IK1 at concentrations ≥30 μM. Suppression of Ito, ICa, IKr, and IK1 has been confirmed also under action potential voltage clamp conditions. ATP-sensitive K(+) current, when activated by lemakalim, was effectively blocked by pioglitazone. Accordingly, action potentials were prolonged by 10 μM pioglitazone when the drug was applied in the presence of lemakalim. All these effects developed rapidly and were readily reversible upon washout. In conclusion, pioglitazone seems to be a harmless agent at usual therapeutic concentrations.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2017

Ca2 +-activated Cl− current is antiarrhythmic by reducing both spatial and temporal heterogeneity of cardiac repolarization

Bence Hegyi; Balázs Horváth; Krisztina Váczi; Mónika Gönczi; Kornél Kistamás; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; Roland Veress; Leighton T. Izu; Ye Chen-Izu; Tamás Bányász; János Magyar; László Csernoch; Péter P. Nánási; Norbert Szentandrássy

The role of Ca2+-activated Cl- current (ICl(Ca)) in cardiac arrhythmias is still controversial. It can generate delayed afterdepolarizations in Ca2+-overloaded cells while in other studies incidence of early afterdepolarization (EAD) was reduced by ICl(Ca). Therefore our goal was to examine the role of ICl(Ca) in spatial and temporal heterogeneity of cardiac repolarization and EAD formation. Experiments were performed on isolated canine cardiomyocytes originating from various regions of the left ventricle; subepicardial, midmyocardial and subendocardial cells, as well as apical and basal cells of the midmyocardium. ICl(Ca) was blocked by 0.5mmol/L 9-anthracene carboxylic acid (9-AC). Action potential (AP) changes were tested with sharp microelectrode recording. Whole-cell 9-AC-sensitive current was measured with either square pulse voltage-clamp or AP voltage-clamp (APVC). Protein expression of TMEM16A and Bestrophin-3, ion channel proteins mediating ICl(Ca), was detected by Western blot. 9-AC reduced phase-1 repolarization in every tested cell. 9-AC also increased AP duration in a reverse rate-dependent manner in all cell types except for subepicardial cells. Neither ICl(Ca) density recorded with square pulses nor the normalized expressions of TMEM16A and Bestrophin-3 proteins differed significantly among the examined groups of cells. The early outward component of ICl(Ca) was significantly larger in subepicardial than in subendocardial cells in APVC setting. Applying a typical subepicardial AP as a command pulse resulted in a significantly larger early outward component in both subepicardial and subendocardial cells, compared to experiments when a typical subendocardial AP was applied. Inhibiting ICl(Ca) by 9-AC generated EADs at low stimulation rates and their incidence increased upon beta-adrenergic stimulation. 9-AC increased the short-term variability of repolarization also. We suggest a protective role for ICl(Ca) against risk of arrhythmias by reducing spatial and temporal heterogeneity of cardiac repolarization and EAD formation.


Acta Physiologica | 2012

Interaction between Ca2+ channel blockers and isoproterenol on L-type Ca2+ current in canine ventricular cardiomyocytes

V. Farkas; Norbert Szentandrássy; László Bárándi; Bence Hegyi; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; O. Ruzsnavszky; Balázs Horváth; Tamás Bányász; János Magyar; Ildikó Márton; Péter P. Nánási

The aim of this work was to study antagonistic interactions between the effects of various types of Ca2+ channel blockers and isoproterenol on the amplitude of L‐type Ca2+ current in canine ventricular cells.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2011

Long Term Regulation of Cardiac L-Type Calcium Channel by Small G Proteins

János Magyar; Agnes Jenes; Kornél Kistamás; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; Péter P. Nánási; Jonathan Satin; Norbert Szentandrássy; Tamás Bányász

Calcium ions are crucial elements of excitation-contraction coupling in cardiac myocytes. The intracellular Ca(2+ ) concentration changes continously during the cardiac cycle, but the Ca(2+ ) entering to the cell serves as an intracellular second messenger, as well. The Ca(2+ ) as a second messenger influences the activity of many intracellular signalling pathways and regulates gene expression. In cardiac myocytes the major pathway for Ca(2+ ) entry into cells is L-type calcium channel (LTCC). The precise control of LTCC function is essential for maintaining the calcium homeostasis of cardiac myocytes. Dysregulation of LTCC may result in different diseases like cardiac hypertrophy, arrhytmias, heart failure. The physiological and pathological structural changes in the heart are induced in part by small G proteins. These proteins are involved in wide spectrum of cell biological functions including protein transport, regulation of cell proliferation, migration, apoptosis, and cytoskeletal rearrangement. Understanding the crosstalk between small G proteins and LTCC may help to understand the pathomechanism of different cardiac diseases and to develop a new generation of genetically-encoded Ca(2+ ) channel inhibitors.


General Physiology and Biophysics | 2014

Nicotine interferes with purinergic signaling in smooth muscle cells isolated from urinary bladders of patients with lower urinary tract symptoms

Agnes Jenes; Gyula P. Szigeti; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; Attila Varga; Laszlo Lorincz; László Csernoch

In patients with outlet obstruction, the contraction of the base is reduced compared to that of healthy individuals, while the contraction of the dome is not affected. Here, we investigated the cellular mechanisms that might be responsible for cholinergic effects blocking non-adrenergic non-cholinergic contractions in the base of the urinary bladder. Smooth muscle cells either from the base or from the dome of human urinary bladders were cultured to determine the contribution of cholinergic and purinergic mechanisms to their Ca2+ homeostasis. While ATP evoked Ca2+ transients in all the cells, nicotine and carbachol induced Ca2+ transients only in 56% and 44% of the cells, respectively. When ATP was administered together with nicotine or carbachol, the amplitudes of the Ca2+ transients recorded from cells prepared from the base of bladders were significantly smaller (42 ± 6% with nicotine and 56 ± 9% with carbachol) than those evoked by ATP alone. This inhibition was much less apparent in the dome of bladders. The inhibition between the cholinergic and purinergic signaling pathways reported in this work may decrease the strength of the contraction of the base of the urinary bladder in patients with outlet obstruction during voiding.


Naunyn-schmiedebergs Archives of Pharmacology | 2011

Effects of the PKC inhibitors chelerythrine and bisindolylmaleimide I (GF 109203X) on delayed rectifier K+ currents

Gábor Harmati; Ferenc Papp; Norbert Szentandrássy; László Bárándi; Ferenc Ruzsnavszky; Balázs Horváth; Tamás Bányász; János Magyar; Gyorgy Panyi; Zoltán Krasznai; Péter P. Nánási

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Bence Hegyi

University of California

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Agnes Jenes

University of Debrecen

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