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Dive into the research topics where František Papoušek is active.

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Featured researches published by František Papoušek.


Basic Research in Cardiology | 2002

Cardioprotective effects of chronic hypoxia and ischaemic preconditioning are not additive

Jan Neckář; František Papoušek; Olga Nováková; Bohuslav Ostadal; František Kolář

Abstract The objective of the work was to examine whether adaptation to intermittent high altitude hypoxia and ischaemic preconditioning provide additive protection of the heart against subsequent acute ischaemic injury. Adult male rats were exposed to hypoxia (7000 m, 8 h/day, 24–30 exposures) in a hypobaric chamber. Susceptibility of their hearts to ischaemia-induced ventricular arrhythmias and infarction was evaluated in open-chest animals subjected to 30-min coronary artery occlusion and 4-h reperfusion. Preconditioning was induced by either two (PC1) or five (PC2) occlusions of the same artery for 5 min, each followed by 5-min reperfusion. Adaptation to hypoxia decreased the arrhythmia score from 2.75 ± 0.13 in normoxic controls to 2.17 ± 0.18. Both PC1 and PC2 reduced the arrhythmia score in the controls (0.15 ± 0.10 and 0.71 ± 0.24, respectively), as well as in the hypoxic groups (0.40 ± 0.15 and 0.27 ± 0.15, respectively). The infarct size was reduced from 66.6 ± 2.3% of the area at risk in the controls to 50.2 ± 1.9% in the adapted rats. PC1 conferred further protection in adapted animals (38.4 ± 2.8%) but this combined effect was of the same magnitude as that of preconditioning in the controls (37.5 ± 1.6%). Similar results were obtained using PC2. It is concluded that adaptation to hypoxia decreases the efficiency of ischaemic preconditioning; cardioprotective effects of these two phenomena are not additive. The results are consistent with the view that the mechanisms of protection conferred by chronic hypoxia and preconditioning may share the same signalling pathway.


Nature | 2011

Endonuclease G is a novel determinant of cardiac hypertrophy and mitochondrial function.

Chris McDermott-Roe; Junmei Ye; Rizwan Ahmed; Ximing Sun; Anna Serafín; James S. Ware; Leonardo Bottolo; Phil Muckett; Xavier Cañas; Jisheng Zhang; Glenn C. Rowe; Rachel Buchan; Han Lu; Adam Braithwaite; Massimiliano Mancini; David Hauton; Ramon Martí; Elena García-Arumí; Norbert Hubner; Howard J. Jacob; Tadao Serikawa; Vaclav Zidek; František Papoušek; Frantisek Kolar; Maria Cardona; Marisol Ruiz-Meana; David Garcia-Dorado; Joan X. Comella; Leanne E. Felkin; Paul J.R. Barton

Left ventricular mass (LVM) is a highly heritable trait and an independent risk factor for all-cause mortality. So far, genome-wide association studies have not identified the genetic factors that underlie LVM variation, and the regulatory mechanisms for blood-pressure-independent cardiac hypertrophy remain poorly understood. Unbiased systems genetics approaches in the rat now provide a powerful complementary tool to genome-wide association studies, and we applied integrative genomics to dissect a highly replicated, blood-pressure-independent LVM locus on rat chromosome 3p. Here we identified endonuclease G (Endog), which previously was implicated in apoptosis but not hypertrophy, as the gene at the locus, and we found a loss-of-function mutation in Endog that is associated with increased LVM and impaired cardiac function. Inhibition of Endog in cultured cardiomyocytes resulted in an increase in cell size and hypertrophic biomarkers in the absence of pro-hypertrophic stimulation. Genome-wide network analysis unexpectedly implicated ENDOG in fundamental mitochondrial processes that are unrelated to apoptosis. We showed direct regulation of ENDOG by ERR-α and PGC1α (which are master regulators of mitochondrial and cardiac function), interaction of ENDOG with the mitochondrial genome and ENDOG-mediated regulation of mitochondrial mass. At baseline, the Endog-deleted mouse heart had depleted mitochondria, mitochondrial dysfunction and elevated levels of reactive oxygen species, which were associated with enlarged and steatotic cardiomyocytes. Our study has further established the link between mitochondrial dysfunction, reactive oxygen species and heart disease and has uncovered a role for Endog in maladaptive cardiac hypertrophy.


Cardiovascular Research | 2002

Effects of mitochondrial KATP modulators on cardioprotection induced by chronic high altitude hypoxia in rats

Jan Neckář; Ondrej Szarszoi; Lukáš Koten; František Papoušek; Bohuslav Ostadal; Gary J. Grover; František Kolář

OBJECTIVES Adaptation of rats to intermittent high altitude hypoxia increases the tolerance of their hearts to acute ischemia/reperfusion injury. Our aim was to examine the role of mitochondrial ATP-sensitive potassium channels (K(ATP)) in this form of protection. METHODS Adult male Wistar rats were exposed to hypoxia of 5000 m in a barochamber for 8 h/day, 5 days a week; the total number of exposures was 24-32. A control group was kept under normoxic conditions (200 m). Infarct size (tetrazolium staining) was measured in anesthetized open-chest animals subjected to 20-min regional ischemia (coronary artery occlusion) and 4-h reperfusion. Isolated perfused hearts were used to assess the recovery of contractile function following 20-min global ischemia and 40-min reperfusion. In the open-chest study, a selective mitochondrial K(ATP) blocker, 5-hydroxydecanoate (5 mg/kg), or openers, diazoxide (10 mg/kg) or BMS-191095 (10 mg/kg), were administered into the jugular vein 5 and 10 min before occlusion, respectively. In the isolated heart study, 5-hydroxydecanoate (250 micromol/l) or diazoxide (50 micromol/l) were added to the perfusion medium 5 or 10 min before ischemia, respectively. RESULTS In the control normoxic group, infarct size occupied 62.2+/-2.0% of the area at risk as compared with 52.7+/-2.5% in the chronically hypoxic group (P<0.05). Post-ischemic recovery of contractile function (dP/dt) reached 60.0+/-3.9% of the pre-ischemic value and it was improved to 72.4+/-1.2% by adaptation to hypoxia (P<0.05). While 5-hydroxydecanoate completely abolished these protective effects of chronic hypoxia, it had no appreciable influence in normoxic groups. In contrast, diazoxide significantly increased the recovery of contractile function and reduced infarct size in normoxic groups only. The later effect was also observed following treatment with BMS-191095. CONCLUSION The results suggest that opening of mitochondrial K(ATP) channels is involved in the cardioprotective mechanism conferred by long-term adaptation to intermittent high altitude hypoxia.


Clinical Science | 2012

Inhibition of soluble epoxide hydrolase by cis-4-(4-(3-adamantan-1-ylureido)cyclohexyl- oxy)benzoic acid exhibits antihypertensive and cardioprotective actions in transgenic rats with angiotensin II-dependent hypertension

Jan Neckář; Libor Kopkan; Zuzana Husková; František Kolář; František Papoušek; Herbert J. Kramer; Sung Hee Hwang; Bruce D. Hammock; John D. Imig; Jiří Malý; Ivan Netuka; Bohuslav Ošťádal; Luděk Červenka

The present study was undertaken to evaluate the effects of chronic treatment with c-AUCB {cis-4-[4-(3-adamantan-1-ylureido)cyclohexyl-oxy]benzoic acid}, a novel inhibitor of sEH (soluble epoxide hydrolase), which is responsible for the conversion of biologically active EETs (epoxyeicosatrienoic acids) into biologically inactive DHETEs (dihydroxyeicosatrienoic acids), on BP (blood pressure) and myocardial infarct size in male heterozygous TGR (Ren-2 renin transgenic rats) with established hypertension. Normotensive HanSD (Hannover Sprague-Dawley) rats served as controls. Myocardial ischaemia was induced by coronary artery occlusion. Systolic BP was measured in conscious animals by tail plethysmography. c-AUCB was administrated in drinking water. Renal and myocardial concentrations of EETs and DHETEs served as markers of internal production of epoxygenase metabolites. Chronic treatment with c-AUCB, which resulted in significant increases in the availability of biologically active epoxygenase metabolites in TGR (assessed as the ratio of EETs to DHETEs), was accompanied by a significant reduction in BP and a significantly reduced infarct size in TGR as compared with untreated TGR. The cardioprotective action of c-AUCB treatment was completely prevented by acute administration of a selective EETs antagonist [14,15-epoxyeicosa-5(Z)-enoic acid], supporting the notion that the improved cardiac ischaemic tolerance conferred by sEH inhibition is mediated by EETs actions at the cellular level. These findings indicate that chronic inhibition of sEH exhibits antihypertensive and cardioprotective actions in this transgenic model of angiotensin II-dependent hypertension.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2011

Metabolic characterization of volume overload heart failure due to aorto-caval fistula in rats

Vojtech Melenovsky; Jan Benes; Petra Škaroupková; David Sedmera; Hynek Strnad; Michal Kolar; Čestmír Vlček; Jiri Petrak; Jiri Benes; František Papoušek; Olena Oliyarnyk; Ludmila Kazdova; Ludek Cervenka

Metabolic interactions between adipose tissue and the heart may play an active role in progression of heart failure (HF). The aim of the study was to examine changes in myocardial and adipose tissue metabolism and gene expression in a rat HF model induced by chronic volume overload. HF was induced by volume overload from aorto-caval fistula (ACF) in 3-month-old male Wistar rats and animals were studied in the phase of decompensated HF (22nd week). HF rats showed marked eccentric cardiac hypertrophy, pulmonary congestion, increased LV end-diastolic pressure, and intraabdominal fat depletion. HF rats had preserved glucose tolerance, but increased circulating free fatty acids (FFA) and attenuated insulin response during oral glucose challenge. Isolated organ studies showed preserved responsiveness of adipose tissue lipolysis and lipogenesis to epinephrine and insulin in ACF. The heart of HF animals had markedly reduced triglyceride content (almost to half of controls), attenuated anti-oxidative reserve (GSH/GSSG), upregulated HF markers (ANP, periostin, thrombospondin-4), specific signaling pathways (Wnt, TGF-β), and downregulated enzymes of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation, citric acid cycle, and respiratory chain. Adipose tissue transcription profiling showed upregulated receptor for gastric inhibitory polypeptide. In conclusion, ACF-induced HF model displays several deregulations of systemic metabolism. Despite elevation of systemic FFAs, myocardial triglycerides are low and insulin levels are attenuated, arguing against a role of lipotoxicity or insulin resistance in this model. Attenuated postprandial insulin response and relative lack of its antilipolytic effects may facilitate intraabdominal fat depletion observed in ACF-HF animals.


Basic Research in Cardiology | 1995

Changes in calcium handling in atrophic heterotopically isotransplanted rat hearts

František Kolář; C. MacNaughton; František Papoušek; Borivoj Korecky; Karel Rakusan

Atrophy of the rat heart induced by hemodynamic unloading after heterotopic transplantation is associated with impaired relaxation while systolic function remains normal when compared to the heart of the recipient animal. To identify possible underlying mechanisms for the above, we studied some aspects of membrane calcium handling using postextrasystolic potentiation of contractions in the isolated right ventricular papillary muscle and in the left ventricle of the Langendorff-perfused heart. We also compared the alterations of the unloaded heart with those of overloaded hypertrophic hearts of rats with suprarenal aortic constriction. In the atrophic heart the degree of potentiation after one extrasystole, considered to be proportional to the trans-sarcolemmal influx of Ca2+ during an action potential, was increased by 125% when compared with recipient hearts. The rate of decay of potentiation which reflects the fraction of activator Ca2+ recirculating in the cells via the sarcoplasmic reticulum, negatively correlated with the degree of potentiation, although its mean value was not significantly altered. In hypertrophic hearts the decay of potentiation was faster when compared with the hearts of sham-operated animals, indicating a decreased recirculating fraction of Ca2+. The data suggest that the relative importance of trans-sarcolemmal Ca2+ fluxes is increased both in cardiac atrophy and hypertrophy, but their quantitative role in the control of cardiac contraction might differ.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2013

Brief Daily Episode of Normoxia Inhibits Cardioprotection Conferred by Chronic Continuous Hypoxia. Role of Oxidative Stress and BK Ca Channels

Jan Neckar; Gudrun H. Borchert; Patricie Hlousková; Petra Micova; Olga Novakova; František Novák; Milos Hroch; František Papoušek; Bohuslav Ostadal; Frantisek Kolar

The purpose of the present study was to assess the impact of brief daily reoxygenation during adaptation to chronic continuous hypoxia (CCH) on protective cardiac phenotype. Adult male Wistar rats were kept at CCH (10% oxygen) for 5, 15 or 30 days; a subgroup of animals was exposed to room air daily for a single 60-min period. While 5 days of CCH did not affect myocardial infarction induced by 20-min coronary artery occlusion and 3-h reperfusion, 15 days reduced infarct size from 62% of the area at risk in normoxic controls to 52%, and this protective effect was more pronounced after 30 days (41%). Susceptibility to ischemic ventricular arrhythmias exhibited reciprocal development. CCH increased myocardial abundance of mitochondrial superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) without affecting malondialdehyde concentration. Daily reoxygenation abolished both the infarct size-limiting effect of CCH and MnSOD upregulation, and increased malondialdehyde (by 53%). Ventricular cardiomyocytes isolated from CCH rats exhibited better survival and lower lactate dehydrogenase release caused by simulated ischemia/reperfusion than cells from normoxic and daily reoxygenated groups. The cytoprotective effects of CCH were attenuated by the large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (BKCa) channel blocker paxilline, while the opener NS1619 reduced cell injury in the normoxic group but not in the CCH group. Daily reoxygenation restored the NS1619- induced protection, whereas paxilline had no effect, resembling the pattern observed in the normoxic group. The results suggest that CCH is cardioprotective and brief daily reoxygenation blunts its salutary effects, possibly by a mechanism involving oxidative stress and attenuation of the activation of mitochondrial BKCa channels.


Physiological Genomics | 2012

CD36 overexpression predisposes to arrhythmias but reduces infarct size in spontaneously hypertensive rats: gene expression profile analysis

Jan Neckář; Jan Šilhavý; Vaclav Zidek; Vladimír Landa; Petr Mlejnek; Miroslava Šimáková; Jonathan G. Seidman; Christine E. Seidman; Ludmila Kazdova; Martina Klevstig; František Novák; Marek Vecka; František Papoušek; Josef Houštěk; Zdeněk Drahota; Theodore W. Kurtz; František Kolář; Michal Pravenec

CD36 fatty acid translocase plays a key role in supplying heart with its major energy substrate, long-chain fatty acids (FA). Previously, we found that the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) harbors a deletion variant of Cd36 gene that results in reduced transport of long-chain FA into cardiomyocytes and predisposes the SHR to cardiac hypertrophy. In the current study, we analyzed the effects of mutant Cd36 on susceptibility to ischemic ventricular arrhythmias and myocardial infarction in adult SHR-Cd36 transgenic rats with wild-type Cd36 compared with age-matched SHR controls. Using an open-chest model of coronary artery occlusion, we found that SHR-Cd36 transgenic rats showed profound arrhythmogenesis resulting in significantly increased duration of tachyarrhythmias (207 ± 48 s vs. 55 ± 21 s, P < 0.05), total number of premature ventricular complexes (2,623 ± 517 vs. 849 ± 250, P < 0.05) and arrhythmia score (3.86 ± 0.18 vs. 3.13 ± 0.13, P < 0.001). On the other hand, transgenic SHR compared with SHR controls showed significantly reduced infarct size (52.6 ± 4.3% vs. 72.4 ± 2.9% of area at risk, P < 0.001). Similar differences were observed in isolated perfused hearts, and the increased susceptibility of transgenic SHR to arrhythmias was abolished by reserpine, suggesting the involvement of catecholamines. To further search for possible molecular mechanisms of altered ischemic tolerance, we compared gene expression profiles in left ventricles dissected from 6-wk-old transgenic SHR vs. age-matched controls using Illumina-based sequencing. Circadian rhythms and oxidative phosphorylation were identified as the top KEGG pathways, while circadian rhythms, VDR/RXR activation, IGF1 signaling, and HMGB1 signaling were the top IPA canonical pathways potentially important for Cd36-mediated effects on ischemic tolerance. It can be concluded that transgenic expression of Cd36 plays an important role in modulating the incidence and severity of ischemic and reperfusion ventricular arrhythmias and myocardial infarct size induced by coronary artery occlusion. The proarrhythmic effect of Cd36 transgene appears to be dependent on adrenergic stimulation.


BMC Endocrine Disorders | 2014

Partial deficiency of HIF-1α stimulates pathological cardiac changes in streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice

Romana Bohuslavova; Frantisek Kolar; David Sedmera; Lada Skvorova; František Papoušek; Jan Neckar; Gabriela Pavlinkova

BackgroundDiabetic cardiomyopathy is associated with a number of functional and structural pathological changes such as left ventricular dysfunction, cardiac remodeling, and apoptosis. The primary cause of diabetic cardiomyopathy is hyperglycemia, the metabolic hallmark of diabetes. Recent studies have shown that a diabetic environment suppresses hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF)-1α protein stability and function. The aim of this study was to analyze the functional role of HIF-1α in the development of diabetic cardiomyopathy. We have hypothesized that the partial deficiency of HIF-1α may compromise cardiac responses under diabetic conditions and increase susceptibility to diabetic cardiomyopathy.MethodsDiabetes was induced by streptozotocin in wild type (Wt) and heterozygous Hif1a knock-out (Hif1a+/-) mice. Echocardiographic evaluations of left ventricular functional parameters, expression analyses by qPCR and Western blot, and cardiac histopathology assessments were performed in age-matched groups, diabetic, and non-diabetic Wt and Hif1a+/- mice.ResultsFive weeks after diabetes was established, a significant decrease in left ventricle fractional shortening was detected in diabetic Hif1a+/- but not in diabetic Wt mice. The combination effects of the partial deficiency of Hif1a and diabetes affected the gene expression profile of the heart, including reduced vascular endothelial growth factor A (Vegfa) expression. Adverse cardiac remodeling in the diabetic Hif1a+/- heart was shown by molecular changes in the expression of structural molecules and components of the extracellular matrix.ConclusionsWe have shown a correlation between heterozygosity for Hif1α and adverse functional, molecular, and cellular changes associated with diabetic cardiomyopathy. Our results provide evidence that HIF-1α regulates early cardiac responses to diabetes, and that HIF-1α deregulation may influence the increased risk for diabetic cardiomyopathy.


Langmuir | 2011

Preparation of metallochelating microbubbles and study on their site-specific interaction with rGFP-HisTag as a model protein.

Róbert Lukáč; Zuzana Kauerová; Josef Mašek; Eliška Bartheldyová; Pavel Kulich; Štěpán Koudelka; Zina Korvasová; Jana Plocková; František Papoušek; František Kolář; Roland Schmidt; Jaroslav Turánek

The histidine-metallochelating lipid complex is one of the smallest high affinity binding units used as tools for rapid noncovalent binding of histidine tagged molecules, especially recombinant proteins. The advantage of metallochelating complex over protein-ligand complexes (e.g., streptavidine-biotin, glutathiontransferase-glutathion) consists in its very low immunogenicity, if any. This concept for the construction of surface-modified metallochelating microbubbles was proved with recombinant green fluorescent protein (rGFP) containing 6His-tag. This protein is easy to be detected by various fluorescence techniques as flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. Microbubbles (MB) composed of DPPC with various contents of metallochelating lipid DOGS-NTA-Ni were prepared by intensive shaking of the liposome suspension under the atmosphere of sulfur hexafluoride. For this purpose, the instrument 3M ESPE CapMix was used. Various techniques (static light scattering, flow cytometry, and optical microscopy) were compared and used for the measurements of the size distribution of MB. All three methods demonstrated that the prepared MB were homogeneous in their size, and the mean diameter of the MB in various batches was within the range of 2.1-2.8 μm (the size range of 1-10 μm). The presence of large MB (8-10 μm) was marginal. Counting of MB revealed that the average amount of MB prepared of 10 mg of phospholipid equaled approximately 10(9) MB/mL. Lyophilized MB were prepared with saccharose as a cryoprotectant. These MB were shown to be stable both in vitro (the estimated half-live of the MB in bovine serum at 37 °C was 3-7 min) and in vivo (mouse). The stability of the MB was affected by molar content of DOGS-NTA-Ni. DPPC-based metallochelating MB provided a clear and very contrast image of the ventricular cavity soon after the injection. Site selective and stable binding of rGFP-HisTag (as a model of His-tagged protein) onto the surface of metallochelating MB was demonstrated by confocal microscopy.

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Frantisek Kolar

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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František Kolář

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Jan Neckar

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Jan Neckář

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Vaclav Zidek

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Bohuslav Ostadal

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Josef Houštěk

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Petr Mlejnek

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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Ludmila Kazdova

Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic

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