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Dive into the research topics where Gunter Grupp is active.

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Featured researches published by Gunter Grupp.


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.


Molecular Cell | 1999

Identification of a Specific Role for the Na,K-ATPase α2 Isoform as a Regulator of Calcium in the Heart

Paul F. James; Ingrid L. Grupp; Gunter Grupp; Alison L. Woo; G.Roger Askew; Michelle L. Croyle; Richard A. Walsh; Jerry B. Lingrel

It is well accepted that inhibition of the Na,K-ATPase in the heart, through effects on the Na/Ca exchanger, raises the intracellular Ca2+ concentration and strengthens cardiac contraction. However, the contribution that individual isoforms make to this calcium regulatory role is unknown. Assessing the phenotypes of mouse hearts with genetically reduced levels of Na,K-ATPase alpha 1 or alpha 2 isoforms clearly demonstrates different functional roles for these isoforms in vivo. Heterozygous alpha 2 hearts are hypercontractile as a result of increased calcium transients during the contractile cycle. In contrast, heterozygous alpha 1 hearts are hypocontractile. The different functional roles of these two isoforms are further demonstrated since inhibition of the alpha 2 isoform with ouabain increases the contractility of heterozygous alpha 1 hearts. These results definitively illustrate a specific role for the alpha 2 Na,K-ATPase isoform in Ca2+ signaling during cardiac contraction.


Circulation Research | 1998

Targeted Overexpression of the Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+-ATPase Increases Cardiac Contractility in Transgenic Mouse Hearts

Debra L. Baker; Katsuji Hashimoto; Ingrid L. Grupp; Yong Ji; Thomas D. Reed; Evgenij Loukianov; Gunter Grupp; Ajit Bhagwhat; Brian D. Hoit; Richard A. Walsh; Eduardo Marban; Muthu Periasamy

Cardiac hypertrophy and heart failure are known to be associated with a reduction in Ca2+-ATPase pump levels of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR). To determine whether, and to what extent, alterations in Ca2+ pump numbers can affect contraction and relaxation parameters of the heart, we have overexpressed the cardiac SR Ca2+-ATPase specifically in the mouse heart using the alpha-myosin heavy chain promoter. Analysis of 2 independent transgenic lines demonstrated that sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase isoform (SERCA2a) mRNA levels were increased 3.88+/-0. 4-fold and 7.90+/-0.2-fold over those of the control mice. SERCA2a protein levels were increased by 1.31+/-0.05-fold and 1.54+/-0. 05-fold in these lines despite high levels of mRNA, suggesting that complex regulatory mechanisms may determine the SERCA2a pump levels. The maximum velocity of Ca2+ uptake (Vmax) was increased by 37%, demonstrating that increased pump levels result in increased SR Ca2+ uptake function. However, the apparent affinity of the SR Ca2+-ATPase for Ca2+ remains unchanged in transgenic hearts. To evaluate the effects of overexpression of the SR Ca2+ pump on cardiac contractility, we used the isolated perfused work-performing heart model. The transgenic hearts showed significantly higher myocardial contractile function, as indicated by increased maximal rates of pressure development for contraction (+dP/dt) and relaxation (-dP/dt), together with shortening of the normalized time to peak pressure and time to half relaxation. Measurements of intracellular free calcium concentration and contractile force in trabeculae revealed a doubling of Ca2+ transient amplitude, with a concomitant boost in contractility. The present study demonstrates that increases in SERCA2a pump levels can directly enhance contractile function of the heart by increasing SR Ca2+ transport.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1996

Ablation of the murine alpha myosin heavy chain gene leads to dosage effects and functional deficits in the heart.

W K Jones; Ingrid L. Grupp; Thomas Doetschman; Gunter Grupp; Hanna Osinska; Timothy E. Hewett; Gregory P. Boivin; James Gulick; W A Ng; Jeffrey Robbins

The alpha-myosin heavy chain (alpha-MyHC) is the major contractile protein expressed in the myocardium of adult mice. We have produced mice carrying a null mutation of alpha-MyHC by homologous recombination in murine ES cells. Homozygous null animals die between 11 and 12 d in utero of gross heart defects, while alpha-MyHC+/- heterozygotes survive and appear externally normal. The presence of a single functional alpha-MyHC+ allele in heterozygous animals results in reduced levels of the transcript and protein as well as fibrosis and alterations in sarcomeric structure. Examination of heart function using a working heart preparation revealed severe impairment of both contractility and relaxation in a subset of the alpha-MyHC+/- animals. Thus, two alpha-MyHC+ alleles are necessary for normal cardiac development, and hemizygosity for the normal allele can result in altered cardiac function.


Circulation Research | 1998

Enhanced Myocardial Contractility and Increased Ca2+ Transport Function in Transgenic Hearts Expressing the Fast-Twitch Skeletal Muscle Sarcoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+-ATPase

Evgeny Loukianov; Yong Ji; Ingrid L. Grupp; Darryl L. Kirkpatrick; Debra L. Baker; Tanya Loukianova; Gunter Grupp; Jonathan Lytton; Richard A. Walsh; Muthu Periasamy

In this study, we investigated whether the fast-twitch skeletal muscle sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca2+ transport pump (SERCA1a) can functionally substitute the cardiac SERCA2a isoform and how its overexpression affects cardiac contractility. For this purpose, we generated transgenic (TG) mice that specifically overexpress SERCA1a in the heart, using the cardiac-specific alpha-myosin heavy chain promoter. Ectopic expression of SERCA1a resulted in a 2.5-fold increase in the amount of total SERCA protein. At the same time, the level of the endogenous SERCA2a protein was decreased by 50%, whereas the level of other muscle proteins, including calsequestrin, phospholamban, actin, and tropomyosin, remained unchanged. The steady-state level of SERCA phosphoenzyme intermediate was increased 2.5-fold, and the maximal velocity of Ca2+ uptake was increased 1.7-fold in TG hearts, demonstrating that the overexpressed protein is functional. Although the basal cytosolic calcium signal was decreased by 38% in TG cardiomyocytes, the amplitude of cytosolic calcium signal was increased by 71.8%. The rate of calcium resequestration was also increased in TG myocytes, which was reflected by a 51.6% decrease in the normalized time to 80% decay of calcium signal. This resulted in considerably increased peak rates of myocyte shortening and relengthening (50.0% and 66.6%, respectively). Cardiac functional analysis using isolated work-performing heart preparations revealed significantly faster rates of contraction and relaxation in TG hearts (41.9% and 39.5%, respectively). The time to peak pressure and the time to half-relaxation were shorter (29.1% and 32.7%, respectively). In conclusion, our study demonstrates that the SERCA1a pump can functionally substitute endogenous SERCA2a, and its overexpression significantly enhances Ca2+ transport and contractile function of the myocardium. These results also demonstrate that the SERCA pump level is a critical determinant of cardiac contractility.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1980

Hemodynamic and myocardial consequences of scorpion venom

Mosche Gueron; Robert J. Adolph; Ingrid L. Grupp; Margorie Gabel; Gunter Grupp; Noble O. Fowler

Abstract The hemodynamic effects of scorpion venom (Leiurus quinquestriatus) and the mechanism of heart failure were investigated in two groups of anesthetized spontaneously breathing dogs. The effects of different adrenergic and cholinergic blocking agents on the venom-induced hemodynamic changes were also evaluated. In one group the venom was given before autonomic nervous system blocking agents and in a second group propranolol, atropine, phentolamine and hexamethonium alone or in different combinations were given before the venom. Complete autonomic nervous system blockade was induced in two animals to evaluate a possible direct myocardial effect of venom. The venom, a powerful arrhythmogenic agent stimulating the autonomic sympathetic nervous system and adrenals, induced dramatic hemodynamic increases in left ventricular systolic and diastolic pressures, pulmonary and systemic arterial pressures and left ventricular contractility. The hemodynamic data show clearly for the first time that pulmonary edema in severe scorpion envenomation is cardiac in origin, thus emphasizing the importance of the abnormal left ventricular hemodynamics. Heart failure is most probably the result of the interaction of several mechanisms that include a catecholamine-induced decrease in left ventricular compliance and increased impedance to left ventricular emptying and cardiac arrhythmias, all of which may impede left ventricular filling. The combination of propranolol and phentolamine was the most effective blocking agent in reversing the venom-induced hemodynamic changes. However, atropine was effective only when the venom-induced cholinergic effects dominated the clinical picture.


Laboratory Investigation | 2000

Cardiac Dysfunction Occurs in the HIV-1 Transgenic Mouse Treated with Zidovudine

William Lewis; Ingrid L. Grupp; Gunter Grupp; Brian D. Hoit; Randal E. Morris; Allen M. Samarel; Leslie A. Bruggeman; Paul E. Klotman

Cardiomyopathy in AIDS is an increasingly important clinical problem. Mechanisms of AIDS cardiomyopathy were explored using AIDS transgenic mice that express replication-incompetent HIV-1 (NL4–3Δ gag/pol). Transgenic and FVB/n mice (n = 3 to 6 per cohort) received water ad libitum with and without zidovudine (3′-azido-2′,3′-deoxythymidine; AZT; 0.7 mg/ml) for 21 or 35 days. After 21 days, echocardiographic studies were performed and abundance of mRNA for cardiac sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA2), sodium calcium exchanger (NCX1), and atrial natriuretic factor were determined individually using Northern analysis of extracts of left ventricles. After 35 days, contractile function and relaxation were analyzed in isolated work-performing hearts. Histopathological and ultrastructural (transmission electron microscopy) changes were identified. After 21 days, molecular indicators of cardiac dysfunction were found. Depressed SERCA2 and increased atrial natriuretic factor mRNA abundance occurred in left ventricles from AZT-treated transgenic mice. NCX1 abundance was unchanged. Eccentric left ventricle hypertrophy was determined echocardiographically. After 35 days, cardiac dysfunction was worst in AZT-treated and AZT-untreated transgenic mice. Decreases in the first derivative of the maximal change in left ventricle systolic pressure with respect to time (+dP/dt) occurred in transgenic mice with and without AZT. Increased half-time of relaxation and ventricular relaxation (−dP/dt) occurred in AZT-treated and -untreated transgenic mice. Increased time to peak pressure was found only in AZT-treated transgenic mice. In AZT-treated FVB/n mice, −dP/dt was decreased. Ultrastructurally, mitochondrial destruction was most pronounced in AZT-treated transgenic mice, but also was found in AZT-treated FVB/n mice. Transgenic mice that express HIV-1 demonstrate cardiac dysfunction. AZT treatment of FVB/n mice causes mitochondrial ultrastructural alterations that are similar to those in other species. In transgenic mice, AZT treatment worsens molecular and ultrastructural features of cardiomyopathy. HIV-1 constructs and AZT each contribute to cardiac dysfunction in this murine model of AIDS cardiomyopathy.


Circulation Research | 1994

Alpha-skeletal actin is associated with increased contractility in the mouse heart.

Timothy E. Hewett; Ingrid L. Grupp; Gunter Grupp; Jeffrey Robbins

BALB/c mice express abnormally high levels of alpha-skeletal actin in the heart, which may be related to a duplication in the promoter of the alpha-cardiac actin gene. To evaluate the effects of overexpression of the alpha-skeletal actin isoform on cardiac contractile function, we studied these mice using the isolated perfused work-performing murine heart model and measured actin isoform expression in the same hearts. We quantified myocardial contractility from the maximum rate of contraction (+dP/dt) and time to peak pressure and relaxation from -dP/dt and time to half relaxation of left intraventricular pressure. Dot blots of total RNA hybridized against oligonucleotide sequences specific for either alpha-skeletal or alpha-cardiac actin mRNA showed that increased levels of alpha-skeletal actin RNA correlated significantly with increased contractility of hearts from the BALB/c mice (r = .80, n = 15, P < .001). The present study demonstrates a significant functional correlation between alpha-actin isoform content and cardiac contractile function and also that alpha-skeletal actin may promote an increased contractile function in the heart compared with alpha-cardiac actin.


Circulation Research | 1996

Phospholamban Gene Dosage Effects in the Mammalian Heart

Wusheng Luo; Beata M. Wolska; Ingrid L. Grupp; Judy M. Harrer; Kobra Haghighi; Donald G. Ferguson; Jay P. Slack; Gunter Grupp; Thomas Doetschman; R. John Solaro; Evangelia G. Kranias

Phospholamban ablation has been shown to result in significant increases in cardiac contractile parameters and loss of beta-adrenergic stimulation. To determine whether partial reduction in phospholamban levels is also associated with enhancement of cardiac performance and to further examine the sensitivity of the contractile system to alterations in phospholamban levels, hearts from wild-type, phospholamban-heterozygous, and phospholamban-deficient mice were studied in parallel at the subcellular, cellular, and organ levels. The phospholamban-heterozygous mice expressed reduced cardiac phospholamban mRNA and protein levels (40 +/- 5%) compared with wild type mice. The reduced phospholamban levels were associated with significant decreases in the EC50 of the sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ pump for CA2+ and increases in the contractile parameters of isolated myocytes and beating hearts. The relative phospholamban levels among wild-type, phospholamban-heterozygous, and phospholamban-deficient mouse hearts correlated well with the (1) EC50 of the Ca(2+)-ATPase for Ca2+ in sarcoplasmic reticulum, (2) rates of relaxation and contraction in isolated cardiac myocytes, and (3) rates of relaxation and intact beating hearts. These findings suggest that physiological and pathological changes in the levels of phospholamban will result in parallel changes in sarcoplasmic reticulum function and cardiac contraction.


Circulation Research | 1998

Thyroid Hormone–Induced Alterations in Phospholamban-Deficient Mouse Hearts

Eva Kiss; Angie G. Brittsan; István Édes; Ingrid L. Grupp; Gunter Grupp; Evangelia G. Kranias

Alterations in the expression levels of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+-ATPase and its regulator, phospholamban, have been implicated in the effects of thyroxine hormone on cardiac function. To determine the role of phospholamban in these effects, hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism were induced in phospholamban-deficient mice and their isogenic wild types. Hypothyroidism resulted in significant decreases of left ventricular contractility, which could be moderately stimulated by increases in preload or afterload, in both phospholamban-deficient and wild-type mice. However, the basal contractile parameters in hypothyroid phospholamban-deficient hearts were at least as high as those exhibited by hyperthyroid wild-type hearts. In hyperthyroidism, there was no further enhancement of the hyperdynamic contractile parameters in phospholamban-deficient hearts, although the wild-type hearts exhibited significantly increased contractile function compared with their respective euthyroid groups. Furthermore, increases in preload or afterload did not enhance contractility in either phospholamban-deficient or wild-type hyperthyroid hearts. Examination of the relative tissue levels of cardiac SR Ca2+-ATPase revealed increases in hyperthyroidism and decreases in hypothyroidism compared with euthyroidism, and these changes were similar between phospholamban-deficient and wild-type hearts. An opposite trend was observed for phospholamban expression levels in the wild-type group, which were depressed in hyperthyroid hearts but increased in hypothyroid hearts. These findings indicate that (1) thyroid hormones induce similar changes in the cardiac SR Ca2+-ATPase levels in either the presence or absence of phospholamban, (2) the thyroxine-induced increases in SR Ca2+-ATPase levels are not associated with any further stimulation of the hyperdynamic cardiac function in phospholamban-deficient mice, and (3) the decreased contractile parameters in hypothyroid phospholamban-deficient hearts associated with decreases in SR Ca2+-ATPase levels and myosin heavy chain isoform switches are at least as high as those of the stimulated hyperthyroid wild-type hearts. Thus, alterations in the phospholamban level or its activity may be a critical determinant of the contractile responses to altered thyroid states in the mammalian heart.

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Ingrid L. Grupp

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Evangelia G. Kranias

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Judith S. Williams

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Pal L. Vaghy

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Richard A. Walsh

Case Western Reserve University

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A. DePover

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Arnold M. Schwartz

George Washington University

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Brian D. Hoit

Case Western Reserve University

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