Hetal D Patel
East Carolina University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hetal D Patel.
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2012
Ruben C. Sloan; Fatiha Moukdar; Chad R. Frasier; Hetal D Patel; Phillip A. Bostian; Robert M. Lust; David A. Brown
Mitochondria from diabetic hearts are sensitized to mitochondrial permeability transition pore (PTP) opening, which may be responsible for the increased propensity for cardiac injury in diabetic hearts. The purpose of this study was to determine if redox-dependent PTP opening contributes to augmented injury in diabetic hearts, and if compounds targeted at mitochondrial PTP, ROS, and calcium influx protected diabetic hearts from injury. Hearts from control or streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats were excised for either whole-heart or isolated mitochondria experiments. Myocardial glutathione content was oxidized in diabetic hearts when compared to control, and this translated to increased oxidation of the adenine nucleotide translocase in diabetic hearts. Diabetic mitochondria displayed significantly greater sensitivity to PTP opening than non-diabetic counterparts, which was reversed with the thiol-reducing agent dithiothreitol. The thiol-oxidant diamide increased calcium sensitivity in control, but not diabetic mitochondria. Diabetic animals treated with the mitochondria-targeted ROS suppressing peptide MTP-131 also showed improved resistance to PTP opening. In separate experiments hearts underwent ex vivo ischemia/reperfusion (IR). Diabetic hearts were more susceptible to IR injury, with infarct sizes of 60 ± 4% of the area-at-risk (vs. 46 ± 2% in non-diabetics; P<0.05). Administration of the PTP blocker NIM811 (5 μM), MTP-131 (1 nM) or the mitochondrial calcium uniporter blocker minocycline (1 μM) at the onset of reperfusion reduced infarct sizes in both control and diabetic hearts. These findings suggest that augmented susceptibility to injury in the diabetic heart is mediated by redox-dependent shifts in PTP opening, and that three novel mitochondria-targeted agents administered at reperfusion may be suitable adjuvant reperfusion therapies to attenuate injury in diabetic patients.
Cardiovascular Research | 2013
Chad R. Frasier; Fatiha Moukdar; Hetal D Patel; Ruben C. Sloan; Luke M. Stewart; Rick J. Alleman; Justin D. La Favor; David A. Brown
AIMS We have previously shown that exercise leads to sustainable cardioprotection through a mechanism involving improved glutathione replenishment. This study was conducted to determine if redox-dependent modifications in glutathione reductase (GR) were involved in exercise cardioprotection. Furthermore, we sought to determine if reactive oxygen species generated by NADPH oxidase and/or mitochondria during exercise were triggering events for GR modulations. METHODS AND RESULTS Rats were exercised for 10 consecutive days, after which isolated hearts were exposed to ischaemia/reperfusion (25 min/120 min). Exercise protected against infarction and arrhythmia, and preserved coronary flow. The GR inhibitor BCNU abolished the beneficial effects. GR activity was increased following exercise in a redox-dependent manner, with no change in GR protein levels. Because fluorescent labelling of GR protein thiols showed lower amounts of reduced thiols after exercise, we sought to determine the source of intracellular reactive oxygen species that may be activating GR. Subsets of animals were exercised immediately after treatment with either NADPH-oxidase inhibitors apocynin or Vas2870, or with mitoTEMPO or Bendavia, which reduce mitochondrial reactive oxygen species levels. The cardioprotective effects of exercise were abolished if animals exercised in the presence of NADPH oxidase inhibitors, in clear contrast to the mitochondrial reagents. These changes correlated with thiol-dependent modifications of GR. CONCLUSION Adaptive cardioprotective signalling is triggered by reactive oxygen species from NADPH oxidase, and leads to improved glutathione replenishment through redox-dependent modifications in GR.
Comparative Medicine | 2013
Chad R. Frasier; David A. Brown; Ruben C. Sloan; Brian Hayes; Luke M. Stewart; Hetal D Patel; Robert M. Lust; Matthew D. Rosenbaum
Archive | 2015
David A. Brown; Russell L. Moore; Chad R. Frasier; Fatiha Moukdar; Hetal D Patel; Ruben C. Sloan; Luke M. Stewart; J Rick; John W. Calvert; David J. Lefer; Rick J. Alleman; Alvin M. Tsang
The FASEB Journal | 2014
Rick J. Alleman; Hetal D Patel; Fatiha Moukdar; David A. Brown
Circulation Research | 2014
Rick J. Alleman; Hetal D Patel; Fatiha Moukdar; David A. Brown
The FASEB Journal | 2013
Luke M. Stewart; Jacob Q Lloyd; Hetal D Patel; Fatiha Moukdar; David A. Brown
Mitochondrion | 2013
David A. Brown; Hetal D Patel; Fatiha Moukdar; Saame Raza Shaikh; Mitchel Harris; Kelsey H. Fisher-Wellman; P. Darrell Neufer; Sharon L. Hale; Wangde Dai; Robert A. Kloner
Circulation Research | 2013
David A. Brown; Mitchel Harris; Fatiha Moukdar; Hetal D Patel; Saame Raza Shaikh
Circulation | 2012
David A. Brown; Sharon L. Hale; Carlos del Rio; Robert L. Hamlin; Yukie Yueyama; Anusak Kijtawornrat; Steve T. Yeh; Chad R. Frasier; Luke M. Stewart; Hetal D Patel; Maria C. Collins; Barbara J. Muller-Borer; Saame Raza Shaikh; Mitchel Harris; Kelsey H. Fisher-Wellman; P D Neufer; Robert A. Kloner