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Dive into the research topics where Hiroki Takanari is active.

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Featured researches published by Hiroki Takanari.


Nature Genetics | 2012

Dominant missense mutations in ABCC9 cause Cantú syndrome

Magdalena Harakalova; Jeske van Harssel; Paulien A. Terhal; Stef van Lieshout; Karen Duran; Ivo Renkens; David J. Amor; Louise C. Wilson; Edwin P. Kirk; Claire Turner; Debbie Shears; Sixto García-Miñaúr; Melissa Lees; Alison Ross; Hanka Venselaar; Gert Vriend; Hiroki Takanari; Martin B. Rook; Marcel A.G. van der Heyden; Folkert W. Asselbergs; Hans M Breur; Marielle Swinkels; Ingrid Scurr; Sarah F. Smithson; Nine V.A.M. Knoers; Jasper J. van der Smagt; Isaac J. Nijman; Wigard P. Kloosterman; Mieke M. van Haelst; Gijs van Haaften

Cantú syndrome is characterized by congenital hypertrichosis, distinctive facial features, osteochondrodysplasia and cardiac defects. By using family-based exome sequencing, we identified a de novo mutation in ABCC9. Subsequently, we discovered novel dominant missense mutations in ABCC9 in 14 of the 16 individuals with Cantú syndrome examined. The ABCC9 protein is part of an ATP-dependent potassium (KATP) channel that couples the metabolic state of a cell with its electrical activity. All mutations altered amino acids in or close to the transmembrane domains of ABCC9. Using electrophysiological measurements, we show that mutations in ABCC9 reduce the ATP-mediated potassium channel inhibition, resulting in channel opening. Moreover, similarities between the phenotype of individuals with Cantú syndrome and side effects from the KATP channel agonist minoxidil indicate that the mutations in ABCC9 result in channel opening. Given the availability of ABCC9 antagonists, our findings may have direct implications for the treatment of individuals with Cantú syndrome.


Cardiovascular Research | 2011

Alterations in adhesion junction precede gap junction remodelling during the development of heart failure in cardiomyopathic hamsters.

Masaaki Yoshida; Tomoko Ohkusa; Tadamitsu Nakashima; Hiroki Takanari; Masafumi Yano; Genzou Takemura; Haruo Honjo; Itsuo Kodama; Yoichi Mizukami; Masunori Matsuzaki

AIMS The intercalated disc (ID) contains two complexes, the adhesion junction (AJ) and the gap junction (GJ). We studied ID remodelling and its potential role in arrhythmogenesis and investigated the effects of olmesartan on ID remodelling during development of heart failure (HF) in UM-X7.1 cardiomyopathic hamsters. METHODS AND RESULTS The UM-X7.1 hamsters showed left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy by the age of 10-15 weeks and a moderate impairment in LV contractility at 20 weeks. At age 10-15 weeks, 10-20% of the hamsters died suddenly without HF, and ventricular tachycardia (VT)/ventricular fibrillation (VF) was induced in ∼30% of hamsters. Electron microscopy showed that density linking cell-to-cell adhesion was irregular and unclearly defined, and filamentous structures attached to electron-dense components were arranged in disorder. Western blotting showed that the total cellular expression level of β-catenin was decreased, and expression of nuclear β-catenin, which functions as a T-cell factor/lymphocyte enhancer binding factor transcriptional activator, was also remarkably decreased. At age 20 weeks, LV connexin43 expression showed a remarkable decrease, and the VT/VF induction rate was ∼90%. In UM-X7.1 hamsters, olmesartan improved abnormal ID ultrastructural changes, attenuated the decrease of total cellular and nuclear β-catenin expression, decreased VT/VF induction, and improved survival rate. CONCLUSION These results suggest that changes in AJ protein precede connexin43 GJ alterations, and ID remodelling might contribute to arrhythmogenesis during the development of HF. Angiotensin receptor blockade might be a new therapy for lethal ventricular arrhythmia by modulating both AJ and GJ remodelling.


Cardiovascular Research | 2013

Efficient and specific cardiac IK1 inhibition by a new pentamidine analogue

Hiroki Takanari; Lukas Nalos; Anna Stary-Weinzinger; Kathy C. G. de Git; Rosanne Varkevisser; Tobias Linder; Marien J.C. Houtman; Maaike Peschar; Teun P. de Boer; Richard R. Tidwell; Martin B. Rook; Marc A. Vos; Marcel A.G. van der Heyden

AIMS In excitable cells, KIR2.x ion-channel-carried inward rectifier current (IK₁) is thought to set the negative and stable resting membrane potential, and contributes to action potential repolarization. Loss- or gain-of-function mutations correlate with cardiac arrhythmias and pathological remodelling affects normal KIR2.x protein levels. No specific IK1 inhibitor is currently available for in vivo use, which severely hampers studies on the precise role of IK1 in normal cardiac physiology and pathophysiology. The diamine antiprotozoal drug pentamidine (P) acutely inhibits IK₁ by plugging the cytoplasmic pore region of the channel. We aim to develop more efficient and specific IK₁ inhibitors based on the P structure. METHODS AND RESULTS We analysed seven pentamidine analogues (PA-1 to PA-7) for IK₁ blocking potency at 200 nM using inside-out patches from KIR2.1 expressing HEK-293 cells. PA-6 showed the highest potency and was tested further. PA-6 blocked KIR2.x currents of human and mouse with low IC₅₀ values (12-15 nM). Modelling indicated that PA-6 had less electrostatic but more lipophilic interactions with the cytoplasmic channel pore than P, resulting in a higher channel affinity for PA-6 (ΔG -44.1 kJ/Mol) than for P (ΔG -31.7 kJ/Mol). The involvement of acidic amino acid residues E224 and E299 in drug-channel interaction was confirmed experimentally. PA-6 did not affect INav1.5, ICa-L, IKv4.3, IKv11.1, and IKv7.1/minK currents at 200 nM. PA-6 inhibited the inward (50 nM 40%; 100 nM 59%; 200 nM 77%) and outward (50 nM 40%; 100 nM 76%; 200 nM 100%) components of IK₁ in isolated canine adult-ventricular cardiomyocytes (CMs). PA-6 prolonged action potential duration of CMs by 8 (n = 9), 26 (n = 5), and 34% (n = 11) at 50, 100, and 200 nM, respectively. Unlike P, PA-6 had no effect on KIR2.1 channel expression at concentrations from 0.1 to 3 μM. However, PA-6 at 10 μM increased KIR2.1 expression levels. Also, PA-6 did not affect the maturation of hERG, except when applied at 10 μM. CONCLUSION PA-6 has higher efficiency and specificity to KIR2.x-mediated current than P, lengthens action potential duration, and does not affect channel trafficking at concentrations relevant for complete IK₁ block.


Heart Rhythm | 2009

Early termination of spiral wave reentry by combined blockade of Na+ and L-type Ca2+ currents in a perfused two-dimensional epicardial layer of rabbit ventricular myocardium.

Yuko Ishiguro; Haruo Honjo; Tobias Opthof; Yusuke Okuno; Harumichi Nakagawa; Masatoshi Yamazaki; Masahide Harada; Hiroki Takanari; Tomoyuki Suzuki; Mikio Morishima; Ichiro Sakuma; Kaichiro Kamiya; Itsuo Kodama

BACKGROUND Modification of spiral wave (SW) reentry by antiarrhythmic drugs is a central issue to be challenged for better understanding of their benefits and risks. OBJECTIVE We investigated the effects of pilsicainide and/or verapamil, which block sodium and L-type calcium currents (I(Na) and I(Ca,L)), respectively, on SW reentry. METHODS A two-dimensional epicardial ventricular muscle layer was created in rabbit hearts by cryoablation (n = 32), and action potential signals were analyzed by high-resolution optical mapping. RESULTS During constant stimulation, pilsicainide (3-5 microM) caused a frequency-dependent decrease of conduction velocity (CV; by 20%-54% at 5 Hz) without affecting action potential duration (APD). Verapamil (3 microM) caused APD shortening (by 16% at 5 Hz) without affecting CV. Ventricular tachycardias (VTs) that were induced were more sustained in the presence of either pilsicainide or verapamil. The incidence of sustained VTs (>30 s)/all VTs per heart was 58% +/- 9% for 5 microM pilsicainide vs. 22% +/- 9% for controls and 62% +/- 10% for 3 microM verapamil vs. 22% +/- 8% for controls. The SWs with pilsicainide were characterized by slower rotation around longer functional block lines (FBLs), whereas those with verapamil were characterized by faster rotation around shorter FBLs. Combined application of 3 microM pilsicainide and 3 microM verapamil resulted in early termination of VTs (sustained VTs/all VTs per heart: 2% +/- 2% vs. 29% +/- 9% for controls); SWs showed extensive drift and decremental conduction, leading to their spontaneous annihilation. CONCLUSION Blockade of either I(Na) or I(Ca,L) stabilizes SWs in a two-dimensional epicardial layer of rabbit ventricular myocardium to help their persistence, whereas blockade of both currents destabilizes SWs to facilitate their termination.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2011

Rate-dependent shortening of action potential duration increases ventricular vulnerability in failing rabbit heart

Masahide Harada; Yukiomi Tsuji; Yuko Ishiguro; Hiroki Takanari; Yusuke Okuno; Yasuya Inden; Haruo Honjo; Jong-Kook Lee; Toyoaki Murohara; Ichiro Sakuma; Kaichiro Kamiya; Itsuo Kodama

Congestive heart failure (CHF) predisposes to ventricular fibrillation (VF) in association with electrical remodeling of the ventricle. However, much remains unknown about the rate-dependent electrophysiological properties in a failing heart. Action potential properties in the left ventricular subepicardial muscles during dynamic pacing were examined with optical mapping in pacing-induced CHF (n=18) and control (n=17) rabbit hearts perfused in vitro. Action potential durations (APDs) in CHF were significantly longer than those observed for controls at basic cycle lengths (BCLs)>1,000 ms but significantly shorter at BCLs<400 ms. Spatial APD dispersions were significantly increased in CHF versus control (by 17-81%), and conduction velocity was significantly decreased in CHF (by 6-20%). In both groups, high-frequency stimulation (BCLs<150 ms) always caused spatial APD alternans; spatially concordant alternans and spatially discordant alternans (SDA) were induced at 60% and 40% in control, respectively, whereas 18% and 82% in CHF. SDA in CHF caused wavebreaks followed by reentrant excitations, giving rise to VF. Incidence of ventricular tachycardia/VFs elicited by high-frequency dynamic pacing (BCLs<150 ms) was significantly higher in CHF versus control (93% vs. 20%). In CHF, left ventricular subepicardial muscles show significant APD shortenings at short BCLs favoring reentry formations following wavebreaks in association with SDA. High-frequency excitation itself may increase the vulnerability to VF in CHF.


Frontiers in Physiology | 2012

Experimental Mapping of the Canine KCNJ2 and KCNJ12 Gene Structures and Functional Analysis of the Canine KIR2.2 ion Channel

Marien J.C. Houtman; Hiroki Takanari; Bart Kok; Margot B.Sc. van Eck; Denise R. Montagne; Marc A. Vos; Teun P. de Boer; Marcel A.G. van der Heyden

For many model organisms traditionally in use for cardiac electrophysiological studies, characterization of ion channel genes is lacking. We focused here on two genes encoding the inward rectifier current, KCNJ2 and KCNJ12, in the dog heart. A combination of RT-PCR, 5′-RACE, and 3′-RACE demonstrated the status of KCNJ2 as a two exon gene. The complete open reading frame (ORF) was located on the second exon. One transcription initiation site was mapped. Four differential transcription termination sites were found downstream of two consensus polyadenylation signals. The canine KCNJ12 gene was found to consist of three exons, with its ORF located on the third exon. One transcription initiation and one termination site were found. No alternative splicing was observed in right ventricle or brain cortex. The gene structure of canine KCNJ2 and KCNJ12 was conserved amongst other vertebrates, while current GenBank gene annotation was determined as incomplete. In silico translation of KCN12 revealed a non-conserved glycine rich stretch located near the carboxy-terminus of the KIR2.2 protein. However, no differences were observed when comparing dog with human KIR2.2 protein upon ectopic expression in COS-7 or HEK293 cells with respect to subcellular localization or electrophysiological properties.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2012

Inhibition of intercellular coupling stabilizes spiral-wave reentry, whereas enhancement of the coupling destabilizes the reentry in favor of early termination

Yoshio Takemoto; Hiroki Takanari; Haruo Honjo; Norihiro Ueda; Masahide Harada; Sara Kato; Masatoshi Yamazaki; Ichiro Sakuma; Tobias Opthof; Itsuo Kodama; Kaichiro Kamiya

Spiral-wave (SW) reentry is a major organizing principle of ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation (VT/VF). We tested a hypothesis that pharmacological modification of gap junction (GJ) conductance affects the stability of SW reentry in a two-dimensional (2D) epicardial ventricular muscle layer prepared by endocardial cryoablation of Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts. Action potential signals were recorded and analyzed by high-resolution optical mapping. Carbenoxolone (CBX; 30 μM) and rotigaptide (RG, 0.1 μM) were used to inhibit and enhance GJ coupling, respectively. CBX decreased the space constant (λ) by 36%, whereas RG increased it by 22-24% (n = 5; P < 0.01). During centrifugal propagation, there was a linear relationship between the wavefront curvature (κ) and local conduction velocity (LCV): LCV = LCV(0) - D·κ (D, diffusion coefficient; LCV(0), LCV at κ = 0). CBX decreased LCV(0) and D by 27 ± 3 and 57 ± 3%, respectively (n = 5; P < 0.01). RG increased LCV(0) and D by 18 ± 3 and 54 ± 5%, respectively (n = 5, P < 0.01). The regression lines with and without RG crossed, resulting in a paradoxical decrease of LCV with RG at κ > ~60 cm(-1). SW reentry induced after CBX was stable, and the incidence of sustained VTs (>30 s) increased from 38 ± 4 to 85 ± 4% after CBX (n = 18; P < 0.01). SW reentry induced after RG was characterized by decremental conduction near the rotation center, prominent drift and self-termination by collision with the anatomical boundaries, and the incidence of sustained VTs decreased from 40 ± 5 to 17 ± 6% after RG (n = 13; P < 0.05). These results suggest that decreased intercellular coupling stabilizes SW reentry in 2D cardiac muscle, whereas increased coupling facilitates its early self-termination.


Cardiovascular Research | 2016

Calmodulin/CaMKII inhibition improves intercellular communication and impulse propagation in the heart and is antiarrhythmic under conditions when fibrosis is absent

Hiroki Takanari; Vincent J.A. Bourgonje; Magda S.C. Fontes; Antonia J. A. Raaijmakers; Helen E. Driessen; John A. Jansen; Roel van der Nagel; Bart Kok; Leonie van Stuijvenberg; Mohamed Boulaksil; Yoshio Takemoto; Masatoshi Yamazaki; Yukiomi Tsuji; Haruo Honjo; Kaichiro Kamiya; Itsuo Kodama; Mark E. Anderson; Marcel A.G. van der Heyden; Harold V.M. van Rijen; Toon A.B. van Veen; Marc A. Vos

AIM In healthy hearts, ventricular gap junctions are mainly composed by connexin43 (Cx43) and localize in the intercalated disc, enabling appropriate electrical coupling. In diseased hearts, Cx43 is heterogeneously down-regulated, whereas activity of calmodulin/calcium-calmodulin protein kinase II (CaM/CaMKII) signalling increases. It is unclear if CaM/CaMKII affects Cx43 expression/localization or impulse propagation. We analysed different models to assess this. METHODS AND RESULTS AC3-I mice with CaMKII genetically inhibited were subjected to pressure overload (16 weeks, TAC vs. sham). Optical and epicardial mapping was performed on Langendorff-perfused rabbit and AC3-I hearts, respectively. Cx43 subcellular distribution from rabbit/mouse ventricles was evaluated by immunoblot after Triton X-100-based fractionation. In mice with constitutively reduced CaMKII activity (AC3-I), conduction velocity (CV) was augmented (n = 11, P < 0.01 vs. WT); in AC3-I, CV was preserved after TAC, in contrast to a reduction seen in TAC-WT mice (-20%). Cx43 expression was preserved after TAC in AC3-I mice, though arrhythmias and fibrosis were still present. In rabbits, W7 (CaM inhibitor, 10 µM) increased CV (6-13%, n= 6, P< 0.05), while susceptibility to arrhythmias decreased. Immunoconfocal microscopy revealed enlarged Cx43 cluster sizes at intercalated discs of those hearts. Total Cx43 did not change by W7 (n= 4), whereas Triton X-100 insoluble Cx43 increased (+21%, n= 4, P< 0.01). Similar findings were obtained in AC3-I mouse hearts when compared with control, and in cultured dog cardiomyocytes. Functional implication was shown through increased intercellular coupling in cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. CONCLUSION Both acute and chronic CaM/CaMKII inhibition improves conduction characteristics and enhances localization of Cx43 in the intercalated disc. In the absence of fibrosis, this reduced the susceptibility for arrhythmias.


Heart and Vessels | 2010

Acute amiodarone promotes drift and early termination of spiral wave re-entry

Harumichi Nakagawa; Haruo Honjo; Yuko Ishiguro; Masatoshi Yamazaki; Yusuke Okuno; Masahide Harada; Hiroki Takanari; Ichiro Sakuma; Kaichiro Kamiya; Itsuo Kodama

Intravenous application of amiodarone is commonly used in the treatment of life-threatening arrhythmias, but the underlying mechanism is not fully understood. The purpose of the present study is to investigate the acute effects of amiodarone on spiral wave (SW) re-entry, the primary organization machinery of ventricular tachycardia/fibrillation (VT/VF), in comparison with lidocaine. A two-dimensional ventricular myocardial layer was obtained from 24 Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts, and epicardial excitations were analyzed by high-resolution optical mapping. During basic stimulation, amiodarone (5 μM) caused prolongation of action potential duration (APD) by 5.6%–9.1%, whereas lidocaine (15 μM) caused APD shortening by 5.0%–6.4%. Amiodarone and lidocaine reduced conduction velocity similarly. Ventricular tachycardias induced by DC stimulation in the presence of amiodarone were of shorter duration (sustained-VTs >30 s/total VTs: 2/58, amiodarone vs 13/52, control), whereas those with lidocaine were of longer duration (22/73, lidocaine vs 14/58, control). Amiodarone caused prolongation of VT cycle length and destabilization of SW re-entry, which is characterized by marked prolongation of functional block lines, frequent wavefront-tail interactions near the rotation center, and considerable drift, leading to its early annihilation via collision with anatomical boundaries. Spiral wave re-entry in the presence of lidocaine was more stabilized than in control. In the anisotropic ventricular myocardium, amiodarone destabilizes SW re-entry facilitating its early termination. Lidocaine, in contrast, stabilizes SW re-entry resulting in its persistence.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2017

Class III antiarrhythmic drugs amiodarone and dronedarone impair KIR 2.1 backward trafficking

Yuan Ji; Hiroki Takanari; Muge Qile; Lukas Nalos; Marien J.C. Houtman; Fee L. Romunde; Raimond Heukers; Paul M.P. van Bergen en Henegouwen; Marc A. Vos; Marcel A.G. van der Heyden

Drug‐induced ion channel trafficking disturbance can cause cardiac arrhythmias. The subcellular level at which drugs interfere in trafficking pathways is largely unknown. KIR2.1 inward rectifier channels, largely responsible for the cardiac inward rectifier current (IK1), are degraded in lysosomes. Amiodarone and dronedarone are class III antiarrhythmics. Chronic use of amiodarone, and to a lesser extent dronedarone, causes serious adverse effects to several organs and tissue types, including the heart. Both drugs have been described to interfere in the late‐endosome/lysosome system. Here we defined the potential interference in KIR2.1 backward trafficking by amiodarone and dronedarone. Both drugs inhibited IK1 in isolated rabbit ventricular cardiomyocytes at supraclinical doses only. In HK‐KWGF cells, both drugs dose‐ and time‐dependently increased KIR2.1 expression (2.0 ± 0.2‐fold with amiodarone: 10 μM, 24 hrs; 2.3 ± 0.3‐fold with dronedarone: 5 μM, 24 hrs) and late‐endosomal/lysosomal KIR2.1 accumulation. Increased KIR2.1 expression level was also observed in the presence of Nav1.5 co‐expression. Augmented KIR2.1 protein levels and intracellular accumulation were also observed in COS‐7, END‐2, MES‐1 and EPI‐7 cells. Both drugs had no effect on Kv11.1 ion channel protein expression levels. Finally, amiodarone (73.3 ± 10.3% P < 0.05 at −120 mV, 5 μM) enhanced IKIR2.1 upon 24‐hrs treatment, whereas dronedarone tended to increase IKIR2.1 and it did not reach significance (43.8 ± 5.5%, P = 0.26 at −120 mV; 2 μM). We conclude that chronic amiodarone, and potentially also dronedarone, treatment can result in enhanced IK1 by inhibiting KIR2.1 degradation.

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