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Dive into the research topics where Jason Karch is active.

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Featured researches published by Jason Karch.


Nature | 2014

c-kit + cells minimally contribute cardiomyocytes to the heart

Jop H. van Berlo; Onur Kanisicak; Marjorie Maillet; Ronald J. Vagnozzi; Jason Karch; Suh Chin J. Lin; Ryan Middleton; Eduardo Marbán; Jeffery D. Molkentin

If and how the heart regenerates after an injury event is highly debated. c-kit-expressing cardiac progenitor cells have been reported as the primary source for generation of new myocardium after injury. Here we generated two genetic approaches in mice to examine whether endogenous c-kit+ cells contribute differentiated cardiomyocytes to the heart during development, with ageing or after injury in adulthood. A complementary DNA encoding either Cre recombinase or a tamoxifen-inducible MerCreMer chimaeric protein was targeted to the Kit locus in mice and then bred with reporter lines to permanently mark cell lineage. Endogenous c-kit+ cells did produce new cardiomyocytes within the heart, although at a percentage of approximately 0.03 or less, and if a preponderance towards cellular fusion is considered, the percentage falls to below approximately 0.008. By contrast, c-kit+ cells amply generated cardiac endothelial cells. Thus, endogenous c-kit+ cells can generate cardiomyocytes within the heart, although probably at a functionally insignificant level.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

Cyclophilin D controls mitochondrial pore–dependent Ca2+ exchange, metabolic flexibility, and propensity for heart failure in mice

John W. Elrod; Renee Wong; Shikha Mishra; Ronald J. Vagnozzi; Bhuvana Sakthievel; Sanjeewa A. Goonasekera; Jason Karch; Scott A. Gabel; John L. Farber; Thomas Force; Joan Heller Brown; Elizabeth Murphy; Jeffery D. Molkentin

Cyclophilin D (which is encoded by the Ppif gene) is a mitochondrial matrix peptidyl-prolyl isomerase known to modulate opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP). Apart from regulating necrotic cell death, the physiologic function of the MPTP is largely unknown. Here we have shown that Ppif(-/-) mice exhibit substantially greater cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, and reduction in myocardial function in response to pressure overload stimulation than control mice. In addition, Ppif(-/-) mice showed greater hypertrophy and lung edema as well as reduced survival in response to sustained exercise stimulation. Cardiomyocyte-specific transgene expression of cyclophilin D in Ppif(-/-) mice rescued the enhanced hypertrophy, reduction in cardiac function, and rapid onset of heart failure following pressure overload stimulation. Mechanistically, the maladaptive phenotype in the hearts of Ppif(-/-) mice was associated with an alteration in MPTP-mediated Ca(2+) efflux resulting in elevated levels of mitochondrial matrix Ca(2+) and enhanced activation of Ca(2+)-dependent dehydrogenases. Elevated matrix Ca(2+) led to increased glucose oxidation relative to fatty acids, thereby limiting the metabolic flexibility of the heart that is critically involved in compensation during stress. These findings suggest that the MPTP maintains homeostatic mitochondrial Ca(2+) levels to match metabolism with alterations in myocardial workload, thereby suggesting a physiologic function for the MPTP.


eLife | 2013

Bax and Bak function as the outer membrane component of the mitochondrial permeability pore in regulating necrotic cell death in mice.

Jason Karch; Jennifer Q. Kwong; Adam R. Burr; Michelle A. Sargent; John W. Elrod; Pablo M. Peixoto; Sonia Martinez-Caballero; Hanna Osinska; Emily H. Cheng; Jeffrey Robbins; Kathleen W. Kinnally; Jeffery D. Molkentin

A critical event in ischemia-based cell death is the opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP). However, the molecular identity of the components of the MPTP remains unknown. Here, we determined that the Bcl-2 family members Bax and Bak, which are central regulators of apoptotic cell death, are also required for mitochondrial pore-dependent necrotic cell death by facilitating outer membrane permeability of the MPTP. Loss of Bax/Bak reduced outer mitochondrial membrane permeability and conductance without altering inner membrane MPTP function, resulting in resistance to mitochondrial calcium overload and necrotic cell death. Reconstitution with mutants of Bax that cannot oligomerize and form apoptotic pores, but still enhance outer membrane permeability, permitted MPTP-dependent mitochondrial swelling and restored necrotic cell death. Our data predict that the MPTP is an inner membrane regulated process, although in the absence of Bax/Bak the outer membrane resists swelling and prevents organelle rupture to prevent cell death. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.00772.001


Nature Communications | 2016

Genetic lineage tracing defines myofibroblast origin and function in the injured heart

Onur Kanisicak; Hadi Khalil; Malina J. Ivey; Jason Karch; Bryan D. Maliken; Robert N. Correll; Matthew J. Brody; Suh-Chin J. Lin; Bruce J. Aronow; Michelle D. Tallquist; Jeffery D. Molkentin

Cardiac fibroblasts convert to myofibroblasts with injury to mediate healing after acute myocardial infarction (MI) and to mediate long-standing fibrosis with chronic disease. Myofibroblasts remain a poorly defined cell type in terms of their origins and functional effects in vivo. Here we generate Postn (periostin) gene-targeted mice containing a tamoxifen-inducible Cre for cellular lineage-tracing analysis. This Postn allele identifies essentially all myofibroblasts within the heart and multiple other tissues. Lineage tracing with four additional Cre-expressing mouse lines shows that periostin-expressing myofibroblasts in the heart derive from tissue-resident fibroblasts of the Tcf21 lineage, but not endothelial, immune/myeloid or smooth muscle cells. Deletion of periostin+ myofibroblasts reduces collagen production and scar formation after MI. Periostin-traced myofibroblasts also revert back to a less-activated state upon injury resolution. Our results define the myofibroblast as a periostin-expressing cell type necessary for adaptive healing and fibrosis in the heart, which arises from Tcf21+ tissue-resident fibroblasts.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2009

Cyclin D1 Splice Variants: Polymorphism, Risk, and Isoform-Specific Regulation in Prostate Cancer

Clay E.S. Comstock; Michael A. Augello; Ruth Pe Benito; Jason Karch; Thai H. Tran; Fransiscus E. Utama; Elizabeth A. Tindall; Ying Wang; Craig J. Burd; Eric M. Groh; Hoa N. Hoang; Graham G. Giles; Gianluca Severi; Vanessa M. Hayes; Brian E. Henderson; Loic Le Marchand; Laurence N. Kolonel; Christopher A. Haiman; Raffaele Baffa; Leonard G. Gomella; Erik S. Knudsen; Hallgeir Rui; Susan M. Henshall; Robert L. Sutherland; Karen E. Knudsen

Purpose: Alternative CCND1 splicing results in cyclin D1b, which has specialized, protumorigenic functions in prostate not shared by the cyclin D1a (full length) isoform. Here, the frequency, tumor relevance, and mechanisms controlling cyclin D1b were challenged. Experimental Design: First, relative expression of both cyclin D1 isoforms was determined in prostate adenocarcinomas. Second, relevance of the androgen axis was determined. Third, minigenes were created to interrogate the role of the G/A870 polymorphism (within the splice site), and findings were validated in primary tissue. Fourth, the effect of G/A870 on cancer risk was assessed in two large case-control studies. Results: Cyclin D1b is induced in tumors, and a significant subset expressed this isoform in the absence of detectable cyclin D1a. Accordingly, the isoforms showed noncorrelated expression patterns, and hormone status did not alter splicing. Whereas G/A870 was not independently predictive of cancer risk, A870 predisposed for transcript-b production in cells and in normal prostate. The influence of A870 on overall transcript-b levels was relieved in tumors, indicating that aberrations in tumorigenesis likely alter the influence of the polymorphism. Conclusions: These studies reveal that cyclin D1b is specifically elevated in prostate tumorigenesis. Cyclin D1b expression patterns are distinct from that observed with cyclin D1a. The A870 allele predisposes for transcript-b production in a context-specific manner. Although A870 does not independently predict cancer risk, tumor cells can bypass the influence of the polymorphism. These findings have major implications for the analyses of D-cyclin function in the prostate and provide the foundation for future studies directed at identifying potential modifiers of the G/A870 polymorphism. (Clin Cancer Res 2009;15(17):5338–49)


Circulation Research | 2015

Regulated Necrotic Cell Death: The Passive Aggressive Side of Bax and Bak

Jason Karch; Jeffery D. Molkentin

Although the molecular effectors of apoptotic cell death have been largely annotated over the past 30 years, leading to a strong biological understanding of this process and its importance in cell biology, cell death through necrosis has only recently been accepted as a similarly regulated process with definable molecular effectors. The mitochondria are important and central mediators of both apoptosis and regulated necrosis. In apoptosis, the B-cell leukemia/lymphoma 2 (Bcl-2) family members Bcl-2-associated protein x (Bax) and Bcl-2 homologues antagonist/killer (Bak) undergo oligomerization in the outer mitochondrial membrane resulting in the release of apoptosis inducing substrates and the activation of caspases and nucleases. In contrast, during necrosis the mitochondria become dysfunctional and maladaptive in conjunction with reactive oxygen species production and the loss of ATP production, in part through opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. Although regulated necrosis is caspase-independent, recent evidence has shown that it still requires the apoptotic regulators Bax/Bak, which can regulate the permeability characteristics of the outer mitochondrial membrane in their nonoligomerized state. Here, we review the nonapoptotic side of Bcl-2 family, specifically the role of Bax/Bak in regulated necrotic cell death. We will also discuss how these Bcl-2 family member effectors could be part of a larger integrated network that ultimately decides the fate of a given cell somewhere within a molecular continuum between apoptosis and regulated necrosis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Identifying the components of the elusive mitochondrial permeability transition pore

Jason Karch; Jeffery D. Molkentin

The mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP) describes an inducible activity that regulates solute exchange between mitochondrial matrix contents and the surrounding cytoplasm, which acutely leads to loss of mitochondrial inner membrane potential but eventually organelle swelling and rupture. Mitochondrial rupture due to prolonged MPTP engagement, which is often the result of ischemic cellular injury due to elevated intracellular Ca2+ levels and reactive oxygen species, underlies regulated necrotic cell death. An understanding of the molecular constituents that generate the MPTP, as well as the other proteins that can affect it, is of profound disease relevance. However, the molecular identity of the MPTP has been the subject of a protracted scientific debate for nearly three decades. In PNAS, Alavian et al. make a strong case that the c-subunit of the F1FO ATP synthase forms the inner mitochondrial membrane pore of the MPTP (1).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Cyclin D1 Is a Selective Modifier of Androgen-dependent Signaling and Androgen Receptor Function

Clay E.S. Comstock; Michael A. Augello; Matthew J. Schiewer; Jason Karch; Craig J. Burd; Adam Ertel; Erik S. Knudsen; Walter J. Jessen; Bruce J. Aronow; Karen E. Knudsen

D-type cyclins regulate cellular outcomes in part through cyclin-dependent, kinase-independent mechanisms that modify transcription factor action, and recent in vivo studies showed that cyclin D1 associates with a large number of transcriptional regulators in cells of the retina and breast. Given the frequency of cyclin D1 alterations in cancer, it is imperative to delineate the molecular mechanisms by which cyclin D1 controls key transcription factor networks in human disease. Prostate cancer was used as a paradigm because this tumor type is reliant at all stages of the disease on androgen receptor (AR) signaling, and cyclin D1 has been shown to negatively modulate AR-dependent expression of prostate-specific antigen (KLK3/PSA). Strategies were employed to control cyclin D1 expression under conditions of hormone depletion, and the effect of cyclin D1 on subsequent androgen-dependent gene expression was determined using unbiased gene expression profiling. Modulating cyclin D1 conferred widespread effects on androgen signaling and revealed cyclin D1 to be a selective effector of hormone action. A subset of androgen-induced target genes, known to be directly regulated by AR, was strongly suppressed by cyclin D1. Analyses of AR occupancy at target gene regulatory loci of clinical relevance demonstrated that cyclin D1 limits AR residence after hormone stimulation. Together, these findings reveal a new function for cyclin D1 in controlling hormone-dependent transcriptional outcomes and demonstrate a pervasive role for cyclin D1 in regulating transcription factor dynamics.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Necroptosis Interfaces with MOMP and the MPTP in Mediating Cell Death.

Jason Karch; Onur Kanisicak; Matthew J. Brody; Michelle A. Sargent; Demetria Michael; Jeffery D. Molkentin

During apoptosis the pro-death Bcl-2 family members Bax and Bak induce mitochondrial outer membrane permeabilization (MOMP) to mediate cell death. Recently, it was shown that Bax and Bak are also required for mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP)-dependent necrosis, where, in their non-oligomeric state, they enhance permeability characteristics of the outer mitochondrial membrane. Necroptosis is another form of regulated necrosis involving the death receptors and receptor interacting protein kinases (RIP proteins, by Ripk genes). Here, we show cells or mice deficient for Bax/Bak or cyclophilin D, a protein that regulates MPTP opening, are resistant to cell death induced by necroptotic mediators. We show that Bax/Bak oligomerization is required for necroptotic cell death and that this oligomerization reinforces MPTP opening. Mechanistically, we observe mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL) protein and cofilin-1 translocation to the mitochondria following necroptosis induction, while expression of the mitochondrial matrix isoform of the antiapoptotic Bcl-2 family member, myeloid cell leukemia 1 (Mcl-1), is significantly reduced. Some of these effects are lost with necroptosis inhibition in Bax/Bak1 double null, Ppif-/-, or Ripk3-/- fibroblasts. Hence, downstream mechanisms of cell death induced by necroptotic stimuli utilize both Bax/Bak to generate apoptotic pores in the outer mitochondrial membrane as well as MPTP opening in association with known mitochondrial death modifying proteins.


Circulation Research | 2012

Is p53 the Long-Sought Molecular Trigger for Cyclophilin D–Regulated Mitochondrial Permeability Transition Pore Formation and Necrosis?

Jason Karch; Jeffery D. Molkentin

An article recently published in Cell concluded that p53 is necessary and sufficient to induce mitochondrial permeability transition pore (MPTP)–dependent necrosis through inducible p53 translocation to the matrix with cyclophilin D (CypD) binding. The results and implications are very provocative. The physiological significance of the proposed paradigm, however, is uncertain because calcium itself, which is a fundamental regulator of MPTP, is independent of p53, as shown by the authors. In addition, purified mitochondria from any unstimulated cell type or tissue, which presumably lacks p53 given the inducible mechanism proposed, have a fully functional MPTP to all the classic modes of stimulation as analyzed in vitro. Myocardial infarction produces an area of myocyte loss that is a mixture of apoptotic and necrotic cell death. Recent data from multiple laboratories have shown that necrosis can be a programmed event and that specific molecular inhibitors of this process can be potently cardioprotective. During ischemic injury, both reactive oxygen species (ROS) and calcium levels increase within cells, triggering a type of programmed necrosis through MPTP opening that is CypD-dependent.1–5 Indeed, treatment with cyclosporine A, a CypD inhibitor, as well as genetic deletion of CypD, reduces ischemia/reperfusion injury in both the brain and the heart.3–5 Thus, mitochondria are central regulators of ischemic cell death through a mechanism involving the MPTP, but until recently we have lacked an understanding of how CypD is activated and potentially induces MPTP directly. However, Moll et al6 recently published an interesting article in the journal Cell , which shows that p53 can open the MPTP leading to necrotic cell death (Figure). They propose that upon ROS stimulation, p53 translocates to the matrix of the mitochondria where it binds to CypD and somehow opens the MPTP (Figure). This function of p53 was independent of …

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Jeffery D. Molkentin

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Onur Kanisicak

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Matthew J. Brody

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Michelle A. Sargent

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Bryan D. Maliken

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Hadi Khalil

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Ronald J. Vagnozzi

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Tobias G. Schips

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Bruce J. Aronow

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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