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Dive into the research topics where Jop H. van Berlo is active.

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Featured researches published by Jop H. van Berlo.


Circulation | 2004

Galectin-3 Marks Activated Macrophages in Failure-Prone Hypertrophied Hearts and Contributes to Cardiac Dysfunction

Umesh C. Sharma; Saraswati Pokharel; Thomas J. van Brakel; Jop H. van Berlo; Jack P.M. Cleutjens; Blanche Schroen; Sabine André; Harry J.G.M. Crijns; Hans J. Gabius; Jos G. Maessen; Yigal M. Pinto

Background—Inflammatory mechanisms have been proposed to be important in heart failure (HF), and cytokines have been implicated to add to the progression of HF. However, it is unclear whether such mechanisms are already activated when hypertrophied hearts still appear well-compensated and whether such early mechanisms contribute to the development of HF. Methods and Results—In a comprehensive microarray study, galectin-3 emerged as the most robustly overexpressed gene in failing versus functionally compensated hearts from homozygous transgenic TGRmRen2-27 (Ren-2) rats. Myocardial biopsies obtained at an early stage of hypertrophy before apparent HF showed that expression of galectin-3 was increased specifically in the rats that later rapidly developed HF. Galectin-3 colocalized with activated myocardial macrophages. We found galectin-3–binding sites in rat cardiac fibroblasts and the extracellular matrix. Recombinant galectin-3 induced cardiac fibroblast proliferation, collagen production, and cyclin D1 expression. A 4-week continuous infusion of low-dose galectin-3 into the pericardial sac of healthy Sprague-Dawley rats led to left ventricular dysfunction, with a 3-fold differential increase of collagen I over collagen III. Myocardial galectin-3 expression was increased in aortic stenosis patients with depressed ejection fraction. Conclusions—This study shows that an early increase in galectin-3 expression identifies failure-prone hypertrophied hearts. Galectin-3, a macrophage-derived mediator, induces cardiac fibroblast proliferation, collagen deposition, and ventricular dysfunction. This implies that HF therapy aimed at inflammatory responses may need to be targeted at the early stages of HF and probably needs to antagonize multiple inflammatory mediators, including galectin-3.


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.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2013

Molecular basis of physiological heart growth: fundamental concepts and new players

Marjorie Maillet; Jop H. van Berlo; Jeffery D. Molkentin

The heart hypertrophies in response to developmental signals as well as increased workload. Although adult-onset hypertrophy can ultimately lead to disease, cardiac hypertrophy is not necessarily maladaptive and can even be beneficial. Progress has been made in our understanding of the structural and molecular characteristics of physiological cardiac hypertrophy, as well as of the endocrine effectors and associated signalling pathways that regulate it. Physiological hypertrophy is initiated by finite signals, which include growth hormones (such as thyroid hormone, insulin, insulin-like growth factor 1 and vascular endothelial growth factor) and mechanical forces that converge on a limited number of intracellular signalling pathways (such as PI3K, AKT, AMP-activated protein kinase and mTOR) to affect gene transcription, protein translation and metabolism. Harnessing adaptive signalling mediators to reinvigorate the diseased heart could have important medical ramifications.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Signaling effectors underlying pathologic growth and remodeling of the heart

Jop H. van Berlo; Marjorie Maillet; Jeffery D. Molkentin

Cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of mortality in the Western world. The heart responds to many cardiopathological conditions with hypertrophic growth by enlarging individual myocytes to augment cardiac pump function and decrease ventricular wall tension. Initially, such cardiac hypertrophic growth is often compensatory, but as time progresses these changes become maladaptive. Cardiac hypertrophy is the strongest predictor for the development of heart failure, arrhythmia, and sudden death. Here we discuss therapeutic avenues emerging from molecular and genetic studies of cardiovascular disease in animal models. The majority of these are based on intracellular signaling pathways considered central to pathologic cardiac remodeling and hypertrophy, which then leads to heart failure. We focus our discussion on selected therapeutic targets that have more recently emerged and have a tangible translational potential given the available pharmacologic agents that could be readily evaluated in human clinical trials.


Nature Medicine | 2014

An emerging consensus on cardiac regeneration

Jop H. van Berlo; Jeffery D. Molkentin

Cardiac regeneration is a rapidly evolving and controversial field of research. The identification some 12 years ago of progenitor cells that reside within the heart spurred enthusiasm for cell-based regenerative therapies. However, recent evidence has called into question both the presence of a biologically important stem cell population in the heart and the ability of exogenously derived cells to promote regeneration through direct formation of new cardiomyocytes. Here, we discuss recent developments that suggest an emerging consensus on the ability of different cell types to regenerate the adult mammalian heart.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2003

108th ENMC International Workshop, 3rd Workshop of the MYO-CLUSTER project: EUROMEN, 7th International Emery-Dreifuss Muscular Dystrophy (EDMD) Workshop, 13-15 September 2002, Naarden, The Netherlands.

Gisèle Bonne; Rabah Ben Yaou; Christophe Béroud; Giuseppe Boriani; Susan C. Brown; Marianne de Visser; Denis Duboc; Juliet A. Ellis; Irena Hausmanowa-Petrusewicz; Giovanna Lattanzi; Luciano Merlini; Glenn Morris; Francesco Muntoni; Grzegorz Opolski; Yigal M. Pinto; Federica Sangiuolo; Daniela Toniolo; Richard C. Trembath; Jop H. van Berlo; Anneke J. van der Kooi; Manfred Wehnert

Inserm UR582 (ex 523), Institut de Myologie, Bâtiment Babinski, G.H. Pitie-Salpetriere, 47, boulevard de l’Hopital, 75 651 Paris Cedex 13, France Laboratoire de Genetique Moleculaire et Chromosomique, IURC, Montpellier, France Institute of Cardiology, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy Department of Paediatrics and Neonatal Medicine, Imperial College School of Medicine, Hammersmith Campus, London, UK Department of Neurology, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Service de Cardiologie, GH Cochin, Paris, France Randall Center, Kings College, London, UK Neuromuscular Unit, M.R.C. Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw, Poland ITOI, Unit of Bologna, c/o IOR, Bologna, Italy Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Neuromuscular Unit, Bologna, Italy MRIC, North East Wales Institute, Wrexham, UK Department of Internal Medicine and Cardiology Medical University of Warsaw, Warsaw, Poland Department of Cardiology, University Hospital Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands Dipartimento di Biopatologia e Diagnostica per Immagini, Rome, Italy Istituto di Genetica Biochimica ed Evoluzionistica, CNR (IGBE-CNR), Pavia, Italy Division of Medical Genetics, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK Institute of Human Genetics, Greifswald, Germany


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2013

Differential expression of embryonic epicardial progenitor markers and localization of cardiac fibrosis in adult ischemic injury and hypertensive heart disease.

Caitlin M. Braitsch; Onur Kanisicak; Jop H. van Berlo; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Katherine E. Yutzey

During embryonic heart development, the transcription factors Tcf21, Wt1, and Tbx18 regulate activation and differentiation of epicardium-derived cells, including fibroblast lineages. Expression of these epicardial progenitor factors and localization of cardiac fibrosis were examined in mouse models of cardiovascular disease and in human diseased hearts. Following ischemic injury in mice, epicardial fibrosis is apparent in the thickened layer of subepicardial cells that express Wt1, Tbx18, and Tcf21. Perivascular fibrosis with predominant expression of Tcf21, but not Wt1 or Tbx18, occurs in mouse models of pressure overload or hypertensive heart disease, but not following ischemic injury. Areas of interstitial fibrosis in ischemic and hypertensive hearts actively express Tcf21, Wt1, and Tbx18. In all areas of fibrosis, cells that express epicardial progenitor factors are distinct from CD45-positive immune cells. In human diseased hearts, differential expression of Tcf21, Wt1, and Tbx18 also is detected with epicardial, perivascular, and interstitial fibrosis, indicating conservation of reactivated developmental mechanisms in cardiac fibrosis in mice and humans. Together, these data provide evidence for distinct fibrogenic mechanisms that include Tcf21, separate from Wt1 and Tbx18, in different fibroblast populations in response to specific types of cardiac injury.


Circulation Research | 2011

Placental Growth Factor Regulates Cardiac Adaptation and Hypertrophy Through a Paracrine Mechanism

Federica Accornero; Jop H. van Berlo; Matthew J. Benard; John N. Lorenz; Peter Carmeliet; Jeffery D. Molkentin

Rationale: Paracrine growth factor-mediated crosstalk between cardiac myocytes and nonmyocytes in the heart is critical for programming adaptive cardiac hypertrophy in which myocyte size, capillary density, and the extracellular matrix function coordinately. Objective: To examine the role that placental growth factor (PGF) plays in the heart as a paracrine regulator of cardiac adaptation to stress stimulation. Methods and Results: PGF is induced in the heart after pressure-overload stimulation, where it is expressed in both myocytes and nonmyocytes. We generated cardiac-specific and adult inducible PGF-overexpressing transgenic mice and analyzed Pgf−/− mice to examine the role that this factor plays in cardiac disease and paracrine signaling. Although PGF transgenic mice did not have a baseline phenotype or a change in capillary density, they did exhibit a greater cardiac hypertrophic response, a greater increase in capillary density, and increased fibroblast content in the heart in response to pressure-overload stimulation. PGF transgenic mice showed a more adaptive type of cardiac growth that was protective against signs of failure with pressure overload and neuroendocrine stimulation. Antithetically, Pgf−/− mice rapidly died of heart failure within 1 week of pressure overload, they showed an inability to upregulate angiogenesis, and they showed significantly less fibroblast activity in the heart. Mechanistically, we show that PGF does not have a direct effect on cardiomyocytes but works through endothelial cells and fibroblasts by inducing capillary growth and fibroblast proliferation, which secondarily support greater cardiac hypertrophy through intermediate paracrine growth factors such as interleukin-6. Conclusions: PGF is a secreted factor that supports hypertrophy and cardiac function during pressure overload by affecting endothelial cells and fibroblasts that in turn stimulate and support the myocytes through additional paracrine factors.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Serine 105 phosphorylation of transcription factor GATA4 is necessary for stress-induced cardiac hypertrophy in vivo

Jop H. van Berlo; John W. Elrod; Bruce J. Aronow; William T. Pu; Jeffery D. Molkentin

Cardiac hypertrophy is an adaptive growth process that occurs in response to stress stimulation or injury wherein multiple signal transduction pathways are induced, culminating in transcription factor activation and the reprogramming of gene expression. GATA4 is a critical transcription factor in the heart that is known to induce/regulate the hypertrophic program, in part, by receiving signals from MAPKs. Here we generated knock-in mice in which a known MAPK phosphorylation site at serine 105 (S105) in Gata4 that augments activity was mutated to alanine. Homozygous Gata4-S105A mutant mice were viable as adults, although they showed a compromised stress response of the myocardium. For example, cardiac hypertrophy in response to phenylephrine agonist infusion for 2 wk was largely blunted in Gata4-S105A mice, as was the hypertrophic response to pressure overload at 1 and 2 wk of applied stimulation. Gata4-S105A mice were also more susceptible to heart failure and cardiac dilation after 2 wk of pressure overload. With respect to the upstream pathway, hearts from Gata4-S105A mice did not efficiently hypertrophy following direct ERK1/2 activation using an activated MEK1 transgene in vivo. Mechanistically, GATA4 mutant protein from these hearts failed to show enhanced DNA binding in response to hypertrophic stimulation. Moreover, hearts from Gata4-S105A mice had significant changes in the expression of hypertrophy-inducible, fetal, and remodeling-related genes.


Circulation Research | 2010

The Transcription Factor GATA-6 Regulates Pathological Cardiac Hypertrophy

Jop H. van Berlo; John W. Elrod; Maarten M.G. van den Hoogenhof; Allen J. York; Bruce J. Aronow; Stephen A. Duncan; Jeffery D. Molkentin

Rationale: The transcriptional code that programs maladaptive cardiac hypertrophy involves the zinc finger–containing DNA binding factor GATA-4. The highly related transcription factor GATA-6 is also expressed in the adult heart, although its role in controlling the hypertrophic program is unknown. Objective: To determine the role of GATA-6 in cardiac hypertrophy and homeostasis. Methods and Results: Here, we performed a cardiomyocyte-specific conditional gene targeting approach for Gata6, as well as a transgenic approach to overexpress GATA-6 in the mouse heart. Deletion of Gata6-loxP with Nkx2.5-cre produced late embryonic lethality with heart defects, whereas deletion with &bgr;-myosin heavy chain-cre (&bgr;MHC-cre) produced viable adults with >95% loss of GATA-6 protein in the heart. These latter mice were subjected to pressure overload–induced hypertrophy for 2 and 6 weeks, which showed a significant reduction in cardiac hypertrophy similar to that observed Gata4 heart-specific deleted mice. Gata6-deleted mice subjected to pressure overload also developed heart failure, whereas control mice maintained proper cardiac function. Gata6-deleted mice also developed less cardiac hypertrophy following 2 weeks of angiotensin II/phenylephrine infusion. Controlled GATA-6 overexpression in the heart induced hypertrophy with aging and predisposed to greater hypertrophy with pressure overload stimulation. Combinatorial deletion of Gata4 and Gata6 from the adult heart resulted in dilated cardiomyopathy and lethality by 16 weeks of age. Mechanistically, deletion of Gata6 from the heart resulted in fundamental changes in the levels of key regulatory genes and myocyte differentiation–specific genes. Conclusions: These results indicate that GATA-6 is both necessary and sufficient for regulating the cardiac hypertrophic response and differentiated gene expression, both alone and in coordination with GATA-4.

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Jeffery D. Molkentin

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Ym Pinto

University of Groningen

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Federica Accornero

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Allen J. York

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Onur Kanisicak

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Marjorie Maillet

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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