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Dive into the research topics where Katherine M. Holzem is active.

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Featured researches published by Katherine M. Holzem.


Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2015

Arrhythmogenic Remodeling of β2 Versus β1 Adrenergic Signaling in the Human Failing Heart

Di Lang; Katherine M. Holzem; Chaoyi Kang; Mengqian Xiao; Hye Jin Hwang; Gregory A. Ewald; Kathryn A. Yamada; Igor R. Efimov

Background—Arrhythmia is the major cause of death in patients with heart failure, for which &bgr;-adrenergic receptor blockers are a mainstay therapy. But the role of &bgr;-adrenergic signaling in electrophysiology and arrhythmias has never been studied in human ventricles. Methods and Results—We used optical imaging of action potentials and [Ca2+]i transients to compare the &bgr;1- and &bgr;2-adrenergic responses in left ventricular wedge preparations of human donor and failing hearts. &bgr;1-Stimulation significantly increased conduction velocity, shortened action potential duration, and [Ca2+]i transients duration (CaD) in donor but not in failing hearts, because of desensitization of &bgr;1-adrenergic receptor in heart failure. In contrast, &bgr;2-stimulation increased conduction velocity in both donor and failing hearts but shortened action potential duration only in failing hearts. &bgr;2-Stimulation also affected transmural heterogeneity in action potential duration but not in [Ca2+]i transients duration. Both &bgr;1- and &bgr;2-stimulation augmented the vulnerability and frequency of ectopic activity and enhanced substrates for ventricular tachycardia in failing, but not in donor, hearts. Both &bgr;1- and &bgr;2-stimulation enhanced Purkinje fiber automaticity, whereas only &bgr;2-stimulation promoted Ca-mediated premature ventricular contractions in heart failure. Conclusions—During end-stage heart failure, &bgr;2-stimulation creates arrhythmogenic substrates via conduction velocity regulation and transmurally heterogeneous repolarization. &bgr;2-Stimulation is, therefore, more arrhythmogenic than &bgr;1-stimulation. In particular, &bgr;2-stimulation increases the transmural difference between [Ca2+]i transients duration and action potential duration, which facilitates the formation of delayed afterdepolarizations.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2012

Right ventricular arrhythmogenesis in failing human heart: the role of conduction and repolarization remodeling

Qing Lou; Deborah Janks; Katherine M. Holzem; Di Lang; Birce Önal; Christina M. Ambrosi; Vadim V. Fedorov; I-Wen Wang; Igor R. Efimov

Increased dispersion of repolarization has been suggested to underlie increased arrhythmogenesis in human heart failure (HF). However, no detailed repolarization mapping data were available to support the presence of increased dispersion of repolarization in failing human heart. In the present study, we aimed to determine the existence of enhanced repolarization dispersion in the right ventricular (RV) endocardium from failing human heart and examine its association with arrhythmia inducibility. RV free wall preparations were dissected from five failing and five nonfailing human hearts, cannulated and coronary perfused. RV endocardium was optically mapped from an ∼6.3 × 6.3 cm(2) field of view. Action potential duration (APD), dispersion of APD, and conduction velocity (CV) were quantified for basic cycle lengths (BCL) ranging from 2,000 ms to the functional refractory period. We found that RV APD was significantly prolonged within the failing group compared with the nonfailing group (560 ± 44 vs. 448 ± 39 ms, at BCL = 2,000 ms, P < 0.05). Dispersion of APD was increased in three failing hearts (161 ± 5 vs. 86 ± 19 ms, at BCL = 2,000 ms). APD alternans were induced by rapid pacing in these same three failing hearts. CV was significantly reduced in the failing group compared with the nonfailing group (81 ± 11 vs. 98 ± 8 cm/s, at BCL = 2,000 ms). Arrhythmias could be induced in two failing hearts exhibiting an abnormally steep CV restitution and increased dispersion of repolarization due to APD alternans. Dispersion of repolarization is enhanced across the RV endocardium in the failing human heart. This dispersion, together with APD alternans and abnormal CV restitution, could be responsible for the arrhythmia susceptibility in human HF.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2016

Reduced response to IKr blockade and altered hERG1a/1b stoichiometry in human heart failure

Katherine M. Holzem; Juan F. Gomez; Alexey V. Glukhov; Eli J. Madden; Aaron C. Koppel; Gregory A. Ewald; Beatriz Trenor; Igor R. Efimov

Heart failure (HF) claims 250,000 lives per year in the US, and nearly half of these deaths are sudden and presumably due to ventricular tachyarrhythmias. QT interval and action potential (AP) prolongation are hallmark proarrhythmic changes in the failing myocardium, which potentially result from alterations in repolarizing potassium currents. Thus, we aimed to examine whether decreased expression of the rapid delayed rectifier potassium current, IKr, contributes to repolarization abnormalities in human HF. To map functional IKr expression across the left ventricle (LV), we optically imaged coronary-perfused LV free wall from donor and end-stage failing human hearts. The LV wedge preparation was used to examine transmural AP durations at 80% repolarization (APD80), and treatment with the IKr-blocking drug, E-4031, was utilized to interrogate functional expression. We assessed the percent change in APD80 post-IKr blockade relative to baseline APD80 (∆APD80) and found that ∆APD80s are reduced in failing versus donor hearts in each transmural region, with 0.35-, 0.43-, and 0.41-fold reductions in endo-, mid-, and epicardium, respectively (p=0.008, 0.037, and 0.022). We then assessed hERG1 isoform gene and protein expression levels using qPCR and Western blot. While we did not observe differences in hERG1a or hERG1b gene expression between donor and failing hearts, we found a shift in the hERG1a:hERG1b isoform stoichiometry at the protein level. Computer simulations were then conducted to assess IKr block under E-4031 influence in failing and nonfailing conditions. Our results confirmed the experimental observations and E-4031-induced relative APD80 prolongation was greater in normal conditions than in failing conditions, provided that the cellular model of HF included a significant downregulation of IKr. In human HF, the response to IKr blockade is reduced, suggesting decreased functional IKr expression. This attenuated functional response is associated with altered hERG1a:hERG1b protein stoichiometry in the failing human LV, and failing cardiomyoctye simulations support the experimental findings. Thus, of IKr protein and functional expression may be important determinants of repolarization remodeling in the failing human LV.


Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2014

Adverse Remodeling of the Electrophysiological Response to Ischemia-Reperfusion in Human Heart Failure Is Associated with Remodeling of Metabolic Gene Expression

Fu Siong Ng; Katherine M. Holzem; Aaron C. Koppel; Deborah Janks; Fabiana Gordon; Andrew L. Wit; Nicholas S. Peters; Igor R. Efimov

Background—Ventricular arrhythmias occur more frequently in heart failure during episodes of ischemia–reperfusion although the mechanisms underlying this in humans are unclear. We assessed, in explanted human hearts, the remodeled electrophysiological response to acute ischemia–reperfusion in heart failure and its potential causes, including the remodeling of metabolic gene expression. Methods and Results—We optically mapped coronary-perfused left ventricular wedge preparations from 6 human end-stage failing hearts (F) and 6 donor hearts rejected for transplantation (D). Preparations were subjected to 30 minutes of global ischemia, followed by 30 minutes of reperfusion. Failing hearts had exaggerated electrophysiological responses to ischemia–reperfusion, with greater action potential duration shortening (P<0.001 at 8-minute ischemia; P=0.001 at 12-minute ischemia) and greater conduction slowing during ischemia, delayed recovery of electric excitability after reperfusion (F, 4.8±1.8 versus D, 1.0±0 minutes; P<0.05), and incomplete restoration of action potential duration and conduction velocity early after reperfusion. Expression of 46 metabolic genes was probed using custom-designed TaqMan arrays, using extracted RNA from 15 failing and 9 donor hearts. Ten genes important in cardiac metabolism were downregulated in heart failure, with SLC27A4 and KCNJ11 significantly downregulated at a false discovery rate of 0%. Conclusions—We demonstrate, for the first time in human hearts, that the electrophysiological response to ischemia–reperfusion in heart failure is accelerated during ischemia with slower recovery after reperfusion. This can enhance spatial conduction and repolarization gradients across the ischemic border and increase arrhythmia susceptibility. This adverse response was associated with downregulation of expression of cardiac metabolic genes.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2013

Three-dimensional printing physiology laboratory technology

Matthew S. Sulkin; Emily Widder; Connie C. Shao; Katherine M. Holzem; Christopher Gloschat; Sarah R. Gutbrod; Igor R. Efimov

Since its inception in 19th-century Germany, the physiology laboratory has been a complex and expensive research enterprise involving experts in various fields of science and engineering. Physiology research has been critically dependent on cutting-edge technological support of mechanical, electrical, optical, and more recently computer engineers. Evolution of modern experimental equipment is constrained by lack of direct communication between the physiological community and industry producing this equipment. Fortunately, recent advances in open source technologies, including three-dimensional printing, open source hardware and software, present an exciting opportunity to bring the design and development of research instrumentation to the end user, i.e., life scientists. Here we provide an overview on how to develop customized, cost-effective experimental equipment for physiology laboratories.


Europace | 2012

Arrhythmogenic remodelling of activation and repolarization in the failing human heart

Katherine M. Holzem; Igor R. Efimov

Heart failure is a major cause of disability and death worldwide, and approximately half of heart failure-related deaths are sudden and presumably due to ventricular arrhythmias. Patients with heart failure have been shown to be at 6- to 9-fold increased risk of sudden cardiac death compared to the general population. (AHA. Heart Disease and Stroke Statistics-2003 Update. Heart and Stroke Facts. Dallas, TX: American Heart Association; 2002) Thus, electrophysiological remodelling associated with heart failure is a leading cause of disease mortality and has been a major investigational focus examined using many animal models of heart failure. While these studies have provided an important foundation for understanding the arrhythmogenic pathophysiology of heart failure, the need for corroborating studies conducted on human heart tissue has been increasingly recognized. Many human heart studies of conduction and repolarization remodelling have now been published and shed some light on important, potentially arrhythmogenic, changes in human heart failure. These studies are being conducted at multiple experimental scales from isolated cells to whole-tissue preparations and have provided insight into regulatory mechanisms such as decreased protein expression, alternative mRNA splicing of ion channel genes, and defective cellular trafficking. Further investigations of heart failure in the human myocardium will be essential for determining possible therapeutic targets to prevent arrhythmia in heart failure and for facilitating the translation of basic research findings to the clinical realm.


The FASEB Journal | 2016

Mitochondrial structure and function are not different between nonfailing donor and end-stage failing human hearts

Katherine M. Holzem; Kalyan C. Vinnakota; Vinod K. Ravikumar; Eli J. Madden; Gregory A. Ewald; Krikor Dikranian; Daniel A. Beard; Igor R. Efimov

During human heart failure, the balance of cardiac energy use switches from predominantly fatty acids (FAs) to glucose. We hypothesized that this substrate shift was the result of mitochondrial degeneration; therefore, we examined mitochondrial oxidation and ultrastructure in the failing human heart by using respirometry, transmission electron microscopy, and gene expression studies of demographically matched donor and failing human heart left ventricular (LV) tissues. Surprisingly, respiratory capacities for failing LV isolated mitochondria (n = 9) were not significantly diminished compared with donor LV isolated mitochondria (n = 7) for glycolysis (pyruvate + malate)‐ or FA (palmitoylcarnitine)‐derived substrates, and mitochondrial densities, assessed via citrate synthase activity, were consistent between groups. Transmission electron microscopy images also showed no ultrastructural remodeling for failing vs. donor mitochondria; however, the fraction of lipid droplets (LDs) in direct contact with a mitochondrion was reduced, and the average distance between an LD and its nearest neighboring mitochondrion was increased. Analysis of FA processing gene expression between donor and failing LVs revealed 0.64‐fold reduced transcript levels for the mitochondrial‐LD tether, perilipin 5, in the failing myocardium (P = 0.003). Thus, reduced FA use in heart failure may result from improper delivery, potentially via decreased perilipin 5 expression and mitochondrial‐LD tethering, and not from intrinsic mitochondrial dysfunction.—Holzem, K. M., Vinnakota, K. C., Ravikumar, V. K., Madden, E. J., Ewald, G. A., Dikranian, K., Beard, D. A., Efimov, I. R. Mitochondrial structure and function are not different between nonfailing donor and end‐stage failing human hearts. FASEB J. 30, 2698‐2707 (2016). www.fasebj.org


Journal of Structural Biology | 2014

Nanoscale three-dimensional imaging of the human myocyte

Matthew S. Sulkin; Fei Yang; Katherine M. Holzem; Brandon Van Leer; Cliff Bugge; Jacob I. Laughner; Karen G. Green; Igor R. Efimov

The ventricular human myocyte is spatially organized for optimal ATP and Ca(2+) delivery to sarcomeric myosin and ionic pumps during every excitation-contraction cycle. Comprehension of three-dimensional geometry of the tightly packed ultrastructure has been derived from discontinuous two-dimensional images, but has never been precisely reconstructed or analyzed in human myocardium. Using a focused ion beam scanning electron microscope, we created nanoscale resolution serial images to quantify the three-dimensional ultrastructure of a human left ventricular myocyte. Transverse tubules (t-tubule), lipid droplets, A-bands, and mitochondria occupy 1.8, 1.9, 10.8, and 27.9% of the myocyte volume, respectively. The complex t-tubule system has a small tortuosity (1.04±0.01), and is composed of long transverse segments with diameters of 317±24nm and short branches. Our data indicates that lipid droplets located well beneath the sarcolemma are proximal to t-tubules, where 59% (13 of 22) of lipid droplet centroids are within 0.50μm of a t-tubule. This spatial association could have an important implication in the development and treatment of heart failure because it connects two independently known pathophysiological alterations, a substrate switch from fatty acids to glucose and t-tubular derangement.


Physiological Reports | 2015

Diet‐induced obesity promotes altered remodeling and exacerbated cardiac hypertrophy following pressure overload

Katherine M. Holzem; Joseph T. Marmerstein; Eli J. Madden; Igor R. Efimov

Heart failure (HF) is the end stage of cardiovascular disease, in which hypertrophic remodeling no longer meets cardiac output demand. Established animal models of HF have provided insights into disease pathogenesis. However, these models are developed on dissimilar metabolic backgrounds from humans – patients with HF are frequently overweight or obese, whereas animal models of HF are typically lean. Thus, we aimed to develop and investigate model for cardiac hypertrophy and failure that also recapitulates the cardiometabolic state of HF in humans. We subjected mice with established diet‐induced obesity (DIO) to cardiac pressure overload provoked by transverse aortic constriction (TAC). Briefly, we fed WT male mice a normal chow or high‐fat diet for 10 weeks prior to sham/TAC procedures and until surgical follow‐up. We then analyzed cardiac hypertrophy, mechanical function, and electrophysiology at 5–6 weeks after surgery. In DIO mice with TAC, hypertrophy and systolic dysfunction were exacerbated relative to chow TAC animals, which showed minimal remodeling with our moderate constriction intensity. Normalized heart weight was 55.8% greater and fractional shortening was 30.9% less in DIO TAC compared with chow TAC hearts. However, electrophysiologic properties were surprisingly similar between DIO sham and TAC animals. To examine molecular pathways activated by DIO and TAC, we screened prohypertrophic signaling cascades, and the exacerbated remodeling was associated with early activation of the c‐Jun‐N‐terminal kinase (JNK1/2) signaling pathway. Thus, DIO aggravates the progression of hypertrophy and HF caused by pressure overload, which is associated with JNK1/2 signaling, and cardiometabolic state can significantly modify HF pathogenesis.


Europace | 2014

Human cardiac systems electrophysiology and arrhythmogenesis: iteration of experiment and computation

Katherine M. Holzem; Eli J. Madden; Igor R. Efimov

Human cardiac electrophysiology (EP) is a unique system for computational modelling at multiple scales. Due to the complexity of the cardiac excitation sequence, coordinated activity must occur from the single channel to the entire myocardial syncytium. Thus, sophisticated computational algorithms have been developed to investigate cardiac EP at the level of ion channels, cardiomyocytes, multicellular tissues, and the whole heart. Although understanding of each functional level will ultimately be important to thoroughly understand mechanisms of physiology and disease, cardiac arrhythmias are expressly the product of cardiac tissue-containing enough cardiomyocytes to sustain a reentrant loop of activation. In addition, several properties of cardiac cellular EP, that are critical for arrhythmogenesis, are significantly altered by cell-to-cell coupling. However, relevant human cardiac EP data, upon which to develop or validate models at all scales, has been lacking. Thus, over several years, we have developed a paradigm for multiscale human heart physiology investigation and have recovered and studied over 300 human hearts. We have generated a rich experimental dataset, from which we better understand mechanisms of arrhythmia in human and can improve models of human cardiac EP. In addition, in collaboration with computational physiologists, we are developing a database for the deposition of human heart experimental data, including thorough experimental documentation. We anticipate that accessibility to this human heart dataset will further human EP computational investigations, as well as encourage greater data transparency within the field of cardiac EP.

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Igor R. Efimov

George Washington University

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Eli J. Madden

Washington University in St. Louis

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Senthil N. Jayarajan

Washington University in St. Louis

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Di Lang

Washington University in St. Louis

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Gregory A. Ewald

Washington University in St. Louis

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Aaron C. Koppel

Washington University in St. Louis

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Ahmmad A. Abuirqeba

Washington University in St. Louis

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Beverly J. Field

Washington University in St. Louis

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Chandu Vemuri

Washington University in St. Louis

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Deborah Janks

Washington University in St. Louis

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