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Dive into the research topics where Kenneth D. Poss is active.

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Featured researches published by Kenneth D. Poss.


Nature Medicine | 1998

Expression of heme oxygenase-1 can determine cardiac xenograft survival

Miguel P. Soares; Yi-Fan Lin; Josef Anrather; Eva Csizmadia; Koichiro Sato; Shane T. Grey; Robert B. Colvin; Augustine M. K. Choi; Kenneth D. Poss; F.H Bach

The rejection of concordant xenografts, such as mouse-to-rat cardiac xenografts, is very similar to the delayed rejection of porcine-to-primate discordant xenografts. In concordant models, this type of rejection is prevented by brief complement inhibition by cobra venom factor (CVF) and sustained T-cell immunosuppression by cyclosporin A (CyA) (refs. 7, 8, 9, 10). Mouse hearts that survive indefinitely in rats treated with CVF plus CyA express the anti-inflammatory gene heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1) in their endothelial cells and smooth muscle cells. The anti-inflammatory properties of HO-1 are thought to rely on the ability of this enzyme to degrade heme and generate bilirubin, free iron and carbon monoxide. Bilirubin is a potent anti-oxidant, free iron upregulates the transcription of the cytoprotective gene, ferritin, and carbon monoxide is thought to be essential in regulating vascular relaxation in a manner similar to nitric oxide. We show here that the expression of the HO-1 gene is functionally associated with xenograft survival, and that rapid expression of HO-1 in cardiac xenografts can be essential to ensure long-term xenograft survival.


Nature | 2010

Primary contribution to zebrafish heart regeneration by gata4+ cardiomyocytes

Kazu Kikuchi; Jennifer E. Holdway; Andreas A. Werdich; Ryan M. Anderson; Yi Fang; Gregory F. Egnaczyk; Todd Evans; Calum A. MacRae; Didier Y. R. Stainier; Kenneth D. Poss

Recent studies indicate that mammals, including humans, maintain some capacity to renew cardiomyocytes throughout postnatal life. Yet, there is little or no significant cardiac muscle regeneration after an injury such as acute myocardial infarction. By contrast, zebrafish efficiently regenerate lost cardiac muscle, providing a model for understanding how natural heart regeneration may be blocked or enhanced. In the absence of lineage-tracing technology applicable to adult zebrafish, the cellular origins of newly regenerated cardiac muscle have remained unclear. Using new genetic fate-mapping approaches, here we identify a population of cardiomyocytes that become activated after resection of the ventricular apex and contribute prominently to cardiac muscle regeneration. Through the use of a transgenic reporter strain, we found that cardiomyocytes throughout the subepicardial ventricular layer trigger expression of the embryonic cardiogenesis gene gata4 within a week of trauma, before expression localizes to proliferating cardiomyocytes surrounding and within the injury site. Cre-recombinase-based lineage-tracing of cells expressing gata4 before evident regeneration, or of cells expressing the contractile gene cmlc2 before injury, each labelled most cardiac muscle in the ensuing regenerate. By optical voltage mapping of surface myocardium in whole ventricles, we found that electrical conduction is re-established between existing and regenerated cardiomyocytes between 2 and 4 weeks post-injury. After injury and prolonged fibroblast growth factor receptor inhibition to arrest cardiac regeneration and enable scar formation, experimental release of the signalling block led to gata4 expression and morphological improvement of the injured ventricular wall without loss of scar tissue. Our results indicate that electrically coupled cardiac muscle regenerates after resection injury, primarily through activation and expansion of cardiomyocyte populations. These findings have implications for promoting regeneration of the injured human heart.


Cell | 2006

A Dynamic Epicardial Injury Response Supports Progenitor Cell Activity during Zebrafish Heart Regeneration

Alexandra Lepilina; Ashley N. Coon; Kazu Kikuchi; Jennifer E. Holdway; Richard W. Roberts; C. Geoffrey Burns; Kenneth D. Poss

Zebrafish possess a unique yet poorly understood capacity for cardiac regeneration. Here, we show that regeneration proceeds through two coordinated stages following resection of the ventricular apex. First a blastema is formed, comprised of progenitor cells that express precardiac markers, undergo differentiation, and proliferate. Second, epicardial tissue surrounding both cardiac chambers induces developmental markers and rapidly expands, creating a new epithelial cover for the exposed myocardium. A subpopulation of these epicardial cells undergoes epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT), invades the wound, and provides new vasculature to regenerating muscle. During regeneration, the ligand fgf17b is induced in myocardium, while receptors fgfr2 and fgfr4 are induced in adjacent epicardial-derived cells. When fibroblast growth factors (Fgf) signaling is experimentally blocked by expression of a dominant-negative Fgf receptor, epicardial EMT and coronary neovascularization fail, prematurely arresting regeneration. Our findings reveal injury responses by myocardial and epicardial tissues that collaborate in an Fgf-dependent manner to achieve cardiac regeneration.


Nature Immunology | 2003

Transplantation and in vivo imaging of multilineage engraftment in zebrafish bloodless mutants

David Traver; Barry H. Paw; Kenneth D. Poss; W.Todd Penberthy; Shuo Lin; Leonard I. Zon

The zebrafish is firmly established as a genetic model for the study of vertebrate blood development. Here we have characterized the blood-forming system of adult zebrafish. Each major blood lineage can be isolated by flow cytometry, and with these lineal profiles, defects in zebrafish blood mutants can be quantified. We developed hematopoietic cell transplantation to study cell autonomy of mutant gene function and to establish a hematopoietic stem cell assay. Hematopoietic cell transplantation can rescue multilineage hematopoiesis in embryonic lethal gata1−/− mutants for over 6 months. Direct visualization of fluorescent donor cells in embryonic recipients allows engraftment and homing events to be imaged in real time. These results provide a cellular context in which to study the genetics of hematopoiesis.


Nature Cell Biology | 1999

Haem oxygenase-1 prevents cell death by regulating cellular iron

Christopher D. Ferris; Samie R. Jaffrey; Akira Sawa; Masaaki Takahashi; Stephen D. Brady; Roxanne K. Barrow; Steven A. Tysoe; Herman Wolosker; David E. Barañano; Sylvain Doré; Kenneth D. Poss; Solomon H. Snyder

Haem oxygenase-1 (HO1) is a heat-shock protein that is induced by stressful stimuli. Here we demonstrate a cytoprotective role for HO1: cell death produced by serum deprivation, staurosporine or etoposide is markedly accentuated in cells from mice with a targeted deletion of the HO1 gene, and greatly reduced in cells that overexpress HO1. Iron efflux from cells is augmented by HO1 transfection and reduced in HO1-deficient fibroblasts. Iron accumulation in HO1-deficient cells explains their death: iron chelators protect HO1-deficient fibroblasts from cell death. Thus, cytoprotection by HO1 is attributable to its augmentation of iron efflux, reflecting a role for HO1 in modulating intracellular iron levels and regulating cell viability.


Developmental Dynamics | 2003

Tales of regeneration in zebrafish

Kenneth D. Poss; Mark T. Keating; Alex Nechiporuk

Complex tissue regeneration involves exquisitely coordinated proliferation and patterning of adult cells after severe injury or amputation. Certain lower vertebrates such as urodele amphibians and teleost fish have a greater capacity for regeneration than mammals. However, little is known about molecular mechanisms of regeneration, and cellular mechanisms are incompletely defined. To address this deficiency, we and others have focused on the zebrafish model system. Several helpful tools and reagents are available for use with zebrafish, including the potential for genetic approaches to regeneration. Recent studies have shed light on the remarkable ability of zebrafish to regenerate fins. Developmental Dynamics 226:202–210, 2003.


American Journal of Pathology | 2000

The indispensability of heme oxygenase-1 in protecting against acute heme protein-induced toxicity in vivo

Karl A. Nath; Jill J. Haggard; Anthony J. Croatt; Joseph P. Grande; Kenneth D. Poss; Jawed Alam

Heme oxygenase (HO) is the rate limiting enzyme in the degradation of heme, and its isozyme, HO-1, may protect against tissue injury. One posited mechanism is the degradation of heme released from destabilized heme proteins. We demonstrate that HO-1 is a critical protectant against acute heme protein-induced toxicity in vivo. In the glycerol model of heme protein toxicity-one characterized by myolysis, hemolysis, and kidney damage-HO-1 is rapidly induced in the kidney of HO-1 +/+ mice as the latter sustain mild, reversible renal insufficiency without mortality. In stark contrast, after this insult, HO-1 -/- mice exhibit fulminant, irreversible renal failure and 100% mortality; HO-1 -/- mice do not express HO-1, and evince an eightfold increment in kidney heme content as compared to HO-1 +/+ mice. We also demonstrate directly the critical dependency on HO-1 in protecting against a specific heme protein, namely, hemoglobin: doses of hemoglobin which exert no nephrotoxicity or mortality in HO-1 +/+ mice, however, precipitate rapidly developing, acute renal failure and marked mortality in HO-1 -/- mice. We conclude that the induction of HO-1 is an indispensable response in protecting against acute heme protein toxicity in vivo.


Development | 2005

Fgf signaling instructs position-dependent growth rate during zebrafish fin regeneration

Yoonsung Lee; Sara Grill; Angela Sanchez; Maureen Murphy-Ryan; Kenneth D. Poss

During appendage regeneration in urodeles and teleosts, tissue replacement is precisely regulated such that only the appropriate structures are recovered, a phenomenon referred to as positional memory. It is believed that there exists, or is quickly established after amputation, a dynamic gradient of positional information along the proximodistal (PD) axis of the appendage that assigns region-specific instructions to injured tissue. These instructions specify the amount of tissue to regenerate, as well as the rate at which regenerative growth is to occur. A striking theme among many species is that the rate of regeneration is more rapid in proximally amputated appendages compared with distal amputations. However, the underlying molecular regulation is unclear. Here, we identify position-dependent differences in the rate of growth during zebrafish caudal fin regeneration. These growth rates correlate with position-dependent differences in blastemal length, mitotic index and expression of the Fgf target genes mkp3, sef and spry4. To address whether PD differences in amounts of Fgf signaling are responsible for position-dependent blastemal function, we have generated transgenic fish in which Fgf receptor activity can be experimentally manipulated. We find that the level of Fgf signaling exhibits strict control over target gene expression, blastemal proliferation and regenerative growth rate. Our results demonstrate that Fgf signaling defines position-dependent blastemal properties and growth rates for the regenerating zebrafish appendage.


Nature Reviews Genetics | 2010

Advances in understanding tissue regenerative capacity and mechanisms in animals

Kenneth D. Poss

Questions about how and why tissue regeneration occurs have captured the attention of countless biologists, biomedical engineers and clinicians. Regenerative capacity differs greatly across organs and organisms, and a range of model systems that use different regenerative strategies and that offer different technical advantages have been studied to understand regeneration. Making use of this range of systems and approaches, recent advances have allowed progress to be made in understanding several key issues that are common to natural regenerative events. These issues include: the determination of regenerative capacity; the importance of stem cells, dedifferentiation and transdifferentiation; how regenerative signals are initiated and targeted; and the mechanisms that control regenerative proliferation and patterning.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998

Oxygen toxicity and iron accumulation in the lungs of mice lacking heme oxygenase-2.

Phyllis A. Dennery; Douglas R. Spitz; Guang Yang; Arthur Tatarov; Christen S. Lee; M. L. Shegog; Kenneth D. Poss

Heme oxygenase (HO) activity leads to accumulation of the antioxidant bilirubin, and degradation of the prooxidant heme. Moderate overexpression of the inducible form, HO-1, is associated with protection against oxidative injury. However, the role of HO-2 in oxidative stress has not been explored. We evaluated survival, indices of oxidative injury, and lung and HO expression in HO-2 null mutant mice exposed to > 95% O2 compared with wild-type controls. Similar basal levels of major lung antioxidants were observed, except that the knockouts had a twofold increase in total glutathione content. Despite increased HO-1 expression from HO-1 induction, knockout animals were sensitized to hyperoxia-induced oxidative injury and mortality, and also had significantly increased markers of oxidative injury before hyperoxic exposure. Furthermore, during hyperoxia, lung hemoproteins and iron content were significantly increased without increased ferritin, suggesting accumulation of available redox-active iron. These results demonstrate that the absence of HO-2 is associated with induction of HO-1 and increased oxygen toxicity in vivo, apparently due to accumulation of lung iron. These results suggest that HO-2 functions to augment the turnover of lung iron during oxidative stress, and that this function does not appear to be compensated for by induction of HO-1 in the knockouts.

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Kazu Kikuchi

Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute

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Jinhu Wang

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Jennifer E. Holdway

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Gregory Nachtrab

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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