Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre
University of Glasgow
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Featured researches published by Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre.
Toxicological Sciences | 2017
Ksenia Blinova; Jayna Stohlman; Jose Vicente; Dulciana Chan; Lars Johannesen; Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Victor Zamora; Godfrey L. Smith; William J. Crumb; Li Pang; Beverly Lyn-Cook; James Ross; Mathew Brock; Stacie Chvatal; Daniel Millard; Loriano Galeotti; Norman Stockbridge; David G. Strauss
Induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CM) hold promise for assessment of drug-induced arrhythmias and are being considered for use under the comprehensive in vitro proarrhythmia assay (CiPA). We studied the effects of 26 drugs and 3 drug combinations on 2 commercially available iPSC-CM types using high-throughput voltage-sensitive dye and microelectrode-array assays being studied for the CiPA initiative and compared the results with clinical QT prolongation and torsade de pointes (TdP) risk. Concentration-dependent analysis comparing iPSC-CMs to clinical trial results demonstrated good correlation between drug-induced rate-corrected action potential duration and field potential duration (APDc and FPDc) prolongation and clinical trial QTc prolongation. Of 20 drugs studied that exhibit clinical QTc prolongation, 17 caused APDc prolongation (16 in Cor.4U and 13 in iCell cardiomyocytes) and 16 caused FPDc prolongation (16 in Cor.4U and 10 in iCell cardiomyocytes). Of 14 drugs that cause TdP, arrhythmias occurred with 10 drugs. Lack of arrhythmic beating in iPSC-CMs for the four remaining drugs could be due to differences in relative levels of expression of individual ion channels. iPSC-CMs responded consistently to human ether-a-go-go potassium channel blocking drugs (APD prolongation and arrhythmias) and calcium channel blocking drugs (APD shortening and prevention of arrhythmias), with a more variable response to late sodium current blocking drugs. Current results confirm the potential of iPSC-CMs for proarrhythmia prediction under CiPA, where iPSC-CM results would serve as a check to ion channel and in silico modeling prediction of proarrhythmic risk. A multi-site validation study is warranted.
Toxicological Sciences | 2016
Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Victor Zamora; Francis L. Burton; J. Green; Gary A. Gintant; Godfrey L. Smith
Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CM) and higher throughput platforms have emerged as potential tools to advance cardiac drug safety screening. This study evaluated the use of high bandwidth photometry applied to voltage-sensitive fluorescent dyes (VSDs) to assess drug-induced changes in action potential characteristics of spontaneously active hiPSC-CM. Human iPSC-CM from 2 commercial sources (Cor.4U and iCell Cardiomyocytes) were stained with the VSD di-4-ANEPPS and placed in a specialized photometry system that simultaneously monitors 2 wavebands of emitted fluorescence, allowing ratiometric measurement of membrane voltage. Signals were acquired at 10 kHz and analyzed using custom software. Action potential duration (APD) values were normally distributed in cardiomyocytes (CMC) from both sources though the mean and variance differed significantly (APD90: 229 ± 15 ms vs 427 ± 49 ms [mean ± SD, P < 0.01]; average spontaneous cycle length: 0.99 ± 0.02 s vs 1.47 ± 0.35 s [mean ± SD, P < 0.01], Cor.4U vs iCell CMC, respectively). The 10–90% rise time of the AP (Trise) was ∼6 ms and was normally distributed when expressed as 1/Trise2 in both cell preparations. Both cell types showed a rate dependence analogous to that of adult human cardiac cells. Furthermore, nifedipine, ranolazine, and E4031 had similar effects on cardiomyocyte electrophysiology in both cell types. However, ranolazine and E4031 induced early after depolarization-like events and high intrinsic firing rates at lower concentrations in iCell CMC. These data show that VSDs provide a minimally invasive, quantitative, and accurate method to assess hiPSC-CM electrophysiology and detect subtle drug-induced effects for drug safety screening while highlighting a need to standardize experimental protocols across preparations.
FEBS Open Bio | 2014
Tamara Patricia Martin; Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Jane E. Findlay; Christina Elliott; Susan Currie; George S. Baillie
Phosphorylated heat shock protein 20 (HSP20) is cardioprotective. Using human induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC‐CMs) and a mouse model of pressure overload mediated hypertrophy, we show that peptide disruption of the HSP20–phosphodiesterase 4D (PDE4D) complex results in attenuation of action potential prolongation and protection against adverse cardiac remodelling. The later was evidenced by improved contractility, decreased heart weight to body weight ratio, and reduced interstitial and perivascular fibrosis. This study demonstrates that disruption of the specific HSP20–PDE4D interaction leads to attenuation of pathological cardiac remodelling.
Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2011
Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Solenne Chardonnet; Cédric Montigny; Yolanda Gutiérrez-Martín; Philippe Champeil; Fernando Henao
Exposure of sarcoplasmic reticulum membranes to 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) resulted in inhibition of the maximal ATPase activity and Ca(2+) transport ability of SERCA1a, the Ca(2+) pump in these membranes. The concomitant presence of ATP significantly protected SERCA1a ATPase activity from inhibition. ATP binding and phosphoenzyme formation from ATP were reduced after treatment with HNE, whereas Ca(2+) binding to the high-affinity sites was altered to a lower extent. HNE reacted with SH groups, some of which were identified by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, and competition studies with FITC indicated that HNE also reacted with Lys(515) within the nucleotide binding pocket of SERCA1a. A remarkable fact was that both the steady-state ability of SR vesicles to sequester Ca(2+) and the ATPase activity of SR membranes in the absence of added ionophore or detergent were sensitive to concentrations of HNE much smaller than those that affected the maximal ATPase activity of SERCA1a. This was due to an increase in the passive permeability of HNE-treated SR vesicles to Ca(2+), an increase in permeability that did not arise from alteration of the lipid component of these vesicles. Judging from immunodetection with an anti-HNE antibody, this HNE-dependent increase in permeability probably arose from modification of proteins of about 150-160kDa, present in very low abundance in longitudinal SR membranes (and in slightly larger abundance in SR terminal cisternae). HNE-induced promotion, via these proteins, of Ca(2+) leakage pathways might be involved in the general toxic effects of HNE.
Journal of Pharmacological and Toxicological Methods | 2017
Hua Rong Lu; Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Victor Zamora; I. Kopljar; A. De Bondt; David J. Gallacher; Godfrey L. Smith
INTRODUCTION Human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPS-CMs) are emerging as new and human-relevant source in vitro model for cardiac safety assessment that allow us to investigate a set of 20 reference drugs for predicting cardiac arrhythmogenic liability using optical action potential (oAP) assay. METHODS Here, we describe our examination of the oAP measurement using a voltage sensitive dye (Di-4-ANEPPS) to predict adverse compound effects using hiPS-CMs and 20 cardioactive reference compounds. Fluorescence signals were digitized at 10kHz and the records subsequently analyzed off-line. Cells were exposed to 30min incubation to vehicle or compound (n=5/dose, 4 doses/compound) that were blinded to the investigating laboratory. Action potential parameters were measured, including rise time (Trise) of the optical action potential duration (oAPD). RESULTS Significant effects on oAPD were sensitively detected with 11 QT-prolonging drugs, while oAPD shortening was observed with ICa-antagonists, IKr-activator or ATP-sensitive K+ channel (KATP)-opener. Additionally, the assay detected varied effects induced by 6 different sodium channel blockers. The detection threshold for these drug effects was at or below the published values of free effective therapeutic plasma levels or effective concentrations by other studies. DISCUSSION The results of this blinded study indicate that OAP is a sensitive method to accurately detect drug-induced effects (i.e., duration/QT-prolongation, shortening, beat rate, and incidence of early after depolarizations) in hiPS-CMs; therefore, this technique will potentially be useful in predicting drug-induced arrhythmogenic liabilities in early de-risking within the drug discovery phase.
Toxicological Sciences | 2017
Sarah D. Lamore; Ernst Ahlberg; Scott Boyer; Michelle Lamb; Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Victor Zamora Rodriguez; Godfrey L. Smith; Johanna Sagemark; Lars Carlsson; Stephanie Bates; Allison Laura Choy; Jonna Stålring; Clay W Scott; Matthew F. Peters
Abstract Many drugs designed to inhibit kinases have their clinical utility limited by cardiotoxicity-related label warnings or prescribing restrictions. While this liability is widely recognized, designing safer kinase inhibitors (KI) requires knowledge of the causative kinase(s). Efforts to unravel the kinases have encountered pharmacology with nearly prohibitive complexity. At therapeutically relevant concentrations, KIs show promiscuity distributed across the kinome. Here, to overcome this complexity, 65 KIs with known kinome-scale polypharmacology profiles were assessed for effects on cardiomyocyte (CM) beating. Changes in human iPSC-CM beat rate and amplitude were measured using label-free cellular impedance. Correlations between beat effects and kinase inhibition profiles were mined by computation analysis (Matthews Correlation Coefficient) to identify associated kinases. Thirty kinases met criteria of having (1) pharmacological inhibition correlated with CM beat changes, (2) expression in both human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes and adult heart tissue, and (3) effects on CM beating following single gene knockdown. A subset of these 30 kinases were selected for mechanistic follow up. Examples of kinases regulating processes spanning the excitation–contraction cascade were identified, including calcium flux (RPS6KA3, IKBKE) and action potential duration (MAP4K2). Finally, a simple model was created to predict functional cardiotoxicity whereby inactivity at three sentinel kinases (RPS6KB1, FAK, STK35) showed exceptional accuracy in vitro and translated to clinical KI safety data. For drug discovery, identifying causative kinases and introducing a predictive model should transform the ability to design safer KI medicines. For cardiovascular biology, discovering kinases previously unrecognized as influencing cardiovascular biology should stimulate investigation of underappreciated signaling pathways.
Frontiers in Physiology | 2017
Chon Lok Lei; Ken Wang; Michael Clerx; Ross H. Johnstone; Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Victor Zamora; Andrew Allan; Godfrey L. Smith; David J. Gavaghan; Gary R. Mirams; Liudmila Polonchuk
Human induced pluripotent stem cell derived cardiomyocytes (iPSC-CMs) have applications in disease modeling, cell therapy, drug screening and personalized medicine. Computational models can be used to interpret experimental findings in iPSC-CMs, provide mechanistic insights, and translate these findings to adult cardiomyocyte (CM) electrophysiology. However, different cell lines display different expression of ion channels, pumps and receptors, and show differences in electrophysiology. In this exploratory study, we use a mathematical model based on iPSC-CMs from Cellular Dynamic International (CDI, iCell), and compare its predictions to novel experimental recordings made with the Axiogenesis Cor.4U line. We show that tailoring this model to the specific cell line, even using limited data and a relatively simple approach, leads to improved predictions of baseline behavior and response to drugs. This demonstrates the need and the feasibility to tailor models to individual cell lines, although a more refined approach will be needed to characterize individual currents, address differences in ion current kinetics, and further improve these results.
Planta Medica | 2014
Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; José María Blanco; Trinidad Ruiz; Fernando Henao
An interdisciplinary experimental investigation on the antioxidant activity of Thymbra capitata essential oil was made. This plant is a Mediterranean culinary herb, whose essential oil antioxidant power has recently been demonstrated in vitro as one of the highest in nature. We tested if this in vitro antioxidant capacity was reproducible on biological systems using as model system primary cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes treated with the lipid peroxidation product 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal. The composition and the in vitro antioxidant activity of the T. capitata essential oil were also assessed. Cell viability, mitochondrial membrane potential, and reactive oxygen species level were measured in cells treated with pathophysiologic doses of 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (< 10 µM) or vehicle after being pre-incubated with small concentrations of the T. capitata essential oil, and the ability of small doses (< 40 ppm) to prevent the death of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes proved very remarkable. Long-term pre-incubation (12 h) with 20 ppm prevented 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal-induced cell death and avoided mitochondrial membrane potential loss and reactive oxygen species generation caused by 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal. A deleterious effect was shown at doses higher than 40 ppm. The results of this study pave the way to further analysis in animal models to achieve a deeper understanding of the in vivo antioxidant power of T. capitata essential oil.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2017
Priyanka Saxena; Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Stanislav Beyl; Igor Baburin; Stanislav Andranovits; S M Iqbal; Ana Costa; Adriaan P. IJzerman; Philipp Kügler; Evgeny Timin; Godfrey L. Smith; Steffen Hering
Human ether‐a‐go‐go‐related gene (hERG; Kv11.1) channel inhibition is a widely accepted predictor of cardiac arrhythmia. hERG channel inhibition alone is often insufficient to predict pro‐arrhythmic drug effects. This study used a library of dofetilide derivatives to investigate the relationship between standard measures of hERG current block in an expression system and changes in action potential duration (APD) in human‐induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC‐CMs). The interference from accompanying block of Cav1.2 and Nav1.5 channels was investigated along with an in silico AP model.
British Journal of Pharmacology | 2017
P Saxena; Maria P. Hortigon-Vinagre; Stanislav Beyl; Igor Baburin; Stanislav Andranovits; S M Iqbal; Ana Costa; Adriaan P. IJzerman; Philipp Kügler; Eugen Timin; Godfrey L. Smith; Steffen Hering
Human ether‐a‐go‐go‐related gene (hERG; Kv11.1) channel inhibition is a widely accepted predictor of cardiac arrhythmia. hERG channel inhibition alone is often insufficient to predict pro‐arrhythmic drug effects. This study used a library of dofetilide derivatives to investigate the relationship between standard measures of hERG current block in an expression system and changes in action potential duration (APD) in human‐induced pluripotent stem cell‐derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC‐CMs). The interference from accompanying block of Cav1.2 and Nav1.5 channels was investigated along with an in silico AP model.