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Dive into the research topics where Marvin O. Boluyt is active.

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Featured researches published by Marvin O. Boluyt.


Circulation Research | 1994

Alterations in cardiac gene expression during the transition from stable hypertrophy to heart failure. Marked upregulation of genes encoding extracellular matrix components.

Marvin O. Boluyt; Lydia O'Neill; Andrea L. Meredith; Oscar H L Bing; Wesley W. Brooks; Chester H. Conrad; Michael T. Crow; Edward G. Lakatta

The failing heart is characterized by impaired cardiac muscle function and increased interstitial fibrosis. Our purpose was to determine whether the functional impairment of the failing heart is associated with changes in levels of mRNA encoding proteins that modulate parameters of contraction and relaxation and whether the increased fibrosis observed in the failing heart is related to elevated expression of genes encoding extracellular matrix components. We studied hearts of 18- to 24-month-old spontaneously hypertensive rats with signs and symptoms of heart failure (SHR-F) or without evidence of failure (SHR-NF) and of age-matched normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats. Compared with WKY rats, SHR-NF exhibited left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (2.2-fold) and right ventricular (RV) hypertrophy (1.5-fold), whereas SHR-F were characterized by comparable LV hypertrophy (2.1-fold) and augmented RV hypertrophy (2.4-fold; all P < .01). Total RNA was isolated from ventricles and subjected to Northern blot analysis. In SHR-F hearts, the level of alpha-myosin heavy chain mRNA was decreased in both ventricles to 1/3 and 1/5 of the SHR-NF and WKY values, respectively (both P < .01). Levels of beta-myosin heavy chain, alpha-cardiac actin, and myosin light chain-2 mRNAs were not significantly altered in hearts of SHR-NF or SHR-F. Levels of alpha-skeletal actin were twofold greater in SHR-NF hearts compared with WKY hearts and were intermediate in SHR-F hearts. Levels of atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) mRNA were elevated threefold in the LV of SHR-NF (P < .05) but were not significantly increased in the RV of SHR-NF compared with WKY rats. During the transition to failure (SHR-F versus SHR-NF), ANF mRNA levels increased an additional 1.6-fold in the LV and were elevated 4.7-fold in the RV (both P < .05). Levels of sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase (SRCA) mRNA were maintained in the LV of hypertensive and failing hearts at levels not significantly different from WKY values. In contrast, the level of RV SRCA mRNA was 24% less in SHR-NF compared with WKY rats, and during the transition to failure, this difference was not significantly exacerbated (29% less than the WKY value). The levels of fibronectin and pro-alpha 1(I) and pro-alpha 1(III) collagen mRNAs were not significantly elevated in either ventricle of the SHR-NF group but were fourfold to fivefold higher in both ventricles of SHR-F (all P < .05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1997

p53 and the hypoxia-induced apoptosis of cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes.

Xilin Long; Marvin O. Boluyt; Maria De Lourdes Hipolito; Martha S. Lundberg; Jing Sheng Zheng; Lydia O'Neill; Corrado Cirielli; Edward G. Lakatta; Michael T. Crow

Myocyte cell loss is a prominent and important pathogenic feature of cardiac ischemia. We have used cultured neonatal rat cardiac myocytes exposed to prolonged hypoxia as an experimental system to identify critical factors involved in cardiomyocyte death. Exposure of myocytes to hypoxia for 48 h resulted in intranucleosomal cleavage of genomic DNA characteristic of apoptosis and was accompanied by increased p53 transactivating activity and protein accumulation. Expression of p21/WAF-1/CIP-1, a well-characterized target of p53 transactivation, also increased in response to hypoxia. Hypoxia did not cause DNA laddering or cell loss in cardiac fibroblasts. To determine whether the increase in p53 expression in myocytes was sufficient to induce apoptosis, normoxic cultures were infected with a replication-defective adenovirus expressing wild-type human p53 (AdCMV.p53). Infected cells expressed high intracellular levels of p53 protein and exhibited the morphological changes and genomic DNA fragmentation characteristic of apoptosis. In contrast, no genomic DNA fragmentation was observed in myocytes infected with the control virus lacking an insert (AdCMV.null) or in cardiac fibroblasts infected with AdCMV.p53. These results suggest that the intracellular signaling pathways activated by p53 might play a critical role in the regulation of hypoxia-induced apoptosis of cardiomyocytes.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998

Age-associated reductions in cardiac beta1- and beta2-adrenergic responses without changes in inhibitory G proteins or receptor kinases.

Rui-Ping Xiao; Eric D. Tomhave; Ding Ji Wang; Xiangwu Ji; Marvin O. Boluyt; Heping Cheng; Edward G. Lakatta; Walter J. Koch

While an age-associated diminution in myocardial contractile response to beta-adrenergic receptor (beta-AR) stimulation has been widely demonstrated to occur in the context of increased levels of plasma catecholamines, some critical mechanisms that govern beta-AR signaling must still be examined in aged hearts. Specifically, the contribution of beta-AR subtypes (beta1 versus beta2) to the overall reduction in contractile response with aging is unknown. Additionally, whether G protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs), which mediate receptor desensitization, or adenylyl cyclase inhibitory G proteins (Gi) are increased with aging has not been examined. Both these inhibitory mechanisms are upregulated in chronic heart failure, a condition also associated with diminished beta-AR responsiveness and increased circulatory catecholamines. In this study, the contractile responses to both beta1-AR and beta2-AR stimulation were examined in rat ventricular myocytes of a broad age range (2, 8, and 24 mo). A marked age-associated depression in contractile response to both beta-AR subtype stimulation was observed. This was associated with a nonselective reduction in the density of both beta-AR subtypes and a reduction in membrane adenylyl cyclase response to both beta-AR subtype agonists, NaF or forskolin. However, the age-associated diminutions in contractile responses to either beta1-AR or beta2-AR stimulation were not rescued by inhibiting Gi with pertussis toxin treatment. Further, the abundance or activity of beta-adrenergic receptor kinase, GRK5, or Gi did not significantly change with aging. Thus, we conclude that the positive inotropic effects of both beta1- and beta2-AR stimulation are markedly decreased with aging in rat ventricular myocytes and this is accompanied by decreases in both beta-AR subtype densities and a reduction in membrane adenylate cyclase activity. Neither GRKs nor Gi proteins appear to contribute to the age-associated reduction in cardiac beta-AR responsiveness.


Circulation Research | 1997

Rapamycin Inhibits α1-Adrenergic Receptor–Stimulated Cardiac Myocyte Hypertrophy but Not Activation of Hypertrophy-Associated Genes Evidence for Involvement of p70 S6 Kinase

Marvin O. Boluyt; Jing Sheng Zheng; Antoine Younes; Xilin Long; Lydia O'Neill; Howard S. Silverman; Edward G. Lakatta; Michael T. Crow

The 70-kD S6 kinase (p70S6K) has been implicated in the regulation of protein synthesis in many cell types and in the angiotensin II-stimulated hypertrophy of cardiac myocytes. Our purpose was to determine whether p70S6K plays a role in cardiomyocyte hypertrophy induced by the alpha 1-adrenergic receptor (alpha 1-AR) agonist phenylephrine (PE). PE stimulated the activity of p70S6K > 3-fold, and this increase was blocked by rapamycin, an immunosuppressant macrolide that selectively inhibits p70S6K. When administered for 3 days, PE stimulated a 30% increase in total protein content, a 2-fold increase in the incorporation of [14C]phenylalanine (14C-Phe) into protein, and a 50% increase in two-dimensional myocyte area. Rapamycin pretreatment (> or = 500 pg/mL) significantly inhibited each of these PE-stimulated changes. Two days of PE treatment resulted in a 1.6-fold increase in total RNA yield per dish, a 2-fold increase in incorporation of [14C]uridine into myocyte RNA, and increases in relative mRNA levels of the hypertrophy-associated atrial natriuretic factor (ANF, 2.1-fold) and skeletal alpha-actin (SK, 2.2-fold) genes. Although rapamycin abolished the PE-stimulated increases in total RNA and incorporation of [14C]uridine, it had no effect on the induction of the ANF and SK genes. LY294002, a specific inhibitor of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) activity, inhibited PE-stimulated increases in p70S6K activity and the incorporation of labeled precursors into myocyte protein and RNA. These results demonstrate that p70S6K is activated by the hypertrophic agent PE and that a PI3-K or PI3-K-like activity is required for p70S6K activation and myocyte hypertrophy. The data suggest that p70S6K activation may be required for PE-stimulated hypertrophy of cardiac myocytes. Our results demonstrate that intracellular signaling pathways responsible for transcriptional and translational responses diverge early after alpha 1-AR stimulation in cardiac myocytes.


The FASEB Journal | 2004

Self-organization of rat cardiac cells into contractile 3-D cardiac tissue

Keith Baar; Ravi K. Birla; Marvin O. Boluyt; Gregory H. Borschel; Ellen M. Arruda; Robert G. Dennis

The mammalian heart is not known to regenerate following injury. Therefore, there is great interest in developing viable tissue‐based models for cardiac assist. Recent years have brought numerous advances in the development of scaffold‐based models of cardiac tissue, but a self‐organizing model has yet to be described. Here, we report the development of an in vitro cardiac tissue without scaffolding materials in the contractile region. Using an optimal concentration of the adhesion molecule laminin, a confluent layer of neonatal rat cardiomyogenic cells can be induced to self‐organize into a cylindrical construct, resembling a papillary muscle, which we have termed a cardioid. Like endogenous heart tissue, cardioids contract spontaneously and can be electrically paced between 1 and 5 Hz indefinitely without fatigue. These engineered cardiac tissues also show an increased rate of spontaneous contraction (chronotropy), increased rate of relaxation (lusitropy), and increased force production (inotropy) in response to epinephrine. Cardioids have a developmental protein phenotype that expresses both α‐ and β‐tropomyosin, very low levels of SERCA2a, and very little of the mature isoform of cardiac troponin T.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998

Enhanced expression of p53 and apoptosis induced by blockade of the vacuolar proton ATPase in cardiomyocytes.

Xilin Long; Michael T. Crow; Steven J. Sollott; Lydia O'Neill; Daniel S. Menees; Maria De Lourdes Hipolito; Marvin O. Boluyt; Toshinobu Asai; Edward G. Lakatta

Activation of the vacuolar proton ATPase (VPATPase) has been implicated in the prevention of apoptosis in neutrophils and adult cardiac myocytes. To determine the role of the VPATPase in apoptosis of cardiac myocytes, we used a potent and specific inhibitor of the VPATPase, bafilomycin A1. Bafilomycin A1 alone caused increased DNA laddering of genomic DNA and increased nuclear staining for fragmented DNA in neonatal cardiomyocyte apoptosis in a dose- and time-dependent manner. Intracellular acidification in cardiac myocytes was also observed after 18 h of bafilomycin A1 treatment. Accordingly, bafilomycin A1-treated myocytes also showed increased accumulation of p53 protein and p53-dependent transactivation of gene expression, including a persistent upregulation of p21/wild-type p53 activated fragment 1/cyclin kinase inhibitor protein-1 mRNA. The bafilomycin A1-induced increase in p53 protein levels was accompanied by a marked increase in p53 mRNA accumulation. In contrast, cardiac fibroblasts treated with bafilomycin A1 showed no change in p53 protein expression or pHi and did not undergo apoptosis even after 24 h of treatment. Our data suggest that blockade of the VPATPase induces apoptotic cell death of cardiac myocytes and that this may occur through a p53-mediated apoptotic pathway.


Heart Failure Reviews | 2002

Studies of Prevention, Treatment and Mechanisms of Heart Failure in the Aging Spontaneously Hypertensive Rat

Oscar H.L. Bing; Chester H. Conrad; Marvin O. Boluyt; Kathleen G. Robinson; Wesley W. Brooks

The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) is an animal model of genetic hypertension which develops heart failure with aging, similar to man. The consistent pattern of a long period of stable hypertrophy followed by a transition to failure provides a useful model to study mechanisms of heart failure with aging and test treatments at differing phases of the disease process. The transition from compensated hypertrophy to failure is accompanied by changes in cardiac function which are associated with altered active and passive mechanical properties of myocardial tissue; these events define the physiologic basis for cardiac decompensation. In examining the mechanism for myocardial tissue dysfunction, studies have demonstrated a central role for neurohormonal activation, and specifically the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Pharmacologic attenuation of this system at differing points in the course of the process suggests that prevention but not reversal of myocardial tissue dysfunction is possible. The roles of the extracellular matrix, apoptosis, intracellular calcium, beta-adrenergic stimulation, microtubules, and oxygen supply-demand relationships in ultimately mediating myocardial tissue dysfunction are reviewed. Studies suggest that while considerable progress has been made in understanding and treating the transition to failure, our current state of knowledge is limited in scope and we are not yet able to define specific mechanisms responsible for tissue dysfunction. It will be necessary to integrate information on the roles of newly discovered, and as yet undiscovered, genes and pathways to provide a clearer understanding of maladaptive remodeling seen with heart failure. Understanding the mechanism for tissue dysfunction is likely to result in more effective treatments for the prevention and reversal of heart failure with aging. It is anticipated that the SHR model will assist us in reaching these important goals.


Circulation Research | 1996

Extracellular ATP Inhibits Adrenergic Agonist–Induced Hypertrophy of Neonatal Cardiac Myocytes

Jing Sheng Zheng; Marvin O. Boluyt; Xilin Long; Lydia O'Neill; Edward G. Lakatta; Michael T. Crow

We have previously shown that extracellular ATP, like norepinephrine (NE) and many other hypertrophy-inducing agents, increases expression of the immediate-early genes c-fos and junB in cultured neonatal cardiac myocytes but that the intracellular signaling pathways activated by ATP and responsible for these changes differ from those stimulated by NE. Furthermore, whereas NE increases incorporation of [14C]phenylalanine (14C-Phe) and cell size in neonatal cardiomyocytes, ATP does not. Since ATP is coreleased with NE from sympathetic nerve endings in the heart, we investigated whether ATP could modulate cardiac hypertrophy induced by adrenergic agonists, such as NE. We report in the present study that extracellular ATP inhibited the increase in incorporation of 14C-Phe into cellular protein and the increase in cell size in neonatal rat cardiac myocytes that was induced by NE, phenylephrine (PE), basic fibroblast growth factor, or endothelin-1. This inhibition was dose dependent, occurred predominantly through P2 purinergic receptors, and was observed even when cells were treated with ATP for as little as 1 hour before the addition of the hypertrophy-inducing agent. ATP also selectively affected changes in gene expression associated with hypertrophy. It prevented PE-stimulated increases in atrial natriuretic factor and myosin light chain-2 mRNA levels, while appearing to augment basal and PE-stimulated skeletal alpha-actin mRNA levels. ATP alone increased sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase mRNA levels but had no effect when added with PE. ATP did not significantly affect the level of the constitutively expressed mRNA for GAPDH. Neither the PE-stimulated increase in immediate-early gene expression nor the initial induction of mitogen-activated protein kinase activity by PE was inhibited by ATP. These results demonstrate that extracellular ATP can inhibit hypertrophic growth of neonatal cardiac myocytes and differentially alter the changes in gene expression that accompany hypertrophy.


Cardiovascular Research | 2000

Matrix gene expression and decompensated heart failure: the aged SHR model.

Marvin O. Boluyt; Oscar H.L. Bing

Impaired functional performance despite hypertrophic enlargement, and an excessive accumulation of extracellular matrix, are hallmarks of the decompensated failing heart. Age is the leading risk factor for heart failure, and there is evidence suggesting that a number of age-associated changes in the cardiac phenotype predispose the heart to failure. The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) exhibits compensated cardiac hypertrophy followed by a transition to heart failure in the last quartile of the lifespan, and thus provides a useful model of the transition from stable compensated hypertrophy to decompensated heart failure in the context of aging. The transition to failure in the SHR is accompanied by marked changes in the expression of an array of genes in the heart, including increased expression of a number of genes associated with the extracellular matrix. Drug treatments that prevent or reverse matrix gene expression in the SHR heart improve myocardial function and survival. The aged SHR model of decompensated heart failure has provided insight into the role of the extracellular matrix in the transition to failure, and can be useful to further investigate the mechanistic bases of heart failure, as well as to evaluate the potential efficacy of novel therapeutic approaches to the treatment of heart failure.


Hypertension | 1997

Captopril Modifies Gene Expression in Hypertrophied and Failing Hearts of Aged Spontaneously Hypertensive Rats

Wesley W. Brooks; Oscar H.L. Bing; Chester H. Conrad; Lydia O'Neill; Michael T. Crow; Edward G. Lakatta; David E. Dostal; Kenneth M. Baker; Marvin O. Boluyt

The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) exhibits a transition from stable compensated left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy to heart failure (HF) at a mean age of 21 months that is characterized by a decrease in alpha-myosin heavy chain (alpha-MHC) gene expression and increases in the expression of the atrial natriuretic factor (ANF), pro-alpha1(III) collagen, and transforming growth factor beta1 (TGF-beta1) genes. We tested the hypotheses that angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition (ACEI) in SHR would prevent and reverse HF-associated changes in gene expression when administered prior to and after the onset of HF, respectively. We also investigated the effect of ACEI on circulating and cardiac components of the renin-angiotensin system. ACEI (captopril 2 g/L in the drinking water) was initiated at 12, 18, and 21 months of age in SHR without HF and in SHR with HF. Results were compared with those of age-matched normotensive Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats, and to untreated SHR with and without evidence of HF. ACEI initiated prior to failure prevented the changes in alpha-MHC, ANF, pro-alpha1(III) collagen, and TGF-beta1 gene expression that are associated with the transition to HF. ACEI initiated after the onset of HF lowered levels of TGF-beta1 mRNA by 50% (P<.05) and elevated levels of alpha-MHC mRNA two- to threefold (P<.05). Circulating levels of renin and angiotensin I were elevated four- to sixfold by ACEI, but surprisingly, plasma levels of angiotensin II were not reduced. ACEI increased LV renin mRNA levels in WKY and SHR by two- to threefold but did not influence LV levels of angiotensinogen mRNA. The results suggest that the anti-HF benefits of ACEI in SHR may be mediated, at least in part, by effects on the expression of specific genes, including those encoding alpha-MHC, ANF, TGF-beta1, pro-alpha1(III) collagen, and renin-angiotensin system components.

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Edward G. Lakatta

National Institutes of Health

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Lydia O'Neill

National Institutes of Health

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Xilin Long

National Institutes of Health

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A F. Scalia

University of Michigan

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Amy M. Loyd

University of Michigan

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