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Dive into the research topics where Michael McGregor is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael McGregor.


Physiological Reviews | 2011

MYOCARDIAL AKT: THE OMNIPRESENT NEXUS

Mark A. Sussman; Mirko Völkers; Kimberlee Fischer; Brandi Bailey; Christopher T. Cottage; Shabana Din; Natalie Gude; Daniele Avitabile; Roberto Alvarez; Balaji Sundararaman; Pearl Quijada; Matt Mason; Mathias Konstandin; Amy Malhowski; Zhaokang Cheng; Mohsin Khan; Michael McGregor

One of the greatest examples of integrated signal transduction is revealed by examination of effects mediated by AKT kinase in myocardial biology. Positioned at the intersection of multiple afferent and efferent signals, AKT exemplifies a molecular sensing node that coordinates dynamic responses of the cell in literally every aspect of biological responses. The balanced and nuanced nature of homeostatic signaling is particularly essential within the myocardial context, where regulation of survival, energy production, contractility, and response to pathological stress all flow through the nexus of AKT activation or repression. Equally important, the loss of regulated AKT activity is primarily the cause or consequence of pathological conditions leading to remodeling of the heart and eventual decompensation. This review presents an overview compendium of the complex world of myocardial AKT biology gleaned from more than a decade of research. Summarization of the widespread influence that AKT exerts upon myocardial responses leaves no doubt that the participation of AKT in molecular signaling will need to be reckoned with as a seemingly omnipresent regulator of myocardial molecular biological responses.


Circulation Research | 2010

Pim-1 Kinase Protects Mitochondrial Integrity in Cardiomyocytes

Gwynngelle A. Borillo; Matt Mason; Pearl Quijada; Mirko Völkers; Christopher T. Cottage; Michael McGregor; Shabana Din; Kimberlee Fischer; Natalie Gude; Daniele Avitabile; Steven B. Barlow; Roberto Alvarez; Silvia Truffa; Ross Whittaker; Matthew S. Glassy; Åsa B. Gustafsson; Christopher C. Glembotski; Roberta A. Gottlieb; Joan Heller Brown; Mark A. Sussman

Rationale: Cardioprotective signaling mediates antiapoptotic actions through multiple mechanisms including maintenance of mitochondrial integrity. Pim-1 kinase is an essential downstream effector of AKT-mediated cardioprotection but the mechanistic basis for maintenance of mitochondrial integrity by Pim-1 remains unexplored. This study details antiapoptotic actions responsible for enhanced cell survival in cardiomyocytes with elevated Pim-1 activity. Objective: The purpose of this study is to demonstrate that the cardioprotective kinase Pim-1 acts to inhibit cell death by preserving mitochondrial integrity in cardiomyocytes. Methods and Results: A combination of biochemical, molecular, and microscopic analyses demonstrate beneficial effects of Pim-1 on mitochondrial integrity. Pim-1 protein level increases in the mitochondrial fraction with a corresponding decrease in the cytosolic fraction of myocardial lysates from hearts subjected to 30 minutes of ischemia followed by 30 minutes of reperfusion. Cardiac-specific overexpression of Pim-1 results in higher levels of antiapoptotic Bcl-XL and Bcl-2 compared to samples from normal hearts. In response to oxidative stress challenge, Pim-1 preserves the inner mitochondrial membrane potential. Ultrastructure of the mitochondria is maintained by Pim-1 activity, which prevents swelling induced by calcium overload. Finally, mitochondria isolated from hearts created with cardiac-specific overexpression of Pim-1 show inhibition of cytochrome c release triggered by a truncated form of proapoptotic Bid. Conclusion: Cardioprotective action of Pim-1 kinase includes preservation of mitochondrial integrity during cardiomyopathic challenge conditions, thereby raising the potential for Pim-1 kinase activation as a therapeutic interventional approach to inhibit cell death by antagonizing proapoptotic Bcl-2 family members that regulate the intrinsic apoptotic pathway.


Circulation Research | 2013

β-Adrenergic Regulation of Cardiac Progenitor Cell Death Versus Survival and Proliferation

Mohsin Khan; Sadia Mohsin; Daniele Avitabile; Sailay Siddiqi; Jonathan Nguyen; Kathleen Wallach; Pearl Quijada; Michael McGregor; Natalie Gude; Roberto Alvarez; Douglas G. Tilley; Walter J. Koch; Mark A. Sussman

Rationale: Short-term &bgr;-adrenergic stimulation promotes contractility in response to stress but is ultimately detrimental in the failing heart because of accrual of cardiomyocyte death. Endogenous cardiac progenitor cell (CPC) activation may partially offset cardiomyocyte losses, but consequences of long-term &bgr;-adrenergic drive on CPC survival and proliferation are unknown. Objective: We sought to determine the relationship between &bgr;-adrenergic activity and regulation of CPC function. Methods and Results: Mouse and human CPCs express only &bgr;2 adrenergic receptor (&bgr;2-AR) in conjunction with stem cell marker c-kit. Activation of &bgr;2-AR signaling promotes proliferation associated with increased AKT, extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2, and endothelial NO synthase phosphorylation, upregulation of cyclin D1, and decreased levels of G protein–coupled receptor kinase 2. Conversely, silencing of &bgr;2-AR expression or treatment with &bgr;2-antagonist ICI 118, 551 impairs CPC proliferation and survival. &bgr;1-AR expression in CPC is induced by differentiation stimuli, sensitizing CPC to isoproterenol-induced cell death that is abrogated by metoprolol. Efficacy of &bgr;1-AR blockade by metoprolol to increase CPC survival and proliferation was confirmed in vivo by adoptive transfer of CPC into failing mouse myocardium. Conclusions: &bgr;-adrenergic stimulation promotes expansion and survival of CPCs through &bgr;2-AR, but acquisition of &bgr;1-AR on commitment to the myocyte lineage results in loss of CPCs and early myocyte precursors.


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

Nucleolar stress is an early response to myocardial damage involving nucleolar proteins nucleostemin and nucleophosmin

Daniele Avitabile; Brandi Bailey; Christopher T. Cottage; Balaji Sundararaman; Anya Joyo; Michael McGregor; Natalie Gude; Silvia Truffa; Aryan Zarrabi; Mathias Konstandin; Mohsin Khan; Sadia Mohsin; Mirko Völkers; Haruhiro Toko; Matt Mason; Zhaokang Cheng; Shabana Din; Roberto Alvarez; Kimberlee Fischer; Mark A. Sussman

Nucleolar stress, characterized by loss of nucleolar integrity, has not been described in the cardiac context. In addition to ribosome biogenesis, nucleoli are critical for control of cell proliferation and stress responses. Our group previously demonstrated induction of the nucleolar protein nucleostemin (NS) in response to cardiac pathological insult. NS interacts with nucleophosmin (NPM), a marker of nucleolar stress with cytoprotective properties. The dynamic behavior of NS and NPM reveal that nucleolar disruption is an early event associated with stress response in cardiac cells. Rapid translocation of NS and NPM to the nucleoplasm and suppression of new preribosomal RNA synthesis occurs in both neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRCM) and cardiac progenitor cells (CPC) upon exposure to doxorubicin or actinomycin D. Silencing of NS significantly increases cell death resulting from doxorubicin treatment in CPC, whereas NPM knockdown alone induces cell death. Overexpression of either NS or NPM significantly decreases caspase 8 activity in cultured cardiomyocytes challenged with doxorubicin. The presence of altered nucleolar structures resulting from myocardial infarction in mice supports the model of nucleolar stress as a general response to pathological injury. Collectively, these findings serve as the initial description of myocardial nucleolar stress and establish the postulate that nucleoli acts as sensors of stress, regulating the cellular response to pathological insults.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Differential Regulation of Cellular Senescence and Differentiation by Prolyl Isomerase Pin1 in Cardiac Progenitor Cells

Haruhiro Toko; Nirmala Hariharan; Mathias Konstandin; Lucia Ormachea; Michael McGregor; Natalie Gude; Balaji Sundararaman; Eri Joyo; Anya Joyo; Brett Collins; Shabana Din; Sadia Mohsin; Takafumi Uchida; Mark A. Sussman

Background: Pin1 is a prolyl isomerase that modulates the structure of phosphoproteins. Results: Loss of Pin1 causes cell cycle arrest and senescence, whereas Pin1 overexpression increases differentiation and inhibits senescence of cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs). Conclusion: Pin1 has pleiotropic roles in CPCs. Significance: Pin1 may be a molecular target to enhance repair, survival, and differentiation and antagonize senescence of CPCs. Autologous c-kit+ cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) are currently used in the clinic to treat heart disease. CPC-based regeneration may be further augmented by better understanding molecular mechanisms of endogenous cardiac repair and enhancement of pro-survival signaling pathways that antagonize senescence while also increasing differentiation. The prolyl isomerase Pin1 regulates multiple signaling cascades by modulating protein folding and thereby activity and stability of phosphoproteins. In this study, we examine the heretofore unexplored role of Pin1 in CPCs. Pin1 is expressed in CPCs in vitro and in vivo and is associated with increased proliferation. Pin1 is required for cell cycle progression and loss of Pin1 causes cell cycle arrest in the G1 phase in CPCs, concomitantly associated with decreased expression of Cyclins D and B and increased expression of cell cycle inhibitors p53 and retinoblastoma (Rb). Pin1 deletion increases cellular senescence but not differentiation or cell death of CPCs. Pin1 is required for endogenous CPC response as Pin1 knock-out mice have a reduced number of proliferating CPCs after ischemic challenge. Pin1 overexpression also impairs proliferation and causes G2/M phase cell cycle arrest with concurrent down-regulation of Cyclin B, p53, and Rb. Additionally, Pin1 overexpression inhibits replicative senescence, increases differentiation, and inhibits cell death of CPCs, indicating that cell cycle arrest caused by Pin1 overexpression is a consequence of differentiation and not senescence or cell death. In conclusion, Pin1 has pleiotropic roles in CPCs and may be a molecular target to promote survival, enhance repair, improve differentiation, and antagonize senescence.


Cell Cycle | 2014

CENP-A is essential for cardiac progenitor cell proliferation.

Michael McGregor; Nirmala Hariharan; Anya Joyo; Robert L. Margolis; Mark A. Sussman

Centromere protein A (CENP-A) is a homolog of histone H3 that epigenetically marks the heterochromatin of chromosomes. CENP-A is a critical component of the cell cycle machinery that is necessary for proper assembly of the mitotic spindle. However, the role of CENP-A in the heart and cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) has not been previously studied. This study shows that CENP-A is expressed in CPCs and declines with age. Silencing CENP-A results in a decreased CPC growth rate, reduced cell number in phase G2/M of the cell cycle, and increased senescence associated β-galactosidase activity. Lineage commitment is not affected by CENP-A silencing, suggesting that cell cycle arrest induced by loss of CENP-A is a consequence of senescence and not differentiation. CENP-A knockdown does not exacerbate cell death in undifferentiated CPCs, but increases apoptosis upon lineage commitment. Taken together, these results indicate that CPCs maintain relatively high levels of CENP-A early in life, which is necessary for sustaining proliferation, inhibiting senescence, and promoting survival following differentiation of CPCs.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2015

Nucleostemin Rejuvenates Cardiac Progenitor Cells and Antagonizes Myocardial Aging

Nirmala Hariharan; Pearl Quijada; Sadia Mohsin; Anya Joyo; Kaitlen Samse; Megan Monsanto; Andrea De La Torre; Daniele Avitabile; Lucia Ormachea; Michael McGregor; Emily J. Tsai; Mark A. Sussman


Circulation Research | 2013

Abstract 326: Nucleostemin Induced by Pim-1 Kinase Antagonizes Senescence of Cardiac Progenitor Cells

Nirmala Hariharan; Anya Joyo; Daniele Avitabile; Kaitlen Samse; Brandi Bailey; Pearl Quijada; Michael McGregor; Sadia Mohsin; Sailay Siddiqi; Mark A. Sussman


Circulation Research | 2012

Abstract 160: Pim-1 Preserves Cardiac Stem Cell Proliferation with Age

Michael McGregor; Shabana Din; Natalie Gude; Mark A. Sussman


Circulation Research | 2012

Abstract 62: Pim-1 Engineering of Human CPCs Increases Telomere Length from Aged Patients with Heart Failure

Sadia Mohsin; Mohsin Khan; Kathleen Wallach; Travis Cottage; Michael McGregor; Mark A. Sussman

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Mark A. Sussman

San Diego State University

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Daniele Avitabile

San Diego State University

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Natalie Gude

San Diego State University

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Sadia Mohsin

San Diego State University

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Shabana Din

San Diego State University

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Anya Joyo

San Diego State University

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Brandi Bailey

San Diego State University

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Pearl Quijada

San Diego State University

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Mirko Völkers

San Diego State University

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