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Featured researches published by Nazneen Tata.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

CIRCADIAN RHYTHM DISORGANIZATION PRODUCES PROFOUND CARDIOVASCULAR AND RENAL DISEASE IN HAMSTERS

Tami A. Martino; Gavin Y. Oudit; Andrew M. Herzenberg; Nazneen Tata; Margaret M. Koletar; Golam Kabir; Denise D. Belsham; Peter H. Backx; Martin R. Ralph; Michael J. Sole

Sleep deprivation, shift work, and jet lag all disrupt normal biological rhythms and have major impacts on health; however, circadian disorganization has never been shown as a causal risk factor in organ disease. We now demonstrate devastating effects of rhythm disorganization on cardiovascular and renal integrity and that interventions based on circadian principles prevent disease pathology caused by a short-period mutation (tau) of the circadian system in hamsters. The point mutation in the circadian regulatory gene, casein kinase-1epsilon, produces early onset circadian entrainment with fragmented patterns of behavior in +/tau heterozygotes. Animals die at a younger age with cardiomyopathy, extensive fibrosis, and severely impaired contractility; they also have severe renal disease with proteinuria, tubular dilation, and cellular apoptosis. On light cycles appropriate for their genotype (22 h), cyclic behavioral patterns are normalized, cardiorenal phenotype is reversed, and hearts and kidneys show normal structure and function. Moreover, hypertrophy does not develop in animals whose suprachiasmatic nucleus was ablated as young adults. Circadian organization therefore is critical for normal health and longevity, whereas chronic global asynchrony is implicated in the etiology of cardiac and renal disease.


Hypertension | 2007

Disturbed Diurnal Rhythm Alters Gene Expression and Exacerbates Cardiovascular Disease With Rescue by Resynchronization

Tami A. Martino; Nazneen Tata; Denise D. Belsham; Jennifer A. Chalmers; Marty Straume; Paul Lee; Horia Pribiag; Neelam Khaper; Peter Liu; Fayez Dawood; Peter H. Backx; Martin R. Ralph; Michael J. Sole

Day/night rhythms are recognized as important to normal cardiovascular physiology and timing of adverse cardiovascular events; however, their significance in disease has not been determined. We demonstrate that day/night rhythms play a critical role in compensatory remodeling of cardiovascular tissue, and disruption exacerbates disease pathophysiology. We use a murine model of pressure overload cardiac hypertrophy (transverse aortic constriction) in a rhythm-disruptive 20-hour versus 24-hour environment. Echocardiography reveals increased left ventricular end-systolic and -diastolic dimensions and reduced contractility in rhythm-disturbed transverse aortic constriction animals. Furthermore, cardiomyocytes and vascular smooth muscle cells exhibit reduced hypertrophy, despite increased pressure load. Microarray and real-time PCR demonstrate altered gene cycling in transverse aortic constriction myocardium and hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus. With rhythm disturbance, there is a consequent altered cellular clock mechanism (per2 and bmal), whereas key genes in hypertrophic pathways (ANF, BNP, ACE, and collagen) are downregulated paradoxical to the increased pressure. Phenotypic rescue, including reversal/attenuation of abnormal pathology and genes, only occurs when the external rhythm is allowed to correspond with the animals’ innate 24-hour internal rhythm. Our study establishes the importance of diurnal rhythm as a vital determinant in heart disease. Disrupted rhythms contribute to progression of organ dysfunction; restoration of normal diurnal schedules appears to be important for effective treatment of disease.


Journal of Molecular Medicine | 2004

Day/night rhythms in gene expression of the normal murine heart

Tami A. Martino; Sara Arab; Marty Straume; Denise D. Belsham; Nazneen Tata; Fang Cai; Peter Liu; Maria G. Trivieri; Martin R. Ralph; Michael J. Sole

Molecular circadian oscillators have recently been identified in heart and many other peripheral organs; however, little is known about the physiologic significance of circadian gene cycling in the periphery. While general temporal profiles of gene expression in the heart have been described under constant lighting conditions, patterns under normal day/night conditions may be distinctly different. To understand how gene expression contributes to cardiac function, especially in human beings, it is crucial to examine these patterns in 24-h light and dark environments. High-density oligonucleotide microarrays were used to assess myocardial expression of 12,488 murine genes at 3-h intervals under the normal conditions of light and dark cycling. Variation in genetic activity was considerable, as 1,634 genes (~13% of genes analyzed) exhibited statistically significant changes across the 24-h cycle. Some genes exhibited rhythmic expression, others showed abrupt change at light-to-dark and dark-to-light transitions. Importantly, genes that exhibited significant cycling rhythms mapped to key biological pathways, including for example cardiac cellular growth and remodeling, as well as transcription, translation, mitochondrial respiration, and signaling pathways. Gene expression in the heart is remarkably different in the day versus the night. Some gene cycling may be driven by the central circadian pacemaker, while other changes appear to be responses to light and dark. This has important implications regarding our understanding of how the molecular physiology of the heart is controlled, including temporal patterns of organ growth, renewal, and disease, comparative gene expression, and the most appropriate times for administration of therapy.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2011

The Primary Benefits of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibition on Cardiac Remodeling Occur During Sleep Time in Murine Pressure Overload Hypertrophy

Tami A. Martino; Nazneen Tata; Jeremy A. Simpson; Rachel D. Vanderlaan; Fayez Dawood; M. Golam Kabir; Neelam Khaper; Carlo Cifelli; Peter S. Podobed; Peter Liu; Mansoor Husain; Scott P. Heximer; Peter H. Backx; Michael J. Sole

OBJECTIVES Our objective was to test the hypothesis that there is a significant diurnal variation for the therapeutic benefit of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors on pressure-overload cardiovascular hypertrophy. BACKGROUND Physiological and molecular processes exhibit diurnal rhythms that may affect efficacy of disease treatment (chronotherapy). Evidence suggests that the heart primarily remodels during sleep. Although a growing body of clinical and epidemiological evidence suggests that the timing of therapy, such as ACE inhibition, alters diurnal blood pressure patterns in patients with hypertension, the benefits of chronotherapy on myocardial and vascular remodeling have not been studied. METHODS We examined the effects of the short-acting ACE inhibitor, captopril, on the structure and function of cardiovascular tissue subjected to pressure overload by transverse aortic constriction (TAC) in mice. Captopril (15 mg/kg intraperitoneally) or placebo was administered at either murine sleep time or wake time for 8 weeks starting 1 week after surgery. RESULTS TAC mice given captopril at sleep time had improved cardiac function and significantly decreased heart: body weight ratios, myocyte cross-sectional areas, intramyocardial vascular medial wall thickness, and perivascular collagen versus TAC mice given captopril or placebo during wake time. Captopril induced similar drops in blood pressure at sleep or wake time, suggesting that time-of-day differences were not attributable to blood pressure changes. These beneficial effects of captopril were correlated with diurnal changes in ACE mRNA expression in the heart. CONCLUSIONS The ACE inhibitor captopril benefited cardiovascular remodeling only when administered during sleep; wake-time captopril ACE inhibition was identical to that of placebo. These studies support the hypothesis that the heart (and vessels) remodel during sleep time and also illustrate the importance of diurnal timing for some cardiovascular therapies.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

Vascular circadian rhythms in a mouse vascular smooth muscle cell line (Movas-1)

Jennifer A. Chalmers; Tami A. Martino; Nazneen Tata; Martin R. Ralph; Michael J. Sole; Denise D. Belsham

The circadian system in mammals is a hierarchy of oscillators throughout the organism that are coordinated by the circadian clock in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus. Peripheral clocks act to integrate time-of-day information from neural or hormonal signals, regulating gene expression, and, subsequently, organ physiology. However, the mechanisms by which the central clock communicates with peripheral oscillators are not understood and are likely tissue specific. In this study, we establish a mouse vascular cell model suitable for investigations of these mechanisms at a molecular level. Using the immortalized vascular smooth muscle cell line Movas-1, we determined that these cells express the circadian clock machinery with robust rhythms in mRNA expression over a 36-h period after serum shock synchronization. Furthermore, norepinephrine and forskolin were able to synchronize circadian rhythms in bmal1. With synchronization, we observed cycling of specific genes, including the tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase 1 and 3 (timp1, timp3), collagen 3a1 (col3a1), transgelin 1 (sm22alpha), and calponin 1 (cnn1). Diurnal expression of these genes was also found in vivo in mouse aortic tissue, using microarray and real-time RT-PCR analysis. Both of these revealed ultradian rhythms in genes similar to the cycling observed in Movas-1 in vitro. These findings highlight the cyclical nature of structurally important genes in the vasculature that is similar both in vivo and in vitro. This study establishes the Movas-1 cells as a novel cell model from which to further investigate the molecular mechanisms of clock regulation in the vasculature.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2007

Diurnal protein expression in blood revealed by high throughput mass spectrometry proteomics and implications for translational medicine and body time of day

Tami A. Martino; Nazneen Tata; Georg A. Bjarnason; Marty Straume; Michael J. Sole


Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2006

CXCR4 Improves Cardiac Remodeling and Neovascularization, and Regulated Inflammatory and Progenitor Stem Cell Mobilization Post-Myocardial Infarction

Bilal B. Ayach; Koji Higuchi; Tanu Bansal; Fayez Dawood; Kay Lam; Manyin Chen; Nazneen Tata; William L. Stanford; Jeffrey A. Medin; Peter Liu


Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2007

CXCR4 Synergistically Activates FLT3 Receptor and Regulates Mobilization of Innate Immune and Stem Progenitor Cells Post-Myocardial Infarction

Bilal B. Ayach; Koji Higuchi; Fayez Dawood; Manyin Chen; Nazneen Tata; Jacques Galipeau; Duncan J. Stewart; William L. Stanford; Jeffrey A. Medin; Peter Liu


Circulation | 2006

Abstract 904: CXCR4 Improves Cardiac Remodeling and Neovascularization, and Regulated Inflammatory and Progenitor Stem Cell Mobilization Post -Myocardial Infarction

Bilal B. Ayach; Koji Higuchi; Tanu Bansal; Fayez Dawood; Kay Lam; Manyin Chen; Nazneen Tata; William Stanford; Jeffrey A. Medin; Peter Liu


Journal of Cardiac Failure | 2004

Circadian gene expression is essential for remodelling in heart disease

Tami A. Martino; Nazneen Tata; Sara Arab; Martin R. Ralph; Denise D. Belsham; Marty Straume; Paul Lee; Peter H. Backx; Fayez Dawood; Wen-Hu Wen; Peter Liu; Michael J. Sole

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Fayez Dawood

University Health Network

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Marty Straume

University of Virginia Health System

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Koji Higuchi

University Health Network

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