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Dive into the research topics where Patricia A. Powers is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricia A. Powers.


Circulation Research | 2002

Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Cardiac Myosin Binding Protein-C Knockout Mice

Samantha P. Harris; Christopher R. Bartley; Timothy A. Hacker; Kerry S. McDonald; Pamela S. Douglas; Marion L. Greaser; Patricia A. Powers; Richard L. Moss

Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC) is an inherited autosomal dominant disease caused by mutations in sarcomeric proteins. Among these, mutations that affect myosin binding protein-C (MyBP-C), an abundant component of the thick filaments, account for 20% to 30% of all mutations linked to FHC. However, the mechanisms by which MyBP-C mutations cause disease and the function of MyBP-C are not well understood. Therefore, to assess deficits due to elimination of MyBP-C, we used gene targeting to produce a knockout mouse that lacks MyBP-C in the heart. Knockout mice were produced by deletion of exons 3 to 10 from the endogenous cardiac (c) MyBP-C gene in murine embryonic stem (ES) cells and subsequent breeding of chimeric founder mice to obtain mice heterozygous (+/−) and homozygous (−/−) for the knockout allele. Wild-type (+/+), cMyBP-C+/−, and cMyBP-C−/− mice were born in accordance with Mendelian inheritance ratios, survived into adulthood, and were fertile. Western blot analyses confirmed that cMyBP-C was absent in hearts of homozygous knockout mice. Whereas cMyBP-C+/− mice were indistinguishable from wild-type littermates, cMyBP-C−/− mice exhibited significant cardiac hypertrophy. Cardiac function, assessed using 2-dimensionally guided M-mode echocardiography, showed significantly depressed indices of diastolic and systolic function only in cMyBP-C−/− mice. Ca2+ sensitivity of tension, measured in single skinned myocytes, was reduced in cMyBP-C−/− but not cMyBP-C+/− mice. These results establish that cMyBP-C is not essential for cardiac development but that the absence of cMyBP-C results in profound cardiac hypertrophy and impaired contractile function.


Circulation Research | 2008

Acceleration of Crossbridge Kinetics by Protein Kinase A Phosphorylation of Cardiac Myosin Binding Protein C Modulates Cardiac Function

Carl W. Tong; Julian E. Stelzer; Marion L. Greaser; Patricia A. Powers; Richard L. Moss

Normal cardiac function requires dynamic modulation of contraction. β1-Adrenergic–induced protein kinase (PK)A phosphorylation of cardiac myosin binding protein (cMyBP)-C may regulate crossbridge kinetics to modulate contraction. We tested this idea with mechanical measurements and echocardiography in a mouse model lacking 3 PKA sites on cMyBP-C, ie, cMyBP-C(t3SA). We developed the model by transgenic expression of mutant cMyBP-C with Ser-to-Ala mutations on the cMyBP-C knockout background. Western blots, immunofluorescence, and in vitro phosphorylation combined to show that non–PKA-phosphorylatable cMyBP-C expressed at 74% compared to normal wild-type (WT) and was correctly positioned in the sarcomeres. Similar expression of WT cMyBP-C at 72% served as control, ie, cMyBP-C(tWT). Skinned myocardium responded to stretch with an immediate increase in force, followed by a transient relaxation of force and finally a delayed development of force, ie, stretch activation. The rate constants of relaxation, krel (s-1), and delayed force development, kdf (s-1), in the stretch activation response are indicators of crossbridge cycling kinetics. cMyBP-C(t3SA) myocardium had baseline krel and kdf similar to WT myocardium, but, unlike WT, krel and kdf were not accelerated by PKA treatment. Reduced dobutamine augmentation of systolic function in cMyBP-C(t3SA) hearts during echocardiography corroborated the stretch activation findings. Furthermore, cMyBP-C(t3SA) hearts exhibited basal echocardiographic findings of systolic dysfunction, diastolic dysfunction, and hypertrophy. Conversely, cMyBP-C(tWT) hearts performed similar to WT. Thus, PKA phosphorylation of cMyBP-C accelerates crossbridge kinetics and loss of this regulation leads to cardiac dysfunction.


Circulation Research | 1999

Cardiac Troponin I Gene Knockout A Mouse Model of Myocardial Troponin I Deficiency

XuPei Huang; YeQing Pi; Kevin J. Lee; Anne S. Henkel; Ronald G. Gregg; Patricia A. Powers; Jeffery W. Walker

Troponin I is a subunit of the thin filament-associated troponin-tropomyosin complex involved in calcium regulation of skeletal and cardiac muscle contraction. We deleted the cardiac isoform of troponin I by using gene targeting in murine embryonic stem cells to determine the developmental and physiological effects of the absence of this regulatory protein. Mice lacking cardiac troponin I were born healthy, with normal heart and body weight, because a fetal troponin I isoform (identical to slow skeletal troponin I) compensated for the absence of cardiac troponin I. Compensation was only temporary, however, as 15 days after birth slow skeletal troponin I expression began a steady decline, giving rise to a troponin I deficiency. Mice died of acute heart failure on day 18, demonstrating that some form of troponin I is required for normal cardiac function and survival. Ventricular myocytes isolated from these troponin I-depleted hearts displayed shortened sarcomeres and elevated resting tension measured under relaxing conditions and had a reduced myofilament Ca sensitivity under activating conditions. The results show that (1) developmental downregulation of slow skeletal troponin I occurs even in the absence of cardiac troponin I and (2) the resultant troponin I depletion alters specific mechanical properties of myocardium and can lead to a lethal form of acute heart failure.


Circulation Research | 2007

Intact β-Adrenergic Response and Unmodified Progression Toward Heart Failure in Mice With Genetic Ablation of a Major Protein Kinase A Phosphorylation Site in the Cardiac Ryanodine Receptor

Nancy A. Benkusky; Craig Weber; Joseph A. Scherman; Emily F. Farrell; Timothy A. Hacker; Manorama C. John; Patricia A. Powers; Héctor H. Valdivia

Increased phosphorylation of the cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR)2 by protein kinase A (PKA) at the phosphoepitope encompassing Ser2808 has been advanced as a central mechanism in the pathogenesis of cardiac arrhythmias and heart failure. In this scheme, persistent activation of the sympathetic system during chronic stress leads to PKA “hyperphosphorylation” of RyR2-S2808, which increases Ca2+ release by augmenting the sensitivity of the RyR2 channel to diastolic Ca2+. This gain-of-function is postulated to occur with the unique participation of RyR2-S2808, and other potential PKA phosphorylation sites have been discarded. Although it is clear that RyR2 is among the first proteins in the heart to be phosphorylated by &bgr;-adrenergic stimulation, the functional impact of phosphorylation in excitation–contraction coupling and cardiac performance remains unclear. We used gene targeting to produce a mouse model with complete ablation of the RyR2-S2808 phosphorylation site (RyR2-S2808A). Whole-heart and isolated cardiomyocyte experiments were performed to test the role of &bgr;-adrenergic stimulation and PKA phosphorylation of Ser2808 in heart failure progression and cellular Ca2+ handling. We found that the RyR2-S2808A mutation does not alter the &bgr;-adrenergic response, leaves cellular function almost unchanged, and offers no significant protection in the maladaptive cardiac remodeling induced by chronic stress. Moreover, the RyR2-S2808A mutation appears to modify single-channel activity, although modestly and only at activating [Ca2+]. Taken together, these results reveal some of the most important effects of PKA phosphorylation of RyR2 but do not support a major role for RyR2-S2808 phosphorylation in the pathogenesis of cardiac dysfunction and failure.


Biophysical Journal | 1996

Reduced Ca2+ current, charge movement, and absence of Ca2+ transients in skeletal muscle deficient in dihydropyridine receptor beta 1 subunit.

C. Strube; Maryline Beurg; Patricia A. Powers; Ronald G. Gregg; Roberto Coronado

The Ca2+ currents, charge movements, and intracellular Ca2+ transients in mouse skeletal muscle cells homozygous for a null mutation in the cchb1 gene encoding the beta 1 subunit of the dihydropyridine receptor have been characterized. I beta null, the L-type Ca2+ current of mutant cells, had a approximately 13-fold lower density than the L-type current of normal cells (0.41 +/- 0.042 pA/pF at + 20 mV, compared with 5.2 +/- 0.38 pA/pF in normal cells). I beta null was sensitive to dihydropyridines and had faster kinetics of activation and slower kinetics of inactivation than the L-type current of normal cells. Charge movement was reduced approximately 2.8-fold, with Qmax = 6.9 +/- 0.61 and Qmax = 2.5 +/- 0.2 nC/microF in normal and mutant cells, respectively. Approximately 40% of Qmax was nifedipine sensitive in both groups. In contrast to normal cells, Ca2+ transients could not be detected in mutant cells at any test potential; however, caffeine induced a robust Ca2+ transient. In homogenates of mutant muscle, the maximum density of [3H]PN200-110 binding sites (Bmax) was reduced approximately 3.9-fold. The results suggest that the excitation-contraction uncoupling of beta 1-null skeletal muscle involves a failure of the transduction mechanism that is due to either a reduced amount of alpha 1S subunits in the membrane or the specific absence of beta 1 from the voltage-sensor complex.


Learning & Memory | 2008

Conditional forebrain deletion of the L-type calcium channel CaV1.2 disrupts remote spatial memories in mice

Jessica A. White; Brandon C. McKinney; Manorama C. John; Patricia A. Powers; Timothy J. Kamp; Geoffrey G. Murphy

To determine whether L-type voltage-gated calcium channels (L-VGCCs) are required for remote memory consolidation, we generated conditional knockout mice in which the L-VGCC isoform Ca(V)1.2 was postnatally deleted in the hippocampus and cortex. In the Morris water maze, both Ca(V)1.2 conditional knockout mice (Ca(V)1.2(cKO)) and control littermates displayed a marked decrease in escape latencies and performed equally well on probe trials administered during training. In distinct contrast to their performance during training, Ca(V)1.2(cKO) mice exhibited significant impairments in spatial memory when examined 30 d after training, suggesting that Ca(V)1.2 plays a critical role in consolidation of remote spatial memories.


Biophysical Journal | 1999

Involvement of the Carboxy-Terminus Region of the Dihydropyridine Receptor β1a Subunit in Excitation-Contraction Coupling of Skeletal Muscle

Maryline Beurg; Chris A. Ahern; Paola Vallejo; Matthew W. Conklin; Patricia A. Powers; Ronald G. Gregg; Roberto Coronado

Skeletal muscle knockout cells lacking the beta subunit of the dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR) are devoid of slow L-type Ca(2+) current, charge movements, and excitation-contraction coupling, despite having a normal Ca(2+) storage capacity and Ca(2+) spark activity. In this study we identified a specific region of the missing beta1a subunit critical for the recovery of excitation-contraction. Experiments were performed in beta1-null myotubes expressing deletion mutants of the skeletal muscle-specific beta1a, the cardiac/brain-specific beta2a, or beta2a/beta1a chimeras. Immunostaining was used to determine that all beta constructs were expressed in these cells. We examined the Ca(2+) conductance, charge movements, and Ca(2+) transients measured by confocal fluo-3 fluorescence of transfected myotubes under whole-cell voltage-clamp. All constructs recovered an L-type Ca(2+) current with a density, voltage-dependence, and kinetics of activation similar to that recovered by full-length beta1a. In addition, all constructs except beta2a mutants recovered charge movements with a density similar to full-length beta1a. Thus, all beta constructs became integrated into a skeletal-type DHPR and, except for beta2a mutants, all restored functional DHPRs to the cell surface at a high density. The maximum amplitude of the Ca(2+) transient was not affected by separate deletions of the N-terminus of beta1a or the central linker region of beta1a connecting two highly conserved domains. Also, replacement of the N-terminus half of beta1a with that of beta2a had no effect. However, deletion of 35 residues of beta1a at the C-terminus produced a fivefold reduction in the maximum amplitude of the Ca(2+) transients. A similar observation was made by deletion of the C-terminus of a chimera in which the C-terminus half was from beta1a. The identified domain at the C-terminus of beta1a may be responsible for colocalization of DHPRs and ryanodine receptors (RyRs), or may be required for the signal that opens the RyRs during excitation-contraction coupling. This new role of DHPR beta in excitation-contraction coupling represents a cell-specific function that could not be predicted on the basis of functional expression studies in heterologous cells.


The American Naturalist | 1991

Segregation Distortion in Drosophila melanogaster: Genetic and Molecular Analyses

Rayla Greenberg Temin; Barry Ganetzky; Patricia A. Powers; Terrence W. Lyttle; Sergio Pimpinelli; Patrizio Dimitri; Chung-I Wu; Yuichiro Hiraizumi

The Segregation Distorter (SD) complex in the centromeric region of chromosome 2 in Drosophila melanogaster is responsible for a naturally occurring and strong system of male meiotic drive. Earlier recombinational dissection and deletional analysis showed that the SD complex resolves into three major loci: the euchromatic Sd, or Segregation distorter gene at the base of the left arm of the chromosome (2L), and two heterochromatic genes: E(SD), the Enhancer of SD, and Rsp, the Responder, in the center of the left arm and the right arm (2R), respectively. Rsp exists in the major allelic forms, RsPs, for sensitive, and Rspi, for insensitive. Males that are heterozygous for an SD chromosome (SdE(SD)Rspi) and a sensitive SD+ homologue (Sd+E(SD)+Rsps) transmit predominantly or even exclusively the SD-bearing chromosome to the progeny. The distortion of the segregation ratio is traceable to failure in chromatin condensation and maturation of those spermatids that receive the Rsps homologue during meiosis. Characterization of the properties of null alleles of Sd, E(SD), and Rsp that were generated by deletion determined the precise cytological locations of the components and established the functional relationship of each to its wild-type counterpart, suggesting a model whereby a deleterious action of Sd, along with E(SD), on the Rsps target sets in motion the events culminating in sperm dysfunction. Further genetic analysis of E(SD), a gene required for full expression of drive, showed that E(SD) in two doses can cause significant distortion even in the absence of Sd. This distortion is suppressible by a suppressor of SD action. Thus, E(SD) is more than a simple modifier of Sd; rather, it is an effector locus that, like Sd, can act at the Rsps target. Cloning and molecular analysis of the Sd locus reveal that the alteration uniquely associated with Sd is a 5-kb tandem duplication within the polytene band 37D5, which is where Sd is known to map. The Sd-associated duplication appears to be part of a large gene about 100 kb in size. A 4.2-kb SD-specific transcript has been identified, and analyses of the cDNAs indicate a complex transcription pattern. Since Responder plays such a key role in segregation distortion, recent progress in analyzing this locus has been exciting. Studies of Rsp at the genetic, cytogenetic, and molecular levels have been mutually reinforcing and consistent in demonstrating that Rsp is an extended locus that is (1) subdivisible and (2) associated with a 120-bp repeated sequence of DNA that is rich in adenine-thymine pairs and whose copy number is correlated with the degree of sensitivity. In an exceptional situation, there are certain SdRspi/Sd+ Rsps males cartying particular modifiers in which the Rspi chromosome can he transmitted at frequencies of less than 0.50 relative to the Rsps chromosome, suggesting that the genetics of segregation ratios may involve even further complexities, which need to be unraveled.


Biophysical Journal | 1997

RECOVERY OF CA2+ CURRENT, CHARGE MOVEMENTS, AND CA2+ TRANSIENTS IN MYOTUBES DEFICIENT IN DIHYDROPYRIDINE RECEPTOR BETA 1 SUBUNIT TRANSFECTED WITH BETA 1 CDNA

Maryline Beurg; M. Sukhareva; C. Strube; Patricia A. Powers; Ronald G. Gregg; Roberto Coronado

The Ca2+ currents, charge movements, and intracellular Ca2+ transients of mouse dihydropyridine receptor (DHPR) beta 1-null myotubes expressing a mouse DHPR beta 1 cDNA have been characterized. In beta 1-null myotubes maintained in culture for 10-15 days, the density of the L-type current was approximately 7-fold lower than in normal cells of the same age (Imax was 0.65 +/- 0.05 pA/pF in mutant versus 4.5 +/- 0.8 pA/pF in normal), activation of the L-type current was significantly faster (tau activation at +40 mV was 28 +/- 7 ms in mutant versus 57 +/- 8 ms in normal), charge movements were approximately 2.5-fold lower (Qmax was 2.5 +/- 0.2 nC/microF in mutant versus 6.3 +/- 0.7 nC/microF in normal), Ca2+ transients were not elicited by depolarization, and spontaneous or evoked contractions were absent. Transfection of beta 1-null cells by lipofection with beta 1 cDNA reestablished spontaneous or evoked contractions in approximately 10% of cells after 6 days and approximately 30% of cells after 13 days. In contracting beta 1-transfected myotubes there was a complete recovery of the L-type current density (Imax was 4 +/- 0.9 pA/pF), the kinetics of activation (tau activation at +40 mV was 64 +/- 5 ms), the magnitude of charge movements (Qmax was 6.7 +/- 0.4 nC/microF), and the amplitude and voltage dependence of Ca2+ transients evoked by depolarizations. Ca2+ transients of transfected cells were unaltered by the removal of external Ca2+ or by the block of the L-type Ca2+ current, demonstrating that a skeletal-type excitation-contraction coupling was restored. The recovery of the normal skeletal muscle phenotype in beta 1-transfected beta-null myotubes shows that the beta 1 subunit is essential for the functional expression of the DHPR complex.


Genesis | 2008

Targeting of endothelin receptor-B to the neural crest.

Noah R. Druckenbrod; Patricia A. Powers; Christopher R. Bartley; Jeffery W. Walker; Miles L. Epstein

Endothelin receptor B (Ednrb) plays a critical role in the development of melanocytes and neurons and glia of the enteric nervous system. These distinct neural crest‐derived cell types express Ednrb and share the property of intercalating into tissues, such as the intestine whose muscle precursor cells also express Ednrb. Such widespread Ednrb expression has been a significant obstacle in establishing precise roles for Ednrb in development. We describe here the production of an Ednrb allele floxed at exon 3 and its use in excising the receptor from mouse neural crest cells by use of Cre‐recombinase driven by the Wnt1 promoter. Mice born with neural crest‐specific excision of Ednrb possess aganglionic colon, lack trunk pigmentation, and die within 5 weeks due to megacolon. Ednrb receptor expression in these animals is absent only in the neural crest but present in surrounding smooth muscle cells. The absence of Ednrb from crest cells also results in a compensatory upregulation of Ednrb expression in other cells within the gut. We conclude that Ednrb loss only in neural crest cells is sufficient to produce the Hirschsprungs disease phenotype observed with genomic Ednrb mutations. genesis 46:396–400, 2008.

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Ronald G. Gregg

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Richard L. Moss

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Kirk Hogan

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Roberto Coronado

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Carl W. Tong

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Manorama C. John

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Chris A. Ahern

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Maryline Beurg

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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