Peter Moritz Becher
Charité
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Featured researches published by Peter Moritz Becher.
Cancer Research | 2009
Alexander Riad; Sandra Bien; Dirk Westermann; Peter Moritz Becher; Komal Loya; Ulf Landmesser; Heyo K. Kroemer; H.P. Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe
Cardiotoxicity, which may result from intense cardiac oxidative stress and inflammation, is the main limiting factor of the anticancer therapy using doxorubicin. Because statins might exert beneficial pleiotropic cardiovascular effects, among other things, by anti-inflammatory and antioxidative mechanisms, we investigated whether or not fluvastatin pretreatment can attenuate doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity. Five days after a single injection of doxorubicin (20 mg/kg; i.p.), left ventricular (LV) function was measured in fluvastatin-treated (DoxStatin; 100 mg/kg/day, p.o.) and saline-treated (doxorubicin) mice (n = 8 per group) by a micro conductance catheter. Untreated mice served as controls (placebo; n = 8 per group). After measurement of cardiac function, LV tissues were analyzed by molecular biological and immunohistologic methods. Injection resulted in significantly impaired LV function (LV pressure, -29%; dp/dtmax, -45%; cardiac output, -68%; P < 0.05) when compared with placebo. This was associated with a significant increase in cardiac oxidative stress, inflammation and apoptotic mechanisms, as indicated by significant increased cardiac lipid peroxidation activity, protein expression of nitrotyrosine, tumor necrosis factor alpha and Bax (P < 0.05). In contrast, DoxStatin mice showed improved LV function (LV pressure, +24%; dp/dtmax, +87%; cardiac output, +87%; P < 0.05) when compared with untreated doxorubicin mice. This was associated with reduced cardiac expression of nitrotyrosine, enhanced expression of the mitochondrial located antioxidative SOD 2, attenuated mitochondrial apoptotic pathways, and reduced cardiac inflammatory response. Statin pretreatment attenuates doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity via antioxidative and anti-inflammatory effects.
Circulation-heart Failure | 2013
Nazha Hamdani; Constantijn Franssen; André P. Lourenço; Inês Falcão-Pires; Dulce Fontoura; Sara Leite; Luisa Plettig; Begoña López; C. Ottenheijm; Peter Moritz Becher; Arantxa González; Carsten Tschöpe; Javier Díez; Wolfgang A. Linke; Adelino F. Leite-Moreira; Walter J. Paulus
Background—Obesity and diabetes mellitus are important metabolic risk factors and frequent comorbidities in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. They contribute to myocardial diastolic dysfunction (DD) through collagen deposition or titin modification. The relative importance for myocardial DD of collagen deposition and titin modification was investigated in obese, diabetic ZSF1 rats after heart failure with preserved ejection fraction development at 20 weeks. Methods and Results—Four groups of rats (Wistar-Kyoto, n=11; lean ZSF1, n=11; obese ZSF1, n=11, and obese ZSF1 with high-fat diet, n=11) were followed up for 20 weeks with repeat metabolic, renal, and echocardiographic evaluations and hemodynamically assessed at euthanization. Myocardial collagen, collagen cross-linking, titin isoforms, and phosphorylation were also determined. Resting tension (Fpassive)–sarcomere length relations were obtained in small muscle strips before and after KCl–KI treatment, which unanchors titin and allows contributions of titin and extracellular matrix to Fpassive to be discerned. At 20 weeks, the lean ZSF1 group was hypertensive, whereas both obese ZSF1 groups were hypertensive and diabetic. Only the obese ZSF1 groups had developed heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, which was evident from increased lung weight, preserved left ventricular ejection fraction, and left ventricular DD. The underlying myocardial DD was obvious from high muscle strip stiffness, which was largely (±80%) attributable to titin hypophosphorylation. The latter occurred specifically at the S3991 site of the elastic N2Bus segment and at the S12884 site of the PEVK segment. Conclusions—Obese ZSF1 rats developed heart failure with preserved ejection fraction during a 20-week time span. Titin hypophosphorylation importantly contributed to the underlying myocardial DD.
Hypertension | 2008
Dirk Westermann; Alexander Riad; Olga Lettau; Anton J.M. Roks; Konstantinos Savvatis; Peter Moritz Becher; Felicitas Escher; A.H. Jan Danser; Heinz-Peter Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe
Pharmacological renin inhibition with aliskiren is an effective antihypertensive drug treatment, but it is currently unknown whether aliskiren is able to attenuate cardiac failure independent of its blood pressure–lowering effects. We investigated the effect of aliskiren on cardiac remodeling, apoptosis, and left ventricular (LV) function after experimental myocardial infarction (MI). C57J/bl6 mice were subjected to coronary artery ligation and were treated for 10 days with vehicle or aliskiren (50 mg/kg per day via an SC osmopump), whereas sham-operated animals served as controls. This dose of aliskiren, which did not affect systemic blood pressure, improved systolic and diastolic LV function, as measured by the assessment of pressure-volume loops after MI. Furthermore, after MI LV dilatation, cardiac hypertrophy and lung weights were decreased in mice treated with aliskiren compared with placebo-treated mice after MI. This was associated with a normalization of the mitogen-activated protein kinase P38 and extracellular signal-regulated kinases 1/2, AKT, and the apoptotic markers bax and bcl-2 (all measured by Western blots), as well as the number of TUNEL-positive cells in histology. LV dilatation, as well as the associated upregulation of gene expression (mRNA abundance) and activity (by zymography) of the cardiac metalloproteinase 9 in the placebo group after MI, was also attenuated in the aliskiren-treated group. Aliskiren improved LV dysfunction after MI in a dose that did not affect blood pressure. This was associated with the amelioration of cardiac remodelling, hypertrophy, and apoptosis.
Circulation | 2011
Dirk Westermann; Kostantinos Savvatis; Diana Lindner; Christin Zietsch; Peter Moritz Becher; Elke Hammer; Markus M. Heimesaat; Stefan Bereswill; Uwe Völker; Felicitas Escher; Alexander Riad; Johanna Plendl; Karin Klingel; Wolfgang Poller; Heinz-Peter Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe
Background— Myocarditis is an important cause for cardiac failure, especially in younger patients, followed by the development of cardiac dysfunction and death. The present study investigated whether gene deletion of matrix metalloproteinase-2 influences cardiac inflammation and function in murine coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3)–induced myocarditis. Methods and Results— Matrix metalloproteinase-2 knockout mice (MMP-2−/−) and their wild-type controls (WT) were infected with CVB3 to induce myocarditis. Three days after infection, an increased invasion of CD4+-activated T cells into the myocardium was documented, followed by an excess of inflammatory cells 7 days after infection, which was significantly higher in the MMP-2−/−animals compared with the WT animals. Moreover, cardiac apoptosis, remodeling, viral load, and function were deteriorated in MMP-2−/− animals after CVB3 infection. This overwhelming inflammation was followed by 100% mortality after 15 days. This was associated with increased levels of MCP-3 in the cardiac tissue of MMP-2−/− mice. Because MMP-2 cleaves the chemokine MCP-3, the loss of this cleavage lead to an overreaction of the immune system with pronounced myocardial damage mediated by the inflammatory cells. When a neutralizing antibody against MCP-3 was given to MMP-2−/− mice, this exaggerated reaction of the immune system could be normalized to levels similar to WT-CVB3 animals. Conclusions— Loss of MMP-2 increased the inflammatory response after CVB3 infection, which impaired cardiac function and survival during CVB3-induced myocarditis. Matrix metalloproteinase-2–mediated chemokine cleavage has an important role in cardiac inflammation as a negative feedback mechanism.
Journal of Immunology | 2011
Alexander Riad; Dirk Westermann; Christin Zietsch; Konstantinos Savvatis; Peter Moritz Becher; Stefan Bereswill; Markus M. Heimesaat; Olga Lettau; Dirk Lassner; Andrea Dörner; Wolfgang Poller; Matthias Busch; Stephan B. Felix; H.P. Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe
TRIF is a member of the innate immune system known to be involved in viral recognition and type I IFN activation. Because IFNs are thought to play an important role in viral myocarditis, we investigated the role of TRIF in induced myocarditis in mice. Whereas C57BL/6 (wild-type) mice showed only mild myocarditis, including normal survival postinfection with coxsackievirus group B serotype 3 (CVB3), infection of TRIF−/− mice led to the induction of cardiac remodeling, severe heart failure, and 100% mortality (p < 0.0001). These mice showed markedly reduced virus control in cardiac tissues and cardiomyocytes. This was accompained with dynamic cardiac cytokine activation in the heart, including a suppression of the antiviral cytokine IFN-β in the early viremic phase. TRIF−/− myocytes displayed a TLR4-dependent suppression of IFN-β, and pharmacological treatment of CVB3-infected TRIF−/− mice with murine IFN-β led to improved virus control and reduced cardiac inflammation. Additionally, this treatment within the viremic phase of myocarditis showed a significant long-term outcome indexed by reduced mortality (20 versus 100%; p < 0.001). TRIF is essential toward a cardioprotection against CVB3 infection.
Hypertension | 2012
Peter Moritz Becher; Diana Lindner; Kapka Miteva; Konstantinos Savvatis; Christin Zietsch; Bastian Schmack; Sophie Van Linthout; Dirk Westermann; Heinz-Peter Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe
To investigate whether heart rate reduction via If-channel blockade and &bgr;-receptor blockade prevents left ventricular (LV) dysfunction, we studied ivabradine and metoprolol in angiotensin II–induced heart failure. Cardiac dysfunction in C57BL/6J mice was induced by implantation of osmotic pumps for continuous subcutaneous dosing of angiotensin II (1.8 mg/kg per day SC) over a period of 3 weeks. Ivabradine (10 mg/kg per day) and metoprolol (90 mg/kg per day), which resulted in similar heart rate reduction, or placebo treatments were simultaneously started with infusion of angiotensin II. After 3 weeks, LV function was estimated by conductance catheter technique, cardiac remodeling assessed by estimation of cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, and inflammatory stress response by immunohistochemistry or PCR, respectively. Compared with controls, angiotensin II infusion resulted in hypertension in impaired systolic (LV contractility, stroke volume, end systolic elastance, afterload, index of arterial-ventricular coupling, and cardiac output; P<0.05) and diastolic (LV relaxation, LV end diastolic pressure, &tgr;, and stiffness constant &bgr;; P<0.05) LV function. This was associated with a significant increase in cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis. Increased cardiac stress was also indicated by an increase in cardiac inflammation and apoptosis. Both ivabradine and metoprolol led to a similar reduction in heart rate. Metoprolol also reduced systolic blood pressure. Ivabradine led to a significant improvement in systolic and diastolic LV function (P<0.05). This was associated with less cardiac hypertrophy, fibrosis, inflammation, and cardiac apoptosis (P<0.05). Metoprolol treatment did not prevent the reduction in cardiac function and adverse remodeling, despite a reduction of the inflammatory stress response. Behind heart rate reduction, additional beneficial cardiac effects contribute to heart failure prevention with If-channel inhibition.
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2010
Alexander Riad; Dirk Westermann; Felicitas Escher; Peter Moritz Becher; Konstantinos Savvatis; Olga Lettau; Markus M. Heimesaat; Stefan Bereswill; H.-D. Volk; H.P. Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe
Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) is a member of the innate immune system and has been shown to influence myocardial function, but its role in myocarditis is hitherto unknown. We therefore investigated whether or not TLR9 plays a role in this disease in coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3)-induced myocarditis in mice. Left ventricular (LV) function, cardiac immune cell infiltration, virus mRNA, and components of the TLR9 downstream pathway were investigated in TLR9-deficient [knockout (KO)] and wild-type (WT) mice after infection with CVB3. Murine cardiac TLR9 expression was significantly increased in WT mice with acute CVB3 infection but not in WT mice with chronic myocarditis. Furthermore, in the acute phase of CVB3-induced myocarditis, CVB3-infected KO mice displayed improved LV function associated with reduced cardiac inflammation indexed by reduced amounts of immune cells compared with CVB3-infected WT mice. In contrast, in the chronic phase, LV function and inflammation were not seen to differ among the infected groups. The cardioprotective effects due to TLR9 deficiency were associated with suppression of the TLR9 downstream pathway as indexed by reduced cardiac levels of the adapter protein myeloid differentiation factor (MyD)-88 and the proinflammatory cytokine TNF-alpha. In addition, TLR9 deficiency led to an activation of the antiviral cytokine interferon-beta in the heart as a result from viral infection. In conclusion, the MyD88/TNF-alpha axis due to TLR9 activation in the heart contributes the development of acute myocarditis but not of chronic myocarditis.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Konstantinos Savvatis; Sophie Van Linthout; Kapka Miteva; Kathleen Pappritz; Dirk Westermann; Joerg C. Schefold; Gerhard Fusch; Alice Weithäuser; Ursula Rauch; Peter Moritz Becher; Karin Klingel; Jochen Ringe; Andreas Kurtz; Heinz-Peter Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe
Systemic application of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) in inflammatory cardiomyopathy exerts cardiobeneficial effects. The mode of action is unclear since a sufficient and long-acting cardiac homing of MSCs is unlikely. We therefore investigated the regulation of the immune response in coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3)-induced acute myocarditis after intravenous application of MSCs. Wildtype mice were infected with CVB3 and treated with either PBS, human MSCs or human cardiac fibroblasts intravenously 1 day after infection. Seven days after infection, MSCs could be detected in the spleen, heart, pancreas, liver, lung and kidney, whereby the highest presence was observed in the lung. MSCs increased significantly the myocardial expression of HGF and decreased the expression of the proinflammatory cytokines TNFα, IL1β and IL6 as well as the severity of myocarditis and ameliorated the left ventricular dysfunction measured by conductance catheter. MSCs upregulated the production of IFNγ in CD4+ and CD8+ cells, the number of IL10-producing regulatory T cells and the apoptosis rate of T cells in the spleen. An increased number of CD4+CD25+FoxP3 could be found in the spleen as well as in the circulation. In contrast, application of human cardiac fibroblasts had no effect on the severity of myocarditis and the systemic immune response observed after MSCs-administration. In conclusion, modulation of the immune response in extracardiac organs is associated with cardiobeneficial effects in experimental inflammatory cardiomyopathy after systemic application of MSCs.
Circulation-heart Failure | 2014
Konstantinos Savvatis; Kathleen Pappritz; Peter Moritz Becher; Diana Lindner; Christin Zietsch; Hans-Dieter Volk; Dirk Westermann; Heinz-Peter Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe
Background— CD4+ cells are implicated in the healing process after myocardial infarction (MI). We sought to investigate the role of interleukin-23 (IL-23) deficiency, a cytokine important in differentiation of CD4+ cells, in scar formation of the ischemic heart. Methods and Results— MI was performed in wild-type and IL23p19−/− mice. Thirty-day mortality, hemodynamic function 4 days after MI and myocardial inflammation, and remodeling 4 and 30 days after MI were examined. Differentiation of fibroblasts from infarcted and noninfarcted hearts into myofibroblasts was examined under basal conditions and after stimulation with interferon-&ggr;, IL-17&agr; and IL-23. Interleukin-23p19−/− mice showed higher expression of proinflammatory cytokines and immune cell infiltration in the scar early after MI compared with wild-type mice. A stronger interferon-&ggr;/Th1 reaction seemed to be responsible for the increased inflammation under IL-23 deficiency. Expression of &agr;-smooth muscle actin (&agr;-SMA), collagen I and III was significantly higher in the heart tissue and isolated cardiac fibroblasts 4 days after MI in the wild-type mice. Interleukin-23p19−/− mice showed impaired healing compared with wild-type mice, as seen by significantly higher mortality because of ventricular rupture (40% higher after 30 days) and stronger left ventricular dilation early after MI. Stimulation of cardiac fibroblasts with interferon-&ggr;, the main Th1 cytokine, but not with IL-23 or IL-17&agr;, led to a significant downregulation of &agr;-smooth muscle actin, collagen I and III and decreased migration and differentiation to myofibroblasts. Conclusions— IL-23 deficiency leads to increased myocardial inflammation and decreased cardiac fibroblast activation, associated with impaired scar formation and adverse remodeling after MI.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Kapka Miteva; Marion Haag; Jun Peng; K. Savvatis; Peter Moritz Becher; Martina Seifert; Katrin Warstat; Dirk Westermann; Jochen Ringe; Michael Sittinger; Heinz-Peter Schultheiss; Carsten Tschöpe; Sophie Van Linthout
Background Under conventional heart failure therapy, inflammatory cardiomyopathy typically has a progressive course, indicating a need for alternative therapeutic strategies to improve long-term outcomes. We recently isolated and identified novel cardiac-derived cells from human cardiac biopsies: cardiac-derived adherent proliferating cells (CAPs). They have similarities with mesenchymal stromal cells, which are known for their anti-apoptotic and immunomodulatory properties. We explored whether CAPs application could be a novel strategy to improve acute Coxsackievirus B3 (CVB3)-induced myocarditis. Methodology/Principal Findings To evaluate the safety of our approach, we first analyzed the expression of the coxsackie- and adenovirus receptor (CAR) and the co-receptor CD55 on CAPs, which are both required for effective CVB3 infectivity. We could demonstrate that CAPs only minimally express both receptors, which translates to minimal CVB3 copy numbers, and without viral particle release after CVB3 infection. Co-culture of CAPs with CVB3-infected HL-1 cardiomyocytes resulted in a reduction of CVB3-induced HL-1 apoptosis and viral progeny release. In addition, CAPs reduced CD4 and CD8 T cell proliferation. All CAPs-mediated protective effects were nitric oxide- and interleukin-10-dependent and required interferon-γ. In an acute murine model of CVB3-induced myocarditis, application of CAPs led to a decrease of cardiac apoptosis, cardiac CVB3 viral load and improved left ventricular contractility parameters. This was associated with a decline in cardiac mononuclear cell activity, an increase in T regulatory cells and T cell apoptosis, and an increase in left ventricular interleukin-10 and interferon-γ mRNA expression. Conclusions We conclude that CAPs are a unique type of cardiac-derived cells and promising tools to improve acute CVB3-induced myocarditis.