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Dive into the research topics where Richard A McKinney is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard A McKinney.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2011

Direct regulation of membrane type 1 matrix metalloproteinase following myocardial infarction causes changes in survival, cardiac function, and remodeling

Juozas A. Zavadzkas; Rupak Mukherjee; William T Rivers; Risha K. Patel; Evan C. Meyer; Laurel E. Black; Richard A McKinney; J. Marshall Oelsen; Robert E. Stroud; Francis G. Spinale

The membrane type 1 matrix metalloproteinase (MT1-MMP) is increased in left ventricular (LV) failure. However, the direct effects of altered MT1-MMP levels on survival, LV function, and geometry following myocardial infarction (MI) and the proteolytic substrates involved in this process remain unclear. MI was induced in mice with cardiac-restricted overexpression of MT1-MMP (MT1-MMPexp; full length human), reduced MT1-MMP expression (heterozygous; MT1-MMP(+/-)), and wild type. Post-MI survival was reduced with MT1-MMPexp and increased with MT1-MMP(+/-) compared with WT. LV ejection fraction was lower in the post-MI MT1-MMPexp mice compared with WT post-MI and was higher in the MT1-MMP(+/-) mice. In vivo localization of MT1-MMP using antibody-conjugated microbubbles revealed higher MT1-MMP levels post-MI, which were the highest in the MT1-MMPexp group and the lowest in the MT1-MMP(+/-) group. LV collagen content within the MI region was higher in the MT1-MMPexp vs. WT post-MI and reduced in the MT1-MMP(+/-) group. Furthermore, it was demonstrated that MT1-MMP proteolytically processed the profibrotic molecule, latency-associated transforming growth factor-1-binding protein (LTBP-1), and MT1-MMP-specific LTBP-1 proteolytic activity was increased by over fourfold in the post-MI MT1-MMPexp group and reduced in the MT1-MMP(+/-) group, which was directionally paralleled by phospho-Smad-3 levels, a critical signaling component of the profibrotic transforming growth factor pathway. We conclude that modulating myocardial MT1-MMP levels affected LV function and matrix structure, and a contributory mechanism for these effects is through processing of profibrotic signaling molecules. These findings underscore the diversity of biological effects of certain MMP types on the LV remodeling process.


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2011

Hemodynamics and myocardial blood flow patterns after placement of a cardiac passive restraint device in a model of dilated cardiomyopathy.

Jennifer A. Dixon; Amy M. Goodman; William F. Gaillard; William T Rivers; Richard A McKinney; Rupak Mukherjee; Nathaniel L. Baker; John S. Ikonomidis; Francis G. Spinale

BACKGROUND The present study examined a cardiac passive restraint device which applies epicardial pressure (HeartNet Implant; Paracor Medical, Inc, Sunnyvale, Calif) in a clinically relevant model of dilated cardiomyopathy to determine effects on hemodynamic and myocardial blood flow patterns. METHODS Dilated cardiomyopatht was established in 10 pigs (3 weeks of atrial pacing, 240 beats/min). Hemodynamic parameters and regional left ventricular blood flow were measured under baseline conditions and after acute placement of the HeartNet Implant. Measurements were repeated after adenosine infusion, allowing maximal coronary vasodilation and coronary flow reserve to be determined. RESULTS Left ventricular dilation and systolic dysfunction occurred relative to baseline as measured by echocardiography. Left ventricular end-diastolic dimension increased and left ventricular fractional shortening decreased (3.8 ± 0.1 vs 6.1 ± 0.2 cm and 31.6% ± 0.5% vs 16.2% ± 2.1%, both P < .05, respectively), consistent with the dilated cardiomyopathy phenotype. The HeartNet Implant was successfully deployed without arrhythmias and a computed median mid-left ventricular epicardial pressure of 1.4 mm Hg was applied by the HeartNet Implant throughout the cardiac cycle. Acute HeartNet placement did not adversely affect steady state hemodynamics. With the HeartNet Implant in place, coronary reserve was significantly blunted. CONCLUSIONS In a large animal model of dilated cardiomyopathy, the cardiac passive restraint device did not appear to adversely affect basal resting myocardial blood flow. However, after acute HeartNet Implant placement, left ventricular maximal coronary reserve was blunted. These unique results suggest that cardiac passive restraint devices that apply epicardial transmural pressure can alter myocardial blood flow patterns in a model of dilated cardiomyopathy. Whether this blunting of coronary reserve holds clinical relevance with chronic passive restraint device placement remains unestablished.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2014

Cyclosporin A in left ventricular remodeling after myocardial infarction

Andaleb Kholmukhamedov; Christina B. Logdon; Jiangting Hu; Richard A McKinney; Francis G. Spinale; John J. Lemasters; Rupak Mukherjee

Recent studies suggest that an increase in apoptosis within the myocardium may be a contributing factor for the progression of late adverse left ventricular (LV) remodeling following myocardial infarction (MI). Given that apoptosis is often triggered by induction of the mitochondrial permeability transition (MPT) pore, the goal of this study was to evaluate the therapeutic efficacy of cyclosporin A (CsA), an MPT blocker, to prevent cells from undergoing apoptosis and consequently attenuate late LV remodeling post-MI. MI was induced in C57BL/6 mice and then randomized to either vehicle or CsA groups. Beginning 48 h after surgery after infarction had already occurred, mice were gavaged with CsA (2 mg/kg) or vehicle once daily. LV end-diastolic volume and LV ejection fraction were assessed by echocardiography before MI induction and terminally at either 7 days (n = 7) or 28 days (n = 8) post-MI. LV end-diastolic volume increased and LV ejection fraction decreased in all MI groups with no difference between the CsA-treated and untreated groups. After vehicle and CsA, areas of necrosis were present at 7 and 28 days post-MI with no difference between treatment groups. Caspase-3 activity and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP-mediated nick-end labeling in distal nonnecrotic LV both increased after MI but were lower in CsA-treated mice compared with vehicle (P < 0.05). In conclusion, CsA decreased apoptosis occurring late after MI, confirming involvement of a CsA-sensitive MPT in the cell death. However, CsA-mediated reduction in apoptosis in non-MI myocardium was not beneficial against late pump dysfunction occurring during post-MI remodeling.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2014

Cardiac-restricted overexpression or deletion of tissue inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinase-4: differential effects on left ventricular structure and function following pressure overload-induced hypertrophy

William M. Yarbrough; Catalin F. Baicu; Rupak Mukherjee; An O. Van Laer; William T Rivers; Richard A McKinney; Corey B Prescott; Robert E. Stroud; Parker D. Freels; Kia N. Zellars; Michael R. Zile; Francis G. Spinale

Historically, the tissue inhibitors of matrix metalloproteinases (TIMPs) were considered monochromatic in function. However, differential TIMP profiles more recently observed with left ventricular (LV) dysfunction and matrix remodeling suggest more diverse biological roles for individual TIMPs. This study tested the hypothesis that cardiac-specific overexpression (TIMP-4OE) or deletion (knockout; TIMP-4KO) would differentially affect LV function and structure following pressure overload (LVPO). LVPO (transverse aortic constriction) was induced in mice (3.5 ± 0.1 mo of age, equal sex distribution) with TIMP-4OE (n = 38), TIMP-4KO (n = 24), as well as age/strain-matched wild type (WT, n = 25), whereby indexes of LV remodeling and function such as LV mass and ejection fraction (LVEF) were determined at 28 days following LVPO. Following LVPO, both early (7 days) and late (28 days) survival was ~25% lower in the TIMP-4KO group (P < 0.05). While LVPO increased LV mass in all groups, the relative hypertrophic response was attenuated with TIMP-4OE. With LVPO, LVEF was similar between WT and TIMP-4KO (48 ± 2% and 45 ± 3%, respectively) but was higher with TIMP-4OE (57 ± 2%, P < 0.05). With LVPO, LV myocardial collagen expression (type I, III) increased by threefold in all groups (P < 0.05), but surprisingly this response was most robust in the TIMP-4KO group. These unique findings suggest that increased myocardial TIMP-4 in the context of a LVPO stimulus may actually provide protective effects with respect to survival, LV function, and extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling. These findings challenge the canonical belief that increased levels of specific myocardial TIMPs, such as TIMP-4 in and of themselves, contribute to adverse ECM accumulation following a pathological stimulus, such as LVPO.


Circulation | 2010

Abstract 12601: Tissue Inhibitor of Matrix Metalloproteinase-4 Overexpression and Deletion- Effects on Survival and Collagen Accumulation with Pressure Overload Hypertrophy

William M. Yarbrough; An O. Van Laer; William T Rivers; Richard A McKinney; Laurel E. Black; Robert E. Stroud; Michael R. Zile; Rupak Mukherjee; Francis G. Spinale


Circulation | 2010

Abstract 12801: Altering Myocardial Membrane Type-1 Following Myocardial Infarction Directly Affects LV Remodeling and Function Through a Novel Fibrotic Signaling Cascade

Francis G. Spinale; Rupak Mukherjee; Juozas A. Zavadzkas; Christine N. Koval; Robert E. Stroud; William T Rivers; Richard A McKinney


Circulation | 2010

Abstract 12597: Progressive Induction of Pressure Overload in a Large Animal Model Causes a Unique Matrix Signature and Remodeling: Relation to LV Function and Stiffness

William M. Yarbrough; Jennifer A. Dixon; William T Rivers; Richard A McKinney; Robert E. Stroud; Risha K. Patel; Corey B Prescott; Rupak Mukherjee; Michael R. Zile; Francis G. Spinale


Circulation | 2010

Abstract 9037: Hemodynamics and Myocardial Blood Flow Patterns Following Placement of a Cardiac Passive Restraint Device in a Model of Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Jennifer A. Dixon; Amy M. Goodman; William F. Gaillard; William T Rivers; Richard A McKinney; Rupak Mukherjee; Nathaniel L. Baker; John S. Ikonomidis; Francis G. Spinale


Circulation | 2010

Abstract 13798: Differential Plasma Profiles of Matrix Metalloproteinases and Tissue Inhibitors of the Metalloproteinases with Atrial Fibrillation: Relation to Recurrence Following Cardioversion

Rupak Mukherjee; Deborah K. Adams; Elizabeth Clarke; Catherine D. McClure; Robert E. Stroud; Richard A McKinney; Francis G. Spinale; Michael R. Gold


Circulation | 2010

Abstract 12431: Continuous Localized Monitoring of Plasmin Activity Identifies Differential and Regional Effects of the Serine Protease Inhibitor Aprotinin: Relevance to Antifibrinolytic Therapy

Daryl L. Reust; Jennifer A. Dixon; Richard A McKinney; Risha K. Patel; William T Rivers; Rupak Mukherjee; Robert E. Stroud; Scott Reeves; James H. Abernathy; Francis G. Spinale

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Francis G. Spinale

University of South Carolina

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Rupak Mukherjee

Medical University of South Carolina

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William T Rivers

Medical University of South Carolina

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Robert E. Stroud

Medical University of South Carolina

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Jennifer A. Dixon

Medical University of South Carolina

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Michael R. Zile

Medical University of South Carolina

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Risha K. Patel

Medical University of South Carolina

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William M. Yarbrough

Medical University of South Carolina

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An O. Van Laer

Medical University of South Carolina

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Corey B Prescott

Medical University of South Carolina

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