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Dive into the research topics where Santosh K. Sanganalmath is active.

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Featured researches published by Santosh K. Sanganalmath.


Circulation Research | 2013

Cell Therapy for Heart Failure: A Comprehensive Overview of Experimental and Clinical Studies, Current Challenges, and Future Directions

Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Roberto Bolli

Despite significant therapeutic advances, the prognosis of patients with heart failure (HF) remains poor, and current therapeutic approaches are palliative in the sense that they do not address the underlying problem of the loss of cardiac tissue. Stem cell–based therapies have the potential to fundamentally transform the treatment of HF by achieving what would have been unthinkable only a few years ago—myocardial regeneration. For the first time since cardiac transplantation, a therapy is being developed to eliminate the underlying cause of HF, not just to achieve damage control. Since the initial report of cell therapy (skeletal myoblasts) in HF in 1998, research has proceeded at lightning speed, and numerous preclinical and clinical studies have been performed that support the ability of various stem cell populations to improve cardiac function and reduce infarct size in both ischemic and nonischemic cardiomyopathy. Nevertheless, we are still at the dawn of this therapeutic revolution. Many important issues (eg, mechanism(s) of action of stem cells, long-term engraftment, optimal cell type(s), and dose, route, and frequency of cell administration) remain to be resolved, and no cell therapy has been conclusively shown to be effective. The purpose of this article is to critically review the large body of work performed with respect to the use of stem/progenitor cells in HF, both at the experimental and clinical levels, and to discuss current controversies, unresolved issues, challenges, and future directions. The review focuses specifically on chronic HF; other settings (eg, acute myocardial infarction, refractory angina) are not discussed.


Circulation | 2010

Intracoronary Administration of Cardiac Progenitor Cells Alleviates Left Ventricular Dysfunction in Rats With a 30-Day-Old Infarction

Xian Liang Tang; Gregg Rokosh; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Fangping Yuan; Hiroshi Sato; Jianyao Mu; Shujing Dai; Chengxin Li; Ning Chen; Yong Peng; Buddhadeb Dawn; Greg Hunt; Annarosa Leri; Jan Kajstura; Sumit Tiwari; Gregg Shirk; Piero Anversa; Roberto Bolli

Background— Administration of cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) 4 hours after reperfusion ameliorates left ventricular function in rats with acute myocardial infarction (MI). Clinically, however, this approach is not feasible, because expansion of autologous CPCs after acute MI requires several weeks. Therefore, we sought to determine whether CPCs are beneficial in the more clinically relevant setting of an old MI (scar). Methods and Results— One month after coronary occlusion/reperfusion, rats received an intracoronary infusion of vehicle or enhanced green fluorescent protein–labeled CPCs. Thirty-five days later, CPC-treated rats exhibited more viable myocardium in the risk region, less fibrosis in the noninfarcted region, and improved left ventricular function. Cells that stained positive for enhanced green fluorescent protein that expressed cardiomyocyte, endothelial, and vascular smooth muscle cell markers were observed only in 7 of 17 treated rats and occupied only 2.6% and 1.1% of the risk and noninfarcted regions, respectively. Transplantation of CPCs was associated with increased proliferation and expression of cardiac proteins by endogenous CPCs. Conclusions— Intracoronary administration of CPCs in the setting of an old MI produces beneficial structural and functional effects. Although exogenous CPCs can differentiate into new cardiac cells, this mechanism is not sufficient to explain the benefits, which suggests paracrine effects; among these, the present data identify activation of endogenous CPCs. This is the first report that CPCs are beneficial in the setting of an old MI when given by intracoronary infusion, the most widely applicable therapeutic approach in patients. Furthermore, this is the first evidence that exogenous CPC administration activates endogenous CPCs. These results open the door to new therapeutic applications for the use of autologous CPCs in patients with old MI and chronic ischemic cardiomyopathy.


Circulation Research | 2008

Activation of Cardiac Progenitor Cells Reverses the Failing Heart Senescent Phenotype and Prolongs Lifespan

Arantxa Gonzalez; Marcello Rota; Daria Nurzynska; Yu Misao; Jochen Tillmanns; Caroline Ojaimi; M. Elena Padin-Iruegas; Patrick Müller; Grazia Esposito; Claudia Bearzi; Serena Vitale; Buddhadeb Dawn; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Mathue Baker; Thomas H. Hintze; Roberto Bolli; Konrad Urbanek; Toru Hosoda; Piero Anversa; Jan Kajstura; Annarosa Leri

Heart failure is the leading cause of death in the elderly, but whether this is the result of a primary aging myopathy dictated by depletion of the cardiac progenitor cell (CPC) pool is unknown. Similarly, whether current lifespan reflects the ineluctable genetic clock or heart failure interferes with the genetically determined fate of the organ and organism is an important question. We have identified that chronological age leads to telomeric shortening in CPCs, which by necessity generate a differentiated progeny that rapidly acquires the senescent phenotype conditioning organ aging. CPC aging is mediated by attenuation of the insulin-like growth factor-1/insulin-like growth factor-1 receptor and hepatocyte growth factor/c-Met systems, which do not counteract any longer the CPC renin–angiotensin system, resulting in cellular senescence, growth arrest, and apoptosis. However, pulse-chase 5-bromodeoxyuridine–labeling assay revealed that the senescent heart contains functionally competent CPCs that have the properties of stem cells. This subset of telomerase-competent CPCs have long telomeres and, following activation, migrate to the regions of damage, where they generate a population of young cardiomyocytes, reversing partly the aging myopathy. The senescent heart phenotype and heart failure are corrected to some extent, leading to prolongation of maximum lifespan.


Circulation | 2013

Intracoronary Delivery of Autologous Cardiac Stem Cells Improves Cardiac Function in a Porcine Model of Chronic Ischemic Cardiomyopathy

Roberto Bolli; Xian Liang Tang; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Ornella Rimoldi; Federico Mosna; Ahmed Abdel-Latif; Hani Jneid; Marcello Rota; Annarosa Leri; Jan Kajstura

Background— Relevant preclinical models are necessary for further mechanistic and translational studies of c-kit+ cardiac stem cells (CSCs). The present study was undertaken to determine whether intracoronary CSCs are beneficial in a porcine model of chronic ischemic cardiomyopathy. Methods and Results— Pigs underwent a 90-minute coronary occlusion followed by reperfusion. Three months later, autologous CSCs (n=11) or vehicle (n=10) were infused into the infarct-related artery. At this time, all indices of left ventricular (LV) function were similar in control and CSC-treated pigs, indicating that the damage inflicted by the infarct in the 2 groups was similar; 1 month later, however, CSC-treated pigs exhibited significantly greater LV ejection fraction (echocardiography) (51.7±2.0% versus 42.9±2.3%, P<0.01), systolic thickening fraction in the infarcted LV wall, and maximum LV dP/dt, as well as lower LV end-diastolic pressure. Confocal microscopy showed clusters of small &agr;-sarcomeric actin–positive cells expressing Ki67 in the scar of treated pigs, consistent with cardiac regeneration. The origin of these cycling myocytes from the injected cells was confirmed in 4 pigs that received enhanced green fluorescent protein –labeled CSCs, which were positive for the cardiac markers troponin I, troponin T, myosin heavy chain, and connexin-43. Some engrafted CSCs also formed vascular structures and expressed &agr;-smooth muscle actin. Conclusions— Intracoronary infusion of autologous CSCs improves regional and global LV function and promotes cardiac and vascular regeneration in pigs with old myocardial infarction (scar). The results mimic those recently reported in humans (Stem Cell Infusion in Patients with Ischemic CardiOmyopathy [SCIPIO] trial) and establish this porcine model of ischemic cardiomyopathy as a useful and clinically relevant model for studying CSCs.


Stem Cells | 2008

Transplantation of Bone Marrow-Derived Very Small Embryonic-Like Stem Cells Attenuates Left Ventricular Dysfunction and Remodeling After Myocardial Infarction

Buddhadeb Dawn; Sumit Tiwari; Magdalena Kucia; Ewa K. Zuba-Surma; Yiru Guo; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Ahmed Abdel-Latif; Greg Hunt; Robert J. Vincent; Hisham Taher; Nathan J. Reed; Mariusz Z. Ratajczak; Roberto Bolli

Adult bone marrow (BM) contains Sca‐1+/Lin−/CD45− very small embryonic‐like stem cells (VSELs) that express markers of several lineages, including cardiac markers, and differentiate into cardiomyocytes in vitro. We examined whether BM‐derived VSELs promote myocardial repair after a reperfused myocardial infarction (MI). Mice underwent a 30‐minute coronary occlusion followed by reperfusion and received intramyocardial injection of vehicle (n= 11), 1 × 105 Sca‐1+/Lin−/CD45+ enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)‐labeled hematopoietic stem cells (n= 13 [cell control group]), or 1 × 104 Sca‐1+/Lin−/CD45− EGFP‐labeled cells (n= 14 [VSEL‐treated group]) at 48 hours after MI. At 35 days after MI, VSEL‐treated mice exhibited improved global and regional left ventricular (LV) systolic function (echocardiography) and attenuated myocyte hypertrophy in surviving tissue (histology and echocardiography) compared with vehicle‐treated controls. In contrast, transplantation of Sca‐1+/Lin−/CD45+ cells failed to confer any functional or structural benefits. Scattered EGFP+ myocytes and capillaries were present in the infarct region in VSEL‐treated mice, but their numbers were very small. These results indicate that transplantation of a relatively small number of CD45− VSELs is sufficient to improve LV function and alleviate myocyte hypertrophy after MI, supporting the potential therapeutic utility of these cells for cardiac repair.


Journal of Cellular and Molecular Medicine | 2011

Transplantation of expanded bone marrow-derived very small embryonic-like stem cells (VSEL-SCs) improves left ventricular function and remodelling after myocardial infarction

Ewa K. Zuba-Surma; Yiru Guo; Hisham Taher; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Greg Hunt; Robert J. Vincent; Magda Kucia; Ahmed Abdel-Latif; Xian-Liang Tang; Mariusz Z. Ratajczak; Buddhadeb Dawn; Roberto Bolli

Adult bone marrow‐derived very small embryonic‐like stem cells (VSEL‐SCs) exhibit a Sca‐1+/Lin–/CD45– phenotype and can differentiate into various cell types, including cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells. We have previously reported that transplantation of a small number (1 × 106) of freshly isolated, non‐expanded VSEL‐SCs into infarcted mouse hearts resulted in improved left ventricular (LV) function and anatomy. Clinical translation, however, will require large numbers of cells. Because the frequency of VSEL‐SCs in the marrow is very low, we examined whether VSEL‐SCs can be expanded in culture without loss of therapeutic efficacy. Mice underwent a 30 min. coronary occlusion followed by reperfusion and, 48 hrs later, received an intramyocardial injection of vehicle (group I, n= 11), 1 × 105 enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)‐labelled expanded untreated VSEL‐SCs (group II, n= 7), or 1 × 105 EGFP‐labelled expanded VSEL‐SCs pre‐incubated in a cardiogenic medium (group III, n= 8). At 35 days after myocardial infarction (MI), mice treated with pre‐incubated VSEL‐SCs exhibited better global and regional LV systolic function and less LV hypertrophy compared with vehicle‐treated controls. In contrast, transplantation of expanded but untreated VSEL‐SCs did not produce appreciable reparative benefits. Scattered EGFP+ cells expressing α‐sarcomeric actin, platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM)‐1, or von Willebrand factor were present in VSEL‐SC‐treated mice, but their numbers were very small. No tumour formation was observed. We conclude that VSEL‐SCs expanded in culture retain the ability to alleviate LV dysfunction and remodelling after a reperfused MI provided that they are exposed to a combination of cardiomyogenic growth factors and cytokines prior to transplantation. Counter intuitively, the mechanism whereby such pre‐incubation confers therapeutic efficacy does not involve differentiation into new cardiac cells. These results support the potential therapeutic utility of VSEL‐SCs for cardiac repair.


Circulation Research | 2016

Long-Term Outcome of Administration of c-kit(POS) Cardiac Progenitor Cells After Acute Myocardial Infarction: Transplanted Cells Do not Become Cardiomyocytes, but Structural and Functional Improvement and Proliferation of Endogenous Cells Persist for at Least One Year.

Xian Liang Tang; Qianhong Li; Gregg Rokosh; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Ning Chen; Qinghui Ou; Heather Stowers; Greg Hunt; Roberto Bolli

Rationale:Cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) improve left ventricular remodeling and function after acute or chronic myocardial infarction. However, the long-term (>5 weeks) effects, potential tumorigenicity, and fate of transplanted CPCs are unknown. Objective:To assess the outcome of CPC therapy at 1 year. Methods and Results:Female rats underwent a 90-minute coronary occlusion; 4 hours after reperfusion, they received intracoronarily vehicle or 1 million male, syngeneic CPCs. One year later, CPC-treated rats exhibited smaller scars and more viable myocardium in the risk region, along with improved left ventricular remodeling and regional and global left ventricular function. No tumors were observed. Some transplanted (Y-chromosomePOS) CPCs (or their progeny) persisted and continued to proliferate, but they failed to acquire a mature cardiomyocyte phenotype and were too few (4–8% of nuclei) to account for the benefits of CPC therapy. Surprisingly, CPC transplantation triggered a prolonged proliferative res...RATIONALE Cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) improve left ventricular remodeling and function after acute or chronic myocardial infarction. However, the long-term (>5 weeks) effects, potential tumorigenicity, and fate of transplanted CPCs are unknown. OBJECTIVE To assess the outcome of CPC therapy at 1 year. METHODS AND RESULTS Female rats underwent a 90-minute coronary occlusion; 4 hours after reperfusion, they received intracoronarily vehicle or 1 million male, syngeneic CPCs. One year later, CPC-treated rats exhibited smaller scars and more viable myocardium in the risk region, along with improved left ventricular remodeling and regional and global left ventricular function. No tumors were observed. Some transplanted (Y-chromosome(POS)) CPCs (or their progeny) persisted and continued to proliferate, but they failed to acquire a mature cardiomyocyte phenotype and were too few (4-8% of nuclei) to account for the benefits of CPC therapy. Surprisingly, CPC transplantation triggered a prolonged proliferative response of endogenous cells, resulting in increased formation of endothelial cells and Y-chromosome(NEG) CPCs for 12 months and increased formation, for at least 7 months, of small cells that expressed cardiomyocytic proteins (α-sarcomeric actin) but did not have a mature cardiomyocyte phenotype. CONCLUSIONS The beneficial effects of CPCs on left ventricular remodeling and dysfunction are sustained for at least 1 year and thus are likely to be permanent. Because transplanted CPCs do not differentiate into mature myocytes, their major mechanism of action must involve paracrine actions. These paracrine mechanisms could be very prolonged because some CPCs engraft, proliferate, and persist at 1 year. This is the first report that transplantation of any cell type in the heart induces a proliferative response that lasts at least 1 year. The results strongly support the safety and clinical utility of CPC therapy.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2011

A murine model of inducible, cardiac-specific deletion of STAT3: its use to determine the role of STAT3 in the upregulation of cardioprotective proteins by ischemic preconditioning.

Roberto Bolli; Adam B. Stein; Yiru Guo; Ou Li Wang; Gregg Rokosh; Buddhadeb Dawn; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Yanqing Zhu; Yu-Ting Xuan

Pharmacological studies have shown that signal transducers and activators of transcription (STATs) are necessary for the delayed cardioprotection of ischemic preconditioning (PC). However, pharmacologic STAT inhibitors are not specific; furthermore, the individual role of STAT3 in late PC remains unknown. The objectives of the study were (i) to create an inducible, cardiac-specific STAT3 knockout mouse; (ii) to verify whether STAT3 deletion has any adverse effects in the short term (~1 month); and (iii) to use this novel tool to evaluate the role of STAT3 in the PC-induced upregulation of cardioprotective and anti-apoptotic proteins. We created an inducible, cardiomyocyte-restricted STAT3 deficient mouse (MCM TG:STAT3(flox/flox)) by interbreeding STAT3(flox/flox) mice and tamoxifen-inducible MCM TG mice. Treatment of MCM TG:STAT3(flox/flox) mice with tamoxifen resulted in deletion of STAT3 specifically in cardiac myocytes, concomitant with abrogation of ischemic PC-induced Tyr-705 and Ser-727 phosphorylation of STAT3 and increased STAT3 DNA-binding activity. In vehicle-treated MCM TG:STAT3(flox/flox) mice, ischemic PC increased the expression of cardioprotective (COX-2 and HO-1) and anti-apoptotic (e.g., Mcl-1, Bcl-x(L), c-FLIP(L), c-FLIP(S)) proteins 24h later; in contrast, in tamoxifen-treated MCM TG:STAT3(flox/flox) mice this increase was completely absent. Deletion of STAT3 had no apparent adverse effects on LV structure or function after 35 days. We have developed a novel inducible, cardiomyocyte-restricted STAT3 deficient mouse that can be used to specifically interrogate the role of this transcription factor in cardiovascular pathophysiology in vivo. Our data demonstrate, for the first time, that recruitment of STAT3 plays an obligatory role in the upregulation of cardioprotective and anti-apoptotic proteins and suggest that STAT3 activation is important in inhibiting both the death receptor pathway (which is modulated by c-FLIP(L) and c-FLIP(S)) and the mitochondrial pathway (which is mediated by Mcl-1 and Bcl-x(L)).


Circulation | 2009

Gene Transfer of Inducible Nitric Oxide Synthase Affords Cardioprotection by Upregulating Heme Oxygenase-1 Via a Nuclear Factor-κB-Dependent Pathway

Qianhong Li; Yiru Guo; Qinghui Ou; Chuanjue Cui; Wen-Jian Wu; Wei Tan; Xiaoping Zhu; Lilibeth B. Lanceta; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Buddhadeb Dawn; Ken Shinmura; Gregg Rokosh; Shuyan Wang; Roberto Bolli

Background— Although inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) is known to impart powerful protection against myocardial infarction, the mechanism for this salubrious action remains unclear. Methods and Results— Adenovirus-mediated iNOS gene transfer in mice resulted 48 to 72 hours later in increased expression not only of iNOS protein but also of heme oxygenase (HO)-1 mRNA and protein; HO-2 protein expression did not change. iNOS gene transfer markedly reduced infarct size in wild-type mice, but this effect was completely abrogated in HO-1−/− mice. At 48 hours after iNOS gene transfer, nuclear factor-&kgr;B was markedly activated. In transgenic mice with cardiomyocyte-restricted expression of a dominant negative mutant of I&kgr;Bα (I&kgr;BαS32A,S36A), both basal HO-1 levels and upregulation of HO-1 by iNOS gene transfer were suppressed. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis of mouse hearts provided direct evidence that nuclear factor-&kgr;B subunits p50 and p65 were recruited to the HO-1 gene promoter (−468 to −459 bp) 48 hours after iNOS gene transfer. Conclusions— This study demonstrates for the first time the existence of a close functional coupling between cardiac iNOS and cardiac HO-1: iNOS upregulates HO-1 by augmenting nuclear factor-&kgr;B binding to the region of the HO-1 gene promoter from −468 to −459 bp, and HO-1 then mediates the cardioprotective effects of iNOS. These results also reveal an important role of nuclear factor-&kgr;B in both basal and iNOS-induced expression of cardiac HO-1. Collectively, the present findings significantly expand our understanding of the regulation of cardiac HO-1 and of the mechanism whereby iNOS exerts its cardioprotective actions.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2008

The role of TNF-α receptors p55 and p75 in acute myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury and late preconditioning

Michael P. Flaherty; Yiru Guo; Sumit Tiwari; Arash Rezazadeh; Greg Hunt; Santosh K. Sanganalmath; Xian-Liang Tang; Roberto Bolli; Buddhadeb Dawn

The specific role of TNF-alpha receptors I (TNFR-I, p55) and II (TNFR-II, p75) in myocardial ischemic injury remains unclear. Using genetically engineered mice, we examined the relative effects of TNF-alpha signaling via p55 and p75 in acute myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury under basal conditions and in late preconditioning (PC). Wild-type (WT) (C57BL/6 and B6,129) mice and mice lacking TNF-alpha (TNF-alpha(-/-)), p55 (p55(-/-)), p75 (p75(-/-)), or both receptors (p55(-/-)/p75(-/-)) underwent 30 min of coronary occlusion and 24 h of reperfusion with or without six cycles of 4-min coronary occlusion/4-min reperfusion (O/R) 24 h earlier (ischemic PC). Six cycles of O/R reduced infarct size 24 h later in WT mice, indicating a late PC effect. This late PC-induced infarct-sparing effect was abolished not only in TNF-alpha(-/-) and p55(-/-)/p75(-/-) mice, but also in p55(-/-) and p75(-/-) mice, indicating that TNF-alpha signaling via both p55 and p75 is necessary for the development of protection. In nonpreconditioned TNF-alpha(-/-), p55(-/-)/p75(-/-), and p75(-/-) mice, infarct size was similar to strain-matched WT mice. In contrast, infarct size in nonpreconditioned p55(-/-) mice was reduced compared with nonpreconditioned WT mice. We conclude that (i) unopposed p75 signaling (in the absence of p55) reduces infarct size following acute ischemia/reperfusion injury in naive myocardium, whereas unopposed p55 signaling (in the absence of p75) has no effect; and (ii) the development of the infarct-sparing effects of the late phase of PC requires nonredundant signaling via both p55 and p75 receptors. These findings reveal a fundamental, heretofore unrecognized, difference between the two TNF-alpha receptors in the setting of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury: that is, both p55 and p75 are necessary for the development of protection during late PC, but only signaling via p75 is protective in nonpreconditioned myocardium.

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Roberto Bolli

University of Louisville

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Yiru Guo

University of Louisville

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Greg Hunt

University of Louisville

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Gregg Rokosh

University of Louisville

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Qianhong Li

University of Louisville

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Wen-Jian Wu

University of Louisville

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