Sarah Brix
Charité
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sarah Brix.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2015
Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Michael Kreissl; Verena Benz; Sarah Brix; Elia Smeir; Zsofia Ban; Elżbieta Januszewicz; Janek Salatzki; Jana Grune; Anne-Kathrin Schwanstecher; Annelie Blumrich; Andreas Schirbel; Robert Klopfleisch; Michael Rothe; Katharina Blume; Martin Halle; Bernd Wolfarth; Erin E. Kershaw; Ulrich Kintscher
Background: Endurance training induces physiological cardiac hypertrophy and elevates adipose tissue lipolysis. Results: Adipose-specific adipose triglyceride lipase (Atgl)-knock-out mice exhibit attenuated exercise-induced cardiac hypertrophy likely mediated by the lack of C16:1n7 palmitoleate actions on the heart. Conclusion: Atgl-mediated adipose lipolysis regulates physiological cardiac hypertrophy. Significance: Adipose-derived lipokines may serve as important molecular mediators of cardiac physiology and pathology. Endurance exercise training induces substantial adaptive cardiac modifications such as left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH). Simultaneously to the development of LVH, adipose tissue (AT) lipolysis becomes elevated upon endurance training to cope with enhanced energy demands. In this study, we investigated the impact of adipose tissue lipolysis on the development of exercise-induced cardiac hypertrophy. Mice deficient for adipose triglyceride lipase (Atgl) in AT (atATGL-KO) were challenged with chronic treadmill running. Exercise-induced AT lipolytic activity was significantly reduced in atATGL-KO mice accompanied by the absence of a plasma fatty acid (FA) increase. These processes were directly associated with a prominent attenuation of myocardial FA uptake in atATGL-KO and a significant reduction of the cardiac hypertrophic response to exercise. FA serum profiling revealed palmitoleic acid (C16:1n7) as a new molecular co-mediator of exercise-induced cardiac hypertrophy by inducing nonproliferative cardiomyocyte growth. In parallel, serum FA analysis and echocardiography were performed in 25 endurance athletes. In consonance, the serum C16:1n7 palmitoleate level exhibited a significantly positive correlation with diastolic interventricular septum thickness in those athletes. No correlation existed between linoleic acid (18:2n6) and diastolic interventricular septum thickness. Collectively, our data provide the first evidence that adipose tissue lipolysis directly promotes the development of exercise-induced cardiac hypertrophy involving the lipokine C16:1n7 palmitoleate as a molecular co-mediator. The identification of a lipokine involved in physiological cardiac growth may help to develop future lipid-based therapies for pathological LVH or heart failure.
Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2017
Niklas Beyhoff; Sarah Brix; Iris R. Betz; Robert Klopfleisch; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Alexander Krannich; Philipp Stawowy; Fabian Knebel; Jana Grune; Ulrich Kintscher
Background: The subendocardium is highly vulnerable to damage and is thus affected even in subclinical disease stages. Therefore, methods reflecting subendocardial status are of great clinical relevance for the early detection of cardiac damage and the prevention of functional impairment. The aim of this study was to investigate the potential ability of myocardial strain parameters to evaluate changes within the subendocardium. Methods: Male 129/Sv mice were injected with isoproterenol (ISO; n = 32) to induce isolated subendocardial fibrotic lesions or saline as appropriate control (n = 15). Transthoracic echocardiography was performed using a 30‐MHz linear‐frequency transducer coupled to a high‐resolution imaging system, and acquired images were analyzed for conventional and strain parameters. The degree of collagen content within the different cardiac layers was quantified by histologic analysis and serum levels of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase–1, a biomarker for fibrosis, were assessed. Results: ISO treatment induced a marked increase in subendocardial collagen content in response to cell loss (control vs ISO, 0.6 ± 0.3% vs 5.8 ± 0.9%; P < .001) and resulted in a moderate increase in left ventricular wall thickness with preserved systolic function. Global longitudinal peak strain (LS) and longitudinal strain rate were significantly decreased in ISO‐treated animals (LS, −15.49% vs −11.49% [P = .001]; longitudinal strain rate, −4.81 vs −3.88 sec−1 [P < .05]), whereas radial and circumferential strain values remained unchanged. Global LS was associated with subendocardial collagen content (r = 0.46, P = .01) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase–1 serum level (r = 0.52, P < .05). Further statistical analyses identified global LS as a superior predictor for the presence of subendocardial fibrosis (sensitivity, 84%; specificity, 80%; cutoff value, −14.4%). Conclusion: Assessment of LS may provide a noninvasive method for the detection of subendocardial damage and may consequently improve early diagnosis of cardiac diseases. HighlightsSTE was performed in an experimental model of isolated subendocardial fibrosis, and comprehensive morphologic‐functional correlation analyses were performed.Functional impairment was present only in decreased global LS and global LSR values, whereas global systolic function and other strain parameters remained unaffected.Global LS was associated with subendocardial collagen content and serum level of TIMP‐1.Global LS was identified as a superior predictor for the presence of subendocardial damage. Abbreviations: H&E = Hematoxylin and Eosin; ISO = Isoproterenol; LS = Longitudinal peak strain; LSR = Longitudinal strain rate; LV = Left ventricular; SBP = Systolic blood pressure; STE = Speckle‐tracking echocardiography; TIMP‐1 = Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase–1.
PLOS Genetics | 2018
Janek Salatzki; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Kajetan Bentele; Annelie Blumrich; Elia Smeir; Zsofia Ban; Sarah Brix; Jana Grune; Niklas Beyhoff; Robert Klopfleisch; Sebastian Dunst; Michal A. Surma; Christian Klose; Michael Rothe; Frank R. Heinzel; Alexander Krannich; Erin E. Kershaw; Dieter Beule; P. Christian Schulze; Nikolaus Marx; Ulrich Kintscher
Adipose tissue lipolysis occurs during the development of heart failure as a consequence of chronic adrenergic stimulation. However, the impact of enhanced adipose triacylglycerol hydrolysis mediated by adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) on cardiac function is unclear. To investigate the role of adipose tissue lipolysis during heart failure, we generated mice with tissue-specific deletion of ATGL (atATGL-KO). atATGL-KO mice were subjected to transverse aortic constriction (TAC) to induce pressure-mediated cardiac failure. The cardiac mouse lipidome and the human plasma lipidome from healthy controls (n = 10) and patients with systolic heart failure (HFrEF, n = 13) were analyzed by MS-based shotgun lipidomics. TAC-induced increases in left ventricular mass (LVM) and diastolic LV inner diameter were significantly attenuated in atATGL-KO mice compared to wild type (wt) -mice. More importantly, atATGL-KO mice were protected against TAC-induced systolic LV failure. Perturbation of lipolysis in the adipose tissue of atATGL-KO mice resulted in the prevention of the major cardiac lipidome changes observed after TAC in wt-mice. Profound changes occurred in the lipid class of phosphatidylethanolamines (PE) in which multiple PE-species were markedly induced in failing wt-hearts, which was attenuated in atATGL-KO hearts. Moreover, selected heart failure-induced PE species in mouse hearts were also induced in plasma samples from patients with chronic heart failure. TAC-induced cardiac PE induction resulted in decreased PC/ PE-species ratios associated with increased apoptotic marker expression in failing wt-hearts, a process absent in atATGL-KO hearts. Perturbation of adipose tissue lipolysis by ATGL-deficiency ameliorated pressure-induced heart failure and the potentially deleterious cardiac lipidome changes that accompany this pathological process, namely the induction of specific PE species. Non-cardiac ATGL-mediated modulation of the cardiac lipidome may play an important role in the pathogenesis of chronic heart failure.
Hypertension | 2018
Jana Grune; Niklas Beyhoff; Elia Smeir; Remigiusz Chudek; Annelie Blumrich; Zsofia Ban; Sarah Brix; Iris R. Betz; Michael Schupp; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Robert Klopfleisch; Philipp Stawowy; René Houtman; Peter Kolkhof; Ulrich Kintscher
Mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists (MRAs) reduce morbidity and mortality in chronic heart failure. Novel nonsteroidal MRAs are currently developed and need to be pharmacologically characterized in comparison to classical steroidal MRAs. A mouse model of cardiac fibrosis induced by short-term isoproterenol injection was used to compare the nonsteroidal MRA finerenone and the steroidal MRA eplerenone in equi-efficient systemic MR blocking dosages. Molecular mechanisms were studied in MR-expressing H9C2/MR+ cardiomyocytes and in MR transcriptional cofactor binding assays. Both MRAs significantly inhibited an isoproterenol-mediated increase of left ventricular mass. Isoproterenol-induced cardiac fibrosis and macrophage invasion were potently blocked by finerenone, whereas eplerenone had no significant effect. Speckle tracking echocardiography revealed a significant improvement of global longitudinal peak strain by finerenone, an effect less prominent with eplerenone. Antifibrotic actions of finerenone were accompanied by a significant inhibition of profibrotic cardiac TNX (tenascin-X) expression, a regulation absent with eplerenone. Finally, we show a higher potency/efficacy and inverse agonism of finerenone versus eplerenone in MR transcriptional cofactor binding assays indicating differential MR cofactor modulation by steroidal and nonsteroidal MRAs. This study demonstrates that the nonsteroidal MRA finerenone potently prevents cardiac fibrosis and improves strain parameters in mice. Cardiac antifibrotic actions of finerenone may result from the inhibition of profibrotic TNX gene expression mediated by differential MR cofactor binding. Selective MR cofactor modulation provides a molecular basis for distinct (pre)-clinical actions of nonsteroidal and steroidal MRAs.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Zsofia Ban; Paul Maurischat; Verena Benz; Sarah Brix; Anna Sonnenburg; Gerhard Schuler; Robert Klopfleisch; Michael Rothe; Jan Åke Gustafsson; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Ulrich Kintscher
Estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) is a major regulator of metabolic processes in obesity. In this study we aimed to define the relevance of adipose tissue ERα during high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obesity using female aP2-Cre−/+/ERαfl/fl mice (atERαKO). HFD did not affect body weight or glucose metabolism in atERαKO- compared to control mice. Surprisingly, HFD feeding markedly increased mortality in atERαKO mice associated with a destructive bacterial infection of the uterus driven by commensal microbes, an alteration likely explaining the absence of a metabolic phenotype in HFD-fed atERαKO mice. In order to identify a mechanism of the exaggerated uterine infection in HFD-fed atERαKO mice, a marked reduction of uterine M2-macrophages was detected, a cell type relevant for anti-microbial defence. In parallel, atERαKO mice exhibited elevated circulating estradiol (E2) acting on E2-responsive tissue/cells such as macrophages. Accompanying cell culture experiments showed that despite E2 co-administration stearic acid (C18:0), a fatty acid elevated in plasma from HFD-fed atERαKO mice, blocks M2-polarization, a process known to be enhanced by E2. In this study we demonstrate an unexpected phenotype in HFD-fed atERαKO involving severe uterine bacterial infections likely resulting from a previously unknown negative interference between dietary FAs and ERα-signaling during anti-microbial defence.
Hypertension | 2018
Jana Grune; Niklas Beyhoff; Elia Smeir; Remigiusz Chudek; Annelie Blumrich; Zsofia Ban; Sarah Brix; Iris R. Betz; Michael Schupp; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Robert Klopfleisch; Philipp Stawowy; René Houtman; Peter Kolkhof; Ulrich Kintscher
Cardiovascular Ultrasound | 2018
Jana Grune; Annelie Blumrich; Sarah Brix; Sarah Jeuthe; Cathleen Drescher; Tilman Grune; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Daniel Messroghli; Wolfgang M. Kuebler; Christiane Ott; Ulrich Kintscher
Circulation | 2016
Annelie Blumrich; Janek Salatzki; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Kajetan Bentele; Elia Smeir; Zsofia Ban; Sarah Brix; Jana Grune; Robert Klopfleisch; Christian Klose; Erin E. Kershaw; Dieter Beule; Nikolaus Marx; Ulrich Kintscher
Society of Nuclear Medicine Annual Meeting Abstracts | 2014
Michael Kreissl; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Verena Benz; Elżbieta Januszewicz; Sarah Brix; Andreas Schirbel; Michael Rothe; Erin E. Kershaw; Ulrich Kintscher
Hypertension | 2014
Jana Grune; Verena Benz; Sarah Brix; Zsofia Ban; Janek Salatzki; Beata Hoeft; Anna Foryst-Ludwig; Robert Klopfleisch; Peter Kolkhof; Ulrich Kintscher