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Dive into the research topics where Satsuki Fukushima is active.

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Featured researches published by Satsuki Fukushima.


Circulation | 2007

Direct Intramyocardial But Not Intracoronary Injection of Bone Marrow Cells Induces Ventricular Arrhythmias in a Rat Chronic Ischemic Heart Failure Model

Satsuki Fukushima; Anabel Varela-Carver; Steven R. Coppen; Kenichi Yamahara; Leanne E. Felkin; Joon Lee; Paul J.R. Barton; Cesare M. Terracciano; Magdi H. Yacoub; Ken Suzuki

Background— Therapeutic efficacy of bone marrow (BM) cell injection for treating ischemic chronic heart failure has not been established. In addition, experimental data are lacking on arrhythmia occurrence after BM cell injection. We hypothesized that therapeutic efficacy and arrhythmia occurrence induced by BM cell injection may be affected by the cell delivery route. Methods and Results— Three weeks after left coronary artery ligation, wild-type female rats were injected with 1×107 mononuclear BM cells derived from green fluorescent protein–transgenic male rats through either a direct intramyocardial or a retrograde intracoronary route. Both intramyocardial and intracoronary injection of BM cells demonstrated similar improvement in left ventricular ejection fraction measured by echocardiography and a similar graft size analyzed by real-time polymerase chain reaction for the Y chromosome–specific Sry gene. Noticeably, intramyocardial injection of BM cells induced frequent ventricular premature contractions (108±73 per hour at 7 days after BM cell injection), including multiform, consecutive ventricular premature contractions and ventricular tachycardia for the initial 14 days; intracoronary injection of BM cells and intramyocardial injection of phosphate-buffered saline rarely induced arrhythmias. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated that intramyocardial BM cell injection formed distinct cell clusters containing donor-derived cells and accumulated host-derived inflammatory cells in the infarct border zone, whereas intracoronary BM cell injection provided more homogeneous donor cell dissemination with less inflammation and without disrupting the native myocardial structure. Conclusions— BM cell injection is able to improve cardiac function in ischemic chronic heart failure but has a risk of arrhythmia occurrence when the intramyocardial route is used. Such arrhythmias may be prevented by using the intracoronary route.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Choice of cell-delivery route for skeletal myoblast transplantation for treating post-infarction chronic heart failure in rat

Satsuki Fukushima; Steven R. Coppen; Joon Lee; Kenichi Yamahara; Leanne E. Felkin; Cesare M. Terracciano; Paul J.R. Barton; Magdi H. Yacoub; Ken Suzuki

Background Intramyocardial injection of skeletal myoblasts (SMB) has been shown to be a promising strategy for treating post-infarction chronic heart failure. However, insufficient therapeutic benefit and occurrence of ventricular arrhythmias are concerns. We hypothesised that the use of a retrograde intracoronary route for SMB-delivery might favourably alter the behaviour of the grafted SMB, consequently modulating the therapeutic effects and arrhythmogenicity. Methods and Results Three weeks after coronary artery ligation in female wild-type rats, 5×106 GFP-expressing SMB or PBS only (control) were injected via either the intramyocardial or retrograde intracoronary routes. Injection of SMB via either route similarly improved cardiac performance and physical activity, associated with reduced cardiomyocyte-hypertrophy and fibrosis. Grafted SMB via either route were only present in low numbers in the myocardium, analysed by real-time PCR for the Y-chromosome specific gene, Sry. Cardiomyogenic differentiation of grafted SMB was extremely rare. Continuous ECG monitoring by telemetry revealed that only intramyocardial injection of SMB produced spontaneous ventricular tachycardia up to 14 days, associated with local myocardial heterogeneity generated by clusters of injected SMB and accumulated inflammatory cells. A small number of ventricular premature contractions with latent ventricular tachycardia were detected in the late-phase of SMB injection regardless of the injection-route. Conclusion Retrograde intracoronary injection of SMB provided significant therapeutic benefits with attenuated early-phase arrhythmogenicity in treating ischaemic cardiomyopathy, indicating the promising utility of this route for SMB-delivery. Late-phase arrhythmogenicity remains a concern, regardless of the delivery route.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2009

Donor cell-type specific paracrine effects of cell transplantation for post-infarction heart failure

Yasunori Shintani; Satsuki Fukushima; Anabel Varela-Carver; Joon Lee; Steven R. Coppen; Kunihiko Takahashi; Scott Brouilette; Kenta Yashiro; Cesare M. Terracciano; Magdi H. Yacoub; Ken Suzuki

Cell transplantation is an emerging therapy for treating post-infarction heart failure. Although the paracrine effect has been proposed to be an important mechanism for the therapeutic benefits, details remain largely unknown. This study compared various aspects of the paracrine effect after transplantation of either bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMC) or skeletal myoblasts (SMB) into the post-infarction chronically failing heart. Three weeks after left coronary artery ligation, adult rats received intramyocardial injection of either BMC, SMB or PBS only. Echocardiography demonstrated that injection of either cell type improved cardiac function compared to PBS injection. Interestingly, BMC injection markedly improved neovascularization in the border areas surrounding infarcts, while SMB injection decreased fibrosis in both the border and remote areas. Injection of either cell type similarly reduced hypertrophy of cardiomyocytes as assessed by cell-size planimetry using isolated cardiomyocytes. Quantitative RT-PCR revealed that, among 15 candidate mediators of paracrine effects studied, Fgf2 and Hgf were upregulated only after BMC injection, while Mmp2 and Timp4 were modulated after SMB injection. Additional investigations of signalling pathways relevant to heart failure by western blotting showed that p38 and STAT3 were temporarily activated after BMC injection, in contrast, ERK1/2 and JNK were activated after SMB injection. There was no difference in activation of Akt, PKD or Smad3 among groups. These data suggest that paracrine effects observed after cell transplantation in post-infarction heart failure were noticeably different between cell types in terms of mediators, signal transductions and consequent effects.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2008

Heterogeneic nature of adult cardiac side population cells

Kenichi Yamahara; Satsuki Fukushima; Steven R. Coppen; Leanne E. Felkin; Anabel Varela-Carver; Paul J.R. Barton; Magdi H. Yacoub; Ken Suzuki

Side population cells have been found in various types of adult tissue including heart and are presumed to be tissue-specific stem/progenitor cells. In the present study, we confirmed the presence of cardiac side population (cSP) cells, which showed both the Hoechst 33342 efflux ability and ABCG2 expression, in adult murine heart. Flow cytometric analysis showed that more than half of cSP cells expressed the endothelial marker VE-cadherin or the smooth muscle markers, alpha-smooth muscle actin and desmin. In addition, immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated that ABCG2(+) cells were mainly localized within vascular walls. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis demonstrated that VE-cadherin(-) cSP cells progressively expressed Nkx2.5 and cardiac troponin T with time in culture. VE-cadherin(-) cSP cells also expressed mesodermal-mesenchymal-associated markers and differentiated into osteocytes and adipocytes. These results highlight the heterogeneic nature of cSP cells, consisting of vascular endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and mesenchymal stem/progenitor cells including potential cardiomyogenic cells.


Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation | 2011

Quantitative assessment of initial retention of bone marrow mononuclear cells injected into the coronary arteries

Satsuki Fukushima; Niall Campbell; Steven R. Coppen; Kenichi Yamahara; Ada H.Y. Yuen; Smolenski Rt; Magdi H. Yacoub; Ken Suzuki

BACKGROUNDnIntracoronary injection of bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMMNC) is a common clinical protocol of cell transplantation for heart disease, but poor engraftment of donor cells in the heart, which will limit its therapeutic efficacy, is a major issue. Initial retention (endothelial adherence and/or extravasation) of BMMNC immediately after intracoronary injection is a key step toward successful engraftment; however, this event has not been fully characterized. The aim of this study is to quantitatively clarify the frequency of retention of BMMNC after intracoronary injection, determine the impact of prior induction of ischemia-reperfusion injury on retention efficiency, and elucidate the underlying mechanisms focusing on adhesion molecule-mediated cell-cell interactions.nnnMETHODSnOne million BMMNC collected from green fluorescent protein (GFP)-transgenic mice were injected into the coronary arteries of syngeneic wild-type mouse hearts under Langendorff perfusion. Retention efficiency was quantitatively estimated from the GFP-positive cell number flushed out into the coronary effluent.nnnRESULTSnWhereas only 13.3 ± 1.2% of injected BMMNC were retained into normal hearts, prior induction of 30-minute ischemia and 30-minute reperfusion increased the retention efficiency to 36.5 ± 1.6% (p < 0.05, n = 8). Immunoconfocal observation further confirmed this enhanced retention after ischemia-reperfusion. Noticeably, the enhanced retention efficiency after ischemia-reperfusion treatment was diminished by administration of anti-P-selectin antibody (8.3 ± 0.8%, p < 0.05), but was not affected by inhibiting intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (39.6 ± 3.3%) or vascular cell adhesion molecule-1 (43.9 ± 2.9%).nnnCONCLUSIONSnRetention efficiency of intracoronary-injected BMMNC was poor in a model of isolated, crystalloid-perfused murine hearts. An antecedent period of global ischemia-reperfusion increased the retention via P-selectin-dependent BMMNC-endothelial interaction.


Cardiovascular Research | 2006

Enhanced efficiency of superoxide dismutase-induced cardioprotection by retrograde intracoronary administration.

Satsuki Fukushima; Steven R. Coppen; Anabel Varela-Carver; Gemma Brindley; Kenichi Yamahara; Padmini Sarathchandra; Magdi H. Yacoub; Ken Suzuki


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2004

Enhanced effect of myocardial gene transfection by VP22-mediated intercellular protein transport.

Ken Suzuki; Bari Murtuza; Nigel J. Brand; Anabel Varela-Carver; Satsuki Fukushima; Magdi H. Yacoub


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2006

A novel strategy for myocardial protection by combined antibody therapy inhibiting both P-selectin and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 via retrograde intracoronary route

Ken Suzuki; Satsuki Fukushima; Steven R. Coppen; Kenichi Yamahara; Anabel Varela-Carver; Alexander Ermakov; Magdi H. Yacoub


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2006

Characterization of cardiac side population cells

Kenichi Yamahara; Steven R. Coppen; Anabel Varela_Carver; Satsuki Fukushima; Alexander Ermakov; Magdi H. Yacoub; Ken Suzuki


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2006

Ventricular arrhythmias induced by bone marrow cell transplantation into post-infarction chronic heart failure

Ken Suzuki; Satsuki Fukushima; Anabel Varela-Carver; Steven R. Coppen; Kenichi Yamahara; Alexander Ermakov; Magdi H. Yacoub

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Ken Suzuki

Queen Mary University of London

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Steven R. Coppen

Queen Mary University of London

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Anabel Varela-Carver

National Institutes of Health

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Cesare M. Terracciano

National Institutes of Health

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Joon Lee

National Institutes of Health

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