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Featured researches published by Sean Reuter.


Circulation | 2010

Cardiomyogenic Potential of C-Kit+–Expressing Cells Derived From Neonatal and Adult Mouse Hearts

Marc Michael Zaruba; Mark H. Soonpaa; Sean Reuter; Loren J. Field

Background— C-kit is a receptor tyrosine kinase family member expressed in hematopoietic stem cells. C-kit is also transiently expressed in cardiomyocyte precursors during development and in a rare cell population in the normal adult heart. In the present study, the cardiomyogenic potential of c-kit+ cells isolated from normal neonatal, normal adult, and infarcted adult mouse hearts was evaluated. Methods and Results— Magnetic activated cell sorting was used to prepare c-kit+ cells from the hearts of ACT-EGFP/MHC-nLAC double transgenic mice. These animals exhibit widespread enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) expression and cardiomyocyte-restricted nuclear &bgr;-galactosidase activity, thus permitting simultaneous tracking of cell survival and differentiation. A subset of the c-kit+ cells from double transgenic neonatal hearts acquired a cardiomyogenic phenotype when cocultured with fetal cardiomyocytes (2.4% of all EGFP+ cells screened) but rarely when cultured alone or when cocultured with mouse fibroblasts (0.03% and 0.05% of the EGFP+ cells screened, respectively). In contrast, c-kit+ cells from normal adult double transgenic hearts failed to undergo cardiomyogenic differentiation when cocultured with nontransgenic fetal cardiomyocytes (>18 000 EGFP+ cells screened) or when transplanted into normal or infarcted adult mouse hearts (14 EGFP+ grafts examined). A single c-kit+ cell from an infarcted double transgenic adult heart was observed to acquire a cardiomyogenic phenotype in coculture (>37 000 EGFP+ cells screened). Conclusions— These data suggest that the ability of cardiac-resident c-kit+ cells to acquire a cardiomyogenic phenotype is subject to temporal limitations or, alternatively, that the cardiomyogenic population is lost. Elucidation of the underlying molecular basis may permit robust cardiomyogenic induction in adult-derived cardiac c-kit+ cells.


Circulation | 2010

Differential Cardiac Remodeling in Preload Versus Afterload

Karl Toischer; Adam G. Rokita; Bernhard Unsöld; Wuqiang Zhu; Georgios Kararigas; Samuel Sossalla; Sean Reuter; Alexander Becker; Nils Teucher; Tim Seidler; Cornelia Grebe; Lena Preuß; Shamindra N. Gupta; Kathie Schmidt; Stephan E. Lehnart; Martina Krüger; Wolfgang A. Linke; Johannes Backs; Vera Regitz-Zagrosek; Katrin Schäfer; Loren J. Field; Lars S. Maier; Gerd Hasenfuss

Background— Hemodynamic load regulates myocardial function and gene expression. We tested the hypothesis that afterload and preload, despite similar average load, result in different phenotypes. Methods and Results— Afterload and preload were compared in mice with transverse aortic constriction (TAC) and aortocaval shunt (shunt). Compared with sham mice, 6 hours after surgery, systolic wall stress (afterload) was increased in TAC mice (+40%; P<0.05), diastolic wall stress (preload) was increased in shunt (+277%; P<0.05) and TAC mice (+74%; P<0.05), and mean total wall stress was similarly increased in TAC (69%) and shunt mice (67%) (P=NS, TAC versus shunt; each P<0.05 versus sham). At 1 week, left ventricular weight/tibia length was significantly increased by 22% in TAC and 29% in shunt mice (P=NS, TAC versus shunt). After 24 hours and 1 week, calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II signaling was increased in TAC. This resulted in altered calcium cycling, including increased L-type calcium current, calcium transients, fractional sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium release, and calcium spark frequency. In shunt mice, Akt phosphorylation was increased. TAC was associated with inflammation, fibrosis, and cardiomyocyte apoptosis. The latter was significantly reduced in calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IIΔ-knockout TAC mice. A total of 157 mRNAs and 13 microRNAs were differentially regulated in TAC versus shunt mice. After 8 weeks, fractional shortening was lower and mortality was higher in TAC versus shunt mice. Conclusions— Afterload results in maladaptive fibrotic hypertrophy with calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II–dependent altered calcium cycling and apoptosis. Preload is associated with Akt activation without fibrosis, little apoptosis, better function, and lower mortality. This indicates that different loads result in distinct phenotype differences that may require specific pharmacological interventions.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

Restrictive loss of Plakoglobin in cardiomyocytes leads to Arrhythmogenic Cardiomyopathy

Deqiang Li; Ying Liu; Mitsunori Maruyama; Wuqiang Zhu; Hanying Chen; Wenjun Zhang; Sean Reuter; Shien Fong Lin; Laura S. Haneline; Loren J. Field; Peng Sheng Chen; Weinian Shou

Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) is an inheritable myocardial disorder associated with fibrofatty replacement of myocardium and ventricular arrhythmia. A subset of ARVC is categorized as Naxos disease, which is characterized by ARVC and a cutaneous disorder. A homozygous loss-of-function mutation of the Plakoglobin (Jup) gene, which encodes a major component of the desmosome and the adherens junction, had been identified in Naxos patients, although the underlying mechanism remained elusive. We generated Jup mutant mice by ablating Jup in cardiomyocytes. Jup mutant mice largely recapitulated the clinical manifestation of human ARVC: ventricular dilation and aneurysm, cardiac fibrosis, cardiac dysfunction and spontaneous ventricular arrhythmias. Ultra-structural analyses revealed that desmosomes were absent in Jup mutant myocardia, whereas adherens junctions and gap junctions were preserved. We found that ventricular arrhythmias were associated with progressive cardiomyopathy and fibrosis in Jup mutant hearts. Massive cell death contributed to the cardiomyocyte dropout in Jup mutant hearts. Despite the increase of β-catenin at adherens junctions in Jup mutant cardiomyoicytes, the Wnt/β-catenin-mediated signaling was not altered. Transforming growth factor-beta-mediated signaling was found significantly elevated in Jup mutant cardiomyocytes at the early stage of cardiomyopathy, suggesting an important pathogenic pathway for Jup-related ARVC. These findings have provided further insights for the pathogenesis of ARVC and potential therapeutic interventions.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2010

Limitations of conventional approaches to identify myocyte nuclei in histologic sections of the heart

Keng Leong Ang; Lincoln Takura Shenje; Sean Reuter; Mark H. Soonpaa; Michael Rubart; Loren J. Field; Manuel Galiñanes

Accurate nuclear identification is crucial for distinguishing the role of cardiac myocytes in intrinsic and experimentally induced regenerative growth of the myocardium. Conventional histologic analysis of myocyte nuclei relies on the optical sectioning capabilities of confocal microscopy in conjunction with immunofluorescent labeling of cytoplasmic proteins such as troponin T, and dyes that bind to double-strand DNA to identify nuclei. Using heart sections from transgenic mice in which the cardiomyocyte-restricted alpha-cardiac myosin heavy chain promoter targeted the expression of nuclear localized beta-galactosidase reporter in >99% of myocytes, we systematically compared the fidelity of conventional myocyte nuclear identification using confocal microscopy, with and without the aid of a membrane marker. The values obtained with these assays were then compared with those obtained with anti-beta-galactosidase immune reactivity in the same samples. In addition, we also studied the accuracy of anti-GATA4 immunoreactivity for myocyte nuclear identification. Our results demonstrate that, although these strategies are capable of identifying myocyte nuclei, the level of interobserver agreement and margin of error can compromise accurate identification of rare events, such as cardiomyocyte apoptosis and proliferation. Thus these data indicate that morphometric approaches based on segmentation are justified only if the margin of error for measuring the event in question has been predetermined and deemed to be small and uniform. We also illustrate the value of a transgene-based approach to overcome these intrinsic limitations of identifying myocyte nuclei. This latter approach should prove quite useful when measuring rare events.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Recombinant Neuregulin 1 Does Not Activate Cardiomyocyte DNA Synthesis in Normal or Infarcted Adult Mice

Sean Reuter; Mark H. Soonpaa; Anthony B. Firulli; Audrey N. Chang; Loren J. Field

Objectives Neuregulin 1 signaling plays an important role in cardiac trabecular development, and in sustaining functional integrity in adult hearts. Treatment with neuregulin 1 enhances adult cardiomyocyte differentiation, survival and/or function in vitro and in vivo. It has also been suggested that recombinant neuregulin 1β1 (NRG1β1) induces cardiomyocyte proliferation in normal and injured adult hearts. Here we further explore the impact of neuregulin 1 signaling on adult cardiomyocyte cell cycle activity. Methods and Results Adult mice were subjected to 9 consecutive daily injections of recombinant NRG1β1 or vehicle, and cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis was quantitated via bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) incorporation, which was delivered using mini-osmotic pumps over the entire duration of NRG1β1 treatment. NRG1β1 treatment inhibited baseline rates of cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in normal mice (cardiomyocyte labelling index: 0.019±0.005% vs. 0.003±0.001%, saline vs. NRG1β1, P<0.05). Acute NRG1β1 treatment did result in activation of Erk1/2 and cardiac myosin regulatory light chain (down-stream mediators of neuregulin signalling), as well as activation of DNA synthesis in non-cardiomyocytes, validating the biological activity of the recombinant protein. In other studies, mice were subjected to permanent coronary artery occlusion, and cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis was monitored via tritiated thymidine incorporation which was delivered as a single injection 7 days post-infarction. Daily NRG1β1 treatment had no impact on cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis in the infarcted myocardium (cardiomyocyte labelling index: 0.039±0.011% vs. 0.027±0.021%, saline vs. NRG1β1, P>0.05). Summary These data indicate that NRG1β1 treatment does not increase cardiomyocyte DNA synthesis (and consequently does not increase the rate of cardiomyocyte renewal) in normal or infarcted adult mouse hearts. Thus, any improvement in cardiac structure and function observed following neuregulin treatment of injured hearts likely occurs independently of overt myocardial regeneration.


Anatomical Record-advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology | 2012

The giant danio (D. aequipinnatus) as a model of cardiac remodeling and regeneration.

Pascal J. Lafontant; Alan R. Burns; Jamie Grivas; Mary Ann Lesch; Tanmoy D. Lala; Sean Reuter; Loren J. Field; Tyler Frounfelter

The paucity of mammalian adult cardiac myocytes (CM) proliferation following myocardial infarction (MI) and the remodeling of the necrotic tissue that ensues, result in non‐regenerative repair. In contrast, zebrafish (ZF) can regenerate after an apical resection or cryoinjury of the heart. There is considerable interest in models where regeneration proceeds in the presence of necrotic tissue. We have developed and characterized a cautery injury model in the giant danio (GD), a species closely related to ZF, where necrotic tissue remains part of the ventricle, yet regeneration occurs. By light and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), we have documented four temporally overlapping processes: (1) a robust inflammatory response analogous to that observed in MI, (2) concomitant proliferation of epicardial cells leading to wound closure, (3) resorption of necrotic tissue and its replacement by granulation tissue, and (4) regeneration of the myocardial tissue driven by 5‐EDU and [3H]thymidine incorporating CMs. In conclusion, our data suggest that the GD possesses robust repair mechanisms in the ventricle and can serve as an important model of cardiac inflammation, remodeling and regeneration. Anat Rec, 2012.


European Heart Journal | 2012

Granulocyte colony-stimulating factor treatment plus dipeptidylpeptidase-IV inhibition augments myocardial regeneration in mice expressing cyclin D2 in adult cardiomyocytes

Marc Michael Zaruba; Wuqiang Zhu; Mark H. Soonpaa; Sean Reuter; Wolfgang M. Franz; Loren J. Field

AIMS Although pharmacological interventions that mobilize stem cells and enhance their homing to damaged tissue can limit adverse post-myocardial infarction (MI) remodelling, cardiomyocyte renewal with this approach is limited. While experimental cell cycle induction can promote cardiomyocyte renewal following MI, this process must compete with the more rapid processes of scar formation and adverse remodelling. The current study tested the hypothesis that the combination of enhanced stem cell mobilization/homing and cardiomyocyte cell cycle induction would result in increased myocardial renewal in injured hearts. METHODS AND RESULTS Myocardial infarction was induced by coronary artery ligation in adult MHC-cycD2 transgenic mice (which exhibit constitutive cardiomyocyte cell cycle activity) and their non-transgenic littermates. Mice were then treated with saline or with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) plus the dipeptidylpeptidase-IV (DPP-IV) inhibitor Diprotin A (DipA) for 7 days. Infarct thickness and cardiomyocyte number/infarct/section were significantly improved in MHC-cycD2 mice with G-CSF plus DipA treatment when compared with MHC-cycD2 transgene expression or G-CSF plus DipA treatment alone. Echocardiographic analyses revealed that stem cell mobilization/homing and cardiomyocyte cell cycle activation had an additive effect on functional recovery. CONCLUSION These data strongly suggest that G-CSF plus DPP-IV inhibition, combined with cardiomyocyte cell cycle activation, leads to enhanced myocardial regeneration following MI. The data are also consistent with the notion that altering adverse post-injury remodelling renders the myocardium more permissive for cardiomyocyte repopulation.


Cardiovascular Research | 2018

Electrical coupling between ventricular myocytes and myofibroblasts in the infarcted mouse heart

Michael Rubart; Wen Tao; Xiao Long Lu; Simon J. Conway; Sean Reuter; Shien Fong Lin; Mark H. Soonpaa

Aims Recent studies have demonstrated electrotonic coupling between scar tissue and the surrounding myocardium in cryoinjured hearts. However, the electrical dynamics occurring at the myocyte-nonmyocyte interface in the fibrotic heart remain undefined. Here, we sought to develop an assay to interrogate the nonmyocyte cell type contributing to heterocellular coupling and to characterize, on a cellular scale, its voltage response in the infarct border zone of living hearts. Methods and results We used two-photon laser scanning microscopy in conjunction with a voltage-sensitive dye to record transmembrane voltage changes simultaneously from cardiomyocytes and adjoined nonmyocytes in Langendorff-perfused mouse hearts with healing myocardial infarction. Transgenic mice with cardiomyocyte-restricted expression of a green fluorescent reporter protein underwent permanent coronary artery ligation and their hearts were subjected to voltage imaging 7-10 days later. Reporter-negative cells, i.e. nonmyocytes, in the infarct border zone exhibited depolarizing transients at a 1:1 coupling ratio with action potentials recorded simultaneously from adjacent, reporter-positive ventricular myocytes. The electrotonic responses in the nonmyocytes exhibited slower rates of de- and repolarization compared to the action potential waveform of juxtaposed myocytes. Voltage imaging in infarcted hearts expressing a fluorescent reporter specifically in myofibroblasts revealed that the latter were electrically coupled to border zone myocytes. Their voltage transient properties were indistinguishable from those of nonmyocytes in hearts with cardiomyocyte-restricted reporter expression. The density of connexin43 expression at myofibroblast-cardiomyocyte junctions was ∼5% of that in the intercalated disc regions of paired ventricular myocytes in the remote, uninjured myocardium, whereas the ratio of connexin45 to connexin43 expression levels at heterocellular contacts was ∼1%. Conclusion Myofibroblasts contribute to the population of electrically coupled nonmyocytes in the infarct border zone. The slower kinetics of myofibroblast voltage responses may reflect low electrical conductivity across heterocellular junctions, in accordance with the paucity of connexin expression at myofibroblast-cardiomyocyte contacts.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2017

Cardiomyocyte proliferation prevents failure in pressure overload but not volume overload

Karl Toischer; Wuqiang Zhu; Mark Hünlich; Belal A. Mohamed; Sara Khadjeh; Sean Reuter; Katrin Schäfer; Deepak Ramanujam; Stefan Engelhardt; Loren J. Field; Gerd Hasenfuss

Induction of the cell cycle is emerging as an intervention to treat heart failure. Here, we tested the hypothesis that enhanced cardiomyocyte renewal in transgenic mice expressing cyclin D2 would be beneficial during hemodynamic overload. We induced pressure overload by transthoracic aortic constriction (TAC) or volume overload by aortocaval shunt in cyclin D2–expressing and WT mice. Although cyclin D2 expression dramatically improved survival following TAC, it did not confer a survival advantage to mice following aortocaval shunt. Cardiac function decreased following TAC in WT mice, but was preserved in cyclin D2–expressing mice. On the other hand, cardiac structure and function were compromised in response to aortocaval shunt in both WT and cyclin D2–expressing mice. The preserved function and improved survival in cyclin D2–expressing mice after TAC was associated with an approximately 50% increase in cardiomyocyte number and exaggerated cardiac hypertrophy, as indicated by increased septum thickness. Aortocaval shunt did not further impact cardiomyocyte number in mice expressing cyclin D2. Following TAC, cyclin D2 expression attenuated cardiomyocyte hypertrophy, reduced cardiomyocyte apoptosis, fibrosis, calcium/calmodulin–dependent protein kinase II&dgr; phosphorylation, brain natriuretic peptide expression, and sustained capillarization. Thus, we show that cyclin D2–induced cardiomyocyte renewal reduced myocardial remodeling and dysfunction after pressure overload but not after volume overload.


Circulation | 2011

Response to Letter Regarding Article, “Differential Cardiac Remodeling in Preload Versus Afterload”

Karl Toischer; Adam G. Rokita; Bernhard Unsöld; Samuel Sossalla; Alexander Becker; Tim Seidler; Cornelia Grebe; Lena Preuß; Shamindra N. Gupta; Kathie Schmidt; Stephan E. Lehnart; Katrin Schäfer; Lars S. Maier; Gerd Hasenfuss; Wuqiang Zhu; Sean Reuter; Loren J. Field; Georgios Kararigas; Vera Regitz-Zagrosek; Nils Teucher; Martina Krüger; Wolfgang A. Linke; Johannes Backs

We would like to thank Reil et al for their interesting discussion. They argue that wall stress of mice with transversal aortic constriction (TAC) may have been higher than those of mice with aortocaval shunt (shunt), which would be supported by lack of brain natriuretic peptide expression in shunt. We believe that we can disprove the arguments and the conclusion of Reil et al for the following reasons: 1. After 1 week of increased load under both conditions, hypertrophy, as measured by left ventricular weight per tibia length, is similarly increased in both models, and this holds true for myocyte minimal fiber diameter as well (Figure 1 of our article).1 2. It was recently shown under well-controlled in vitro conditions that myocardial expression of brain natriuretic peptide increases only …

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Gerd Hasenfuss

University of Göttingen

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Karl Toischer

University of Göttingen

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Adam G. Rokita

University of Göttingen

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