Shahin Hassanzadeh
National Institutes of Health
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Featured researches published by Shahin Hassanzadeh.
Cell | 2001
Julien S. Davis; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Steve O Winitsky; Hua Lin; Colleen Satorius; Ramesh Vemuri; Anthony H. Aletras; Han Wen; Neal D. Epstein
Evolution of the human heart has incorporated a variety of successful strategies for motion used throughout the animal kingdom. One such strategy is to add the efficiency of torsion to compression so that blood is wrung, as well as pumped, out of the heart. Models of cardiac torsion have assumed uniform contractile properties of muscle fibers throughout the heart. Here, we show how a spatial gradient of myosin light chain phosphorylation across the heart facilitates torsion by inversely altering tension production and the stretch activation response. To demonstrate the importance of cardiac light chain phosphorylation, we cloned a myosin light chain kinase from a human heart and have identified a gain-in-function mutation in two individuals with cardiac hypertrophy.
PLOS Biology | 2005
Steve O Winitsky; Thiru V Gopal; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Hiroshi Takahashi; Divina Gryder; Michael A. Rogawski; Kazuyo Takeda; Zu X Yu; Yu H Xu; Neal D. Epstein
It has long been held as scientific fact that soon after birth, cardiomyocytes cease dividing, thus explaining the limited restoration of cardiac function after a heart attack. Recent demonstrations of cardiac myocyte differentiation observed in vitro or after in vivo transplantation of adult stem cells from blood, fat, skeletal muscle, or heart have challenged this view. Analysis of these studies has been complicated by the large disparity in the magnitude of effects seen by different groups and obscured by the recently appreciated process of in vivo stem-cell fusion. We now show a novel population of nonsatellite cells in adult murine skeletal muscle that progress under standard primary cell-culture conditions to autonomously beating cardiomyocytes. Their differentiation into beating cardiomyocytes is characterized here by video microscopy, confocal-detected calcium transients, electron microscopy, immunofluorescent cardiac-specific markers, and single-cell patch recordings of cardiac action potentials. Within 2 d after tail-vein injection of these marked cells into a mouse model of acute infarction, the marked cells are visible in the heart. By 6 d they begin to differentiate without fusing to recipient cardiac cells. Three months later, the tagged cells are visible as striated heart muscle restricted to the region of the cardiac infarct.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Kim Han; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Komudi Singh; Sara Menazza; Tiffany Nguyen; Mark V. Stevens; An Nguyen; Hong San; Stasia A. Anderson; Yongshun Lin; Jizhong Zou; Elizabeth Murphy; Michael N. Sack
The regulatory control of cardiac endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress is incompletely characterized. As ER stress signaling upregulates the E3-ubiquitin ligase Parkin, we investigated the role of Parkin in cardiac ER stress. Parkin knockout mice exposed to aortic constriction-induced cardiac pressure-overload or in response to systemic tunicamycin (TM) developed adverse ventricular remodeling with excessive levels of the ER regulatory C/EBP homologous protein CHOP. CHOP was identified as a Parkin substrate and its turnover was Parkin-dose and proteasome-dependent. Parkin depletion in cardiac HL-1 cells increased CHOP levels and enhanced susceptibility to TM-induced cell death. Parkin reconstitution rescued this phenotype and the contribution of excess CHOP to this ER stress injury was confirmed by reduction in TM-induced cell death when CHOP was depleted in Parkin knockdown cardiomyocytes. Isogenic Parkin mutant iPSC-derived cardiomyocytes showed exaggerated ER stress induced CHOP and apoptotic signatures and myocardium from subjects with dilated cardiomyopathy showed excessive Parkin and CHOP induction. This study identifies that Parkin functions to blunt excessive CHOP to prevent maladaptive ER stress-induced cell death and adverse cardiac ventricular remodeling. Additionally, Parkin is identified as a novel post-translational regulatory moderator of CHOP stability and uncovers an additional stress-modifying function of this E3-ubiquitin ligase.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999
Ramesh Vemuri; Edward B. Lankford; Karl Poetter; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Kazuyo Takeda; Zu-Xi Yu; Victor J. Ferrans; Neal D. Epstein
Cold Spring Harbor Symposia on Quantitative Biology | 2002
Julien S. Davis; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Steve O Winitsky; Han Wen; Anthony H. Aletras; Neal D. Epstein
Archive | 2001
Neal D. Epstein; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Steven Winitsky; Julien S. Davis
PLOS Biology | 2013
Steve O Winitsky; Thiru V Gopal; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Hiroshi Takahashi; Divina Gryder; Michael A. Rogawski; Kazuyo Takeda; Zu X Yu; Yu H Xu; Neal D. Epstein
Archive | 2008
Neal D. Epstein; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Steven Winitsky; Julien S. Davis
Archive | 2008
Neal D. Epstein; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Steve O Winitsky; Julien S. Davis
Archive | 2002
Neal D. Epstein; Thiru V Gopal; Shahin Hassanzadeh; Steve O Winitsky