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Dive into the research topics where Shan Parikh is active.

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Featured researches published by Shan Parikh.


Nature Genetics | 2017

Frequency of mononuclear diploid cardiomyocytes underlies natural variation in heart regeneration

Michaela Patterson; Lindsey Barske; Ben Van Handel; Christoph Rau; Peiheng Gan; Avneesh Sharma; Shan Parikh; Matt Denholtz; Ying Huang; Yukiko Yamaguchi; Hua Shen; Hooman Allayee; J. Gage Crump; Thomas Force; Ching-Ling Lien; Takako Makita; Aldons J. Lusis; S. Ram Kumar; Henry M. Sucov

Adult mammalian cardiomyocyte regeneration after injury is thought to be minimal. Mononuclear diploid cardiomyocytes (MNDCMs), a relatively small subpopulation in the adult heart, may account for the observed degree of regeneration, but this has not been tested. We surveyed 120 inbred mouse strains and found that the frequency of adult mononuclear cardiomyocytes was surprisingly variable (>7-fold). Cardiomyocyte proliferation and heart functional recovery after coronary artery ligation both correlated with pre-injury MNDCM content. Using genome-wide association, we identified Tnni3k as one gene that influences variation in this composition and demonstrated that Tnni3k knockout resulted in elevated MNDCM content and increased cardiomyocyte proliferation after injury. Reciprocally, overexpression of Tnni3k in zebrafish promoted cardiomyocyte polyploidization and compromised heart regeneration. Our results corroborate the relevance of MNDCMs in heart regeneration. Moreover, they imply that intrinsic heart regeneration is not limited nor uniform in all individuals, but rather is a variable trait influenced by multiple genes.


Circulation Research | 2017

Thyroid and Glucocorticoid Hormones Promote Functional T-Tubule Development in Human-Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell–Derived Cardiomyocytes

Shan Parikh; Daniel Jesse Blackwell; Nieves Gomez-Hurtado; Michael Frisk; Lili Wang; Kyungsoo Kim; Christen P. Dahl; Arnt E. Fiane; Theis Tønnessen; Dmytro O. Kryshtal; William E. Louch; Björn C. Knollmann

Rationale: Human-induced pluripotent stem cell–derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CM) are increasingly being used for modeling heart disease and are under development for regeneration of the injured heart. However, incomplete structural and functional maturation of hiPSC-CM, including lack of T-tubules, immature excitation–contraction coupling, and inefficient Ca-induced Ca release remain major limitations. Objective: Thyroid and glucocorticoid hormones are critical for heart maturation. We hypothesized that their addition to standard protocols would promote T-tubule development and mature excitation–contraction coupling of hiPSC-CM when cultured on extracellular matrix with physiological stiffness (Matrigel mattress). Methods and Results: hiPSC-CM were generated using a standard chemical differentiation method supplemented with T3 (triiodothyronine) and/or Dex (dexamethasone) during days 16 to 30 followed by single-cell culture for 5 days on Matrigel mattress. hiPSC-CM treated with T3+Dex, but not with either T3 or Dex alone, developed an extensive T-tubule network. Notably, Matrigel mattress was necessary for T-tubule formation. Compared with adult human ventricular cardiomyocytes, T-tubules in T3+Dex-treated hiPSC-CM were less organized and had more longitudinal elements. Confocal line scans demonstrated spatially and temporally uniform Ca release that is characteristic of excitation–contraction coupling in the heart ventricle. T3+Dex enhanced elementary Ca release measured by Ca sparks and promoted RyR2 (ryanodine receptor) structural organization. Simultaneous measurements of L-type Ca current and intracellular Ca release confirmed enhanced functional coupling between L-type Ca channels and RyR2 in T3+Dex-treated cells. Conclusions: Our results suggest a permissive role of combined thyroid and glucocorticoid hormones during the cardiac differentiation process, which when coupled with further maturation on Matrigel mattress, is sufficient for T-tubule development, enhanced Ca-induced Ca release, and more ventricular-like excitation–contraction coupling. This new hormone maturation method could advance the use of hiPSC-CM for disease modeling and cell-based therapy.


Circulation Research | 2016

Loss of Adult Cardiac Myocyte GSK-3 Leads to Mitotic Catastrophe Resulting in Fatal Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Jibin Zhou; Firdos Ahmad; Shan Parikh; Nichole E. Hoffman; Sudarsan Rajan; Vipin K. Verma; Jianliang Song; Ancai Yuan; Santhanam Shanmughapriya; Yuanjun Guo; Erhe Gao; Walter J. Koch; James R. Woodgett; Muniswamy Madesh; Raj Kishore; Hind Lal; Thomas Force

RATIONALE Cardiac myocyte-specific deletion of either glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)-3α and GSK-3β leads to cardiac protection after myocardial infarction, suggesting that deletion of both isoforms may provide synergistic protection. This is an important consideration because of the fact that all GSK-3-targeted drugs, including the drugs already in clinical trial target both isoforms of GSK-3, and none are isoform specific. OBJECTIVE To identify the consequences of combined deletion of cardiac myocyte GSK-3α and GSK-3β in heart function. METHODS AND RESULTS We generated tamoxifen-inducible cardiac myocyte-specific mice lacking both GSK-3 isoforms (double knockout). We unexpectedly found that cardiac myocyte GSK-3 is essential for cardiac homeostasis and overall survival. Serial echocardiographic analysis reveals that within 2 weeks of tamoxifen treatment, double-knockout hearts leads to excessive dilatative remodeling and ventricular dysfunction. Further experimentation with isolated adult cardiac myocytes and fibroblasts from double-knockout implicated cardiac myocytes intrinsic factors responsible for observed phenotype. Mechanistically, loss of GSK-3 in adult cardiac myocytes resulted in induction of mitotic catastrophe, a previously unreported event in cardiac myocytes. Double-knockout cardiac myocytes showed cell cycle progression resulting in increased DNA content and multinucleation. However, increased cell cycle activity was rivaled by marked activation of DNA damage, cell cycle checkpoint activation, and mitotic catastrophe-induced apoptotic cell death. Importantly, mitotic catastrophe was also confirmed in isolated adult cardiac myocytes. CONCLUSIONS Together, our findings suggest that cardiac myocyte GSK-3 is required to maintain normal cardiac homeostasis, and its loss is incompatible with life because of cell cycle dysregulation that ultimately results in a severe fatal dilated cardiomyopathy.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2018

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-linked mutation in troponin T causes myofibrillar disarray and pro-arrhythmic action potential changes in human iPSC cardiomyocytes

Lili Wang; Kyungsoo Kim; Shan Parikh; Adrian G. Cadar; Kevin Bersell; Huan He; Jose R. Pinto; Dmytro O. Kryshtal; Björn C. Knollmann

BACKGROUND Mutations in cardiac troponin T (TnT) are linked to increased risk of ventricular arrhythmia and sudden death despite causing little to no cardiac hypertrophy. Studies in mice suggest that the hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM)-associated TnT-I79N mutation increases myofilament Ca sensitivity and is arrhythmogenic, but whether findings from mice translate to human cardiomyocyte electrophysiology is not known. OBJECTIVES To study the effects of the TnT-I79N mutation in human cardiomyocytes. METHODS Using CRISPR/Cas9, the TnT-I79N mutation was introduced into human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). We then used the matrigel mattress method to generate single rod-shaped cardiomyocytes (CMs) and studied contractility, Ca handling and electrophysiology. RESULTS Compared to isogenic control hiPSC-CMs, TnT-I79N hiPSC-CMs exhibited sarcomere disorganization, increased systolic function and impaired relaxation. The Ca-dependence of contractility was leftward shifted in mutation containing cardiomyocytes, demonstrating increased myofilament Ca sensitivity. In voltage-clamped hiPSC-CMs, TnT-I79N reduced intracellular Ca transients by enhancing cytosolic Ca buffering. These changes in Ca handling resulted in beat-to-beat instability and triangulation of the cardiac action potential, which are predictors of arrhythmia risk. The myofilament Ca sensitizer EMD57033 produced similar action potential triangulation in control hiPSC-CMs. CONCLUSIONS The TnT-I79N hiPSC-CM model not only reproduces key cellular features of TnT-linked HCM such as myofilament disarray, hypercontractility and diastolic dysfunction, but also suggests that this TnT mutation causes pro-arrhythmic changes of the human ventricular action potential.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2018

Cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of GSK-3β leads to cardiac dysfunction in a diet induced obesity model

Manisha Gupte; Samvruta Tumuluru; Jennifer Y. Sui; Anand Prakash Singh; Prachi Umbarkar; Shan Parikh; Firdos Ahmad; Qinkun Zhang; Thomas Force; Hind Lal

BACKGROUND AND RATIONALE Obesity, an independent risk factor for the development of myocardial diseases is a growing healthcare problem worldwide. Its well established that GSK-3β is critical to cardiac pathophysiology. However, the role cardiomyocyte (CM) GSK-3β in diet-induced cardiac dysfunction is unknown. METHODS CM-specific GSK-3β knockout (CM-GSK-3β-KO) and littermate controls (WT) mice were fed either a control diet (CD) or high-fat diet (HFD) for 55weeks. Cardiac function was assessed by transthoracic echocardiography. RESULTS At baseline, body weights and cardiac function were comparable between the WT and CM-GSK-3β-KOs. However, HFD-fed CM-GSK-3β-KO mice developed severe cardiac dysfunction. Consistently, both heart weight/tibia length and lung weight/tibia length were significantly elevated in the HFD-fed CM-GSK-3β-KO mice. The impaired cardiac function and adverse ventricular remodeling in the CM-GSK-3β-KOs were independent of body weight or the lean/fat mass composition as HFD-fed CM-GSK-3β-KO and controls demonstrated comparable body weight and body masses. At the molecular level, on a CD, CM-GSK-3α compensated for the loss of CM-GSK-3β, as evident by significantly reduced GSK-3αs21 phosphorylation (activation) resulting in a preserved canonical β-catenin ubiquitination pathway and cardiac function. However, this protective compensatory mechanism is lost with HFD, leading to excessive accumulation of β-catenin in HFD-fed CM-GSK-3β-KO hearts, resulting in adverse ventricular remodeling and cardiac dysfunction. CONCLUSION In summary, these results suggest that cardiac GSK-3β is crucial to protect against obesity-induced adverse ventricular remodeling and cardiac dysfunction.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2017

Myofilament Calcium-Buffering Dependent Action Potential Triangulation in Human-Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Model of Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Lili Wang; Dmytro O. Kryshtal; Kyungsoo Kim; Shan Parikh; Adrian G. Cadar; Kevin Bersell; Huan He; Jose R. Pinto; Björn C. Knollmann

Familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is caused by mutations in genes encoding sarcomere proteins. Among hypertrophic cardiomyopathy–linked disease genes, cardiac troponin T (TnT) mutations are associated with a high incidence of arrhythmic cardiac death [(1)][1], but the underlying mechanism has


Circulation | 2014

Troponin I-Interacting Protein Kinase

Hind Lal; Firdos Ahmad; Shan Parikh; Thomas Force


Biophysical Journal | 2018

Improved Calcium Handling in Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell Cardiomyocytes

Daniel Blackwell; Shan Parikh; Nieves Gómez-Hurtado; Björn C. Knollmann


Biophysical Journal | 2018

High-Throughput Investigation of Contractile and Electrophysiological Properties of Optically Stimulated hiPSC-CM Monolayers

Shan Parikh; Nikhil Chavali; Andrew M. Glazer; Christian M. Shaffer; Marcia Blair; Dan M. Roden; Björn C. Knollmann


Circulation Research | 2017

Abstract 41: Cardiomyocyte-specific Conditional Deletion of GSK-3β Leads to Cardiac Dysfunction in a High Fat Diet Induced Obesity Model

Manisha Gupte; Samvruta Tumuluru; Anand Singh; Prachi Umbarkar; Qinkun Zhang; Firdos Ahmad; Shan Parikh; Thomas Force; Hind Lal

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Firdos Ahmad

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Hind Lal

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Lili Wang

Vanderbilt University

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Dmytro O. Kryshtal

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Kyungsoo Kim

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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Huan He

Florida State University

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Jose R. Pinto

Florida State University

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