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Dive into the research topics where Sophie Cardin is active.

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Featured researches published by Sophie Cardin.


Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2012

Role for MicroRNA-21 in atrial profibrillatory fibrotic remodeling associated with experimental postinfarction heart failure.

Sophie Cardin; Eduard Guasch; Xiaobin Luo; Patrice Naud; Khai Le Quang; Yanfen Shi; Jean-Claude Tardif; Philippe Comtois; Stanley Nattel

Background—Atrial tissue fibrosis is often an important component of the atrial fibrillation (AF) substrate. Small noncoding microRNAs are important mediators in many cardiac remodeling paradigms. MicroRNA-21 (miR-21) has been suggested to be important in ventricular fibrotic remodeling by downregulating Sprouty-1, a protein that suppresses fibroblast proliferation. The present study examined the potential role of miR-21 in the atrial AF substrate resulting from experimental heart failure after myocardial infarction (MI). Methods and Results—Large MIs (based on echocardiographic left ventricular wall motion score index) were created by left anterior descending coronary artery ligation in rats. Changes induced by MI versus sham controls were first characterized with echocardiography, histology, biochemistry, and in vivo electrophysiology. Additional MI rats were then randomized to receive anti–miR-21 (KD21) or scrambled control sequence (Scr21) injections into the left atrial myocardium. Progressive left ventricular enlargement, hypocontractility, left atrial dilation, fibrosis, refractoriness prolongation, and AF promotion occurred in MI rats versus sham controls. Atrial tissues of MI rats showed upregulation of miR-21, along with dysregulation of the target genes Sprouty-1, collagen-1, and collagen-3. KD21 treatment reduced atrial miR-21 expression levels in MI rats to values in sham rats, decreased AF duration from 417 (69–1595; median [Q1–Q3]) seconds to 3 (2–16) seconds (8 weeks after MI; P<0.05), and reduced atrial fibrous tissue content from 14.4±1.8% (mean±SEM) to 4.9±1.2% (8 weeks after MI; P<0.05) versus Scr21 controls. Conclusions—MI-induced heart failure leads to AF-promoting atrial remodeling in rats. Atrial miR-21 knockdown suppresses atrial fibrosis and AF promotion, implicating miR-21 as an important signaling molecule for the AF substrate and pointing to miR-21 as a potential target for molecular interventions designed to prevent AF.


Circulation Research | 2007

Contrasting gene expression profiles in two canine models of atrial fibrillation.

Sophie Cardin; Eric Libby; Patricia Pelletier; Sabrina Le Bouter; Akiko Shiroshita-Takeshita; Nolwenn Le Meur; Jean Léger; Sophie Demolombe; André Ponton; Leon Glass; Stanley Nattel

Gene-expression changes in atrial fibrillation patients reflect both underlying heart-disease substrates and changes because of atrial fibrillation-induced atrial-tachycardia remodeling. These are difficult to separate in clinical investigations. This study assessed time-dependent mRNA expression-changes in canine models of atrial-tachycardia remodeling and congestive heart failure. Five experimental groups (5 dogs/group) were submitted to atrial (ATP, 400 bpm ×24 hours, 1 or 6 weeks) or ventricular (VTP, 240 bpm ×24 hours or 2 weeks) tachypacing. The expression of ≈21,700 transcripts was analyzed by microarray in isolated left-atrial cardiomyocytes and (for 18 genes) by real-time RT-PCR. Protein-expression changes were assessed by Western blot. In VTP, a large number of significant mRNA-expression changes occurred after both 24 hours (2209) and 2 weeks (2720). In ATP, fewer changes occurred at 24 hours (242) and fewer still (87) at 1 week, with no statistically-significant alterations at 6 weeks. Expression changes in VTP varied over time in complex ways. Extracellular matrix-related transcripts were strongly upregulated by VTP consistent with its pathophysiology, with 8 collagen-genes upregulated >10-fold, fibrillin-1 8-fold and MMP2 4.5-fold at 2 weeks (time of fibrosis) but unchanged at 24 hours. Other extracellular matrix genes (eg, fibronectin, lysine oxidase-like 2) increased at both time-points (≈10, ≈5-fold respectively). In ATP, mRNA-changes almost exclusively represented downregulation and were quantitatively smaller. This study shows that VTP-induced congestive heart failure and ATP produce qualitatively different temporally-evolving patterns of gene-expression change, and that specific transcriptomal responses associated with atrial fibrillation versus underlying heart disease substrates must be considered in assessing gene-expression changes in man.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2008

Marked differences between atrial and ventricular gene-expression remodeling in dogs with experimental heart failure

Sophie Cardin; Patricia Pelletier; Eric Libby; Sabrina Le Bouter; Ling Xiao; Stefan Kääb; Sophie Demolombe; Leon Glass; Stanley Nattel

Congestive heart failure (CHF) causes arrhythmogenic, structural and contractile remodeling, with important atrial-ventricular differences: atria show faster and greater inflammation, cell-death and fibrosis. The present study assessed time-dependent left atrial (LA) and ventricular (LV) gene-expression changes in CHF. Groups of dogs were submitted to ventricular tachypacing (VTP, 240 bpm) for 24 h or 2 weeks, and compared to sham-instrumented animals. RNA from isolated LA and LV cardiomyocytes of each dog was analyzed by canine-specific microarrays (>21,700 probe-sets). LA showed dramatic gene-expression changes, with 4785 transcripts significantly-altered (Q<5) at 24-hour and 6284 at 2-week VTP. LV gene-changes were more limited, with 52 significantly-altered at 24-hour and 130 at 2-week VTP. Particularly marked differences were seen in ECM genes, with 153 changed in LA (e.g. approximately 65-fold increase in collagen-1) at 2-week VTP versus 2 in LV; DNA/RNA genes (LA=358, LV=7); protein biosynthesis (LA=327, LV=14); membrane transport (LA=230, LV=8); cell structure and mobility (LA=159, LV=6) and coagulation/inflammation (LA=147, LV=1). Noteworthy changes in LV were genes involved in metabolism (35 genes; creatine-kinase B increased 8-fold at 2-week VTP) and Ca(2+)-signalling. LA versus LV differential gene-expression decreased over time: 1567 genes were differentially expressed (Q<1) at baseline, 1499 at 24-hour and 897 at 2-week VTP. Pathway analysis revealed particularly-important changes in LA for mitogen-activated protein-kinase, apoptotic, and ubiquitin/proteasome systems, and LV for Krebs cycle and electron-transfer complex I/II genes. VTP-induced CHF causes dramatically more gene-expression changes in LA than LV, dynamically altering the LA-LV differential gene-expression pattern. These results are relevant to understanding chamber-specific remodeling in CHF.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2010

A high-fat diet increases risk of ventricular arrhythmia in female rats: enhanced arrhythmic risk in the absence of obesity or hyperlipidemia

Marie-Claude Aubin; Sophie Cardin; Philippe Comtois; Robert Clément; Hugues Gosselin; Marc-Antoine Gillis; Khai Le Quang; Stanley Nattel; Louis P. Perrault; Angelino Calderone

Obesity increases the incidence of cardiac arrhythmias and impairs wound healing. However, it is presently unknown whether a high-fat diet affects arrhythmic risk or wound healing before the onset of overt obesity or hyperlipidemia. After 8 wk of feeding a high-fat diet to adult female rats, a nonsignificant increase in body weight was observed and associated with a normal plasma lipid profile. Following ischemia/reperfusion injury, scar length (standard diet 0.29 +/- 0.09 vs. high-fat 0.32 +/- 0.13 cm), thickness (standard diet 0.047 +/- 0.02 vs. high-fat 0.059 +/- 0.01 cm), and collagen alpha(1) type 1 content (standard diet 0.21 +/- 0.04 vs. high-fat 0.20 +/- 0.04 arbitrary units/mm(2)) of infarcted hearts were not altered by the high-fat diet. However, the mortality rate was greatly increased 24 h postinfarction (from 5% to 46%, P < 0.01 for ischemia/reperfusion rats; from 20% to 89%, P < 0.0001, in complete-occlusion rats) in high-fat fed rats, in association with a higher prevalence of ventricular arrhythmias. Ventricular arrhythmia inducibility was also significantly increased in noninfarcted rats fed a high-fat diet. In the hearts of rats fed a high-fat diet, connexin-40 expression was absent, connexin-43 was hypophosphorylated and lateralized, and neurofilament-M immunoreactive fiber density (standard diet 2,020 +/- 260 vs. high-fat diet 2,830 +/- 250 microm(2)/mm(2)) and tyrosine hydroxylase protein expression were increased (P < 0.05). Thus, in the absence of overt obesity and hyperlipidemia, sympathetic hyperinnervation and an aberrant pattern of gap junctional protein expression and regulation in the heart of female rats fed a high-fat diet may have contributed in part to the higher incidence of inducible cardiac arrhythmias.


Hypertension Research | 2009

Cardiac pathways distinguish two epistatic modules enacting BP quantitative trait loci and candidate gene analysis

Cristina Chauvet; Annie Ménard; Johanne Tremblay; Chunjie Xiao; Yanfen Shi; Nathalie L'Heureux; Sophie Cardin; Jean-Claude Tardif; Stanley Nattel; Alan Y. Deng

Animal models emulating essential hypertension are an informative means by which to elucidate the physiological mechanisms and gene–gene interactions underlying blood pressure (BP) regulation. We have localized earlier quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for BP on Chromosome (Chr) 2 of Dahl salt-sensitive (DSS) rats, but their chromosome delineations were too large for gene identification. To advance toward positional cloning of these QTLs, we constructed congenic strains that systematically dissect a Chr 2 segment with no overlaps. BP and cardiac functions were measured by telemetry and echocardiography. Six QTLs were delimited, each independently influencing BP. The intervals lodging two of them harbor 10–15 genes and undefined loci. These six QTLs can be grouped into two epistatic modules distinguishable by cardiac pathways/cascades. None of the genes known to exert physiological effects on BP in the segments harboring the six QTLs are leading candidates, as their protein products are the same in DSS rats and similar to those in their Milan normotensive counterparts. Specifically, the lack of an amino-acid alteration, coupled with a lack of difference in the α1-Na-K-ATPase activity, excluded ATPase, Na+/K+-transporting, α-1 polypeptide as a candidate gene for C2QTL6. The identification of the six QTLs will likely develop into a novel diagnostic and/or therapeutic target for essential hypertension and hypertension-associated diseases.


Journal of Hypertension | 2008

Distinct genomic replacements from Lewis correct diastolic dysfunction, attenuate hypertension, and reduce left ventricular hypertrophy in Dahl salt-sensitive rats.

Alan Y. Deng; Stanley Nattel; Yanfen Shi; Nathalie L'Heureux; Sophie Cardin; Annie Ménard; Julie Roy; Jean-Claude Tardif

Background Hypertension and diastolic heart failure are two common cardiovascular diseases that inflict heavy morbidity and mortality, yet relatively little is understood about their pathophysiology. The identification of quantitative trait loci for blood pressure is important in unveiling the causes of polygenic hypertension. Although Dahl salt-sensitive strain is also an excellent model for the study of diastolic heart failure, virtually nothing is known about the quantitative trait loci determining diastolic heart failure. Diastolic dysfunction often represents the onset of diastolic heart failure. Methods We first characterized the cardiac phenotype of Dahl salt-sensitive strain and normotensive Lewis control rats by echocardiography to ascertain diastolic function. We then analyzed corresponding features of four newly developed and two existing congenic strains, each of which carrys a specific chromosome substitution of Dahl salt-sensitive strain by its Lewis homologue and each lowering blood pressure. Results Dahl salt-sensitive strain displayed diastolic dysfunction that was rectified in two of six congenic strains, designated as positive congenic strains, which represent the first rodent models exhibiting functional normalization of diastolic dysfunction caused by naturally occurring genetic variants. The two positive congenic strains also showed a reduction in left ventricular mass. In contrast, four of six congenic strains did not change diastolic function despite their blood pressure-lowering effects. Conclusion Genes present in the replaced chromosome segments of the two positive congenic strains are not commonly known to affect blood pressure, diastolic function or left ventricular mass. Consequently, novel prognostic, diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for hypertensive diastolic heart failure likely emerge from this work.


Hypertension | 2014

Differences in Cell-Type–Specific Responses to Angiotensin II Explain Cardiac Remodeling Differences in C57BL/6 Mouse Substrains

Sophie Cardin; Marie-Pier Scott-Boyer; Samantha D. Praktiknjo; Saloua Jeidane; Sylvie Picard; Timothy L. Reudelhuber; Christian F. Deschepper

Despite indications that hearts from the C57BL/6N and C57BL/6J mouse substrains differ in terms of their contractility and their responses to stress-induced overload, no information is available about the underlying molecular and cellular mechanisms. We tested whether subacute (48 hours) and chronic (14 days) administration of angiotensin II (500 ng/kg per day) had different effects on the left ventricles of male C57BL/6J and C57BL/6N mice. Despite higher blood pressure in C57BL/6J mice, chronic angiotensin II induced fibrosis and increased the left ventricular weight/body weight ratio and cardiac expression of markers of left ventricular hypertrophy to a greater extent in C57BL/6N mice. Subacute angiotensin II affected a greater number of cardiac genes in C57BL/6N than in C57BL/6J mice. Some of the most prominent differences were observed for markers of (1) macrophage activation and M2 polarization, including 2 genes (osteopontin and galectin-3) whose inactivation was reported as sufficient to prevent angiotensin II–induced myocardial fibrosis; and (2) fibroblast activation. These differences were confirmed in macrophage- and fibroblast-enriched populations of cells isolated from the hearts of experimental mice. When testing F2 animals, the amount of connective tissue present after chronic angiotensin II administration did not cosegregate with the inactivation mutation of the nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase gene from C57BL/6J mice, thus discounting its possible contribution to differences in cardiac remodeling. However, expression levels of osteopontin and galectin-3 were cosegregated in hearts from angiotensin II–treated F2 animals and may represent endophenotypes that could facilitate the identification of genetic regulators of the cardiac fibrogenic response to angiotensin II.


Circulation | 2001

Effects of Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibition on the Development of the Atrial Fibrillation Substrate in Dogs With Ventricular Tachypacing–Induced Congestive Heart Failure

Danshi Li; Kaori Shinagawa; Li Pang; Tack Ki Leung; Sophie Cardin; Zhiguo Wang; Stanley Nattel


Cardiovascular Research | 2003

Evolution of the atrial fibrillation substrate in experimental congestive heart failure: angiotensin-dependent and -independent pathways

Sophie Cardin; Danshi Li; Nathalie Thorin-Trescases; Tack-Ki Leung; Eric Thorin; Stanley Nattel


Cardiovascular Research | 2004

Differences in atrial versus ventricular remodeling in dogs with ventricular tachypacing-induced congestive heart failure

Nessrine Hanna; Sophie Cardin; Tack-Ki Leung; Stanley Nattel

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Stanley Nattel

Montreal Heart Institute

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Yanfen Shi

Montreal Heart Institute

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Ange Maguy

Université de Montréal

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Alan Y. Deng

Université de Montréal

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Annie Ménard

Université de Montréal

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