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Dive into the research topics where Stephen Rothery is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen Rothery.


Cardiovascular Research | 2008

Remodelling of gap junctions and connexin expression in diseased myocardium.

Nicholas J. Severs; Alexandra F. Bruce; Emmanuel Dupont; Stephen Rothery

Gap junctions form the cell-to-cell pathways for propagation of the precisely orchestrated patterns of current flow that govern the regular rhythm of the healthy heart. As in most tissues and organs, multiple connexin types are expressed in the heart: connexin43 (Cx43), Cx40 and Cx45 are found in distinctive combinations and relative quantities in different, functionally-specialized subsets of cardiac myocyte. Mutations in genes that encode connexins have only rarely been identified as being a cause of human cardiac disease, but remodelling of connexin expression and gap junction organization are well documented in acquired adult heart disease, notably ischaemic heart disease and heart failure. Remodelling may take the form of alterations in (i) the distribution of gap junctions and (ii) the amount and type of connexins expressed. Heterogeneous reduction in Cx43 expression and disordering in gap junction distribution feature in human ventricular disease and correlate with electrophysiologically identified arrhythmic changes and contractile dysfunction in animal models. Disease-related alterations in Cx45 and Cx40 expression have also been reported, and some of the functional implications of these are beginning to emerge. Apart from ventricular disease, various features of gap junction organization and connexin expression have been implicated in the initiation and persistence of the most common form of atrial arrhythmia, atrial fibrillation, though the disparate findings in this area remain to be clarified. Other major tasks ahead focus on the Purkinje/working ventricular myocyte interface and its role in normal and abnormal impulse propagation, connexin-interacting proteins and their regulatory functions, and on defining the precise functional properties conferred by the distinctive connexin co-expression patterns of different myocyte types in health and disease.


BJUI | 2002

Gap junctions and connexin expression in human suburothelial interstitial cells.

Guiping Sui; Stephen Rothery; Emmanuel Dupont; Christopher H. Fry; Nicholas J. Severs

Objective  To determine whether suburothelial interstitial cells of the human bladder express gap junctions, and if so, to establish their extent and composition, using immunocytochemistry, confocal microscopy and electron microscopy.


Circulation Research | 1998

Connexin45 expression is preferentially associated with the ventricular conduction system in mouse and rat heart

Steven R. Coppen; Emmanuel Dupont; Stephen Rothery; Nicholas J. Severs

Cardiac myocytes are electrically coupled by gap junctions, clusters of low-resistance intercellular channels composed of connexins. Variations in the quantities and spatial distribution of different connexin types have been implicated in regional differentiation of electrophysiological properties in the heart. Although independent studies have demonstrated that connexin43 is abundant in working ventricular myocardium and that connexin40 is preferentially expressed in the atrioventricular conduction system of a number of species, information on the spatial distribution of connexin45 in the heart is limited to data obtained using an antibody raised to a single peptide sequence. In the present study, we report on the production and characterization of a new anti-connexin45 antibody and its application to the investigation of connexin45 expression in mouse and rat myocardium. The affinity-purified antiserum, raised in guinea pig to residues 354 to 367 of human connexin45, recognized a single 45-kD band on Western blots of HeLa cells transfected to express connexin45 and gave punctate immunolabeling at the cell borders, demonstrated by freeze-fracture cytochemistry to represent gap junctions. Only low levels of connexin45 mRNA were detected on Northern blots of mouse and rat cardiac tissues, and connexin45 protein levels were below the limit of detection on Western blots. Confocal microscopy of immunolabeled ventricular tissue revealed that the major part of the working myocardium was immunonegative for connexin45. A clearly defined zone containing connexin45-expressing cells was, however, localized to the endocardial surface, overlapping with connexin40-expressing myocytes of the conduction system. As these results contrast with the prevailing view that connexin45 is widely distributed in working ventricular myocytes, we compared the immunolabeling pattern obtained with a commercially supplied anti-connexin45 antiserum raised against the same peptide that was used in previous studies. The commercial connexin45 antiserum gave widespread labeling throughout the ventricular myocardium, but this labeling was inhibited by a six-amino acid peptide matching part of the connexin43 sequence, indicating cross-reaction of the commercial connexin45 antiserum with connexin43 in the tissue. Further evidence for such cross-reactivity came from observations on connexin43-transfected cells, which gave positive immunolabeling with the commercial anti-connexin45 antiserum. Our demonstration of a specific association of connexin45 with connexin40-expressing myocytes in rat and mouse ventricle raises the possibility that connexin45 contributes to the modulation of electrophysiological properties in the ventricular conduction system and highlights the need for reappraisal of the distribution and role of connexin45 in other species.


Circulation | 1998

Downregulation of immunodetectable connexin43 and decreased gap junction size in the pathogenesis of chronic hibernation in the human left ventricle.

Raffi Kaprielian; Mark Gunning; Emmanuel Dupont; Mary N. Sheppard; Stephen Rothery; Richard Underwood; Dudley J. Pennell; Kim Fox; John Pepper; Philip A. Poole-Wilson; Nicholas J. Severs

BACKGROUND The regional wall motion impairment and predisposition to arrhythmias in human ventricular hibernation may plausibly result from abnormal intercellular propagation of the depolarizing wave front. This study investigated the hypothesis that altered patterns of expression of connexin43, the principal gap junctional protein responsible for passive conduction of the cardiac action potential, contribute to the pathogenesis of hibernation. METHODS AND RESULTS Patients with poor ventricular function and severe coronary artery disease underwent thallium scanning and MRI to predict regions of normally perfused, reversibly ischemic, or hibernating myocardium. Twenty-one patients went on to coronary artery bypass graft surgery, during which biopsies representative of each of the above classes were taken. Hibernation was confirmed by improvement in segmental wall motion at reassessment 6 months after surgery. Connexin43 was studied by quantitative immunoconfocal laser scanning microscopy and PC image software. Analysis of en face projection views of intercalated disks revealed a significant reduction in relative connexin43 content per unit area in reversibly ischemic (76.7+/-34.6%, P<.001) and hibernating (67.4+/-24.3%, P<.001) tissue compared with normal (100+/-30.3%); ANOVA P<.001. The hibernating regions were further characterized by loss of the larger gap junctions normally seen at the disk periphery, reflected by a significant reduction in mean junctional plaque size in the hibernating tissues (69.5+/-20.8%) compared with reversibly ischemic (87.4+/-31.2%, P=.012) and normal (100+/-31.5%, P<.001) segments; ANOVA P<.001. CONCLUSIONS These results indicate progressive reduction and disruption of connexin43 gap junctions in reversible ischemia and hibernation. Abnormal impulse propagation resulting from such changes may contribute to the electromechanical dysfunction associated with hibernation.


Microscopy Research and Technique | 2001

Immunocytochemical analysis of connexin expression in the healthy and diseased cardiovascular system.

Nicholas J. Severs; Stephen Rothery; Emmanuel Dupont; Steven R. Coppen; Hung-I Yeh; Yu-Shien Ko; Tsutomu Matsushita; Riyaz A. Kaba; Deborah Halliday

Gap junctions play essential roles in the normal function of the heart and arteries, mediating the spread of the electrical impulse that stimulates synchronized contraction of the cardiac chambers, and contributing to co‐ordination of activities between cells of the arterial wall. In common with other multicellular systems, cardiovascular tissues express multiple connexin isotypes that confer distinctive channel properties. This review highlights how state‐of‐the‐art immunocytochemical and cellular imaging techniques, as part of a multidisciplinary approach in gap junction research, have advanced our understanding of connexin diversity in cardiovascular cell function in health and disease. In the heart, spatially defined patterns of expression of three connexin isotypes—connexin43, connexin40, and connexin45—underlie the precisely orchestrated patterns of current flow governing the normal cardiac rhythm. Derangement of gap junction organization and/or reduced expression of connexin43 are associated with arrhythmic tendency in the diseased human ventricle, and high levels of connexin40 in the atrium are associated with increased risk of developing atrial fibrillation after coronary by‐pass surgery. In the major arteries, endothelial gap junctions may simultaneously express three connexin isotypes, connexin40, connexin37, and connexin43; underlying medial smooth muscle, by contrast, predominantly expresses connexin43, with connexin45 additionally expressed at restricted sites. In normal arterial smooth muscle, the abundance of connexin43 gap junctions varies according to vascular site, and shows an inverse relationship with desmin expression and positive correlation with the quantity of extracellular matrix. Increased connexin43 expression between smooth muscle cells is closely linked to phenotypic transformation in early human coronary atherosclerosis and in the response of the arterial wall to injury. Current evidence thus suggests that gap junctions in both their guises, as pathways for cell‐to‐cell signaling in the vessel wall and as pathways for impulse conduction in the heart, contribute to the initial pathogenesis and eventual clinical manifestation of human cardiovascular disease. Microsc. Res. Tech. 52:301–322, 2001.


Circulation Research | 1997

Dissociated Spatial Patterning of Gap Junctions and Cell Adhesion Junctions During Postnatal Differentiation of Ventricular Myocardium

Brigitt D. Angst; Laeeq U.R. Khan; Nicholas J. Severs; Kate Whitely; Stephen Rothery; Robert P. Thompson; Anthony I. Magee; Robert G. Gourdie

Nonuniformity in the spatial patterning of gap junctions between heart muscle cells is now recognized as an important determinant of electromechanical function in working myocardium. Breakdown of the normal geometry of electrical intercellular connectivity in diseased myocardium correlates with reentry, arrhythmia, and conduction disturbance. The developmental mechanism(s) that determines this precise spatial order in gap junction organization in normal myocardium is at present unknown. To examine this question, we have used immunoelectron and immunoconfocal microscopy to analyze the spatial distributions of gap junctional (connexin43), desmosomal (desmoplakin), and adherens junctional (N-cadherin) components during maturation of rodent and canine left ventricular myocardium. In rats, a striking divergence in the distribution of gap junctions and cell adhesion junctions emerged within the first 20 days of postnatal life. It was found that although gap junctions initially demonstrated dispersed distributions across myocyte cell membranes, desmosomes and adherens junctions showed more rapid polarization toward cell termini (ie, nascent intercalated disks) after birth. Over subsequent postnatal development (20 to 90 postnatal days), gap junctions became progressively concentrated in these cell adhesion junction-rich zones of membrane. Quantitative analyses of this process in a series of rats aged 15 embryonic and 1, 5, 10, 20, 40, 70, and 90 postnatal days indicated that significantly higher levels (P < .01) of N-cadherin and desmoplakin than of connexin43 were immunolocalized to cell termini by as early as postnatal day 5. Although all three junctions types showed increasing polarization to myocyte termini with development, variation between junctions remained significant (P < .05) at all times points between 5 and 70 postnatal days. Only at 90 postnatal days, when the animals were nearly full grown, did the proportions of gap junction, desmosome, and adherens junction at intercalated disks become statistically similar (P > .05). Examination of myocardium from 1- and 3-month-old canines revealed that related differential changes to the spatiotemporal distribution of intercellular junctions occurred during postnatal maturation of the dog heart, suggesting that the process was not rodent specific. It is concluded that this progressive change in the organization and pattern of association between gap junctions and cell adhesion junctions is likely to be an important factor in maturation of electromechanical function within the mammalian heart.


Circulation | 2001

The Gap-Junctional Protein Connexin40 Is Elevated in Patients Susceptible to Postoperative Atrial Fibrillation

Emmanuel Dupont; Yu-Shien Ko; Stephen Rothery; Steven R. Coppen; Max Baghai; Marcus P. Haw; Nicholas J. Severs

Background —Atrial fibrillation (AF), a cardiac arrhythmia arising from atrial re-entrant circuits, is a common complication after cardiac surgery, but the proarrhythmic substrate underlying the development of postoperative AF remains unclear. This study investigated the hypothesis that altered expression of connexins, the component proteins of gap junctions, is a determinant of a predisposition to AF. Methods and Results —The expression of the 3 atrial connexins–connexins 43, 40, and 45 —was analyzed at the mRNA and protein levels by Northern and Western blotting techniques and immunoconfocal microscopy in right atrial appendages from patients with ischemic heart disease who were undergoing coronary artery bypass surgery. Twenty percent of the patients subsequently developed AF, which allowed retrospective division of the samples into 2 groups, non-AF and AF. Connexin43 and connexin45 transcript and protein levels did not differ between the groups. However, connexin40 transcript and protein were expressed at significantly higher levels in the AF group. Connexin40 protein was markedly heterogeneous in distribution. Conclusions —Atrial myocardium susceptible to AF is distinguished from its nonsusceptible counterpart by elevated connexin40 expression. The heterogeneity of connexin distribution could give rise to different resistive properties and conduction velocities in spatially adjacent regions of tissue, which become enhanced and, hence, proarrhythmic the higher the overall level of connexin40.


Circulation | 1994

Spatiotemporal relation between gap junctions and fascia adherens junctions during postnatal development of human ventricular myocardium.

Nicholas S. Peters; Nicholas J. Severs; Stephen Rothery; Christopher Lincoln; Magdi H. Yacoub; C R Green

BackgroundThe growing postnatal human heart maintains electromechanical function while undergoing substantial changes of cellular topology and myocardial architecture. The capacity for growth and remodeling of ventricular myocardium in adaptation to the hemodynamic changes of early infancy later declines. This decline is associated with changes in electromechanical properties of the myocardium, which suggest that the electrical and mechanical interactions between the myocytes may change in an age-dependent manner. Thus, reduction in the capacity for myocardial growth and adaptability may relate to age-dependent alterations in the patterns of the intercellular junctions that mediate electrical and mechanical coupling. We therefore examined the hypotheses that (1) age-dependent changes in the distribution patterns of gap junctions and fasciae adherentes, the intercellular junctions responsible, respectively, for electrical and mechanical coupling, accompany postnatal development in the human heart and that (2) such changes continue into the first few years of childhood. Further, the spatial relation between the two types of junction, for which a close association has been hypothe-sized as necessary, was explored. Methods and ResultsVentricular myocardial gap-junction distribution was investigated in 23 pediatric surgical patients (4 weeks to 15 years old) by quantitative immunohistochemical localization of the principal cardiac gap-junctional protein, connexin43, using confocal microscopy. Immunolocalization of fascia adherens junctions by labeling N-cadherin, and correlative immunogold and standard electron microscopy, were performed in parallel. In the neonate, connexin43 gap junctions have a punctate distribution over the entire surface of the ventricular myocytes. With advancing age, gap junctions become progressively confined to the transverse terminals of the cell, ie, toward the distribution within the intercalated disk characteristic of the adult ventricle. The transversely arrayed proportion of gap-junctional label showed a linear increase with age (R=.88, P<.001), reaching the adult pattern at about 6 years, and the fascia adherens junctions showed a similar progression. Electron microscopy confirmed the changing pattern of junctional contacts and demonstrated that initially gap junctions and adhering junctions are frequently not closely adjacent but become increasingly so with maturation of the intercalated disk. ConclusionsChanges in the spatiotemporal patterns of the intercellular junctions responsible for electrical and mechanical coupling are closely coordinated in postnatal human ventricular myocardium and continue to about 6 years of age. Over this period there is a close and increasing association between the gap junctions and fascia adherens junctions. These changes in the distribution of intercellular electrical and adhering junctions may parallel the changing functional requirements of the ventricle, from a distribution that facilitates the remodeling necessitated by rapid growth and changing hemodynamics to that of the relatively stable and rapidly conducting adult myocardium. These age-related changes may also diminish the ability for appropriate myocardial remodeling in response to physiological, pathological, or surgical hemodynamic alterations.


Circulation Research | 1998

Individual Gap Junction Plaques Contain Multiple Connexins in Arterial Endothelium

Hung-I Yeh; Stephen Rothery; Emmanuel Dupont; Steven R. Coppen; Nicholas J. Severs

Gap-junctional intercellular communication in endothelial cells is implicated in the coordination of growth, migration, and vasomotor responses. Up to 3 connexin types, connexin40 (Cx40), Cx37, and Cx43 may be expressed in vascular endothelium according to vascular site, species, and physiological conditions. To establish how these connexins are organized at the level of the individual endothelial gap junction, we used affinity-purified connexin-specific antibodies raised in 3 different species to permit double and triple immunolabeling in combination with confocal and electron microscopy. Using HeLa cells transfected with Cx37 and Cx40 for characterization, the anti-Cx37 antibody (raised in rabbit) and the anti-Cx40 antibody (raised in guinea pig) were shown to recognize single bands of 37 and 40 kDa, respectively, on Western blots and to give prominent punctate labeling at the cell borders, specifically in the corresponding transfectant. By applying these antibodies together with mouse monoclonal anti-Cx43 for double and triple immunofluorescence labeling at confocal microscopy, rat aortic and pulmonary arterial endothelia were found to express all 3 connexin types, whereas coronary artery endothelium expressed Cx40 and Cx37 but lacked Cx43. High-resolution en face confocal viewing of the aortic endothelium after double labeling demonstrated frequent colocalization of connexins, with distinct variation in the expression pattern within a given cell, where it made contact with different neighbors. Triple immunogold labeling at the electron-microscopic level revealed that aortic endothelial gap junctions commonly contain all 3 connexin types. This represents the first definitive demonstration of any cell type in vivo expressing 3 different connexins organized within the same gap-junctional plaque.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1995

Upregulation of Connexin43 Gap Junctions During Early Stages of Human Coronary Atherosclerosis

J. P. Blackburn; N. S. Peters; H.-I. Yeh; Stephen Rothery; C. R. Green; Nicholas J. Severs

Interactions between cells form the framework for understanding the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, but little information is available on the role of direct intercellular communication via gap junctions in this process. To investigate gap junction expression in the pathogenesis of human atherosclerosis, lesions representing different stages of the disease were obtained from coronary arteries of hearts removed from patients undergoing cardiac transplantation. Twelve hearts, each providing 1 to 3 segments of artery, were used in the study. Sections were examined by confocal laser scanning microscopy after immunofluorescent labeling with a specific antibody against connexin43, the major gap-junctional protein of smooth muscle cells, to permit high-definition visualization of immunolabeled gap junctions through the depth of the specimen. Double labeling using anti-connexin43 and cell type-specific antibodies demonstrated colocalization of gap junctions with smooth muscle cells but not with macrophages, a relationship confirmed by electron microscopy. Regions of intimal thickening and early atheromatous lesions showed markedly increased expression of connexin43 gap junctions between intimal smooth muscle cells compared with the undiseased vessels. This increase in gap junctions was most marked in regions of intimal thickening, semiquantitative analysis of the confocal digital images revealing a > 10-fold increase compared with the undiseased vessel. The quantity of labeled gap junctions in early atheromatous lesions, although higher than that of the undiseased vessel, was lower than that of intimal thickenings, and this trend toward reduced levels of gap junction immunolabeling with lesion progression continued, the value observed in the most advanced atheromatous lesions being lower than that of the undiseased vessel. As the quantity of gap junctions declined, their distribution became more patchy and the sizes of individual junctions larger. The results suggest that enhanced expression of gap junctions between smooth muscle cells may play a role in maintaining the synthetic phenotype during early growth of the atherosclerotic plaque.

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Nicholas J. Severs

National Institutes of Health

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Emmanuel Dupont

National Institutes of Health

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Steven R. Coppen

Queen Mary University of London

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Alexandra F. Bruce

National Institutes of Health

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Yu-Shien Ko

Memorial Hospital of South Bend

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Hung-I Yeh

Mackay Memorial Hospital

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