Upasna Varma
University of Melbourne
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Publication
Featured researches published by Upasna Varma.
The Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology | 2013
Jimmy D. Bell; G. Bernasochi; Upasna Varma; A. Raaijmakers; Lea M.D. Delbridge
Important sex differences in the onset and characteristics of cardiovascular disease are evident, yet the mechanistic details remain unresolved. Men are more susceptible to cardiovascular disease earlier in life, though younger women who have a cardiovascular event are more likely to experience adverse outcomes. Emerging evidence is prompting a re-examination of the conventional view that estrogen is protective and testosterone a liability. The heart expresses both androgen and estrogen receptors and is functionally responsive to circulating sex steroids. New evidence of cardiac aromatase expression indicates local estrogen production may also exert autocrine/paracrine actions in the heart. Cardiomyocyte contractility studies suggest testosterone and estrogen have contrasting inotropic actions, and modulate Ca(2+) handling and transient characteristics. Experimentally, sex differences are also evident in cardiac stress responses. Female hearts are generally less susceptible to acute ischemic damage and associated arrhythmias, and generally are more resistant to stress-induced hypertrophy and heart failure, attributed to the cardioprotective actions of estrogen. However, more recent data show that testosterone can also improve acute post-ischemic outcomes and facilitate myocardial function and survival in chronic post-infarction. The myocardial actions of sex steroids are complex and context dependent. A greater mechanistic understanding of the specific actions of systemic/local sex steroids in different cardiovascular disease states has potential to lead to the development of cardiac therapies targeted specifically for men and women.
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2014
Jimmy D. Bell; Gabriel N Bernasochi; Upasna Varma; Wah Chin Boon; Stuart John Ellem; Gail P. Risbridger; L. Delbridge
Estrogen in females is conventionally considered a cardioprotective influence, but a role for estrogen in male cardioprotection has yet to be defined. Estrogen biosynthesis from testosterone is regulated by aromatase. Aromatase has recently been shown to be expressed in the adult heart, although little is known about its involvement in the regulation of myocardial function and stress responses. The goal of this study was to determine whether upregulation of tissue aromatase expression could improve ischemic resilience in male hearts. Isolated hearts from male transgenic aromatase-overexpressing (AROM(+); high estrogen, low testosterone) mice and wild-type (WT) mice (12 wk) were Langendorff perfused and subjected to ischemia-reperfusion (25 min ischemia and 60 min of reperfusion). Basal systolic function was lower in AROM(+) hearts (dP/dtmax: 4,121 ± 255 vs. 4,992 ± 283 mmHg/s, P < 0.05) and associated with augmented Akt phosphorylation, consistent with a suppressor action of estrogen on contractility. Ischemic contracture was attenuated in AROM(+) hearts (43 ± 3 vs. 55 ± 4 mmHg, P < 0.05), yet AROM(+) hearts were more arrhythmic in early reperfusion. At the end of 60 min of reperfusion, AROM(+) systolic functional recovery was lower (left ventricular developed pressure: 39 ± 6 vs. 56 ± 5 %basal, P < 0.05) and diastolic dysfunction was accentuated (36 ± 4 vs. 24 ± 2 mmHg, P < 0.05). This is the first study to show that in vivo aromatase upregulation modulates basal cardiac performance and the response to ischemic stress. These data suggest that while chronic exposure to enhanced estrogenic influence may have benefits in limiting ischemic contracture severity, acute functional recovery in reperfusion is compromised. A temporally targeted, tissue-specific intervention combining aromatase treatment with inotropic support may offer therapeutic potential for men and women.
Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 2015
Chanchal Chandramouli; Upasna Varma; Rui-Ping Xiao; David Stapleton; Kimberley M. Mellor; Lea M.D. Delbridge
Cardiac glycogen regulation involves a complex interplay between multiple signalling pathways, allosteric activation of enzymes, and sequestration for autophagic degradation. Signalling pathways appear to converge on glycogen regulatory enzymes via insulin (glycogen synthase kinase 3β, protein phosphatase 1, allosteric action of glucose‐6‐phosphate), β–adrenergic (phosphorylase kinase protein phosphatase 1 inhibitor), and 5′ adenosine monophosphate‐activated protein kinase (allosteric action of glucose‐6‐phosphate, direct glycogen binding, insulin receptor). While cytosolic glycogen synthesis and breakdown are relatively well understood, recent findings relating to phagic glycogen degradation highlight a new area of investigation in the heart. It has been recently demonstrated that a specific glycophagy pathway is operational in the myocardium. Proteins involved in recruiting glycogen to the forming phagosome have been identified. Starch–binding domain‐containing protein 1 is involved in binding glycogen and mediating membrane anchorage via interaction with a homologue of the phagosomal protein light‐chain 3. Specifically, it has been shown that starch–binding domain‐containing protein 1 and light‐chain 3 have discrete phagosomal immunolocalization patterns in cardiomyocytes, indicating that autophagic trafficking of glycogen and protein cargo in cardiomyocytes can occur via distinct pathways. There is strong evidence from glycogen storage diseases that phagic/lysosomal glycogen breakdown is important for maintaining normal cardiac glycogen levels and does not simply constitute a redundant ‘alternative’ breakdown route for glycogen. Advancing understanding of glycogen handling in the heart is an important priority with relevance not only to genetic glycogen storage diseases but also to cardiac metabolic stress disorders such as diabetes and ischaemia.
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2017
G. Bernasochi; Wah Chin Boon; Claire L. Curl; Upasna Varma; Salvatore Pepe; Marianne Tare; Laura J. Parry; Evdokia Dimitriadis; Stephen B. Harrap; C. Nalliah; J. Kalman; L. Delbridge; Jimmy D. Bell
A correlation exists between the extent of pericardial adipose and atrial fibrillation (AF) risk, though the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Selected adipose depots express high levels of aromatase, capable of converting androgens to estrogens - no studies have investigated aromatase occurrence/expression regulation in pericardial adipose. The Womens Health Initiative reported that estrogen-only therapy in women elevated AF incidence, indicating augmented estrogenic influence may exacerbate cardiac vulnerability. The aim of this study was to identify the occurrence of pericardial adipose aromatase, evaluate the age- and sex-dependency of local cardiac steroid synthesis capacity and seek preliminary experimental evidence of a link between pericardial adipose aromatase capacity and arrhythmogenic vulnerability. Both human atrial appendage and epicardial adipose exhibited immunoblot aromatase expression. In rodents, myocardium and pericardial adipose aromatase expression increased >20-fold relative to young controls. Comparing young, aged and aged-high fat diet animals, a significant positive correlation was determined between the total aromatase content of pericardial adipose and the occurrence/duration of triggered atrial arrhythmias. Incidence and duration of arrhythmias were increased in hearts perfused with 17β-estradiol. This study provides novel report of pericardial adipose aromatase expression. We show that aromatase expression is remarkably upregulated with aging, and aromatase estrogen conversion capacity significantly elevated with obesity-related cardiac adiposity. Our studies suggest an association between adiposity, aromatase estrogenic capacity and atrial arrhythmogenicity - additional investigation is required to establish causality. The potential impact of these findings may be considerable, and suggests that focus on local cardiac steroid conversion (rather than systemic levels) may yield translational outcomes.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Chanchal Chandramouli; Melissa E. Reichelt; Claire L. Curl; Upasna Varma; Laura A. Bienvenu; Parisa Koutsifeli; A. Raaijmakers; Miles J. De Blasio; Cheng Xue Qin; Alicia J. Jenkins; Rebecca H. Ritchie; Kimberley M. Mellor; Lea M.D. Delbridge
Diabetic cardiomyopathy is a distinct pathology characterized by early emergence of diastolic dysfunction. Increased cardiovascular risk associated with diabetes is more marked for women, but an understanding of the role of diastolic dysfunction in female susceptibility to diabetic cardiomyopathy is lacking. To investigate the sex-specific relationship between systemic diabetic status and in vivo occurrence of diastolic dysfunction, diabetes was induced in male and female mice by streptozotocin (5x daily i.p. 55 mg/kg). Echocardiography was performed at 7 weeks post-diabetes induction, cardiac collagen content assessed by picrosirius red staining, and gene expression measured using qPCR. The extent of diabetes-associated hyperglycemia was more marked in males than females (males: 25.8 ± 1.2 vs 9.1 ± 0.4 mM; females: 13.5 ± 1.5 vs 8.4 ± 0.4 mM, p < 0.05) yet in vivo diastolic dysfunction was evident in female (E/E′ 54% increase, p < 0.05) but not male diabetic mice. Cardiac structural abnormalities (left ventricular wall thinning, collagen deposition) were similar in male and female diabetic mice. Female-specific gene expression changes in glucose metabolic and autophagy-related genes were evident. This study demonstrates that STZ-induced diabetic female mice exhibit a heightened susceptibility to diastolic dysfunction, despite exhibiting a lower extent of hyperglycemia than male mice. These findings highlight the importance of early echocardiographic screening of asymptomatic prediabetic at-risk patients.
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2014
Kimberley M. Mellor; Upasna Varma; David Stapleton; Lea M.D. Delbridge
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2017
Upasna Varma; P. Koutsifeli; Vicky L. Benson; Kimberley M. Mellor; Lea M.D. Delbridge
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2018
Upasna Varma; Claire L. Curl; J.V. Janssens; Kimberley M. Mellor; L. Delbridge
Heart Lung and Circulation | 2018
P. Koutsifeli; Upasna Varma; E. Chan; L. Delbridge; Kimberley M. Mellor
Heart Lung and Circulation | 2017
Upasna Varma; Claire L. Curl; G. Bernasochi; Chanchal Chandramouli; Kimberley M. Mellor; L. Delbridge