Xiying Shang
Temple University
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Featured researches published by Xiying Shang.
Circulation Research | 2010
Erhe Gao; Yong Hong Lei; Xiying Shang; Z. Maggie Huang; Lin Zuo; Matthieu Boucher; Qian Fan; J. Kurt Chuprun; Xin L. Ma; Walter J. Koch
Rationale: Coronary artery ligation to induce myocardial infarction (MI) in mice is typically performed by an invasive and time-consuming approach that requires ventilation and chest opening (classic method), often resulting in extensive tissue damage and high mortality. We developed a novel and rapid surgical method to induce MI that does not require ventilation. Objective: The purpose of this study was to develop and comprehensively describe this method and directly compare it to the classic method. Methods and Results: Male C57/B6 mice were grouped into 4 groups: new method MI (MI-N) or sham (S-N) and classic method MI (MI-C) or sham (S-C). In the new method, heart was manually exposed without intubation through a small incision and MI was induced. In the classic method, MI was induced through a ventilated thoracotomy. Similar groups were used in an ischemia/reperfusion injury model. This novel MI procedure is rapid, with an average procedure time of 1.22±0.05 minutes, whereas the classic method requires 23.2±0.6 minutes per procedure. Surgical mortality was 3% in MI-N and 15.9% in MI-C. The rate of arrhythmia was significantly lower in MI-N. The postsurgical levels of tumor necrosis factor-&agr; and myeloperoxidase were lower in new method, indicating less inflammation. Overall, 28-day post-MI survival rate was 68% with MI-N and 48% with MI-C. Importantly, there was no difference in infarct size or post-MI cardiac function between the methods. Conclusions: This new rapid method of MI in mice represents a more efficient and less damaging model of myocardial ischemic injury compared with the classic method.
Circulation | 2012
Wei Yi; Yang Sun; Yuexing Yuan; Wayne Bond Lau; Qijun Zheng; Xiaoliang Wang; Yajing Wang; Xiying Shang; Erhe Gao; Walter J. Koch; Xin-Liang Ma
Background— Obesity and diabetes mellitus adversely affect postischemic heart remodeling via incompletely understood mechanisms. C1q/tumor necrosis factor–related protein-3 (CTRP3) is a newly identified adipokine exerting beneficial metabolic regulation, similar to adiponectin. The aim of the present study was to determine whether CTRP3 may regulate postischemic cardiac remodeling and cardiac dysfunction, and, if so, to elucidate the underlying mechanisms. Methods and Results— Male adult mice were subjected to myocardial infarction (MI) via left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion. Both the effect of MI on endogenous CTRP3 expression/production and the effect of exogenous CTRP3 (adenovirus or recombinant CTRP3) replenishment on MI injury were investigated. MI significantly inhibited adipocyte CTRP3 expression and reduced the plasma CTRP3 level, reaching a nadir 3 days after MI. CTRP3 replenishment improved survival rate (P<0.05), restored cardiac function, attenuated cardiomyocyte apoptosis, increased revascularization, and dramatically reduced interstitial fibrosis (all P<0.01). CTRP3 replenishment had no significant effect on cardiac AMP-activated protein kinase phosphorylation but significantly increased Akt phosphorylation and expression of hypoxia inducing factor-1&agr; and vascular endothelial growth factor. Surprisingly, treatment of human umbilical vascular endothelial cells with CTRP3 did not directly affect nitric oxide production or tube formation. However, preconditioned medium from CTRP3-treated cardiomyocytes significantly enhanced human umbilical vascular endothelial cell tube formation, an effect blocked by either pretreatment of cardiomyocytes with a PI3K inhibitor or pretreatment of human umbilical vascular endothelial cells with a vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitor. Finally, the protective effect of adipocyte-conditioned medium against hypoxia-induced cardiomyocyte injury is significantly blunted when CTRP3 is knocked down. Conclusion— CTRP3 is a novel antiapoptotic, proangiogenic, and cardioprotective adipokine, the expression of which is significantly inhibited after MI.
Circulation Research | 2010
Kathleen Woulfe; Erhe Gao; Hind Lal; David T. Harris; Qian Fan; Ronald J. Vagnozzi; Morgan DeCaul; Xiying Shang; Satish Patel; James R. Woodgett; Thomas Force; Jibin Zhou
Rationale: Numerous studies have proposed that glycogen synthase kinase (GSK)-3&bgr; is a central regulator of the hypertrophic response of cardiomyocytes. However, all of this work has relied on overexpression of GSK-3&bgr;, expression of constitutively active mutants, or small molecule inhibitors with documented off-target effects. Genetic loss of function approaches have not been used in the adult mouse because germ-line deletion of GSK-3&bgr; is embryonic-lethal. Objective: This study was designed to define the role played by GSK-3&bgr; in pressure overload (PO)-induced hypertrophy and remodeling following myocardial infarction (MI). Methods and Results: We used a mouse model that allows inducible, cardiomyocyte-specific deletion of GSK-3&bgr; in the adult knockout. Surprisingly, we find that knockout mice exposed to PO induced by thoracic aortic constriction exhibit a normal hypertrophic response. Thus, in contrast to virtually all prior published studies, GSK-3&bgr; appears to play at most a minor role in the hypertrophic response to PO stress. However, GSK-3&bgr; does regulate post-MI remodeling because the GSK-3&bgr; knockouts had less left ventricular dilatation and better-preserved left ventricular function at up to 8 weeks post-MI despite demonstrating significantly more hypertrophy in the remote myocardium. Deletion of GSK-3&bgr; also led to increased cardiomyocyte proliferation following PO and MI. Conclusions: Deletion of GSK-3&bgr; protects against post-MI remodeling and promotes stress-induced cardiomyocyte proliferation in the adult heart. These studies suggest that inhibition of GSK-3&bgr; could be a strategy to both prevent remodeling and to promote cardiac regeneration in pathological states.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010
Jibin Zhou; Hind Lal; Xiongwen Chen; Xiying Shang; Jianliang Song; Yingxin Li; Risto Kerkelä; Bradley W. Doble; Katrina MacAulay; Morgan DeCaul; Walter J. Koch; John L. Farber; James R. Woodgett; Erhe Gao; Thomas Force
The glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) family of serine/threonine kinases consists of 2 highly related isoforms, alpha and beta. Although GSK-3beta has an important role in cardiac development, much remains unknown about the function of either GSK-3 isoform in the postnatal heart. Herein, we present what we believe to be the first studies defining the role of GSK-3alpha in the mouse heart using gene targeting. Gsk3a(-/-) mice over 2 months of age developed progressive cardiomyocyte and cardiac hypertrophy and contractile dysfunction. Following thoracic aortic constriction in young mice, we observed enhanced hypertrophy that rapidly transitioned to ventricular dilatation and contractile dysfunction. Surprisingly, markedly impaired beta-adrenergic responsiveness was found at both the organ and cellular level. This phenotype was reproduced by acute treatment of WT cardiomyocytes with a small molecule GSK-3 inhibitor, confirming that the response was not due to a chronic adaptation to LV dysfunction. Thus, GSK-3alpha appears to be the central regulator of a striking range of essential processes, including acute and direct positive regulation of beta-adrenergic responsiveness. In the absence of GSK-3alpha, the heart cannot respond effectively to hemodynamic stress and rapidly fails. Our findings identify what we believe to be a new paradigm of regulation of beta-adrenergic signaling and raise concerns given the rapid expansion of drug development targeting GSK-3.
Science Signaling | 2013
Huang Zm; Erhe Gao; Fábio V. Fonseca; Hayashi H; Xiying Shang; Nicholas E. Hoffman; Chuprun Jk; Xufan Tian; Tilley Dg; Muniswamy Madesh; David J. Lefer; Jonathan S. Stamler; Walter J. Koch
S-nitrosothiols protect against ischemic injury in the heart by limiting signaling downstream of G protein–coupled receptors. NO More Heart Damage Damage caused by the lack of oxygen and nutrients that occurs during myocardial ischemia can result in heart failure. A therapeutic strategy that helps to limit the effects of heart failure is to increase signaling through G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) by inhibiting GRK2 (GPCR kinase 2), a kinase that desensitizes GPCRs. Another therapeutic strategy provides S-nitrosothiols, such as nitric oxide, which can be added to proteins in a posttranslational modification called S-nitrosylation. Huang et al. found that the ability of S-nitrosothiols to enhance cardiomyocyte survival after ischemic injury required the S-nitrosylation of GRK2, a modification that inhibits this kinase. Mice bearing a form of GRK2 that could not be S-nitrosylated were more susceptible to cardiac damage after ischemia. These results suggest that therapeutic strategies that promote the S-nitrosylation of GRK2 could be used to treat heart failure after myocardial ischemia. Heart failure caused by ischemic heart disease is a leading cause of death in the developed world. Treatment is currently centered on regimens involving G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) or nitric oxide (NO). These regimens are thought to target distinct molecular pathways. We showed that these pathways were interdependent and converged on the effector GRK2 (GPCR kinase 2) to regulate myocyte survival and function. Ischemic injury coupled to GPCR activation, including GPCR desensitization and myocyte loss, required GRK2 activation, and we found that cardioprotection mediated by inhibition of GRK2 depended on endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) and was associated with S-nitrosylation of GRK2. Conversely, the cardioprotective effects of NO bioactivity were absent in a knock-in mouse with a form of GRK2 that cannot be S-nitrosylated. Because GRK2 and eNOS inhibit each other, the balance of the activities of these enzymes in the myocardium determined the outcome to ischemic injury. Our findings suggest new insights into the mechanism of action of classic drugs used to treat heart failure and new therapeutic approaches to ischemic heart disease.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Qian Fan; Mai Chen; Lin Zuo; Xiying Shang; Maggie Z. Huang; Michele Ciccarelli; Philip Raake; Henriette Brinks; Kurt Chuprun; Gerald W. Dorn; Walter J. Koch; Erhe Gao
Studies from our lab have shown that decreasing myocardial G protein–coupled receptor kinase 2 (GRK2) activity and expression can prevent heart failure progression after myocardial infarction. Since GRK2 appears to also act as a pro-death kinase in myocytes, we investigated the effect of cardiomyocyte-specific GRK2 ablation on the acute response to cardiac ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury. To do this we utilized two independent lines of GRK2 knockout (KO) mice where the GRK2 gene was deleted in only cardiomyocytes either constitutively at birth or in an inducible manner that occurred in adult mice prior to I/R. These GRK2 KO mice and appropriate control mice were subjected to a sham procedure or 30 min of myocardial ischemia via coronary artery ligation followed by 24 hrs reperfusion. Echocardiography and hemodynamic measurements showed significantly improved post-I/R cardiac function in both GRK2 KO lines, which correlated with smaller infarct sizes in GRK2 KO mice compared to controls. Moreover, there was significantly less TUNEL positive myocytes, less caspase-3, and -9 but not caspase-8 activities in GRK2 KO mice compared to control mice after I/R injury. Of note, we found that lowering cardiac GRK2 expression was associated with significantly lower cytosolic cytochrome C levels in both lines of GRK2 KO mice after I/R compared to corresponding control animals. Mechanistically, the anti-apoptotic effects of lowering GRK2 expression were accompanied by increased levels of Bcl-2, Bcl-xl, and increased activation of Akt after I/R injury. These findings were reproduced in vitro in cultured cardiomyocytes and GRK2 mRNA silencing. Therefore, lowering GRK2 expression in cardiomyocytes limits I/R-induced injury and improves post-ischemia recovery by decreasing myocyte apoptosis at least partially via Akt/Bcl-2 mediated mitochondrial protection and implicates mitochondrial-dependent actions, solidifying GRK2 as a pro-death kinase in the heart.
Circulation Research | 2012
Jessica I. Gold; Erhe Gao; Xiying Shang; Richard T. Premont; Walter J. Koch
Rationale: Heart failure (HF) is often the end phase of maladaptive cardiac hypertrophy. A contributing factor is activation of a hypertrophic gene expression program controlled by decreased class II histone deacetylase (HDAC) transcriptional repression via HDAC phosphorylation. Cardiac-specific overexpression of G proteinen–coupled receptor kinase-5 (GRK5) has previously been shown to possess nuclear activity as a HDAC5 kinase, promoting an intolerance to in vivo ventricular pressure overload; however, its endogenous requirement in adaptive and maladaptive hypertrophy remains unknown. Objective: We used mouse models with global or cardiomyocyte-specific GRK5 gene deletion to determine the absolute requirement of endogenous GRK5 for cardiac hypertrophy and HF development after chronic hypertrophic stimuli. Methods and Results: Mice with global deletion of GRK5 were subjected to transverse aortic constriction. At 12 weeks, these mice showed attenuated hypertrophy, remodeling, and hypertrophic gene transcription along with preserved cardiac function. Global GRK5 deletion also diminished hypertrophy and related gene expression due to chronic phenylephrine infusion. We then generated mice with conditional, cardiac-specific deletion of GRK5 that also demonstrated similar protection from pathological cardiac hypertrophy and HF after transverse aortic constriction. Conclusions: These results define myocyte GRK5 as a critical regulator of pathological cardiac growth after ventricular pressure overload, supporting its role as an endogenous (patho)-physiological HDAC kinase. Further, these results define GRK5 as a potential therapeutic target to limit HF development after hypertrophic stress.
American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2012
Jianliang Song; Erhe Gao; JuFang Wang; Xue-Qian Zhang; Tung O. Chan; Walter J. Koch; Xiying Shang; Jeffrey I. Joseph; Blaise Z. Peterson; Arthur M. Feldman; Joseph Y. Cheung
Expression and activity of cardiac Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger (NCX1) are altered in many disease states. We engineered mice in which the phosphomimetic phospholemman S68E mutant (inhibits NCX1 but not Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase) was constitutively overexpressed in a cardiac-specific manner (conS68E). At 4-6 wk, conS68E mice exhibited severe bradycardia, ventricular arrhythmias, increased left ventricular (LV) mass, decreased cardiac output (CO), and ∼50% mortality compared with wild-type (WT) littermates. Protein levels of NCX1, calsequestrin, ryanodine receptor, and α(1)- and α(2)-subunits of Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase were similar, but sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum Ca(2+)-ATPase was lower, whereas L-type Ca(2+) channels were higher in conS68E hearts. Resting membrane potential and action potential amplitude were similar, but action potential duration was dramatically prolonged in conS68E myocytes. Diastolic intracellular Ca(2+) ([Ca(2+)](i)) was higher, [Ca(2+)](i) transient and maximal contraction amplitudes were lower, and half-time of [Ca(2+)](i) transient decline was longer in conS68E myocytes. Intracellular Na(+) reached maximum within 3 min after isoproterenol addition, followed by decline in WT but not in conS68E myocytes. Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchange, L-type Ca(2+), Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase, and depolarization-activated K(+) currents were decreased in conS68E myocytes. At 22 wk, bradycardia and increased LV mass persisted in conS68E survivors. Despite comparable baseline CO, conS68E survivors at 22 wk exhibited decreased chronotropic, inotropic, and lusitropic responses to isoproterenol. We conclude that constitutive overexpression of S68E mutant was detrimental, both in terms of depressed cardiac function and increased arrhythmogenesis.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Qian Fan; Zheng M. Huang; Matthieu Boucher; Xiying Shang; Lin Zuo; Henriette Brinks; Wayne Bond Lau; Jianke Zhang; J. Kurt Chuprun; Erhe Gao
Aim As technological interventions treating acute myocardial infarction (MI) improve, post-ischemic heart failure increasingly threatens patient health. The aim of the current study was to test whether FADD could be a potential target of gene therapy in the treatment of heart failure. Methods Cardiomyocyte-specific FADD knockout mice along with non-transgenic littermates (NLC) were subjected to 30 minutes myocardial ischemia followed by 7 days of reperfusion or 6 weeks of permanent myocardial ischemia via the ligation of left main descending coronary artery. Cardiac function were evaluated by echocardiography and left ventricular (LV) catheterization and cardiomyocyte death was measured by Evans blue-TTC staining, TUNEL staining, and caspase-3, -8, and -9 activities. In vitro, H9C2 cells transfected with ether scramble siRNA or FADD siRNA were stressed with chelerythrin for 30 min and cleaved caspase-3 was assessed. Results FADD expression was significantly decreased in FADD knockout mice compared to NLC. Ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) upregulated FADD expression in NLC mice, but not in FADD knockout mice at the early time. FADD deletion significantly attenuated I/R-induced cardiac dysfunction, decreased myocardial necrosis, and inhibited cardiomyocyte apoptosis. Furthermore, in 6 weeks long term permanent ischemia model, FADD deletion significantly reduced the infarct size (from 41.20±3.90% in NLC to 26.83±4.17% in FADD deletion), attenuated myocardial remodeling, improved cardiac function and improved survival. In vitro, FADD knockdown significantly reduced chelerythrin-induced the level of cleaved caspase-3. Conclusion Taken together, our results suggest FADD plays a critical role in post-ischemic heart failure. Inhibition of FADD retards heart failure progression. Our data supports the further investigation of FADD as a potential target for genetic manipulation in the treatment of heart failure.
Circulation | 2012
Wei Yi; Yang Sun; Yuexing Yuan; Wayne Bond Lau; Qijun Zheng; Xiaoliang Wang; Yajing Wang; Xiying Shang; Erhe Gao; Walter J. Koch; Xin-Liang Ma
Background— Obesity and diabetes mellitus adversely affect postischemic heart remodeling via incompletely understood mechanisms. C1q/tumor necrosis factor–related protein-3 (CTRP3) is a newly identified adipokine exerting beneficial metabolic regulation, similar to adiponectin. The aim of the present study was to determine whether CTRP3 may regulate postischemic cardiac remodeling and cardiac dysfunction, and, if so, to elucidate the underlying mechanisms. Methods and Results— Male adult mice were subjected to myocardial infarction (MI) via left anterior descending coronary artery occlusion. Both the effect of MI on endogenous CTRP3 expression/production and the effect of exogenous CTRP3 (adenovirus or recombinant CTRP3) replenishment on MI injury were investigated. MI significantly inhibited adipocyte CTRP3 expression and reduced the plasma CTRP3 level, reaching a nadir 3 days after MI. CTRP3 replenishment improved survival rate (P<0.05), restored cardiac function, attenuated cardiomyocyte apoptosis, increased revascularization, and dramatically reduced interstitial fibrosis (all P<0.01). CTRP3 replenishment had no significant effect on cardiac AMP-activated protein kinase phosphorylation but significantly increased Akt phosphorylation and expression of hypoxia inducing factor-1&agr; and vascular endothelial growth factor. Surprisingly, treatment of human umbilical vascular endothelial cells with CTRP3 did not directly affect nitric oxide production or tube formation. However, preconditioned medium from CTRP3-treated cardiomyocytes significantly enhanced human umbilical vascular endothelial cell tube formation, an effect blocked by either pretreatment of cardiomyocytes with a PI3K inhibitor or pretreatment of human umbilical vascular endothelial cells with a vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitor. Finally, the protective effect of adipocyte-conditioned medium against hypoxia-induced cardiomyocyte injury is significantly blunted when CTRP3 is knocked down. Conclusion— CTRP3 is a novel antiapoptotic, proangiogenic, and cardioprotective adipokine, the expression of which is significantly inhibited after MI.