Publications by authors named "Cristobal G dos Remedios"

Article Synopsis
  • Pregnancy causes significant changes in a woman’s heart and vascular system, but some women can develop a heart condition called peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) during or after pregnancy which can lead to heart failure.
  • A study used mass spectrometry to compare protein and metabolite profiles from heart tissue of patients with end-stage PPCM against those with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and non-failing heart donors, aiming to understand the molecular differences.
  • Findings revealed two specific proteins (SBSPON and TNS3) were downregulated in PPCM, disrupting tissue remodeling, while certain metabolites showed abnormal levels indicating altered metabolic functions; both PPCM and DCM shared some inflammatory pathways but differed significantly in thyroid
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The second-generation myosin activator danicamtiv (DN) has shown improved function compared to the first generation myosin activator omecamtiv mecarbil (OM) in non-failing myocardium by enhancing cardiac force generation but attenuating slowed relaxation. However, whether the functional improvement with DN compared to OM persists in remodeled failing myocardium remain unknown. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the differential contractile response to myosin activators in non-failing and failing myocardium.

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Article Synopsis
  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a heart condition caused by gene mutations in about half of the patients, while the other half don't have these mutations.
  • Researchers studied heart tissue from patients to understand how energy use and fat processing changes in both groups of HCM patients.
  • They found different metabolic changes between the two groups that affect how the disease progresses in the heart.
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Motor proteins, such as myosin and kinesin, are biological molecular motors involved in force generation and intracellular transport within living cells. The characteristics of molecular motors, i.e.

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Employing animal models to study heart failure (HF) has become indispensable to discover and test novel therapies, but their translatability remains challenging. Although cytoskeletal alterations are linked to HF, the tubulin signature of common experimental models has been incompletely defined. Here, we assessed the tubulin signature in a large set of human cardiac samples and myocardium of animal models with cardiac remodeling caused by pressure overload, myocardial infarction or a gene defect.

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Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) is a rare form of acute onset heart failure that presents in otherwise healthy pregnant women around the time of delivery. While most of these women respond to early intervention, about 20% progress to end-stage heart failure that symptomatically resembles dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). In this study, we examined two independent RNAseq datasets from the left ventricle of end-stage PPCM patients and compared gene expression profiles to female DCM and non-failing donors.

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Background: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is characterized by asymmetric left ventricular hypertrophy. Currently, hypertrophy pathways responsible for HCM have not been fully elucidated. Their identification could serve as a nidus for the generation of novel therapeutics aimed at halting disease development or progression.

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Transcriptional bursting is a common expression mode for most genes where independent transcription of alleles leads to different ratios of allelic mRNA from cell to cell. Here we investigated burst-like transcription and its consequences in cardiac tissue from Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy (HCM) patients with heterozygous mutations in the sarcomeric proteins cardiac myosin binding protein C (cMyBP-C, ) and cardiac troponin I (cTnI, ). Using fluorescence hybridization (RNA-FISH) we found that both, and are transcribed burst-like.

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Aims: Hippo signalling is an evolutionarily conserved pathway that controls organ size by regulating apoptosis, cell proliferation, and stem cell self-renewal. Recently, the pathway has been shown to exert powerful growth regulatory activity in cardiomyocytes. However, the functional role of this stress-related and cell death-related pathway in the human heart and cardiomyocytes is not known.

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Heterozygous truncating variants in (TTNtv), the gene coding for titin, cause dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), but the underlying pathomechanisms are unclear and disease management remains uncertain. Truncated titin proteins have not yet been considered as a contributor to disease development. Here, we studied myocardial tissues from nonfailing donor hearts and 113 patients with end-stage DCM for titin expression and identified a TTNtv in 22 patients with DCM (19.

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The disrupted organisation of the ryanodine receptors (RyR) and junctophilin (JPH) is thought to underpin the transverse tubule (t-tubule) remodelling in a failing heart. Here, we assessed the nanoscale organisation of these two key proteins in the failing human heart. Recently, an advanced feature of the t-tubule remodelling identified large flattened t-tubules called t-sheets, that were several microns wide.

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Multiple mouse lines lacking the orphan G protein-coupled receptor, GPR37L1, have elicited disparate cardiovascular phenotypes. The first knockout mice study to be published reported a marked elevation in systolic blood pressure (SBP; ∼60 mmHg), revealing a potential therapeutic opportunity. The phenotype differed from our own independently generated knockout line, where male mice exhibited equivalent baseline blood pressure to wild type.

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Background: Despite in-depth knowledge of the molecular mechanisms controlling embryonic heart development, little is known about the signals governing postnatal maturation of the human heart.

Methods: Single-nucleus RNA sequencing of 54 140 nuclei from 9 human donors was used to profile transcriptional changes in diverse cardiac cell types during maturation from fetal stages to adulthood. Bulk RNA sequencing and the Assay for Transposase-Accessible Chromatin using sequencing were used to further validate transcriptional changes and to profile alterations in the chromatin accessibility landscape in purified cardiomyocyte nuclei from 21 human donors.

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Aims: Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is associated with mutations in many genes encoding sarcomere proteins. Truncating mutations in the titin gene TTN are the most frequent. Proteomic and functional characterizations are required to elucidate the origin of the disease and the pathogenic mechanisms of TTN-truncating variants.

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Background Patients with repair of tetralogy of Fallot (rToF) who are approaching adulthood often exhibit pulmonary valve regurgitation, leading to right ventricle (RV) dilatation and dysfunction. The regurgitation can be corrected by pulmonary valve replacement (PVR), but the optimal surgical timing remains under debate, mainly because of the poorly understood nature of RV remodeling in patients with rToF. The goal of this study was to probe for pathologic molecular, cellular, and tissue changes in the myocardium of patients with rToF at the time of PVR.

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Our knowledge in the field of cardiac muscle and associated cardiomyopathies has been evolving incrementally over the past 60 years and all was possible due to the parallel progress in techniques and methods allowing to take a fresh glimpse at an old problem. Here, we describe an exciting tool used to examine the various states of the human cardiac myosin at the single molecule level. By imaging single Alexa-ATP binding to permeabilised cardiomyocytes using total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, we are able to acquire large populations of events in a short timeframe (~ 5000 sites in ~ 10 min) and measure each binding event with high spatio-temporal resolution.

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Objective: To explore the transcriptomic differences between patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and controls.

Patients And Methods: RNA was extracted from cardiac tissue flash frozen at therapeutic surgical septal myectomy for 106 patients with HCM and 39 healthy donor hearts. Expression profiling of 37,846 genes was performed using the Illumina Human HT-12v3 Expression BeadChip.

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Background: Despite its established significance in fibrotic cardiac remodeling, clinical benefits of global inhibition of TGF (transforming growth factor)-β1 signaling remain controversial. LRG1 (leucine-rich-α2 glycoprotein 1) is known to regulate endothelial TGFβ signaling. This study evaluated the role of LRG1 in cardiac fibrosis and its transcriptional regulatory network in cardiac fibroblasts.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers found that a buildup of a protein precursor called prelamin A was present in heart tissue of a patient and in a special mouse model, leading to inflammation similar to that seen in HIV-related heart disease.
  • * The study suggests that prelamin A plays a key role in both inherited and acquired heart diseases, which could change how HIV patients with heart issues are treated and indicates that targeting inflammation might help some inherited forms of cardiomyopathy.
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We have previously reported a subpopulation of mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) within the platelet-derived growth factor receptor-alpha (PDGFRα)/CD90 co-expressing cardiac interstitial and adventitial cell fraction. Here we further characterise PDGFRα/CD90-expressing cardiac MSCs (PDGFRα + cMSCs) and use human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) over-expression to increase cMSCs ability to repair the heart after induced myocardial infarction. hTERT over-expression in PDGFRα + cardiac MSCs (hTERT + PDGFRα + cMSCs) modulates cell differentiation, proliferation, survival and angiogenesis related genes.

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Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common inherited cardiac disorder. It is mainly caused by mutations in genes encoding sarcomere proteins. Mutant forms of these highly abundant proteins likely stress the protein quality control (PQC) system of cardiomyocytes.

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The protein kinase C (PKC) and closely related protein kinase N (PKN) families of serine/threonine protein kinases play crucial cellular roles. Both kinases belong to the AGC subfamily of protein kinases that also include the cAMP dependent protein kinase (PKA), protein kinase B (PKB/AKT), protein kinase G (PKG) and the ribosomal protein S6 kinase (S6K). Involvement of PKC family members in heart disease has been well documented over the years, as their activity and levels are mis-regulated in several pathological heart conditions, such as ischemia, diabetic cardiomyopathy, as well as hypertrophic or dilated cardiomyopathy.

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