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157


Contrasting Ionic Mechanisms of Impaired Conduction in FHF1- and FHF2-Deficient Hearts [Letter]

Santucci, John; Park, David S; Shekhar, Akshay; Lin, Xianming; Bu, Lei; Yamaguchi, Naoko; Mintz, Shana; Chang, Ernest Whanwook; Khodadadi-Jamayran, Alireza; Redel-Traub, Gabriel; Goldfarb, Mitchell; Fishman, Glenn I
PMID: 35862854
ISSN: 1941-3084
CID: 5268322

Partial and complete loss of myosin binding protein H-like cause cardiac conduction defects

Barefield, David Y; Yamakawa, Sean; Tahtah, Ibrahim; Sell, Jordan J; Broman, Michael; Laforest, Brigitte; Harris, Sloane; Alvarez-Arce, Alejandro; Araujo, Kelly N; Puckelwartz, Megan J; Wasserstrom, J Andrew; Fishman, Glenn I; McNally, Elizabeth M
A premature truncation of MYBPHL in humans and a loss of Mybphl in mice is associated with dilated cardiomyopathy, atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, and atrial enlargement. MYBPHL encodes myosin binding protein H-like (MyBP-HL). Prior work in mice indirectly identified Mybphl expression in the atria and in small puncta throughout the ventricle. Because of its genetic association with human and mouse cardiac conduction system disease, we evaluated the anatomical localization of MyBP-HL and the consequences of loss of MyBP-HL on conduction system function. Immunofluorescence microscopy of normal adult mouse ventricles identified MyBP-HL-positive ventricular cardiomyocytes that co-localized with the ventricular conduction system marker contactin-2 near the atrioventricular node and in a subset of Purkinje fibers. Mybphl heterozygous ventricles had a marked reduction of MyBP-HL-positive cells compared to controls. Lightsheet microscopy of normal perinatal day 5 mouse hearts showed enrichment of MyBP-HL-positive cells within and immediately adjacent to the contactin-2-positive ventricular conduction system, but this association was not apparent in Mybphl heterozygous hearts. Surface telemetry of Mybphl-null mice revealed atrioventricular block and atrial bigeminy, while intracardiac pacing revealed a shorter atrial relative refractory period and atrial tachycardia. Calcium transient analysis of isolated Mybphl-null atrial cardiomyocytes demonstrated an increased heterogeneity of calcium release and faster rates of calcium release compared to wild type controls. Super-resolution microscopy of Mybphl heterozygous and homozygous null atrial cardiomyocytes showed ryanodine receptor disorganization compared to wild type controls. Abnormal calcium release, shorter atrial refractory period, and atrial dilation seen in Mybphl null, but not wild type control hearts, agree with the observed atrial arrhythmias, bigeminy, and atrial tachycardia, whereas the proximity of MyBP-HL-positive cells with the ventricular conduction system provides insight into how a predominantly atrial expressed gene contributes to ventricular arrhythmias and ventricular dysfunction.
PMID: 35533732
ISSN: 1095-8584
CID: 5214162

The Purkinje-myocardial junction is the anatomical origin of ventricular arrhythmia in CPVT

Blackwell, Daniel J; Faggioni, Michela; Wleklinski, Matthew J; Gomez-Hurtado, Nieves; Venkataraman, Raghav; Gibbs, Chelsea E; Baudenbacher, Franz J; Gong, Shiaoching; Fishman, Glenn I; Boyle, Patrick M; Pfeifer, Karl; Knollmann, Bjorn C
Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is an arrhythmia syndrome due to gene mutations that render RYR2 calcium release channels hyperactive, causing spontaneous calcium release and delayed afterdepolarizations (DADs). What remains unknown is the cellular source of ventricular arrhythmia triggered by DADs - Purkinje cells in the conduction system or ventricular cardiomyocytes in the working myocardium. To answer this question, we used a genetic approach in mice to knock out cardiac calsequestrin either in Purkinje cells or in ventricular cardiomyocytes. Total loss of calsequestrin in the heart causes a severe CPVT phenotype in mice and humans. We found that loss of calsequestrin only in ventricular myocytes produced a full-blown CPVT phenotype, whereas mice with loss of calsequestrin only in Purkinje cells were comparable to wild-type mice. Subendocardial chemical ablation or restoration of calsequestrin expression in subendocardial cardiomyocytes neighboring Purkinje cells was sufficient to protect against catecholamine-induced arrhythmias. In silico modeling demonstrated that DADs in ventricular myocardium can trigger full action potentials in the Purkinje fiber, but not vice versa. Hence, ectopic beats in CPVT are likely generated at the Purkinje-myocardial junction via a heretofore unrecognized tissue mechanism, whereby DADs in the ventricular myocardium trigger full action potentials in adjacent Purkinje cells.
PMID: 34990403
ISSN: 2379-3708
CID: 5107292

A pilot open-label study of aldose reductase inhibition with AT-001 (caficrestat) in patients hospitalized for COVID-19 infection: Results from a registry-based matched-control analysis

Gaztanaga, Juan; Ramasamy, Ravichandran; Schmidt, Ann Marie; Fishman, Glenn; Schendelman, Shoshana; Thangavelu, Karthinathan; Perfetti, Riccardo; Katz, Stuart D
BACKGROUND AND AIMS/OBJECTIVE:Cardiometabolic disease may confer increased risk of adverse outcomes in COVID-19 patients by activation of the aldose reductase pathway. We hypothesized that aldose reductase inhibition with AT-001 might reduce viral inflammation and risk of adverse outcomes in diabetic patients with COVID-19. METHODS:We conducted an open-label prospective phase 2 clinical trial to assess safety, tolerability and efficacy of AT-001 in patients hospitalized with COVID-19 infection, history of diabetes mellitus and chronic heart disease. Eligible participants were prospectively enrolled and treated with AT-001 1500 mg BID for up to 14 days. Safety, tolerability, survival and length of hospital stay (LOS) were collected from the electronic medical record and compared with data from two matched control groups (MC1 and MC2) selected from a deidentified registry of COVID-19 patients at the same institution. RESULTS:AT-001 was safe and well tolerated in the 10 participants who received the study drug. In-hospital mortality observed in the AT-001 group was 20% vs. 31% in MC1 and 27% in MC2. Mean LOS observed in the AT-001 group was 5 days vs. 10 days in MC1 and 25 days in MC2. CONCLUSIONS:In hospitalized patients with COVID-19 and co-morbid diabetes mellitus and heart disease, treatment with AT-001 was safe and well tolerated. Exposure to AT-001 was associated with a trend of reduced mortality and shortened LOS. While the observed trend did not reach statistical significance, the present study provides the rationale for investigating potential benefit of AT-001 in COVID 19 affected patients in future studies.
PMCID:8556062
PMID: 34752935
ISSN: 1878-0334
CID: 5050382

Early onset epilepsy and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy with cardiac arrhythmia in mice carrying the early infantile epileptic encephalopathy 47 gain-of-function FHF1(FGF12) missense mutation

Velíšková, Jana; Marra, Christopher; Liu, Yue; Shekhar, Akshay; Park, David S; Iatckova, Vasilisa; Xie, Ying; Fishman, Glenn I; Velíšek, Libor; Goldfarb, Mitchell
OBJECTIVE:Fibroblast growth factor homologous factors (FHFs) are brain and cardiac sodium channel-binding proteins that modulate channel density and inactivation gating. A recurrent de novo gain-of-function missense mutation in the FHF1(FGF12) gene (p.Arg52His) is associated with early infantile epileptic encephalopathy 47 (EIEE47; Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man database 617166). To determine whether the FHF1 missense mutation is sufficient to cause EIEE and to establish an animal model for EIEE47, we sought to engineer this mutation into mice. METHODS:protein. RESULTS:mice prior to seizure. SIGNIFICANCE/CONCLUSIONS:1.6 functional axis underlying altered brain sodium channel gating in epileptic encephalopathy.
PMID: 33982289
ISSN: 1528-1167
CID: 4867612

Neural cell adhesion molecule is required for ventricular conduction system development

Delgado, Camila; Bu, Lei; Zhang, Jie; Liu, Fang-Yu; Sall, Joseph; Liang, Feng-Xia; Furley, Andrew J; Fishman, Glenn I
The most distal portion of the ventricular conduction system (VCS) contains cardiac Purkinje cells (PCs), which are essential for synchronous activation of the ventricular myocardium. Contactin-2 (CNTN2), a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily of cell adhesion molecules (IgSF-CAMs), was previously identified as a marker of the VCS. Through differential transcriptional profiling, we discovered two additional highly enriched IgSF-CAMs in the VCS: NCAM-1 and ALCAM. Immunofluorescence staining showed dynamic expression patterns for each IgSF-CAM during embryonic and early postnatal stages, but ultimately all three proteins became highly enriched in mature PCs. Mice deficient in NCAM-1, but not CNTN2 or ALCAM, exhibited defects in PC gene expression and VCS patterning, as well as cardiac conduction disease. Moreover, using ST8sia2 and ST8sia4 knockout mice, we show that inhibition of post-translational modification of NCAM-1 by polysialic acid leads to disrupted trafficking of sarcolemmal intercalated disc proteins to junctional membranes and abnormal expansion of the extracellular space between apposing PCs. Taken together, our data provide insights into the complex developmental biology of the ventricular conduction system.
PMID: 34100064
ISSN: 1477-9129
CID: 4899742

Multiple Biomarker Approach to Risk Stratification in COVID-19 [Letter]

Smilowitz, Nathaniel R; Nguy, Vuthy; Aphinyanaphongs, Yindalon; Newman, Jonathan D; Xia, Yuhe; Reynolds, Harmony R; Hochman, Judith S; Fishman, Glenn I; Berger, Jeffrey S
PMID: 33587646
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 4786532

Characterization of vortex flow in a mouse model of ventricular dyssynchrony by plane-wave ultrasound using hexplex processing

Shekhar, Akshay; Aristizabal, Orlando; Fishman, Glenn I; Phoon, Colin K L; Ketterling, Jeffrey A
The rodent heart is frequently used to study human cardiovascular disease (CVD). Although advanced cardiovascular ultrasound imaging methods are available for human clinical practice, application of these techniques to small animals remains limited due to the temporal and spatial-resolution demands. Here, an ultrasound vector-flow workflow is demonstrated that enables visualization and quantification of the complex hemodynamics within the mouse heart. Wild type (WT) and fibroblast growth factor homologous factor 2 (FHF2)-deficient mice (Fhf2KO/Y), which present with hyperthermia-induced ECG abnormalities highly reminiscent of Brugada syndrome, were used as a mouse model of human CVD. An 18-MHz linear array was used to acquire high-speed (30 kHz), plane-wave data of the left ventricle (LV) while increasing core body temperature up to 41.5°C. Hexplex (i.e., six output) processing of the raw data sets produced the output of vector-flow estimates (magnitude and phase); B-mode and color-Doppler images; Doppler spectrograms; and local time histories of vorticity and pericardium motion. Fhf2WT/Y mice had repeatable beat-to-beat cardiac function, including vortex formation during diastole, at all temperatures. In contrast, Fhf2KO/Y mice displayed dyssynchronous contractile motion that disrupted normal inflow vortex formation and impaired LV filling as temperature rose. The hexplex processing approach demonstrates the ability to visualize and quantify the interplay between hemodynamic and mechanical function in a mouse model of human CVD.
PMID: 32763851
ISSN: 1525-8955
CID: 4555602

A Pilot Open-label Study of Aldose Reductase Inhibition with AT-001 (caficrestat) in Patients Hospitalized for COVID-19 Infection: Results from a Registry-based Matched-control Analysis [Meeting Abstract]

Gaztanaga, Juan; Ramasamy, Ravichandran; Schmidt, Ann Marie; Fishman, Glenn; Shendelman, Shoshana; Thangavelu, Karthinathan; Perfetti, Riccardo; Katz, Stuart D.
ISI:000746754900022
ISSN: 0002-8703
CID: 5208602

Myocardial Injury in Adults Hospitalized with COVID-19 [Letter]

Smilowitz, Nathaniel R; Jethani, Neil; Chen, Ji; Aphinyanaphongs, Yindalon; Zhang, Ruina; Dogra, Siddhant; Alviar, Carlos L; Keller, Norma Mary; Razzouk, Louai; Quinones-Camacho, Adriana; Jung, Albert S; Fishman, Glenn I; Hochman, Judith S; Berger, Jeffrey S
PMID: 33151762
ISSN: 1524-4539
CID: 4664312