7A-L. Knockdown of ERα in human myotubes from healthy and obese insulinresistant women minimally affects basal O2 consumption and ATP production rate.

Estrogen receptor-α in female skeletal muscle is not required for regulation of muscle insulin sensitivity and mitochondrial regulation

Dec. 31, 2019

Estrogen receptor-α (ERα) is a nuclear receptor family member thought to substantially contribute to the metabolic regulation of skeletal muscle. However, previous mouse models utilized to assess the necessity of ERα signaling in skeletal muscle are confounded by altered developmental programming and/or influenced by secondary effects, making it difficult to...

Srsf9 is a direct target of miR-1 and miR-206

miR-1/206 downregulates splicing factor Srsf9 to promote C2C12 differentiation

Dec. 30, 2019

Background Myogenesis is driven by specific changes in the transcriptome that occur during the different stages of muscle differentiation. In addition to controlled transcriptional transitions, several other post-transcriptional mechanisms direct muscle differentiation. Both alternative splicing and miRNA activity regulate gene expression and production of specialized protein isoforms. Importantly, disruption of...

Differences in miR29 and Pro-fibrotic Gene Expression in Mouse and Human Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Nov. 22, 2019

Background: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is characterized by myocyte hypertrophy and fibrosis. Studies in 2 mouse models (R92W-TnT/R403Q-MyHC) at early HCM stage revealed upregulation of endothelin (ET1) signaling in both mutants, but TGFβ signaling only in TnT mutants. Dysregulation of miR29 expression has been implicated in cardiac fibrosis. But it is...

Structure of the 8‐arm, 20 000 g mol−1 PEG‐Ant used in this study.

PEG–Anthracene Hydrogels as an On‐Demand Stiffening Matrix To Study Mechanobiology

Oct. 31, 2019

There is a growing interest in materials that can dynamically change their properties in the presence of cells to study mechanobiology. Herein, we exploit the 365 nm light mediated [4+4] photodimerization of anthracene groups to develop cytocompatible PEG‐based hydrogels with tailorable initial moduli that can be further stiffened. A hydrogel formulation...

Thiol-ene PEG hydrogels for adult mouse cardiac myocytes 3D encapsulation and culture

Three-dimensional encapsulation of adult mouse cardiomyocytes in hydrogels with tunable stiffness

Oct. 29, 2019

Numerous diseases, including those of the heart, are characterized by increased stiffness due to excessive deposition of extracellular matrix proteins. Cardiomyocytes continuously adapt their morphology and function to the mechanical changes of their microenvironment. Because traditional cell culture is conducted on substrates that are many orders of magnitude stiffer than...

Transcatheter aortic valve replacements alter circulating serum factors to mediate myofibroblast deactivation

Oct. 29, 2019

The transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) procedure has emerged as a minimally invasive treatment for patients with aortic valve stenosis (AVS). However, alterations in serum factor composition and biological activity after TAVR remain unknown. Here, we quantified the systemic inflammatory effects of the TAVR procedure and hypothesized that alterations in...

Structural location of HCM mutations

Myosin motor domains carrying mutations implicated in early or late onset hypertrophic cardiomyopathy have similar properties.

Oct. 29, 2019

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a common genetic disorder characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy and cardiac hyper-contractility. Mutations in the β cardiac myosin heavy chain gene (β-MyHC) are a major cause of HCM, but the specific mechanistic changes to myosin function that lead to this disease remain incompletely understood. Predicting the...

 Sarcomeric structure and t-tubules are preserved in adult mouse cardiomyocytes cultured in 3D PEG hydrogels over time

Three-dimensional encapsulation of adult mouse cardiomyocytes in hydrogels with tunable stiffness

Oct. 22, 2019

Numerous diseases, including those of the heart, are characterized by increased stiffness due to excessive deposition of extracellular matrix proteins. Cardiomyocytes continuously adapt their morphology and function to the mechanical changes of their microenvironment. Because traditional cell culture is conducted on substrates that are many orders of magnitude stiffer than...

Yellow Fish

Copying tricks from the animal kingdom

Oct. 8, 2019

What can we learn from prairie voles, Burmese pythons, shortfin mollies, and naked mole rats? Researchers from across the world are studying unusual laboratory animals with astonishing traits in their quest to answer important questions in the fields of biomedicine and neuroscience.

Rat cardiac fibroblasts—which happen to be in the shape of a heart—grown on hydrogels mimicking cardiac tissue and treated with human serum.

Mimicking the heart's microenvironment

Sept. 11, 2019

CU Boulder engineers and faculty from the Consortium for Fibrosis Research & Translation (CFReT) at the CU Anschutz Medical Campus have teamed up to develop biomaterial-based “mimics” of heart tissues to measure patients’ responses to an aortic valve replacement procedure, offering new insight into the ways that cardiac tissue re-shapes...

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