Edward A Fisher

Edward A Fisher

New York University

H-index: 119

North America-United States

Professor Information

University

New York University

Position

Professor of Medicine

Citations(all)

65524

Citations(since 2020)

27940

Cited By

48965

hIndex(all)

119

hIndex(since 2020)

68

i10Index(all)

335

i10Index(since 2020)

239

Email

University Profile Page

New York University

Research & Interests List

atherosclerosis and lipoprotein metabolism

Top articles of Edward A Fisher

Clonal expansion in cardiovascular pathology

Clonal expansion refers to the proliferation and selection of advantageous “clones” that are better suited for survival in a Darwinian manner. In recent years, we have greatly enhanced our understanding of cell clonality in the cardiovascular context. However, our knowledge of the underlying mechanisms behind this clonal selection is still severely limited. There is a transpiring pattern of clonal expansion of smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells—and, in some cases, macrophages—in numerous cardiovascular diseases irrespective of their differing microenvironments. These findings indirectly suggest the possible existence of stem-like vascular cells which are primed to respond during disease. Subsequent clones may undergo further phenotypic changes to adopt either protective or detrimental roles. By investigating these clone-forming vascular cells, we may be able to harness this inherent clonal nature for …

Authors

Alexander Lin,Mairi Brittan,Andrew H Baker,Stefanie Dimmeler,Edward A Fisher,Judith C Sluimer,Ashish Misra

Published Date

2024/1/1

Suggested searches

Monocytes comprise two major subsets, Ly6C hi classical monocytes and Ly6C lo nonclassical monocytes. Notch2 signaling in Ly6C hi monocytes triggers transition to Ly6C lo monocytes, which require Nr4a1, Bcl6, Irf2, and Cebpb. By comparison, less is known...

Authors

Sunkyung Kim,Jing Chen,Feiya Ou,Tian-Tian Liu,Suin Jo,William E Gillanders,Kenneth M Murphy,Dengfeng Guan,Shuyan Sun,Lingyun Song,Pengpeng Zhao,Yonggang Nie,Xin Huang,Wenliang Zhou,Li Yan,Yinghu Lei,Fuwen Wei,Daiki Shinozaki,Erina Takayama,Kohki Yoshimoto,Carolyn Beans,Stefania Morales-Herrera,Joris Jourquin,Frederic Coppé,Lorena Lopez-Galvis,Tom De Smet,Alaeddine Safi,Maria Njo,Cara A Griffiths,John D Sidda,James SO Mccullagh,Xiaochao Xue,Benjamin G Davis,Johan Van der Eycken,Matthew J Paul,Tom Beeckman,Takuya Noguchi,Yuto Sekiguchi,Tatsuya Shimada,Wakana Suzuki,Takumi Yokosawa,Tamaki Itoh,Mayuka Yamada,Midori Suzuki,Reon Kurokawa,Atsushi Matsuzawa,Ji-Young Kim,Connor McGlothin,Minjeong Cha,Zechariah J Pfaffenberger,Emine Sumeyra Turali Emre,Wonjin Choi,Sanghoon Kim,Nicholas A Kotov,Zhuan Chen,Faliang An,Yayun Zhang,Zhiyan Liang,Mingyang Xing,Hong Ao,Jiaoyang Ruan,María Martinón-Torres,Mario Krapp,Diederik Liebrand,Mark J Dekkers,Thibaut Caley,Tara N Jonell,Zongmin Zhu,Chunju Huang,Xinxia Li,Ziyun Zhang,Qiang Sun,Pingguo Yang,Jiali Jiang,Xinzhou Li,Xiaoxun Xie,Yougui Song,Xiaoke Qiang,Zhisheng An,Zu-Lin Chen,Pradeep K Singh,Marissa Calvano,Sidney Strickland,Jacob Freeman,Erick Robinson,Darcy Bird,Robert J Hard,John M Anderies,Giulia Giubertoni,Liru Feng,Kevin Klein,Guido Giannetti,Luco Rutten,Yeji Choi,Anouk van der Net,Gerard Castro-Linares,Federico Caporaletti,Dimitra Micha,Johannes Hunger,Antoine Deblais

Journal

Perspective

Published Date

2024/3/4

The IRG1–itaconate axis protects from cholesterol-induced inflammation and atherosclerosis

Atherosclerosis is fueled by a failure to resolve lipid-driven inflammation within the vasculature that drives plaque formation. Therapeutic approaches to reverse atherosclerotic inflammation are needed to address the rising global burden of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Recently, metabolites have gained attention for their immunomodulatory properties, including itaconate, which is generated from the tricarboxylic acid-intermediate cis-aconitate by the enzyme Immune Responsive Gene 1 (IRG1/ACOD1). Here, we tested the therapeutic potential of the IRG1–itaconate axis for human atherosclerosis. Using single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA-seq), we found that IRG1 is up-regulated in human coronary atherosclerotic lesions compared to patient-matched healthy vasculature, and in mouse models of atherosclerosis, where it is primarily expressed by plaque monocytes, macrophages, and neutrophils. Global or …

Authors

Yannick Cyr,Fazli K Bozal,José Gabriel Barcia Durán,Alexandra AC Newman,Letizia Amadori,Panagiotis Smyrnis,Morgane Gourvest,Dayasagar Das,Michael Gildea,Ravneet Kaur,Tracy Zhang,Kristin M Wang,Richard Von Itter,P Martin Schlegel,Samantha D Dupuis,Bernard F Sanchez,Ann Marie Schmidt,Edward A Fisher,Coen van Solingen,Chiara Giannarelli,Kathryn J Moore

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Published Date

2024/4/9

β-carotene accelerates the resolution of atherosclerosis in mice

This study presents an important conceptual advance of how vitamin A and its derivatives contribute to atherosclerosis. There is solid evidence for the contributions of specialized populations of T cells in atherosclerosis resolution, including use of multiple in vivo models to validate the functional effects. A limitation is the insufficient analysis of lesions, but the manuscript has been improved from the original preprint version and the overarching conclusions have been refined.

Authors

Ivan Pinos,Johana Coronel,Asma'a Albakri,Amparo Blanco,Patrick McQueen,Donald Molina,JaeYoung Sim,Edward A Fisher,Jaume Amengual

Journal

Elife

Published Date

2024/2/6

ANGPTL3 deficiency impairs lipoprotein production and produces adaptive changes in hepatic lipid metabolism

Angiopoietin-like protein 3 (ANGPTL3) is a hepatically secreted protein and therapeutic target for reducing plasma triglyceride-rich lipoproteins and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol. Although ANGPTL3 modulates the metabolism of circulating lipoproteins, its role in triglyceride-rich lipoprotein assembly and secretion remains unknown. CRISPR-associated protein 9 (CRISPR/Cas9) was used to target ANGPTL3 in HepG2 cells (ANGPTL3−/−) whereupon we observed ∼50% reduction of apolipoprotein B100 (ApoB100) secretion, accompanied by an increase in ApoB100 early presecretory degradation via a predominantly lysosomal mechanism. Despite defective particle secretion in ANGPTL3−/− cells, targeted lipidomic analysis did not reveal neutral lipid accumulation in ANGPTL3−/− cells; rather ANGPTL3−/− cells demonstrated decreased secretion of newly synthesized triglycerides and increased fatty …

Authors

Kendall H Burks,Yan Xie,Michael Gildea,In-Hyuk Jung,Sandip Mukherjee,Paul Lee,Upasana Pudupakkam,Ryan Wagoner,Ved Patel,Katherine Santana,Arturo Alisio,Ira J Goldberg,Brian N Finck,Edward A Fisher,Nicholas O Davidson,Nathan O Stitziel

Journal

Journal of Lipid Research

Published Date

2024/2/1

The Effect of Diet Composition on the Post-operative Outcomes of Roux-en-Y Gastric Bypass in Mice

PurposeRoux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) leads to the improvement of many obesity-associated conditions. The degree to which post-operative macronutrient composition contributes to metabolic improvement after RYGB is understudied.MethodsA mouse model of RYGB was used to examine the effects of diet on the post-operative outcomes of RYGB. Obese mice underwent either Sham or RYGB surgery and were administered either chow or HFD and then monitored for an additional 8 weeks.ResultsAfter RYGB, reductions to body weight, fat mass, and lean mass were similar regardless of diet. RYGB and HFD were independently detrimental to bone mineral density and plasma vitamin D levels. Independent of surgery, HFD accelerated hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell proliferation and differentiation and exhibited greater myeloid lineage commitment. Independent of diet, systemic iron deficiency was …

Authors

Matthew Stevenson,Ankita Srivastava,Maria Nacher,Christopher Hall,Thomas Palaia,Jenny Lee,Chaohui Lisa Zhao,Raymond Lau,Mohamed AE Ali,Christopher Y Park,Florencia Schlamp,Sean P Heffron,Edward A Fisher,Collin Brathwaite,Louis Ragolia

Journal

Obesity surgery

Published Date

2024/1/8

Single cell mapping identifies expansion of Cytotoxic CD4 T cells in the atherosclerotic plaque of subjects with Type 2 Diabetes

Patients with Type 2 diabetes (T2D) are at greater risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) and fail to fully respond to standard lipid lowering drugs. While the role of macrophages in T2D plaque pathology has been investigated, no studies have systematically investigated the heterogeneity of CD4 T cells in human plaques and how they respond to cholesterol reduction. To identify the specific T cell alterations in plaques from patients with T2D, we performed scRNAseq of human carotid plaques from 22 subjects (54.5% T2D) were being treated with cholesterol lowering drugs (average LDL cholesterol of 1.2 mmol/L) undergoing carotid endarterectomy. Data were processed and integrated using Seurat and Slingshot algorithms. We identified a total of 24 immune cell clusters by unbiased clustering of CD45+ cells, including CD4 T cells that presented similar frequencies between T2D (~ 11%) and non …

Authors

Dayasagar Das,Michael Gildea,Natalia Eberhardt,Ravneet Kaur,Dawn Fernandez,Letizia Amadori,Swathy Sajja,Roza Shamailova,Ira J Goldberg,Thomas Maldonado,Caron B Rockman,Jeffrey Berger,Edward A Fisher,Chiara Giannarelli

Journal

The Journal of Immunology

Published Date

2023/5/1

Relationship Between Diabetes, Glucose Control, And Vascular Health: Findings From The American Heart Association Cardiometabolic Health Strategically Focused Research Network

Background: Diabetes mellitus (DM) increases the risk of vascular endothelial damage and subsequent cardiovascular (CV) events. This study was designed to investigate mechanisms of endothelial cell (EC) damage in DM. Methods: CHORD (CHOlesterol lowering and Residual Risk in Diabetes) is an ongoing study evaluating mechanisms of CV disease (CVD) risk in patients with 1) LDL-C >100 mg/dL, 2) no known CVD and 3) with or without DM. In a subset of participants, EC harvesting was performed at baseline by inserting a J-wire through an angiocatheter into the brachial vein. ECs were isolated with magnetic beads directed against CD146 and transcript expression assessed using next generation RNA sequencing. Results: We performed EC harvesting on participants with DM (n=11, mean age 47 ± 15 years, 45% female, mean HbA1c 6.4%) and controls (n=11, mean age 50 ± 15 years, 56% female …

Authors

Michael Garshick,Tessa A Barrett,Manila Jindal,Jonathan D Newman,Maja Fadzan,Cindy Bredefeld,Natalie Levy,Adedoyin Akinlonu,Adriana Heguy,Kamelia Drenkova,Florencia Schlamp,Chiara Giannarelli,Edward A Fisher,Ira J Goldberg,Jeffrey Berger

Journal

Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology

Published Date

2023/5

Professor FAQs

What is Edward A Fisher's h-index at New York University?

The h-index of Edward A Fisher has been 68 since 2020 and 119 in total.

What are Edward A Fisher's research interests?

The research interests of Edward A Fisher are: atherosclerosis and lipoprotein metabolism

What is Edward A Fisher's total number of citations?

Edward A Fisher has 65,524 citations in total.

academic-engine

Useful Links