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3312 CardioPulse doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehw477 The William Harvey lecture at ESC Congress 2016 Prof Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner outlines the key role of interdisciplinary research in cardiovascular science using the example of STAT3 as she delivers the William Harvey Lecture on Basic Science at ESC 2016 in Rome STAT3 is a protein that plays a pivotal role in cardiac physiology and pathophysiology. Connected to different pathways and networks, it affects almost every biological mechanism in the heart. ‘If you move STAT3 it basically moves the whole network’, explains Professor Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner. ‘It is not the only gene in the universe of cell biology that has such a key function, but it seems quite essential for many different aspects of the heart including stress response, survival, growth, inflammation, metabolism, matrix composition and fibrosis, angiogenesis, contractile function, cell-to-cell communication, regeneration, and many more’. Through the William Harvey Lecture on Basic Science at ESC 2016 in Rome entitled ‘Renaissance of signalling modules: The role of STAT3 in the cardiac pathophysiology’, she will offer an introduction on signalling modules from today’s perspective; summarize the nature of STAT3, its regulation and biological roles; and the role of STAT3 in the heart with regard to development and aging. Prof Hilfiker-Kleiner, who is Dean of Research of the Hannover Medical School (MHH) and leads the Department of Molecular Cardiology within the Department of Cardiology and Angiology of the MHH, will further explain contrary roles of STAT3 in tumour cells and in the heart with regard to cardio-toxic treatments and Cardio-Oncology; and provide insights into the role of STAT3 in pathophysiologic conditions. And significantly, she will focus on an area she has gained global renown for by summarizing the central role of STAT3 for protection of the maternal heart and its relation to Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM). Prof Hilfiker-Kleiner, who has long-standing experience in analysing signalling pathways in cardiac cells relevant for cardiac physiological and pathophysiological, explained: ‘What makes it so interesting to work with this protein is that there are thousands of different aspects you can study—everything from development to ageing, physiological stress factors, having ischaemia, infarction, cardiotoxicity, and also neuro-hormones’. ‘With almost every single thing that happens to the heart, STAT3 plays a role.’ She felt it was a great honour to be chosen to deliver the William Harvey lecture at ESC 2016 and see the cardiology community appreciate and acknowledge her work in cardiovascular science. ‘It means a lot to me as a basic scientist (biologist) to be chosen to present my work at the world’s biggest medical congress on cardiovascular disease’, she added. Acknowledging the role of her former mentor Prof Helmut Drexler from Hannover and Prof Karen Sliwa—her close collaborator in her work with PPCM, she also paid tribute to the contribution of English physician William Harvey (1578–1657), who is acknowledged as the first to describe the systemic circulation and properties of blood being pumped to the brain and body by the heart. ‘William Harvey was a genius’, said Prof Hilfiker-Kleiner. ‘He was a great observer and a critical researcher, who founded the modern view of the cardiovascular system by stating that the blood is circulating through the veins.’ ‘But he was much more; he was a talented physician as well as a great biologist and physiologist.’ Inspired by Harvey, she sees an affinity to the 16th century physician and his work. She continued: ‘Maybe there are some parallels in the way he conducted his research; always carefully planning experiments, using positive and negative controls, believing his eyes and data when he was sure he had carefully planned and conducted his experiments, no matter if his findings were contradicting common views’. There are, she suggests, further parallels in that he was also a developmental biologist making an important contribution in the field of embryology and epigenetics. As a developmental biologist and geneticist, who later switched to medical research, Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner sees her work as continuing the tradition he began almost four centuries ago. Today, a major focus of her research lies in understanding pathophysiology’s of the cardiovascular system associated with pregnancy, with a second focus on myocardial ischemia and Cardio-Oncology. During her early career at the University of Zurich’s Department of Classic and Molecular Genetics and Developmental Biology, and at the Department of Biology, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, her main discovery was the novel way the maternal environment determines the sex of a developing house fly embryo and together with her husband Andreas Hilfiker, showed for the first time the important role of histone modification for transcriptional control in higher eukaryotes. 3313 CardioPulse It was on joining the lab of Prof Drexler at the MHH that she started to specialize in signalling pathways important for the development of cardiac pathophysiology’s, with a special focus on STAT3 signalling. An observation made was the clear gender difference with females being more tolerant to low STAT3 levels than males, except in pregnancy and STAT3 turned out to be a critical molecule for protection of the maternal heart against the Peripartum-related stress. Her group discovered that at least one of the major pathophysiological mechanisms of PPCM involved unbalanced oxidative stress that promotes proteolytic cleavage of the nursing hormone prolactin in a strongly anti-angiogenic 16 kDa form that impairs cardiac angiogenesis and leads to heart failure. Blocking prolactin with the Dopamine 2D receptor agonist bromocriptine successfully prevented PPCM in mice and in a high risk PPCM collective with subsequent pregnancies. Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner explained that her collaboration with Karen Sliwa over PPCM began with a chance meeting and a casual conversation in an airport lounge. Karen Sliwa was seeing in patients what Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner was observing in mice models. ‘We were convinced that the mice were showing more or less the same PPCM phenotype that she saw in patients so we started a bench-to-bedside approach and soon figured out that bromocriptine is playing a major role in this setting.’ First publishing their findings in 2007, clinical trials with Karen Sliwa followed. A Fellow of the ESC and past chair of the ESC Working Group on Myocardial Function, Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner is a founding member of the study group on PPCM and of the translational research group of the Heart Failure Association of the ESC, a core PI of the REBIRTH Excellence Cluster at the MHH and the lead scientist and organiser of the multicentre clinical trial on the efficacy of bromocriptine in PPCM, funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research. Mark Nicholls [email protected] doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehw478 An airport meeting that led to bromocriptine use in peripartum cardiomyopathy Prof Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner speaks about a chance meeting that helped tackle peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM), with Mark Nicholls It was a chance meeting, yet one which helped unlock the mysteries of a cardiac condition affecting thousands of pregnant women. The casual conversation in an airport lounge took place between South African cardiologist Karen Sliwa and Andres Hilfiker, a biologist now specialising in tissue engineering, who relayed it to his wife Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner. That led to a close collaboration between the two women, which in turn significantly advanced the knowledge and awareness of PPCM and as a consequence helped save many lives. Today, Professor Denise HilfikerKleiner—now Dean of Research of the Hannover Medical School (MHH) and who leads the Department of Molecular Cardiology within the Department of Cardiology and Angiology of the MHH—is widely-recognized for her work on PPCM. From initial work studying transcription control of insects, she joined the lab of Professor Helmut Drexler at the MHH in 1996 where she specialized in signalling pathways important for the development of cardiac pathophysiologies, with a special focus on STAT3 signalling. A clear gender difference with females being more tolerant to low-STAT3 levels than males except in pregnancy as observed, with STAT3 turning out to be a critical molecule for protection of the maternal heart against the peripartum-related stress. Together with Prof Drexler, she started to elucidate the pathophysiological mechanism of postpartum cardiomyopathy using mice