Dr. Hsieh, Patrick Ching-Ho 's publons link picture

Dr. Hsieh, Patrick Ching-Ho

Distinguished Research Fellow
Division Chief
  • 02-27899170 (Lab) (Room No: N417)
  • 02-27858594 (Fax)

Specialty:
1. Cardiac repair and regeneration
2. Microbiota and metabolism
3. Human induced pluripotent stem cells
4. Targeted delivery of nanomedicin

Education and Positions:

M.D. Kaohsiung Medical College

Ph.D. University of Washington, Seattle (Bioengineering)

PDF Harvard Medical School/M.I.T.

 

Joint Professor, National Taiwan University College of Medicine and Kaohsiung Medical University

Affiliate Professor, University of Washington, Seattle (Bioengineering)

Founder and President, Taiwan Circulation Research Society (TCRS)

Committee Member, Healthy Taiwan Promotion Committee, Presidential Office of Taiwan


  • Personal CV

  • Highlight Detail
    ...

    Gut butyrate-producers confer post-infarction cardiac protection

    Dr. Hsieh, Patrick Ching-Ho
    Nature Communications, Nov 09, 2023

    The gut microbiome and its metabolites are increasingly implicated in several cardiovascular diseases, but their role in human myocardial infarction (MI) injury responses have yet to be established. To address this, we examined stool samples from 77 ST-elevation MI (STEMI) patients using 16 S V3-V4 next-generation sequencing, metagenomics and machine learning. Our analysis identified an enriched population of butyrate-producing bacteria. These findings were then validated using a controlled ischemia/reperfusion model using eight nonhuman primates. To elucidate mechanisms, we inoculated gnotobiotic mice with these bacteria and found that they can produce beta-hydroxybutyrate, supporting cardiac function post-MI. This was further confirmed using HMGCS2-deficient mice which lack endogenous ketogenesis and have poor outcomes after MI. Inoculation increased plasma ketone levels and provided significant improvements in cardiac function post-MI. Together, this demonstrates a previously unknown role of gut butyrate-producers in the post-MI response.