Background: Microcystins are an emergent public health problem. These toxins are secondary metabolites of harmful cyanobacterial blooms, with blooms becoming more prevalent with eutrophication of water. Exposure to microcystins can result in sickness, liver damage, and even death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCystic fibrosis related diabetes (CFRD), the main co-morbidity in cystic fibrosis (CF), is associated with higher rates of lung function decline. We hypothesize that airway epithelial barrier function is impaired in CF and is further exacerbated under hyperglycemia, worsening pulmonary outcomes. Using 16HBE cells, we studied the effects of hyperglycemia in airway epithelial barrier function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDysregulated neutrophil recruitment drives many pulmonary diseases, but most preclinical screening methods are unsuited to evaluate pulmonary neutrophilia, limiting progress towards therapeutics. Namely, high throughput therapeutic screening systems typically exclude critical neutrophilic pathophysiology, including blood-to-lung recruitment, dysfunctional activation, and resulting impacts on the air-blood barrier. To meet the conflicting demands of physiological complexity and high throughput, we developed an assay of 96-well Leukocyte recruitment in an Air-Blood Barrier Array (L-ABBA-96) that enables -like neutrophil recruitment compatible with downstream phenotyping by automated flow cytometry.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Asthma exacerbations are highly prevalent in children, but only a few studies have examined the biologic mechanisms underlying exacerbations in this population.
Objective: High-resolution metabolomics analyses were performed to understand the differences in metabolites in children with exacerbating asthma who were hospitalized in a pediatric intensive care unit for status asthmaticus. We hypothesized that compared with a similar population of stable outpatients with asthma, children with exacerbating asthma would have differing metabolite abundance patterns with distinct clustering profiles.
Myeloperoxidase (MPO) is released by neutrophils in inflamed tissues. MPO oxidizes chloride, bromide, and thiocyanate to produce hypochlorous acid (HOCl), hypobromous acid (HOBr), and hypothiocyanous acid (HOSCN), respectively. These oxidants are toxic to pathogens, but may also react with host cells to elicit biological activity and potential toxicity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe obesity pandemic currently affects more than 70 million Americans and more than 650 million individuals worldwide. In addition to increasing susceptibility to pathogenic infections (eg, SARS-CoV-2), obesity promotes the development of many cancer subtypes and increases mortality rates in most cases. We and others have demonstrated that, in the context of B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL), adipocytes promote multidrug chemoresistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChildren with life-threatening asthma exacerbations who are admitted to a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) are a heterogeneous group with poorly studied inflammatory features. We hypothesized that distinct clusters of children with asthma in a PICU would be identified based on differences in plasma cytokine levels and that these clusters would have differing underlying inflammation and asthma outcomes within 1 year. Plasma cytokines and differential gene expression were measured in neutrophils isolated from children admitted to a PICU for asthma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The asthma of some children remains poorly controlled, with recurrent exacerbations despite treatment with inhaled corticosteroids. Aside from prior exacerbations, there are currently no reliable predictors of exacerbation-prone asthma in these children and only a limited understanding of the potential underlying mechanisms.
Objective: We sought to quantify small molecules in the plasma of children with exacerbation-prone asthma through mass spectrometry-based metabolomics.
Loss of function of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) causes cystic fibrosis (CF). In the lungs, this manifests as immune cell infiltration and bacterial infections, leading to tissue destruction. Previous work has determined that acute bacterial sphingomyelinase (SMase) decreases CFTR function in bronchial epithelial cells from individuals without CF (nHBEs) and with CF (cfHBEs, homozygous ΔF508-CFTR mutation).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is an anion channel whose dysfunction causes cystic fibrosis (CF). The loss of CFTR function in pulmonary epithelial cells causes surface dehydration, mucus build-up, inflammation, and bacterial infections that lead to lung failure. Little has been done to evaluate the effects of lipid perturbation on CFTR activity, despite CFTR residing in the plasma membrane.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAltered cholesterol homeostasis in cystic fibrosis patients has been reported, although controversy remains. As a major membrane lipid component, cholesterol modulates the function of multiple ion channels by complicated mechanisms. However, whether cholesterol directly modulates cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) channel function remains unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIon channels play crucial roles in cell physiology, and are a major class of targets for clinically relevant pharmaceuticals. Because they carry ionic current, the function and pharmacology of ion channels can be studied using electrophysiological approaches that range in resolution from the single molecule to many millions of molecules. This chapter describes electrophysiological approaches for the study of one representative ion channel that is defective in a genetic disease, and that is the target of so-called highly effective modulator therapies now used in the clinic: the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCystic Fibrosis (CF) is the most common life-shortening genetic disease among Caucasians, resulting from mutations in the gene encoding the Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane conductance Regulator (CFTR). While work to understand this protein has resulted in new treatment strategies, it is important to emphasize that CFTR exists within a complex lipid bilayer - a concept largely overlooked when performing structural and functional studies. In this review we discuss cellular lipid imbalances in CF, mechanisms by which lipids affect membrane protein activity, and the specific impact of detergents and lipids on CFTR function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is a chloride channel central to the development of secretory diarrhea and cystic fibrosis. The oldest CFTR ortholog identified is from dogfish shark, which retains similar structural and functional characteristics to the mammalian protein, thereby highlighting CFTR's critical role in regulating epithelial ion transport in vertebrates. However, the identification of an early CFTR ortholog with altered structure or function would provide critical insight into the evolution of epithelial anion transport.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: An individual with a bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) runs a substantially higher risk of developing aneurysm in the ascending aorta compared to the normal population with tricuspid aortic valves (TAV). Aneurysm formation in patients with BAV and TAV is known to be distinct at the molecular level but the underlying mechanisms are undefined. Here, we investigated the still incompletely described role of microRNAs (miRNAs), important post-transcriptional regulators of gene expression, in such aortic disease of patients with BAV as compared with TAV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmTORC1 hyperactivation drives the multi-organ hamartomatous disease tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). Rapamycin inhibits mTORC1, inducing partial tumor responses; however, the tumors regrow following treatment cessation. We discovered that the oncogenic miRNA, miR-21, is increased in Tsc2-deficient cells and, surprisingly, further increased by rapamycin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSphingomyelinase C (SMase) inhibits CFTR chloride channel activity in multiple cell systems, an effect that could exacerbate disease in CF and COPD patients. The mechanism by which sphingomyelin catalysis inhibits CFTR is not known but evidence suggests that it occurs independently of CFTR's regulatory "R" domain. In this study we utilized the Xenopus oocyte expression system to shed light on how CFTR channel activity is reduced by SMase.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDysregulation of vascular stiffness and cellular metabolism occurs early in pulmonary hypertension (PH). However, the mechanisms by which biophysical properties of the vascular extracellular matrix (ECM) relate to metabolic processes important in PH remain undefined. In this work, we examined cultured pulmonary vascular cells and various types of PH-diseased lung tissue and determined that ECM stiffening resulted in mechanoactivation of the transcriptional coactivators YAP and TAZ (WWTR1).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe molecular origins of fibrosis affecting multiple tissue beds remain incompletely defined. Previously, we delineated the critical role of the control of extracellular matrix (ECM) stiffening by the mechanosensitive microRNA-130/301 family, as activated by the YAP/TAZ co-transcription factors, in promoting pulmonary hypertension (PH). We hypothesized that similar mechanisms may dictate fibrosis in other tissue beds beyond the pulmonary vasculature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPulmonary hypertension (PH) is a deadly vascular disease with enigmatic molecular origins. We found that vascular extracellular matrix (ECM) remodeling and stiffening are early and pervasive processes that promote PH. In multiple pulmonary vascular cell types, such ECM stiffening induced the microRNA-130/301 family via activation of the co-transcription factors YAP and TAZ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPulmonary hypertension (PH) is a complex disorder, spanning several known vascular cell types. Recently, we identified the microRNA-130/301 (miR-130/301) family as a regulator of multiple pro-proliferative pathways in PH, but the true breadth of influence of the miR-130/301 family across cell types in PH may be even more extensive. Here, we employed targeted network theory to identify additional pathogenic pathways regulated by miR-130/301, including those involving vasomotor tone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF