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Dive into the research topics where Allison J. Janocha is active.

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Featured researches published by Allison J. Janocha.


The FASEB Journal | 2004

Increased arginase II and decreased NO synthesis in endothelial cells of patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension

Weiling Xu; F. Takao Kaneko; Shuo Zheng; Suzy Comhair; Allison J. Janocha; Tannishia Goggans; Frederik B. J. M. Thunnissen; Carol Farver; Stanley L. Hazen; Constance Jennings; Raed A. Dweik; Alejandro C. Arroliga; Serpil C. Erzurum

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), a fatal disease of unknown etiology characterized by impaired regulation of pulmonary hemodynamics and vascular growth, is associated with low levels of pulmonary nitric oxide (NO). Based upon its critical role in mediating vasodilation and cell growth, decrease of NO has been implicated in the pathogenesis of PAH. We evaluated mechanisms for low NO and pulmonary hypertension, including NO synthases (NOS) and factors regulating NOS activity, i.e. the substrate arginine, arginase expression and activity, and endogenous inhibitors of NOS in patients with PAH and healthy controls. PAH lungs had normal NOS I–III expression, but substrate arginine levels were inversely related to pulmonary artery pressures. Activity of arginase, an enzyme that regulates NO biosynthesis through effects on arginine, was higher in PAH serum than in controls, with high‐level arginase expression localized by immunostaining to pulmonary endothelial cells. Further, pulmonary artery endothelial cells derived from PAH lung had higher arginase II expression and produced lower NO than control cells in vitro. Thus, substrate availability affects NOS activity and vasodilation, implicating arginase II and alterations in arginine metabolic pathways in the pathophysiology of PAH.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Higher blood flow and circulating NO products offset high-altitude hypoxia among Tibetans

Serpil C. Erzurum; S. Ghosh; Allison J. Janocha; W. Xu; S. Bauer; Nathan S. Bryan; Jesús Tejero; Craig Hemann; Russ Hille; Dennis J. Stuehr; Martin Feelisch; Cynthia M. Beall

The low barometric pressure at high altitude causes lower arterial oxygen content among Tibetan highlanders, who maintain normal levels of oxygen use as indicated by basal and maximal oxygen consumption levels that are consistent with sea level predictions. This study tested the hypothesis that Tibetans resident at 4,200 m offset physiological hypoxia and achieve normal oxygen delivery by means of higher blood flow enabled by higher levels of bioactive forms of NO, the main endothelial factor regulating blood flow and vascular resistance. The natural experimental study design compared Tibetans at 4,200 m and U.S. residents at 206 m. Eighty-eight Tibetan and 50 U.S. resident volunteers (18–56 years of age, healthy, nonsmoking, nonhypertensive, not pregnant, with normal pulmonary function) participated. Forearm blood flow, an indicator of systemic blood flow, was measured noninvasively by using plethysmography at rest, after breathing supplemental oxygen, and after exercise. The Tibetans had more than double the forearm blood flow of low-altitude residents, resulting in greater than sea level oxygen delivery to tissues. In comparison to sea level controls, Tibetans had >10-fold-higher circulating concentrations of bioactive NO products, including plasma and red blood cell nitrate and nitroso proteins and plasma nitrite, but lower concentrations of iron nitrosyl complexes (HbFeIINO) in red blood cells. This suggests that NO production is increased and that metabolic pathways controlling formation of NO products are regulated differently among Tibetans. These findings shift attention from the traditional focus on pulmonary and hematological systems to vascular factors contributing to adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia.


American Journal of Pathology | 2005

Superoxide dismutase inactivation in pathophysiology of asthmatic airway remodeling and reactivity

Suzy Comhair; Weiling Xu; Sudakshina Ghosh; Frederik B. J. M. Thunnissen; Alexandru Almasan; William J. Calhoun; Allison J. Janocha; Lemin Zheng; Stanley L. Hazen; Serpil C. Erzurum

Airway hyperresponsiveness and remodeling are defining features of asthma. We hypothesized that impaired superoxide dismutase (SOD) antioxidant defense is a primary event in the pathophysiology of hyperresponsiveness and remodeling that induces apoptosis and shedding of airway epithelial cells. Mechanisms leading to apoptosis were studied in vivo and in vitro. Asthmatic lungs had increased apoptotic epithelial cells compared to controls as determined by terminal dUTP nick-end labeling-positive cells. Apoptosis was confirmed by the finding that caspase-9 and -3 and poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase were cleaved. On the basis that SOD inactivation triggers cell death and low SOD levels occur in asthma, we tested whether SOD inactivation plays a role in airway epithelial cell death. SOD inhibition increased cell death and cleavage/activation of caspases in bronchial epithelial cells in vitro. Furthermore, oxidation and nitration of MnSOD were identified in the asthmatic airway, correlating with physiological parameters of asthma severity. These findings link oxidative and nitrative stress to loss of SOD activity and downstream events that typify asthma, including apoptosis and shedding of the airway epithelium and hyperresponsiveness.


American Journal of Pathology | 2010

Hypoxia Inducible-Factor1α Regulates the Metabolic Shift of Pulmonary Hypertensive Endothelial Cells

Iwona Fijalkowska; Weiling Xu; Suzy Comhair; Allison J. Janocha; Lori Mavrakis; Balaji Krishnamachary; Lijie Zhen; Thianzi Mao; Amy Richter; Serpil C. Erzurum; Rubin M. Tuder

Severe pulmonary hypertension is irreversible and often fatal. Abnormal proliferation and resistance to apoptosis of endothelial cells (ECs) and hypertrophy of smooth muscle cells in this disease are linked to decreased mitochondria and preferential energy generation by glycolysis. We hypothesized this metabolic shift of pulmonary hypertensive ECs is due to greater hypoxia inducible-factor1alpha (HIF-1alpha) expression caused by low levels of nitric oxide combined with low superoxide dismutase activity. We show that cultured ECs from patients with idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH-ECs) have greater HIF-1alpha expression and transcriptional activity than controls under normoxia or hypoxia, and pulmonary arteries from affected patients have increased expression of HIF-1alpha and its target carbonic anhydrase IX. Decreased expression of manganese superoxide dismutase (MnSOD) in IPAH-ECs paralleled increased HIF-1alpha levels and small interfering (SI) RNA knockdown of MnSOD, but not of the copper-zinc SOD, increased HIF-1 protein expression and hypoxia response element (HRE)-driven luciferase activity in normoxic ECs. MnSOD siRNA also reduced nitric oxide production in supernatants of IPAH-ECs. Conversely, low levels of a nitric oxide donor reduced HIF-1alpha expression in normoxic IPAH-ECs. Finally, mitochondria numbers increased in IPAH-ECs with knockdown of HIF-1alpha. These findings indicate that alterations of nitric oxide and MnSOD contribute to pathological HIF-1alpha expression and account for lower numbers of mitochondria in IPAH-ECs.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

Nitrotyrosine Proteome Survey in Asthma Identifies Oxidative Mechanism of Catalase Inactivation

Sudakshina Ghosh; Allison J. Janocha; Mark Aronica; Shadi Swaidani; Suzy Comhair; Weiling Xu; Lemin Zheng; Suma Kaveti; Michael Kinter; Stanley L. Hazen; Serpil C. Erzurum

Reactive oxygen species and reactive nitrogen species produced by epithelial and inflammatory cells are key mediators of the chronic airway inflammation of asthma. Detection of 3-nitrotyrosine in the asthmatic lung confirms the presence of increased reactive oxygen and nitrogen species, but the lack of identification of modified proteins has hindered an understanding of the potential mechanistic contributions of nitration/oxidation to airway inflammation. In this study, we applied a proteomic approach, using nitrotyrosine as a marker, to evaluate the oxidation of proteins in the allergen-induced murine model of asthma. Over 30 different proteins were targets of nitration following allergen challenge, including the antioxidant enzyme catalase. Oxidative modification and loss of catalase enzyme function were seen in this model. Subsequent investigation of human bronchoalveolar lavage fluid revealed that catalase activity was reduced in asthma by up to 50% relative to healthy controls. Analysis of catalase isolated from asthmatic airway epithelial cells revealed increased amounts of several protein oxidation markers, including chloro- and nitrotyrosine, linking oxidative modification to the reduced activity in vivo. Parallel in vitro studies using reactive chlorinating species revealed that catalase inactivation is accompanied by the oxidation of a specific cysteine (Cys377). Taken together, these studies provide evidence of multiple ongoing and profound oxidative reactions in asthmatic airways, with one early downstream consequence being catalase inactivation. Loss of catalase activity likely amplifies oxidative stress, contributing to the chronic inflammatory state of the asthmatic airway.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2011

Nitric Oxide during Altitude Acclimatization

Allison J. Janocha; Carl D. Koch; Mauro Tiso; Andrea Ponchia; Allan Doctor; Lindsey B. Gibbons; Benjamin Gaston; Cynthia M. Beall; Serpil C. Erzurum

Hypobaric hypoxia occurs during ascent to higher altitude. In this observational study of healthy lowland dwellers, intracellular red-cell forms of nitric oxide, S-nitrosohemoglobin, and iron nitrosyl hemoglobin increased strikingly during ascent to 5050 m.


American Journal of Human Biology | 2011

Elevated pulmonary artery pressure among Amhara highlanders in Ethiopia.

Brian D. Hoit; Nancy D. Dalton; Amha Gebremedhin; Allison J. Janocha; Peter A. Zimmerman; Allison M. Zimmerman; Kingman P. Strohl; Serpil C. Erzurum; Cynthia M. Beall

Pulmonary arterioles respond to hypoxia with constriction that raises vascular resistance and pulmonary artery blood pressure. The response is sustained indefinitely by the chronic hypoxia of high‐altitude residence among highlanders of European and Andean descent, but not Tibetans. The objective of this study was to identify the consequences of lifelong hypoxia exposure for the pulmonary vasculature among Amhara high‐altitude natives from Ethiopia.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

Increased mitochondrial arginine metabolism supports bioenergetics in asthma

Weiling Xu; Sudakshina Ghosh; Suzy Comhair; Kewal Asosingh; Allison J. Janocha; Deloris A. Mavrakis; Carole Bennett; Lourdes L. Gruca; Brian B. Graham; Kimberly Queisser; Christina C. Kao; Samuel H. Wedes; John Petrich; Rubin M. Tuder; Satish C. Kalhan; Serpil C. Erzurum

High levels of arginine metabolizing enzymes, including inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and arginase (ARG), are typical in asthmatic airway epithelium; however, little is known about the metabolic effects of enhanced arginine flux in asthma. Here, we demonstrated that increased metabolism sustains arginine availability in asthmatic airway epithelium with consequences for bioenergetics and inflammation. Expression of iNOS, ARG2, arginine synthetic enzymes, and mitochondrial respiratory complexes III and IV was elevated in asthmatic lung samples compared with healthy controls. ARG2 overexpression in a human bronchial epithelial cell line accelerated oxidative bioenergetic pathways and suppressed hypoxia-inducible factors (HIFs) and phosphorylation of the signal transducer for atopic Th2 inflammation STAT6 (pSTAT6), both of which are implicated in asthma etiology. Arg2-deficient mice had lower mitochondrial membrane potential and greater HIF-2α than WT animals. In an allergen-induced asthma model, mice lacking Arg2 had greater Th2 inflammation than WT mice, as indicated by higher levels of pSTAT6, IL-13, IL-17, eotaxin, and eosinophils and more mucus metaplasia. Bone marrow transplants from Arg2-deficient mice did not affect airway inflammation in recipient mice, supporting resident lung cells as the drivers of elevated Th2 inflammation. These data demonstrate that arginine flux preserves cellular respiration and suppresses pathological signaling events that promote inflammation in asthma.


Blood | 2013

Plasma hepcidin of Ethiopian highlanders with steady-state hypoxia

Erika L. Lundgrin; Allison J. Janocha; Carl Koch; Amha Gebremedhin; Anna Di Rienzo; Gorka Alkorta-Aranburu; Gary M. Brittenham; Serpil C. Erzurum; Cynthia M. Beall

To the editor: Hepcidin impedes iron absorption and is suppressed when erythropoietic iron requirements are increased. Recent studies show that during acute exposure to high-altitude hypoxia, plasma hepcidin concentrations drop when iron demands for erythropoiesis and hemoglobin synthesis are


The Journal of Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery | 2013

Nebulized nitrite protects rat lung grafts from ischemia reperfusion injury.

Toshihiro Okamoto; Xiaoying Tang; Allison J. Janocha; Caral F. Farver; Mark T. Gladwin; Kenneth R. McCurry

OBJECTIVES Nebulization is a potential method for delivering therapeutic agents to lung grafts. Recent evidence suggests that nitrite may mitigate ischemia-reperfusion injury via a nitric oxide-dependent pathway. METHODS Syngeneic orthotopic left lung transplantation was performed in rats after 7 hours of cold ischemia. Sodium nitrite (3 mg) or phosphate-buffered saline (controls) was delivered before procurement via nebulization. RESULTS Nitrite treatment was associated with better oxygenation, lower peak airway pressure, lower wet/dry ratio, reduced myeloperoxidase level and macrophage infiltration, increased cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) levels, and decreased levels of interleukin 6, interleukin 1-β, inducible nitric oxide synthase, and intercellular adhesion molecule-1 at 2 hours after reperfusion. Treatment with 2-(4-carboxypheny)-4,4,5,5-tetramethylimidazoline-1-oxyl-3-oxide, a nitric oxide scavenger, reversed the beneficial effects of nitrite and decreased cGMP concentration in grafts. A dose-response curve of nitrite was performed at the following doses: 0.3 mg (N0.1), 3.0 mg (N1.0), 5.25 mg (N1.75), 7.5 mg (N2.5), and 15.0 mg (N5.0). All treatments, excluding N1.0, resulted in poorer oxygenation, higher peak airway pressures, and higher wet/dry ratio. Higher dosage groups (N1.75, N2.5, and N5.0) exhibited positive immunostaining of nitrotyrosine and increased the intensity of nitrotyrosine in immunoblotting. CONCLUSIONS These data suggest that nebulized nitrite limits lung ischemia-reperfusion injury and may prove a clinically useful strategy but requires appropriate dosing to limit oxidative injury at high doses.

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Cynthia M. Beall

Case Western Reserve University

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Rubin M. Tuder

University of Colorado Denver

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