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Dive into the research topics where Ashley G. Henderson is active.

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Featured researches published by Ashley G. Henderson.


Critical Care Medicine | 2006

A randomized trial of intermittent lorazepam versus propofol with daily interruption in mechanically ventilated patients.

Shannon S. Carson; John P. Kress; Jo E. Rodgers; Ajeet Vinayak; Stacy Campbell-Bright; Joseph E. Levitt; Sharya Bourdet; Anastasia Ivanova; Ashley G. Henderson; Anne S. Pohlman; Lydia Chang; Preston B. Rich; Jesse B. Hall

Objective:To compare duration of mechanical ventilation for patients randomized to receive lorazepam by intermittent bolus administration vs. continuous infusions of propofol using protocols that include scheduled daily interruption of sedation. Design:A randomized open-label trial enrolling patients from October 2001 to March 2004. Setting:Medical intensive care units of two tertiary care medical centers. Patients:Adult patients expected to require mechanical ventilation for >48 hrs and who required ≥10 mg of lorazepam or a continuous infusion of a sedative to achieve adequate sedation. Interventions:Patients were randomized to receive lorazepam by intermittent bolus administration or propofol by continuous infusion to maintain a Ramsay score of 2–3. Sedation was interrupted on a daily basis for both groups. Measurements and Main Results:The primary outcome was median ventilator days. Secondary outcomes included 28-day ventilator-free survival, intensive care unit and hospital length of stay, and hospital mortality. Median ventilator days were significantly lower in the daily interruption propofol group compared with the intermittent bolus lorazepam group (5.8 vs. 8.4, p = .04). The difference was largest for hospital survivors (4.4 vs. 9.0, p = .006). There was a trend toward greater ventilator-free survival for patients in the daily interruption propofol group (median 18.5 days for propofol vs. 10.2 for lorazepam, p = .06). Hospital mortality was not different. Conclusions:For medical patients requiring >48 hrs of mechanical ventilation, sedation with propofol results in significantly fewer ventilator days compared with intermittent lorazepam when sedatives are interrupted daily.


The FASEB Journal | 2012

Cigarette smoke exposure induces CFTR internalization and insolubility, leading to airway surface liquid dehydration

Lucy A. Clunes; Catrin M. Davies; Raymond D. Coakley; Andrei A. Aleksandrov; Ashley G. Henderson; Kirby L. Zeman; Erin N. Worthington; Martina Gentzsch; Silvia M. Kreda; Deborah M. Cholon; William D. Bennett; John R. Riordan; Richard C. Boucher; Robert Tarran

Cigarette smoke (CS) exposure induces mucus obstruction and the development of chronic bronchitis (CB). While many of these responses are determined genetically, little is known about the effects CS can exert on pulmonary epithelia at the protein level. We, therefore, tested the hypothesis that CS exerts direct effects on the CFTR protein, which could impair airway hydration, leading to the mucus stasis characteristic of both cystic fibrosis and CB. In vivo and in vitro studies demonstrated that CS rapidly decreased CFTR activity, leading to airway surface liquid (ASL) volume depletion (i.e., dehydration). Further studies revealed that CS induced internalization of CFTR. Surprisingly, CS‐internalized CFTR did not colocalize with lysosomal proteins. Instead, the bulk of CFTR shifted to a detergent‐resistant fraction within the cell and colocalized with the intermediate filament vimentin, suggesting that CS induced CFTR movement into an aggresome‐like, perinuclear compartment. To test whether airway dehydration could be reversed, we used hypertonic saline (HS) as an osmolyte to rehydrate ASL. HS restored ASL height in CS‐exposed, dehydrated airway cultures. Similarly, inhaled HS restored mucus transport and increased clearance in patients with CB. Thus, we propose that CS exposure rapidly impairs CFTR function by internalizing CFTR, leading to ASL dehydration, which promotes mucus stasis and a failure of mucus clearance, leaving smokers at risk for developing CB. Furthermore, our data suggest that strategies to rehydrate airway surfaces may provide a novel form of therapy for patients with CB.—Clunes, L. A., Davies, C. M., Coakley, R. D., Aleksandrov, A. A., Henderson, A. G., Zeman, K. L., Worthington, E. N., Gentzsch, M., Kreda, S. M., Cholon, D., Bennett, W. D., Riordan, J. R., Boucher, R. C., Tarran, R. Cigarette smoke exposure induces CFTR internalization and insolubility, leading to airway surface liquid dehydration. FASEB J. 26, 533–545 (2012). www.fasebj.org


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2009

Tracheobronchial air-liquid interface cell culture: A model for innate mucosal defense of the upper airways?

Mehmet Kesimer; Sara Kirkham; Raymond J. Pickles; Ashley G. Henderson; Neil E. Alexis; Genevieve DeMaria; David Knight; David J. Thornton; John K. Sheehan

Human tracheobronchial epithelial cells grown in air-liquid interface culture have emerged as a powerful tool for the study of airway biology. In this study, we have investigated whether this culture system produces “mucus” with a protein composition similar to that of in vivo, induced airway secretions. Previous compositional studies of mucous secretions have greatly underrepresented the contribution of mucins, which are major structural components of normal mucus. To overcome this limitation, we have used a mass spectrometry-based approach centered on prior separation of the mucins from the majority of the other proteins. Using this approach, we have compared the protein composition of apical secretions (AS) from well-differentiated primary human tracheobronchial cells grown at air-liquid interface and human tracheobronchial normal induced sputum (IS). A total of 186 proteins were identified, 134 from AS and 136 from IS; 84 proteins were common to both secretions, with host defense proteins being predominant. The epithelial mucins MUC1, MUC4, and MUC16 and the gel-forming mucins MUC5B and MUC5AC were identified in both secretions. Refractometry showed that the gel-forming mucins were the major contributors by mass to both secretions. When the composition of the IS was corrected for proteins that were most likely derived from saliva, serum, and migratory cells, there was considerable similarity between the two secretions, in particular, in the category of host defense proteins, which includes the mucins. This shows that the primary cell culture system is an important model for study of aspects of innate defense of the upper airways related specifically to mucus consisting solely of airway cell products.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2014

Cystic fibrosis airway secretions exhibit mucin hyperconcentration and increased osmotic pressure

Ashley G. Henderson; Camille Ehre; Brian Button; Lubna H. Abdullah; Li Heng Cai; Margaret W. Leigh; Genevieve DeMaria; Hiro Matsui; Scott H. Donaldson; C. William Davis; John K. Sheehan; Richard C. Boucher; Mehmet Kesimer

The pathogenesis of mucoinfective lung disease in cystic fibrosis (CF) patients likely involves poor mucus clearance. A recent model of mucus clearance predicts that mucus flow depends on the relative mucin concentration of the mucus layer compared with that of the periciliary layer; however, mucin concentrations have been difficult to measure in CF secretions. Here, we have shown that the concentration of mucin in CF sputum is low when measured by immunologically based techniques, and mass spectrometric analyses of CF mucins revealed mucin cleavage at antibody recognition sites. Using physical size exclusion chromatography/differential refractometry (SEC/dRI) techniques, we determined that mucin concentrations in CF secretions were higher than those in normal secretions. Measurements of partial osmotic pressures revealed that the partial osmotic pressure of CF sputum and the retained mucus in excised CF lungs were substantially greater than the partial osmotic pressure of normal secretions. Our data reveal that mucin concentration cannot be accurately measured immunologically in proteolytically active CF secretions; mucins are hyperconcentrated in CF secretions; and CF secretion osmotic pressures predict mucus layer-dependent osmotic compression of the periciliary liquid layer in CF lungs. Consequently, mucin hypersecretion likely produces mucus stasis, which contributes to key infectious and inflammatory components of CF lung disease.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A Biophysical Basis for Mucus Solids Concentration as a Candidate Biomarker for Airways Disease

David B. Hill; Paula A. Vasquez; Scott A. McKinley; Aaron Vose; Frank W. Mu; Ashley G. Henderson; Scott H. Donaldson; Neil E. Alexis; Richard C. Boucher; M. Gregory Forest

In human airways diseases, including cystic fibrosis (CF) and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), host defense is compromised and airways inflammation and infection often result. Mucus clearance and trapping of inhaled pathogens constitute key elements of host defense. Clearance rates are governed by mucus viscous and elastic moduli at physiological driving frequencies, whereas transport of trapped pathogens in mucus layers is governed by diffusivity. There is a clear need for simple and effective clinical biomarkers of airways disease that correlate with these properties. We tested the hypothesis that mucus solids concentration, indexed as weight percent solids (wt%), is such a biomarker. Passive microbead rheology was employed to determine both diffusive and viscoelastic properties of mucus harvested from human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cultures. Guided by sputum from healthy (1.5–2.5 wt%) and diseased (COPD, CF; 5 wt%) subjects, mucus samples were generated in vitro to mimic in vivo physiology, including intermediate range wt% to represent disease progression. Analyses of microbead datasets showed mucus diffusive properties and viscoelastic moduli scale robustly with wt%. Importantly, prominent changes in both biophysical properties arose at ∼4 wt%, consistent with a gel transition (from a more viscous-dominated solution to a more elastic-dominated gel). These findings have significant implications for: (1) penetration of cilia into the mucus layer and effectiveness of mucus transport; and (2) diffusion vs. immobilization of micro-scale particles relevant to mucus barrier properties. These data provide compelling evidence for mucus solids concentration as a baseline clinical biomarker of mucus barrier and clearance functions.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2013

Identification of the SPLUNC1 ENaC-inhibitory domain yields novel strategies to treat sodium hyperabsorption in cystic fibrosis airway epithelial cultures

Carey A. Hobbs; Maxime G. Blanchard; Omar Alijevic; Chong Da Tan; Stephan Kellenberger; Sompop Bencharit; Rui Cao; Mehmet Kesimer; William G. Walton; Ashley G. Henderson; Matthew R. Redinbo; M. Jackson Stutts; Robert Tarran

The epithelial sodium channel (ENaC) is responsible for Na(+) and fluid absorption across colon, kidney, and airway epithelia. Short palate lung and nasal epithelial clone 1 (SPLUNC1) is a secreted, innate defense protein and an autocrine inhibitor of ENaC that is highly expressed in airway epithelia. While SPLUNC1 has a bactericidal permeability-increasing protein (BPI)-type structure, its NH2-terminal region lacks structure. Here we found that an 18 amino acid peptide, S18, which corresponded to residues G22-A39 of the SPLUNC1 NH2 terminus inhibited ENaC activity to a similar degree as full-length SPLUNC1 (∼2.5 fold), while SPLUNC1 protein lacking this region was without effect. S18 did not inhibit the structurally related acid-sensing ion channels, indicating specificity for ENaC. However, S18 preferentially bound to the βENaC subunit in a glycosylation-dependent manner. ENaC hyperactivity is contributory to cystic fibrosis (CF) lung disease. Unlike control, CF human bronchial epithelial cultures (HBECs) where airway surface liquid (ASL) height was abnormally low (4.2 ± 0.6 μm), addition of S18 prevented ENaC-led ASL hyperabsorption and maintained CF ASL height at 7.9 ± 0.6 μm, even in the presence of neutrophil elastase, which is comparable to heights seen in normal HBECs. Our data also indicate that the ENaC inhibitory domain of SPLUNC1 may be cleaved away from the main molecule by neutrophil elastase, suggesting that it may still be active during inflammation or neutrophilia. Furthermore, the robust inhibition of ENaC by the S18 peptide suggests that this peptide may be suitable for treating CF lung disease.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2015

The relationship of mucus concentration (hydration) to mucus osmotic pressure and transport in chronic bronchitis

Wayne Anderson; Raymond D. Coakley; Brian Button; Ashley G. Henderson; Kirby L. Zeman; Neil E. Alexis; David B. Peden; Eduardo R. Lazarowski; C. William Davis; Summer L. Bailey; Fred Fuller; Martha Almond; Bahjat F. Qaqish; Elena Bordonali; Michael Rubinstein; William D. Bennett; Mehmet Kesimer; Richard C. Boucher

RATIONALE Chronic bronchitis (CB) is characterized by persistent cough and sputum production. Studies were performed to test whether mucus hyperconcentration and increased partial osmotic pressure, in part caused by abnormal purine nucleotide regulation of ion transport, contribute to the pathogenesis of CB. OBJECTIVES We tested the hypothesis that CB is characterized by mucus hyperconcentration, increased mucus partial osmotic pressures, and reduced mucus clearance. METHODS We measured in subjects with CB as compared with normal and asymptomatic smoking control subjects indices of mucus concentration (hydration; i.e., percentage solids) and sputum adenine nucleotide/nucleoside concentrations. In addition, sputum partial osmotic pressures and mucus transport rates were measured in subjects with CB. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS CB secretions were hyperconcentrated as indexed by an increase in percentage solids and total mucins, in part reflecting decreased extracellular nucleotide/nucleoside concentrations. CB mucus generated concentration-dependent increases in partial osmotic pressures into ranges predicted to reduce mucus transport. Mucociliary clearance (MCC) in subjects with CB was negatively correlated with mucus concentration (percentage solids). As a test of relationships between mucus concentration and disease, mucus concentrations and MCC were compared with FEV1, and both were significantly correlated. CONCLUSIONS Abnormal regulation of airway surface hydration may slow MCC in CB and contribute to disease pathogenesis.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2016

Pulmonary disease and age at immigration among Hispanics: Results from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos

R. Graham Barr; Larissa Aviles-Santa; Sonia M. Davis; Tom K. Aldrich; Franklyn Gonzalez; Ashley G. Henderson; Robert C. Kaplan; Lisa La Vange; Kiang Liu; Jose S. Loredo; Eliana S. Mendes; Ai Ni; Andrew L. Ries; Matthias Salathe; Lewis J. Smith

RATIONALE Asthma has been reported to be more prevalent among Hispanics of Puerto Rican heritage than among other Hispanics and among Hispanics born in the United States or who immigrated as children than among those who came as adults; however, direct comparisons across Hispanic groups are lacking. OBJECTIVES To test whether asthma is more prevalent among Hispanics of Puerto Rican heritage than among other Hispanic groups, whether asthma is associated with age of immigration, and whether chronic obstructive pulmonary disease varies by heritage in a large, population-based cohort of Hispanics in the United States. METHODS The Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos researchers recruited a population-based probability sample of 16,415 Hispanics/Latinos, 18-74 years of age, in New York City, Chicago, Miami, and San Diego. Participants self-reported Puerto Rican, Cuban, Dominican, Mexican, Central American, or South American heritage; birthplace; and, if relevant, age at immigration. A respiratory questionnaire and standardized spirometry were performed with post-bronchodilator measures for those with airflow limitation. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS The prevalence of physician-diagnosed asthma among Puerto Ricans (36.5%; 95% confidence interval, 33.6-39.5%) was higher than among other Hispanics (odds ratio, 3.9; 95% confidence interval, 3.3-4.6). Hispanics who were born in the mainland United States or had immigrated as children had a higher asthma prevalence than those who had immigrated as adults (19.6, 19.4, and 14.1%, respectively; P < 0.001). Current asthma, bronchodilator responsiveness, and wheeze followed similar patterns. Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease prevalence was higher among Puerto Ricans (14.1%) and Cubans (9.8%) than among other Hispanics (<6.0%), but it did not vary across Hispanic heritages after adjustment for smoking and prior asthma (P = 0.22), by country of birth, or by age at immigration. CONCLUSIONS Asthma was more prevalent among Puerto Ricans, other Hispanics born in the United States, and those who had immigrated as children than among other Hispanics. In contrast, the higher prevalence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease among Puerto Ricans and Cubans was largely reflective of differential smoking patterns and asthma.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2017

Airway mucin concentration as a marker of chronic bronchitis

Mehmet Kesimer; Amina A. Ford; Agathe Ceppe; Giorgia Radicioni; Rui Cao; C. William Davis; Claire M. Doerschuk; Neil E. Alexis; Wayne Anderson; Ashley G. Henderson; Graham Barr; Eugene R. Bleecker; Stephanie A. Christenson; Christopher B. Cooper; MeiLan K. Han; Nadia N. Hansel; Annette T. Hastie; Eric A. Hoffman; Richard E. Kanner; Fernando J. Martinez; Rober Paine; Prescott G. Woodruff; Wanda K. O'Neal; Richard C. Boucher

BACKGROUND Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is characterized by chronic bronchitic and emphysematous components. In one biophysical model, the concentration of mucin on the airway surfaces is hypothesized to be a key variable that controls mucus transport in healthy persons versus cessation of transport in persons with muco‐obstructive lung diseases. Under this model, it is postulated that a high mucin concentration produces the sputum and disease progression that are characteristic of chronic bronchitis. METHODS We characterized the COPD status of 917 participants from the Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD Study (SPIROMICS) using questionnaires administered to participants, chest tomography, spirometry, and examination of induced sputum. Total mucin concentrations in sputum were measured with the use of size‐exclusion chromatography and refractometry. In 148 of these participants, the respiratory secreted mucins MUC5AC and MUC5B were quantitated by means of mass spectrometry. Data from chronic‐bronchitis questionnaires and data on total mucin concentrations in sputum were also analyzed in an independent 94‐participant cohort. RESULTS Mean (±SE) total mucin concentrations were higher in current or former smokers with severe COPD than in controls who had never smoked (3166±402 vs. 1515±152 μg per milliliter) and were higher in participants with two or more respiratory exacerbations per year than in those with zero exacerbations (4194±878 vs. 2458±113 μg per milliliter). The absolute concentrations of MUC5B and MUC5AC in current or former smokers with severe COPD were approximately 3 times as high and 10 times as high, respectively, as in controls who had never smoked. Receiver‐operating‐characteristic curve analysis of the association between total mucin concentration and a diagnosis of chronic bronchitis yielded areas under the curve of 0.72 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.65 to 0.79) for the SPIROMICS cohort and 0.82 (95% CI, 0.73 to 0.92) for the independent cohort. CONCLUSIONS Airway mucin concentrations may quantitate a key component of the chronic bronchitis pathophysiologic cascade that produces sputum and mediates disease severity. Studies designed to explore total mucin concentrations in sputum as a diagnostic biomarker and therapeutic target for chronic bronchitis appear to be warranted. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and others.)


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2014

Multicenter Study Comparing Case Definitions Used to Identify Patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Valentin Prieto-Centurion; Andrew J. Rolle; David H. Au; Shannon S. Carson; Ashley G. Henderson; Todd A. Lee; Peter K. Lindenauer; Mary Ann McBurnie; Richard A. Mularski; Edward T. Naureckas; William M. Vollmer; Binoy Joese; Jerry A. Krishnan

RATIONALE Clinical trials in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) usually require evidence of airflow obstruction and clinical risk factors. International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) diagnosis codes or patient-reported physician diagnoses are often used for epidemiologic studies and performance improvement programs. OBJECTIVES To evaluate agreement between these case definitions for COPD and to assess the comparability of study populations identified as having COPD not using the clinical trial reference standard. METHODS We recruited patients from the COPD Outcomes-based Network for Clinical Effectiveness and Research Translation multicenter clinical registry in a cross-sectional study. Demographics, clinical, and post-bronchodilator spirometry data were collected at an in-person study visit. The kappa statistic (κ) was used to evaluate agreement. A multivariable logistic regression model was used to identify patient characteristics associated with meeting the trial reference standard. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS A total of 998 (82.8%) of 1,206 study participants met at least one case definition for COPD (of the 998: 91% using ICD-9 codes, 73% using patient-reported physician diagnosis, 56% using trial reference standard); agreement between case definitions was poor (κ = 0.20-0.26). Lack of airflow obstruction was the principal (89%) reason patients identified as having COPD did not meet the trial reference standard. Patients who were black (vs. white), obese (vs. normal weight), or had depression (vs. not) were less likely to meet the trial reference standard (odds ratio [95% CI], 0.37 [0.26-0.53], 0.51 [0.34-0.75], 0.53 [0.40-0.71], respectively). CONCLUSIONS Findings highlight concerns about the applicability of findings in clinical trials to patients meeting other case definitions for COPD.

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Mehmet Kesimer

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Richard C. Boucher

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Shannon S. Carson

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Andrew L. Ries

University of California

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John K. Sheehan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Neil E. Alexis

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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C. William Davis

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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David H. Au

University of Washington

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