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Dive into the research topics where Barry R. Stripp is active.

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Featured researches published by Barry R. Stripp.


American Journal of Pathology | 2002

Terminal Bronchioles Harbor a Unique Airway Stem Cell Population That Localizes to the Bronchoalveolar Duct Junction

Adam Giangreco; Susan D. Reynolds; Barry R. Stripp

Cellular mechanisms contributing to renewal of terminal bronchioles remain poorly defined. Our previous studies identified pollutant-resistant Clara cell secretory protein (CCSP)-expressing stem cells that localize to the neuroepithelial body (NEB) and contribute to renewal of the proximal bronchiolar epithelium. However, activation of NEB-associated stem cells is unlikely to contribute to renewal of terminal bronchiolar epithelium because of the paucity of NEBs at this location. Goals of this study were to determine the location and properties of cells contributing to renewal of terminal bronchioles after Clara cell depletion. Pollutant-resistant CCSP-expressing cells were identified that localized to the bronchoalveolar duct junction (BADJ) and contribute to restoration of a phenotypically diverse epithelium. CCSP-expressing cells comprise the predominant proliferative population in initial terminal bronchiolar repair and include a population of label-retaining cells suggesting that they maintain characteristics of a stem cell population. Furthermore, immunohistochemical co-localization studies involving CCSP and the NEB-specific marker calcitonin gene-related peptide indicate that BADJ-associated CCSP-expressing stem cells function independently of NEB microenvironments. These studies identify a BADJ-associated, NEB-independent, CCSP-expressing stem cell population in terminal bronchioles and support the notion that regiospecific stem cell niches function to maintain epithelial diversity after injury.


American Journal of Pathology | 2004

Basal Cells Are a Multipotent Progenitor Capable of Renewing the Bronchial Epithelium

Kyung U. Hong; Susan D. Reynolds; Simon C. Watkins; Elaine Fuchs; Barry R. Stripp

Commitment of the pulmonary epithelium to bronchial and bronchiolar airway lineages occurs during the transition from pseudoglandular to cannalicular phases of lung development, suggesting that regional differences exist with respect to the identity of stem and progenitor cells that contribute to epithelial maintenance in adulthood. We previously defined a critical role for Clara cell secretory protein-expressing (CE) cells in renewal of bronchiolar airway epithelium following injury. Even though CE cells are also the principal progenitor for maintenance of the bronchial airway epithelium, CE cell injury is resolved through a mechanism involving recruitment of a second progenitor cell population that we now identify as a GSI-B(4) reactive, cytokeratin-14-expressing basal cell. These cells exhibit multipotent differentiation capacity as assessed by analysis of cellular phenotype within clones of LacZ-tagged cells. Clones were derived from K14-expressing cells tagged in a cell-type-specific fashion by ligand-regulable Cre recombinase-mediated genomic rearrangement of the ROSA26 recombination substrate allele. We conclude that basal cells represent an alternative multipotent progenitor cell population of bronchial airways and that progenitor cell selection is dictated by the type of airway injury.


American Journal of Pathology | 2000

Neuroepithelial bodies of pulmonary airways serve as a reservoir of progenitor cells capable of epithelial regeneration.

Susan D. Reynolds; Adam Giangreco; John H. T. Power; Barry R. Stripp

Remodeling of the conducting airway epithelium is a common finding in the chronically injured lung and has been associated with increased risk for developing lung cancer. Pulmonary neuroendocrine cells and clusters of these cells termed neuroepithelial bodies (NEBs) play a central role in each of these processes. We previously developed an adult mouse model of airway injury and repair in which epithelial regeneration after naphthalene-induced Clara cell ablation occurred preferentially at airway branch points and gave rise to nascent Clara cells. Continued repair was accompanied by NEB hyperplasia. We now provide the following evidence that the NEB microenvironment serves as a source of airway progenitor cells that contribute to focal regeneration of the airway epithelium: 1) nascent Clara cells and NEBs localize to the same spatial domain; 2) within NEB, both Clara cell secretory protein- and calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunopositive cells are proliferative; 3) the NEB microenvironment of both the steady-state and repairing lung includes cells that are dually immunopositive for Clara cell secretory protein and calcitonin gene-related peptide, which were previously identified only within the embryonic lung; and 4) NEBs harbor variant Clara cells deficient in cytochrome P450 2F2-immunoreactive protein. These data suggest that the NEB microenvironment is a reservoir of pollutant-resistant progenitor cells responsive to depletion of an abundant airway progenitor such as the Clara cell.


Cell Stem Cell | 2014

Repair and regeneration of the respiratory system: complexity, plasticity, and mechanisms of lung stem cell function

Brigid L.M. Hogan; Christina E. Barkauskas; Harold A. Chapman; Jonathan A. Epstein; Rajan Jain; Connie C. W. Hsia; Laura E. Niklason; Elizabeth A. Calle; Andrew V. Le; Scott H. Randell; Jason R. Rock; Melinda Snitow; Matthew F. Krummel; Barry R. Stripp; Thiennu H. Vu; Eric S. White; Jeffrey A. Whitsett; Edward E. Morrisey

Respiratory disease is the third leading cause of death in the industrialized world. Consequently, the trachea, lungs, and cardiopulmonary vasculature have been the focus of extensive investigations. Recent studies have provided new information about the mechanisms driving lung development and differentiation. However, there is still much to learn about the ability of the adult respiratory system to undergo repair and to replace cells lost in response to injury and disease. This Review highlights the multiple stem/progenitor populations in different regions of the adult lung, the plasticity of their behavior in injury models, and molecular pathways that support homeostasis and repair.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1994

Airway epithelial cell expression of interleukin-6 in transgenic mice. Uncoupling of airway inflammation and bronchial hyperreactivity.

Bruno F. DiCosmo; Gregory P. Geba; Dominic Picarella; Jack A. Elias; John A. Rankin; Barry R. Stripp; Jeffrey A. Whitsett; Richard A. Flavell

We produced transgenic mice which overexpress human IL-6 in the airway epithelial cells. Transgenic mice develop a mononuclear cell infiltrate adjacent to large and mid-sized airways. Immunohistochemistry reveals these cells to be predominantly CD4+ cells, MHC class II+ cells, and B220+ cells. Transgenic mice and nontransgenic mice had similar baseline respiratory system resistance (0.47 +/- 0.06 vs 0.43 +/- 0.04 cmH2O/ml per s at 9 wk of age, P = NS and 0.45 +/- 0.07 vs 0.43 +/- 0.09 cmH2O/ml per s at 17 wk of age, P = NS). Transgenic mice, however, required a significantly higher log dose of methacholine to produce a 100% increase in respiratory system resistance as compared with non-transgenic littermates (1.34 +/- 0.24 vs 0.34 +/- 0.05 mg/ml, P < or = 0.01). We conclude that the expression of human IL-6 in the airways of transgenic mice results in a CD4+, MHC class II+, B220+ lymphocytic infiltrate surrounding large and mid-sized airways that does not alter basal respiratory resistance, but does diminish airway reactivity to methacholine. These findings demonstrate an uncoupling of IL-6-induced airway lymphocytic inflammation and airway hyperresponsiveness and suggest that some forms of airway inflammation may serve to restore altered airway physiology.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Stem cells are dispensable for lung homeostasis but restore airways after injury

Adam Giangreco; Esther N. Arwert; Ian Rosewell; Joshua C. Snyder; Fiona M. Watt; Barry R. Stripp

Local tissue stem cells have been described in airways of the lung but their contribution to normal epithelial maintenance is currently unknown. We therefore developed aggregation chimera mice and a whole-lung imaging method to determine the relative contributions of progenitor (Clara) and bronchiolar stem cells to epithelial maintenance and repair. In normal and moderately injured airways chimeric patches were small in size and not associated with previously described stem cell niches. This finding suggested that single, randomly distributed progenitor cells maintain normal epithelial homeostasis. In contrast we found that repair following severe lung injury resulted in the generation of rare, large clonal cell patches that were associated with stem cell niches. This study provides evidence that epithelial stem cells are dispensable for normal airway homeostasis. We also demonstrate that stem cell activation and robust clonal cellular expansion occur only during repair from severe lung injury.


Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2008

Maintenance and Repair of the Bronchiolar Epithelium

Barry R. Stripp; Susan D. Reynolds

Bronchioles of the distal conducting airway are lined by a simple epithelium composed primarily of nonciliated secretory (Clara) cells and ciliated cells. These cells are long-lived in the normal lung; renewal is mediated by cells that constitute a nonclassical stem cell hierarchy. Within this type of hierarchy, facultative progenitor cells are responsible for normal epithelial maintenance and rare adult tissue-specific stem cells are activated only in response to depletion of the facultative progenitor cell pool. This organizational structure is a departure from the classical stem cell hierarchies that maintain rapidly renewing tissues such as the epithelium of the small intestine. This article compares cellular and molecular mechanisms of epithelial renewal in the relatively quiescent bronchiolar epithelium and in the mitotically active intestinal epithelium. Fundamental distinctions between stem cell hierarchies of slowly and rapidly renewing epithelia are highlighted and may provide insight into tissue-specific interpretation of signals that mediate repair in some tissues but lead to remodeling and chronic disease in other organ systems.


Stem Cells | 2008

Conditional Stabilization of β‐Catenin Expands the Pool of Lung Stem Cells

Susan D. Reynolds; Anna C. Zemke; Adam Giangreco; Brian L. Brockway; Roxana M. Teisanu; Jeffrey A. Drake; Thomas J. Mariani; Peter Di; Mark M. Taketo; Barry R. Stripp

Maintenance of classic stem cell hierarchies is dependent upon stem cell self‐renewal mediated in part by Wnt/β‐catenin regulation of the cell cycle. This function is critical in rapidly renewing tissues due to the obligate role played by the tissue stem cell. However, the stem cell hierarchy responsible for maintenance of the conducting airway epithelium is distinct from classic stem cell hierarchies. The epithelium of conducting airways is maintained by transit‐amplifying cells in the steady state; rare bronchiolar stem cells are activated to participate in epithelial repair only following depletion of transit‐amplifying cells. Here, we investigate how signaling through β‐catenin affects establishment and maintenance of the stem cell hierarchy within the slowly renewing epithelium of the lung. Conditional potentiation of β‐catenin signaling in the embryonic lung results in amplification of airway stem cells through attenuated differentiation rather than augmented proliferation. Our data demonstrate that the differentiation‐modulating activities of stabilized β‐catenin account for expansion of tissue stem cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

The lung-specific CC10 gene is regulated by transcription factors from the AP-1, octamer, and hepatocyte nuclear factor 3 families.

Patricia L. Sawaya; Barry R. Stripp; Jeffrey A. Whitsett; Donal S. Luse

We have shown that a large fragment (-2339 to +57) from the rat CC10 gene directed lung-specific expression of a reporter construct in transgenic animals. Upon transfection, a smaller fragment (-165 to +57) supported reporter gene expression exclusively in the Clara cell-like NCI-H441 cell line, suggesting that a Clara cell-specific transcriptional element resided on this fragment (B. R. Stripp, P. L. Sawaya, D. S. Luse, K. A. Wikenheiser, S. E. Wert, J. A. Huffman, D. L. Lattier, G. Singh, S. L. Katyal, and J. A. Whitsett, J. Biol. Chem. 267:14703-14712, 1992). The interactions of nuclear proteins with a particular segment of the CC10 promoter which extends from 79 to 128 bp upstream of the CC10 transcription initiation site (CC10 region I) have now been studied. This sequence can stimulate both in vitro transcription in H441 nuclear extract and transient expression of reporter constructs in H441 cells. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays using extracts from H441, HeLa, rat liver, and fetal sheep lung cells were used to demonstrate that members of the AP-1, octamer, and HNF-3 families bind to CC10 region I. Transcription factors from H441 cells which are capable of binding to CC10 region I are either absent in HeLa, rat liver, and fetal sheep lung extracts or enriched in H441 extracts relative to extracts from non-Clara cells.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 1998

Clara cell secretory protein decreases lung inflammation after acute virus infection.

Kevin S. Harrod; Amber D. Mounday; Barry R. Stripp; Jeffrey A. Whitsett

Clara cell secretory protein (CCSP) is an abundant 10-kDa polypeptide synthesized and secreted primarily by nonciliated bronchiolar epithelial cells in the mammalian lung. To determine the potential role of CCSP in pulmonary inflammation after acute viral infection, CCSP gene-targeted (CCSP-deficient [CCSP(-/-)]) mice were exposed to a recombinant E1- and E3-deficient adenoviral vector, Av1Luc1, intratracheally. Lung inflammation was markedly increased in CCSP(-/-) mice compared with wild-type control mice and was associated with an increased number of polymorphonuclear cell infiltrates and epithelial cell injury in both conducting airways and alveolar regions. Histological evidence of pulmonary inflammation in CCSP(-/-) mice was associated with increased production of cytokine (interleukin-1beta and -6 and tumor necrosis factor-alpha) mRNA and protein, as well as chemokine (macrophage inflammatory protein-1alpha and -2 and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1) mRNA expression within the lung in response to adenoviral infection. Adenoviral-mediated gene transfer was decreased in CCSP(-/-) mice relative to wild-type mice as measured by luciferase enzyme activity in lung homogenates. The present study suggests that CCSP is involved in modulating lung inflammation during viral infection and supports a role for CCSP in lung host defense.Clara cell secretory protein (CCSP) is an abundant 10-kDa polypeptide synthesized and secreted primarily by nonciliated bronchiolar epithelial cells in the mammalian lung. To determine the potential role of CCSP in pulmonary inflammation after acute viral infection, CCSP gene-targeted {CCSP-deficient [CCSP(-/-)]} mice were exposed to a recombinant E1- and E3-deficient adenoviral vector, Av1Luc1, intratracheally. Lung inflammation was markedly increased in CCSP(-/-) mice compared with wild-type control mice and was associated with an increased number of polymorphonuclear cell infiltrates and epithelial cell injury in both conducting airways and alveolar regions. Histological evidence of pulmonary inflammation in CCSP(-/-) mice was associated with increased production of cytokine (interleukin-1β and -6 and tumor necrosis factor-α) mRNA and protein, as well as chemokine (macrophage inflammatory protein-1α and -2 and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1) mRNA expression within the lung in response to adenoviral infection. Adenoviral-mediated gene transfer was decreased in CCSP(-/-) mice relative to wild-type mice as measured by luciferase enzyme activity in lung homogenates. The present study suggests that CCSP is involved in modulating lung inflammation during viral infection and supports a role for CCSP in lung host defense.

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Jeffrey A. Whitsett

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Adam Giangreco

University College London

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Scott H. Randell

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Gianni Carraro

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Jacob N. Finkelstein

University of Rochester Medical Center

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