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Dive into the research topics where Charles J. Venglarik is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles J. Venglarik.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Efficient Intracellular Processing of the Endogenous Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator in Epithelial Cell Lines

Karoly Varga; Asta Jurkuvenaite; John K. Wakefield; Jeong S. Hong; Jennifer S. Guimbellot; Charles J. Venglarik; Ashutosh Niraj; Marina Mazur; Eric J. Sorscher; James F. Collawn; Zsuzsa Bebok

The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is a cAMP-dependent protein kinase A-activated chloride channel that resides on the apical surface of epithelial cells. One unusual feature of this protein is that during biogenesis, ∼75% of wild type CFTR is degraded by the endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-associated degradative (ERAD) pathway. Examining the biogenesis and structural instability of the molecule has been technically challenging due to the limited amount of CFTR expressed in epithelia. Consequently, investigators have employed heterologous overexpression systems. Based on recent results that epithelial specific factors regulate both CFTR biogenesis and function, we hypothesized that CFTR biogenesis in endogenous CFTR expressing epithelial cells may be more efficient. To test this, we compared CFTR biogenesis in two epithelial cell lines endogenously expressing CFTR (Calu-3 and T84) with two heterologous expression systems (COS-7 and HeLa). Consistent with previous reports, 20 and 35% of the newly synthesized CFTR were converted to maturely glycosylated CFTR in COS-7 and HeLa cells, respectively. In contrast, CFTR maturation was virtually 100% efficient in Calu-3 and T84 cells. Furthermore, inhibition of the proteasome had no effect on CFTR biogenesis in Calu-3 cells, whereas it stabilized the immature form of CFTR in HeLa cells. Quantitative reverse transcriptase-PCR indicated that CFTR message levels are ∼4-fold lower in Calu-3 than HeLa cells, yet steady-state protein levels are comparable. Our results question the structural instability model of wild type CFTR and indicate that epithelial cells endogenously expressing CFTR efficiently process this protein to post-Golgi compartments.


Biophysical Journal | 1996

Tolbutamide causes open channel blockade of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator Cl- channels

Charles J. Venglarik; B. D. Schultz; A. D. G. Deroos; Ashvani K. Singh; Robert J. Bridges

Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) is an epithelial Cl- channel that is regulated by protein kinase A and cytosolic nucleotides. Previously, Sheppard and Welsh reported that the sulfonylureas glibenclamide and tolbutamide reduced CFTR whole cell currents. The aim of this study was to quantify the effects of tolbutamide on CFTR gating in excised membrane patches containing multiple channels. We chose tolbutamide because weak (i.e., fast-type) open channel blockers introduce brief events into multichannel recordings that can be readily quantified by current fluctuation analysis. Inspection of current records revealed that the addition of tolbutamide reduced the apparent single-channel current amplitude and increased the open-channel noise, as expected for a fast-type open channel blocker. The apparent decrease in unitary current amplitude provides a measure of open probability within a burst (P0 Burst), and the resulting concentration-response relationship was described by a simple Michaelis-Menten inhibition function. The concentration of tolbutamide causing a 50% reduction of Po Burst (540 +/- 20 microM) was similar to the concentration producing a 50% inhibition of short-circuit current across T84 colonic epithelial cell monolayers (400 +/- 20 microM). Changes in CFTR gating were then quantified by analyzing current fluctuations. Tolbutamide caused a high-frequency Lorentzian (corner frequency, fc > 300 Hz) to appear in the power density spectrum. The fc of this Lorentzian component increased as a linear function of tolbutamide concentration, as expected for a pseudo-first-order open-blocked mechanism and yielded estimates of the on rate (koff = 2.8 +/- 0.3 microM-1 s-1), the off rate (kon = 1210 +/- 225 s-1), and the dissociation constant (KD = 430 +/- 80 microM). Based on these observations, we propose that there is a bimolecular interaction between tolbutamide and CFTR, causing open channel blockade.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1998

Activation of ΔF508 CFTR in an epithelial monolayer

Zsuzsa Bebok; Charles J. Venglarik; Zita Pánczél; Tamas Jilling; Kevin L. Kirk; Eric J. Sorscher

The DeltaF508 mutation leads to retention of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) in the endoplasmic reticulum and rapid degradation by the proteasome and other proteolytic systems. In stably transfected LLC-PK1 (porcine kidney) epithelial cells, DeltaF508 CFTR conforms to this paradigm and is not present at the plasma membrane. When LLC-PK1 cells or human nasal polyp cells derived from a DeltaF508 homozygous patient are grown on plastic dishes and treated with an epithelial differentiating agent (DMSO, 2% for 4 days) or when LLC-PK1 cells are grown as polarized monolayers on permeable supports, plasma membrane DeltaF508 CFTR is significantly increased. Moreover, when confluent LLC-PK1 cells expressing DeltaF508 CFTR were treated with DMSO and mounted in an Ussing chamber, a further increase in cAMP-activated short-circuit current (i.e., approximately 7 microA/cm2; P < 0.00025 compared with untreated controls) was observed. No plasma membrane CFTR was detected after DMSO treatment in nonepithelial cells (mouse L cells) expressing DeltaF508 CFTR. The experiments describe a way to augment DeltaF508 CFTR maturation in epithelial cells that appears to act through a novel mechanism and allows insertion of functional DeltaF508 CFTR in the plasma membranes of transporting cell monolayers. The results raise the possibility that increased epithelial differentiation might increase the delivery of DeltaF508 CFTR from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi, where the DeltaF508 protein is shielded from degradative pathways such as the proteasome and allowed to mature.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2008

Role of Oxygen Availability in CFTR Expression and Function

Jennifer S. Guimbellot; James A. Fortenberry; Gene P. Siegal; Bryan A. Moore; Hui Wen; Charles J. Venglarik; Yiu-Fai Chen; Suzanne Oparil; Eric J. Sorscher; Jeong S. Hong

The cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) serves a pivotal role in normal epithelial homeostasis; its absence leads to destruction of exocrine tissues, including those of the gastrointestinal tract and lung. Acute regulation of CFTR protein in response to environmental stimuli occurs at several levels (e.g., ion channel phosphorylation, ATP hydrolysis, apical membrane recycling). However, less information is available concerning the regulatory pathways that control levels of CFTR mRNA. In the present study, we investigated regulation of CFTR mRNA during oxygen restriction, examined effects of hypoxic signaling on chloride transport across cell monolayers, and related these findings to a possible role in the pathogenesis of chronic hypoxic lung disease. CFTR mRNA, protein, and function were robustly and reversibly altered in human cells in relation to hypoxia. In mice subjected to low oxygen in vivo, CFTR mRNA expression in airways, gastrointestinal tissues, and liver was repressed. CFTR mRNA expression was also diminished in pulmonary tissues taken from hypoxemic subjects at the time of lung transplantation. Environmental factors that induce hypoxic signaling regulate CFTR mRNA and epithelial Cl(-) transport in vitro and in vivo.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 1994

Comparison of-nitro versus-amino 4, 4′-substituents of disulfonic stilbenes as chloride channel blockers

Charles J. Venglarik; Ashvani K. Singh; Robert J. Bridges

We showed previously that the disulfonic stilbene DNDS (4, 4′-dinitrostilben-2, 2′-disulfonic acid) was a potent blocker of outwardly rectifying chloride channels (ORCC). The studies reported here were designed to quantify the relationship between electron withdrawal by the 4, 4′-substituents and blocker potency. Specifically we compared the blocking effects and molecular properties of the symmetrically substituted 4, 4′-diaminostilben-2, 2′-disulfonic acid (DADS) and the hemi-substituted 4-amino, 4′-nitrostilben-2, 2′-disulfonic acid (ANDS) with those of DNDS. Blockade was studied using outwardly rectifying colonic chloride channels incorporated into planar lipid bilayers. DADS was 430-fold and ANDS 44-fold less potent than DNDS as blockers of ORCC. Amplitude distribution analysis revealed that all three disulfonic stilbenes act as open channel blockers. Furthermore, this kinetic analysis indicated that the lower potency of DADS and ANDS was due to an increase in off rate. These results support the conclusion that the 4, 4′-substituents make an important contribution to blockade by stabilizing the channel-blocker complex. Isopotential electron contour maps illustrated the dramatic shift in charge at the 4, 4′-poles of the disulfonic stilbene molecule from electronegative in DNDS to electropositive in DADS as well as the bipolar contour of ANDS. Thus, the greater potency of DNDS results from the symmetric electronegative regions at the 4, 4′-poles of the molecule. We hypothesize that the channel protein has two corresponding electropositive areas at the blocker binding site.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 1996

Glibenclamide blockade of CFTR chloride channels

Bruce D. Schultz; A. D. G. Deroos; Charles J. Venglarik; Ashvani K. Singh; Raymond A. Frizzell; Robert J. Bridges


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 1990

A simple assay for agonist-regulated Cl and K conductances in salt-secreting epithelial cells.

Charles J. Venglarik; R. J. Bridges; R. A. Frizzell


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Reactive Oxygen Nitrogen Species Decrease Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator Expression and cAMP-mediated Cl− Secretion in Airway Epithelia

Zsuzsa Bebok; Karoly Varga; James K. Hicks; Charles J. Venglarik; Timea Kovacs; Lan Chen; Karin M. Hardiman; James F. Collawn; Eric J. Sorscher; Sadis Matalon


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2001

Synthetic chloride channel restores glutathione secretion in cystic fibrosis airway epithelia

Lin Gao; James R. Broughman; Takeo Iwamoto; John M. Tomich; Charles J. Venglarik; Henry Jay Forman


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2001

Improved oxygenation promotes CFTR maturation and trafficking in MDCK monolayers

Zsuzsanna Bebok; Albert Tousson; Lisa M. Schwiebert; Charles J. Venglarik

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Ashvani K. Singh

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Henry Jay Forman

University of Southern California

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Robert J. Bridges

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Sadis Matalon

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Jennifer S. Guimbellot

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Lan Chen

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Zsuzsa Bebok

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Ahmed Lazrak

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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