Danijela Dokic
Northwestern University
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Featured researches published by Danijela Dokic.
Circulation Research | 2010
Gregory B. Waypa; Jeremy D. Marks; Robert D. Guzy; Paul T. Mungai; Jacqueline M. Schriewer; Danijela Dokic; Paul T. Schumacker
Rationale: Recent studies have implicated mitochondrial reactive oxygen species (ROS) in regulating hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV), but controversy exists regarding whether hypoxia increases or decreases ROS generation. Objective: This study tested the hypothesis that hypoxia induces redox changes that differ among subcellular compartments in pulmonary (PASMCs) and systemic (SASMCs) smooth muscle cells. Methods and Results: We used a novel, redox-sensitive, ratiometric fluorescent protein sensor (RoGFP) to assess the effects of hypoxia on redox signaling in cultured PASMCs and SASMCs. Using genetic targeting sequences, RoGFP was expressed in the cytosol (Cyto-RoGFP), the mitochondrial matrix (Mito-RoGFP), or the mitochondrial intermembrane space (IMS-RoGFP), allowing assessment of oxidant signaling in distinct intracellular compartments. Superfusion of PASMCs or SASMCs with hypoxic media increased oxidation of both Cyto-RoGFP and IMS-RoGFP. However, hypoxia decreased oxidation of Mito-RoGFP in both cell types. The hypoxia-induced oxidation of Cyto-RoGFP was attenuated through the overexpression of cytosolic catalase in PASMCs. Conclusions: These results indicate that hypoxia causes a decrease in nonspecific ROS generation in the matrix compartment, whereas it increases regulated ROS production in the IMS, which diffuses to the cytosol of both PASMCs and SASMCs.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2011
Paul T. Mungai; Gregory B. Waypa; Amit Jairaman; Murali Prakriya; Danijela Dokic; Molly K. Ball; Paul T. Schumacker
ABSTRACT AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is an energy sensor activated by increases in [AMP] or by oxidant stress (reactive oxygen species [ROS]). Hypoxia increases cellular ROS signaling, but the pathways underlying subsequent AMPK activation are not known. We tested the hypothesis that hypoxia activates AMPK by ROS-mediated opening of calcium release-activated calcium (CRAC) channels. Hypoxia (1.5% O2) augments cellular ROS as detected by the redox-sensitive green fluorescent protein (roGFP) but does not increase the [AMP]/[ATP] ratio. Increases in intracellular calcium during hypoxia were detected with Fura2 and the calcium-calmodulin fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) sensor YC2.3. Antioxidant treatment or removal of extracellular calcium abrogates hypoxia-induced calcium signaling and subsequent AMPK phosphorylation during hypoxia. Oxidant stress triggers relocation of stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1), the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+ sensor, to the plasma membrane. Knockdown of STIM1 by short interfering RNA (siRNA) attenuates the calcium responses to hypoxia and subsequent AMPK phosphorylation, while inhibition of L-type calcium channels has no effect. Knockdown of the AMPK upstream kinase LKB1 by siRNA does not prevent AMPK activation during hypoxia, but knockdown of CaMKKβ abolishes the AMPK response. These findings reveal that hypoxia can trigger AMPK activation in the apparent absence of increased [AMP] through ROS-dependent CRAC channel activation, leading to increases in cytosolic calcium that activate the AMPK upstream kinase CaMKKβ.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2013
Gregory B. Waypa; Jeremy D. Marks; Robert D. Guzy; Paul T. Mungai; Jacqueline M. Schriewer; Danijela Dokic; Molly K. Ball; Paul T. Schumacker
RATIONALE The role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) signaling in the O(2) sensing mechanism underlying acute hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (HPV) has been controversial. Although mitochondria are important sources of ROS, studies using chemical inhibitors have yielded conflicting results, whereas cellular models using genetic suppression have precluded in vivo confirmation. Hence, genetic animal models are required to test mechanistic hypotheses. OBJECTIVES We tested whether mitochondrial Complex III is required for the ROS signaling and vasoconstriction responses to acute hypoxia in pulmonary arteries (PA). METHODS A mouse permitting Cre-mediated conditional deletion of the Rieske iron-sulfur protein (RISP) of Complex III was generated. Adenoviral Cre recombinase was used to delete RISP from isolated PA vessels or smooth muscle cells (PASMC). MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS In PASMC, RISP depletion abolished hypoxia-induced increases in ROS signaling in the mitochondrial intermembrane space and cytosol, and it abrogated hypoxia-induced increases in [Ca(2+)](i). In isolated PA vessels, RISP depletion abolished hypoxia-induced ROS signaling in the cytosol. Breeding the RISP mice with transgenic mice expressing tamoxifen-activated Cre in smooth muscle permitted the depletion of RISP in PASMC in vivo. Precision-cut lung slices from those mice revealed that RISP depletion abolished hypoxia-induced increases in [Ca(2+)](i) of the PA. In vivo RISP depletion in smooth muscle attenuated the acute hypoxia-induced increase in right ventricular systolic pressure in anesthetized mice. CONCLUSIONS Acute hypoxia induces superoxide release from Complex III of smooth muscle cells. These oxidant signals diffuse into the cytosol and trigger increases in [Ca(2+)](i) that cause acute hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction.
Nature Communications | 2017
Shuo Xiao; Jonathan Coppeta; Hunter B. Rogers; Brett Isenberg; Jie Zhu; Susan A. Olalekan; Kelly E. McKinnon; Danijela Dokic; Alexandra S. Rashedi; Daniel J. Haisenleder; Saurabh S. Malpani; Chanel A. Arnold-Murray; Kuanwei Chen; Mingyang Jiang; Lu Bai; Catherine T. Nguyen; Jiyang Zhang; Monica M. Laronda; Thomas J. Hope; Kruti P. Maniar; Mary Ellen Pavone; Michael J. Avram; Elizabeth C. Sefton; Spiro Getsios; Joanna E. Burdette; J. Julie Kim; Jeffrey T. Borenstein; Teresa K. Woodruff
The endocrine system dynamically controls tissue differentiation and homeostasis, but has not been studied using dynamic tissue culture paradigms. Here we show that a microfluidic system supports murine ovarian follicles to produce the human 28-day menstrual cycle hormone profile, which controls human female reproductive tract and peripheral tissue dynamics in single, dual and multiple unit microfluidic platforms (Solo-MFP, Duet-MFP and Quintet-MPF, respectively). These systems simulate the in vivo female reproductive tract and the endocrine loops between organ modules for the ovary, fallopian tube, uterus, cervix and liver, with a sustained circulating flow between all tissues. The reproductive tract tissues and peripheral organs integrated into a microfluidic platform, termed EVATAR, represents a powerful new in vitro tool that allows organ–organ integration of hormonal signalling as a phenocopy of menstrual cycle and pregnancy-like endocrine loops and has great potential to be used in drug discovery and toxicology studies.
British Journal of Haematology | 2008
Andrew M. Evens; Paul T. Schumacker; Irene B. Helenowski; Amareshwar T.K. Singh; Danijela Dokic; Anjeni Keswani; Elizabeth Kordeluk; Adekunle Raji; Jane N. Winter; Borko Jovanovic; Arne Holmgren; Beverly P. Nelson; Leo I. Gordon
Hypoxia inducible factors (HIFs) activate oncogenic pathways, while thioredoxins (Trx), including Trx1 and Trx reductases‐1 and ‐2 (TrxR1 and TrxR2), promote HIF‐α stabilization. In immunoblotting studies in lymphoma cell lines we found that Raji and SUDHL4 cells exhibited normoxic HIF‐2α protein stabilization. Five cell lines showed increased TrxR1 expression, while only Namalwa, HF1 and SUDHL4 had Trx1 and TrxR2 activation. Tissue microarrays in diffuse large B‐cell lymphoma (DLBCL) and follicular lymphoma (FL) identified different HIF expression among histological subgroups (e.g. 44% DLBCL vs. 11% of FL cases with moderate‐to‐high expression of HIF‐1α and HIF‐2α, P = 0·0017). These data demonstrate that HIF and the thioredoxin family are abnormally activated in lymphoma.
Cell Cycle | 2014
Elizabeth Tarasewicz; Lisbi Rivas; Randala Hamdan; Danijela Dokic; Vamsi Parimi; Beatriz Peñalver Bernabé; Alexandra L. Thomas; Lonnie D. Shea; Jacqueline S. Jeruss
Breast cancer onset and disease progression have been linked to members of the TGFβ superfamily and their downstream signaling components, the Smads. Alterations in Smad3 signaling are associated with the dichotomous role of TGFβ in malignancy, mediating both tumor suppressant and pro-metastatic behaviors. Overexpression of cell cycle regulators, cyclins D and E, renders cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) 4/2 hyperactive. Noncanonical phosphorylation of Smad3 by CDK4/2 inhibits tumor suppressant actions of Smad3. We hypothesized that CDK inhibition (CDKi) would restore Smad3 action and help promote cancer cell regression. Treatment of triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) cell lines (MDA-MB-231, MDA-MB-436, Hs578T) with CDK2i or CDK4i resulted in increased Smad3 activity and decreased cell migration. Transfection with a 5M Smad3 construct containing inhibitory mutations in 5 CDK phosphorylation sites also resulted in decreased TNBC cell migration and invasion. MDA-MB-231 cells treated with CDK2i or CDK4i resulted in decreased Smad3 protein phosphorylation at the CDK phosphorylation T179 site, decreased MMP2 and c-myc expression, and increased p15 and p21 expression. Using a novel transfected cell array, we found that CDK2i treatment decreased activity of the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition related transcription factors Snail and Twist. In vivo studies in an MDA-MB-231 tumor model showed that individual and combination treatment with paclitaxel and CDK2i resulted in decreased tumor volume and Ki67 staining. Collectively, these data support further investigation of targeted CDK inhibitors as a promising therapeutic strategy for TNBC, a breast cancer subtype with limited treatment options.
Developmental Dynamics | 2008
So Hyun Pae; Danijela Dokic; Robert W. Dettman
Formation of the epicardium requires interactions between α4β1 integrin, and the extracellular matrix. We investigated the role of other integrins expressed by epicardial cells. We detected transcripts for α5, α8, αv, β1, β3, and β5 integrins in the chick proepicardial organ (PE). We demonstrate that α5β1, α8β1, and αvβ3 integrins are expressed by chick epicardial mesothelial cells (EMCs). Migration of EMCs in vitro was reduced by RGD‐containing peptides. Using adenoviruses expressing an antisense to chick α4 (AdGFPα4AS), full‐length (Adhα4V5), and C‐terminal deleted α4 (Adhα4ΔCV5), we found that EMCs were less able to adhere to vitronectin and fibronectin120 indicating that α4β1 plays a role in regulating EMC adhesion to ligands of α5β1, α8β1, and αvβ3. In Adhα4ΔCV5‐infected EMCs, α5β1 was diminished in fibrillar adhesions and new FN matrix assembly was abnormal. We propose that cooperation between α4β1 and RGD integrins is important for EMC adhesion and subepicardial matrix formation. Developmental Dynamics 237:962–978, 2008.
Cell Cycle | 2017
Alexandra L. Thomas; Hanne Lind; Angela Hong; Danijela Dokic; Kailey Oppat; Elana Rosenthal; Amina Guo; Aaron Thomas; Randala Hamden; Jacqueline S. Jeruss
ABSTRACT Triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a highly aggressive breast cancer subtype that lacks effective targeted therapies. Although TNBC is not defined by specific therapeutic targets, a subset of patients have tumors that overexpress cyclins. High cyclin D/E expression catalyzes CDK4/2 activity. In turn, CDK4/2 can non-canonically phosphorylate Smad3, a key TGFβ signaling intermediate, and this phosphorylation has been associated with the shift from tumor-suppressive to oncogenic TGFβ pathway action in breast oncogenesis. Additionally, CDK-mediated Smad3 phosphorylation facilitates an interaction between Smad3 and Pin1, a cis-trans isomerase that is also overexpressed in aggressive breast cancers. Treatment with CYC065, a CDK2/9 inhibitor, decreased non-canonical Smad3 phosphorylation and inhibited the Pin1-Smad3 interaction. We hypothesized that the interaction of Pin1 and Smad3, facilitated by CDK-mediated Smad3 phosphorylation, promotes TNBC cell aggressiveness. Inhibition of the Pin1-Smad3 interaction in TNBC cell lines, through depletion of Pin1 or CYC065 treatment, resulted in decreased cell migration/invasion and impeded the EMT program. Inhibition of CDK-mediated phosphorylation of Smad3 by mutagenesis also decreased cell migration, underscoring the importance of non-canonical CDK2 phosphorylation of Smad3 to enable cell motility. Pin1 depletion restored Smad3 protein levels and tumor-suppressive activity, suggesting that the Pin1-Smad3 interaction has a negative impact on canonical Smad3 action. Collectively, the data show that the Pin1-Smad3 interaction, facilitated by CDK-mediated Smad3 phosphorylation, is associated with oncogenic TGFβ signaling and breast cancer progression. Inhibition of this interaction with CYC065 treatment may provide an important therapeutic option for TNBC patients.
Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2014
Elizabeth Tarasewicz; Randala Hamdan; Joelle Straehla; Ashley Hardy; Omar Nunez; Stanislav Zelivianski; Danijela Dokic; Jacqueline S. Jeruss
Cyclin D1/CDK4 activity is upregulated in up to 50% of breast cancers and CDK4-mediated phosphorylation negatively regulates the TGFβ superfamily member Smad3. We sought to determine if CDK4 inhibition and doxorubicin chemotherapy could impact Smad3-mediated cell/colony growth and apoptosis in breast cancer cells. Parental and cyclin D1-overexpressing MCF7 cells were treated with CDK4 inhibitor, doxorubicin, or combination therapy and cell proliferation, apoptosis, colony formation, and expression of apoptotic proteins were evaluated using an MTS assay, TUNEL staining, 3D Matrigel assay, and apoptosis array/immunoblotting. Study cells were also transduced with WT Smad3 or a Smad3 construct resistant to CDK4 phosphorylation (5M) and colony formation and expression of apoptotic proteins were assessed. Treatment with CDK4 inhibitor/doxorubicin combination therapy, or transduction with 5M Smad3, resulted in a similar decrease in colony formation. Treating cyclin D overexpressing breast cancer cells with combination therapy also resulted in the greatest increase in apoptosis, resulted in decreased expression of anti-apoptotic proteins survivin and XIAP, and impacted subcellular localization of pro-apoptotic Smac/DIABLO. Additionally, transduction of 5M Smad3 and doxorubicin treatment resulted in the greatest change in apoptotic protein expression. Collectively, this work showed the impact of CDK4 inhibitor-mediated, Smad3-regulated tumor suppression, which was augmented in doxorubicin-treated cyclin D-overexpressing study cells.
Oncotarget | 2017
Shreyas S. Rao; Jenna Stoehr; Danijela Dokic; Lei Wan; Joseph T. Decker; Kristine Konopka; Alexandra L. Thomas; Jia Wu; Virginia G. Kaklamani; Lonnie D. Shea; Jacqueline S. Jeruss
Activation of CDK2 in triple negative breast cancer (TNBC) can contribute to non-canonical phosphorylation of a TGFβ signaling component, Smad3, promoting cell proliferation and migration. Inhibition of CDK2 was shown to decrease breast cancer oncogenesis. Eribulin chemotherapy was used effectively in the treatment of TNBC. To this end, we tested therapeutic efficacy of a novel CDK2/9 inhibitor, CYC065, eribulin, and the combination of CYC065 and eribulin in 3 different TNBC cell lines, and an in vivo xenograft model. Specifically, we characterized cell proliferation, apoptosis, migration, cell cycle associated protein expression, treatment-related transcription factor activity, and tumor growth in TNBC. Treatment with CYC065 and eribulin in combination had a superior effect on decreasing cell proliferation, inducing apoptosis, and inhibiting migration in TNBC cell lines in vitro. Combination therapy inhibited non-canonical Smad3 phosphorylation at the T179 site in the protein linker region, and resulted in increased p15 and decreased c-myc expression. In a transcription factor array, combination treatment significantly increased activity of AP1 and decreased activity of factors including NFκB, SP1, E2F, and SMAD3. In an in vivo xenograft model of TNBC, individual and combination treatments resulted in a decrease in both tumor volume and mitotic indices. Taken together, these studies highlight the potential of this novel drug combination, CYC065 and eribulin, to suppress the growth of TNBC cells in vitro and in vivo, warranting further clinical investigation.