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Dive into the research topics where Denise Tefft is active.

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Featured researches published by Denise Tefft.


Mechanisms of Development | 2001

Evidence that SPROUTY2 functions as an inhibitor of mouse embryonic lung growth and morphogenesis

Arnaud Mailleux; Denise Tefft; Delphine Ndiaye; Nobuyuki Itoh; Jean Paul Thiery; David Warburton; SaveÂrio Bellusci

Experimental evidence is rapidly emerging that the coupling of positive regulatory signals with the induction of negative feedback modulators is a mechanism of fine regulation in development. Studies in Drosophila and chick have shown that members of the SPROUTY family are inducible negative regulators of growth factors that act through tyrosine kinase receptors. We and others have shown that Fibroblast Growth Factor 10 (FGF10) is a key positive regulator of lung branching morphogenesis. Herein, we provide direct evidence that mSprouty2 is dynamically expressed in the peripheral endoderm in embryonic lung and is downregulated in the clefts between new branches at E12.5. We found that mSprouty2 was expressed in a domain restricted in time and space, adjacent to that of Fgf10 in the peripheral mesenchyme. By E14.5, Fgf10 expression was restricted to a narrow domain of mesenchyme along the extreme edges of the individual lung lobes, whereas mSprouty2 was most highly expressed in the subjacent epithelial terminal buds. FGF10 beads upregulated the expression of mSprouty2 in adjacent epithelium in embryonic lung explant culture. Lung cultures treated with exogenous FGF10 showed greater branching and higher levels of mSpry2 mRNA. Conversely, Fgf10 antisense oligonucleotides reduced branching and decreased mSpry2 mRNA levels. However, treatment with exogenous FGF10 or antisense Fgf10 did not change Shh and FgfR2 mRNA levels in the lungs. We investigated Sprouty2 function during lung development by two different but complementary approaches. The targeted overexpression of mSprouty2 in the peripheral lung epithelium in vivo, using the Surfactant Protein C promoter, resulted in a low level of branching, lung lobe edges abnormal in appearance and the inhibition of epithelial proliferation. Transient high-level overexpression of mSpry2 throughout the pulmonary epithelium by intra-tracheal adenovirus microinjection also resulted in a low level of branching. These results indicate for the first time that mSPROUTY2 functions as a negative regulator of embryonic lung morphogenesis and growth.


Pediatric Research | 2005

Molecular Mechanisms of Early Lung Specification and Branching Morphogenesis

David Warburton; Saverio Bellusci; Stijn De Langhe; Pierre-Marie Del Moral; Vincent Fleury; Arnaud Mailleux; Denise Tefft; Mathieu Unbekandt; Kasper S. Wang; Wei Shi

The “hard wiring” encoded within the genome that determines the emergence of the laryngotracheal groove and subsequently early lung branching morphogenesis is mediated by finely regulated, interactive growth factor signaling mechanisms that determine the automaticity of branching, interbranch length, stereotypy of branching, left-right asymmetry, and finally gas diffusion surface area. The extracellular matrix is an important regulator as well as a target for growth factor signaling in lung branching morphogenesis and alveolarization. Coordination not only of epithelial but also endothelial branching morphogenesis determines bronchial branching and the eventual alveolar-capillary interface. Improved prospects for lung protection, repair, regeneration, and engineering will depend on more detailed understanding of these processes. Herein, we concisely review the functionally integrated morphogenetic signaling network comprising the critical bone morphogenetic protein, fibroblast growth factor, Sonic hedgehog, transforming growth factor-β, vascular endothelial growth factor, and Wnt signaling pathways that specify and drive early embryonic lung morphogenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Formation and Differentiation of Multiple Mesenchymal Lineages during Lung Development Is Regulated by β-catenin Signaling

Stijn De Langhe; Gianni Carraro; Denise Tefft; Changgong Li; Xin Xu; Yang Chai; Parviz Minoo; Mohammad K. Hajihosseini; Jacques Drouin; Vesa Kaartinen; Saverio Bellusci

Background The role of ß-catenin signaling in mesodermal lineage formation and differentiation has been elusive. Methodology To define the role of ß-catenin signaling in these processes, we used a Dermo1(Twist2)Cre/+ line to target a floxed β-catenin allele, throughout the embryonic mesenchyme. Strikingly, the Dermo1Cre/+; β-cateninf/− conditional Knock Out embryos largely phenocopy Pitx1−/−/Pitx2−/− double knockout embryos, suggesting that ß-catenin signaling in the mesenchyme depends mostly on the PITX family of transcription factors. We have dissected this relationship further in the developing lungs and find that mesenchymal deletion of β-catenin differentially affects two major mesenchymal lineages. The amplification but not differentiation of Fgf10-expressing parabronchial smooth muscle progenitor cells is drastically reduced. In the angioblast-endothelial lineage, however, only differentiation into mature endothelial cells is impaired. Conclusion Taken together these findings reveal a hierarchy of gene activity involving ß-catenin and PITX, as important regulators of mesenchymal cell proliferation and differentiation.


Respiratory Research | 2003

Growth factor signaling in lung morphogenetic centers: automaticity, stereotypy and symmetry

David Warburton; Saverio Bellusci; Pierre M. Del Moral; Vesa Kaartinen; Matt Lee; Denise Tefft; Wei Shi

Lung morphogenesis is stereotypic, both for lobation and for the first several generations of airways, implying mechanistic control by a well conserved, genetically hardwired developmental program. This program is not only directed by transcriptional factors and peptide growth factor signaling, but also co-opts and is modulated by physical forces. Peptide growth factors signal within repeating epithelial-mesenchymal temporospatial patterns that constitute morphogenetic centers, automatically directing millions of repetitive events during both stereotypic branching and nonstereotypic branching as well as alveolar surface expansion phases of lung development. Transduction of peptide growth factor signaling within these centers is finely regulated at multiple levels. These may include ligand expression, proteolytic activation of latent ligand, ligand bioavailability, ligand binding proteins and receptor affinity and presentation, receptor complex assembly and kinase activation, phosphorylation and activation of adapter and messenger protein complexes as well as downstream events and cross-talk both inside and outside the nucleus. Herein we review the critical Sonic Hedgehog, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Bone Morphogenetic Protein, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor and Transforming Growth Factorβ signaling pathways and propose how they may be functionally coordinated within compound, highly regulated morphogenetic gradients that drive first stereotypic and then non-stereotypic, automatically repetitive, symmetrical as well as asymmetrical branching events in the lung.


Developmental Dynamics | 2008

Centrifugal Migration of Mesenchymal Cells in Embryonic Lung

Lin Shan; Meera Subramaniam; Rodica L. Emanuel; Simone Degan; Pamela Johnston; Denise Tefft; David Warburton; Mary E. Sunday

Murine lung development begins at embryonic day (E) 9.5. Normal lung structure and function depend on the patterns of localization of differentiated cells. Pulmonary mesenchymal cell lineages have been relatively unexplored. Importantly, there has been no prior evidence of clonality of any lung cells. Herein we use a definitive genetic approach to demonstrate a common origin for proximal and distal pulmonary mesenchymal cells. A retroviral library with 3,400 unique inserts was microinjected into the airway lumen of E11.5 lung buds. After 7–11 days of culture, buds were stained for placental alkaline phosphatase (PLAP). Most PLAP+ cells are peribronchial smooth muscle cells, initially localized laterally near the hilum, then migrating down airways to the subpleural region. Laser‐capture microdissection and polymerase chain reaction confirm the clonal identities of PLAP+ cells proximally and distally. Our observation of this fundamental process during lung development opens new avenues for investigation of maladaptive mesenchymal responses in lung diseases. Developmental Dynamics 237:750–757, 2008.


Mechanisms of Development | 2000

The molecular basis of lung morphogenesis.

David Warburton; Margaret A. Schwarz; Denise Tefft; Guillermo Flores-Delgado; Kathryn D. Anderson; Wellington V. Cardoso


Developmental Biology | 2006

VEGF-A signaling through Flk-1 is a critical facilitator of early embryonic lung epithelial to endothelial crosstalk and branching morphogenesis

Pierre-Marie Del Moral; Frederic G. Sala; Denise Tefft; Wei Shi; Eli Keshet; Saverio Bellusci; David Warburton


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2002

mSprouty2 inhibits FGF10-activated MAP kinase by differentially binding to upstream target proteins

Denise Tefft; Matt Lee; Susan M. Smith; David L. Crowe; Saverio Bellusci; David Warburton


Developmental Biology | 2006

Differential role of FGF9 on epithelium and mesenchyme in mouse embryonic lung

Pierre-Marie Del Moral; Stijn De Langhe; Frederic G. Sala; Jacqueline M. Veltmaat; Denise Tefft; Kasper S. Wang; David Warburton; Saverio Bellusci


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2001

Do Lung Remodeling, Repair, and Regeneration Recapitulate Respiratory Ontogeny?

David Warburton; Denise Tefft; Arnaud Mailleux; Saverio Bellusci; Jean Paul Thiery; Jingsong Zhao; Sue Buckley; Wei Shi; Barbara Driscoll

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David Warburton

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Wei Shi

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Pierre-Marie Del Moral

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Stijn De Langhe

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Jean Paul Thiery

National University of Singapore

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Frederic G. Sala

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Kathryn D. Anderson

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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Matt Lee

University of Southern California

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