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Dive into the research topics where Dubravko Pavlin is active.

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Featured researches published by Dubravko Pavlin.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2001

Osteopontin as a means to cope with environmental insults: regulation of inflammation, tissue remodeling, and cell survival

David T. Denhardt; Masaki Noda; Anthony W. O’Regan; Dubravko Pavlin; Jeffrey S. Berman

OPN is a multifunctional cytokine and adhesion protein that contains an integrin-binding RGD sequence and additional sequences that interact with CD44v6/7 or other adhesive receptors. Its expression is increased in response to early proinflammatory cytokines and to mechanical strain in bone. The function of the secreted protein may be altered by extracellular enzymes, including thrombin and kinases. The study of OPN-null mice has revealed roles for OPN in a broad range of homeostatic (bone remodeling, tissue debridement) and pathologic (cellular immunity, wound healing, cancer metastasis) processes. While these processes seem disparate, they are linked by several common themes, including enhanced expression of OPN in response to stress or tissue injury, and stimulation of cell motility and cell survival pathways via interactions of OPN with adhesive receptors. OPN is chemotactic for various cell types, notably monocytes/macrophages, which are attracted to sites of infection and inflammation. It is essential for cell-mediated immunity and a normal Th1 cytokine response during granuloma formation. OPN serves both to attach bone cells to bone matrix and to generate intracellular signals essential for normal osteoclast motility on bone; it may mediate osteocyte recognition of bone strain. OPN activates intracellular signaling pathways and regulates gene expression as a consequence of its interactions with its various receptors. The best-characterized is the integrin-stimulated FAK-Src-Rho pathway, which alters gelsolin function and podosome formation in osteoclasts. Identification and dissection of the signal transduction pathways and their targets are complicated by the fact that OPN can engage more than one type of receptor on the cell. For this reason, it is important to ascertain which receptors are in play in any given experimental system. There is compelling evidence that soluble OPN can in a variety of situations help cells survive an otherwise lethal insult. Remarkably, this survival signaling is mediated by receptors that are generally considered to be receptors for ECM components. We suggest that OPN delivers an antiapoptotic “ECM-like” signal via multiple ligand-receptor interactions to cells, both adherent and nonadherent.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2003

Mechanical Loading Stimulates Dentin Matrix Protein 1 (DMP1) Expression in Osteocytes In Vivo

Jelica Gluhak-Heinrich; Ling Ye; Lynda F. Bonewald; Jian Q. Feng; Mary MacDougall; S. E. Harris; Dubravko Pavlin

Dentin matrix protein 1 (DMP1) was originally postulated to be dentin specific. Further analysis showed that DMP1 is also expressed in mature cartilage and bone. In bone tissue, DMP1 is expressed predominantly in late osteoblasts and osteocytes. DMP1 belongs to the SIBLING (Small Integrin Binding Ligand N‐linked Glycoprotein) family of cellular matrix proteins that also includes osteopontin, bone sialoprotein, dentin sialophosphoprotein, and others. In this study, we examined the effect of mechanical loading on expression of DMP1 mRNA and DMP1 protein in alveolar bone in the mouse tooth movement model by in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry. The expression of DMP1 mRNA was determined quantitatively in mechanically loaded and control sites of dento‐alveolar tissue at several time points from 6 h to 7 days after loading. The tooth movement model allows simultaneous evaluation of bone resorption and bone formation sites. Expression of DMP1 mRNA in osteocytes increased 2‐fold as early as 6 h after treatment in both the bone formation and bone resorption sites. After 4 days, DMP1 expression in osteocytes increased to a maximum of 3.7‐fold in the bone formation sites and 3.5‐fold in the resorption sites. Osteoblasts responded in the opposite manner and showed a transient 45% decrease of DMP1 mRNA in bone formation sites and a constant decrease of DMP1 mRNA during the entire course of treatment in the bone resorption sites, with a peak inhibition of 67% at day 2. By immunocytochemistry using a C‐terminal region peptide antibody to DMP1, we found that there was a transient decrease in immunoreactivity at 3 days after treatment on both the formation side and the resorption side compared with the matched contralateral control tissue. However by 7 days of loading, there was a dramatic increase in DMP1 protein immunoreactivity on both the formation side and the resorption side. These results represent changes in epitope availability using this antibody or true changes in protein levels. The observations imply that the DMP1 protein is undergoing dynamic changes in either synthesis or other protein/matrix interaction after mechanical loading of alveolar bone. The findings indicate that DMP1 is involved in the responses of osteocytes and osteoblasts to mechanical loading of bone. These results support the hypothesis that osteocytes alter their matrix microenvironment in response to mechanical loading.


Calcified Tissue International | 2000

Mechanical Loading Stimulates Differentiation of Periodontal Osteoblasts in a Mouse Osteoinduction Model: Effect on Type I Collagen and Alkaline Phosphatase Genes

Dubravko Pavlin; Stephen B Dove; R. Zadro; Jelica Gluhak-Heinrich

Abstract The effects of mechanical loading on the osteoblast phenotype remain unclear because of many variables inherent to the current experimental models. This study reports on utilization of a mouse tooth movement model and a semiquantitative video image analysis of in situ hybridization to determine the effect of mechanical loading on cell-specific expression of type I collagen (collagen I) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) genes in periodontal osteoblasts, using nonosseous cells as an internal standard. The histomorphometric analysis showed intense osteoid deposition after 3 days of treatment, confirming the osteoinductive nature of the mechanical signal. The results of in situ hybridization showed that in control periodontal sites both collagen I and ALP mRNAs were expressed uniformly across the periodontium. Treatment for 24 hours enhanced the ALP mRNA level about twofold over controls and maintained that level of stimulation after 6 days. In contrast, collagen I mRNA level was not affected after 24 hours of treatment, but it was stimulated 2.8-fold at day 6. This increase reflected enhanced gene expression in individual osteoblasts, since the increase in osteoblast number was small. These results indicate that (1) the mouse model and a semiquantitative video image analysis are suitable for detecting osteoblast-specific gene regulation by mechanical loading; (2) osteogenic mechanical stress induces deposition of bone matrix primarily by stimulating differentiation of osteoblasts, and, to a lesser extent, by an increase in number of these cells; (3) ALP is an early marker of mechanically-induced differentiation of osteoblasts. (4) osteogenic mechanical stimulation in vivo produces a cell-specific 2.8-fold increase in collagen gene expression in mature, matrix-depositing osteoblasts located on the bone surface and within the osteoid layer.


Critical Reviews in Oral Biology & Medicine | 2001

Effect of Mechanical Loading On Periodontal Cells

Dubravko Pavlin; Jelica Gluhak-Heinrich

Mechanical loading is an important regulatory factor in alveolar bone homeostasis, and plays an essential role in maintaining the structure and mass of the alveolar processes throughout lifetime. A better understanding of the cellular and molecular responses of periodontal cells is a prerequisite for further improvements of therapeutic approaches in orthodontics, periodontal and alveolar bone repair and regeneration, implantology, and post-surgical wound healing. The purpose of this review is to provide an insight into some cell culture and animal models used for studying the effects of mechanical loading on periodontal cells, and into the recent developments and utilization of new in vivo animal models. There has been an increased awareness about the need for improvement and development of in vivo models to supplement the widely used cell culture models, and for biological validation of in vitro results, especially in the light of evidence that developmental models may not always reflect bone homeostasis in an adult organism. Due to the limitations of in vivo models, previous studies on mechanical regulation of alveolar bone osteoblasts and cementoblasts mostly focused on proliferative responses, rather than on the stimulation of cell differentiation. To address this problem, we have recently characterized and implemented a mouse osteoinductive tooth movement model for studying mechanically induced regulation of osteoblast- and cementoblast-associated genes. In this model, a defined and reproducible mechanical osteogenic loading is applied during a time course of up to two weeks. Regulation of gene expression in either wild-type or transgenic animals is assessed by a relative quantitative measurement of the level of target mRNAs directly within the subpopulations of periodontal cells. To date, results demonstrate a defined temporal pattern of cell-specific gene regulation in periodontal osteoblasts mechanically stimulated to differentiate and deposit bone matrix. The responses of osteoblast-associated genes to mechanical loading were 10- to 20-fold greater than the increase in the numbers of these cells, indicating that the induction of differentiation and an increase of cell function are the primary responses to osteogenic loading. The progression of the osteoblast phenotype in the intact mouse periodontium was several-fold faster compared with that in cultured cells, suggesting that the mechanical signal may be targeting osteoblast precursors in the state of readiness to respond to an environmental challenge, without the initial proliferative response. An early response of alkaline phosphatase and bone sialoprotein genes was detected after 24 hrs of treatment, followed by a concomitant stimulation of osteocalcin and collagen I between 24 and 48 hrs, and deposition of osteoid after 72 hrs. Although cementoblasts constitutively express biochemical markers similar to those of osteoblasts, distinct responses of osteocalcin, collagen I, and bone sialoprotein genes to mechanical loading were observed in the two cell phenotypes. This finding indicates that differential genetic responses to mechanical loading provide functional markers for distinction of the cementoblast and osteoblast phenotypes.


Connective Tissue Research | 2001

Temporal Pattern of Stimulation of Osteoblast-Associated Genes During Mechanically-Induced Osteogenesis In Vivo: Early Responses of Osteocalcin and Type I Collagen

Dubravko Pavlin; Renata Zadro; Jelica Gluhak-Heinrich

Mechanical loading is an essential environmental factor in skeletal homeostasis, but the response of osteoblast-associated genes to mechanical osteogenic signal is largely unknown. This study uses our recently characterized in vivo osteoinductive model to analyze the sequence of stimulation and the time course of expression of osteoblast-associated genes in mechanically loaded mouse periodontium. Temporal pattern of regulation of osteocalcin (OC), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), and type I collagen (collagen I) was determined during mechanically-induced osteoblast differentiation in vivo, using a mouse tooth movement model earlier shown to induce bone formation and cell-specific regulation of genes in osteoblasts. The expression of target genes was determined after 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6 days of orthodontic movement of the mouse first molar. mRNA levels were measured in the layer of osteoblasts adjacent to the alveolar bone surface, using in situ hybridization and a relative quantitative video image analysis of cell-specific hybridization intensity, with non-osseous mesenchymal periodontal cells as an internal standard. After 24 hours of loading, the level of OC in osteoblasts slightly decreased, followed by a remarkable 4.6-fold cell-specific stimulation between 1 and 2 days of treatment. The high level expression of OC was maintained throughout the treatment with a peak 7-fold stimulation at day 4. The expression of collagen I gene was not significantly affected after 1 day, but it was stimulated 3-fold at day 2, and maintained at a similar level through day 6. The ALP gene, which we previously found to be mechanically stimulated during the first 24 hours, remained enhanced from 1.8- to 2.2-fold throughout the 6 days of treatment. Thus, in an intact alveolar bone compartment, mechanical loading resulted in a defined temporal sequence of induction of osteoblast-associated genes. Stimulation of OC 48 h after the onset of loading (and 24 h prior to deposition of osteoid) temporally coincided with that of collagen I, and was preceded for 24 h by an enhancement of ALP. Identification of OC as a mechanically responsive gene induced in functionally active osteoblasts in this study is consistent with its potential role in limiting the rate of mechanically-induced bone modeling. Furthermore, these results show that temporal progression of mechanically-induced osteoblast phenotype in this in vivo model occurs very rapidly. This suggests that physiologically relevant mechanical osteoinductive signal in vivo is targeting a population of committed osteoblast precursor cells that are capable of rapidly responding by entering a differentiation pathway and initiating an anabolic skeletal adaptation process.


American Journal of Orthodontics | 1984

Mechanical reactions of facial skeleton to maxillary expansion determined by laser holography

Dubravko Pavlin; Dalibor Vukicevic

The highly accurate laser holographic interferometry method was used to determine in what way low-magnitude forces during slow maxillary expansion are transmitted to the entire maxillary complex and its surrounding structures. The experiments were carried out on a macerated human skull which had a perfectly preserved, normally aligned maxillary dental arch and intact alveolar processes. The soft palatal and periodontal tissues were reconstructed with a semielastic material. The specimen was loaded gradually by widening of a split acrylic appliance with an expansion screw. Interferograms were taken simultaneously on the left and right sides of the maxillary complex, using the 10 mV He-Ne laser and the double-exposure method. Analysis of the fringe pattern on the recorded object surface was performed by graphically determining the deformation curves related to the bony surface in selected horizontal and vertical planes. Experimental results show that the application of laterally directed forces from the maxillary expansion appliance induced initial mechanical reactions of the entire maxilla, the circummaxillary sutures, and the surrounding bones. Each increase in dental arch width was obtained not only by the deformation of the alveolar process with dental tipping but also by the rotation of the entire maxilla within its sutures around horizontal and vertical axes. Moreover, displacement of the surrounding maxillary structures (pterygoid processes, zygomatic, lacrimal, and nasal bones) was detected in response to the rotational movement of the maxilla.


Matrix Biology | 2001

Neutrophil collagenase (MMP-8) is expressed during early development in neural crest cells as well as in adult melanoma cells

Troy A. Giambernardi; Alan Y. Sakaguchi; Jelica Gluhak; Dubravko Pavlin; Dean A. Troyer; Gokal Das; Ulrich Rodeck; Robert J. Klebe

Matrix metalloproteinase-8 (MMP-8) is a neutral metalloproteinase of the fibrillar collagenase family that also includes MMP-1 and MMP-13. In contrast to the other collagenases, MMP-8 has a very limited tissue distribution, thought to be restricted to neutrophils and chondrocytes. In a previous study, we observed MMP-8 expression in human melanoma cells. This observation led us to assess in more detail the expression of MMP-8 in normal and malignant melanocytic cells. We found that MMP-8 was expressed by 11 out of 12 human melanoma cell lines tested and all 10 primary melanomas we examined, but was not expressed by four primary neonatal melanocyte strains. Since melanocytes arise from highly motile neural crest cells, we examined the hypothesis that MMP-8 might be expressed by neural crest cells. RT-PCR analysis of post-implantation mouse embryos indicated the presence of MMP-8 transcripts at E9.5. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry of mouse embryos between E9.5-E14.5 demonstrated MMP-8 expression in the surface ectoderm, neural crest cells and chondrocytes. MMP-8 was also detected in neural crest cell migration located in the circumference of the neural tube, branchial arches and the notochord. In addition, MMP-8 expression was observed between the somites, in circumscriptive areas of the developing brain, heart, and eye, and in the interdigital zones of the limbs. In summary, we found MMP-8 to be the first fibrillar collagenase expressed during development. In contrast to its restricted tissue expression post-partum, MMP-8 was present in multiple embryonic tissues, including neural crest cells. The production of MMP-8 by migrating neural crest cells may contribute to their ability to degrade fibrillar collagen matrices while in transit.


Cell Communication and Adhesion | 2006

Mechanical Loading Stimulates Expression of Connexin 43 in Alveolar Bone Cells in the Tooth Movement Model

Jelica Gluhak-Heinrich; Sumin Gu; Dubravko Pavlin; Jean X. Jiang

Bone osteoblasts and osteocytes express large amounts of connexin (Cx) 43, the component of gap junctions and hemichannels. Previous studies have shown that these channels play important roles in regulating biological functions in response to mechanical loading. Here, we characterized the distribution of mRNA and protein of Cx43 in mechanical loading model of tooth movement. The locations of bone formation and resorption have been well defined in this model, which provides unique experimental systems for better understanding of potential roles of Cx43 in bone formation and remodeling under mechanical stimulation. We found that mechanical loading increased Cx43 mRNA expression in osteoblasts and bone lining cells, but not in osteocytes, at both formation and resorption sites. Cx43 protein, however, increased in both osteoblasts and osteocytes in response to loading. Interestingly, the upregulation of Cx43 protein by loading was even more pronounced in osteocytes compared to other bone cells, with an appearance of punctate staining on the cell body and dendritic process. Cx45 was reported to be expressed in several bone cell lines, but here we did not detect the Cx45 protein in the alveolar bone cells. These results further suggest the potential involvement of Cx43-forming gap junctions and hemichannels in the process of mechanically induced bone formation and resorption.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1998

1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 inhibition of Col1a1 promoter expression in calvariae from neonatal transgenic mice

Antonio Bedalov; Roberto Salvatori; Milan Dodig; Belinda Kapural; Dubravko Pavlin; Barbara E. Kream; Stephen H. Clark; Charles O. Woody; David W. Rowe; Alexander C. Lichtler

We studied the effect of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D3 (1,25(OH)2D3) on organ cultures of transgenic mouse calvariae containing segments of the Col1a1 promoter extending to -3518, -2297, -1997, -1794, -1763, and -1719 bp upstream of the transcription start site fused to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) reporter gene. 1,25(OH)2D3 had a dose-dependent inhibitory effect on the expression of the -3518 bp promoter construct (ColCAT3.6), with maximal inhibition of about 50% at 10 nM. This level of inhibition was consistent with the previously observed effect on the endogenous Col1a1 gene in bone cell models. All of the shorter constructs were also inhibited by 10 nM 1,25(OH)2D3, suggesting that the sequences required for 1, 25(OH)2D3 inhibition are downstream of -1719 bp. The inhibitory effect of 1,25(OH)2D3 on transgene mRNA was maintained in the presence of the protein synthesis inhibitor cycloheximide, suggesting that the inhibitory effect on Col1a1 gene transcription does not require de novo protein synthesis. We also examined the in vivo effect of 1,25(OH)2D3 treatment of transgenic mice on ColCAT activity, and found that 48 h treatment caused a dose-dependent inhibition of CAT activity in calvariae comparable to that observed in organ cultures. In conclusion, we demonstrated that 1,25(OH)2D3 inhibits Col1A1 promoter activity in transgenic mouse calvariae, both in vivo and in vitro. The results indicate that there is a 1, 25(OH)2D3 responsive element downstream of -1719 bp. The inhibitory effect does not require new protein synthesis.


Journal of Dental Research | 2001

Cloning, Characterization, and Tissue Expression Pattern of Mouse Nma/BAMBI During Odontogenesis

C. Knight; D. Simmons; Ting Ting Gu; Jelica Gluhak-Heinrich; Dubravko Pavlin; M. Zeichner-David; Mary MacDougall

Degenerate oligonucleotides to consensus serine kinase functional domains previously identified a novel, partial rabbit tooth cDNA (Zeichner-David et al., 1992) that was used in this study to identify a full-length mouse clone. A 1390-base-pair cDNA clone was isolated encoding a putative 260-amino-acid open reading frame containing a hydrophobic 25-amino-acid potential transmembrane domain. This clone shares some homology with the TGF-β type I receptor family, but lacks the intracellular kinase domain. DNA database analysis revealed that this clone has 86% identity to a newly isolated human gene termed non-metastatic gene A and 80% identity to a Xenopus cDNA clone termed BMP and activin membrane bound inhibitor. Here we report the mouse Nma/BAMBI cDNA sequence, the tissue expression pattern, and confirmed expression in dental cell lines. This study demonstrates that Nma/BAMBI is a highly conserved protein across species and is expressed at high levels during odontogenesis.

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Jelica Gluhak-Heinrich

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Alexander C. Lichtler

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Antonio Bedalov

University of Connecticut

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Barbara E. Kream

University of Connecticut Health Center

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David W. Rowe

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Stephen H. Clark

University of Connecticut Health Center

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John R. Harrison

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Huw F. Thomas

University of Connecticut

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Lynda F. Bonewald

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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