Elena Lopez-Rodriguez
Hannover Medical School
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Publication
Featured researches published by Elena Lopez-Rodriguez.
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2015
Dennis Lutz; Amiq Gazdhar; Elena Lopez-Rodriguez; Clemens Ruppert; Poornima Mahavadi; Andreas Günther; Walter Klepetko; Jason H. T. Bates; Bradford J. Smith; Thomas Geiser; Matthias Ochs; Lars Knudsen
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) and bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis are associated with surfactant system dysfunction, alveolar collapse (derecruitment), and collapse induration (irreversible collapse). These events play undefined roles in the loss of lung function. The purpose of this study was to quantify how surfactant inactivation, alveolar collapse, and collapse induration lead to degradation of lung function. Design-based stereology and invasive pulmonary function tests were performed 1, 3, 7, and 14 days after intratracheal bleomycin-instillation in rats. The number and size of open alveoli was correlated to mechanical properties. Active surfactant subtypes declined by Day 1, associated with a progressive alveolar derecruitment and a decrease in compliance. Alveolar epithelial damage was more pronounced in closed alveoli compared with ventilated alveoli. Collapse induration occurred on Day 7 and Day 14 as indicated by collapsed alveoli overgrown by a hyperplastic alveolar epithelium. This pathophysiology was also observed for the first time in human IPF lung explants. Before the onset of collapse induration, distal airspaces were easily recruited, and lung elastance could be kept low after recruitment by positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP). At later time points, the recruitable fraction of the lung was reduced by collapse induration, causing elastance to be elevated at high levels of PEEP. Surfactant inactivation leading to alveolar collapse and subsequent collapse induration might be the primary pathway for the loss of alveoli in this animal model. Loss of alveoli is highly correlated with the degradation of lung function. Our ultrastructural observations suggest that collapse induration is important in human IPF.
American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2015
Bastian Birkelbach; Dennis Lutz; Clemens Ruppert; Ingrid Henneke; Elena Lopez-Rodriguez; Andreas Günther; Matthias Ochs; Poornima Mahavadi; Lars Knudsen
Chronic injury of alveolar epithelial type II cells (AE2 cells) represents a key event in the development of lung fibrosis in animal models and in humans, such as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF). Intratracheal delivery of amiodarone to mice results in a profound injury and macroautophagy-dependent apoptosis of AE2 cells. Increased autophagy manifested in AE2 cells by disturbances of the intracellular surfactant. Hence, we hypothesized that ultrastructural alterations of the intracellular surfactant pool are signs of epithelial stress correlating with the severity of fibrotic remodeling. With the use of design-based stereology, the amiodarone model of pulmonary fibrosis in mice was characterized at the light and ultrastructural level during progression. Mean volume of AE2 cells, volume of lamellar bodies per AE2 cell, and mean size of lamellar bodies were correlated to structural parameters reflecting severity of fibrosis like collagen content. Within 2 wk amiodarone leads to an increase in septal wall thickness and a decrease in alveolar numbers due to irreversible alveolar collapse associated with alveolar surfactant dysfunction. Progressive hypertrophy of AE2 cells and increase in mean individual size and total volume of lamellar bodies per AE2 cell were observed. A high positive correlation of these AE2 cell-related ultrastructural changes and the deposition of collagen fibrils within septal walls were established. Qualitatively, similar alterations could be found in IPF samples with mild to moderate fibrosis. We conclude that ultrastructural alterations of AE2 cells including the surfactant system are tightly correlated with the progression of fibrotic remodeling.
American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2016
Elena Lopez-Rodriguez; Caroline Boden; Mercedes Echaide; Jesús Pérez-Gil; Martin Kolb; Jack Gauldie; Ulrich A. Maus; Matthias Ochs; Lars Knudsen
Transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) is involved in regulation of cellular proliferation, differentiation, and fibrogenesis, inducing myofibroblast migration and increasing extracellular matrix synthesis. Here, TGF-β1 effects on pulmonary structure and function were analyzed. Adenovirus-mediated gene transfer of TGF-β1 in mice lungs was performed and evaluated by design-based stereology, invasive pulmonary function testing, and detailed analyses of the surfactant system 1 and 2 wk after gene transfer. After 1 wk decreased static compliance was linked with a dramatic alveolar derecruitment without edema formation or increase in the volume of septal wall tissue or collagen fibrils. Abnormally high surface tension correlated with downregulation of surfactant proteins B and C. TTF-1 expression was reduced, and, using PLA (proximity ligand assay) technology, we found Smad3 and TTF-1 forming complexes in vivo, which are normally translocated into the nucleus of the alveolar epithelial type II cells (AE2C) but in the presence of TGF-β1 remain in the cytoplasm. AE2C show altered morphology, resulting in loss of total apical surface area per lung and polarity. These changes of AE2C were progressive 2 wk after gene transfer and correlated with lung compliance. Although static lung compliance remained low, the volume of septal wall tissue and collagen fibrils increased 2 wk after gene transfer. In this animal model, the primary effect of TGF-β1 signaling in the lung is downregulation of surfactant proteins, high surface tension, alveolar derecruitment, and mechanical stress, which precede fibrotic tissue remodeling and progressive loss of AE2C polarity. Initial TTF-1 dysfunction is potentially linked to downregulation of surfactant proteins.
Cell and Tissue Research | 2017
Elena Lopez-Rodriguez; Gemma Gay-Jordi; Adele Mucci; Nico Lachmann; Anna Serrano-Mollar
Lung surfactant is a complex mixture of lipids and proteins lining the alveolar epithelium. At the air–liquid interface, surfactant lowers surface tension, avoiding alveolar collapse and reducing the work of breathing. The essential role of lung surfactant in breathing and therefore in life, is highlighted by surfactant deficiency in premature neonates, which causes neonatal respiratory distress syndrome and results in early death after birth. In addition, defects in surfactant metabolism alter lung homeostasis and lead to disease. Special attention should be paid to two important key cells responsible for surfactant metabolism: alveolar epithelial type II cells (AE2C) and alveolar macrophages (AM). On the one hand, surfactant deficiency coming from abnormal AE2C function results in high surface tension, promoting alveolar collapse and mechanical stress in the epithelium. This epithelial injury contributes to tissue remodeling and lung fibrosis. On the other hand, impaired surfactant catabolism by AM leads to accumulation of surfactant in air spaces and the associated altered lung function in pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP). We review here two recent cell therapies that aim to recover the activity of AE2C or AM, respectively, therefore targeting the restoring of surfactant metabolism and lung homeostasis. Applied therapies successfully show either transplantation of healthy AE2C in fibrotic lungs, to replace injured AE2C cells and surfactant, or transplantation of bone marrow-derived macrophages to counteract accumulation of surfactant lipid and proteinaceous material in the alveolar spaces leading to PAP. These therapies introduce an alternative treatment with great potential for patients suffering from lung diseases.
American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2017
Katharina Maria Kling; Elena Lopez-Rodriguez; Christiane Pfarrer; Christian Mühlfeld; Christina Brandenberger
Acute lung injury (ALI) is characterized by hypoxemia, enhanced permeability of the air-blood barrier, and pulmonary edema. Particularly in the elderly, ALI is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. The reasons for this, however, are poorly understood. We hypothesized that age-related changes in pulmonary structure, function, and inflammation lead to a worse prognosis in ALI. ALI was induced in young (10 wk old) and old (18 mo old) male C57BL/6 mice by intranasal application of 2.5 mg lipopolysaccharide (LPS)/kg body wt or saline (control mice). After 24 h, lung function was assessed, and lungs were either processed for stereological or inflammatory analysis, such as bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) cytometry and qPCR. Both young and old mice developed severe signs of ALI, including alveolar and septal edema and enhanced inflammatory BALF cells. However, the pathology of ALI was more pronounced in old compared with young mice with nearly sixfold higher BALF protein concentration, twice the number of neutrophils, and significantly higher expression of neutrophil chemokine Cxcl1, adhesion molecule Icam-1, and metalloprotease-9, whereas the expression of tight junction protein occludin significantly decreased. The old LPS mice had thicker alveolar septa attributable to higher volumes of interstitial cells and extracellular matrix. Tissue resistance and elastance reflected observed changes at the ultrastructural level in the lung parenchyma in ALI of young and old mice. In summary, the pathology of ALI with advanced age in mice is characterized by a greater neutrophilic inflammation, leakier air-blood barrier, and altered lung function, which is in line with findings in elderly patients.
American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2017
Simone Ebener; Sandra Barnowski; Carlos Wotzkow; Thomas Marti; Elena Lopez-Rodriguez; Bruno Crestani; Fabian Blank; Ralph A. Schmid; Thomas Geiser; Manuela Funke
Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a devastating lung disease with a median survival of 3 yr. IPF deteriorates upon viral or bacterial lung infection although pulmonary infection (pneumonia) in healthy lungs rarely induces fibrosis. Bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) activates Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4), initiating proinflammatory pathways. As TLR4 has already been linked to hepatic fibrosis and scleroderma, we now investigated the role of TLR4 in IPF fibroblasts. Lung tissue sections from patients with IPF were analyzed for TLR4 expression. Isolated normal human lung fibroblasts (NL-FB) and IPF fibroblasts (IPF-FB) were exposed to LPS and transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) before expression analysis of receptors, profibrotic mediators, and cytokines. TLR4 is expressed in fibroblast foci of IPF lungs as well as in primary NL-FB and IPF-FB. As a model for a gram-negative pneumonia in the nonfibrotic lung, NL-FB and IPF-FB were coexposed to LPS and TGF-β. Whereas NL-FB produced significantly less connective tissue growth factor upon costimulation compared with TGF-β stimulation alone, IPF-FB showed significantly increased profibrotic markers compared with control fibroblasts after costimulation. Although levels of antifibrotic prostaglandin E2 were elevated after costimulation, they were not responsible for this effect. However, significant downregulation of TGF-β receptor type 1 in control fibroblasts seems to contribute to the reduced profibrotic response in our in vitro model. Normal and IPF fibroblasts thus differ in their profibrotic response upon LPS-induced TLR4 stimulation.
American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2017
Lilian Steffen; Clemens Ruppert; Heinz-Gerd Hoymann; Manuela Funke; Simone Ebener; Christina Kloth; Christian Mühlfeld; Matthias Ochs; Lars Knudsen; Elena Lopez-Rodriguez
Bleomycin-induced lung injury leads to surfactant dysfunction and permanent loss of alveoli due to a remodeling process called collapse induration. Collapse induration also occurs in acute interstitial lung disease and idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis in humans. We hypothesized that surfactant dysfunction aggravates lung injury and early remodeling resulting in collapse induration within 7 days after lung injury. Rats received bleomycin to induce lung injury and either repetitive surfactant replacement therapy (SRT: 100 mg Curosurf/kg BW = surf group) or saline (0.9% NaCl = saline group). After 3 (D3) or 7 (D7) days, invasive pulmonary function tests were performed to determine tissue elastance (H) and static compliance (Cst). Bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) was taken for surfactant function, inflammatory markers, and protein measurements. Lungs were fixed by vascular perfusion for design-based stereology and electron microscopic analyses. SRT significantly improved minimum surface tension of alveolar surfactant as well as H and Cst at D3 and D7. At D3 decreased inflammatory markers including neutrophilic granulocytes, IL-1β, and IL-6 correlated with reduced BAL-protein levels after SRT. Numbers of open alveoli were significantly increased at D3 and D7 in SRT groups whereas at D7 there was also a significant reduction in septal wall thickness and parenchymal tissue volume. Septal wall thickness and numbers of open alveoli highly correlated with improved lung mechanics after SRT. In conclusion, reduction in surface tension was effective to stabilize alveoli linked with an attenuation of parameters of acute lung injury at D3 and collapse induration at D7. Hence, SRT modifies disease progression to collapse induration.
Stem cell reports | 2018
Adele Mucci; Elena Lopez-Rodriguez; Miriam Hetzel; Serena Liu; Takuji Suzuki; Christine Happle; Mania Ackermann; Henning Kempf; Roman Hillje; Jessica Kunkiel; Ewa Janosz; Sebastian Brennig; Silke Glage; Jens P. Bankstahl; Sabine Dettmer; Thomas Rodt; Gudrun Göhring; Bruce C. Trapnell; Gesine Hansen; Cole Trapnell; Lars Knudsen; Nico Lachmann; Thomas Moritz
Summary Induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived hematopoietic cells represent a highly attractive source for cell and gene therapy. Given the longevity, plasticity, and self-renewal potential of distinct macrophage subpopulations, iPSC-derived macrophages (iPSC-Mφ) appear of particular interest in this context. We here evaluated the airway residence, plasticity, and therapeutic efficacy of iPSC-Mφ in a murine model of hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (herPAP). We demonstrate that single pulmonary macrophage transplantation (PMT) of 2.5–4 × 106 iPSC-Mφ yields efficient airway residence with conversion of iPSC-Mφ to an alveolar macrophage (AMφ) phenotype characterized by a distinct surface marker and gene expression profile within 2 months. Moreover, PMT significantly improves alveolar protein deposition and other critical herPAP disease parameters. Thus, our data indicate iPSC-Mφ as a source of functional macrophages displaying substantial plasticity and therapeutic potential that upon pulmonary transplantation will integrate into the lung microenvironment, adopt an AMφ phenotype and gene expression pattern, and profoundly ameliorate pulmonary disease phenotypes.
Molecular Therapy | 2016
Adele Mucci; Jessica Kunkiel; Mania Ackermann; Takuji Suzuki; Christine Happle; Sebastian Brennig; Elena Lopez-Rodriguez; Jens P. Bankstahl; Mark Philipp Kühnel; Miriam Hetzel; Axel Schambach; Gesine Hansen; Bruce C. Trapnell; Nico Lachmann; Thomas Moritz
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) have proven applicability to various areas including disease modeling and cell therapy. Hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (herPAP) is a rare lung disease caused by mutations within the α- (CSF2RA) or β-chain (CSF2RB) of the GM-CSF receptor gene (CSF2R), resulting in the inability of alveolar macrophages (MΦ) to clear the alveolar spaces from surfactant material. Given the limited treatment options in herPAP, we evaluated the suitability of murine iPSC-derived MΦ (iPSC-MΦ) for disease modelling and as a source for an innovative cell replacement therapy. To this point we first established an efficient and robust protocol to obtain mature and functional MΦ from healthy murine iPSCs. These MΦ closely resemble their counterparts generated in vitro from bone marrow cells with regard to morphology, surface phenotype and function. Furthermore, murine Csf2rb-deficient iPSCs (miPAP) were generated and submitted to our differentiation protocol. miPAP-derived MΦ faithfully recapitulated the defects in GM-CSF signaling and MΦ function present in herPAP patients. Of note, we also evaluated the feasibility, safety and clinical benefit of the intratracheal application of healthy iPSC-MΦ using a clinically relevant in vivo mouse model of herPAP. Following single pulmonary MΦ transplantation (PMT) of 4×106 iPSC-MΦ, specific engraftment was observed in the alveolar spaces for up to 8 weeks as shown by tissue sections and PCR. Moreover, cells displayed donor-specific CD45.1 expression and typical MΦ morphology in vivo and upon re-isolation. No teratoma formation or tissue toxicity was detected in the organs of transplanted mice. Most importantly, following PMT a significant improvement of disease parameters such as reduced protein, M-CSF, GM-CSF and surfactant protein-D (SP-D) concentration was shown in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. We also observed a decrease in PAS-positive material in lung sections and a reduction in lung opacity in computer tomography scans. Thus, we here present an efficient differentiation protocol to obtain MΦ from iPSCs for disease modeling and introduce PMT of iPSC-MΦ as an innovative cell therapy for herPAP.
Herbsttagung der Sektionen Zellbiologie und Infektiologie und Tuberkulose der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Pneumologie und Beatmungsmedizin e.V. | 2018
J Ruwisch; N Roldan; Jesús Pérez-Gil; Te Weaver; Matthias Ochs; Lars Knudsen; Elena Lopez-Rodriguez