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Dive into the research topics where Elianne Burg is active.

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Featured researches published by Elianne Burg.


Mucosal Immunology | 2012

Essential role of IL-6 in protection against H1N1 influenza virus by promoting neutrophil survival in the lung.

Oliver Dienz; Jonathan G. Rud; Sheri M. Eaton; Paula A. Lanthier; Elianne Burg; Angela Drew; Janice Y. Bunn; Benjamin T. Suratt; Laura Haynes; Mercedes Rincon

Influenza virus infection is considered a major worldwide public health problem. Seasonal infections with the most common influenza virus strains (e.g., H1N1) can usually be resolved, but they still cause a high rate of mortality. The factors that influence the outcome of the infection remain unclear. Here, we show that deficiency of interleukin (IL)-6 or IL-6 receptor is sufficient for normally sublethal doses of H1N1 influenza A virus to cause death in mice. IL-6 is necessary for resolution of influenza infection by protecting neutrophils from virus-induced death in the lung and by promoting neutrophil-mediated viral clearance. Loss of IL-6 results in persistence of the influenza virus in the lung leading to pronounced lung damage and, ultimately, death. Thus, we demonstrate that IL-6 is a vital innate immune cytokine in providing protection against influenza A infection. Genetic or environmental factors that impair IL-6 production or signaling could increase mortality to influenza virus infection.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2012

Obesity Is Associated with Neutrophil Dysfunction and Attenuation of Murine Acute Lung Injury

Lauren L. Kordonowy; Elianne Burg; Christopher C. Lenox; Lauren M. Gauthier; Joseph M. Petty; Maryellen Antkowiak; Tatsiana Palvinskaya; Niki D.J. Ubags; Mercedes Rincon; Anne E. Dixon; Juanita H. J. Vernooy; Michael B. Fessler; Matthew E. Poynter; Benjamin T. Suratt

Although obesity is implicated in numerous health complications leading to increased mortality, the relationship between obesity and outcomes for critically ill patients appears paradoxical. Recent studies have reported better outcomes and lower levels of inflammatory cytokines in obese patients with acute lung injury (ALI)/acute respiratory distress syndrome, suggesting that obesity may ameliorate the effects of this disease. We investigated the effects of obesity in leptin-resistant db/db obese and diet-induced obese mice using an inhaled LPS model of ALI. Obesity-associated effects on neutrophil chemoattractant response were examined in bone marrow neutrophils using chemotaxis and adoptive transfer; neutrophil surface levels of chemokine receptor CXCR2 were determined by flow cytometry. Airspace neutrophilia, capillary leak, and plasma IL-6 were all decreased in obese relative to lean mice in established lung injury (24 h). No difference in airspace inflammatory cytokine levels was found between obese and lean mice in both obesity models during the early phase of neutrophil recruitment (2-6 h), but early airspace neutrophilia was reduced in db/db obese mice. Neutrophils from uninjured obese mice demonstrated diminished chemotaxis to the chemokine keratinocyte cytokine compared with lean control mice, and adoptive transfer of obese mouse neutrophils into injured lean mice revealed a defect in airspace migration of these cells. Possibly contributing to this defect, neutrophil CXCR2 expression was significantly lower in obese db/db mice, and a similar but nonsignificant decrease was seen in diet-induced obese mice. ALI is attenuated in obese mice, and this blunted response is in part attributable to an obesity-associated abnormal neutrophil chemoattractant response.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2013

MCJ/DnaJC15, an Endogenous Mitochondrial Repressor of the Respiratory Chain That Controls Metabolic Alterations

Ketki M. Hatle; Phani Gummadidala; Nicolás Navasa; Edgar Bernardo; John Dodge; Brian Silverstrim; Karen A. Fortner; Elianne Burg; Benajamin T. Suratt; Juergen Hammer; Michael Radermacher; Douglas J. Taatjes; Tina M. Thornton; Juan Anguita; Mercedes Rincon

ABSTRACT Mitochondria are the main engine that generates ATP through oxidative phosphorylation within the respiratory chain. Mitochondrial respiration is regulated according to the metabolic needs of cells and can be modulated in response to metabolic changes. Little is known about the mechanisms that regulate this process. Here, we identify MCJ/DnaJC15 as a distinct cochaperone that localizes at the mitochondrial inner membrane, where it interacts preferentially with complex I of the electron transfer chain. We show that MCJ impairs the formation of supercomplexes and functions as a negative regulator of the respiratory chain. The loss of MCJ leads to increased complex I activity, mitochondrial membrane potential, and ATP production. Although MCJ is dispensable for mitochondrial function under normal physiological conditions, MCJ deficiency affects the pathophysiology resulting from metabolic alterations. Thus, enhanced mitochondrial respiration in the absence of MCJ prevents the pathological accumulation of lipids in the liver in response to both fasting and a high-cholesterol diet. Impaired expression or loss of MCJ expression may therefore result in a “rapid” metabolism that mitigates the consequences of metabolic disorders.


Critical Care Medicine | 2014

The role of leptin in the development of pulmonary neutrophilia in infection and Acute Lung Injury

Niki D.J. Ubags; Juanita H. J. Vernooy; Elianne Burg; Catherine Hayes; Jenna Bement; Estee Dilli; Lennart Zabeau; Edward Abraham; Katie R. Poch; Jerry A. Nick; Oliver Dienz; Joaquin Zuñiga; Matthew J. Wargo; Joseph P. Mizgerd; Jan Tavernier; Mercedes Rincon; Matthew E. Poynter; Emiel F. M. Wouters; Benjamin T. Suratt

Objectives:One of the hallmarks of severe pneumonia and associated acute lung injury is neutrophil recruitment to the lung. Leptin is thought to be up-regulated in the lung following injury and to exert diverse effects on leukocytes, influencing both chemotaxis and survival. We hypothesized that pulmonary leptin contributes directly to the development of pulmonary neutrophilia during pneumonia and acute lung injury. Design:Controlled human and murine in vivo and ex vivo experimental studies. Setting:Research laboratory of a university hospital. Subjects:Healthy human volunteers and subjects hospitalized with bacterial and H1N1 pneumonia. C57Bl/6 and db/db mice were also used. Interventions:Lung samples from patients and mice with either bacterial or H1N1 pneumonia and associated acute lung injury were immunostained for leptin. Human bronchoalveolar lavage samples obtained after lipopolysaccharide-induced lung injury were assayed for leptin. C57Bl/6 mice were examined after oropharyngeal aspiration of recombinant leptin alone or in combination with Escherichia coli- or Klebsiella pneumoniae-induced pneumonia. Leptin-resistant (db/db) mice were also examined using the E. coli model. Bronchoalveolar lavage neutrophilia and cytokine levels were measured. Leptin-induced chemotaxis was examined in human blood- and murine marrow-derived neutrophils in vitro. Measurements and Main Results:Injured human and murine lung tissue showed leptin induction compared to normal lung, as did human bronchoalveolar lavage following lipopolysaccharide instillation. Bronchoalveolar lavage neutrophilia in uninjured and infected mice was increased and lung bacterial load decreased by airway leptin administration, whereas bronchoalveolar lavage neutrophilia in infected leptin-resistant mice was decreased. In sterile lung injury by lipopolysaccharide, leptin also appeared to decrease airspace neutrophil apoptosis. Both human and murine neutrophils migrated toward leptin in vitro, and this required intact signaling through the Janus Kinase 2/phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate 3-kinase pathway. Conclusions:We demonstrate that pulmonary leptin is induced in injured human and murine lungs and that this cytokine is effective in driving alveolar airspace neutrophilia. This action appears to be caused by direct effects of leptin on neutrophils.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2016

A Comparative Study of Lung Host Defense in Murine Obesity Models Insights into Neutrophil Function

Niki D.J. Ubags; Elianne Burg; Maryellen Antkowiak; Aaron M. Wallace; Estee Dilli; Jenna Bement; Matthew J. Wargo; Matthew E. Poynter; Emiel F.M. Wouters; Benjamin T. Suratt

We have shown that obesity-associated attenuation of murine acute lung injury is driven, in part, by blunted neutrophil chemotaxis, yet differences were noted between the two models of obesity studied. We hypothesized that obesity-associated impairment of multiple neutrophil functions contributes to increased risk for respiratory infection but that such impairments may vary between murine models of obesity. We examined the most commonly used murine obesity models (diet-induced obesity, db/db, CPE(fat/fat), and ob/ob) using a Klebsiella pneumoniae pneumonia model and LPS-induced pneumonitis. Marrow-derived neutrophils from uninjured lean and obese mice were examined for in vitro functional responses. All obesity models showed impaired clearance of K. pneumoniae, but in differing temporal patterns. Failure to contain infection in obese mice was seen in the db/db model at both 24 and 48 hours, yet this defect was only evident at 24 hours in CPE(fat/fat) and ob/ob models, and at 48 hours in diet-induced obesity. LPS-induced airspace neutrophilia was decreased in all models, and associated with blood neutropenia in the ob/ob model but with leukocytosis in the others. Obese mouse neutrophils from all models demonstrated impaired chemotaxis, whereas neutrophil granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-mediated survival, LPS-induced cytokine transcription, and mitogen-activated protein kinase and signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 activation in response to LPS and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, respectively, were variably impaired across the four models. Obesity-associated impairment of host response to lung infection is characterized by defects in neutrophil recruitment and survival. However, critical differences exist between commonly used mouse models of obesity and may reflect variable penetrance of elements of the metabolic syndrome, as well as other factors.


Pulmonary Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2013

Effects of acute and chronic low density lipoprotein exposure on neutrophil function.

Tatsiana Palvinskaya; Maryellen Antkowiak; Elianne Burg; Christopher C. Lenox; Niki D.J. Ubags; Angela Cramer; Mercedes Rincon; Anne E. Dixon; Michael B. Fessler; Matthew E. Poynter; Benjamin T. Suratt

Mounting evidence suggests that obesity and the metabolic syndrome have significant but often divergent effects on the innate immune system. These effects have been best established in monocytes and macrophages, particularly as a consequence of the hypercholesterolemic state. We have recently described defects in neutrophil function in the setting of both obesity and hypercholesterolemia, and hypothesized that exposure to elevated levels of lipoproteins, particularly LDL its oxidized forms, contributed to these defects. As a model of chronic cholesterol exposure, we examined functional responses of bone marrow neutrophils isolated from non-obese mice with diet-induced hypercholesterolemia compared to normal cholesterol controls. Chemotaxis, calcium flux, CD11b display, and F-actin polymerization were assayed in response to several chemoattractants, while neutrophil cytokine transcriptional response was determined to LPS. Following this, the acute effects of isolated LDL and its oxidized forms on normal neutrophils were assayed using the same functional assays. We found that neutrophils from non-obese hypercholesterolemic mice had blunted chemotaxis, altered calcium flux, and normal to augmented CD11b display with prolonged actin polymerization in response to stimuli. In response to acute exposure to lipoproteins, neutrophils showed chemotaxis to LDL which increased with the degree of LDL oxidation. Paradoxically, LDL oxidation yielded the opposite effect on LDL-induced CD11b display and actin polymerization, and both native and oxidized LDL were found to induce neutrophil transcription of the monocyte chemoattractant MCP-1. Together these findings suggest that chronic hypercholesterolemia impairs neutrophil functional responses, and these defects may be in part due to protracted signaling responses to LDL and its oxidized forms.


JCI insight | 2018

AIBP augments cholesterol efflux from alveolar macrophages to surfactant and reduces acute lung inflammation

Soo-Ho Choi; Aaron M. Wallace; Dina A. Schneider; Elianne Burg; Jungsu Kim; Elena Alekseeva; Niki D.J. Ubags; Carlyne D. Cool; Longhou Fang; Benjamin T. Suratt; Yury I. Miller

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is characterized by an excessive pulmonary inflammatory response. Removal of excess cholesterol from the plasma membrane of inflammatory cells helps reduce their activation. The secreted apolipoprotein A-I binding protein (AIBP) has been shown to augment cholesterol efflux from endothelial cells to the plasma lipoprotein HDL. Here, we find that AIBP was expressed in inflammatory cells in the human lung and was secreted into the bronchoalveolar space in mice subjected to inhalation of LPS. AIBP bound surfactant protein B and increased cholesterol efflux from alveolar macrophages to calfactant, a therapeutic surfactant formulation. In vitro, AIBP in the presence of surfactant reduced LPS-induced p65, ERK1/2 and p38 phosphorylation, and IL-6 secretion by alveolar macrophages. In vivo, inhalation of AIBP significantly reduced LPS-induced airspace neutrophilia, alveolar capillary leak, and secretion of IL-6. These results suggest that, similar to HDL in plasma, surfactant serves as a cholesterol acceptor in the lung. Furthermore, lung injury increases pulmonary AIBP expression, which likely serves to promote cholesterol efflux to surfactant and reduce inflammation.


Structure | 2016

Reconstructing the TIR Side of the Myddosome: a Paradigm for TIR-TIR Interactions

Laurens Vyncke; Celia Bovijn; Ewald Pauwels; Tim Van Acker; Elien Ruyssinck; Elianne Burg; Jan Tavernier; Frank Peelman


JCI insight | 2016

Hyperleptinemia is associated with impaired pulmonary host defense

Niki D.J. Ubags; Renee D. Stapleton; Juanita H. J. Vernooy; Elianne Burg; Jenna Bement; Catherine M. Hayes; Sebastian Ventrone; Lennart Zabeau; Jan Tavernier; Matthew E. Poynter; Polly E. Parsons; Anne E. Dixon; Matthew J. Wargo; Benjamin Littenberg; Emiel F. M. Wouters; Benjamin T. Suratt


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Transgenic Mice Inducibly Overexpressing Pulmonary SDF-1 Demonstrate Augmented Lung Neutrophilia After Injury

Joseph M. Petty; Christopher C. Lenox; James D. Nolin; Lauren L. Kordonowy; Elianne Burg; Angela Panoskaltsis-Mortari; Matthew E. Poynter; Benjamin T. Suratt

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