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Dive into the research topics where Erin J. Plosa is active.

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Featured researches published by Erin J. Plosa.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

NF-κB Activation Limits Airway Branching through Inhibition of Sp1-Mediated Fibroblast Growth Factor-10 Expression

John T. Benjamin; Billy J. Carver; Erin J. Plosa; Yasutoshi Yamamoto; J. Davin Miller; Jin-Hua Liu; Riet van der Meer; Timothy S. Blackwell; Lawrence S. Prince

Bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) is a frequent complication of preterm birth. This chronic lung disease results from arrested saccular airway development and is most common in infants exposed to inflammatory stimuli. In experimental models, inflammation inhibits expression of fibroblast growth factor-10 (FGF-10) and impairs epithelial–mesenchymal interactions during lung development; however, the mechanisms connecting inflammatory signaling with reduced growth factor expression are not yet understood. In this study we found that soluble inflammatory mediators present in tracheal fluid from preterm infants can prevent saccular airway branching. In addition, LPS treatment led to local production of mediators that inhibited airway branching and FGF-10 expression in LPS-resistant C.C3-Tlr4Lpsd/J fetal mouse lung explants. Both direct NF-κB activation and inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β and TNF-α) that activate NF-κB reduced FGF-10 expression, whereas chemokines that signal via other inflammatory pathways had no effect. Mutational analysis of the FGF-10 promoter failed to identify genetic elements required for direct NF-κB–mediated FGF-10 inhibition. Instead, NF-κB activation appeared to interfere with the normal stimulation of FGF-10 expression by Sp1. Chromatin immunoprecipitation and nuclear coimmunoprecipitation studies demonstrated that the RelA subunit of NF-κB and Sp1 physically interact at the FGF-10 promoter. These findings indicate that inflammatory signaling through NF-κB disrupts the normal expression of FGF-10 in fetal lung mesenchyme by interfering with the transcriptional machinery critical for lung morphogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Targeting IL-17A attenuates neonatal sepsis mortality induced by IL-18

James L. Wynn; Christopher S. Wilson; Jacek Hawiger; Philip O. Scumpia; Andrew F. Marshall; Jin-Hua Liu; Irina Zharkikh; Hector R. Wong; Patrick Lahni; John T. Benjamin; Erin J. Plosa; Jörn-Hendrik Weitkamp; Edward R. Sherwood; Lyle L. Moldawer; Ricardo Ungaro; Henry V. Baker; M. Cecilia Lopez; Steven J. McElroy; Natacha Colliou; Mansour Mohamadzadeh; Daniel J. Moore

Significance Infants born prematurely suffer the greatest incidence of and impact from sepsis among all age groups. Therapeutic interventions aimed at reducing morbidity and mortality in this vulnerable population have been unsuccessful. Interleukin (IL)-18 is a proinflammatory member of the IL-1 superfamily. Serum IL-18 concentrations in uninfected premature infants are increased as compared with healthy adults. We show that IL-18 in the setting of sepsis results in gut injury, a potentiation of the host’s inflammatory response, increased bacteremia, and mortality mediated by IL-1 receptor 1 (IL-1R1)–dependent IL-17A produced by γδT and myeloid cells. The discovery of this novel IL-18/IL-1R1/IL-17A axis brings new hope for therapeutic interventions that target downstream IL-17A and ultimately reduce the increased mortality from sepsis in this understudied population. Interleukin (IL)-18 is an important effector of innate and adaptive immunity, but its expression must also be tightly regulated because it can potentiate lethal systemic inflammation and death. Healthy and septic human neonates demonstrate elevated serum concentrations of IL-18 compared with adults. Thus, we determined the contribution of IL-18 to lethality and its mechanism in a murine model of neonatal sepsis. We find that IL-18–null neonatal mice are highly protected from polymicrobial sepsis, whereas replenishing IL-18 increased lethality to sepsis or endotoxemia. Increased lethality depended on IL-1 receptor 1 (IL-1R1) signaling but not adaptive immunity. In genome-wide analyses of blood mRNA from septic human neonates, expression of the IL-17 receptor emerged as a critical regulatory node. Indeed, IL-18 administration in sepsis increased IL-17A production by murine intestinal γδT cells as well as Ly6G+ myeloid cells, and blocking IL-17A reduced IL-18–potentiated mortality to both neonatal sepsis and endotoxemia. We conclude that IL-17A is a previously unrecognized effector of IL-18–mediated injury in neonatal sepsis and that disruption of the deleterious and tissue-destructive IL-18/IL-1/IL-17A axis represents a novel therapeutic approach to improve outcomes for human neonates with sepsis.


Development | 2014

Epithelial β1 integrin is required for lung branching morphogenesis and alveolarization

Erin J. Plosa; Lisa R. Young; Peter M. Gulleman; Vasiliy V. Polosukhin; Rinat Zaynagetdinov; John T. Benjamin; Amanda M. Im; Riet van der Meer; Linda A. Gleaves; Nada Bulus; Wei Han; Lawrence S. Prince; Timothy S. Blackwell; Roy Zent

Integrin-dependent interactions between cells and extracellular matrix regulate lung development; however, specific roles for β1-containing integrins in individual cell types, including epithelial cells, remain incompletely understood. In this study, the functional importance of β1 integrin in lung epithelium during mouse lung development was investigated by deleting the integrin from E10.5 onwards using surfactant protein C promoter-driven Cre. These mutant mice appeared normal at birth but failed to gain weight appropriately and died by 4 months of age with severe hypoxemia. Defects in airway branching morphogenesis in association with impaired epithelial cell adhesion and migration, as well as alveolarization defects and persistent macrophage-mediated inflammation were identified. Using an inducible system to delete β1 integrin after completion of airway branching, we showed that alveolarization defects, characterized by disrupted secondary septation, abnormal alveolar epithelial cell differentiation, excessive collagen I and elastin deposition, and hypercellularity of the mesenchyme occurred independently of airway branching defects. By depleting macrophages using liposomal clodronate, we found that alveolarization defects were secondary to persistent alveolar inflammation. β1 integrin-deficient alveolar epithelial cells produced excessive monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 and reactive oxygen species, suggesting a direct role for β1 integrin in regulating alveolar homeostasis. Taken together, these studies define distinct functions of epithelial β1 integrin during both early and late lung development that affect airway branching morphogenesis, epithelial cell differentiation, alveolar septation and regulation of alveolar homeostasis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Interactions between NF-κB and SP3 connect inflammatory signaling with reduced FGF-10 expression.

Billy J. Carver; Erin J. Plosa; Amanda M. Stinnett; Timothy S. Blackwell; Lawrence S. Prince

Background: Inflammation and NF-κB activation inhibit FGF-10 expression and lung development by an unknown mechanism. Results: In the presence of NF-κB activation, SP3 functions as a transcriptional repressor, inhibiting SP1-mediated FGF-10 transcription. Conclusion: NF-κB can regulate developmental gene expression by recruiting inhibitory transcription factors to gene promoters. Significance: Interaction between NF-κB and Sp proteins identifies a mechanism by which inflammation inhibits normal developmental programs. Inflammation inhibits normal lung morphogenesis in preterm infants. Soluble inflammatory mediators present in the lungs of patients developing bronchopulmonary dysplasia disrupt expression of multiple genes critical for development. However, the mechanisms linking innate immune signaling and developmental programs are not clear. NF-κB activation inhibits expression of the critical morphogen FGF-10. Here, we show that interactions between the RELA subunit of NF-κB and SP3 suppress SP1-mediated FGF-10 expression. SP3 co-expression reduced SP1-mediated Fgf-10 promoter activity, suggesting antagonistic interactions between SP1 and SP3. Chromatin immunoprecipitation of LPS-treated primary mouse fetal lung mesenchymal cells detected increased interactions between SP3, RELA, and the Fgf-10 promoter. Expression of a constitutively active IκB kinase β mutant not only decreased Fgf-10 promoter activity but also increased RELA-SP3 nuclear interactions. Expression of a dominant-negative IκB, which blocks NF-κB nuclear translocation, prevented inhibition of FGF-10 by SP3. The inhibitory functions of SP3 required sequences located in the N-terminal region of the protein. These data suggested that inhibition of FGF-10 by inflammatory signaling involves the NF-κB-dependent interactions between RELA, SP3, and the Fgf-10 promoter. NF-κB activation may therefore lead to reduced gene expression by recruiting inhibitory factors to specific gene promoters following exposure to inflammatory stimuli.


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2016

Prenatal Diagnosis of Alveolar Capillary Dysplasia with Misalignment of Pulmonary Veins.

Stephanie L. Prothro; Erin J. Plosa; Melinda Markham; Przemyslaw Szafranski; Pawel Stankiewicz; Stacy A.S. Killen

Alveolar capillary dysplasia with misalignment of pulmonary veins (ACDMPV) is a rare, lethal cause of neonatal respiratory failure and persistent pulmonary hypertension. We present a presumptive prenatal diagnosis of ACDMPV based on chorionic villus sampling of a FOXF1 mutation in a fetus with extra-pulmonary anomalies often associated with ACDMPV.


American Journal of Pathology | 2016

Epithelial-Derived Inflammation Disrupts Elastin Assembly and Alters Saccular Stage Lung Development.

John T. Benjamin; Riet van der Meer; Amanda M. Im; Erin J. Plosa; Rinat Zaynagetdinov; Ankita Burman; Madeline E. Havrilla; Linda A. Gleaves; Vasiliy V. Polosukhin; Gail H. Deutsch; Hiromi Yanagisawa; Jeffrey M. Davidson; Lawrence S. Prince; Lisa R. Young; Timothy S. Blackwell

The highly orchestrated interactions between the epithelium and mesenchyme required for normal lung development can be disrupted by perinatal inflammation in preterm infants, although the mechanisms are incompletely understood. We used transgenic (inhibitory κB kinase β transactivated) mice that conditionally express an activator of the NF-κB pathway in airway epithelium to investigate the impact of epithelial-derived inflammation during lung development. Epithelial NF-κB activation selectively impaired saccular stage lung development, with a phenotype comprising rapidly progressive distal airspace dilation, impaired gas exchange, and perinatal lethality. Epithelial-derived inflammation resulted in disrupted elastic fiber organization and down-regulation of elastin assembly components, including fibulins 4 and 5, lysyl oxidase like-1, and fibrillin-1. Fibulin-5 expression by saccular stage lung fibroblasts was consistently inhibited by treatment with bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from inhibitory κB kinase β transactivated mice, Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide, or tracheal aspirates from preterm infants exposed to chorioamnionitis. Expression of a dominant NF-κB inhibitor in fibroblasts restored fibulin-5 expression after lipopolysaccharide treatment, whereas reconstitution of fibulin-5 rescued extracellular elastin assembly by saccular stage lung fibroblasts. Elastin organization was disrupted in saccular stage lungs of preterm infants exposed to systemic inflammation. Our study reveals a critical window for elastin assembly during the saccular stage that is disrupted by inflammatory signaling and could be amenable to interventions that restore elastic fiber assembly in the developing lung.


Developmental Dynamics | 2012

Nonmuscle myosin II regulation of lung epithelial morphology.

Erin J. Plosa; Kimberly A. Gooding; Roy Zent; Lawrence S. Prince

Background: The regulation of epithelial cell shape and orientation during lung branching morphogenesis is not clearly understood. Nonmuscle myosins regulate cell size, morphology, and planar cell polarity. Here, we test the hypothesis that nonmuscle myosin II (NM II) regulates lung epithelial morphology in a spatially restricted manner. Results: Epithelial cell orientation at airway tips in fetal mouse lungs underwent a significant transformation at embryonic day (E) E17. Treatment of E15 lung explants with the NM II inhibitor blebbistatin increased airway branching, epithelial cell size, and the degree of anisotropy in epithelial cells lining the airway stalks. In cultured MLE‐12 lung epithelial cells, blebbistatin increased cell velocity, but left the migratory response to FGF‐10 unchanged. Conclusions: In the developing lung, NM II acts to constrain cell morphology and orientation, but may be suppressed at sites of branching and cell migration. The regulation of epithelial orientation may therefore undergo dynamic variations from E15 to E17. Developmental Dynamics, 2012.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2018

Successful Establishment of Primary Type 2 Alveolar Epithelium with 3D Organotypic Co-culture

Jennifer M.S. Sucre; Christopher S. Jetter; Holli A. Loomans; Janice A. Williams; Erin J. Plosa; John T. Benjamin; Lisa R. Young; Jonathan A. Kropski; Carla Calvi; Seunghyi Kook; Ping Wang; Linda A. Gleaves; Adel Eskaros; Laura Goetzl; Timothy S. Blackwell; Susan H. Guttentag; Andries Zijlstra

&NA; Alveolar type II (AT2) epithelial cells are uniquely specialized to produce surfactant in the lung and act as progenitor cells in the process of repair after lung injury. AT2 cell injury has been implicated in several lung diseases, including idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and bronchopulmonary dysplasia. The inability to maintain primary AT2 cells in culture has been a significant barrier in the investigation of pulmonary biology. We have addressed this knowledge gap by developing a three‐dimensional (3D) organotypic coculture using primary human fetal AT2 cells and pulmonary fibroblasts. Grown on top of matrix‐embedded fibroblasts, the primary human AT2 cells establish a monolayer and have direct contact with the underlying pulmonary fibroblasts. Unlike conventional two‐dimensional (2D) culture, the structural and functional phenotype of the AT2 cells in our 3D organotypic culture was preserved over 7 days of culture, as evidenced by the presence of lamellar bodies and by production of surfactant proteins B and C. Importantly, the AT2 cells in 3D cocultures maintained the ability to replicate, with approximately 60% of AT2 cells staining positive for the proliferation marker Ki67, whereas no such proliferation is evident in 2D cultures of the same primary AT2 cells. This organotypic culture system enables interrogation of AT2 epithelial biology by providing a reductionist in vitro model in which to investigate the response of AT2 epithelial cells and AT2 cell‐fibroblast interactions during lung injury and repair.


Pediatric Research | 2018

Effects of antenatal betamethasone on preterm human and mouse ductus arteriosus: comparison with baboon data

Elaine L. Shelton; Nahid Waleh; Erin J. Plosa; John T. Benjamin; Ginger L. Milne; Christopher W. Hooper; Noah J. Ehinger; Stanley D. Poole; Naoko Brown; Steven R. Seidner; Donald C. McCurnin; Jeff Reese; Ronald I. Clyman

BackgroundAlthough studies involving preterm infants ≤34 weeks gestation report a decreased incidence of patent ductus arteriosus after antenatal betamethasone, studies involving younger gestation infants report conflicting results.MethodsWe used preterm baboons, mice, and humans (≤276/7 weeks gestation) to examine betamethasone’s effects on ductus gene expression and constriction both in vitro and in vivo.ResultsIn mice, betamethasone increased the sensitivity of the premature ductus to the contractile effects of oxygen without altering the effects of other contractile or vasodilatory stimuli. Betamethasone’s effects on oxygen sensitivity could be eliminated by inhibiting endogenous prostaglandin/nitric oxide signaling. In mice and baboons, betamethasone increased the expression of several developmentally regulated genes that mediate oxygen-induced constriction (K+ channels) and inhibit vasodilator signaling (phosphodiesterases). In human infants, betamethasone increased the rate of ductus constriction at all gestational ages. However, in infants born ≤256/7 weeks gestation, betamethasone’s contractile effects were only apparent when prostaglandin signaling was inhibited, whereas at 26–27 weeks gestation, betamethasone’s contractile effects were apparent even in the absence of prostaglandin inhibitors.ConclusionsWe speculate that betamethasone’s contractile effects may be mediated through genes that are developmentally regulated. This could explain why betamethasone’s effects vary according to the infant’s developmental age at birth.


Biology of Reproduction | 2018

Mouse models of preterm birth: suggested assessment and reporting guidelines†

Ronald McCarthy; Carmel Martin-Fairey; Dorothy K. Sojka; Erik D. Herzog; Emily S. Jungheim; Molly J. Stout; Justin C. Fay; Mala Mahendroo; Jeff Reese; Jennifer L. Herington; Erin J. Plosa; Elaine L. Shelton; Sarah K. England

Abstract Preterm birth affects approximately 1 out of every 10 births in the United States, leading to high rates of mortality and long-term negative health consequences. To investigate the mechanisms leading to preterm birth so as to develop prevention strategies, researchers have developed numerous mouse models of preterm birth. However, the lack of standard definitions for preterm birth in mice limits our fields ability to compare models and make inferences about preterm birth in humans. In this review, we discuss numerous mouse preterm birth models, propose guidelines for experiments and reporting, and suggest markers that can be used to assess whether pups are premature or mature. We argue that adoption of these recommendations will enhance the utility of mice as models for preterm birth. Summary Sentence To improve reporting of mouse models of preterm birth, a set of universal guidelines and simple assays of developmental markers are proposed to distinguish between mature and premature pups.

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Roy Zent

Vanderbilt University

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Amanda M. Im

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

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