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Dive into the research topics where Genevieve Bates is active.

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Featured researches published by Genevieve Bates.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2012

Caffeine relaxes smooth muscle through actin depolymerization

Tracy Tazzeo; Genevieve Bates; Horia N. Roman; Anne-Marie Lauzon; Mukta D. Khasnis; Masumi Eto; Luke J. Janssen

Caffeine is sometimes used in cell physiological studies to release internally stored Ca(2+). We obtained evidence that caffeine may also act through a different mechanism that has not been previously described and sought to examine this in greater detail. We ruled out a role for phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibition, since the effect was 1) not reversed by inhibiting PKA or adenylate cyclase; 2) not exacerbated by inhibiting PDE4; and 3) not mimicked by submillimolar caffeine nor theophylline, both of which are sufficient to inhibit PDE. Although caffeine is an agonist of bitter taste receptors, which in turn mediate bronchodilation, its relaxant effect was not mimicked by quinine. After permeabilizing the membrane using β-escin and depleting the internal Ca(2+) store using A23187, we found that 10 mM caffeine reversed tone evoked by direct application of Ca(2+), suggesting it functionally antagonizes the contractile apparatus. Using a variety of molecular techniques, we found that caffeine did not affect phosphorylation of myosin light chain (MLC) by MLC kinase, actin-filament motility catalyzed by MLC kinase, phosphorylation of CPI-17 by either protein kinase C or RhoA kinase, nor the activity of MLC-phosphatase. However, we did obtain evidence that caffeine decreased actin filament binding to phosphorylated myosin heads and increased the ratio of globular to filamentous actin in precontracted tissues. We conclude that, in addition to its other non-RyR targets, caffeine also interferes with actin function (decreased binding by myosin, possibly with depolymerization), an effect that should be borne in mind in studies using caffeine to probe excitation-contraction coupling in smooth muscle.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2016

Peripheral Airway Smooth Muscle, but Not the Trachealis, Is Hypercontractile in an Equine Model of Asthma

Oleg S. Matusovsky; Linda Kachmar; Gijs Ijpma; Genevieve Bates; Nedjma B. Zitouni; Andrea Benedetti; Jean-Pierre Lavoie; Anne-Marie Lauzon

Heaves is a naturally occurring equine disease that shares many similarities with human asthma, including reversible antigen-induced bronchoconstriction, airway inflammation, and remodeling. The purpose of this study was to determine whether the trachealis muscle is mechanically representative of the peripheral airway smooth muscle (ASM) in an equine model of asthma. Tracheal and peripheral ASM of heaves-affected horses under exacerbation, or under clinical remission of the disease, and control horses were dissected and freed of epithelium to measure unloaded shortening velocity (Vmax), stress (force/cross-sectional area), methacholine effective concentration at which 50% of the maximum response is obtained, and stiffness. Myofibrillar Mg(2+)-ATPase activity, actomyosin in vitro motility, and contractile protein expression were also measured. Horses with heaves had significantly greater Vmax and Mg(2+)-ATPase activity in peripheral airway but not in tracheal smooth muscle. In addition, a significant correlation was found between Vmax and the time elapsed since the end of the corticosteroid treatment for the peripheral airways in horses with heaves. Maximal stress and stiffness were greater in the peripheral airways of the horses under remission compared with controls and the horses under exacerbation, potentially due to remodeling. Actomyosin in vitro motility was not different between controls and horses with heaves. These data demonstrate that peripheral ASM is mechanically and biochemically altered in heaves, whereas the trachealis behaves as in control horses. It is therefore conceivable that the trachealis muscle may not be representative of the peripheral ASM in human asthma either, but this will require further investigation.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2013

Molecular, cellular, and muscle strip mechanics of the mdx mouse diaphragm.

Genevieve Bates; Sara Sigurdardottir; Linda Kachmar; Nedjma B. Zitouni; Andrea Benedetti; Basil J. Petrof; Dilson E. Rassier; Anne-Marie Lauzon

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a lethal disorder caused by defects in the dystrophin gene, which leads to respiratory or cardiac muscle failure. Lack of dystrophin predisposes the muscle cell sarcolemmal membrane to mechanical damage. However, the role of myosin in this muscle weakness has been poorly addressed. In the current study, in addition to measuring the velocity of actin filament propulsion (υmax) of mdx myosin molecules purified from 3- and 12-mo-old control (C57Bl/10) and mdx (C57Bl/10mdx) mouse diaphragms, we also measured myosin force production. Furthermore, we measured cellular and muscle strip force production at three mo of age. Stress (force/cross-sectional area) was smaller for mdx than control at the muscle strip level but was not different at the single fiber level. υmax of mdx myosin was not different from control at either 3 or 12 mo nor was their relative myosin force. The type I and IIb myosin heavy chain composition was not different between control and mdx diaphragms at 3 or 12 mo. These results suggest that the myosin function, as well as the single fiber mechanics, do not underlie the weakness of the mdx diaphragm. This weakness was only observed at the level of the intact muscle bundle and could not be narrowed down to a specific mechanical impairment of its individual fibers or myosin molecules.


PLOS Computational Biology | 2013

Molecular Mechanical Differences between Isoforms of Contractile Actin in the Presence of Isoforms of Smooth Muscle Tropomyosin

Lennart Hilbert; Genevieve Bates; Horia N. Roman; Jenna L. Blumenthal; Nedjma B. Zitouni; Apolinary Sobieszek; Michael C. Mackey; Anne-Marie Lauzon

The proteins involved in smooth muscles molecular contractile mechanism – the anti-parallel motion of actin and myosin filaments driven by myosin heads interacting with actin – are found as different isoforms. While their expression levels are altered in disease states, their relevance to the mechanical interaction of myosin with actin is not sufficiently understood. Here, we analyzed in vitro actin filament propulsion by smooth muscle myosin for -actin (A), -actin-tropomyosin- (A-Tm), -actin-tropomyosin- (A-Tm), -actin (A), -actin-tropomyosin- (A-Tm), and -actin-tropomoysin- (A-Tm). Actin sliding analysis with our specifically developed video analysis software followed by statistical assessment (Bootstrapped Principal Component Analysis) indicated that the in vitro motility of A, A, and A-Tm is not distinguishable. Compared to these three ‘baseline conditions’, statistically significant differences () were: A-Tm – actin sliding velocity increased 1.12-fold, A-Tm – motile fraction decreased to 0.96-fold, stop time elevated 1.6-fold, A-Tm – run time elevated 1.7-fold. We constructed a mathematical model, simulated actin sliding data, and adjusted the kinetic parameters so as to mimic the experimentally observed differences: A-Tm – myosin binding to actin, the main, and the secondary myosin power stroke are accelerated, A-Tm – mechanical coupling between myosins is stronger, A-Tm – the secondary power stroke is decelerated and mechanical coupling between myosins is weaker. In summary, our results explain the different regulatory effects that specific combinations of actin and smooth muscle tropomyosin have on smooth muscle actin-myosin interaction kinetics.


Biophysical Journal | 2015

Bronchial but not Tracheal Smooth Muscle is Hypercontractile in an Equine Model of Severe Asthma

Oleg S. Matusovsky; Linda Kachmar; Gijs Ipgma; Nedjma B. Zitouni; Genevieve Bates; Jean-Pierre Lavoie; Anne-Marie Lauzon


Archive | 2015

mechanisms in tracheal and bronchial smooth muscles Muscarinic excitation-contraction coupling

Luke J. Janssen; Jennifer Wattie; Hwa Lu-Chao; Tracy Tazzeo; Simon Hirota; Peter B. Helli; P. B. Helli; Masumi Eto; Genevieve Bates; Horia N. Roman; Anne-Marie Lauzon; Mukta D. Khasnis


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Molecular Mechanical differences between Skeletal Muscle α-Actin and Smooth Muscle γ-Actin in the Presence of Smooth Muscle Tropomyosin

Lennart Hilbert; Jenna L. Blumenthal; Genevieve Bates; Horia N. Roman; Nedjma B. Zitouni; Michael C. Mackey; Anne-Marie Lauzon


Biophysical Journal | 2012

The Effects of Telokin on the Mechanics of Thiophosphorylated Smooth Muscle Myosin

Genevieve Bates; Nedjma B. Zitouni; Apolinary Sobieszek; Anne-Marie Lauzon


american thoracic society international conference | 2011

Molecular, Cellular, And Muscle Strip Mechanics Of The MDX Mouse Diaphragm

Genevieve Bates; Sara Sigurdardottir; Linda Kachmar; Nedjma B. Zitouni; Basil J. Petrof; Dilson J. Rassier; Anne-Marie Lauzon


Biophysical Journal | 2011

Making Sense of the Motility Assay: Automated Video Analysis and Molecular Model Based Inference

Lennart Hilbert; Genevieve Bates; Horia N. Roman; Michael C. Mackey; Anne-Marie Lauzon

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Basil J. Petrof

McGill University Health Centre

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Oleg S. Matusovsky

Russian Academy of Sciences

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