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Dive into the research topics where Jenifer Monks is active.

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Featured researches published by Jenifer Monks.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2005

Epithelial cells as phagocytes: apoptotic epithelial cells are engulfed by mammary alveolar epithelial cells and repress inflammatory mediator release

Jenifer Monks; D Rosner; F. Jon Geske; Lisa Lehman; Linda Hanson; Margaret C. Neville; Valerie A. Fadok

Clearance of apoptotic cells is critical to tissue homeostasis and resolution of inflammatory lesions. Macrophages are known to remove dying cells and release anti-inflammatory mediators in response; however, many cells traditionally thought of as poor phagocytes can mediate this function as well. In the lactating mammary gland following weaning, alveolar epithelial cell death is massive, yet the gland involutes rapidly, attaining its prepregnancy state in a matter of days. We found histologic evidence of apoptotic cell phagocytosis by viable mammary epithelial cells (MEC) in the involuting mouse mammary gland. Cultured MEC were able to engulf apoptotic cells in vitro, utilizing many of the same receptors used by macrophages, including the phosphatidylserine receptor (PSR), CD36, the vitronectin receptor αvβ3, and CD91. In addition, MEC, like macrophages, produced TGFβ in response to stimulation of the PSR by apoptotic cells or the anti-PSR ab 217G8E9, and downregulated endotoxin-stimulated proinflammatory cytokine production. These data support the hypothesis that amateur phagocytes play a significant role in apoptotic cell clearance and its regulation of inflammation.


American Journal of Pathology | 2010

Alternatively Activated Macrophages and Collagen Remodeling Characterize the Postpartum Involuting Mammary Gland across Species

Jenean O'Brien; Traci R. Lyons; Jenifer Monks; M. Scott Lucia; R. Storey Wilson; Lisa M. Hines; Yan Gao Man; Virginia F. Borges; Pepper Schedin

Recent pregnancy correlates with decreased survival for breast cancer patients compared with non-pregnancy-associated breast cancer. We hypothesize that postpartum mammary involution induces metastasis through wound-healing programs known to promote cancer. It is unknown whether alternatively activated M2 macrophages, immune cells important in wound-healing and experimental tumorigenesis that also predict poor prognosis for breast cancer patients, are recruited to the normal involuting gland. Macrophage markers CD68, CSF-1R, and F4/80 were examined across the pregnancy and involution cycle in rodent and human mammary tissues. Quantitative immunohistochemistry revealed up to an eightfold increase in macrophage number during involution, which returned to nulliparous levels with full regression. The involution macrophages exhibit an M2 phenotype as determined by high arginase-1 and low inducible nitric oxide synthase staining in rodent tissue, and by mannose receptor expression in human breast tissue. M2 cytokines IL-4 and IL-13 also peaked during involution. Extracellular matrix (ECM) isolated from involuting rat mammary glands was chemotactic for macrophages compared with nulliparous mammary ECM. Fibrillar collagen levels and proteolysis increased dramatically during involution, and denatured collagen I acted as a strong chemoattractant for macrophages in cell culture, suggesting proteolyzed fibrillar collagen as a candidate ECM mediator of macrophage recruitment. M2 macrophages, IL-4, IL-13, fibrillar collagen accumulation, and proteolysis of collagen are all components of tumor promotional microenvironments, and thus may mediate promotion of breast cancers arising in the postpartum setting.


Biology of Reproduction | 2008

Epithelial Cells Remove Apoptotic Epithelial Cells During Post-Lactation Involution of the Mouse Mammary Gland

Jenifer Monks; Christine Smith-Steinhart; Ellen R. Kruk; Valerie A. Fadok; Peter M. Henson

Abstract Following the cessation of lactation, the mammary gland undergoes a physiologic process of tissue remodeling called involution in which glandular structures are lost, leaving an adipose tissue compartment that takes up a much larger proportion of the tissue. A quantitative morphometric analysis was undertaken to determine the mechanisms for clearance of the epithelial cells during this process. The involution process was set in motion by removal of pups from 14-day lactating C57BL/6 mice. Within hours, milk-secreting epithelial cells were shed into the glandular lumen. These cells became apoptotic, exhibiting exposure of phosphatidylserine residues on their surfaces, activation of effector caspase-3, staining for caspase-cleaved keratin 18, loss of internal organellar structure, and nuclear breakdown, but minimal blebbing or generation of apoptotic bodies. Clearance of residual milk and the shed epithelial cells was rapid, with most of the removal occurring in the first 72 h. Intact apoptotic epithelial cells were engulfed in large numbers by residual viable epithelial cells into spacious efferosomes. This process led to essentially complete involution within 4 days, at which point estrous cycling recommenced. Macrophages and other inflammatory cells did not contribute to the clearance of either residual milk or apoptotic cells, which appeared to be due entirely to the epithelium itself.


Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia | 1998

The mammary fat pad.

Margaret C. Neville; Daniel Medina; Jenifer Monks; Russel C. Hovey

The mammary fat pad is essential for developmentof the mammary epithelium, providing signals thatmediate ductal morphogenesis and, probably, alveolardifferentiation. The “cleared” fat pad is often used as a transplantation site.Considering the crucial role of the fat pad, itsproperties have received relatively little attentionfrom researchers in the field. Some of the questionswhose investigation is pertinent to understanding both normalmammary development and carcinogenesis are outlined inthis commentary in the spirit of stimulating enquiryinto this important subject. It is clear from a brief perusal of the available literature that untilstudies are specifically designed to clearlydifferentiate between functional effects of the fibrousand the adipose stroma, more substantive informationabout their differential effects on mammarydevelopment and tumorigenesis will not beforthcoming.


Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia | 2002

Do Inflammatory Cells Participate in Mammary Gland Involution

Jenifer Monks; F. Jon Geske; Lisa Lehman; Valerie A. Fadok

The processes by which the involuting mammary gland clears residual milk and milk fat, as well as apoptotic cells, have gone largely unstudied in the modern literature. Here we review the evidence for and against the involvement of professional phagocytes of hematopoetic lineage in this process. Additionally we present evidence that mammary epithelial cells themselves are capable of phagocytosis and may be responsible for the majority of apoptotic cell and residual milk clearance during murine involution. In this scheme these cells regulate their cytokine production in response to apoptotic cells in a manner similar to other cells, including macrophages. The ensuing model describes a process of involution that actively suppresses an inflammatory response in the gland, allowing for effective tissue remodeling and damage prevention.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Sterol regulatory element binding protein and dietary lipid regulation of fatty acid synthesis in the mammary epithelium.

Michael C. Rudolph; Jenifer Monks; Valerie Burns; Meridee Phistry; Russell Marians; Monica R. Foote; Dale E. Bauman; Steven M. Anderson; Margaret C. Neville

The lactating mammary gland synthesizes large amounts of triglyceride from fatty acids derived from the blood and from de novo lipogenesis. The latter is significantly increased at parturition and decreased when additional dietary fatty acids become available. To begin to understand the molecular regulation of de novo lipogenesis, we tested the hypothesis that the transcription factor sterol regulatory element binding factor (SREBF)-1c is a primary regulator of this system. Expression of Srebf1c mRNA and six of its known target genes increased ≥2.5-fold at parturition. However, Srebf1c-null mice showed only minor deficiencies in lipid synthesis during lactation, possibly due to compensation by Srebf1a expression. To abrogate the function of both isoforms of Srebf1, we bred mice to obtain a mammary epithelial cell-specific deletion of SREBF cleavage-activating protein (SCAP), the SREBF escort protein. These dams showed a significant lactation deficiency, and expression of mRNA for fatty acid synthase (Fasn), insulin-induced gene 1 (Insig1), mitochondrial citrate transporter (Slc25a1), and stearoyl-CoA desaturase 2 (Scd2) was reduced threefold or more; however, the mRNA levels of acetyl-CoA carboxylase-1α (Acaca) and ATP citrate lyase (Acly) were unchanged. Furthermore, a 46% fat diet significantly decreased de novo fatty acid synthesis and reduced the protein levels of ACACA, ACLY, and FASN significantly, with no change in their mRNA levels. These data lead us to conclude that two modes of regulation exist to control fatty acid synthesis in the mammary gland of the lactating mouse: the well-known SREBF1 system and a novel mechanism that acts at the posttranscriptional level in the presence of SCAP deletion and high-fat feeding to alter enzyme protein.


International Journal of Hematology | 2002

The Role of the Macrophage in Apoptosis: Hunter, Gatherer, and Regulator

F. Jon Geske; Jenifer Monks; Lisa Lehman; Valerie A. Fadok

Clearance of cellular corpses is a critical feature of apoptosis in vivo during development, tissue homeostasis, and resolution of inflammation. As the professional phagocytes of the body, macrophages play a key role in this process. By recognizing emerging signals using several different receptors, macrophages engulf apoptotic cells swiftly and efficiently. In addition, the binding of apoptotic cells profoundly down-regulates the ability of the macrophage to produce inflammatory mediators by inducing the release of antiinflammatory mediators. Finally, macrophages may actually induce cell death in specific cells during embryogenesis.Abnormalities of apoptotic cell clearance may contribute to the pathogenesis of chronic inflammatory diseases, including those of autoimmune etiology. It is also possible that certain malignant tumor cells co-opt the mechanisms for apoptotic cell clearance to avoid immune surveillance by subverting macrophage and dendritic cell responses.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Dynamic Regulation of Hepatic Lipid Droplet Properties by Diet

Amanda E. Crunk; Jenifer Monks; Aya Murakami; Matthew R. Jackman; Paul S. MacLean; Mark S. Ladinsky; Elise S. Bales; Shannon Cain; David J. Orlicky; James L. McManaman

Cytoplasmic lipid droplets (CLD) are organelle-like structures that function in neutral lipid storage, transport and metabolism through the actions of specific surface-associated proteins. Although diet and metabolism influence hepatic CLD levels, how they affect CLD protein composition is largely unknown. We used non-biased, shotgun, proteomics in combination with metabolic analysis, quantitative immunoblotting, electron microscopy and confocal imaging to define the effects of low- and high-fat diets on CLD properties in fasted-refed mice. We found that the hepatic CLD proteome is distinct from that of CLD from other mammalian tissues, containing enzymes from multiple metabolic pathways. The hepatic CLD proteome is also differentially affected by dietary fat content and hepatic metabolic status. High fat feeding markedly increased the CLD surface density of perilipin-2, a critical regulator of hepatic neutral lipid storage, whereas it reduced CLD levels of betaine-homocysteine S-methyltransferase, an enzyme regulator of homocysteine levels linked to fatty liver disease and hepatocellular carcinoma. Collectively our data demonstrate that the hepatic CLD proteome is enriched in metabolic enzymes, and that it is qualitatively and quantitatively regulated by diet and metabolism. These findings implicate CLD in the regulation of hepatic metabolic processes, and suggest that their properties undergo reorganization in response to hepatic metabolic demands.


The Journal of Physiology | 2004

Albumin transcytosis across the epithelium of the lactating mouse mammary gland

Jenifer Monks; Margaret C. Neville

Murine milk contains 18 mg ml−1 serum albumin, a concentration equal to that in the serum of the lactating mouse. We examined cellular transport using in vivo methods in the mouse. At steady state the specific activity of 125I‐albumin injected into the blood stream was equal in plasma and whey, confirming that milk albumin is extra‐mammary in origin. Fluorescent albumin crossed the gland from basolateral surface to lumen via cytoplasmic vesicles, but was not transported in the apical to basal direction. Albumin was segregated from transferrin at the basal surface of the epithelial cells and did not colocalize with either caveolin‐1 or ‐2. Vesicular transport was not disrupted by filipin providing additional evidence that, unlike the vascular endothelium, caveoli are not involved. Cytoplasmic albumin was localized to vesicles containing IgA and transport was disrupted by agents that interfere with clathrin‐mediated endocytosis. Together, these findings provide evidence that albumin is transported across the mammary epithelium by the same pathway as immunoglobulin. The possibility that the massive transfer of albumin into mouse milk is mediated by fluid phase transport is considered.


Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia | 2009

Differentiation of the Mammary Epithelial Cell during Involution: Implications for Breast Cancer

Jenifer Monks; Peter M. Henson

That milk secretion is not the final differentiated state of the mammary alveolar cells is a relatively new concept. Recent work has suggested that secreting, mammary epithelial cells (MECs) have another function to perform before they undergo cell death in the involuting mammary gland. That is, they help in the final clearance and breakdown of their neighboring cells (and likely residual milk as well.) They become, for a short time, amateur phagocytes, or efferocytes, and then are believed to die and be cleared themselves. Although relatively little study has been made of this change in the functional state of the MEC, nevertheless we may speculate from the involution literature, and extend findings from other systems of apoptotic cell clearance, on some of the mechanisms involved. And with the finding that involution may represent a unique susceptibility window for the progression of metastatic breast cancer, we may suggest areas for future research along these lines as well.

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Margaret C. Neville

University of Colorado Denver

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James L. McManaman

University of Colorado Denver

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Elise S. Bales

University of Colorado Denver

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Paul S. MacLean

University of Colorado Denver

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Valerie A. Fadok

Indiana University Bloomington

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Andrew Lewis

Anschutz Medical Campus

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Linda Hanson

Anschutz Medical Campus

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Michael C. Rudolph

University of Colorado Boulder

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