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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer M. Petrosino is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer M. Petrosino.


Nutrients | 2014

Aldehyde dehydrogenase 1A1: friend or foe to female metabolism?

Jennifer M. Petrosino; David DiSilvestro; Ouliana Ziouzenkova

In this review, we summarize recent advances in understanding vitamin A-dependent regulation of sex-specific differences in metabolic diseases, inflammation, and certain cancers. We focus on the characterization of the aldehyde dehydrogenase-1 family of enzymes (ALDH1A1, ALDH1A2, ALDH1A3) that catalyze conversion of retinaldehyde to retinoic acid. Additionally, we propose a “horizontal transfer of signaling” from estrogen to retinoids through the action of ALDH1A1. Although estrogen does not directly influence expression of Aldh1a1, it has the ability to suppress Aldh1a2 and Aldh1a3, thereby establishing a female-specific mechanism for retinoic acid generation in target tissues. ALDH1A1 regulates adipogenesis, abdominal fat formation, glucose tolerance, and suppression of thermogenesis in adipocytes; in B cells, ALDH1A1 plays a protective role by inducing oncogene suppressors Rara and Pparg. Considering the conflicting responses of Aldh1a1 in a multitude of physiological processes, only tissue-specific regulation of Aldh1a1 can result in therapeutic effects. We have shown through successful implantation of tissue-specific Aldh1a1−/− preadipocytes that thermogenesis can be induced in wild-type adipose tissues to resolve diet-induced visceral obesity in females. We will briefly discuss the emerging role of ALDH1A1 in multiple myeloma, the regulation of reproduction, and immune responses, and conclude by discussing the role of ALDH1A1 in future therapeutic applications.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Graded Maximal Exercise Testing to Assess Mouse Cardio-Metabolic Phenotypes

Jennifer M. Petrosino; Valerie Heiss; Santosh K. Maurya; Anuradha Kalyanasundaram; Muthu Periasamy; Richard A. LaFountain; Jacob M. Wilson; Orlando P. Simonetti; Ouliana Ziouzenkova

Functional assessments of cardiovascular fitness (CVF) are needed to establish animal models of dysfunction, test the effects of novel therapeutics, and establish the cardio-metabolic phenotype of mice. In humans, the graded maximal exercise test (GXT) is a standardized diagnostic for assessing CVF and mortality risk. These tests, which consist of concurrent staged increases in running speed and inclination, provide diagnostic cardio-metabolic parameters, such as, VO2max, anaerobic threshold, and metabolic crossover. Unlike the human-GXT, published mouse treadmill tests have set, not staged, increases in inclination as speed progress until exhaustion (PXT). Additionally, they often lack multiple cardio-metabolic parameters. Here, we developed a mouse-GXT with the intent of improving mouse-exercise testing sensitivity and developing translatable parameters to assess CVF in healthy and dysfunctional mice. The mouse-GXT, like the human-GXT, incorporated staged increases in inclination, speed, and intensity; and, was designed by considering imitations of the PXT and differences between human and mouse physiology. The mouse-GXT and PXTs were both tested in healthy mice (C57BL/6J, FVBN/J) to determine their ability to identify cardio-metabolic parameters (anaerobic threshold, VO2max, metabolic crossover) observed in human-GXTs. Next, theses assays were tested on established diet-induced (obese-C57BL/6J) and genetic (cardiac isoform Casq2-/-) models of cardiovascular dysfunction. Results showed that both tests reported VO2max and provided reproducible data about performance. Only the mouse-GXT reproducibly identified anaerobic threshold, metabolic crossover, and detected impaired CVF in dysfunctional models. Our findings demonstrated that the mouse-GXT is a sensitive, non-invasive, and cost-effective method for assessing CVF in mice. This new test can be used as a functional assessment to determine the cardio-metabolic phenotype of various animal models or the effects of novel therapeutics.


Science Advances | 2017

Computational integration of nanoscale physical biomarkers and cognitive assessments for Alzheimer’s disease diagnosis and prognosis

Tao Yue; Xinghua Jia; Jennifer M. Petrosino; Leming Sun; Zhen Fan; Jesse Fine; Rebecca Davis; Scott Galster; Jeff Kuret; Douglas W. Scharre; Mingjun Zhang

Protein properties of AD patients can be computationally integrated with behavioral assessments for AD diagnosis and prognosis. With the increasing prevalence of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), significant efforts have been directed toward developing novel diagnostics and biomarkers that can enhance AD detection and management. AD affects the cognition, behavior, function, and physiology of patients through mechanisms that are still being elucidated. Current AD diagnosis is contingent on evaluating which symptoms and signs a patient does or does not display. Concerns have been raised that AD diagnosis may be affected by how those measurements are analyzed. Unbiased means of diagnosing AD using computational algorithms that integrate multidisciplinary inputs, ranging from nanoscale biomarkers to cognitive assessments, and integrating both biochemical and physical changes may provide solutions to these limitations due to lack of understanding for the dynamic progress of the disease coupled with multiple symptoms in multiscale. We show that nanoscale physical properties of protein aggregates from the cerebral spinal fluid and blood of patients are altered during AD pathogenesis and that these properties can be used as a new class of “physical biomarkers.” Using a computational algorithm, developed to integrate these biomarkers and cognitive assessments, we demonstrate an approach to impartially diagnose AD and predict its progression. Real-time diagnostic updates of progression could be made on the basis of the changes in the physical biomarkers and the cognitive assessment scores of patients over time. Additionally, the Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem was used to determine the minimum number of necessary patient checkups to effectively predict disease progression. This integrated computational approach can generate patient-specific, personalized signatures for AD diagnosis and prognosis.


international conference on robotics and automation | 2017

Biological undulation inspired swimming robot

Xinghua Jia; Zongyao Chen; Jennifer M. Petrosino; William R. Hamel; Mingjun Zhang

Aquatic animal movement results from a complex balance between muscular actuation, swimmers inertia, damping, and stiffness; as well as, the effects from the fluid environment. Most aquatic animals utilize undulatory propulsion methods during swimming. Propulsion mode transition involves a variation of these parameters, and to better investigate the variation of these parameters during propulsion mode switching, and provide guidance for swimming robot design, we studied propulsion mechanism of undulation locomotion by combining biological investigation, mathematical simulation and experimental validation. A modular robot platform, with assembling function, was built based on the obtained biological features to realize the corresponding propulsion methods. Then a modular dynamic modeling method was proposed to simulate robot locomotion using a CPG based algorithm and a PD control method, further revealing the underlying mechanism for undulatory locomotion. Finally, experiments were conducted using the robotic platform to validate the found conclusions as well as enhance the propulsion mechanism of undulatory motion, providing a generic guidance for swimming robot design.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2017

TGF-β1 affects cell-cell adhesion in the heart in an NCAM1-dependent mechanism

Maegen A. Ackermann; Jennifer M. Petrosino; Heather R. Manring; Patrick Wright; Vikram Shettigar; Ahmet Kilic; Paul M. L. Janssen; Mark T. Ziolo; Federica Accornero

The contractile property of the myocardium is maintained by cell-cell junctions enabling cardiomyocytes to work as a syncytium. Alterations in cell-cell junctions are observed in heart failure, a disease characterized by the activation of Transforming Growth Factor beta 1 (TGFβ1). While TGFβ1 has been implicated in diverse biologic responses, its molecular function in controlling cell-cell adhesion in the heart has never been investigated. Cardiac-specific transgenic mice expressing active TGFβ1 were generated to model the observed increase in activity in the failing heart. Activation of TGFβ1 in the heart was sufficient to drive ventricular dysfunction. To begin to understand the function of this important molecule we undertook an extensive structural analysis of the myocardium by electron microscopy and immunostaining. This approach revealed that TGFβ1 alters intercalated disc structures and cell-cell adhesion in ventricular myocytes. Mechanistically, we found that TGFβ1 induces the expression of neural adhesion molecule 1 (NCAM1) in cardiomyocytes in a p38-dependent pathway, and that selective targeting of NCAM1 was sufficient to rescue the cell adhesion defect observed when cardiomyocytes were treated with TGFβ1. Importantly, NCAM1 was upregulated in human heart samples from ischemic and non-ischemic cardiomyopathy patients and NCAM1 protein levels correlated with the degree of TGFβ1 activity in the human cardiac ventricle. Overall, we found that TGFβ1 is deleterious to the heart by regulating the adhesion properties of cardiomyocytes in an NCAM1-dependent mechanism. Our results suggest that inhibiting NCAM1 would be cardioprotective, counteract the pathological action of TGFβ1 and reduce heart failure severity.


Hormone Molecular Biology and Clinical Investigation | 2014

Enzymatic intracrine regulation of white adipose tissue.

David DiSilvestro; Jennifer M. Petrosino; Ayat Aldoori; Emiliano Melgar-Bermudez; Alexandra Wells; Ouliana Ziouzenkova

Abstract Abdominal fat formation has become a permanent risk factor for metabolic syndrome and various cancers in one-third of the world’s population of obese and even lean patients. Formation of abdominal fat involves additional mechanisms beyond an imbalance in energy intake and expenditure, which explains systemic obesity. In this review, we briefly summarized autonomous regulatory circuits that locally produce hormones from inactive precursors or nutrients for intra-/auto-/paracrine signaling in white adipose depots. Enzymatic pathways activating steroid and thyroid hormones in adipose depots were compared with enzymatic production of retinoic acid from vitamin A. We discussed the role of intracrine circuits in fat-depot functions and strategies to reduce abdominal adiposity through thermogenic adipocytes with interrupted generation of retinoic acid.


Nature Communications | 2018

NF-κB inhibition rescues cardiac function by remodeling calcium genes in a Duchenne muscular dystrophy model

Jennifer M. Peterson; David J. Wang; Vikram Shettigar; Steve R. Roof; Benjamin D. Canan; Nadine Bakkar; Jonathan Shintaku; Jin-Mo Gu; Sean C. Little; Nivedita M. Ratnam; Priya Londhe; Leina Lu; Christopher E. Gaw; Jennifer M. Petrosino; Sandya Liyanarachchi; Huating Wang; Paul M. L. Janssen; Jonathan P. Davis; Mark T. Ziolo; Sudarshana M. Sharma; Denis C. Guttridge

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a neuromuscular disorder causing progressive muscle degeneration. Although cardiomyopathy is a leading mortality cause in DMD patients, the mechanisms underlying heart failure are not well understood. Previously, we showed that NF-κB exacerbates DMD skeletal muscle pathology by promoting inflammation and impairing new muscle growth. Here, we show that NF-κB is activated in murine dystrophic (mdx) hearts, and that cardiomyocyte ablation of NF-κB rescues cardiac function. This physiological improvement is associated with a signature of upregulated calcium genes, coinciding with global enrichment of permissive H3K27 acetylation chromatin marks and depletion of the transcriptional repressors CCCTC-binding factor, SIN3 transcription regulator family member A, and histone deacetylase 1. In this respect, in DMD hearts, NF-κB acts differently from its established role as a transcriptional activator, instead promoting global changes in the chromatin landscape to regulate calcium genes and cardiac function.The molecular mechanisms leading to heart failure in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy are unclear. Here the authors show that NF-κB is activated in the heart of dystrophin-deficient mice and that its ablation rescues cardiac function through chromatin remodeling and activation of gene expression.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Sundew-Inspired Adhesive Hydrogels Combined with Adipose-Derived Stem Cells for Wound Healing

Leming Sun; Yujian Huang; Zehua Bian; Jennifer M. Petrosino; Zhen Fan; Yongzhong Wang; Ki Ho Park; Tao Yue; Michael Stenbæk Schmidt; Scott Galster; Jianjie Ma; H. Zhu; Mingjun Zhang


Nature Communications | 2017

BEX1 is an RNA-dependent mediator of cardiomyopathy

Federica Accornero; Tobias G. Schips; Jennifer M. Petrosino; Shan Qing Gu; Onur Kanisicak; Jop H. van Berlo; Jeffery D. Molkentin


The FASEB Journal | 2018

Genetic manipulation of CCN2/CTGF unveils cell-specific ECM-remodeling effects in injured skeletal muscle

Jennifer M. Petrosino; Andrew Leask; Federica Accornero

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Federica Accornero

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Scott Galster

Air Force Research Laboratory

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