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Dive into the research topics where Jeremy Adamowicz is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeremy Adamowicz.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2011

Adipose Stem Cell Treatment in Mice Attenuates Lung and Systemic Injury Induced by Cigarette Smoking

Kelly S. Schweitzer; Brian H. Johnstone; Jana Garrison; Natalia I. Rush; Scott Cooper; Dmitry O. Traktuev; Dongni Feng; Jeremy Adamowicz; Mary Van Demark; Amanda J. Fisher; Krzysztof Kamocki; Mary Beth Brown; Robert G. Presson; Hal E. Broxmeyer; Keith L. March; Irina Petrache

RATIONALE Adipose-derived stem cells express multiple growth factors that inhibit endothelial cell apoptosis, and demonstrate substantial pulmonary trapping after intravascular delivery. OBJECTIVES We hypothesized that adipose stem cells would ameliorate chronic lung injury associated with endothelial cell apoptosis, such as that occurring in emphysema. METHODS Therapeutic effects of systemically delivered human or mouse adult adipose stem cells were evaluated in murine models of emphysema induced by chronic exposure to cigarette smoke or by inhibition of vascular endothelial growth factor receptors. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Adipose stem cells were detectable in the parenchyma and large airways of lungs up to 21 days after injection. Adipose stem cell treatment was associated with reduced inflammatory infiltration in response to cigarette smoke exposure, and markedly decreased lung cell death and airspace enlargement in both models of emphysema. Remarkably, therapeutic results of adipose stem cells extended beyond lung protection by rescuing the suppressive effects of cigarette smoke on bone marrow hematopoietic progenitor cell function, and by restoring weight loss sustained by mice during cigarette smoke exposure. Pulmonary vascular protective effects of adipose stem cells were recapitulated by application of cell-free conditioned medium, which improved lung endothelial cell repair and recovery in a wound injury repair model and antagonized effects of cigarette smoke in vitro. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest a useful therapeutic effect of adipose stem cells on both lung and systemic injury induced by cigarette smoke, and implicate a lung vascular protective function of adipose stem cell derived paracrine factors.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2008

Superoxide dismutase protects against apoptosis and alveolar enlargement induced by ceramide

Irina Petrache; Terry R. Medler; Amy Richter; Krzysztof Kamocki; Ugonma Chukwueke; Lijie Zhen; Yuan Gu; Jeremy Adamowicz; Kelly S. Schweitzer; Walter C. Hubbard; Evgeny Berdyshev; Giuseppe Lungarella; Rubin M. Tuder

The molecular events leading to emphysema development include generation of oxidative stress and alveolar cell apoptosis. Oxidative stress upregulates ceramides, proapoptotic signaling sphingolipids that trigger further oxidative stress and alveolar space enlargement, as shown in an experimental model of emphysema due to VEGF blockade. As alveolar cell apoptosis and oxidative stress mutually interact to mediate alveolar destruction, we hypothesized that the oxidative stress generated by ceramide is required for its pathogenic effect on lung alveoli. To model the direct lung effects of ceramide, mice received ceramide intratracheally (Cer(12:0) or Cer(8:0); 1 mg/kg) or vehicle. Apoptosis was inhibited with a general caspase inhibitor. Ceramide augmentation shown to mimic levels found in human emphysema lungs increased oxidative stress, and decreased, independently of caspase activation, the lung superoxide dismutase activity at 48 h. In contrast to their wild-type littermates, transgenic mice overexpressing human Cu/Zn SOD were significantly protected from ceramide-induced superoxide production, apoptosis, and air space enlargement. Activation of lung acid sphingomyelinase in response to ceramide treatment was abolished in the Cu/Zn SOD transgenic mice. Since cigarette smoke-induced emphysema in mice is similarly ameliorated by the Cu/Zn SOD overexpression, we hypothesized that cigarette smoke may induce ceramides in the mouse lung. Utilizing tandem mass spectrometry, we documented increased lung ceramides in adult mice exposed to cigarette smoke for 4 wk. In conclusion, ceramide-induced superoxide accumulation in the lung may be a critical step in ceramides proapoptotic effect in the lung. This work implicates excessive lung ceramides as amplifiers of lung injury through redox-dependent mechanisms.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2010

Stimulation of sphingosine 1-phosphate signaling as an alveolar cell survival strategy in emphysema.

Khalil Diab; Jeremy Adamowicz; Krzysztof Kamocki; Natalia I. Rush; Jana Garrison; Yuan Gu; Kelly S. Schweitzer; Anastasia Skobeleva; Gangaraju Rajashekhar; Walter C. Hubbard; Evgeny Berdyshev; Irina Petrache

RATIONALE Vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR) inhibition increases ceramides in lung structural cells of the alveolus, initiating apoptosis and alveolar destruction morphologically resembling emphysema. The effects of increased endogenous ceramides could be offset by sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P), a prosurvival by-product of ceramide metabolism. OBJECTIVES The aims of our work were to investigate the sphingosine-S1P-S1P receptor axis in the VEGFR inhibition model of emphysema and to determine whether stimulation of S1P signaling is sufficient to functionally antagonize alveolar space enlargement. METHODS Concurrent to VEGFR blockade in mice, S1P signaling augmentation was achieved via treatment with the S1P precursor sphingosine, S1P agonist FTY720, or S1P receptor-1 (S1PR1) agonist SEW2871. Outcomes included sphingosine kinase-1 RNA expression and activity, sphingolipid measurements by combined liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry, immunoblotting for prosurvival signaling pathways, caspase-3 activity and terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUTP nick end labeling assays, and airspace morphometry. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Consistent with previously reported de novo activation of ceramide synthesis, VEGFR inhibition triggered increases in lung ceramides, dihydroceramides, and dihydrosphingosine, but did not alter sphingosine kinase activity or S1P levels. Administration of sphingosine decreased the ceramide-to-S1P ratio in the lung and inhibited alveolar space enlargement, along with activation of prosurvival signaling pathways and decreased lung parenchyma cell apoptosis. Sphingosine significantly opposed ceramide-induced apoptosis in cultured lung endothelial cells, but not epithelial cells. FTY720 or SEW2871 recapitulated the protective effects of sphingosine on airspace enlargement concomitant with attenuation of VEGFR inhibitor-induced lung apoptosis. CONCLUSIONS Strategies aimed at augmenting the S1P-S1PR1 signaling may be effective in ameliorating the apoptotic mechanisms of emphysema development.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Sphingolipid-mediated Inhibition of Apoptotic Cell Clearance by Alveolar Macrophages

Daniela N. Petrusca; Yuan Gu; Jeremy Adamowicz; Natalia I. Rush; Walter C. Hubbard; Patricia Smith; Evgeni V. Berdyshev; Konstantin G. Birukov; Chao Hung Lee; Rubin M. Tuder; Homer L. Twigg; R. William Vandivier; Irina Petrache

A decreased clearance of apoptotic cells (efferocytosis) by alveolar macrophages (AM) may contribute to inflammation in emphysema. The up-regulation of ceramides in response to cigarette smoking (CS) has been linked to AM accumulation and increased detection of apoptotic alveolar epithelial and endothelial cells in lung parenchyma. We hypothesized that ceramides inhibit the AM phagocytosis of apoptotic cells. Release of endogenous ceramides via sphingomyelinase or exogenous ceramide treatments dose-dependently impaired apoptotic Jurkat cell phagocytosis by primary rat or human AM, irrespective of the molecular species of ceramide. Similarly, in vivo augmentation of lung ceramides via intratracheal instillation in rats significantly decreased the engulfment of instilled target apoptotic thymocytes by resident AM. The mechanism of ceramide-induced efferocytosis impairment was dependent on generation of sphingosine via ceramidase. Sphingosine treatment recapitulated the effects of ceramide, dose-dependently inhibiting apoptotic cell clearance. The effect of ceramide on efferocytosis was associated with decreased membrane ruffle formation and attenuated Rac1 plasma membrane recruitment. Constitutively active Rac1 overexpression rescued AM efferocytosis against the effects of ceramide. CS exposure significantly increased AM ceramides and recapitulated the effect of ceramides on Rac1 membrane recruitment in a sphingosine-dependent manner. Importantly, CS profoundly inhibited AM efferocytosis via ceramide-dependent sphingosine production. These results suggest that excessive lung ceramides may amplify lung injury in emphysema by causing both apoptosis of structural cells and inhibition of their clearance by AM.


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Effects Of 17-beta Estradiol On Cultured Hypoxic Lung Endothelial Cells And Hypoxic Pulmonary Hypertension

Tim Lahm; Marjorie Albrecht; Jeremy Adamowicz; Mary Van Demark; Cecilia M. Devlin; Mircea Ivan; Robert G. Presson; Irina Petrache


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Protective Effects Of Adipose Stem Cells Against Cigarette-smoke Induced Lung Injury

Kelly S. Schweitzer; Brian Johnstone; Dmitry O. Traktuev; Jana Garrison; Natalia I. Rush; Jeremy Adamowicz; Todd G. Cook; Dongni Feng; Stephanie Merfeld-Clauss; Hal E. Broxmeyer; Keith L. March; Irina Petrache


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Effect Of Alpha 1 Antitrypsin (A1AT) On Pulmonary Endothelial Cell Responses To Pro-inflammatory Cytokines

Angelia D. Lockett; Samuel W. Kimani; Daniela N. Petrusca; Jeremy Adamowicz; Yuan Gu; Natalia I. Rush; Mary Van Demark; Robert G. Presson; Horia I. Petrache; Irina Petrache


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Ceramide-dependent Modulation Of Apoptotic Cell Clearance (efferocytosis) By Alveolar Macrophages

Daniela N. Petrusca; Jeremy Adamowicz; Natalia I. Rush; Amanda J. Fisher; Matthew J. Justice; Patricia Smith; Yuan Gu; Walter C. Hubbard; Konstantin G. Birukov; Chao-Hung Lee; Homer L. Twigg; R. William Vandivier; Horia I. Petrache; Irina Petrache


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Neutralization Of EMAP II Inhibits Cigarette Smoke-induced Lung Emphysema

Matthias Clauss; Jana Garrison; Gangaraju Rajashekhar; Kelly S. Schweitzer; Jeremy Adamowicz; Natalia I. Rush; Amanda J. Fisher; Robert G. Presson; Irina Petrache


american thoracic society international conference | 2010

Involvement Of Ceramides And Dihydroceramides In Lung Apoptosis And Autophagy

Irina Petrache; Daniela N. Petrusca; Zhihua Chen; Dorothy Ndishabandi; Matthew J. Justice; Krzysztof Kamocki; Natalia I. Rush; Mary Van Demark; Jeremy Adamowicz; Walter C. Hubbard; Augustine M. K. Choi

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Irina Petrache

University of Colorado Denver

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