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Featured researches published by Jolyn Fernandes.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2016

Metabolic pathways of lung inflammation revealed by high-resolution metabolomics (HRM) of H1N1 influenza virus infection in mice

Joshua D. Chandler; Xin Hu; Eun-Ju Ko; Soojin Park; Young-Tae Lee; Michael Orr; Jolyn Fernandes; Karan Uppal; Sang-Moo Kang; Dean P. Jones; Young-Mi Go

Influenza is a significant health concern worldwide. Viral infection induces local and systemic activation of the immune system causing attendant changes in metabolism. High-resolution metabolomics (HRM) uses advanced mass spectrometry and computational methods to measure thousands of metabolites inclusive of most metabolic pathways. We used HRM to identify metabolic pathways and clusters of association related to inflammatory cytokines in lungs of mice with H1N1 influenza virus infection. Infected mice showed progressive weight loss, decreased lung function, and severe lung inflammation with elevated cytokines [interleukin (IL)-1β, IL-6, IL-10, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, and interferon (IFN)-γ] and increased oxidative stress via cysteine oxidation. HRM showed prominent effects of influenza virus infection on tryptophan and other amino acids, and widespread effects on pathways including purines, pyrimidines, fatty acids, and glycerophospholipids. A metabolome-wide association study (MWAS) of the aforementioned inflammatory cytokines was used to determine the relationship of metabolic responses to inflammation during infection. This cytokine-MWAS (cMWAS) showed that metabolic associations consisted of distinct and shared clusters of 396 metabolites highly correlated with inflammatory cytokines. Strong negative associations of selected glycosphingolipid, linoleate, and tryptophan metabolites with IFN-γ contrasted strong positive associations of glycosphingolipid and bile acid metabolites with IL-1β, TNF-α, and IL-10. Anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 had strong positive associations with vitamin D, purine, and vitamin E metabolism. The detailed metabolic interactions with cytokines indicate that targeted metabolic interventions may be useful during life-threatening crises related to severe acute infection and inflammation.


Toxicological Sciences | 2017

From the Cover: Manganese Stimulates Mitochondrial H2O2 Production in SH-SY5Y Human Neuroblastoma Cells Over Physiologic as well as Toxicologic Range

Jolyn Fernandes; Li Hao; Kaiser M. Bijli; Joshua D. Chandler; Michael Orr; Xin Hu; Dean P. Jones; Young-Mi Go

Manganese (Mn) is an abundant redox-active metal with well-characterized mitochondrial accumulation and neurotoxicity due to excessive exposures. Mn is also an essential co-factor for the mitochondrial antioxidant protein, superoxide dismutase-2 (SOD2), and the range for adequate intake established by the Institute of Medicine Food and Nutrition Board is 20% of the interim guidance value for toxicity by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, leaving little margin for safety. To study toxic mechanisms over this critical dose range, we treated human neuroblastoma SH-SY5Y cells with a series of MnCl2 concentrations (from 0 to 100 &mgr;M) and measured cellular content to compare to human brain Mn content. Concentrations ⩽10 &mgr;M gave cellular concentrations comparable to literature values for normal human brain, whereas concentrations ≥50 &mgr;M resulted in values comparable to brains from individuals with toxic Mn exposures. Cellular oxygen consumption rate increased as a function of Mn up to 10 &mgr;M and decreased with Mn dose ≥50 &mgr;M. Over this range, Mn had no effect on superoxide production as measured by aconitase activity or MitoSOX but increased H2O2 production as measured by MitoPY1. Consistent with increased production of H2O2, SOD2 activity, and steady-state oxidation of total thiol increased with increasing Mn. These findings have important implications for Mn toxicity by re-directing attention from superoxide anion radical to H2O2-dependent mechanisms and to investigation over the entire physiologic range to toxicologic range. Additionally, the results show that controlled Mn exposure provides a useful cell manipulation for toxicological studies of mitochondrial H2O2 signaling.


Toxicology | 2017

Cadmium stimulates myofibroblast differentiation and mouse lung fibrosis

Xin Hu; Jolyn Fernandes; Dean P. Jones; Young-Mi Go

Increasing evidence suggests that Cd at levels found in the human diet can cause oxidative stress and activate redox-sensitive transcription factors in inflammatory signaling. Following inflammation, tissue repair often involves activation of redox-sensitive transcription factors in fibroblasts. In lungs, epithelial barrier remodeling is required to restore gas exchange and barrier function, and aberrant myofibroblast differentiation leads to pulmonary fibrosis. Contributions of exogenous exposures, such as dietary Cd, to pulmonary fibrosis remain incompletely defined. In the current study, we tested whether Cd activates fibrotic signaling in human fetal lung fibroblasts (HFLF) at micromolar and submicromolar Cd concentrations that do not cause cell death. Exposure of HFLF to low-dose Cd (≤1.0μM) caused an increase in stress fibers and increased protein levels of myofibroblast differentiation markers, including α-smooth muscle actin (α-SMA) and extra-domain-A-containing fibronectin (ED-A-FN). Assay of transcription factor (TF) activity using a 45-TF array showed that Cd increased activity of 12 TF, including SMAD2/3/4 (mothers against decapentaplegic homolog) signaling differentiation and fibrosis. Results were confirmed by real-time PCR and supported by increased expression of target genes of SMAD2/3/4. Immunocytochemistry of lungs of mice exposed to low-dose Cd (0.3 and 1.0mg/L in drinking water) showed increased α-SMA protein level with lung Cd accumulation similar to lung Cd in non-smoking humans. Together, the results show that relatively low Cd exposures stimulate pulmonary fibrotic signaling and myofibroblast differentiation by activating SMAD2/3/4-dependent signaling. The results indicate that dietary Cd intake could be an important variable contributing to pulmonary fibrosis in humans.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2018

Selenium at the redox interface of the genome, metabolome and exposome

Jolyn Fernandes; Xin Hu; M. Ryan Smith; Young-Mi Go; Dean P. Jones

Selenium (Se) is a redox-active environmental mineral that is converted to only a small number of metabolites and required for a relatively small number of mammalian enzymes. Despite this, dietary and environmental Se has extensive impact on every layer of omics space. This highlights a need for global network response structures to provide reference for targeted, hypothesis-driven Se research. In this review, we survey the Se research literature from the perspective of the responsive physical and chemical barrier between an organism (functional genome) and its environment (exposome), which we have previously termed the redox interface. Recent advances in metabolomics allow molecular phenotyping of the integrated genome-metabolome-exposome structure. Use of metabolomics with transcriptomics to map functional network responses to supplemental Se in mice revealed complex network responses linked to dyslipidemia and weight gain. Central metabolic hubs in the network structure in liver were not directly linked to transcripts for selenoproteins but were, instead, linked to transcripts for glucose transport and fatty acid β-oxidation. The experimental results confirm the survey of research literature in showing that Se interacts with the functional genome through a complex network response structure. The results imply that systematic application of data-driven integrated omics methods to models with controlled Se exposure could disentangle health benefits and risks from Se exposures and also serve more broadly as an experimental paradigm for exposome research.


bioRxiv | 2018

Low-dose cadmium potentiates lung inflammatory response to 2009 pandemic H1N1 influenza virus in mice

Joshua D. Chandler; Xin Hu; Eun-Ju Ko; Soojin Park; Jolyn Fernandes; Young-Tae Lee; Michael Orr; Li Hao; Matthew Ryan Smith; David Nujahr; Karan Uppal; Sang-Moo Kang; Dean P. Jones; Young-Mi Go

Cadmium (Cd) is a toxic, pro-inflammatory metal ubiquitous in the diet that accumulates in body organs due to inefficient elimination. Responses to influenza virus infection are variable, particularly severity of pneumonia. We used a murine model of chronic low-dose oral exposure to Cd to test if increased lung tissue Cd worsened inflammation in response to sub-lethal H1N1 infection. Using histopathology and flow cytometry, we observed increased lung inflammation in Cd-treated mice given H1N1 compared to H1N1 alone, including neutrophils, monocytes, T lymphocytes and dendritic cells. Lung genetic responses to infection (increasing TNF-α, interferon and complement, and decreasing myogenesis) were also exacerbated. To reveal the organization of a network structure, pinpointing molecules critical to Cd-altered lung function, global correlations were made for immune cell counts, leading edge gene transcripts and metabolites. This revealed that Cd increased correlation of myeloid immune cells with pro-inflammatory genes, particularly interferon-γ and metabolites. Together, the results show that Cd burden in mice increased inflammation in response to sub-lethal H1N1 challenge, which was coordinated by genetic and metabolic responses, and could provide new targets for intervention against lethal inflammatory pathology of clinical H1N1 infection.


Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2018

Putrescine as indicator of manganese neurotoxicity: Dose-response study in human SH-SY5Y cells

Jolyn Fernandes; Joshua D. Chandler; Ken H. Liu; Karan Uppal; Young-Mi Go; Dean P. Jones

Disrupted polyamine metabolism with elevated putrescine is associated with neuronal dysfunction. Manganese (Mn) is an essential nutrient that causes neurotoxicity in excess, but methods to evaluate biochemical responses to high Mn are limited. No information is available on dose-response effects of Mn on putrescine abundance and related polyamine metabolism. The present research was to test the hypothesis that Mn causes putrescine accumulation over a physiologically adequate to toxic concentration range in a neuronal cell line. We used human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells treated with MnCl2 under conditions that resulted in cell death or no cell death after 48 h. Putrescine and other metabolites were analyzed by liquid chromatography-ultra high-resolution mass spectrometry. Putrescine-related pathway changes were identified with metabolome-wide association study (MWAS). Results show that Mn caused a dose-dependent increase in putrescine over a non-toxic to toxic concentration range. MWAS of putrescine showed positive correlations with the polyamine metabolite N8-acetylspermidine, methionine-related precursors, and arginine-associated urea cycle metabolites, while putrescine was negatively correlated with γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)-related and succinate-related metabolites (P < 0.001, FDR < 0.01). These data suggest that measurement of putrescine and correlated metabolites may be useful to study effects of Mn intake in the high adequate to UL range.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2018

Selenium supplementation prevents metabolic and transcriptomic responses to cadmium in mouse lung

Xin Hu; Joshua D. Chandler; Jolyn Fernandes; Michael Orr; Li Hao; Karan Uppal; David C. Neujahr; Dean P. Jones; Young-Mi Go

BACKGROUND The protective effect of selenium (Se) on cadmium (Cd) toxicity is well documented, but underlying mechanisms are unclear. METHODS Male mice fed standard diet were given Cd (CdCl2, 18 μmol/L) in drinking water with or without Se (Na2SeO4, 20 μmol/L) for 16 weeks. Lungs were analyzed for Cd concentration, transcriptomics and metabolomics. Data were analyzed with biostatistics, bioinformatics, pathway enrichment analysis, and combined transcriptome-metabolome-wide association study. RESULTS Mice treated with Cd had higher lung Cd content (1.7 ± 0.4 pmol/mg protein) than control mice (0.8 ± 0.3 pmol/mg protein) or mice treated with Cd and Se (0.4 ± 0.1 pmol/mg protein). Gene set enrichment analysis of transcriptomics data showed that Se prevented Cd effects on inflammatory and myogenesis genes and diminished Cd effects on several other pathways. Similarly, Se prevented Cd-disrupted metabolic pathways in amino acid metabolism and urea cycle. Integrated transcriptome and metabolome network analysis showed that Cd treatment had a network structure with fewer gene-metabolite clusters compared to control. Centrality measurements showed that Se counteracted changes in a group of Cd-responsive genes including Zdhhc11, (protein-cysteine S-palmitoyltransferase), Ighg1 (immunoglobulin heavy constant gamma-1) and associated changes in metabolite concentrations. CONCLUSION Co-administration of Se with Cd prevented Cd increase in lung and prevented Cd-associated pathway and network responses of the transcriptome and metabolome. Se protection against Cd toxicity in lung involves complex systems responses. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE Environmental Cd stimulates proinflammatory and profibrotic signaling. The present results indicate that dietary or supplemental Se could be useful to mitigate Cd toxicity.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2017

Redox dynamics of manganese as a mitochondrial life-death switch

Matthew Ryan Smith; Jolyn Fernandes; Young-Mi Go; Dean P. Jones


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 2017

049Constitutive Activation of Nrf2 Causes Hyper-Reductive State and Heart Failure

Gobinath Shanmugam; Madhusudhanan Narasimhan; Silvio Litovsky; Jolyn Fernandes; Kevin J. Whitehead; John R. Hoidal; Thomas W. Kensler; Dean P. Jones; E. Dale Abel; Namakkal-Soorapppan Rajasekaran


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2017

Manganese Stimulates Putrescine Accumulation and Influences Associated Polyamine, Methionine and Neurotransmitter Metabolism in Human SH-SY5Y Neuroblastoma Cells

Jolyn Fernandes; Joshua D. Chandler; Ken H. Liu; Karan Uppal; Young-Mi Go; Dean P. Jones

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Eun-Ju Ko

Georgia State University

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Sang-Moo Kang

Georgia State University

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Soojin Park

Georgia State University

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