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Dive into the research topics where Josephine Lok is active.

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Featured researches published by Josephine Lok.


Neurochemical Research | 2007

Cell–cell Signaling in the Neurovascular Unit

Josephine Lok; Punkaj Gupta; Shuzhen Guo; Woo Jean Kim; Michael J. Whalen; Klaus van Leyen; Eng H. Lo

Historically, the neuron has been the conceptual focus for almost all of neuroscience research. In recent years, however, the concept of the neurovascular unit has emerged as a new paradigm for investigating both physiology and pathology in the CNS. This concept proposes that a purely neurocentric focus is not sufficient, and emphasizes that all cell types in the brain including neuronal, glial and vascular components, must be examined in an integrated context. Cell–cell signaling and coupling between these different compartments form the basis for normal function. Disordered signaling and perturbed coupling form the basis for dysfunction and disease. In this mini-review, we will survey four examples of this phenomenon: hemodynamic neurovascular coupling linking blood flow to brain activity; cellular communications that evoke the blood–brain barrier phenotype; parallel systems that underlie both neurogenesis and angiogenesis in the CNS; and finally, the potential exchange of trophic factors that may link neuronal, glial and vascular homeostasis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Neuroprotection via matrix-trophic coupling between cerebral endothelial cells and neurons

Shuzhen Guo; Woo Jean Kim; Josephine Lok; Sun Ryung Lee; Elaine Besancon; Bing Hao Luo; Monique F. Stins; Xiaoying Wang; Shoukat Dedhar; Eng H. Lo

The neurovascular unit is an emerging concept that emphasizes homeostatic interactions between endothelium and cerebral parenchyma. Here, we show that cerebral endothelium are not just inert tubes for delivering blood, but they also secrete trophic factors that can be directly neuroprotective. Conditioned media from cerebral endothelial cells broadly protects neurons against oxygen-glucose deprivation, oxidative damage, endoplasmic reticulum stress, hypoxia, and amyloid neurotoxicity. This phenomenon is largely mediated by endothelial-produced brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) because filtering endothelial-conditioned media with TrkB-Fc eliminates the neuroprotective effect. Endothelial production of BDNF is sustained by β-1 integrin and integrin-linked kinase (ILK) signaling. Noncytotoxic levels of oxidative stress disrupts ILK signaling and reduces endothelial levels of neuroprotective BDNF. These data suggest that cerebral endothelium provides a critical source of homeostatic support for neurons. Targeting these signals of matrix and trophic coupling between endothelium and neurons may provide new therapeutic opportunities for stroke and other CNS disorders.


Trends in Pharmacological Sciences | 2008

Beyond NMDA and AMPA glutamate receptors: emerging mechanisms for ionic imbalance and cell death in stroke

Elaine Besancon; Shuzhen Guo; Josephine Lok; Michael Tymianski; Eng H. Lo

The glutamate receptor was one of the most intensely investigated targets for neuroprotection. However, numerous clinical trials of glutamate receptor antagonists for the treatment of stroke were unsuccessful. These failures have led to pessimism in the field. But recent advances could provide hope for the future. This minireview looks beyond the traditional mechanism of glutamate-receptor-driven excitotoxicity to identify other mechanisms of ionic imbalance. These advances include findings implicating sodium-calcium exchangers, hemichannels, volume-regulated anion channels, acid-sensing channels, transient receptor potential channels, nonselective cation channels and signaling cascades that mediate crosstalk between redundant pathways of cell death. Further in vivo validation of these pathways could ultimately lead us to new therapeutic targets for stroke, trauma and neurodegeneration.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2011

Cellular Mechanisms of Neurovascular Damage and Repair After Stroke

Ken Arai; Josephine Lok; Shuzhen Guo; Kazuhide Hayakawa; Changhong Xing; Eng H. Lo

The biological processes underlying stroke are complex, and patients have a narrow repertoire of therapeutic opportunities. After the National Institutes of Health (NIH) convened the Stroke Progress Review Group in 2001, stroke research shifted from having a purely neurocentric focus to adopting a more integrated view wherein dynamic interactions between all cell types contribute to function and dysfunction in the brain. This so-called “neurovascular unit” provides a conceptual framework that emphasizes cell–cell interactions between neuronal, glial, and vascular elements. Under normal conditions, signaling within the neurovascular unit helps maintain homeostasis. After stroke, cell–cell signaling is disturbed, leading to pathophysiology. More recently, emerging data now suggest that these cell–cell signaling mechanisms may also mediate parallel processes of neurovascular remodeling during stroke recovery. Because plasticity is a signature feature of the young and developing brain, these concepts may have special relevance to how the pediatric brain responds after stroke.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Astrocytes Promote Oligodendrogenesis after White Matter Damage via Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor

Nobukazu Miyamoto; Takakuni Maki; Akihiro Shindo; Anna C. Liang; Mitsuyo Maeda; Naohiro Egawa; Kanako Itoh; Evan K. Lo; Josephine Lok; Masafumi Ihara; Ken Arai

Oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs) in the adult brain contribute to white matter homeostasis. After white matter damage, OPCs compensate for oligodendrocyte loss by differentiating into mature oligodendrocytes. However, the underlying mechanisms remain to be fully defined. Here, we test the hypothesis that, during endogenous recovery from white matter ischemic injury, astrocytes support the maturation of OPCs by secreting brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). For in vitro experiments, cultured primary OPCs and astrocytes were prepared from postnatal day 2 rat cortex. When OPCs were subjected to chemical hypoxic stress by exposing them to sublethal CoCl2 for 7 d, in vitro OPC differentiation into oligodendrocytes was significantly suppressed. Conditioned medium from astrocytes (astro-medium) restored the process of OPC maturation even under the stressed conditions. When astro-medium was filtered with TrkB-Fc to remove BDNF, the BDNF-deficient astro-medium no longer supported OPC maturation. For in vivo experiments, we analyzed a transgenic mouse line (GFAPcre/BDNFwt/fl) in which BDNF expression is downregulated specifically in GFAP+ astrocytes. Both wild-type (GFAPwt/BDNFwt/fl mice) and transgenic mice were subjected to prolonged cerebral hypoperfusion by bilateral common carotid artery stenosis. As expected, compared with wild-type mice, the transgenic mice exhibited a lower number of newly generated oligodendrocytes and larger white matter damage. Together, these findings demonstrate that, during endogenous recovery from white matter damage, astrocytes may promote oligodendrogenesis by secreting BDNF. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The repair of white matter after brain injury and neurodegeneration remains a tremendous hurdle for a wide spectrum of CNS disorders. One potentially important opportunity may reside in the response of residual oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs). OPCs may serve as a back-up for generating mature oligodendrocytes in damaged white matter. However, the underlying mechanisms are still mostly unknown. Here, we use a combination of cell biology and an animal model to report a new pathway in which astrocyte-derived BDNF supports oligodendrogenesis and regeneration after white matter damage. These findings provide new mechanistic insight into white matter physiology and pathophysiology, which would be broadly and clinically applicable to CNS disease.


Neurological Research | 2012

Injury and repair in the neurovascular unit.

Changhong Xing; Kazuhide Hayakawa; Josephine Lok; Ken Arai; Eng H. Lo

Abstract The neurovascular unit provides a conceptual framework for investigating the pathophysiology of how brain cells die after stroke, brain injury, and neurodegeneration. Emerging data now suggest that this concept can be further extended. Cell–cell signaling between neuronal, glial, and vascular elements in the brain not only mediates the mechanisms of acute injury, but integrated responses in these same elements may also be required for recovery as the entire neurovascular unit attempts to reorganize and remodel. Understanding the common signals and substrates of this transition between acute injury and delayed repair in the neurovascular unit may reveal useful paradigms for augmenting neuronal, glial, and vascular plasticity in damaged and diseased brain.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2009

Interleukin-1β augments angiogenic responses of murine endothelial progenitor cells in vitro

Anna Rosell; Ken Arai; Josephine Lok; Tongrong He; Shuzhen Guo; Miriam Navarro; Joan Montaner; Zvonimir S. Katusic; Eng H. Lo

Endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) may provide novel opportunities for therapeutic angiogenesis after ischemic diseases. However, it is unclear how the angiogenic potential of EPCs might be affected by an inflammatory environment. We examine how the potent cytokine interleukin-1β (IL-1β) affects angiovasculogenic responses in EPCs in culture. Mononuclear cells isolated from mouse spleen were plated on fibronectin-coated wells and grown in EGM-2 MV media. Endothelial progenitor cells were phenotyped using multiple markers (UEA-Lectin, ac-LDL, CD133, CD34, vWillebrand Factor, Flk-1) and to identify the IL-1 Receptor-I. We quantified cell and colony counts and performed MTT (3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)2,5-diphenyl-tetrazolium bromide) and Matrigel assays, in vitro, under control and IL-1β (10 ng/mL) conditions. Endothelial progenitor cells exposed to IL-1β increased in the number of cells and colonies compared with untreated cells, without any effect on cell metabolic integrity. Furthermore, IL-1β treatment augmented EPC angiogenic function, significantly increasing the number of vessel-like structures in the Matrigel assay. An early phosphorylation of ERK1/2 occurred after IL-1β stimulation, and this pathway was inhibited if IL-1 Receptor-I was blocked. Our results suggest that IL-1β is a potent stimulator of in vitro angiogenesis through ERK signaling in mouse EPCs. Further studies are warranted to assess how interactions between proinflammatory environments and EPC responses may be leveraged to enhance therapeutic angiogenesis.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2012

Neurovascular matrix metalloproteinases and the blood-brain barrier.

Ji Hae Seo; Shuzhen Guo; Josephine Lok; Deepti Navaratna; Michael J. Whalen; Kyu-Won Kim; Eng H. Lo

Blood-brain barrier (BBB) leakage and brain edema is a critical part of stroke pathophysiology. In this mini-review, we briefly survey the potential role of matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in BBB dysfunction. A large body of data in both experimental models as well as clinical patient populations suggests that MMPs may disrupt BBB permeability and interfere with cell-cell signaling in the neurovascular unit. Hence, ongoing efforts are underway to validate MMPs as potential biomarkers in stroke as well as pursue MMP blockers as therapeutic opportunities. Because BBB perturbations may also occur in neurodegeneration, MMPs and associated neurovascular unit mechanisms may also be potential targets in a broader range of CNS disorders.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2012

Pro-angiogenic effects of resveratrol in brain endothelial cells: nitric oxide-mediated regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor and metalloproteinases

Fabrício Simão; Aline S Pagnussat; Ji Hae Seo; Deepti Navaratna; Wendy Leung; Josephine Lok; Shuzhen Guo; Christian Waeber; Christianne Gazzana Salbego; Eng H. Lo

Resveratrol may be a powerful way of protecting the brain against a wide variety of stress and injury. Recently, it has been proposed that resveratrol not only reduces brain injury but also promotes recovery after stroke. But the underlying mechanisms are unclear. Here, we tested the hypothesis that resveratrol promotes angiogenesis in cerebral endothelial cells and dissected the signaling pathways involved. Treatment of cerebral endothelial cells with resveratrol promoted proliferation, migration, and tube formation in Matrigel assays. Consistent with these pro-angiogenic responses, resveratrol altered endothelial morphology resulting in cytoskeletal rearrangements of β-catenin and VE-cadherin. These effects of resveratrol were accompanied by activation of phosphoinositide 3 kinase (PI3-K)/Akt and Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase (MAPK)/ERK signaling pathways that led to endothelial nitric oxide synthase upregulation and increased nitric oxide (NO) levels. Subsequently, elevated NO signaling increased vascular endothelial growth factor and matrix metalloproteinase levels. Sequential blockade of these signaling steps prevented resveratrol-induced angiogenesis in cerebral endothelial cells. These findings provide a mechanistic basis for the potential use of resveratrol as a candidate therapy to promote angiogenesis and neurovascular recovery after stroke.


Acta neurochirurgica | 2011

Intracranial Hemorrhage: Mechanisms of Secondary Brain Injury

Josephine Lok; Wendy Leung; Sarah Murphy; William E. Butler; Natan Noviski; Eng H. Lo

ICH is a disease with high rates of mortality and morbidity, with a substantial public health impact. Spontaneous ICH (sICH) has been extensively studied, and a large body of data has been accumulated on its pathophysiology. However, the literature on traumatic ICH (tICH) is limited, and further investigations of this important topic are needed. This review will highlight some of the cellular pathways in ICH with an emphasis on the mechanisms of secondary injury due to heme toxicity and to events in the coagulation process that are common to both sICH and tICH.

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