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Dive into the research topics where Joshua J. Maraj is active.

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Featured researches published by Joshua J. Maraj.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2015

Spaceflight on the Bion-M1 biosatellite alters cerebral artery vasomotor and mechanical properties in mice

Svetlana I. Sofronova; O.S. Tarasova; Dina Gaynullina; Anna A. Borzykh; Bradley J. Behnke; John N. Stabley; Danielle J. McCullough; Joshua J. Maraj; Mina E. Hanna; Judy M. Muller-Delp; O. L. Vinogradova; Michael D. Delp

Conditions during spaceflight, such as the loss of the head-to-foot gravity vector, are thought to potentially alter cerebral blood flow and vascular resistance. The purpose of the present study was to determine the effects of long-term spaceflight on the functional, mechanical, and structural properties of cerebral arteries. Male C57BL/6N mice were flown 30 days in a Bion-M1 biosatellite. Basilar arteries isolated from spaceflight (SF) (n = 6), habitat control (HC) (n = 6), and vivarium control (VC) (n = 16) mice were used for in vitro functional and mechanical testing and histological structural analysis. The results demonstrate that vasoconstriction elicited through a voltage-gated Ca(2+) mechanism (30-80 mM KCl) and thromboxane A2 receptors (10(-8) - 3 × 10(-5) M U46619) are lower in cerebral arteries from SF mice. Inhibition of Rho-kinase activity (1 μM Y27632) abolished group differences in U46619-evoked contractions. Endothelium-dependent vasodilation elicited by acetylcholine (10 μM, 2 μM U46619 preconstriction) was virtually absent in cerebral arteries from SF mice. The pressure-diameter relation was lower in arteries from SF mice relative to that in HC mice, which was not related to differences in the extracellular matrix protein elastin or collagen content or the elastin/collagen ratio in the basilar arteries. Diameter, medial wall thickness, and medial cross-sectional area of unpressurized basilar arteries were not different among groups. These results suggest that the microgravity-induced attenuation of both vasoconstrictor and vasodilator properties may limit the range of vascular control of cerebral perfusion or impair the distribution of brain blood flow during periods of stress.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2014

Structural remodeling of coronary resistance arteries: effects of age and exercise training.

Mina E. Hanna; Curtis R. Taylor; Bei Chen; Hae-Sun La; Joshua J. Maraj; Cody R. Kilar; Bradley J. Behnke; Michael D. Delp; Judy M. Muller-Delp

Age is known to induce remodeling and stiffening of large-conduit arteries; however, little is known of the effects of age on remodeling and mechanical properties of coronary resistance arteries. We employed a rat model of aging to investigate whether 1) age increases wall thickness and stiffness of coronary resistance arteries, and 2) exercise training reverses putative age-induced increases in wall thickness and stiffness of coronary resistance arteries. Young (4 mo) and old (21 mo) Fischer 344 rats remained sedentary or underwent 10 wk of treadmill exercise training. Coronary resistance arteries were isolated for determination of wall-to-lumen ratio, effective elastic modulus, and active and passive responses to changes in intraluminal pressure. Elastin and collagen content of the vascular wall were assessed histologically. Wall-to-lumen ratio increased with age, but this increase was reversed by exercise training. In contrast, age reduced stiffness, and exercise training increased stiffness in coronary resistance arteries from old rats. Myogenic responsiveness was reduced with age and restored by exercise training. Collagen-to-elastin ratio (C/E) of the wall did not change with age and was reduced with exercise training in arteries from old rats. Thus age induces hypertrophic remodeling of the vessel wall and reduces the stiffness and myogenic function of coronary resistance arteries. Exercise training reduces wall-to-lumen ratio, increases wall stiffness, and restores myogenic function in aged coronary resistance arteries. The restorative effect of exercise training on myogenic function of coronary resistance arteries may be due to both changes in vascular smooth muscle phenotype and expression of extracellular matrix proteins.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2018

Effects of age and exercise training on coronary microvascular smooth muscle phenotype and function

Judy M. Muller-Delp; Kazuki Hotta; Bei Chen; Bradley J. Behnke; Joshua J. Maraj; Michael D. Delp; Tiffani R. Lucero; Jeremy A. Bramy; David B. Alarcon; Hannah Morgan; Morgan Cowan; Anthony D. Haynes

Coronary microvascular function and blood flow responses during acute exercise are impaired in the aged heart but can be restored by exercise training. Coronary microvascular resistance is directly dependent on vascular smooth muscle function in coronary resistance arterioles; therefore, we hypothesized that age impairs contractile function and alters the phenotype of vascular smooth muscle in coronary arterioles. We further hypothesized that exercise training restores contractile function and reverses age-induced phenotypic alterations of arteriolar smooth muscle. Young and old Fischer 344 rats underwent 10 wk of treadmill exercise training or remained sedentary. At the end of training or cage confinement, contractile responses, vascular smooth muscle proliferation, and expression of contractile proteins were assessed in isolated coronary arterioles. Both receptor- and non-receptor-mediated contractile function were impaired in coronary arterioles from aged rats. Vascular smooth muscle shifted from a differentiated, contractile phenotype to a secretory phenotype with associated proliferation of smooth muscle in the arteriolar wall. Expression of smooth muscle myosin heavy chain 1 (SM1) was decreased in arterioles from aged rats, whereas expression of phospho-histone H3 and of the synthetic protein ribosomal protein S6 (rpS6) were increased. Exercise training improved contractile responses, reduced smooth muscle proliferation and expression of rpS6, and increased expression of SM1 in arterioles from old rats. Thus age-induced contractile dysfunction of coronary arterioles and emergence of a secretory smooth muscle phenotype may contribute to impaired coronary blood flow responses, but arteriolar contractile responsiveness and a younger smooth muscle phenotype can be restored with late-life exercise training. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Aging impairs contractile function of coronary arterioles and induces a shift of the vascular smooth muscle toward a proliferative, noncontractile phenotype. Late-life exercise training reverses contractile dysfunction of coronary arterioles and restores a young phenotype to the vascular smooth muscle.


The Journal of Physiology | 2018

Daily muscle stretching enhances blood flow, endothelial function, capillarity, vascular volume and connectivity in aged skeletal muscle

Kazuki Hotta; Bradley J. Behnke; Bahram H. Arjmandi; Payal Ghosh; Bei Chen; Rachael Brooks; Joshua J. Maraj; Marcus L. Elam; Patrick Maher; Daniel Kurien; Alexandra Churchill; Jaime L. Sepulveda; Max B. Kabolowsky; Demetra D. Christou; Judy M. Muller-Delp

In aged rats, daily muscle stretching increases blood flow to skeletal muscle during exercise. Daily muscle stretching enhanced endothelium‐dependent vasodilatation of skeletal muscle resistance arterioles of aged rats. Angiogenic markers and capillarity increased in response to daily stretching in muscles of aged rats. Muscle stretching performed with a splint could provide a feasible means of improving muscle blood flow and function in elderly patients who cannot perform regular aerobic exercise.


The Journal of Physiology | 2018

Daily muscle stretching enhances blood flow, endothelial function, capillarity, vascular volume and connectivity in aged skeletal muscle: Daily muscle stretching and blood flow

Kazuki Hotta; Bradley J. Behnke; Bahram H. Arjmandi; Payal Ghosh; Bei Chen; Rachael Brooks; Joshua J. Maraj; Marcus L. Elam; Patrick Maher; Daniel Kurien; Alexandra Churchill; Jaime L. Sepulveda; Max B. Kabolowsky; Demetra D. Christou; Judy M. Muller-Delp


Archive | 2015

flow regulation intra-abdominal adipose arteriolar function and blood Differential effects of aging and exercise on

Danielle J. McCullough; Lisa A. Lesniewski; Michael D. Delp; John N. Stabley; Bradley J. Behnke; Judy M. Muller-Delp; Mina A. Hanna; Curtis R. Taylor; Joshua J. Maraj; Cody R. Kilar


Archive | 2015

skeletal muscle arterioles hindlimb unloading on the vasodilator properties of Selected Contribution: Effects of fiber composition and

Patrick N. Colleran; D Michael; Robert T. Davis; Payal Ghosh; Anthony Papadopoulos; Judy M. Muller-Delp; Robert T. Taylor; Mina Hanna; Bradley J. Behnke; John N. Stabley; Danielle J. McCullough; Michael D. Delp; Mina A. Hanna; Curtis R. Taylor; Joshua J. Maraj; Cody R. Kilar; Rhonda D. Prisby; Matthew R. Allen


Archive | 2015

remodelinga possible mechanism for bone Alterations in skeletal perfusion with simulated

Russell T. Turner; Michael D. Delp; M. Keith Wilkerson; Larry J. Suva; John N. Stabley; Rhonda D. Prisby; Bradley J. Behnke; O. L. Vinogradova; Danielle J. McCullough; Joshua J. Maraj; Mina Hanna; I. Sofronova; O.S. Tarasova; Dina Gaynullina; Anna A. Borzykh; Matthew R. Allen


Archive | 2015

nitric oxide synthase and EDHF mechanisms through arteries is altered with simulated microgravity Endothelium-dependent vasodilation of cerebral

Emily Wilson; Michael D. Delp; Rhonda D. Prisby; M. Keith; Elke M. Sokoya; Robert M. Bryan; Randy F. Crossland; David J. Durgan; Eric E. Lloyd; Sharon C. Phillips; Anilkumar K. Reddy; O. L. Vinogradova; John N. Stabley; Danielle J. McCullough; Joshua J. Maraj; Mina Hanna; I. Sofronova; O.S. Tarasova; Dina Gaynullina; Anna A. Borzykh


Archive | 2015

skeletal muscle resistance arteries in mice Spaceflight reduces vasoconstrictor responsiveness of

Joslyn Ahlgren; Bradley J. Behnke; Judy M. Muller-Delp; N. Stabley; James M. Dominguez; Catherine E. Dominguez; Fredy R. Mora; O. L. Vinogradova; John N. Stabley; Danielle J. McCullough; Joshua J. Maraj; Mina Hanna; I. Sofronova; O.S. Tarasova; Dina Gaynullina; Anna A. Borzykh; Rhonda D. Prisby; Matthew R. Allen; Michael D. Delp

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John N. Stabley

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Bei Chen

University of Florida

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