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Dive into the research topics where Judy Creighton is active.

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Featured researches published by Judy Creighton.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2013

Metformin-stimulated AMPK-α1 promotes microvascular repair in acute lung injury

Ming-Yuan Jian; Mikhail Alexeyev; Paul E. Wolkowicz; Jaroslaw W. Zmijewski; Judy Creighton

Acute lung injury secondary to sepsis is a leading cause of mortality in sepsis-related death. Present therapies are not effective in reversing endothelial cell dysfunction, which plays a key role in increased vascular permeability and compromised lung function. AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is a molecular sensor important for detection and mediation of cellular adaptations to vascular disruptive stimuli. In this study, we sought to determine the role of AMPK in resolving increased endothelial permeability in the sepsis-injured lung. AMPK function was determined in vivo using a rat model of endotoxin-induced lung injury, ex vivo using the isolated lung, and in vitro using cultured rat pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (PMVECs). AMPK stimulation using N1-(α-d-ribofuranosyl)-5-aminoimidizole-4-carboxamide or metformin decreased the LPS-induced increase in permeability, as determined by filtration coefficient (Kf) measurements, and resolved edema as indicated by decreased wet-to-dry ratios. The role of AMPK in the endothelial response to LPS was determined by shRNA designed to decrease expression of the AMPK-α1 isoform in capillary endothelial cells. Permeability, wounding, and barrier resistance assays using PMVECs identified AMPK-α1 as the molecule responsible for the beneficial effects of AMPK in the lung. Our findings provide novel evidence for AMPK-α1 as a vascular repair mechanism important in the pulmonary response to sepsis and identify a role for metformin treatment in the management of capillary injury.


The FASEB Journal | 2011

Adenosine monophosphate-activated kinase α1 promotes endothelial barrier repair

Judy Creighton; Ming-Yuan Jian; Sarah Sayner; Mikhail Alexeyev; Paul A. Insel

The vascular endothelium responds to damage through activation of multiple signaling events that restore cell‐cell adhesion and vascular integrity. However, the molecular mechanisms that integrate these events are not clearly defined. Herein, we identify a previously unexpected role for adenosine monophosphate‐activated protein kinase (AMPK) in pulmonary microvascular endothelial cell (PMVEC) repair. PMVECs selectively express the AMPKα1 catalytic subunit, pharmacological and short hairpin RNA‐mediated inhibition of which attenuates Ca2+ entry in these cells induced by the inflammatory Ca2+‐signaling mimetic thapsigargin. We find that AMPKα1 activity is required for the formation of PMVEC cell‐cell networks in a prorepair environment and for monolayer resealing after wounding. Decreasing AMPKα1 expression reduces barrier resistance in PMVEC monolayers, results consistent with a role for AMPKα1 in cell‐cell adhesion. AMPKα1 colocalizes and coimmunoprecipitates with the adherens junction protein N‐cadherin and cofractionates with proteins selectively expressed in caveolar membranes. Assessment of permeability, by measuring the filtration coefficient (Kf) in isolated perfused lungs, confirmed that AMPK activation contributes to barrier repair in vivo. Our findings thus provide novel evidence for AMPKα1 in Ca2+ influx‐mediated signaling and wound repair in the endothelium.—Creighton, J., Jian, M., Sayner, S., Alexeyev, M., Insel, P. A. Adenosine monophosphate‐activated kinase α1 promotes endothelial barrier repair. FASEB J. 25, 3356–3365 (2011). www.fasebj.org


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2015

Hyaluronan mediates airway hyperresponsiveness in oxidative lung injury.

Ahmed Lazrak; Judy Creighton; Zhihong Yu; Svetlana Komarova; Stephen F. Doran; Saurabh Aggarwal; Charles W. Emala; Vandy P. Stober; Carol S. Trempus; Stavros Garantziotis; Sadis Matalon

Chlorine (Cl2) inhalation induces severe oxidative lung injury and airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) that lead to asthmalike symptoms. When inhaled, Cl2 reacts with epithelial lining fluid, forming by-products that damage hyaluronan, a constituent of the extracellular matrix, causing the release of low-molecular-weight fragments (L-HA, <300 kDa), which initiate a series of proinflammatory events. Cl2 (400 ppm, 30 min) exposure to mice caused an increase of L-HA and its binding partner, inter-α-trypsin-inhibitor (IαI), in the bronchoalveolar lavage fluid. Airway resistance following methacholine challenge was increased 24 h post-Cl2 exposure. Intratracheal administration of high-molecular-weight hyaluronan (H-HA) or an antibody against IαI post-Cl2 exposure decreased AHR. Exposure of human airway smooth muscle (HASM) cells to Cl2 (100 ppm, 10 min) or incubation with Cl2-exposed H-HA (which fragments it to L-HA) increased membrane potential depolarization, intracellular Ca(2+), and RhoA activation. Inhibition of RhoA, chelation of intracellular Ca(2+), blockade of cation channels, as well as postexposure addition of H-HA, reversed membrane depolarization in HASM cells. We propose a paradigm in which oxidative lung injury generates reactive species and L-HA that activates RhoA and Ca(2+) channels of airway smooth muscle cells, increasing their contractility and thus causing AHR.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2014

Targeted Delivery of Pulmonary Arterial Endothelial Cells Overexpressing Interleukin-8 Receptors Attenuates Monocrotaline-Induced Pulmonary Vascular Remodeling

Jinyan Fu; Yiu-Fai Chen; Xiangmin Zhao; Judy Creighton; Yuanyuan Guo; Fadi G. Hage; Suzanne Oparil; Daisy D. Xing

Objective—Interleukin-8 (IL-8) receptors IL8RA and IL8RB (IL8RA/B) on neutrophil membranes bind to IL-8 with high affinity and play a critical role in neutrophil recruitment to sites of injury and inflammation. This study tested the hypothesis that administration of rat pulmonary arterial endothelial cells (ECs) overexpressing IL8RA/B can accelerate the adhesion of ECs to the injured lung and inhibit monocrotaline-induced pulmonary inflammation, arterial thickening and hypertension, and right ventricular hypertrophy. Approach and Results—The treatment groups included 10-week-old ovariectomized Sprague-Dawley rats that received subcutaneous injection of PBS (vehicle), a single injection of monocrotaline (monocrotaline alone, 60 mg/kg, SC), monocrotaline followed by intravenous transfusion of ECs transduced with the empty adenoviral vector (null-EC), and monocrotaline followed by intravenous transfusion of ECs overexpressing IL8RA/B (1.5×106 cells/rat). Two days or 4 weeks after monocrotaline treatment, endothelial nitric oxide synthase, inducible nitric oxide synthase, cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant-2&bgr; (IL-8 equivalent in rat), and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 expression, neutrophil and macrophage infiltration into pulmonary arterioles, and arteriolar and alveolar morphology were measured by histological and immunohistochemical techniques. Proinflammatory cytokine/chemokine protein levels were measured by Multiplex rat-specific magnetic bead–based sandwich immunoassay in total lung homogenates. Transfusion of ECs overexpressing IL8RA/B significantly reduced monocrotaline-induced neutrophil infiltration and proinflammatory mediator (IL-8, monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, inducible nitric oxide synthase, cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant, and macrophage inflammatory protein-2) expression in lungs and pulmonary arterioles and alveoli, pulmonary arterial pressure, and pulmonary arterial and right ventricular hypertrophy and remodeling. Conclusions—These provocative findings suggest that targeted delivery of ECs overexpressing IL8RA/B is effective in repairing the injured pulmonary vasculature.


The FASEB Journal | 2016

Neuronal Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein regulates TGF-β1-mediated lung vascular permeability.

Brant M. Wagener; Meng Hu; Anni Zheng; Xue-ke Zhao; Pulin Che; Angela Brandon; Naseem Anjum; Scott B. Snapper; Judy Creighton; Jun-Lin Guan; Qimei Han; Guo-Qiang Cai; Xiaosi Han; Jean-Francois Pittet; Qiang Ding

TGF‐β1 induces an increase in paracellular permeability and actin stress fiber formation in lung microvascular endothelial and alveolar epithelial cells via small Rho GTPase. The molecular mechanism involved is not fully understood. Neuronal Wiskott‐Aldrich syndrome protein (N‐WASP) has an essential role in actin structure dynamics. We hypothesized that N‐WASP plays a critical role in these TGF‐β1‐induced responses. In these cell monolayers, we demonstrated that N‐WASP down‐regulation by short hairpin RNA prevented TGF‐β1‐mediated disruption of the cortical actin structure, actin stress filament formation, and increased permeability. Furthermore, N‐WASP down‐regulation blocked TGF‐β1 activation mediated by IL‐1β in alveolar epithelial cells, which requires actin stress fiber formation. Control short hairpin RNA had no effect on these TGF‐β1‐induced responses. TGF‐β1‐induced phosphorylation of Y256 of N‐WASP via activation of small Rho GTPase and focal adhesion kinase mediates TGF‐β1‐induced paracellular permeability and actin cytoskeleton dynamics. In vivo, compared with controls, N‐WASP down‐regulation increases survival and prevents lung edema in mice induced by bleomycin exposure—a lung injury model in which TGF‐β1 plays a critical role. Our data indicate that N‐WASP plays a crucial role in the development of TGF‐β1‐mediated acute lung injury by promoting pulmonary edema via regulation of actin cytoskeleton dynamics.—Wagener, B. M., Hu, M., Zheng, A., Zhao, X., Che, P., Brandon, A., Anjum, N., Snapper, S., Creighton, J., Guan, J.‐L., Han, Q., Cai, G.‐Q., Han, X., Pittet, J.‐F., Ding, Q. Neuronal Wiskott‐Aldrich syndrome protein regulates TGF‐β1‐mediated lung vascular permeability. FASEB J. 30, 2557‐2569 (2016). www.fasebj.org


Brain Research | 2017

Urothelial bladder afferent neurons in the rat are anatomically and neurochemically distinct from non-urothelial afferents

Buffie Clodfelder-Miller; Hirosato Kanda; Jianguo G. Gu; Judy Creighton; Timothy J. Ness; Jennifer J. DeBerry

There is mounting evidence underscoring a role for the urothelium in urinary bladder sensation. Previous functional studies have identified bladder primary afferents with mechanosensitive properties suggesting urothelial innervation and/or communication. The current study identifies a group of urothelium-innervating afferent neurons in rat, and characterizes and compares the properties of these and non-urothelial afferent neuron populations. Lumbosacral (LS) primary afferent neurons were retrogradely labeled using intraparenchymal (IPar) microinjection or intravesical (IVes) infusion of tracer into the bladder. Using these techniques, separate populations of neurons were differentiated by dorsal root ganglion (DRG) somata labeling and dye distribution within the bladder. IPar- and IVes-labeled neurons accounted for 85.0% and 14.4% of labeled L6-S1 neurons (Pu202f<u202f.001), respectively, with only 0.6% of neurons labeled by both techniques. Following IVes labeling, dye was contained only within the periurothelial bladder region in contrast to non-urothelial distribution of dye after IPar labeling. Electrophysiological characterization by in situ patch-clamp recordings from whole-mount DRG preparations indicated no significant difference in passive or active membrane properties of IPar and IVes DRG neurons. However, calcium imaging of isolated neurons indicates that a greater proportion of IPar- than IVes-labeled neurons express functional TRPA1 (45.7% versus 25.6%, respectively; Pu202f<u202f.05). This study demonstrates that two anatomically distinct groups of LS bladder afferents can be identified in rat. Further studies of urothelial afferents and the phenotypic differences between non-/urothelial afferents may have important implications for normal and pathophysiological bladder sensory processing.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2013

Factors controlling vascular permeability: transmitting mechanical signals. Focus on “mechanical induction of group V phospholipase A2 causes lung inflammation and acute lung injury”

Judy Creighton

mechanical ventilation has been used in the management of critically ill patients for more than 60 years. During this time knowledge of the physiology of ventilation and gas exchange evolved from a relatively primitive state to an appreciation that molecular pathways contribute to the pathology of


PLOS Medicine | 2018

Role of heme in lung bacterial infection after trauma hemorrhage and stored red blood cell transfusion: A preclinical experimental study

Brant M. Wagener; Parker J. Hu; Joo Yeun Oh; Cilina A. Evans; Jillian R. Richter; Jaideep Honavar; Angela Brandon; Judy Creighton; Shannon Stephens; Charity J. Morgan; Randal O. Dull; Marisa B. Marques; Jeffrey D. Kerby; Jean Francois Pittet; Rakesh P. Patel

Background Trauma is the leading cause of death and disability in patients aged 1–46 y. Severely injured patients experience considerable blood loss and hemorrhagic shock requiring treatment with massive transfusion of red blood cells (RBCs). Preclinical and retrospective human studies in trauma patients have suggested that poorer therapeutic efficacy, increased severity of organ injury, and increased bacterial infection are associated with transfusion of large volumes of stored RBCs, although the mechanisms are not fully understood. Methods and findings We developed a murine model of trauma hemorrhage (TH) followed by resuscitation with plasma and leukoreduced RBCs (in a 1:1 ratio) that were banked for 0 (fresh) or 14 (stored) days. Two days later, lungs were infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa K-strain (PAK). Resuscitation with stored RBCs significantly increased the severity of lung injury caused by P. aeruginosa, as demonstrated by higher mortality (median survival 35 h for fresh RBC group and 8 h for stored RBC group; p < 0.001), increased pulmonary edema (mean [95% CI] 106.4 μl [88.5–124.3] for fresh RBCs and 192.5 μl [140.9–244.0] for stored RBCs; p = 0.003), and higher bacterial numbers in the lung (mean [95% CI] 1.2 × 107 [−1.0 × 107 to 2.5 × 107] for fresh RBCs and 3.6 × 107 [2.5 × 107 to 4.7 × 107] for stored RBCs; p = 0.014). The mechanism underlying this increased infection susceptibility and severity was free-heme-dependent, as recombinant hemopexin or pharmacological inhibition or genetic deletion of toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) during TH and resuscitation completely prevented P. aeruginosa–induced mortality after stored RBC transfusion (p < 0.001 for all groups relative to stored RBC group). Evidence from studies transfusing fresh and stored RBCs mixed with stored and fresh RBC supernatants, respectively, indicated that heme arising both during storage and from RBC hemolysis post-resuscitation plays a role in increased mortality after PAK (p < 0.001). Heme also increased endothelial permeability and inhibited macrophage-dependent phagocytosis in cultured cells. Stored RBCs also increased circulating high mobility group box 1 (HMGB1; mean [95% CI] 15.4 ng/ml [6.7–24.0] for fresh RBCs and 50.3 ng/ml [12.3–88.2] for stored RBCs), and anti-HMGB1 blocking antibody protected against PAK-induced mortality in vivo (p = 0.001) and restored macrophage-dependent phagocytosis of P. aeruginosa in vitro. Finally, we showed that TH patients, admitted to the University of Alabama at Birmingham ER between 1 January 2015 and 30 April 2016 (n = 50), received high micromolar–millimolar levels of heme proportional to the number of units transfused, sufficient to overwhelm endogenous hemopexin levels early after TH and resuscitation. Limitations of the study include lack of assessment of temporal changes in different products of hemolysis after resuscitation and the small sample size precluding testing of associations between heme levels and adverse outcomes in resuscitated TH patients. Conclusions We provide evidence that large volume resuscitation with stored blood, compared to fresh blood, in mice increases mortality from subsequent pneumonia, which occurs via mechanisms sensitive to hemopexin and TLR4 and HMGB1 inhibition.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2017

A novel role for primary cilia in airway remodeling

Carol S. Trempus; Weifeng Song; Ahmed Lazrak; Zhihong Yu; Judy Creighton; Bethany M. Young; Rebecca L. Heise; Yen-Rei A. Yu; Jennifer L. Ingram; Robert M. Tighe; Sadis Matalon; Stavros Garantziotis

Primary cilia (PC) are solitary cellular organelles that play critical roles in development, homeostasis, and disease pathogenesis by modulating key signaling pathways such as Sonic Hedgehog and calcium flux. The antenna-like shape of PC enables them also to facilitate sensing of extracellular and mechanical stimuli into the cell, and a critical role for PC has been described for mesenchymal cells such as chondrocytes. However, nothing is known about the role of PC in airway smooth muscle cells (ASMCs) in the context of airway remodeling. We hypothesized that PC on ASMCs mediate cell contraction and are thus integral in the remodeling process. We found that PC are expressed on ASMCs in asthmatic lungs. Using pharmacological and genetic methods, we demonstrated that PC are necessary for ASMC contraction in a collagen gel three-dimensional model both in the absence of external stimulus and in response to the extracellular component hyaluronan. Mechanistically, we demonstrate that the effect of PC on ASMC contraction is, to a small extent, due to their effect on Sonic Hedgehog signaling and, to a larger extent, due to their effect on calcium influx and membrane depolarization. In conclusion, PC are necessary for the development of airway remodeling by mediating calcium flux and Sonic Hedgehog signaling.


Archive | 2015

mechanismion via a bradykinin-mediated Inhaled porcine pancreatic elastase causes

W. M. Abraham; Rosanna M. Forteza; Isabel Lauredo; Juan R. Sabater; L. Allegra; Isabel T. Lauredo; Rosanna Forteza; Yelena Botvinnikova; William M. Abraham; Mario Scuri; Sadis Matalon; Charles W. Emala; Vandy P. Stober; Carol S. Trempus; Ahmed Lazrak; Judy Creighton; Zhihong Yu; Svetlana Komarova; Stephen F. Doran

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Ahmed Lazrak

National Institutes of Health

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Carol S. Trempus

National Institutes of Health

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Zhihong Yu

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Angela Brandon

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Brant M. Wagener

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Charles W. Emala

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Fadi G. Hage

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Jinyan Fu

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Mikhail Alexeyev

University of South Alabama

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