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Dive into the research topics where Julie A. Wilder is active.

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Featured researches published by Julie A. Wilder.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Prenatal Secondhand Cigarette Smoke Promotes Th2 Polarization and Impairs Goblet Cell Differentiation and Airway Mucus Formation

Shashi P. Singh; Sravanthi Gundavarapu; Juan Carlos Peña-Philippides; Neerad C. Mishra; Julie A. Wilder; Raymond J. Langley; Kevin R. Smith; Mohan L. Sopori

Parental, particularly maternal, smoking increases the risk for childhood allergic asthma and infection. Similarly, in a murine allergic asthma model, prenatal plus early postnatal exposure to secondhand cigarette smoke (SS) exacerbates airways hyperreactivity and Th2 responses in the lung. However, the mechanism and contribution of prenatal versus early postnatal SS exposure on allergic asthma remain unresolved. To identify the effects of prenatal and/or early postnatal SS on allergic asthma, BALB/c dams and their offspring were exposed gestationally and/or 8–10 wk postbirth to filtered air or SS. Prenatal, but not postnatal, SS strongly increased methacholine and allergen (Aspergillus)-induced airway resistance, Th2 cytokine levels, and atopy and activated the Th2-polarizing pathway GATA3/Lck/ERK1/2/STAT6. Either prenatal and/or early postnatal SS downregulated the Th1-specific transcription factor T-bet and, surprisingly, despite high levels of IL-4/IL-13, dramatically blocked the allergen-induced mucous cell metaplasia, airway mucus formation, and the expression of mucus-related genes/proteins: Muc5ac, γ-aminobutyric acid A receptors, and SAM pointed domain-containing Ets-like factor. Given that SS/nicotine exposure of normal adult mice promotes mucus formation, the results suggested that fetal and neonatal lung are highly sensitive to cigarette smoke. Thus, although the gestational SS promotes Th2 polarization/allergic asthma, it may also impair and/or delay the development of fetal and neonatal lung, affecting mucociliary clearance and Th1 responses. Together, this may explain the increased susceptibility of children from smoking parents to allergic asthma and childhood respiratory infections.


Dose-response | 2009

Radiation-stimulated epigenetic reprogramming of adaptive-response genes in the lung: an evolutionary gift for mounting adaptive protection against lung cancer.

Bobby R. Scott; Steven A. Belinsky; Shuguang Leng; Yong Lin; Julie A. Wilder; Leah A. Damiani

Humans are continuously exposed to low-level ionizing radiation from natural sources. However, harsher radiation environments persisted during our planets early years and mammals survived via an evolutionary gift - a system of radiation-induced natural protective measures (adaptive protection). This system includes antioxidants, DNA repair, apoptosis of severely damaged cells, epigenetically regulated apoptosis ( epiapoptosis ) pathways that selectively remove precancerous and other aberrant cells, and immunity against cancer. We propose a novel model in which the protective system is regulated at least in part via radiation-stress-stimulated epigenetic reprogramming (epireprogramming) of adaptive-response genes. High-dose radiation can promote epigenetically silencing of adaptive-response genes ( episilencing ), for example via promoter-associated DNA and/or histone methylation and/or histone deacetylation. Evidence is provided for low linear-energy-transfer (LET) radiation-activated natural protection (ANP) against high-LET alpha-radiation-induced lung cancer in plutonium-239 exposed rats and radon-progeny-exposed humans. Using a revised hormetic relative risk model for cancer induction that accounts for both epigenetic activation ( epiactivation ) and episilencing of genes, we demonstrate that, on average, >80% of alpha-radiation-induced rat lung cancers were prevented by chronic, low-rate gamma-ray ANP. Interestingly, lifetime exposure to residential radon at the Environmental Protection Agencys action level of 4 pCi L−1 appears to be associated with on average a > 60% reduction in lung cancer cases, rather than an increase. We have used underlined italics to indicate newly introduced terminology.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Increased Expression of Genes Linked to FcεRI Signaling and to Cytokine and Chemokine Production in Lyn-Deficient Mast Cells

Valerie Hernandez-Hansen; Julie D. J. Bard; Christy A. Tarleton; Julie A. Wilder; Clifford A. Lowell; Bridget S. Wilson; Janet M. Oliver

Cross-linking the high-affinity IgE receptor, FcεRI, on mast cells activates signaling pathways leading to the release of preformed inflammatory mediators and the production of cytokines and chemokines associated with allergic disorders. Bone marrow-derived mast cells (BMMCs) from Lyn-deficient (Lyn−/−) mice are hyperresponsive to FcεRI cross-linking with multivalent Ag. Previous studies linked the hyperresponsive phenotype in part to increased Fyn kinase activity and reduced SHIP phosphatase activity in the Lyn−/− BMMCs in comparison with wild-type (WT) cells. In this study, we compared gene expression profiles between resting and Ag-activated WT and Lyn−/− BMMCs to identify other factors that may contribute to the hyperresponsiveness of the Lyn−/− cells. Among genes implicated in the positive regulation of FcεRI signaling, mRNA for the tyrosine kinase, Fyn, and for several proteins contributing to calcium regulation are more up-regulated following Ag stimulation in Lyn−/− BMMCs than in WT BMMCs. Conversely, mRNA for the low-affinity IgG receptor (FcγRIIB), implicated in negative regulation of FcεRI-mediated signaling, is more down-regulated in Ag-stimulated Lyn−/− BMMCs than in WT BMMCs. Genes coding for proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines (IL-4, IL-6, IL-13, CSF, CCL1, CCL3, CCL5, CCL7, CCL9, and MIP1β)are all more highly expressed in Ag-stimulated Lyn−/− mast cells than in WT cells. These microarray data identify Lyn as a negative regulator in Ag-stimulated BMMCs of the expression of genes linked to FcεRI signaling and also to the response pathways that lead to allergy and asthma.


Carcinogenesis | 2012

Low-dose gamma-irradiation inhibits IL-6 secretion from human lung fibroblasts that promotes bronchial epithelial cell transformation by cigarette-smoke carcinogen

Wenshu Chen; Xiuling Xu; Lang Bai; Mabel T. Padilla; Katherine Gott; Shuguang Leng; Carmen S. Tellez; Julie A. Wilder; Steven A. Belinsky; Bobby R. Scott; Yong Lin

Despite decades of research in defining the health effects of low-dose (<100 mGy) ionizing photon radiation (LDR), the relationship between LDR and human cancer risk remains elusive. Because chemical carcinogens modify the tumor microenvironment, which is critical for cancer development, we investigated the role and mechanism of LDR in modulating the response of stromal cells to chemical carcinogen-induced lung cancer development. Secretion of proinflammatory cytokines such as interleukin-6 (IL-6), CXCL1 and CXCL5 from human lung fibroblasts was induced by cigarette-smoke carcinogen benzo[a]pyrene diol epoxide (BPDE), which was inhibited by a single dose of LDR. The activation of NF-κB, which is important for BPDE-induced IL-6 secretion, was also effectively suppressed by LDR. In addition, conditioned media from BPDE-treated fibroblasts activated STAT3 in the immortalized normal human bronchial epithelial cell line Beas-2B, which was blocked with an IL-6 neutralizing antibody. Conditioned medium from LDR-primed and BPDE-treated fibroblast showed diminished capacity in activating STAT3. Furthermore, IL-6 enhanced BPDE-induced Beas-2B cell transformation in vitro. These results suggest that LDR inhibits cigarette smoke-induced lung carcinogenesis by suppressing secretion of cytokines such as IL-6 from fibroblasts in lung tumor-prone microenvironment.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

B Cell Induction of IL-13 Expression in NK Cells: Role of CD244 and SLAM-Associated Protein

Ning Gao; Pamela L. Schwartzberg; Julie A. Wilder; Bruce R. Blazar; Dorothy Yuan

NK cells are an important component of the innate immune system that can also interact with B cells in a mutually productive manner. We have previously shown that activated B cells can induce NK cells to up-regulate their secretion of IFN-γ. In this study, we show that B cells, and, particularly, marginal zone B cells, can, in addition, induce NK cells via direct cell-cell interactions to express mRNA encoding the Th2 cytokine IL-13. The induction of NK cell IL-13 mRNA expression requires the ligation of the CD244 receptor by the CD48 ligand on B cells via signaling pathways that depend upon expression of the X-linked lymphoproliferative disease gene product, SH2D1A/DSHP/SAP (SLAM-associated protein, or SAP) in NK cells. Thus, the positive signals attributed to the B cell activation of CD244 on murine NK cells appears to be more similar to the activity of CD244 on human cells. The induction of IL-13 mRNA by B cells may account for the effect of NK cells on the generation of Th2-type responses in the presence of some adjuvants.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Bax is Crucial for IFN-γ-Induced Resolution of Allergen- Induced Mucus Cell Metaplasia

Yohannes Tesfaigzi; Mark J. Fischer; Massoud Daheshia; Francis H. Y. Green; George T. De Sanctis; Julie A. Wilder

Allergic airway responses cause proliferation of epithelial cells and mucus cell metaplasia (MCM), and the resolution of MCM involves reduction of cell numbers. The role of inflammation and apoptosis on this process was investigated in P-selectin +/+ and −/− mice sensitized and challenged with OVA by analyzing the expression and the role of regulators of apoptosis in metaplastic mucus cells. No differences were observed in MCM at 5 days of allergen exposure between +/+ and −/− mice, despite reduced IL-13 levels in −/− mice. Although IL-4 levels were similar in both −/− and +/+ mice, IL-13 and IL-5 levels had decreased and IFN-γ levels were increased earlier in −/− compared with +/+ mice. MCM levels were decreased 4-fold at 7 days of allergen exposure in −/− mice and at 15 days in +/+ mice. The percentage of Bax-expressing mucus cells increased significantly at 7 days in −/− mice and at 10 days in +/+ mice. The Bax-positive mucus cells exhibited caspase-specific cleavage of cytokeratin 18. IFN-γ caused Bax expression in IL-13-induced MCM in microdissected airway cultures. MCM remained significantly elevated in Bax −/− mice following 15 days of allergen exposure compared with +/+ mice, while the number of eosinophils was reduced in both Bax +/+ and −/− mice at 15 days. Together, these data demonstrate that reduced IL-13 levels were sufficient to elicit maximum MCM, that IFN-γ induces Bax in metaplastic mucus cells, and that Bax plays a critical role in the resolution of MCM, but not in the resolution of eosinophils.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2010

Altered lymphocyte trafficking and diminished airway reactivity in transgenic mice expressing human MMP-9 in a mouse model of asthma

Divya Mehra; David I. Sternberg; Yuxia Jia; Stephen M. Canfield; Vincent Lemaître; Takwi Nkyimbeng; Julie A. Wilder; Joshua R. Sonett; Jeanine D'Armiento

Matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) is hypothesized to facilitate leukocyte extravasation and extracellular remodeling in asthmatic airways. Careful descriptive studies have shown that MMP-9 levels are higher in the sputum of asthmatics; however, the consequence of increased MMP-9 activity has not been determined in this disease. We induced asthma in transgenic mice that express human MMP-9 in the murine lung tissue macrophage to determine the direct effect of human MMP-9 expression on airway inflammation. Transgenic (TG) and wild-type (WT) mice were immunized and challenged with ovalbumin. Forty-eight hours after the ovalbumin challenge, airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR) was measured, and inflammatory cell infiltration was evaluated in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) and lung tissue. Baseline levels of inflammation were similar in the TG and WT groups of mice, and pulmonary eosinophilia was established in both groups by sensitization and challenge with ovalbumin. There was a significant reduction in AHR in sensitized and challenged trangenics compared with WT controls. Although total BALF cell counts were similar in both groups, the lymphocyte number in the lavage of the TG group was significantly diminished compared with the WT group (0.25 +/- 0.08 vs. 0.89 +/- 0.53; P = 0.0032). In addition, the draining lymphocytes were found to be larger in the TG animals compared with the WT mice. Equal numbers of macrophages, eosinophils, and neutrophils were seen in both groups. IL-13 levels were found to be lower in the sensitized TG compared with the WT mice. These results demonstrate an inverse relationship between human MMP-9 and AHR and suggest that MMP-9 expression alters leukocyte extravasation by reducing lymphocyte accumulation in the walls of asthmatic airways.


PLOS Pathogens | 2014

Live attenuated Francisella novicida vaccine protects against Francisella tularensis pulmonary challenge in rats and non-human primates.

Ping Chu; Aimee L. Cunningham; Jieh Juen Yu; Jesse Q. Nguyen; Jeffrey R. Barker; C. Rick Lyons; Julie A. Wilder; Michelle Valderas; Robert Sherwood; Bernard P. Arulanandam; Karl E. Klose

Francisella tularensis causes the disease tularemia. Human pulmonary exposure to the most virulent form, F. tularensis subsp. tularensis (Ftt), leads to high morbidity and mortality, resulting in this bacterium being classified as a potential biothreat agent. However, a closely-related species, F. novicida, is avirulent in healthy humans. No tularemia vaccine is currently approved for human use. We demonstrate that a single dose vaccine of a live attenuated F. novicida strain (Fn iglD) protects against subsequent pulmonary challenge with Ftt using two different animal models, Fischer 344 rats and cynomolgus macaques (NHP). The Fn iglD vaccine showed protective efficacy in rats, as did a Ftt iglD vaccine, suggesting no disadvantage to utilizing the low human virulent Francisella species to induce protective immunity. Comparison of specific antibody profiles in vaccinated rat and NHP sera by proteome array identified a core set of immunodominant antigens in vaccinated animals. This is the first report of a defined live attenuated vaccine that demonstrates efficacy against pulmonary tularemia in a NHP, and indicates that the low human virulence F. novicida functions as an effective tularemia vaccine platform.


American Journal of Pathology | 2015

A novel nonhuman primate model of cigarette smoke-induced airway disease.

Francesca Polverino; Melanie Doyle-Eisele; Jacob D. McDonald; Julie A. Wilder; Christopher Royer; Maria E. Laucho-Contreras; Emer Kelly; Miguel Divo; Victor Pinto-Plata; Joe L. Mauderly; Bartolome R. Celli; Yohannes Tesfaigzi; Caroline A. Owen

Small animal models of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have several limitations for identifying new therapeutic targets and biomarkers for human COPD. These include a pulmonary anatomy that differs from humans, the limited airway pathologies and lymphoid aggregates that develop in smoke-exposed mice, and the challenges associated with serial biological sampling. Thus, we assessed the utility of cigarette smoke (CS)-exposed cynomolgus macaque as a nonhuman primate (NHP) large animal model of COPD. Twenty-eight NHPs were exposed to air or CS 5 days per week for up to 12 weeks. Bronchoalveolar lavage and pulmonary function tests were performed at intervals. After 12 weeks, we measured airway pathologies, pulmonary inflammation, and airspace enlargement. CS-exposed NHPs developed robust mucus metaplasia, submucosal gland hypertrophy and hyperplasia, airway inflammation, peribronchial fibrosis, and increases in bronchial lymphoid aggregates. Although CS-exposed NHPs did not develop emphysema over the study time, they exhibited pathologies that precede emphysema development, including increases in the following: i) matrix metalloproteinase-9 and proinflammatory mediator levels in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid, ii) lung parenchymal leukocyte counts and lymphoid aggregates, iii) lung oxidative stress levels, and iv) alveolar septal cell apoptosis. CS-exposed NHPs can be used as a model of airway disease occurring in COPD patients. Unlike rodents, NHPs can safely undergo longitudinal sampling, which could be useful for assessing novel biomarkers or therapeutics for COPD.


Molecular therapy. Methods & clinical development | 2016

Safety and biodistribution assessment of sc-rAAV2.5IL-1Ra administered via intra-articular injection in a mono-iodoacetate-induced osteoarthritis rat model

Gensheng Wang; Christopher H. Evans; Janet M. Benson; Julie A. Hutt; Jean Clare Seagrave; Julie A. Wilder; Joshua C. Grieger; R. Jude Samulski; Pramod Terse

Interleukin-1 (IL-1) plays an important role in the pathophysiology of osteoarthritis (OA), and gene transfer of IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) holds promise for OA treatment. A preclinical safety and biodistribution study evaluated a self-complementary adeno-associated viral vector carrying rat IL-1Ra transgene (sc-rAAV2.5rIL-1Ra) at 5 × 108, 5 × 109, or 5 × 1010 vg/knee, or human IL-1Ra transgene (sc-rAAV2.5hIL-1Ra) at 5 × 1010 vg/knee, in Wistar rats with mono-iodoacetate (MIA)–induced OA at days 7, 26, 91, 180, and 364 following intra-articular injection. The MIA-induced OA lesions were consistent with the published data on this model. The vector genomes persisted in the injected knees for up to a year with only limited vector leakage to systemic circulation and uptake in tissues outside the knee. Low levels of IL-1Ra expression and mitigation of OA lesions were observed in the vector-injected knees, albeit inconsistently. Neutralizing antibodies against the vector capsid developed in a dose-dependent manner, but only the human vector induced a small splenic T-cell immune response to the vector capsid. No local or systemic toxicity attributable to vector administration was identified in the rats as indicated by clinical signs, body weight, feed consumption, clinical pathology, and gross and microscopic pathology through day 364. Taken together, the gene therapy vector demonstrated a favorable safety profile.

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Katherine Gott

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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Bobby R. Scott

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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Yohannes Tesfaigzi

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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Jacob D. McDonald

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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Julie A. Hutt

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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Melanie Doyle-Eisele

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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Steven A. Belinsky

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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Thomas H. March

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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Yong Lin

Lovelace Respiratory Research Institute

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