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Dive into the research topics where Karen L. Oslund is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen L. Oslund.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2011

Stereological analysis of bacterial load and lung lesions in nonhuman primates (rhesus macaques) experimentally infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Paul A. Luciw; Karen L. Oslund; Xiao Wei Yang; Lourdes Adamson; Resmi Ravindran; Don R. Canfield; Ross P. Tarara; Linda Hirst; Miles Christensen; Nicholas W. Lerche; Heather Offenstein; David M. Lewinsohn; Frank Ventimiglia; Laurie L. Brignolo; Erik R. Wisner; Dallas M. Hyde

Infection with Mycobacterium tuberculosis primarily produces a multifocal distribution of pulmonary granulomas in which the pathogen resides. Accordingly, quantitative assessment of the bacterial load and pathology is a substantial challenge in tuberculosis. Such assessments are critical for studies of the pathogenesis and for the development of vaccines and drugs in animal models of experimental M. tuberculosis infection. Stereology enables unbiased quantitation of three-dimensional objects from two-dimensional sections and thus is suited to quantify histological lesions. We have developed a protocol for stereological analysis of the lung in rhesus macaques inoculated with a pathogenic clinical strain of M. tuberculosis (Erdman strain). These animals exhibit a pattern of infection and tuberculosis similar to that of naturally infected humans. Conditions were optimized for collecting lung samples in a nonbiased, random manner. Bacterial load in these samples was assessed by a standard plating assay, and granulomas were graded and enumerated microscopically. Stereological analysis provided quantitative data that supported a significant correlation between bacterial load and lung granulomas. Thus this stereological approach enables a quantitative, statistically valid analysis of the impact of M. tuberculosis infection in the lung and will serve as an essential tool for objectively comparing the efficacy of drugs and vaccines.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2008

TRX-ASK1-JNK signaling regulation of cell density-dependent cytotoxicity in cigarette smoke-exposed human bronchial epithelial cells

Yong Chan Lee; Chun-Yu Chuang; Pak Kei Lee; Jin Soo Lee; Richart W. Harper; Alan B. Buckpitt; Reen Wu; Karen L. Oslund

Cigarette smoke is a major environmental air pollutant that injures airway epithelium and incites subsequent diseases including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The lesion that smoke induces in airway epithelium is still incompletely understood. Using a LIVE/DEAD cytotoxicity assay, we observed that subconfluent cultures of bronchial epithelial cells derived from both human and monkey airway tissues and an immortalized normal human bronchial epithelial cell line (HBE1) were more susceptible to injury by cigarette smoke extract (CSE) and by direct cigarette smoke exposure than cells in confluent cultures. Scraping confluent cultures also caused an enhanced cell injury predominately in the leading edge of the scraped confluent cultures by CSE. Cellular ATP levels in both subconfluent and confluent cultures were drastically reduced after CSE exposure. In contrast, GSH levels were significantly reduced only in subconfluent cultures exposed to smoke and not in confluent cultures. Western blot analysis demonstrated ERK activation in both confluent and subconfluent cultures after CSE. However, activation of apoptosis signal-regulating kinase 1 (ASK1), JNK, and p38 were demonstrated only in subconfluent cultures and not in confluent cultures after CSE. Using short interfering RNA (siRNA) to JNK1 and JNK2 and a JNK inhibitor, we attenuated CSE-mediated cell death in subconfluent cultures but not with an inhibitor of the p38 pathway. Using the tetracycline (Tet)-on inducible approach, overexpression of thioredoxin (TRX) attenuated CSE-mediated cell death and JNK activation in subconfluent cultures. These results suggest that the TRX-ASK1-JNK pathway may play a critical role in mediating cell density-dependent CSE cytotoxicity.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2011

2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin-induced MUC5AC expression: aryl hydrocarbon receptor-independent/EGFR/ERK/p38-dependent SP1-based transcription.

Yong C. Lee; Karen L. Oslund; Philip Thai; Sharlene Velichko; Tomoyuki Fujisawa; Trang Duong; Michael S. Denison; Reen Wu

2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) is a potent environmental toxicant. Epidemiological studies have associated TCDD exposure with the development of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, which is manifested by mucous/goblet cell hyperplasia. The purpose of this research was to elucidate the pathway/mechanisms that lead to TCDD-induced gene expression in both primary normal human bronchial epithelial cells and an immortalized cell line, HBE1, under air-liquid interface conditions. TCDD exposure induced a time-dependent elevation of MUC5AC mRNA and protein synthesis, and cytochrome p450 1A1 (CYP1A1) expression in these cells. Treatment with an aryl hydrocarbon receptor antagonist had no effect on TCDD-induced MUC5AC expression, but significantly suppressed CYP1A1 induction. However, treatments with inhibitors of signaling pathways and the expression of dominant negative mutants of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and p38, but not the inhibition of c-Jun N-terminal kinase pathway, abrogated MUC5AC induction, but not that of CYP1A1. These effects also occurred at the MUC5AC promoter-reporter level using the chimeric construct for a transient transfection study. Western blot analysis confirmed the phosphorylation of activated EGFR, ERK, and p38 signaling molecules, but not the c-Jun N-terminal kinase, in cells after TCDD exposure. Specificity protein 1 (Sp1) phosphorylation also occurred in cells after TCDD exposure. Both MUC5AC expression and the promoter activity were inhibited by mithramycin A, an inhibitor specific to Sp1-based transcription. These results lead to the conclusion that TCDD induced MUC5AC expression through a noncanonical aryl hydrocarbon receptor-independent, EGFR/ERK/p38-mediated signaling pathway-mediated/Sp1-based transcriptional mechanism.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Synergistic Up-Regulation of CXCL10 by Virus and IFN γ in Human Airway Epithelial Cells

Karen L. Oslund; Xu Zhou; Boram Lee; Trang Duong; Robert Shih; Nicole Baumgarth; Li Yin Hung; Reen Wu; Yin Chen

Airway epithelial cells are the first line of defense against viral infections and are instrumental in coordinating the inflammatory response. In this study, we demonstrate the synergistic stimulation of CXCL10 mRNA and protein, a key chemokine responsible for the early immune response to viral infection, following treatment of airway epithelial cells with IFN γ and influenza virus. The synergism also occurred when the cells were treated with IFN γ and a viral replication mimicker (dsRNA) both in vitro and in vivo. Despite the requirement of type I interferon (IFNAR) signaling in dsRNA-induced CXCL10, the synergism was independent of the IFNAR pathway since it wasn’t affected by the addition of a neutralizing IFNAR antibody or the complete lack of IFNAR expression. Furthermore, the same synergistic effect was also observed when a CXCL10 promoter reporter was examined. Although the responsive promoter region contains both ISRE and NFκB sites, western blot analysis indicated that the combined treatment of IFN γ and dsRNA significantly augmented NFκB but not STAT1 activation as compared to the single treatment. Therefore, we conclude that IFN γ and dsRNA act in concert to potentiate CXCL10 expression in airway epithelial cells via an NFκB-dependent but IFNAR-STAT independent pathway and it is at least partly regulated at the transcriptional level.


American Journal of Veterinary Research | 2010

Evaluation of MUC5AC expression and upregulation in airway epithelial cells of horses.

Karen L. Oslund; Grete N. Adamson; Reen Wu

OBJECTIVE To isolate and culture primary equine airway epithelial cells in vitro and elucidate the major cytokines involved in expression of the gel-forming mucin gene MUC5AC in horses. SAMPLE POPULATION 12 tracheas obtained within 5 hours after euthanasia from horses free from respiratory tract disease. PROCEDURES Tracheal rings were digested overnight in 0.2% protease, and dissociated airway epithelial cells were grown in a serum-free defined medium at an air-liquid interface until confluence was achieved. Differentiated airway epithelial cells were treated with a panel of recombinant equine cytokines followed by quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR assay for mRNA of equine MUC5AC and the control gene glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate dehydrogenase. Cultures were incubated in the presence of isohelenin, a nuclear factor kappaB-DNA-binding inhibitor, to investigate transcriptional regulation of MUC5AC. RESULTS Light and electron microscopy revealed a differentiated epithelium with ciliated cells, nonciliated mucous cells, and basal-like cells. Recombinant equine tumor necrosis factor-alpha was the major mediator in the cytokine panel that significantly increased MUC5AC mRNA by a factor of 5 in a dose- and time-dependent manner. This enhancement was attenuated by isohelenin. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE Data suggested that a nuclear factor KB-based transcriptional mechanism is involved in induction of MUC5AC expression by tumor necrosis factor-A. Understanding the molecular mechanism of cytokine-enhanced MUC5AC expression in horses may lead to better treatment options and understanding of the pathogenesis of equine pulmonary diseases.


Toxicologic Pathology | 2009

Activation of Calcitonin Gene-Related Peptide Receptor during Ozone Inhalation Contributes to Airway Epithelial Injury and Repair

Karen L. Oslund; Dallas M. Hyde; Leialoha F. Putney; Mario F. Alfaro; William F. Walby; Nancy K. Tyler; Edward S. Schelegle

The authors investigated the importance of the neuropeptide, calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP), in epithelial injury, repair, and neutrophil emigration after ozone exposure. Wistar rats were administered either a CGRP-receptor antagonist (CGRP8–37) or saline and exposed to 8 hours of 1-ppm ozone or filtered air with an 8-hour postexposure period. Immediately after exposure, ethidium homodimer was instilled into lungs as a marker of necrotic airway epithelial cells. After fixation, airway dissected lung lobes were stained for 5′-bromo-2′-deoxyuridine, a marker of epithelial proliferation. Positive epithelial cells were quantified in specific airway generations. Rats treated with CGRP8–37 had significantly reduced epithelial injury in terminal bronchioles and reduced epithelial proliferation in proximal airways and terminal bronchioles. Bronchoalveolar lavage and sections of terminal bronchioles showed no significant difference in the number of neutrophils emigrating into airways in CGRP8–37-treated rats. The airway epithelial cell line, HBE-1, showed no difference in the number of oxidant stress positive cells during exposure to hydrogen peroxide and a range of CGRP8–37 doses, demonstrating no antioxidant effect of CGRP8–37. We conclude that activation of CGRP receptors during ozone inhalation contributes to airway epithelial injury and subsequent epithelial proliferation, a critical component of repair, but does not influence neutrophil emigration into airways.


Toxicologic Pathology | 2013

Inflammatory Dilated Cardiomyopathy in Abcg5-deficient Mice

Dennis W. Wilson; Karen L. Oslund; Bonnie L. Lyons; Oded Foreman; Lisa M. Burzenski; Karen L. Svenson; Thomas H. Chase; Leonard D. Shultz

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in A/J mice homozygous for the spontaneous thrombocytopenia and cardiomyopathy (trac) mutation results from a single base pair change in the Abcg5 gene. A similar mutation in humans causes sitosterolemia with high plant sterol levels, hypercholesterolemia, and early onset atherosclerosis. Analyses of CD3+ and Mac-3+ cells and stainable collagen in hearts showed inflammation and myocyte degeneration in A/J-trac/trac mice beginning postweaning and progressed to marked dilative and fibrosing cardiomyopathy by 140 days. Transmission electron microscopy (TEM) demonstrated myocyte vacuoles consistent with swollen endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Myocytes with cytoplasmic glycogen and irregular actinomyosin filament bundles formed mature intercalated disks with normal myocytes suggesting myocyte repair. A/J-trac/trac mice fed lifelong phytosterol-free diets did not develop cardiomyopathy. BALB/cByJ-trac/trac mice had lesser inflammatory infiltrates and later onset DCM. BALB/cByJ-trac/trac mice changed from normal to phytosterol-free diets had lesser T cell infiltrates but persistent monocyte infiltrates and equivalent fibrosis to mice on normal diets. B- and T-cell-deficient BALB/cBy-Rag1null trac/trac mice fed normal diets did not develop inflammatory infiltrates or DCM. We conclude that the trac/trac mouse has many features of inflammatory DCM and that the reversibility of myocardial T cell infiltration provides a novel model for investigating the progression of myocardial fibrosis.


Journal of Medical Primatology | 2014

Large-scale pedigree analysis leads to evidence for founder effects of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta)

Sree Kanthaswamy; Rachel Reader; Ross P. Tarara; Karen L. Oslund; Mark Allen; Jillian Ng; Chloe Grinberg; Dallas M. Hyde; David Glenn Smith; Nicholas W. Lerche

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the abnormal thickening of the ventricles and an increase in cardiac mass.


Future Virology | 2011

Influenza-induced innate immunity: regulators of viral replication, respiratory tract pathology & adaptive immunity

Karen L. Oslund; Nicole Baumgarth


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2008

Activation of Neurokinin-1 Receptors during Ozone Inhalation Contributes to Epithelial Injury and Repair

Karen L. Oslund; Dallas M. Hyde; Leialoha F. Putney; Mario F. Alfaro; William F. Walby; Nancy K. Tyler; Edward S. Schelegle

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Reen Wu

University of California

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Nancy K. Tyler

University of California

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Nicholas W. Lerche

California National Primate Research Center

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Lisa A. Miller

California National Primate Research Center

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