Kelly A. Brant
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Kelly A. Brant.
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2011
An Soo Jang; Vincent J. Concel; Kiflai Bein; Kelly A. Brant; Shannen Liu; Hannah Pope-Varsalona; Richard A. Dopico; Y. Peter Di; Daren L. Knoell; Aaron Barchowsky; George D. Leikauf
An integral membrane protein, Claudin 5 (CLDN5), is a critical component of endothelial tight junctions that control pericellular permeability. Breaching of endothelial barriers is a key event in the development of pulmonary edema during acute lung injury (ALI). A major irritant in smoke, acrolein can induce ALI possibly by altering CLDN5 expression. This study sought to determine the cell signaling mechanism controlling endothelial CLDN5 expression during ALI. To assess susceptibility, 12 mouse strains were exposed to acrolein (10 ppm, 24 h), and survival monitored. Histology, lavage protein, and CLDN5 transcripts were measured in the lung of the most sensitive and resistant strains. CLDN5 transcripts and phosphorylation status of forkhead box O1 (FOXO1) and catenin (cadherin-associated protein) beta 1 (CTNNB1) proteins were determined in control and acrolein-treated human endothelial cells. Mean survival time (MST) varied more than 2-fold among strains with the susceptible (BALB/cByJ) and resistant (129X1/SvJ) strains (MST, 17.3 ± 1.9 h vs. 41.4 ± 5.1 h, respectively). Histological analysis revealed earlier perivascular enlargement in the BALB/cByJ than in 129X1/SvJ mouse lung. Lung CLDN5 transcript and protein increased more in the resistant strain than in the susceptible strain. In human endothelial cells, 30 nM acrolein increased CLDN5 transcripts and increased p-FOXO1 protein levels. The phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase inhibitor LY294002 diminished the acrolein-induced increased CLDN5 transcript. Acrolein (300 nM) decreased CLDN5 transcripts, which were accompanied by increased FOXO1 and CTNNB1. The phosphorylation status of these transcription factors was consistent with the observed CLDN5 alteration. Preservation of endothelial CLDN5 may be a novel clinical approach for ALI therapy.
Toxicological Sciences | 2009
Kelly A. Brant; James P. Fabisiak
Hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1alpha) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) have been implicated in the regulation of inflammatory-like processes that lead to angiogenesis and fibrotic disorders. Here we demonstrate that in human lung fibroblasts (HLFs) treated with mixed exposures to chemical and microbial stimuli, HIF-1alpha stabilization plays a pivotal role in the induction of COX-2 mRNA and protein, driving the release of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and proangiogenic and profibrotic chemokines. Upon costimulation with Ni and the mycoplasma-derived lipopeptide macrophage-activating lipopeptide-2 (MALP-2), there was a synergistic induction of CXCL1 and CXCL5 mRNA and protein release from HLF, as well as an enhanced response in VEGF compared to either stimulus alone. Consistent with our previous findings that Ni and MALP-2 stimulates the induction of CXCL8 via a COX-2-mediated pathway, CXCL1, CXCL5, and VEGF release were also regulated by COX-2. Ni induced the stabilization of HIF-1alpha protein in HLF, which was further enhanced in the presence of MALP-2. Depletion of HIF-1alpha using siRNA blocked COX-2 induction by Ni and MALP-2 along with the release of VEGF, CXCL1, CXCL5, and CXCL8. Our results indicate that Ni and MALP-2 interact to promote an angiogenic profibrotic phenotype in HLF. Moreover, these findings reveal a potential role for HIF-1alpha in mediating chemical-induced alterations in cellular response to microbial stimuli, modulating pulmonary inflammation and its consequences such as fibrosis and angiogenesis.
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2012
George D. Leikauf; Hannah Pope-Varsalona; Vincent J. Concel; Pengyuan Liu; Kiflai Bein; Annerose Berndt; Timothy M. Martin; Koustav Ganguly; An Soo Jang; Kelly A. Brant; Richard A. Dopico; Swapna Upadhyay; Y. Peter Di; Qian Li; Zhen Hu; Louis J. Vuga; Mario Medvedovic; Naftali Kaminski; Ming You; Danny Alexander; Jonathan E. McDunn; Daniel R. Prows; Daren L. Knoell; James P. Fabisiak
The genetic basis for the underlying individual susceptibility to chlorine-induced acute lung injury is unknown. To uncover the genetic basis and pathophysiological processes that could provide additional homeostatic capacities during lung injury, 40 inbred murine strains were exposed to chlorine, and haplotype association mapping was performed. The identified single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) associations were evaluated through transcriptomic and metabolomic profiling. Using ≥ 10% allelic frequency and ≥ 10% phenotype explained as threshold criteria, promoter SNPs that could eliminate putative transcriptional factor recognition sites in candidate genes were assessed by determining transcript levels through microarray and reverse real-time PCR during chlorine exposure. The mean survival time varied by approximately 5-fold among strains, and SNP associations were identified for 13 candidate genes on chromosomes 1, 4, 5, 9, and 15. Microarrays revealed several differentially enriched pathways, including protein transport (decreased more in the sensitive C57BLKS/J lung) and protein catabolic process (increased more in the resistant C57BL/10J lung). Lung metabolomic profiling revealed 95 of the 280 metabolites measured were altered by chlorine exposure, and included alanine, which decreased more in the C57BLKS/J than in the C57BL/10J strain, and glutamine, which increased more in the C57BL/10J than in the C57BLKS/J strain. Genetic associations from haplotype mapping were strengthened by an integrated assessment using transcriptomic and metabolomic profiling. The leading candidate genes associated with increased susceptibility to acute lung injury in mice included Klf4, Sema7a, Tns1, Aacs, and a gene that encodes an amino acid carrier, Slc38a4.
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2013
George D. Leikauf; Vincent J. Concel; Kiflai Bein; Pengyuan Liu; Annerose Berndt; Timothy M. Martin; Koustav Ganguly; An Soo Jang; Kelly A. Brant; Richard A. Dopico; Swapna Upadhyay; Clinton L. Cario; Y. Peter Di; Louis J. Vuga; Emrah Kostem; Eleazar Eskin; Ming You; Naftali Kaminski; Daniel R. Prows; Daren L. Knoell; James P. Fabisiak
In this study, a genetically diverse panel of 43 mouse strains was exposed to phosgene and genome-wide association mapping performed using a high-density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) assembly. Transcriptomic analysis was also used to improve the genetic resolution in the identification of genetic determinants of phosgene-induced acute lung injury (ALI). We prioritized the identified genes based on whether the encoded protein was previously associated with lung injury or contained a nonsynonymous SNP within a functional domain. Candidates were selected that contained a promoter SNP that could alter a putative transcription factor binding site and had variable expression by transcriptomic analyses. The latter two criteria also required that ≥10% of mice carried the minor allele and that this allele could account for ≥10% of the phenotypic difference noted between the strains at the phenotypic extremes. This integrative, functional approach revealed 14 candidate genes that included Atp1a1, Alox5, Galnt11, Hrh1, Mbd4, Phactr2, Plxnd1, Ptprt, Reln, and Zfand4, which had significant SNP associations, and Itga9, Man1a2, Mapk14, and Vwf, which had suggestive SNP associations. Of the genes with significant SNP associations, Atp1a1, Alox5, Plxnd1, Ptprt, and Zfand4 could be associated with ALI in several ways. Using a competitive electrophoretic mobility shift analysis, Atp1a1 promoter (rs215053185) oligonucleotide containing the minor G allele formed a major distinct faster-migrating complex. In addition, a gene with a suggestive SNP association, Itga9, is linked to transforming growth factor β1 signaling, which previously has been associated with the susceptibility to ALI in mice.
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2011
James P. Fabisiak; Mario Medvedovic; Danny Alexander; Jonathan E. McDunn; Vincent J. Concel; Kiflai Bein; An Soo Jang; Annerose Berndt; Louis J. Vuga; Kelly A. Brant; Hannah Pope-Varsalona; Richard A. Dopico; Koustav Ganguly; Swapna Upadhyay; Qian Li; Zhen Hu; Naftali Kaminski; George D. Leikauf
SCOPE This investigation sought to better understand the metabolic role of the lung and to generate insights into the pathogenesis of acrolein-induced acute lung injury. A respiratory irritant, acrolein is generated by overheating cooking oils or by domestic cooking using biomass fuels, and is in environmental tobacco smoke, a health hazard in the restaurant workplace. METHODS AND RESULTS Using SM/J (sensitive) and 129X1/SvJ (resistant) inbred mouse strains, the lung metabolome was integrated with the transcriptome profile before and after acrolein exposure. A total of 280 small molecules were identified and mean values (log 2 >0.58 or <-0.58, p<0.05) were considered different for between-strain comparisons or within-strain responses to acrolein treatment. At baseline, 24 small molecules increased and 33 small molecules decreased in the SM/J mouse lung as compared to 129X1/SvJ mouse lung. Notable among the increased compounds was malonylcarnitine. Following acrolein exposure, several molecules indicative of glycolysis and branched chain amino acid metabolism increased similarly in both strains, whereas SM/J mice were less effective in generating metabolites related to fatty acid β-oxidation. CONCLUSION These findings suggest management of energetic stress varies between these strains, and that the ability to evoke auxiliary energy generating pathways rapidly and effectively may be critical in enhancing survival during acute lung injury in mice.
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2010
Fei Gao; Kelly A. Brant; Rachel M. Ward; Richard T. Cattley; Aaron Barchowsky; James P. Fabisiak
Microbial stimuli and atmospheric particulate matter (PM) interact to amplify the release of inflammatory and immune-modulating cytokines. The basis of this interaction, however, is not known. Cultured human lung fibroblasts (HLF) were used to determine whether various protein kinase pathways were involved in the release of IL-6 following combined exposure to the PM-derived metal, Ni, and M. fermentans-derived macrophage-activating lipopeptide 2 (MALP-2), a toll-like receptor 2 agonist. Synergistic release of IL-6 by MALP-2 and NiSO4 was obvious after 8h of co-stimulation and correlated with a late phase accumulation of IL-6 mRNA. Ni and MALP-2, alone or together, all led to rapid and transient phosphorylations of ERK(1/2) and JNK/SAPK of similar magnitude. p38 phosphorylation, however, was observed only after prolonged treatment of cells with both stimuli together. A constitutive level of PI3K-dependent Akt phosphorylation remained unchanged by Ni and/or MALP-2 exposure. IL-6 induced by Ni/MALP-2 co-exposure was partially dependent on activity of HIF-1alpha and COX-2 as shown by targeted knockdown using siRNA. IL-6 release in response to Ni/MALP-2 was partially sensitive to pharmacological inhibition of ERK(1/2), p38, and PI3K signaling. The protein kinase inhibitors had minimal or no effects on Ni/MALP-2-induced accumulation of HIF-1alpha protein, however, COX-2 expression and, more markedly PGE(2) production, were suppressed by LY294002, SB203580, and U0126. Thus, Ni/MALP-2 interactions involve multiple protein kinase pathways (ERK(1/2), p38, and PI3K) that modulate events downstream from the early accumulation of HIF-1alpha to promote IL-6 gene expression directly or secondarily, through COX-2-derived autocrine products like PGE(2).
Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2010
George D. Leikauf; Hannah Pope-Varsalona; Vincent J. Concel; Pengyuan Liu; Kiflai Bein; Kelly A. Brant; Richard A. Dopico; Di Yp; An Soo Jang; Maggie Dietsch; Mario Medvedovic; Qin Li; Louis J. Vuga; Naftali Kaminski; Ming You; Daniel R. Prows
Acute lung injury can be induced indirectly (e.g., sepsis) or directly (e.g., chlorine inhalation). Because treatment is still limited to supportive measures, mortality remains high ( approximately 74,500 deaths/yr). In the past, accidental (railroad derailments) and intentional (Iraq terrorism) chlorine exposures have led to deaths and hospitalizations from acute lung injury. To better understand the molecular events controlling chlorine-induced acute lung injury, we have developed a functional genomics approach using inbred mice strains. Various mouse strains were exposed to chlorine (45 ppm x 24 h) and survival was monitored. The most divergent strains varied by more than threefold in mean survival time, supporting the likelihood of an underlying genetic basis of susceptibility. These divergent strains are excellent models for additional genetic analysis to identify critical candidate genes controlling chlorine-induced acute lung injury. Gene-targeted mice then could be used to test the functional significance of susceptibility candidate genes, which could be valuable in revealing novel insights into the biology of acute lung injury.
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2014
Koustav Ganguly; Timothy M. Martin; Vincent J. Concel; Swapna Upadhyay; Kiflai Bein; Kelly A. Brant; Leema George; Ankita Mitra; Tania A. Thimraj; James P. Fabisiak; Louis J. Vuga; Cheryl L. Fattman; Naftali Kaminski; Holger Schulz; George D. Leikauf
Secreted phosphoprotein 1 (Spp1) is located within quantitative trait loci associated with lung function that was previously identified by contrasting C3H/HeJ and JF1/Msf mouse strains that have extremely divergent lung function. JF1/Msf mice with diminished lung function had reduced lung SPP1 transcript and protein during the peak stage of alveologenesis (postnatal day [P]14-P28) as compared with C3H/HeJ mice. In addition to a previously identified genetic variant that altered runt-related transcription factor 2 (RUNX2) binding in the Spp1 promoter, we identified another promoter variant in a putative RUNX2 binding site that increased the DNA protein binding. SPP1 induced dose-dependent mouse lung epithelial-15 cell proliferation. Spp1((-/-)) mice have decreased specific total lung capacity/body weight, higher specific compliance, and increased mean airspace chord length (Lm) compared with Spp1((+/+)) mice. Microarray analysis revealed enriched gene ontogeny categories, with numerous genes associated with lung development and/or respiratory disease. Insulin-like growth factor 1, Hedgehog-interacting protein, wingless-related mouse mammary tumor virus integration site 5A, and NOTCH1 transcripts decreased in the lung of P14 Spp1((-/-)) mice as determined by quantitative RT-PCR analysis. SPP1 promotes pneumocyte growth, and mice lacking SPP1 have smaller, more compliant lungs with enlarged airspace (i.e., increased Lm). Microarray analysis suggests a dysregulation of key lung developmental transcripts in gene-targeted Spp1((-/-)) mice, particularly during the peak phase of alveologenesis. In addition to its known roles in lung disease, this study supports SPP1 as a determinant of lung development in mice.
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2013
Kelly A. Brant; James P. Fabisiak
Numerous epidemiological studies have linked exposure to particulate matter (PM) air pollution with acute respiratory infection and chronic respiratory and cardiovascular diseases. We have previously shown that soluble nickel (Ni), a common component of PM, alters the release of CXC chemokines from cultured human lung fibroblasts (HLF) in response to microbial stimuli via a pathway dependent on disrupted prostaglandin (PG)E2 signaling. The current study sought to identify the molecular events underlying Ni-induced alterations in PGE2 signaling and its effects on IL-8 production. PGE2 synergistically enhances Ni-induced IL-8 release from HLF in a concentration-dependent manner. The effects of PGE2 were mimicked by butaprost and PGE1-alcohol and inhibited with antagonists AH6809 and L-161,982, indicating PGE2 signals via PGE2 receptors 2 and 4. PGE2 and forskolin stimulated cAMP, but it was only in the presence of Ni-induced hypoxia-inducible factor 1, α subunit (HIF1A) that these agents stimulated IL-8 release. The Ni-induced HIF1A DNA binding was enhanced by PGE2 and mediated, in part, by activation of p38 MAPK. Negation of cAMP-response element binding protein 1 or HIF1A using short interfering RNA blocked the synergistic interactions between Ni and PGE2. The results of the current study provide novel information on the ability of atmospheric hypoxia-mimetic metals to disrupt the release of immune-modulating chemokines by HLF in response to PGE2. Moreover, in the presence of HIF1A, cAMP-mediated signaling pathways may be altered to exacerbate inflammatory-like processes in lung tissue, imparting a susceptibility of PM-exposed populations to adverse respiratory health effects.
Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2014
Kelly A. Brant; George D. Leikauf
Because proprotein convertases (PCSKs) activate growth factors and matrix metalloproteinase, these enzymes have been implicated in non‐small cell lung cancer tumor progression and aggressiveness. Previous studies indicate that one PCSK member, FURIN is overexpressed in NSCLC, but little is known regarding the mechanisms driving PCSKs expression during malignant change. We sought to determine whether prostaglandin‐endoperoxide synthase 2 (prostaglandin G/H synthase and cyclooxygenase) (PTGS2) (aka COX2), whose expression is also frequently increased in NSCLC, differentially regulates PCSK expression and activity between normal (NHBE) and NSCLC epithelial cells (NCI‐H292, NCI‐H441, A549). NSCLC cells exhibit significantly greater cell‐associated and secreted PCSK activity as compared with NHBE. The heightened activity is consistent with increased FURIN, PCSK4, and PCSK6 protein in the NCSLC cells. Inhibition of PTGS2 activity using NS‐398 and siRNA decreased FURIN mRNA, protein, activity along with cell proliferation in NCI‐H292 cells but not NHBE cells. NSCLC also expressed elevated levels of the transcription factor E2F1. When NCI‐H292 cells were transfected with E2F1 siRNA, both PTGS2 expression and PCSK activity were attenuated, arguing a pivotal role for E2F1 in the differential regulation of PCSKs by PTGS2. Our results highlight a novel role for PTGS2 in NSCLC and may provide a mechanism, whereby PTGS2 inhibitors suppress lung cancer cell growth.