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Dive into the research topics where Mark W. Musch is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark W. Musch.


Nature | 2012

Dietary-fat-induced taurocholic acid promotes pathobiont expansion and colitis in Il10-/- mice

Suzanne Devkota; Yunwei Wang; Mark W. Musch; Vanessa Leone; Hannah Fehlner-Peach; Anuradha Nadimpalli; Dionysios A. Antonopoulos; Bana Jabri; Eugene B. Chang

The composite human microbiome of Western populations has probably changed over the past century, brought on by new environmental triggers that often have a negative impact on human health. Here we show that consumption of a diet high in saturated (milk-derived) fat, but not polyunsaturated (safflower oil) fat, changes the conditions for microbial assemblage and promotes the expansion of a low-abundance, sulphite-reducing pathobiont, Bilophila wadsworthia. This was associated with a pro-inflammatory T helper type 1 (TH1) immune response and increased incidence of colitis in genetically susceptible Il10−/−, but not wild-type mice. These effects are mediated by milk-derived-fat-promoted taurine conjugation of hepatic bile acids, which increases the availability of organic sulphur used by sulphite-reducing microorganisms like B. wadsworthia. When mice were fed a low-fat diet supplemented with taurocholic acid, but not with glycocholic acid, for example, a bloom of B. wadsworthia and development of colitis were observed in Il10−/− mice. Together these data show that dietary fats, by promoting changes in host bile acid composition, can markedly alter conditions for gut microbial assemblage, resulting in dysbiosis that can perturb immune homeostasis. The data provide a plausible mechanistic basis by which Western-type diets high in certain saturated fats might increase the prevalence of complex immune-mediated diseases like inflammatory bowel disease in genetically susceptible hosts.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2006

Coordinated epithelial NHE3 inhibition and barrier dysfunction are required for TNF-mediated diarrhea in vivo

Daniel R. Clayburgh; Mark W. Musch; Michael Leitges; Yang-Xin Fu; Jerrold R. Turner

Acute T cell-mediated diarrhea is associated with increased mucosal expression of proinflammatory cytokines, including the TNF superfamily members TNF and LIGHT. While we have previously shown that epithelial barrier dysfunction induced by myosin light chain kinase (MLCK) is required for the development of diarrhea, MLCK inhibition does not completely restore water absorption. In contrast, although TNF-neutralizing antibodies completely restore water absorption after systemic T cell activation, barrier function is only partially corrected. This suggests that, while barrier dysfunction is critical, other processes must be involved in T cell-mediated diarrhea. To define these processes in vivo, we asked whether individual cytokines might regulate different events in T cell-mediated diarrhea. Both TNF and LIGHT caused MLCK-dependent barrier dysfunction. However, while TNF caused diarrhea, LIGHT enhanced intestinal water absorption. Moreover, TNF, but not LIGHT, inhibited Na+ absorption due to TNF-induced internalization of the brush border Na+/H+ exchanger NHE3. LIGHT did not cause NHE3 internalization. PKCalpha activation by TNF was responsible for NHE3 internalization, and pharmacological or genetic PKCalpha inhibition prevented NHE3 internalization, Na+ malabsorption, and diarrhea despite continued barrier dysfunction. These data demonstrate the necessity of coordinated Na+ malabsorption and barrier dysfunction in TNF-induced diarrhea and provide insight into mechanisms of intestinal water transport.


Cell Host & Microbe | 2015

Effects of diurnal variation of gut microbes and high-fat feeding on host circadian clock function and metabolism.

Vanessa Leone; Sean M. Gibbons; Kristina Martinez; Alan L. Hutchison; Edmond Y. Huang; Candace M. Cham; Joseph F. Pierre; Aaron F. Heneghan; Anuradha Nadimpalli; Nathaniel Hubert; Elizabeth Zale; Yunwei Wang; Yong Huang; Betty Theriault; Aaron R. Dinner; Mark W. Musch; Kenneth A. Kudsk; Brian J. Prendergast; Jack A. Gilbert; Eugene B. Chang

Circadian clocks and metabolism are inextricably intertwined, where central and hepatic circadian clocks coordinate metabolic events in response to light-dark and sleep-wake cycles. We reveal an additional key element involved in maintaining host circadian rhythms, the gut microbiome. Despite persistence of light-dark signals, germ-free mice fed low or high-fat diets exhibit markedly impaired central and hepatic circadian clock gene expression and do not gain weight compared to conventionally raised counterparts. Examination of gut microbiota in conventionally raised mice showed differential diurnal variation in microbial structure and function dependent upon dietary composition. Additionally, specific microbial metabolites induced under low- or high-fat feeding, particularly short-chain fatty acids, but not hydrogen sulfide, directly modulate circadian clock gene expression within hepatocytes. These results underscore the ability of microbially derived metabolites to regulate or modify central and hepatic circadian rhythm and host metabolic function, the latter following intake of a Westernized diet.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Regulation of Human CLC-3 Channels by Multifunctional Ca2+/Calmodulin-dependent Protein Kinase

Ping Huang; Jie Liu; Anke Di; Nicole C. Robinson; Mark W. Musch; Marcia A. Kaetzel; Deborah J. Nelson

The multifunctional calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II, CaMKII, has been shown to regulate chloride movement and cellular function in both excitable and non-excitable cells. We show that the plasma membrane expression of a member of the ClC family of Cl−channels, human CLC-3 (hCLC-3), a 90-kDa protein, is regulated by CaMKII. We cloned the full-length hCLC-3 gene from the human colonic tumor cell line T84, previously shown to express a CaMKII-activated Cl− conductance (ICl,CaMKII), and transfected this gene into the mammalian epithelial cell line tsA, which lacks endogenous expression of ICl,CaMKII. Biotinylation experiments demonstrated plasma membrane expression of hCLC-3 in the stably transfected cells. In whole cell patch clamp experiments, autonomously active CaMKII was introduced into tsA cells stably transfected with hCLC-3 via the patch pipette. Cells transfected with the hCLC-3 gene showed a 22-fold increase in current density over cells expressing the vector alone. Kinase-dependent current expression was abolished in the presence of the autocamtide-2-related inhibitory peptide, a specific inhibitor of CaMKII. A mutation of glycine 280 to glutamic acid in the conserved motif in the putative pore region of the channel changed anion selectivity from I− > Cl− to Cl− > I−. These results indicate that hCLC-3 encodes a Cl− channel that is regulated by CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2002

T cell activation causes diarrhea by increasing intestinal permeability and inhibiting epithelial Na+/K+-ATPase

Mark W. Musch; Lane L. Clarke; Daniel Mamah; Lara R. Gawenis; Zheng Zhang; William Ellsworth; David Shalowitz; Navdha Mittal; Petros Efthimiou; Ziad Alnadjim; Steve D. Hurst; Eugene B. Chang; Terrence A. Barrett

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is associated with mucosal T cell activation and diarrhea. We found that T cell activation with anti-CD3 mAb induces profound diarrhea in mice. Diarrhea was quantified by intestinal weight-to-length (wt/l) ratios, mucosal Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase activity was determined and ion transport changes were measured in Ussing chambers. Anti-CD3 mAb increased jejunal wt/l ratios by more than 50% at 3 hours, returning to base line after 6 hours. Fluid accumulation was significantly reduced in TNF receptor-1 (TNFR-1(-/-)), but not IFN-gamma knockout mice. Anti-CD3 mAb decreased mucosal Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase activity, which was blocked by anti-TNF mAb and occurred to a lesser degree in TNFR-1(-/-) mice. Neither alpha nor beta subunits of Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase decreased in abundance at 3 hours. Intestinal tissue from anti-CD3-treated mice exhibited increased permeability to mannitol at 1 hour and decreases in electroneutral Na(+) absorption, Na(+)-dependent glucose absorption, and cAMP-stimulated anion secretion at 3 hours. Furthermore, enteral fluid accumulation was observed in CFTR(-/-) mice, indicating a minor role of active anion secretion. These data suggest that diarrhea in IBD is due to TNF-mediated malabsorption rather than to secretory processes. T cell activation induces luminal fluid accumulation by increasing mucosal permeability and reducing epithelial Na(+)/K(+)-ATPase activity leading to decreased intestinal Na(+) and water absorption.


Annals of Surgery | 2000

Gut-derived sepsis occurs when the right pathogen with the right virulence genes meets the right host: evidence for in vivo virulence expression in Pseudomonas aeruginosa.

John C. Alverdy; Christopher Holbrook; Flavio Rocha; Louis Seiden; Richard Licheng; Wu; Mark W. Musch; Eugene B. Chang; Dennis Ohman; Sanj Suh

ObjectiveTo define the putative role of the PA-I lectin/adhesin, a binding protein of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, on lethal gut-derived sepsis after surgical stress, and to determine if this protein is expressed in vivo in response to physical and chemical changes in the local microenvironment of the intestinal tract after surgical stress. Summary Background DataPrevious work from the authors’ laboratory has established that lethal gut-derived sepsis can be induced after the introduction of P. aeruginosa into the cecum of mice after a 30% hepatectomy. This effect does not occur when P. aeruginosa is introduced into the cecum of sham operated control mice. Previous experiments further established that the mechanism of this effect is due to the presence of the PA-I lectin/adhesin of P. aeruginosa, which induces a permeability defect to a lethal cytotoxin of P. aeruginosa, exotoxin A. MethodsThree strains of P. aeruginosa, one lacking functional PA-I, were tested in two complementary systems to assess virulence. Strains were tested for their ability to adhere to and alter the permeability of cultured human colon epithelial cells, and for their ability to induce mortality when injected into the cecum of mice after a 30% hepatectomy. To determine if PA-I is “in vivo expressed” when present in the cecal environment after hepatectomy, strains were retrieved from the cecum of sham-operated and hepatectomy-treated mice 24 and 48 hours after their introduction into the cecum and their PA-I expression was assessed. ResultsResults indicated that PA-I plays a putative role in lethal gut-derived sepsis in the mouse, because strains lacking functional PA-I had an attenuated effect on cultured human epithelial cells, and were nonlethal when injected into the cecum of mice after 30% surgical hepatectomy. Furthermore, surgical stress in the form of hepatectomy significantly altered the intestinal microenvironment, resulting in an increase in luminal norepinephrine associated with an increase in PA-I expression in retrieved strains of P. aeruginosa. Co-incubation of P. aeruginosa with norepinephrine increased PA-I expression in vitro, suggesting that norepinephrine plays a role in the observed response in vivo. ConclusionsLethal gut-derived sepsis may occur when intestinal pathogens express virulence determinants in response to environmental signals indicating host stress. In this regard, the PA-I lectin/adhesin of P. aeruginosa appears to be a specific example of in vivo virulence expression in colonizing pathogens in the intestinal tract in response to surgical stress.


Nutrition | 2003

Glutamine attenuates tumor necrosis factor-α release and enhances heat shock protein 72 in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells

Paul E. Wischmeyer; Jacob Riehm; Kristen D. Singleton; Hongyu Ren; Mark W. Musch; Madelyn Kahana; Eugene B. Chang

OBJECTIVE Overexpression of pro-inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) can contribute to multiple organ dysfunction syndrome and septic shock in critically ill patients. We previously found that glutamine (GLN) can attenuate cytokine expression, induce heat shock protein 72 (HSP 72), and protect against endotoxin-induced mortality and organ injury in an in vivo rat model. However, data on the effect of GLN on direct attenuation of cytokine release and HSP 72 expression in human peripheral blood polymorphonuclear cells (PBMCs) is lacking. METHODS In this study, we assessed the effect of GLN on TNF-alpha and HSP 72 expression in human PBMCs. After treating with various doses of GLN, human PBMCs were stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). TNF-alpha release was analyzed via enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and HSP 72 via western blot. RESULTS GLN at doses greater than 4 mM decreased TNF-alpha release at 4 and 24 h after LPS stimulation. Sublethal heating of PBMCs before LPS also markedly decreased TNF-alpha after LPS. Doses of GLN greater than 2 to 4 mM led to an increase in HSP 72 expression after LPS. CONCLUSION These results indicate that GLN, which may improve outcomes in critically ill patients, can directly attenuate pro-inflammatory cytokine release in PBMCs. This effect may be related to enhanced HSP 72 expression.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

Intestinal epithelial vitamin D receptor signaling inhibits experimental colitis

Weicheng Liu; Yunzi Chen; Maya Aharoni Golan; Maria Laura Annunziata; Jie Du; Urszula Dougherty; Juan Kong; Mark W. Musch; Yong Huang; Joel Pekow; Changqing Zheng; Marc Bissonnette; Stephen B. Hanauer; Yan Chun Li

The inhibitory effects of vitamin D on colitis have been previously documented. Global vitamin D receptor (VDR) deletion exaggerates colitis, but the relative anticolitic contribution of epithelial and nonepithelial VDR signaling is unknown. Here, we showed that colonic epithelial VDR expression was substantially reduced in patients with Crohns disease or ulcerative colitis. Moreover, targeted expression of human VDR (hVDR) in intestinal epithelial cells (IECs) protected mice from developing colitis. In experimental colitis models induced by 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid, dextran sulfate sodium, or CD4(+)CD45RB(hi) T cell transfer, transgenic mice expressing hVDR in IECs were highly resistant to colitis, as manifested by marked reductions in clinical colitis scores, colonic histological damage, and colonic inflammation compared with WT mice. Reconstitution of Vdr-deficient IECs with the hVDR transgene completely rescued Vdr-null mice from severe colitis and death, even though the mice still maintained a hyperresponsive Vdr-deficient immune system. Mechanistically, VDR signaling attenuated PUMA induction in IECs by blocking NF-κB activation, leading to a reduction in IEC apoptosis. Together, these results demonstrate that gut epithelial VDR signaling inhibits colitis by protecting the mucosal epithelial barrier, and this anticolitic activity is independent of nonepithelial immune VDR actions.


Annals of Surgery | 2000

The Key Role of Pseudomonas aeruginosa PA-I Lectin on Experimental Gut-Derived Sepsis

Robert S. Laughlin; Mark W. Musch; Christopher J. Hollbrook; Flavio M. Rocha; Eugene B. Chang; John C. Alverdy

OBJECTIVE To examine the effect of Pseudomonas aeruginosa on intestinal barrier function and its lethal potential when introduced into the intestinal tract of mice. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA The mere presence of P. aeruginosa in the intestinal tract of critically ill patients is associated with a threefold increase in death compared with matched cohorts without this pathogen. Whether this effect is a cause or a consequence of the critically ill state has not been previously addressed. METHODS Transepithelial electrical resistance, a measure of tight junction permeability, was evaluated in Caco-2 intestinal epithelial cells cells apically inoculated with live P. aeruginosa, exotoxin A, or purified PA-I lectin, an adhesin of P. aeruginosa. Lethality studies to P. aeruginosa were carried out in mice undergoing 30% surgical hepatectomy by injecting the bacteria or its various components directly into the cecum. RESULTS Only cells exposed to P. aeruginosa or its PA-I lectin developed alterations in barrier function. P. aeruginosa or the combination of PA-I and exotoxin A was lethal to mice when injected into the cecum after partial hepatectomy. Alterations in epithelial barrier function and death in mice were prevented when Pseudomonas was pretreated with N-acetyl D-galactosamine (GalNAc), a binder of PA-I. CONCLUSIONS P. aeruginosa may act as a pathogen in the gastrointestinal tract, resulting in altered epithelial barrier function and death in a susceptible host. The PA-I lectin of P. aeruginosa may play a key role in its pathogenicity to the intestinal epithelium by inducing a permeability defect to its cytotoxic exoproducts such as exotoxin A.


Gastroenterology | 1999

Heat-shock protein 72 protects against oxidant-induced injury of barrier function of human colonic epithelial Caco2/bbe cells

Mark W. Musch; Kazunori Sugi; David Straus; Eugene B. Chang

BACKGROUND & AIMS Barrier function of the inflamed intestinal mucosa can be compromised by reactive oxygen metabolites that increase mucosal permeability and disrupt the actin cytoskeleton, the integrity of which is important for maintaining tight epithelial junctions. Because heat-shock protein 72 (hsp72) protects intestinal epithelial cells against injury, we determined whether resistance of Caco2/bbe (C2) intestinal monolayer barrier function was related to their high endogenous hsp72 expression. METHODS hsp72 anti-sense (C2/AS) and vector-only transfected C2 (C2/CEP4) clones, lines that exhibit low and high hsp72 expression, respectively, were studied. Permeability was assessed by measuring electrical resistance and mannitol fluxes and actin organization by confocal fluorescein isothiocyanate-phalloidin analysis. RESULTS Basal transepithelial electrical resistance (TER) and mannitol fluxes were not significantly different between groups. However, the oxidant monochloramine rapidly decreased TER and increased mannitol permeability of C2/AS monolayers compared with C2/CEP4 (50% effective doses at 30 minutes were 0.53 +/- 0.11 and 2.06 +/- 0.34 mmol/L, respectively). Associated with these changes, decreased cell viability, dissociation and aggregation of perijunctional and stress actin filaments, loss of cell height, and increased intercellular separation were observed only in C2/AS cells treated with monochloramine. CONCLUSIONS hsp72 protects intestinal epithelial barrier function against oxidant-induced stress, in part, by protecting the integrity of the actin cytoskeleton.

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Mrinalini C. Rao

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Yue Xie

University of Chicago

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