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Dive into the research topics where Mary C. Rose is active.

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Featured researches published by Mary C. Rose.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 1999

Neutrophil elastase increases MUC5AC mRNA and protein expression in respiratory epithelial cells

Judith A. Voynow; Lisa Rosenthal Young; Yiqiong Wang; Teresa Horger; Mary C. Rose; Bernard M. Fischer

Chronic neutrophil-predominant inflammation and hypersecretion of mucus are common pathophysiological features of cystic fibrosis, chronic bronchitis, and viral- or pollution-triggered asthma. Neutrophils release elastase, a serine protease, that causes increased mucin production and secretion. The molecular mechanisms of elastase-induced mucin production are unknown. We hypothesized that as part of this mechanism, elastase upregulates expression of a major respiratory mucin gene, MUC5AC. A549, a human lung carcinoma cell line that expresses MUC5AC mRNA and protein, and normal human bronchial epithelial cells in an air-liquid interface culture were stimulated with neutrophil elastase. Neutrophil elastase increased MUC5AC mRNA levels in a time-dependent manner in both cell culture systems. Neutrophil elastase treatment also increased MUC5AC protein levels in A549 cells. The mechanism of MUC5AC gene regulation by elastase was determined in A549 cells. The induction of MUC5AC gene expression required serine protease activity; other classes of proteases had no effect on MUC5AC gene expression. Neutrophil elastase increased MUC5AC mRNA levels by enhancing mRNA stability. This is the first report of mucin gene regulation by this mechanism.Chronic neutrophil-predominant inflammation and hypersecretion of mucus are common pathophysiological features of cystic fibrosis, chronic bronchitis, and viral- or pollution-triggered asthma. Neutrophils release elastase, a serine protease, that causes increased mucin production and secretion. The molecular mechanisms of elastase-induced mucin production are unknown. We hypothesized that as part of this mechanism, elastase upregulates expression of a major respiratory mucin gene, MUC5AC. A549, a human lung carcinoma cell line that expresses MUC5AC mRNA and protein, and normal human bronchial epithelial cells in an air-liquid interface culture were stimulated with neutrophil elastase. Neutrophil elastase increased MUC5AC mRNA levels in a time-dependent manner in both cell culture systems. Neutrophil elastase treatment also increased MUC5AC protein levels in A549 cells. The mechanism of MUC5AC gene regulation by elastase was determined in A549 cells. The induction of MUC5AC gene expression required serine protease activity; other classes of proteases had no effect on MUC5AC gene expression. Neutrophil elastase increased MUC5AC mRNA levels by enhancing mRNA stability. This is the first report of mucin gene regulation by this mechanism.


Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine | 2012

CFTR, Mucins, and Mucus Obstruction in Cystic Fibrosis

Silvia M. Kreda; C. William Davis; Mary C. Rose

Mucus pathology in cystic fibrosis (CF) has been known for as long as the disease has been recognized and is sometimes called mucoviscidosis. The disease is marked by mucus hyperproduction and plugging in many organs, which are usually most fatal in the airways of CF patients, once the problem of meconium ileus at birth is resolved. After the CF gene, CFTR, was cloned and its protein product identified as a cAMP-regulated Cl(-) channel, causal mechanisms underlying the strong mucus phenotype of the disease became obscure. Here we focus on mucin genes and polymeric mucin glycoproteins, examining their regulation and potential relationships to a dysfunctional cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR). Detailed examination of CFTR expression in organs and different cell types indicates that changes in CFTR expression do not always correlate with the severity of CF disease or mucus accumulation. Thus, the mucus hyperproduction that typifies CF does not appear to be a direct cause of a defective CFTR but, rather, to be a downstream consequence. In organs like the lung, up-regulation of mucin gene expression by inflammation results from chronic infection; however, in other instances and organs, the inflammation may have a non-infectious origin. The mucus plugging phenotype of the β-subunit of the epithelial Na(+) channel (βENaC)-overexpressing mouse is proving to be an archetypal example of this kind of inflammation, with a dehydrated airway surface/concentrated mucus gel apparently providing the inflammatory stimulus. Data indicate that the luminal HCO(3)(-) deficiency recently described for CF epithelia may also provide such a stimulus, perhaps by causing a mal-maturation of mucins as they are released onto luminal surfaces. In any event, the path between CFTR dysfunction and mucus hyperproduction has proven tortuous, and its unraveling continues to offer its own twists and turns, along with fascinating glimpses into biology.


Lung | 1998

Mucin gene expression (MUC1, MUC2, and MUC5/5AC) in nasal epithelial cells of cystic fibrosis, allergic rhinitis, and normal individuals.

J. A. Voynow; D. M. Selby; Mary C. Rose

Abstract. The early pathogenic events in cystic fibrosis (CF) include colonization of Pseudomonas in the lung, airway inflammation, and mucus hypersecretion with airway obstruction. The primary mechanisms leading to chronic infection and inflammation are not well understood. One possible explanation for this cascade of events is increased or altered expression of one or more mucin (MUC) genes by CF cells in the respiratory tract. We compared expression levels of three mucin genes, MUC1, MUC2, and MUC5/5AC, known to be expressed in the respiratory tract of CF, allergic rhinitis, and normal individuals. Mucin transcript levels in nasal epithelial cells free from inflammation were quantitated by an MUC mRNA slot-blot method. This study revealed three major findings: (1) MUC5/5AC mRNA was expressed at five- to tenfold greater levels than MUC2 or MUC1 for all subjects. (2) MUC2 mRNA levels were similar among all subject groups. (3) In CF subjects, there was a trend toward reduced MUC5/5AC expression. When normalized to the levels of MUC2 expression in individual specimens, MUC5/5AC expression was reduced significantly in CF cells compared with normal cells. These data suggest that mucin gene expression is altered in noninflamed CF nasal cells.


Journal of Immunology | 2009

IL-8 Regulates Mucin Gene Expression at the Posttranscriptional Level in Lung Epithelial Cells

Maria V. Bautista; Yajun Chen; Vessela S. Ivanova; Michael Rahimi; Alan M. Watson; Mary C. Rose

Airway inflammation and mucus hypersecretion/overproduction/obstruction are pathophysiological characteristics of cystic fibrosis, asthma, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Up-regulation of airway mucin genes by inflammatory/immune response mediators is one of the major contributors to mucin overproduction. IL-8, a potent proinflammatory mediator and neutrophil chemoattractant, is present at high levels in the airway secretions of such patients. In this study, the effects of IL-8 on expression of two major airway mucin genes, MUC5AC and MUC5B, were evaluated. IL-8 increased the mRNA abundance of both mucin genes in two human respiratory tract-derived cell lines (A549 and NCI-H292) in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. IL-8 also increased MUC5AC and MUC5B mRNA levels in primary normal differentiated human bronchial epithelial cells, with a high concentration of IL-8 required to increase MUC5B mRNA levels. IL-8 did not transcriptionally up-regulate MUC5AC gene expression, but rather increased the stability of the MUC5AC transcript, suggesting regulation at the posttranscriptional level. In addition, IL-8 altered the levels of RNA-binding proteins to specific domains in the 3′-untranslated region of the MUC5AC transcript. Taken together, these data indicate that the IL-8-induced binding of RNA-binding proteins to the 3′-untranslated region of MUC5AC is a potential mechanism for regulating MUC5AC gene expression at the posttranscriptional level, thus suggesting a new role whereby IL-8 sustains mucin gene expression in inflamed airways.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2011

Asthmatic Airway Epithelium Is Intrinsically Inflammatory and Mitotically Dyssynchronous

Robert J. Freishtat; Alan M. Watson; Angela S. Benton; Sabah F. Iqbal; Dinesh K. Pillai; Mary C. Rose; Eric P. Hoffman

Asthma is an inflammatory condition for which anti-inflammatory glucocorticoids are the standard of care. However, similar efficacy has not been shown for agents targeting inflammatory cells and pathways. This suggests a noninflammatory cell contributor (e.g., epithelium) to asthmatic inflammation. Herein, we sought to define the intrinsic and glucocorticoid-affected properties of asthmatic airway epithelium compared with normal epithelium. Human primary differentiated normal and asthmatic airway epithelia were cultured in glucocorticoid-free medium beginning at -48 hours. They were pulsed with dexamethasone (20 nM) or vehicle for 2 hours at -26, -2, +22, and +46 hours. Cultures were mechanically scrape-wounded at 0 hours and exposed continuously to bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU). Cytokine secretions were analyzed using cytometric bead assays. Wound regeneration/mitosis was analyzed by microscopy and flow cytometry. Quiescent normal (n = 3) and asthmatic (n = 6) epithelia showed similar minimal inflammatory cytokine secretion and mitotic indices. After wounding, asthmatic epithelia secreted more basolateral TGF-β1, IL-10, IL-13, and IL-1β (P < 0.05) and regenerated less efficiently than normal epithelia (+48 h wound area reduction = [mean ± SEM] 50.2 ± 7.5% versus 78.6 ± 7.7%; P = 0.02). Asthmatic epithelia showed 40% fewer BrdU(+) cells at +48 hours (0.32 ± 0.05% versus 0.56 ± 0.07% of total cells; P = 0.03), and those cells were more dyssynchronously distributed along the cell cycle (52 ± 10, 25 ± 4, 23 ± 7% for G1/G0, S, and G2/M, respectively) than normal epithelia (71 ± 1, 12 ± 2, and 17 ± 2% for G1/G0, S, and G2/M, respectively). Dexamethasone pulses improved asthmatic epithelial inflammation and regeneration/mitosis. In summary, we show that inflammatory/fibrogenic cytokine secretions are correlated with dyssynchronous mitosis upon injury. Intermittent glucocorticoids simultaneously decreased epithelial cytokine secretions and resynchronized mitosis. These data, generated in an airway model lacking inflammatory cells, support the concept that epithelium contributes to asthmatic inflammation.


Pediatric Research | 2010

MUC5B Is the predominant mucin glycoprotein in chronic otitis media fluid.

Diego Preciado; Samita Goyal; Michael Rahimi; Alan M. Watson; Kristy J. Brown; Yetrib Hathout; Mary C. Rose

Chronic otitis media (COM), e.g. “glue” ear is characterized by middle ear effusion and conductive hearing loss. Although mucous glycoproteins (mucins), which contribute to increased effusion viscosity, have been analyzed in ear tissue specimens, no studies have been reported that characterize the molecular identity of secreted mucin proteins present in actual middle ear fluid. For this study, effusions from children with COM undergoing myringotomy at Childrens National Medical Center, Washington, DC were collected. These were solubilized and gel fractionated, and the protein content was identified using a liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) proteomics approach. Western blot analyses with mucin specific antibodies and densitometry were performed to validate the mass spectrometry findings. LC-MS/MS results identified mucin MUC5B by >26 unique peptides in six of six middle ear effusion samples, whereas mucin MUC5AC was only identified in one of six middle ear effusions. These findings were validated by Western blot performed on the same six and on an additional 11 separate samples where densitometry revealed on average a 6.4-fold increased signal in MUC5B when compared with MUC5AC (p = 0.0009). In summary, although both MUC5AC and MUC5B mucins are detected in middle ear effusions, MUC5B seems to be predominant mucin present in COM secretions.


Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2008

Resident Cellular Components of the Human Lung Current Knowledge and Goals for Research on Cell Phenotyping and Function

Teri J. Franks; Thomas V. Colby; William D. Travis; Rubin M. Tuder; Herbert Y. Reynolds; Arnold R. Brody; Wellington V. Cardoso; Ronald G. Crystal; Christopher J. Drake; John F. Engelhardt; Maria G. Frid; Erica L. Herzog; Robert J. Mason; Sem H. Phan; Scott H. Randell; Mary C. Rose; Troy Stevens; Julie Serge; Mary E. Sunday; Judith A. Voynow; Brant M. Weinstein; Jeffrey A. Whitsett; Mary C. Williams

The purpose of the workshop was to identify still obscure or novel cellular components of the lung, to determine cell function in lung development and in health that impacts on disease, and to decide promising avenues for future research to extract and phenotype these cells. Since robust technologies are now available to identify, sort, purify, culture, and phenotype cells, progress is now within sight to unravel the origins and functional capabilities of lung cells in developmental stages and in disease. The Workshops agenda was to first discuss the lungs embryologic development, including progenitor and stem cells, and then assess the functional and structural cells in three main compartments of the lung: (1) airway cells in bronchial and bronchiolar epithelium and bronchial glands (basal, secretory, ciliated, Clara, and neuroendocrine cells); (2) alveolar unit cells (Type 1 cells, Type 2 cells, and fibroblasts in the interstitium); and (3) pulmonary vascular cells (endothelial cells from different vascular structures, smooth muscle cells, and adventitial fibroblasts). The main recommendations were to: (1) characterize with better cell markers, both surface and nonsurface, the various cells within the lung, including progenitor cells and stem cells; (2) obtain more knowledge about gene expression in specific cell types in health and disease, which will provide insights into biological and pathologic processes; (3) develop more methodologies for cell culture, isolation, sorting, co-culture, and immortalization; and (4) promote tissue banks to facilitate the procurement of tissue from normal and from diseased lung for analysis at all levels.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2011

Human bronchial epithelial cells differentiate to 3D glandular acini on basement membrane matrix.

Xiaofang Wu; Jennifer Peters-Hall; Sumit Bose; Maria T. Pena; Mary C. Rose

To create a model system that investigates mechanisms resulting in hyperplasia and hypertrophy of respiratory tract submucosal glands, we developed an in vitro three-dimensional (3D) system wherein normal human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells differentiated into glandular acini when grown on a basement membrane matrix. The differentiation of primary HBE cells into glandular acini was monitored temporally by light microscopy. Apoptosis-induced lumen formation was observed by immunofluorescence analysis. The acinar cells expressed and secreted MUC5B mucin (marker for glandular mucous cells) and lysozyme, lactoferrin, and zinc-α2-glycoprotein (markers for glandular serous cells) at Day 22. β-Tubulin IV, a marker for ciliated cells, was not detected. Expression of mucous and serous cell markers in HBE glandular acini demonstrated that HBE cells grown on a basement membrane matrix differentiated into acini that exhibit molecular characteristics of respiratory tract glandular acinar cells. Inhibition studies with neutralizing antibodies resulted in a marked decrease in size of the spheroids at Day 7, demonstrating that laminin (a major component of the basement membrane matrix), the cell surface receptor integrin α6, and the cell junction marker E-cadherin have functional roles in HBE acinar morphogenesis. No significant variability was detected in the average size of glandular acini formed by HBE cells from two normal individuals. These results demonstrated that this in vitro model system is reproducible, stable, and potentially useful for studies of glandular differentiation and hyperplasia.


Laryngoscope | 2008

Cigarette Smoke Activates NFκB and Induces Muc5b Expression in Mouse Middle Ear Cells

Diego Preciado; Jezhin Lin; Beverly Wuertz; Mary C. Rose

Objectives: Cigarette smoke exposure is a significant risk factor in the development of otitis media (OM). Nuclear factor kappa B (NF‐κB) is a ubiquitous transcription factor known to mediate cigarette smoke effects on gene regulation in multiple cell types. The MUC5B mucin gene contains several putative NF‐κB sites in its promoter and is the predominant mucin expressed in human OM. We hypothesized that in vitro stimulation of a recently developed model system, murine middle ear epithelial cells (MEEC), with cigarette smoke condensate (CSC) activates NF‐κB and subsequently induces Muc5b gene expression.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2015

Quantitative Proteomics Reveals an Altered Cystic Fibrosis In Vitro Bronchial Epithelial Secretome

Jennifer Peters-Hall; Kristy J. Brown; Dinesh K. Pillai; Amarel Tomney; Lindsay M. Garvin; Xiaofang Wu; Mary C. Rose

Alterations in epithelial secretions and mucociliary clearance contribute to chronic bacterial infection in cystic fibrosis (CF) lung disease, but whether CF lungs are unchanged in the absence of infection remains controversial. A proteomic comparison of airway secretions from subjects with CF and control subjects shows alterations in key biological processes, including immune response and proteolytic activity, but it is unclear if these are due to mutant CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) and/or chronic infection. We hypothesized that the CF lung apical secretome is altered under constitutive conditions in the absence of inflammatory cells and pathogens. To test this, we performed quantitative proteomics of in vitro apical secretions from air-liquid interface cultures of three life-extended CF (ΔF508/ΔF508) and three non-CF human bronchial epithelial cells after labeling of CF cells by stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture. Mass spectrometry analysis identified and quantitated 666 proteins across samples, of which 70 exhibited differential enrichment or depletion in CF secretions (±1.5-fold change; P < 0.05). The key molecular functions were innate immunity (24%), cytoskeleton/extracellular matrix organization (24%), and protease/antiprotease activity (17%). Oxidative proteins and classical complement pathway proteins that are altered in CF secretions in vivo were not altered in vitro. Specific differentially increased proteins-MUC5AC and MUC5B mucins, fibronectin, and matrix metalloproteinase-9-were validated by antibody-based assays. Overall, the in vitro CF secretome data are indicative of a constitutive airway epithelium with altered innate immunity, suggesting that downstream consequences of mutant CFTR set the stage for chronic inflammation and infection in CF airways.

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Alan M. Watson

University of Pittsburgh

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Robert J. Freishtat

Children's National Medical Center

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Angela S. Benton

Children's National Medical Center

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Eric P. Hoffman

Children's National Medical Center

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Diego Preciado

Children's National Medical Center

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Xiaofang Wu

Children's National Medical Center

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Dinesh K. Pillai

Children's National Medical Center

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Geovanny F. Perez

Children's National Medical Center

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