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Dive into the research topics where Marybeth Langer is active.

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Featured researches published by Marybeth Langer.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Bacillus anthracis Peptidoglycan Stimulates an Inflammatory Response in Monocytes through the p38 Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Pathway

Marybeth Langer; Alexander Malykhin; Kenichiro Maeda; Kaushik Chakrabarty; Kelly S. Williamson; Christa L. Feasley; Christopher M. West; Jordan P. Metcalf; K. Mark Coggeshall

We hypothesized that the peptidoglycan component of B. anthracis may play a critical role in morbidity and mortality associated with inhalation anthrax. To explore this issue, we purified the peptidoglycan component of the bacterial cell wall and studied the response of human peripheral blood cells. The purified B. anthracis peptidoglycan was free of non-covalently bound protein but contained a complex set of amino acids probably arising from the stem peptide. The peptidoglycan contained a polysaccharide that was removed by mild acid treatment, and the biological activity remained with the peptidoglycan and not the polysaccharide. The biological activity of the peptidoglycan was sensitive to lysozyme but not other hydrolytic enzymes, showing that the activity resides in the peptidoglycan component and not bacterial DNA, RNA or protein. B. anthracis peptidoglycan stimulated monocytes to produce primarily TNFα; neutrophils and lymphocytes did not respond. Peptidoglycan stimulated monocyte p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase and p38 activity was required for TNFα production by the cells. We conclude that peptidoglycan in B. anthracis is biologically active, that it stimulates a proinflammatory response in monocytes, and uses the p38 kinase signal transduction pathway to do so. Given the high bacterial burden in pulmonary anthrax, these findings suggest that the inflammatory events associated with peptidoglycan may play an important role in anthrax pathogenesis.


Infection and Immunity | 2010

Inflammatory Cytokine Response to Bacillus anthracis Peptidoglycan Requires Phagocytosis and Lysosomal Trafficking

Janaki K. Iyer; Taruna Khurana; Marybeth Langer; Christopher M. West; Jimmy D. Ballard; Jordan P. Metcalf; Tod J. Merkel; K. Mark Coggeshall

ABSTRACT During advanced stages of inhalation anthrax, Bacillus anthracis accumulates at high levels in the bloodstream of the infected host. This bacteremia leads to sepsis during late-stage anthrax; however, the mechanisms through which B. anthracis-derived factors contribute to the pathology of infected hosts are poorly defined. Peptidoglycan, a major component of the cell wall of Gram-positive bacteria, can provoke symptoms of sepsis in animal models. We have previously shown that peptidoglycan of B. anthracis can induce the production of proinflammatory cytokines by cells in human blood. Here, we show that biologically active peptidoglycan is shed from an active culture of encapsulated B. anthracis strain Ames in blood. Peptidoglycan is able to bind to surfaces of responding cells, and internalization of peptidoglycan is required for the production of inflammatory cytokines. We also show that the peptidoglycan traffics to lysosomes, and lysosomal function is required for cytokine production. We conclude that peptidoglycan of B. anthracis is initially bound by an unknown extracellular receptor, is phagocytosed, and traffics to lysosomes, where it is degraded to a product recognized by an intracellular receptor. Binding of the peptidoglycan product to the intracellular receptor causes a proinflammatory response. These findings provide new insight into the mechanism by which B. anthracis triggers sepsis during a critical stage of anthrax disease.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Anti-Peptidoglycan Antibodies and Fcγ Receptors Are the Key Mediators of Inflammation in Gram-Positive Sepsis

Dawei Sun; Brent Raisley; Marybeth Langer; Janaki K. Iyer; Vidya Vedham; Jimmy L. Ballard; Judith A. James; Jordan P. Metcalf; K. Mark Coggeshall

Gram-positive bacteria are an important public health problem, but it is unclear how they cause systemic inflammation in sepsis. Our previous work showed that peptidoglycan (PGN) induced proinflammatory cytokines in human cells by binding to an unknown extracellular receptor, followed by phagocytosis leading to the generation of NOD ligands. In this study, we used flow cytometry to identify host factors that supported PGN binding to immune cells. PGN binding required plasma, and plasma from all tested healthy donors contained IgG recognizing PGN. Plasma depleted of IgG or of anti-PGN Abs did not support PGN binding or PGN-triggered cytokine production. Adding back intact but not F(ab′)2 IgG restored binding and cytokine production. Transfection of HEK293 cells with FcγRIIA enabled PGN binding and phagocytosis. These data establish a key role for anti-PGN IgG and FcγRs in supporting inflammation to a major structural element of Gram-positive bacteria and suggest that anti-PGN IgG contributes to human pathology in Gram-positive sepsis.


Infection and Immunity | 2012

Bacillus anthracis Lethal Toxin Reduces Human Alveolar Epithelial Barrier Function

Marybeth Langer; Elizabeth S. Duggan; J. L. Booth; Vineet I. Patel; Ryan A. Zander; Robert Silasi-Mansat; Vijay Ramani; Tibor Z. Veres; Frauke Prenzler; Katherina Sewald; Daniel M. Williams; K. M. Coggeshall; Shanjana Awasthi; Florea Lupu; Dennis Burian; Jimmy D. Ballard; Armin Braun; Jordan P. Metcalf

ABSTRACT The lung is the site of entry for Bacillus anthracis in inhalation anthrax, the deadliest form of the disease. Bacillus anthracis produces virulence toxins required for disease. Alveolar macrophages were considered the primary target of the Bacillus anthracis virulence factor lethal toxin because lethal toxin inhibits mouse macrophages through cleavage of MEK signaling pathway components, but we have reported that human alveolar macrophages are not a target of lethal toxin. Our current results suggest that, unlike human alveolar macrophages, the cells lining the respiratory units of the lung, alveolar epithelial cells, are a target of lethal toxin in humans. Alveolar epithelial cells expressed lethal toxin receptor protein, bound the protective antigen component of lethal toxin, and were subject to lethal-toxin-induced cleavage of multiple MEKs. These findings suggest that human alveolar epithelial cells are a target of Bacillus anthracis lethal toxin. Further, no reduction in alveolar epithelial cell viability was observed, but lethal toxin caused actin rearrangement and impaired desmosome formation, consistent with impaired barrier function as well as reduced surfactant production. Therefore, by compromising epithelial barrier function, lethal toxin may play a role in the pathogenesis of inhalation anthrax by facilitating the dissemination of Bacillus anthracis from the lung in early disease and promoting edema in late stages of the illness.


Microbes and Infection | 2016

Bacillus anthracis spore movement does not require a carrier cell and is not affected by lethal toxin in human lung models

J. Leland Booth; Elizabeth S. Duggan; Vineet I. Patel; Marybeth Langer; Wenxin Wu; Armin Braun; K. Mark Coggeshall; Jordan P. Metcalf

The lung is the entry site for Bacillus anthracis in inhalation anthrax, the most deadly form of the disease. Spores escape from the alveolus to regional lymph nodes, germinate and enter the circulatory system to cause disease. The roles of carrier cells and the effects of B. anthracis toxins in this process are unclear. We used a human lung organ culture model to measure spore uptake by antigen presenting cells (APC) and alveolar epithelial cells (AEC), spore partitioning between these cells, and the effects of B. anthracis lethal toxin and protective antigen. We repeated the study in a human A549 alveolar epithelial cell model. Most spores remained unassociated with cells, but the majority of cell-associated spores were in AEC, not in APC. Spore movement was not dependent on internalization, although the location of internalized spores changed in both cell types. Spores also internalized in a non-uniform pattern. Toxins affected neither transit of the spores nor the partitioning of spores into AEC and APC. Our results support a model of spore escape from the alveolus that involves spore clustering with transient passage through intact AEC. However, subsequent transport of spores by APC from the lung to the lymph nodes may occur.


Journal of Investigative Medicine | 2016

ID: 106: ALVEOLAR ESCAPE BY BACILLUS ANTHRACIS SPORES DOES NOT REQUIRE A CARRIER CELL AND IS NOT ALTERED BY LETHAL TOXIN

J. L. Booth; Elizabeth S. Duggan; Vineet I. Patel; Jordan P. Metcalf; Marybeth Langer; K. M. Coggeshall; Armin Braun

Rationale The lung is the entry site for Bacillus anthracis in inhalation anthrax, the most deadly form of the disease. B. anthracis spores must escape from the alveolus, pass to the regional lymph nodes, germinate and enter the circulatory system as vegetative bacteria to cause systemic disease. Of the resident lung cells, three have been reported to take up B. anthracis spores: the antigen presenting cells (APC) alveolar macrophages and dendritic cells, and alveolar epithelial cells (AEC). Also, B. anthracis produces the exotoxins lethal factor and protective antigen (PA) which combine to form lethal toxin (LT), a metalloproteinase important in pathogenicity. The roles of carrier cells and the effects of B. anthracis toxins in escape of spores from the alveolus are unclear, especially in humans. Methods We employed a human lung organ culture model and a human A549 alveolar epithelial cell culture model, along with fluorescent confocal imaging to quantitate spore partitioning between APC and AEC, and the effects of B. anthracis LT and PA on this process. Cell types were distinguished by positive staining for HLA-DR (APC) and cytokeratin (AEC). Results We found that spores progressed through the lung slice over time, and that spore movement was not dependent on cell internalization. Both free and cell-associated spores moved through slices between 2 and 48 hrs of incubation. However, partitioning of spores between AEC, APC, and the extracellular space did not significantly change over this time. After 2 hrs, 4.7% of spores were in APC; 13.8% in AEC; and 81.5% were not cell-associated. By 48 hrs, 2.9% were in APC; 12.7% were in AEC; and 84.4% were not cell-associated. Spores also internalized in a non-uniform manner, with more variable spore internalization into AEC than into APC. At all incubation times, the majority of cell-associated spores were in AEC, not in APC. PA and LT did not affect transit of the spores through the lung tissue or the distribution of spores into AEC and APC. In A549 cells, spore internalization increased significantly after 24 hrs incubation. However, there was no statistically consistent effects of PA or LT on spore internalization in A549 cells. Conclusions Overall, our results support a “Jailbreak”-like model of spore escape from the alveolus that involves transient passage of spores, although this occurs through intact AEC. However, subsequent transport of spores by APC from the lung to the lymph nodes may occur.


Archive | 2005

Microarray database system

Tyrell Conway; Joe E. Grissom; Jilin Han; Jonathan D. Wren; Minghua Yao; Marybeth Langer; Matt Traxler; Dong E. Chang


DNA and Cell Biology | 2004

Simulated annealing of microarray data reduces noise and enables cross-experimental comparisons

Jonathan D. Wren; Minghua Yao; Marybeth Langer; Tyrrell Conway


Blood | 2015

Complement C5 Inhibition Blocks the Cytokine Storm and Consumptive Coagulopathy By Decreasing Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) Release in E. coli Sepsis

Ravi S. Keshari; Robert Silasi-Mansat; Narcis I. Popescu; Marybeth Langer; Hala Chaaban; Cristina Lupu; Mark K. Coggeshall; Steven J. DeMarco; Florea Lupu


american thoracic society international conference | 2012

Isolation And Characterization Of Human Lung Phagocytic Subsets

Vineet I. Patel; J. L. Booth; Elizabeth S. Duggan; Marybeth Langer; K. M. Coggeshall; Jordan P. Metcalf

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Jordan P. Metcalf

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Elizabeth S. Duggan

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Vineet I. Patel

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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J. L. Booth

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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K. M. Coggeshall

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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K. Mark Coggeshall

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Florea Lupu

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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J. Leland Booth

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Robert Silasi-Mansat

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Wenxin Wu

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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