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Dive into the research topics where Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou is active.

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Featured researches published by Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou.


Stem Cells | 2001

The SDF‐1‐CXCR4 Axis Stimulates VEGF Secretion and Activates Integrins but does not Affect Proliferation and Survival in Lymphohematopoietic Cells

Jacek Kijowski; Monika Baj-Krzyworzeka; Marcin Majka; Ryan Reca; Leah A. Marquez; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou; Anna Janowska-Wieczorek; Mariusz Z. Ratajczak

To better define the role HIV‐related chemokine receptor‐chemokine axes play in human hematopoiesis, we investigated the function of the CXCR4 and CCR5 receptors in human myeloid, T‐ and B‐lymphoid cell lines selected for the expression of these receptors (CXCR4+, CXCR4+ CCR5+, and CCR5+ cell lines). We evaluated the phosphorylation of MAPK p42/44, AKT, and STAT proteins and examined the ability of the ligands for these receptors (stromal‐derived factor‐1 [SDF‐1] and macrophage inflammatory protein‐1β [MIP‐1β]) to influence cell growth, apoptosis, adhesion, and production of vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGF), matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) and their tissue inhibitors (TIMPs) in these cell lines. We found that A) SDF‐1, after binding to CXCR4, activates multiple signaling pathways and that in comparison with the MIP‐1β‐CCR5 axis, plays a privileged role in hematopoiesis; B) SDF‐1 activation of the MAPK p42/44 pathway and the PI‐3K‐AKT axis does not affect proliferation and apoptosis but modulates integrin‐mediated adhesion to fibronectin, and C) SDF‐1 induces secretion of VEGF, but not of MMPs or TIMPs. Thus the role of SDF‐1 relates primarily to the interaction of lymphohematopoietic cells with their microenvironment and does not directly influence their proliferation or survival. We conclude that perturbation of the SDF‐1‐CXCR4 axis during HIV infection may affect interactions of hematopoietic cells with the hematopoietic microenvironment.


Nature Biotechnology | 2003

Immunotargeting of catalase to the pulmonary endothelium alleviates oxidative stress and reduces acute lung transplantation injury

Benjamin D. Kozower; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou; Thomas Sweitzer; Silvia Muro; Donald G. Buerk; Charalambos C. Solomides; Steven M. Albelda; G. Alexander Patterson; Vladimir R. Muzykantov

Vascular immunotargeting may facilitate the rapid and specific delivery of therapeutic agents to endothelial cells. We investigated whether targeting of an antioxidant enzyme, catalase, to the pulmonary endothelium alleviates oxidative stress in an in vivo model of lung transplantation. Intravenously injected enzymes, conjugated with an antibody to platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1, accumulate in the pulmonary vasculature and retain their activity during prolonged cold storage and transplantation. Immunotargeting of catalase to donor rats augments the antioxidant capacity of the pulmonary endothelium, reduces oxidative stress, ameliorates ischemia-reperfusion injury, prolongs the acceptable cold ischemia period of lung grafts, and improves the function of transplanted lung grafts. These findings validate the therapeutic potential of vascular immunotargeting as a drug delivery strategy to reduce endothelial injury. Potential applications of this strategy include improving the outcome of clinical lung transplantation and treating a wide variety of endothelial disorders.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Antibodies Against the First Ig-Like Domain of Human Platelet Endothelial Cell Adhesion Molecule-1 (PECAM-1) That Inhibit PECAM-1-Dependent Homophilic Adhesion Block In Vivo Neutrophil Recruitment

Marian T. Nakada; Kunjlata M. Amin; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou; Christopher D. O’Brien; Jing Sun; Indira Gurubhagavatula; George A. Heavner; Alexander H. Taylor; Cathy Paddock; Qi-Hong Sun; James L. Zehnder; Peter J. Newman; Steven M. Albelda; Horace M. DeLisser

Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM-1), a member of the Ig superfamily, is found on endothelial cells and neutrophils and has been shown to be involved in the migration of leukocytes across the endothelium. Adhesion is mediated, at least in part, through binding interactions involving its first N-terminal Ig-like domain, but it is still unclear which sequences in this domain are required for in vivo function. Therefore, to identify functionally important regions of the first Ig-like domain of PECAM-1 that are required for the participation of PECAM-1 in in vivo neutrophil recruitment, a panel of mAbs against this region of PECAM-1 was generated and characterized in in vitro adhesion assays and in an in vivo model of cutaneous inflammation. It was observed that mAbs that disrupted PECAM-1-dependent homophilic adhesion in an L cell aggregation assay also blocked TNF-α-induced intradermal accumulation of neutrophils in a transmigration model using human skin transplanted onto SCID mice. Localization of the epitopes of these Abs indicated that these function-blocking Abs mapped to specific regions on either face of domain 1. This suggests that these regions of the first Ig-like domain may contain or be close to binding sites involved in PECAM-1-dependent homophilic adhesion, and thus may represent potential targets for the development of antiinflammatory reagents.


Radiation Research | 2010

Dietary Curcumin Increases Antioxidant Defenses in Lung, Ameliorates Radiation-Induced Pulmonary Fibrosis, and Improves Survival in Mice

James C. Lee; Paul A. Kinniry; Evguenia Arguiri; Matthew Serota; Stathis Kanterakis; Shampa Chatterjee; Charalambos Solomides; Prashanthi Javvadi; Constantinos Koumenis; Keith A. Cengel; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou

Abstract The effectiveness of lung radiotherapy is limited by radiation tolerance of normal tissues and by the intrinsic radiosensitivity of lung cancer cells. The chemopreventive agent curcumin has known antioxidant and tumor cell radiosensitizing properties. Its usefulness in preventing radiation-induced pneumonopathy has not been tested previously. We evaluated dietary curcumin in radiation-induced pneumonopathy and lung tumor regression in a murine model. Mice were given 1% or 5% (w/w) dietary curcumin or control diet prior to irradiation and for the duration of the experiment. Lungs were evaluated at 3 weeks after irradiation for acute lung injury and inflammation by evaluating bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluid content for proteins, neutrophils and at 4 months for pulmonary fibrosis. In a separate series of experiments, an orthotopic model of lung cancer using intravenously injected Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cells was used to exclude possible tumor radioprotection by dietary curcumin. In vitro, curcumin boosted antioxidant defenses by increasing heme oxygenase 1 (HO-1) levels in primary lung endothelial and fibroblast cells and blocked radiation-induced generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Dietary curcumin significantly increased HO-1 in lungs as early as after 1 week of feeding, coinciding with a steady-state level of curcumin in plasma. Although both 1% and 5% w/w dietary curcumin exerted physiological changes in lung tissues by significantly decreasing LPS-induced TNF-α production in lungs, only 5% dietary curcumin significantly improved survival of mice after irradiation and decreased radiation-induced lung fibrosis. Importantly, dietary curcumin did not protect LLC pulmonary metastases from radiation killing. Thus dietary curcumin ameliorates radiation-induced pulmonary fibrosis and increases mouse survival while not impairing tumor cell killing by radiation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

The von Hippel–Lindau Chuvash mutation promotes pulmonary hypertension and fibrosis in mice

Michele M. Hickey; Theresa Richardson; Tao Wang; Matias Mosqueira; Evguenia Arguiri; Hongwei Yu; Qian-Chun Yu; Charalambos Solomides; Edward E. Morrisey; Tejvir S. Khurana; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou; M. Celeste Simon

Mutation of the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) tumor suppressor protein at codon 200 (R200W) is associated with a disease known as Chuvash polycythemia. In addition to polycythemia, Chuvash patients have pulmonary hypertension and increased respiratory rates, although the pathophysiological basis of these symptoms is unclear. Here we sought to address this issue by studying mice homozygous for the R200W Vhl mutation (VhlR/R mice) as a model for Chuvash disease. These mice developed pulmonary hypertension independently of polycythemia and enhanced normoxic respiration similar to Chuvash patients, further validating VhlR/R mice as a model for Chuvash disease. Lungs from VhlR/R mice exhibited pulmonary vascular remodeling, hemorrhage, edema, and macrophage infiltration, and lungs from older mice also exhibited fibrosis. HIF-2alpha activity was increased in lungs from VhlR/R mice, and heterozygosity for Hif2a, but not Hif1a, genetically suppressed both the polycythemia and pulmonary hypertension in the VhlR/R mice. Furthermore, Hif2a heterozygosity resulted in partial protection against vascular remodeling, hemorrhage, and edema, but not inflammation, in VhlR/R lungs, suggesting a selective role for HIF-2alpha in the pulmonary pathology and thereby providing insight into the mechanisms underlying pulmonary hypertension. These findings strongly support a dependency of the Chuvash phenotype on HIF-2alpha and suggest potential treatments for Chuvash patients.


Treatments in Respiratory Medicine | 2006

Antioxidant strategies in respiratory medicine.

Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou; Vladimir R. Muzykantov

Pulmonary oxidant stress plays an important pathogenetic role in disease conditions including acute lung injury/adult respiratory distress syndrome (ALI/ARDS), hyperoxia, ischemia-reperfusion, sepsis, radiation injury, lung transplantation, COPD, and inflammation. Reactive oxygen species (ROS), released from activated macrophages and leukocytes or formed in the pulmonary epithelial and endothelial cells, damage the lungs and initiate cascades of pro-inflammatory reactions propagating pulmonary and systemic stress. Diverse molecules including small organic compounds (e.g. gluthatione, tocopherol (vitamin E), flavonoids) serve as natural antioxidants that reduce oxidized cellular components, decompose ROS and detoxify toxic oxidation products. Antioxidant enzymes can either facilitate these antioxidant reactions (e.g. peroxidases using glutathione as a reducing agent) or directly decompose ROS (e.g. Superoxide dismutases [SOD] and catalase). Many antioxidant agents are being tested for treatment of pulmonary oxidant stress. The administration of small antioxidants via the oral, intratracheal and vascular routes for the treatment of short- and long-term oxidant stress showed rather modest protective effects in animal and human studies. Intratracheal and intravascular administration of antioxidant enzymes are being currently tested for the treatment of acute oxidant stress. For example, intratracheal administration of recombinant human SOD is protective in premature infants exposed to hyperoxia. However, animal and human studies show that more effective delivery of drugs to cells experiencing oxidant stress is needed to improve protection. Diverse delivery systems for antioxidants including liposomes, chemical modifications (e.g. attachment of masking pegylated [PEG]-groups) and coupling to affinity carriers (e.g. antibodies against cellular adhesion molecules) are being employed and currently tested, mostly in animal and, to a limited extent, in humans, for the treatment of oxidant stress. Further studies are needed, however, in order to develop and establish effective applications of pulmonary antioxidant interventions useful in clinical practice. Although beyond the scope of this review, antioxidant gene therapies may eventually provide a strategy for the management of subacute and chronic pulmonary oxidant stress.


Cancer Biology & Therapy | 2009

Dietary flaxseed prevents radiation-induced oxidative lung damage, inflammation and fibrosis in a mouse model of thoracic radiation injury

Jimmy Lee; Ryan Krochak; Aaron Blouin; Stathis Kanterakis; Shampa Chatterjee; Evguenia Arguiri; Anil Vachani; Charalambos Solomides; Keith A. Cengel; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou

Flaxseed (FS) has high contents of omega-3 fatty acids and lignans with antioxidant properties. Its use in preventing thoracic X-ray radiation therapy (XRT)-induced pneumonopathy has never been evaluated. We evaluated FS supplementation given to mice given before and post-XRT. FS-derived lignans, known for their direct antioxidant properties, were evaluated in abrogating ROS generation in cultured endothelial cells following gamma radiation exposure. Mice were fed 10% FS or isocaloric control diet for three weeks and given 13.5 Gy thoracic XRT. Lungs were evaluated at 24 hours for markers of radiation-induced injury, three weeks for acute lung damage (lipid peroxidation, lung edema and inflammation), and at four months for late lung damage (inflammation and fibrosis). FS-Lignans blunted ROS generation in vitro, resulting from radiation in a dose-dependent manner. FS-fed mice had reduced expression of lung injury biomarkers (Bax, p21, and TGF-beta1) at 24 hours following XRT and reduced oxidative lung damage as measured by malondialdehyde (MDA) levels at 3 weeks following XRT. In addition, FS-fed mice had decreased lung fibrosis as determined by hydroxyproline content and decreased inflammatory cell influx into lungs at 4 months post XRT. Importantly, when Lewis Lung carcinoma cells were injected systemically in mice, FS dietary supplementation did not appear to protect lung tumors from responding to thoracic XRT. Dietary FS is protective against pulmonary fibrosis, inflammation and oxidative lung damage in a murine model. Moreover, in this model, tumor radioprotection was not observed. FS lignans exhibited potent radiation-induced ROS scavenging action. Taken together, these data suggest that dietary flaxseed may be clinically useful as an agent to increase the therapeutic index of thoracic XRT by increasing the radiation tolerance of lung tissues.


Angiogenesis | 1999

Antibody against murine PECAM-1 inhibits tumor angiogenesis in mice.

Zhao Zhou; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou; Cecilia Garlanda; Horace M. DeLisser

Platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule (PECAM-1/CD31), a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily expressed at high levels on endothelial cells, has been recently implicated in angiogenesis. Although antagonism of PECAM-1 inhibited neovascularization in two different animal models of growth factor/chemokine-induced angiogenesis, its participation in tumor angiogenesis has not been established. We therefore investigated its involvement in models of tumor angiogenesis in mice. An antibody against murine PECAM-1 that was shown to block in vitro murine endothelial tube formation inhibited the subcutaneous growth and tumor vascularity of three tumors in mice: A549 human non-small cell lung cancer in SCID mice, B16 murine melanoma in C57BL/6 mice and AB12 murine mesothelioma in Balb/c mice. These studies suggest a possible role for PECAM-1 in the complex process of tumor angiogenesis and provide additional evidence of the importance of endothelial cell adhesion molecules to the formation of new vessels.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009

Targeted detoxification of selected reactive oxygen species in the vascular endothelium.

Vladimir V. Shuvaev; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou; F.Y. Bhora; Karine Laude; Hua Cai; Sergei Dikalov; Evguenia Arguiri; Charalambos Solomides; Steven M. Albelda; David G. Harrison; Vladimir R. Muzykantov

Oxidative stress underlies diverse vascular diseases, but its management remains elusive, in part because of our inability to selectively detoxify reactive oxygen species (ROS) in pathological sites and our limited understanding which species need to be eliminated. The antioxidant enzymes (AOEs) superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase (which decompose and H2O2, respectively), conjugated with an antibody to platelet-endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 (PECAM-1), bind to endothelial cells and alleviate oxidative stress in cell culture models. Here, we studied the effects of these antioxidant conjugates in mouse models of vascular oxidative stress. Anti-PECAM/catalase and anti-PECAM/SOD conjugates, in contrast to control IgG/AOE conjugates, accumulated in the lungs and vascularized organs after intravenous injection in wild-type, but not PECAM KO mice. Anti-PECAM/catalase, but not anti-PECAM/SOD, protected mice from lung injury induced by H2O2 produced by glucose oxidase deposited in the pulmonary vasculature. Anti-PECAM/catalase also reduced alveolar edema and attenuated decline in arterial oxygen in mice that underwent unilateral lung ischemia/reperfusion, whereas anti-PECAM/SOD was not effective, implying the key role of H2O2 in tissue damage in this pathology. In contrast, anti-PECAM/SOD, but not anti-PECAM/catalase prevented oxidation of tetrahydrobiopterin and normalized vasoreactivity in the vessels of mice rendered hypertensive by pretreatment with angiotensin-II. This outcome agrees with reports implicating superoxide and peroxynitrite in altered endothelium-dependent vasodilatation in hypertension. Therefore, the use of endothelial cell-targeted antioxidants identifies the key specific species of ROS involved in various forms of vascular disease and holds promise for the mechanistically tailored treatment of these pathologies.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2010

Neutrophil α-Defensins Cause Lung Injury by Disrupting the Capillary–Epithelial Barrier

Khalil Bdeir; Abd Al-Roof Higazi; Irina Kulikovskaya; Melpo Christofidou-Solomidou; Sergei A. Vinogradov; Timothy Craig Allen; Steven Idell; Rose Linzmeier; Tomas Ganz; Douglas B. Cines

RATIONALE The involvement of neutrophil activation in the sentinel, potentially reversible, events in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury (ALI) is only partially understood. alpha-Defensins are the most abundant proteins secreted by activated human neutrophils, but their contribution to ALI in mouse models is hindered by their absence from murine neutrophils and the inability to study their effects in isolation in other species. OBJECTIVES To study the role of alpha-defensins in the pathogenesis of ALI in a clinically relevant setting using mice transgenic for polymorphonuclear leukocyte expression of alpha-defensins. METHODS Transgenic mice expressing polymorphonuclear leukocyte alpha-defensins were generated. ALI was induced by acid aspiration. Pulmonary vascular permeability was studied in vivo using labeled dextran and fibrin deposition. The role of the low-density lipoprotein-related receptor (LRP) in permeability was examined. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Acid aspiration induced neutrophil migration and release of alpha-defensins into lung parenchyma and airways. ALI was more severe in alpha-defensin-expressing mice than in wild-type mice, as determined by inspection, influx of neutrophils into the interstitial space and airways, histological evidence of epithelial injury, interstitial edema, extravascular fibrin deposition, impaired oxygenation, and reduced survival. Within 4 hours of insult, alpha-defensin-expressing mice showed greater disruption of capillary-epithelial barrier function and ALI that was attenuated by systemic or intratracheal administration of specific inhibitors of the LRP. CONCLUSIONS alpha-Defensins mediate ALI through LRP-mediated loss of capillary-epithelial barrier function, suggesting a potential new approach to intervention.

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Evguenia Arguiri

University of Pennsylvania

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Steven M. Albelda

University of Pennsylvania

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Keith A. Cengel

University of Pennsylvania

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Sonia Tyagi

University of Pennsylvania

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Floyd Dukes

University of Pennsylvania

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Jimmy Lee

University of Pennsylvania

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