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Featured researches published by Ming-Yuan Jian.


Science Translational Medicine | 2012

An Orally Active TRPV4 Channel Blocker Prevents and Resolves Pulmonary Edema Induced by Heart Failure

Kevin S. Thorneloe; Mui Cheung; Weike Bao; Hasan Alsaid; Stephen C. Lenhard; Ming-Yuan Jian; Melissa H. Costell; Kristeen Maniscalco-Hauk; John A. Krawiec; Alan R. Olzinski; Earl Gordon; Irina M. Lozinskaya; Lou Elefante; Pu Qin; Daniel S. Matasic; Chris James; James Tunstead; Brian T. Donovan; Lorena A. Kallal; Anna Waszkiewicz; Kalindi Vaidya; Elizabeth A. Davenport; J. Larkin; Mark Burgert; Linda N. Casillas; Robert W. Marquis; Guosen Ye; Hilary Schenck Eidam; Krista B. Goodman; John R. Toomey

Transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels are expressed in human heart failure lungs, which can be blocked to prevent and resolve heart failure–induced pulmonary edema. Ion Channel Blockade Prevents Pulmonary Edema Heart failure affects not only the heart and vessels but also the lungs. As blood pressure builds up in the lung’s vessels, fluid leaks into the lungs. Treatment options are limited for these patients, mostly because the mechanism underlying pulmonary edema is unclear. Here, Thorneloe and colleagues implicate the activation of the transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) ion channel in the onset of edema during heart failure and show that a small-molecule drug can prevent such leakage. Activation of the ion channel TRPV4 results in pulmonary edema in animal lungs. The authors first confirmed that TRPV4 was expressed in normal human lungs and then demonstrated that it was increased in lung tissue from patients with a history of congestive heart failure. Using a small-molecule screen, Thorneloe et al. discovered GSK2193874. In human cells in vitro and mouse lungs ex vivo, the small molecule effectively blocked TRPV4 channels to maintain endothelial (vessel) layer integrity. A related study by Huh et al. (this issue) shows that the drug indeed prevents vascular leakage of human cell cultures in vitro. The GSK2193874 analog GSK2263095 displayed similar activity in canine lungs ex vivo. In vivo in rat models of heart failure, the authors found that the drug was effective in both preventing and reversing pulmonary edema. The molecule only protected against lung permeability at high (pathological) pulmonary venous pressure. Thorneloe and colleagues showed that GSK2193874 blocked TRPV4 activity across species, including in human cells, without adversely affecting heart rate or arterial pressure. This suggests that TRPV4 blockers might be used therapeutically to treat patients with heart failure–induced pulmonary edema. Pulmonary edema resulting from high pulmonary venous pressure (PVP) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in heart failure (HF) patients, but current treatment options demonstrate substantial limitations. Recent evidence from rodent lungs suggests that PVP-induced edema is driven by activation of pulmonary capillary endothelial transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels. To examine the therapeutic potential of this mechanism, we evaluated TRPV4 expression in human congestive HF lungs and developed small-molecule TRPV4 channel blockers for testing in animal models of HF. TRPV4 immunolabeling of human lung sections demonstrated expression of TRPV4 in the pulmonary vasculature that was enhanced in sections from HF patients compared to controls. GSK2193874 was identified as a selective, orally active TRPV4 blocker that inhibits Ca2+ influx through recombinant TRPV4 channels and native endothelial TRPV4 currents. In isolated rodent and canine lungs, TRPV4 blockade prevented the increased vascular permeability and resultant pulmonary edema associated with elevated PVP. Furthermore, in both acute and chronic HF models, GSK2193874 pretreatment inhibited the formation of pulmonary edema and enhanced arterial oxygenation. Finally, GSK2193874 treatment resolved pulmonary edema already established by myocardial infarction in mice. These findings identify a crucial role for TRPV4 in the formation of HF-induced pulmonary edema and suggest that TRPV4 blockade is a potential therapeutic strategy for HF patients.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2010

TRPV4 channels augment macrophage activation and ventilator-induced lung injury

Kazutoshi Hamanaka; Ming-Yuan Jian; Mary I. Townsley; Judy A. King; Wolfgang Liedtke; David S. Weber; Fabien G. Eyal; Mary M. Clapp; James C. Parker

We have previously implicated transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) channels and alveolar macrophages in initiating the permeability increase in response to high peak inflation pressure (PIP) ventilation. Alveolar macrophages were harvested from TRPV4(-/-) and TRPV4(+/+) mice and instilled in the lungs of mice of the opposite genotype. Filtration coefficients (K(f)) measured in isolated perfused lungs after ventilation with successive 30-min periods of 9, 25, and 35 cmH(2)O PIP did not significantly increase in lungs from TRPV4(-/-) mice but increased >2.2-fold in TRPV4(+/+) lungs, TRPV4(+/+) lungs instilled with TRPV4(-/-) macrophages, and TRPV4(-/-) lungs instilled with TRPV4(+/+) macrophages after ventilation with 35 cmH(2)O PIP. Activation of TRPV4 with 4-alpha-phorbol didecanoate (4alphaPDD) significantly increased intracellular calcium, superoxide, and nitric oxide production in TRPV4(+/+) macrophages but not TRPV4(-/-) macrophages. Cross-sectional areas increased nearly 3-fold in TRPV4(+/+) macrophages compared with TRPV4(-/-) macrophages after 4alphaPDD. Immunohistochemistry staining of lung tissue for nitrotyrosine revealed increased amounts in high PIP ventilated TRPV4(+/+) lungs compared with low PIP ventilated TRPV4(+/+) or high PIP ventilated TRPV4(-/-) lungs. Thus TRPV4(+/+) macrophages restored susceptibility of TRPV4(-/-) lungs to mechanical injury. A TRPV4 agonist increased intracellular calcium and reactive oxygen and nitrogen species in harvested TRPV4(+/+) macrophages but not TRPV4(-/-) macrophages. K(f) increases correlated with tissue nitrotyrosine, a marker of peroxynitrite production.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2009

Ca2+ entry via α1G and TRPV4 channels differentially regulates surface expression of P-selectin and barrier integrity in pulmonary capillary endothelium

Songwei Wu; Ming-Yuan Jian; Yan-Chun Xu; Chun Zhou; Abu-Bakr Al-Mehdi; Wolfgang Liedtke; Hee-Sup Shin; Mary I. Townsley

Pulmonary vascular endothelial cells express a variety of ion channels that mediate Ca(2+) influx in response to diverse environmental stimuli. However, it is not clear whether Ca(2+) influx from discrete ion channels is functionally coupled to specific outcomes. Thus we conducted a systematic study in mouse lung to address whether the alpha(1G) T-type Ca(2+) channel and the transient receptor potential channel TRPV4 have discrete functional roles in pulmonary capillary endothelium. We used real-time fluorescence imaging for endothelial cytosolic Ca(2+), immunohistochemistry to probe for surface expression of P-selectin, and the filtration coefficient to specifically measure lung endothelial permeability. We demonstrate that membrane depolarization via exposure of pulmonary vascular endothelium to a high-K(+) perfusate induces Ca(2+) entry into alveolar septal endothelial cells and exclusively leads to the surface expression of P-selectin. In contrast, Ca(2+) entry in septal endothelium evoked by the selective TRPV4 activator 4alpha-phorbol-12,13-didecanoate (4alpha-PDD) specifically increases lung endothelial permeability without effect on P-selectin expression. Pharmacological blockade or knockout of alpha(1G) abolishes depolarization-induced Ca(2+) entry and surface expression of P-selectin but does not prevent 4alpha-PDD-activated Ca(2+) entry and the resultant increase in permeability. Conversely, blockade or knockout of TRPV4 specifically abolishes 4alpha-PDD-activated Ca(2+) entry and the increase in permeability, while not impacting depolarization-induced Ca(2+) entry and surface expression of P-selectin. We conclude that in alveolar septal capillaries Ca(2+) entry through alpha(1G) and TRPV4 channels differentially and specifically regulates the transition of endothelial procoagulant phenotype and barrier integrity, respectively.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2007

TRPV4 initiates the acute calcium-dependent permeability increase during ventilator-induced lung injury in isolated mouse lungs

Kazutoshi Hamanaka; Ming-Yuan Jian; David S. Weber; Diego F. Alvarez; Mary I. Townsley; Abu B. Al-Mehdi; Judy A. King; Wolfgang Liedtke; James C. Parker


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2008

High vascular pressure-induced lung injury requires P450 epoxygenase-dependent activation of TRPV4.

Ming-Yuan Jian; Judy A. King; Abu-Bakr Al-Mehdi; Wolfgang Liedtke; Mary I. Townsley


The FASEB Journal | 2007

High vascular pressure leads to P450 epoxygenase-dependent TRPV4 activation and endothelial injury in mouse lung

Ming-Yuan Jian; Wolfgang Liedtke; Mary I. Townsley


Archive | 2016

ventilator-induced lung injury TRPV4 channels augment macrophage activation and

David S. Weber; Fabien G. Eyal; Mary M. Clapp; James C. Parker; Kazutoshi Hamanaka; Ming-Yuan Jian; Mary I. Townsley; Judy A. King


Archive | 2015

injurymodulate airway pressure-induced lung Phosphotyrosine phosphatase and tyrosine kinase

James C. Parker; Claire L. Ivey; Allan Tucker; Abu B. Al-Mehdi; Judy A. King; Kazutoshi Hamanaka; Ming-Yuan Jian; David S. Weber; Diego F. Alvarez; Mary I. Townsley; Takashige Miyahara; Mircea Anghelescu; James R. Frost


Circulation | 2011

Abstract 13510: Discovery of Orally Active Transient Receptor Potential Vanilloid 4 (TRPV4) Blockers for the Treatment of Pulmonary Edema in Heart Failure

Kevin S. Thorneloe; Weike Bao; Hasan Alsaid; Ming-Yuan Jian; Melissa H. Costell; Kristeen Maniscalco; Alan R. Olzinski; Earl Gordon; Irina M. Lozinskaya; Lou Elefante; Pu Qin; Daniel S. Matasic; Lorena A. Kallal; Anna Waszkiewicz; Elizabeth A. Davenport; J. Larkin; Mark Burgert; Hiliary Eidam; Krista B. Goodman; John R. Toomey; Theresa J. Roethke; Beat M. Jucker; Christine G. Schnackenberg; Mui Cheung; Mary I. Townsley; John J. Lepore; Robert N. Willette


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Effect of GSK1016790A, a potent TRPV4 agonist, on lung endothelial permeability

Ming-Yuan Jian; Kevine Thorneloe; Mary I. Townsley

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Mary I. Townsley

University of South Alabama

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Judy A. King

University of Minnesota

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James C. Parker

University of South Alabama

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Kazutoshi Hamanaka

University of South Alabama

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Abu B. Al-Mehdi

University of Pennsylvania

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Abu-Bakr Al-Mehdi

University of South Alabama

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Diego F. Alvarez

University of South Alabama

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Fabien G. Eyal

University of South Alabama

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