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Dive into the research topics where Nathachit Limjunyawong is active.

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Featured researches published by Nathachit Limjunyawong.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Telomere dysfunction causes alveolar stem cell failure

Jonathan K. Alder; Christina E. Barkauskas; Nathachit Limjunyawong; Susan E. Stanley; Frant Kembou; Rubin M. Tuder; Brigid L.M. Hogan; Wayne Mitzner; Mary Armanios

Significance Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema are leading causes of mortality, but there are no effective therapies. Mutations in telomerase are the most common identifiable risk factor for idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. They also predispose to severe emphysema in smokers, occurring at a frequency similar to α-1 antitrypsin deficiency. The work shown here points to alveolar stem cell senescence as a driver of these pathologies. Epithelial stem cell failure was associated with secondary inflammatory recruitment and exquisite susceptibility to injury from “second hits.” The findings suggest that efforts to reverse the stem cell failure state directly, rather than its secondary consequences, may be an effective therapy approach in telomere-mediated lung disease. Telomere syndromes have their most common manifestation in lung disease that is recognized as idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and emphysema. In both conditions, there is loss of alveolar integrity, but the underlying mechanisms are not known. We tested the capacity of alveolar epithelial and stromal cells from mice with short telomeres to support alveolar organoid colony formation and found that type 2 alveolar epithelial cells (AEC2s), the stem cell-containing population, were limiting. When telomere dysfunction was induced in adult AEC2s by conditional deletion of the shelterin component telomeric repeat-binding factor 2, cells survived but remained dormant and showed all the hallmarks of cellular senescence. Telomere dysfunction in AEC2s triggered an immune response, and this was associated with AEC2-derived up-regulation of cytokine signaling pathways that are known to provoke inflammation in the lung. Mice uniformly died after challenge with bleomycin, underscoring an essential role for telomere function in AEC2s for alveolar repair. Our data show that alveoloar progenitor senescence is sufficient to recapitulate the regenerative defects, inflammatory responses, and susceptibility to injury that are characteristic of telomere-mediated lung disease. They suggest alveolar stem cell failure is a driver of telomere-mediated lung disease and that efforts to reverse it may be clinically beneficial.


Physiological Reports | 2014

A mouse model of chronic idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis

Nathachit Limjunyawong; Wayne Mitzner; Maureen R. Horton

Chronic idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a progressive, fatal, and untreatable disease with unclear etiology. There are few models of this chronic pathology, and although delivery of bleomycin to induce acute lung injury is the most common animal model of pulmonary fibrosis, there is considerable uncertainty about whether this acute injury resolves in those animals that survive. In this report, we have systematically followed groups of mice for up to 6 months following a single insult of bleomycin. We assessed changes in lung function and pathology over this time course, with measurements of the diffusion capacity for carbon monoxide, lung mechanics, quantitative stereology, and collagen. Our results show that, while there is some repair over this extended time course, the injury in the lung never fully resolves. This persistent degree of fibrosis may have similarities to many features of human IPF. Thus, these chronic fibrotic changes in mouse lungs could be a useful model to evaluate potential therapeutic interventions to accelerate repair and possible treat this debilitating disease.


Mucosal Immunology | 2014

Foxp3 + regulatory T cells promote lung epithelial proliferation

Jason R. Mock; Brian T. Garibaldi; Neil R. Aggarwal; J. Jenkins; Nathachit Limjunyawong; Benjamin D. Singer; Eric Chau; R. Rabold; Daniel Clark Files; Venkataramana K. Sidhaye; Wayne Mitzner; E. M. Wagner; Landon S. King; Franco R. D'Alessio

Acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) causes significant morbidity and mortality each year. There is a paucity of information regarding the mechanisms necessary for ARDS resolution. Foxp3+ regulatory T cells (Foxp3+ Treg cells) have been shown to be an important determinant of resolution in an experimental model of lung injury. We demonstrate that intratracheal delivery of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide) elicits alveolar epithelial damage from which the epithelium undergoes proliferation and repair. Epithelial proliferation coincided with an increase in Foxp3+ Treg cells in the lung during the course of resolution. To dissect the role that Foxp3+ Treg cells exert on epithelial proliferation, we depleted Foxp3+ Treg cells, which led to decreased alveolar epithelial proliferation and delayed lung injury recovery. Furthermore, antibody-mediated blockade of CD103, an integrin, which binds to epithelial expressed E-cadherin decreased Foxp3+ Treg numbers and decreased rates of epithelial proliferation after injury. In a non-inflammatory model of regenerative alveologenesis, left lung pneumonectomy, we found that Foxp3+ Treg cells enhanced epithelial proliferation. Moreover, Foxp3+ Treg cells co-cultured with primary type II alveolar cells (AT2) directly increased AT2 cell proliferation in a CD103-dependent manner. These studies provide evidence of a new and integral role for Foxp3+ Treg cells in repair of the lung epithelium.


Environmental and Molecular Mutagenesis | 2014

Alterations of the lung methylome in allergic airway hyper‐responsiveness

Robert Y.S. Cheng; Yan Shang; Nathachit Limjunyawong; Tyna Dao; Sandhya Das; Richard Rabold; James S K Sham; Wayne Mitzner; Wan Yee Tang

Asthma is a chronic airway disorder characterized by recurrent attacks of breathlessness and wheezing, affecting 300 million people around the world (available at: www.who.int). To date, genetic factors associated with asthma susceptibility have been unable to explain the full etiology of asthma. Recent studies have demonstrated that the epigenetic disruption of gene expression plays an equally important role in the development of asthma through interaction with our environment. We sensitized 6‐week‐old C57BL/6J mice with house‐dust‐mite (HDM) extracts intraperitoneally followed by 5 weeks of exposure to HDM challenges (three times a week) intratracheally. HDM‐exposed mice showed an increase in airway hyper‐responsiveness (AHR) and inflammation together with structural remodeling of the airways. We applied methylated DNA immunoprecipitation‐next generation sequencing (MeDIP‐seq) for profiling of DNA methylation changes in the lungs in response to HDM. We observed about 20 million reads by a single‐run of massive parallel sequencing. We performed bioinformatics and pathway analysis on the raw sequencing data to identify differentially methylated candidate genes in HDM‐exposed mice. Specifically, we have revealed that the transforming growth factor beta signaling pathway is epigenetically modulated by chronic exposure to HDM. Here, we demonstrated that a specific allergen may play a role in AHR through an epigenetic mechanism by disrupting the expression of genes in lungs that might be involved in airway inflammation and remodeling. Our findings provide new insights into the potential mechanisms by which environmental allergens induce allergic asthma and such insights may assist in the development of novel preventive and therapeutic options for this debilitative disease. Environ. Mol. Mutagen. 55:244–255, 2014.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2016

Enhanced resolution of experimental ARDS through IL-4-mediated lung macrophage reprogramming.

Franco R. D'Alessio; John M. Craig; Benjamin D. Singer; Daniel Clark Files; Jason R. Mock; Brian T. Garibaldi; Jonathan Fallica; Asutosh Tripathi; Pooja Mandke; Jonathan H. Gans; Nathachit Limjunyawong; Venkataramana K. Sidhaye; Nicola M. Heller; Wayne Mitzner; Landon S. King; Neil R. Aggarwal

Despite intense investigation, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) remains an enormous clinical problem for which no specific therapies currently exist. In this study, we used intratracheal lipopolysaccharide or Pseudomonas bacteria administration to model experimental acute lung injury (ALI) and to further understand mediators of the resolution phase of ARDS. Recent work demonstrates macrophages transition from a predominant proinflammatory M1 phenotype during acute inflammation to an anti-inflammatory M2 phenotype with ALI resolution. We tested the hypothesis that IL-4, a potent inducer of M2-specific protein expression, would accelerate ALI resolution and lung repair through reprogramming of endogenous inflammatory macrophages. In fact, IL-4 treatment was found to offer dramatic benefits following delayed administration to mice subjected to experimental ALI, including increased survival, accelerated resolution of lung injury, and improved lung function. Expression of the M2 proteins Arg1, FIZZ1, and Ym1 was increased in lung tissues following IL-4 treatment, and among macrophages, FIZZ1 was most prominently upregulated in the interstitial subpopulation. A similar trend was observed for the expression of macrophage mannose receptor (MMR) and Dectin-1 on the surface of alveolar macrophages following IL-4 administration. Macrophage depletion or STAT6 deficiency abrogated the therapeutic effect of IL-4. Collectively, these data demonstrate that IL-4-mediated therapeutic macrophage reprogramming can accelerate resolution and lung repair despite delayed use following experimental ALI. IL-4 or other therapies that target late-phase, proresolution pathways may hold promise for the treatment of human ARDS.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2016

Recruited monocytes modulate malaria‐induced lung injury through CD36‐mediated clearance of sequestered infected erythrocytes

H. A. Daniel Lagassé; Ifeanyi U. Anidi; John M. Craig; Nathachit Limjunyawong; Amy K. Poupore; Wayne Mitzner; Alan L. Scott

Pulmonary complications occur in a significant percentage of adults and children during the course of severe malaria. The cellular and molecular innate immune mechanisms that limit the extent of pulmonary inflammation and preserve lung function during severe Plasmodium infections remain unclear. In particular, the contributions to pulmonary complications by parasitized erythrocyte sequestration and subsequent clearance from the lung microvasculature by immune cells have not been clearly defined. We used the Plasmodium berghei ANKA‐C57BL/6 mouse model of severe malaria to investigate the mechanisms governing the nature and extent of malaria‐associated lung injury. We have demonstrated that sequestration of infected erythrocytes on postcapillary endothelial surfaces results in acute lung injury and the rapid recruitment of CCR2+CD11b+Ly6Chi monocytes from the circulation. These recruited cells remain in the lungs as monocyte‐derived macrophages and are instrumental in the phagocytic clearance of adherent Plasmodium berghei‐infected erythrocytes. In contrast, alveolar macrophages do not play a significant role in the clearance of malaria‐infected cells. Furthermore, the results obtained from Ccr2−/−, Cd36−/−, and CD36 bone marrow chimeric mice showed that sequestration in the absence of CD36‐mediated phagocytic clearance by monocytes leads to exaggerated lung pathologic features. In summary, our data indicate that the intensity of malaria‐induced lung pathologic features is proportional to the steady‐state levels of Plasmodium‐infected erythrocytes adhering to the pulmonary vasculature. Moreover, the present work has defined a major role of recruited monocytes in clearing infected erythrocytes from the pulmonary interstitium, thus minimizing lung damage.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2015

Experimental Progressive Emphysema in BALB/cJ Mice as a Model for Chronic Alveolar Destruction In Humans.

Nathachit Limjunyawong; John M. Craig; H. A. Daniel Lagassé; Alan L. Scott; Wayne Mitzner

Emphysema, one of the major components of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), is characterized by the progressive and irreversible loss of alveolar lung tissue. Even though >80% of COPD cases are associated with cigarette smoking, only a relatively small proportion of smokers develop emphysema, suggesting a potential role for genetic factors in determining individual susceptibility to emphysema. Although strain-dependent effects have been shown in animal models of emphysema, the molecular basis underlying this intrinsic susceptibility is not fully understood. In this present study, we investigated emphysema development using the elastase-induced experimental emphysema model in two commonly used mouse strains, C57BL/6J and BALB/cJ. The results demonstrate that mice with different genetic backgrounds show disparate susceptibility to the development of emphysema. BALB/cJ mice were found to be much more sensitive than C57BL/6J to elastase injury in both a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner, as measured by significantly higher mortality, greater body weight loss, greater decline in lung function, and a greater loss of alveolar tissue. The more susceptible BALB/cJ strain also showed the persistence of inflammatory cells in the lung, especially macrophages and lymphocytes. A comparative gene expression analysis following elastase-induced injury showed BALB/cJ mice had elevated levels of il17A mRNA and a number of classically (M1) and alternatively (M2) activated macrophage genes, whereas the C57BL/6J mice demonstrated augmented levels of interferon-γ. These findings suggest a possible role for these cellular and molecular mediators in modulating the severity of emphysema and highlight the possibility that they might contribute to the heterogeneity observed in clinical emphysema outcomes.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015

Measurement of the Pressure-volume Curve in Mouse Lungs

Nathachit Limjunyawong; Jonathan Fallica; Maureen R. Horton; Wayne Mitzner

In recent decades the mouse has become the primary animal model of a variety of lung diseases. In models of emphysema or fibrosis, the essential phenotypic changes are best assessed by measurement of the changes in lung elasticity. To best understand specific mechanisms underlying such pathologies in mice, it is essential to make functional measurements that can reflect the developing pathology. Although there are many ways to measure elasticity, the classical method is that of the total lung pressure-volume (PV) curve done over the whole range of lung volumes. This measurement has been made on adult lungs from nearly all mammalian species dating back almost 100 years, and such PV curves also played a major role in the discovery and understanding of the function of pulmonary surfactant in fetal lung development. Unfortunately, such total PV curves have not been widely reported in the mouse, despite the fact that they can provide useful information on the macroscopic effects of structural changes in the lung. Although partial PV curves measuring just the changes in lung volume are sometimes reported, without a measure of absolute volume, the nonlinear nature of the total PV curve makes these partial ones very difficult to interpret. In the present study, we describe a standardized way to measure the total PV curve. We have then tested the ability of these curves to detect changes in mouse lung structure in two common lung pathologies, emphysema and fibrosis. Results showed significant changes in several variables consistent with expected structural changes with these pathologies. This measurement of the lung PV curve in mice thus provides a straightforward means to monitor the progression of the pathophysiologic changes over time and the potential effect of therapeutic procedures.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015

Phenotyping Mouse Pulmonary Function In Vivo with the Lung Diffusing Capacity

Nathachit Limjunyawong; Jonathan Fallica; Amritha Ramakrishnan; Kausik Datta; Matthew Gabrielson; Maureen R. Horton; Wayne Mitzner

The mouse is now the primary animal used to model a variety of lung diseases. To study the mechanisms that underlie such pathologies, phenotypic methods are needed that can quantify the pathologic changes. Furthermore, to provide translational relevance to the mouse models, such measurements should be tests that can easily be done in both humans and mice. Unfortunately, in the present literature few phenotypic measurements of lung function have direct application to humans. One exception is the diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide, which is a measurement that is routinely done in humans. In the present report, we describe a means to quickly and simply measure this diffusing capacity in mice. The procedure involves brief lung inflation with tracer gases in an anesthetized mouse, followed by a 1 min gas analysis time. We have tested the ability of this method to detect several lung pathologies, including emphysema, fibrosis, acute lung injury, and influenza and fungal lung infections, as well as monitoring lung maturation in young pups. Results show significant decreases in all the lung pathologies, as well as an increase in the diffusing capacity with lung maturation. This measurement of lung diffusing capacity thus provides a pulmonary function test that has broad application with its ability to detect phenotypic structural changes with most of the existing pathologic lung models.


Nature Neuroscience | 2018

Mrgprs on vagal sensory neurons contribute to bronchoconstriction and airway hyper-responsiveness

Liang Han; Nathachit Limjunyawong; Fei Ru; Zhe Li; Olivia J. Hall; Haley Steele; Yuyan Zhu; Julie Wilson; Wayne Mitzner; Marian Kollarik; Bradley J. Undem; Brendan J. Canning; Xinzhong Dong

Asthma, accompanied by lung inflammation, bronchoconstriction and airway hyper-responsiveness, is a significant public health burden. Here we report that Mas-related G protein-coupled receptors (Mrgprs) are expressed in a subset of vagal sensory neurons innervating the airway and mediates cholinergic bronchoconstriction and airway hyper-responsiveness. These findings provide insights into the neural mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of asthma.The authors show that Mrgprs, vagal sensory neuron-expressing GPCRs, mediate bronchoconstriction and hyperresponsiveness, both of which are hallmark features of asthma. The results reveal novel potential neural mechanisms underlying asthma.

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Wayne Mitzner

Johns Hopkins University

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Maureen R. Horton

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Sandhya Das

Johns Hopkins University

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Jason R. Mock

Johns Hopkins University

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John M. Craig

Johns Hopkins University

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Alan L. Scott

Johns Hopkins University

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