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Dive into the research topics where Noah P. Zimmerman is active.

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Featured researches published by Noah P. Zimmerman.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2008

Chemokines and chemokine receptors in mucosal homeostasis at the intestinal epithelial barrier in inflammatory bowel disease

Noah P. Zimmerman; Rebecca A. Vongsa; Michael K. Wendt; Michael B. Dwinell

Chemokines, a large family of small chemoattractive cytokines, and their receptors play an integral role in the regulation of the immune response and homeostasis. The ability of chemokines to attract specific populations of immune cells sets them apart from other chemoattractants. Chemokines produced within the gastrointestinal mucosa are critical players in directing the balance between physiological and pathophysiological inflammation in health, inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), and the progression to colon cancer. In addition to the well-characterized role of chemokines in directed trafficking of immune cells to the gut mucosa, the expression of chemokine receptors on the cells of the epithelium makes them active participants in the chemokine signaling network. Recent findings demonstrate an important role for chemokines and chemokine receptors in epithelial barrier repair and maintenance as well as an intricate involvement in limiting metastasis of colonic carcinoma. Increased recognition of the association between barrier defects and inflammation and the subsequent progression to cancer in IBD thus implicates chemokines as key regulators of mucosal homeostasis and disease pathogenesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

CCR6 Regulation of the Actin Cytoskeleton Orchestrates Human Beta Defensin-2- and CCL20-mediated Restitution of Colonic Epithelial Cells

Rebecca A. Vongsa; Noah P. Zimmerman; Michael B. Dwinell

Intestinal inflammation is exacerbated by defects in the epithelial barrier and subsequent infiltration of microbes and toxins into the underlying mucosa. Production of chemokines and antimicrobial peptides by an intact epithelium provide the first line of defense against invading organisms. In addition to its antimicrobial actions, human beta defensin-2 (HBD2) may also stimulate the migration of dendritic cells through binding the chemokine receptor CCR6. As human colonic epithelium expresses CCR6, we investigated the potential of HBD2 to stimulate intestinal epithelial migration. Using polarized human intestinal Caco2 and T84 cells and non-transformed IEC6 cells, HBD2 was equipotent to CCL20 in stimulating migration. Neutralizing antibodies confirmed HBD2 and CCL20 engagement to CCR6 were sufficient to induce epithelial cell migration. Consistent with restitution, motogenic concentrations of HBD2 and CCL20 did not induce proliferation. Stimulation with those CCR6 ligands leads to calcium mobilization and elevated active RhoA, phosphorylated myosin light chain, and F-actin accumulation. HBD2 and CCL20 were unable to stimulate migration in the presence of either Rho-kinase or phosphoinositide 3-kinase inhibitors or an intracellular calcium chelator. Together, these data indicate that the canonical wound healing regulatory pathway, along with calcium mobilization, regulates CCR6-directed epithelial cell migration. These findings expand the mechanistic role for chemokines and HBD2 in mucosal inflammation to include immunocyte trafficking and killing of microbes with the concomitant activation of restitutive migration and barrier repair.


PLOS ONE | 2014

CXCL12 chemokine expression suppresses human pancreatic cancer growth and metastasis.

Ishan Roy; Noah P. Zimmerman; A. Craig Mackinnon; Susan Tsai; Douglas B. Evans; Michael B. Dwinell

Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma is an unsolved health problem with nearly 75% of patients diagnosed with advanced disease and an overall 5-year survival rate near 5%. Despite the strong link between mortality and malignancy, the mechanisms behind pancreatic cancer dissemination and metastasis are poorly understood. Correlative pathological and cell culture analyses suggest the chemokine receptor CXCR4 plays a biological role in pancreatic cancer progression. In vivo roles for the CXCR4 ligand CXCL12 in pancreatic cancer malignancy were investigated. CXCR4 and CXCR7 were consistently expressed in normal and cancerous pancreatic ductal epithelium, established cell lines, and patient-derived primary cancer cells. Relative to healthy exocrine ducts, CXCL12 expression was pathologically repressed in pancreatic cancer tissue specimens and patient-derived cell lines. To test the functional consequences of CXCL12 silencing, pancreatic cancer cell lines stably expressingthe chemokine were engineered. Consistent with a role for CXCL12 as a tumor suppressor, cells producing the chemokine wereincreasingly adherent and migration deficient in vitro and poorly metastatic in vivo, compared to control cells. Further, CXCL12 reintroduction significantly reduced tumor growth in vitro, with significantly smaller tumors in vivo, leading to a pronounced survival advantage in a preclinical model. Together, these data demonstrate a functional tumor suppressive role for the normal expression of CXCL12 in pancreatic ducts, regulating both tumor growth andcellulardissemination to metastatic sites.


Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2015

Cyclic AMP regulates the migration and invasion potential of human pancreatic cancer cells

Noah P. Zimmerman; Ishan Roy; Andrew D. Hauser; Jessica M. Wilson; Michael B. Dwinell

Aggressive dissemination and metastasis of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) results in poor prognosis and marked lethality. Rho monomeric G protein levels are increased in pancreatic cancer tissue. As the mechanisms underlying PDAC malignancy are little understood, we investigated the role for cAMP in regulating monomeric G protein regulated invasion and migration of pancreatic cancer cells. Treatment of PDAC cells with cAMP elevating agents that activate adenylyl cyclases, forskolin, protein kinase A (PKA), 6‐Bnz‐cAMP, or the cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterase inhibitor cilostamide significantly decreased migration and Matrigel invasion of PDAC cell lines. Inhibition was dose‐dependent and not significantly different between forskolin or cilostamide treatment. cAMP elevating drugs not only blocked basal migration, but similarly abrogated transforming‐growth factor‐β‐directed PDAC cell migration and invasion. The inhibitory effects of cAMP were prevented by the pharmacological blockade of PKA. Drugs that increase cellular cAMP levels decreased levels of active RhoA or RhoC, with a concomitant increase in phosphorylated RhoA. Diminished Rho signaling was correlated with the appearance of thickened cortical actin bands along the perimeter of non‐motile forskolin or cilostamide‐treated cells. Decreased migration did not reflect alterations in cell growth or programmed cell death. Collectively these data support the notion that increased levels of cAMP specifically hinder PDAC cell motility through F‐actin remodeling.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

E-cadherin Is Critical for Collective Sheet Migration and Is Regulated by the Chemokine CXCL12 Protein During Restitution

Soonyean Hwang; Noah P. Zimmerman; Kimberle A. Agle; Jerrold R. Turner; Suresh Kumar; Michael B. Dwinell

Background: Restitution is a method for maintaining and repairing the intestinal epithelial barrier. Results: CXCL12 stimulated E-cadherin relocalization and improved barrier function in the reparative epithelium. Conclusion: E-cadherin plays an important role in basal and CXCL12-induced restitution. Significance: Understanding how cell-cell adhesion is regulated during sheet migration is crucial to enhancing treatment of gut barrier defects. Chemokines and other immune mediators enhance epithelial barrier repair. The intestinal barrier is established by highly regulated cell-cell contacts between epithelial cells. The goal of these studies was to define the role for the chemokine CXCL12 in regulating E-cadherin during collective sheet migration during epithelial restitution. Mechanisms regulating E-cadherin were investigated using Caco2BBE and IEC-6 model epithelia. Genetic knockdown confirmed a critical role for E-cadherin in in vitro restitution and in vivo wound repair. During restitution, both CXCL12 and TGF-β1 tightened the monolayer by decreasing the paracellular space between migrating epithelial cells. However, CXCL12 differed from TGF-β1 by stimulating the significant increase in E-cadherin membrane localization during restitution. Chemokine-stimulated relocalization of E-cadherin was paralleled by an increase in barrier integrity of polarized epithelium during restitution. CXCL12 activation of its cognate receptor CXCR4 stimulated E-cadherin localization and monolayer tightening through Rho-associated protein kinase activation and F-actin reorganization. These data demonstrate a key role for E-cadherin in intestinal epithelial restitution.


Laboratory Investigation | 2011

Targeted intestinal epithelial deletion of the chemokine receptor CXCR4 reveals important roles for extracellular-regulated kinase-1/2 in restitution.

Noah P. Zimmerman; Rebecca A. Vongsa; Sheena L Faherty; Nita H. Salzman; Michael B. Dwinell

Barrier defects and/or alterations in the ability of the gut epithelium to repair itself are critical etiological mechanisms of gastrointestinal disease. Our ongoing studies indicate that the chemokine receptor CXCR4 and its cognate ligand CXCL12 regulate intestinal–epithelial barrier maturation and restitution in cell culture models. Gene-deficient mice lacking CXCR4 expression specifically by the cells of the intestinal epithelium were used to test the hypothesis that CXCR4 regulates mucosal barrier integrity in vivo. Epithelial expression of CXCR4 was assessed by RT-PCR, Southern blot, immunoblot and immunohistochemistry. In vivo wounding assays were performed by addition of 3% dextran sodium sulfate (DSS) in drinking water for 5 days. Intestinal damage and DAI scores were assessed by histological examination. Extracellular-regulated kinase (ERK) phosphorylation was assessed in vivo by immunoblot and immunofluorescence. CXCR4 knockdown cells were established using a lentiviral approach and ERK phosphorylation was assessed. Consistent with targeted roles in restitution, epithelium from patients with inflammatory bowel disease indicated that CXCR4 and CXCL12 expression was stable throughout the human colonic epithelium. Conditional CXCR4-deficient mice developed normally, with little phenotypic differences in epithelial morphology, proliferation or migration. Re-epithelialization was absent in CXCR4 conditional knockout mice following acute DSS-induced inflammation. In contrast, heterozygous CXCR4-depleted mice displayed significant improvement in epithelial ulcer healing in acute and chronic inflammation. Mucosal injury repair was correlated with ERK1/2 activity and localization along the crypt–villus axis, with heterozygous mice characterized by increased ERK1/2 activation. Lentiviral depletion of CXCR4 in IEC-6 cells similarly altered ERK1/2 activity and prevented chemokine-stimulated migration. Taken together, these data indicate that chemokine receptors participate in epithelial barrier responses through coordination of the ERK1/2 signaling pathway.


Inflammatory Bowel Diseases | 2012

Cyclic AMP dysregulates intestinal epithelial cell restitution through PKA and RhoA

Noah P. Zimmerman; Suresh Kumar; Jerrold R. Turner; Michael B. Dwinell

Background: Mucosal homeostasis is dependent on the establishment and maintenance of the cell–cell contacts that comprise the physiological barrier. Breaks in the barrier are linked to multiple diseases such as inflammatory bowel disease. While increased cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) levels limit inflammation by decreasing leukocyte infiltration, the effects of elevated cAMP on intestinal epithelial repair are unknown. Methods: Restitution in animals administered rolipram was monitored by microscopic examination after laser wounding of the intestinal epithelium or in mice treated with dextran sodium sulfate (DSS). In vitro analysis was conducted using IEC6 and T84 cells to determine the role of elevated cAMP in altering Rho‐dependent cellular migration signaling pathways. Results: We show that treatment with rolipram, forskolin, and cAMP analogs decrease intestinal epithelial cell migration in vitro. In vivo cell imaging revealed that increased cAMP resulted in a decreased cellular migration rate, with cells at the edge displaying the highest activity. As expected, elevated cAMP elicited increased protein kinase A (PKA) activity, in turn resulting in the inactivation and sequestration of RhoA and decreased actin reorganization. The ablation of restitution by cAMP was not restricted to cell culture, as forskolin and rolipram treatment significantly decreased epithelial microwound closure induced by the two photon confocal injury model. Conclusions: Together, these data suggest that administration of cAMP‐elevating agents paradoxically decrease infiltration of damage‐causing leukocytes while also preventing epithelial repair and barrier maintenance. We propose that treatment with cAMP‐elevating agents severely limits mucosal reepithelialization and should be contraindicated for use in chronic inflammatory bowel disorders. (Inflamm Bowel Dis 2012)


Cancer Research | 2015

Pancreatic Cancer Cell Migration and Metastasis Is Regulated by Chemokine-Biased Agonism and Bioenergetic Signaling

Ishan Roy; Donna McAllister; Egal Gorse; Kate Dixon; Clinton T. Piper; Noah P. Zimmerman; Anthony E. Getschman; Susan Tsai; Dannielle D. Engle; Douglas B. Evans; Brian F. Volkman; B. Kalyanaraman; Michael B. Dwinell

Patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) invariably succumb to metastatic disease, but the underlying mechanisms that regulate PDAC cell movement and metastasis remain little understood. In this study, we investigated the effects of the chemokine gene CXCL12, which is silenced in PDAC tumors, yet is sufficient to suppress growth and metastasis when re-expressed. Chemokines like CXCL12 regulate cell movement in a biphasic pattern, with peak migration typically in the low nanomolar concentration range. Herein, we tested the hypothesis that the biphasic cell migration pattern induced by CXCL12 reflected a biased agonist bioenergetic signaling that might be exploited to interfere with PDAC metastasis. In human and murine PDAC cell models, we observed that nonmigratory doses of CXCL12 were sufficient to decrease oxidative phosphorylation and glycolytic capacity and to increase levels of phosphorylated forms of the master metabolic kinase AMPK. Those same doses of CXCL12 locked myosin light chain into a phosphorylated state, thereby decreasing F-actin polymerization and preventing cell migration in a manner dependent upon AMPK and the calcium-dependent kinase CAMKII. Notably, at elevated concentrations of CXCL12 that were insufficient to trigger chemotaxis of PDAC cells, AMPK blockade resulted in increased cell movement. In two preclinical mouse models of PDAC, administration of CXCL12 decreased tumor dissemination, supporting our hypothesis that chemokine-biased agonist signaling may offer a useful therapeutic strategy. Our results offer a mechanistic rationale for further investigation of CXCL12 as a potential therapy to prevent or treat PDAC metastasis.


Journal of Parasitology | 2003

GUANOSINE 3′,5′-CYCLIC MONOPHOSPHATE: A TAPEWORM-SECRETED SIGNAL MOLECULE COMMUNICATING WITH THE RAT HOST'S SMALL INTESTINE

K. Dubear Kroening; Noah P. Zimmerman; Paul Bass; John A. Oaks

Tapeworms alter the physiological environment of the hosts small intestinal lumen by contracting the intestinal smooth muscle, thereby slowing the transit of intestinal contents. We hypothesize that parasite-to-host molecular signaling is responsible for the specific patterns of small intestinal smooth muscle contraction observed both during tapeworm infection and after the infusion of tapeworm-secreted molecules into the intestinal lumen of unanesthetized rats. Of the tapeworm-secreted compounds tested, only lumenal infusion of guanosine 3′,5′-cyclic monophosphate (cGMP) induced contractile patterns that mimic those observed during tapeworm infection. The response to cGMP occurred in a concentration-dependent fashion. Our study clearly demonstrates that cGMP can serve as an extracellular signal molecule regulating small intestinal motility mechanisms in vivo.


Journal of Parasitology | 2002

PARTIAL CHARACTERIZATION OF A TAPEWORM-SECRETED SIGNAL FACTOR INDUCING SUSTAINED SPIKE POTENTIALS IN THE SMOOTH MUSCLE OF THE RAT SMALL INTESTINE

K. Dubear Kroening; Noah P. Zimmerman; Paul Bass; John A. Oaks

The rat tapeworm Hymenolepis diminuta alters the myoelectric activity of the small intestine. To determine if secreted factors from the tapeworm are responsible for these alterations of intestinal smooth muscle activity, tapeworm-conditioned medium (TCM) obtained from in vitro culture was infused via an indwelling cannula into the duodenum of an uninfected rat. Myoelectric recordings were analyzed for sustained spike potentials (SSP) and repetitive bursts of action potentials (RBAP), the previously characterized tapeworm modifications of the normal interdigestive myoelectric pattern. Results indicated that TCM initiated SSP, but not RBAP in the intestine of the uninfected rat. The SSP-inducing signal factor activity, present in TCM, was retained after boiling, prolonged freezing, proteinase treatment, and passage through a 10-kDa exclusion filter. The signal factor was soluble in the aqueous phase on lipid extraction. It was concluded that the SSP-inducing signal factor is a nonproteinaceous, heat-resistant, low–molecular weight, water soluble molecule.

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Michael B. Dwinell

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Ishan Roy

Medical College of Wisconsin

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John A. Oaks

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Paul Bass

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Douglas B. Evans

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Susan Tsai

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Rebecca A. Vongsa

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Jerrold R. Turner

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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A. Craig Mackinnon

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Egal Gorse

Medical College of Wisconsin

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