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Featured researches published by Oren Lakser.


European Respiratory Journal | 2007

Airway smooth muscle dynamics: a common pathway of airway obstruction in asthma

Steven S. An; Tony R. Bai; Jason H. T. Bates; Judith L. Black; Robert H. Brown; Vito Brusasco; Pasquale Chitano; Linhong Deng; Maria L. Dowell; David H. Eidelman; Ben Fabry; Nigel J. Fairbank; Lincoln E. Ford; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; William T. Gerthoffer; Susan H. Gilbert; Reinoud Gosens; Susan J. Gunst; Andrew J. Halayko; R. H. Ingram; Charles G. Irvin; Alan James; Luke J. Janssen; Gregory G. King; Darryl A. Knight; Anne-Marie Lauzon; Oren Lakser; Mara S. Ludwig; Kenneth R. Lutchen; Geoff Maksym

Excessive airway obstruction is the cause of symptoms and abnormal lung function in asthma. As airway smooth muscle (ASM) is the effecter controlling airway calibre, it is suspected that dysfunction of ASM contributes to the pathophysiology of asthma. However, the precise role of ASM in the series of events leading to asthmatic symptoms is not clear. It is not certain whether, in asthma, there is a change in the intrinsic properties of ASM, a change in the structure and mechanical properties of the noncontractile components of the airway wall, or a change in the interdependence of the airway wall with the surrounding lung parenchyma. All these potential changes could result from acute or chronic airway inflammation and associated tissue repair and remodelling. Anti-inflammatory therapy, however, does not “cure” asthma, and airway hyperresponsiveness can persist in asthmatics, even in the absence of airway inflammation. This is perhaps because the therapy does not directly address a fundamental abnormality of asthma, that of exaggerated airway narrowing due to excessive shortening of ASM. In the present study, a central role for airway smooth muscle in the pathogenesis of airway hyperresponsiveness in asthma is explored.


Clinical Reviews in Allergy & Immunology | 2003

What evidence implicates airway smooth muscle in the cause of BHR

Nickolai O. Dulin; Darren J. Fernandes; Maria L. Dowell; Shashi Bellam; John F. McConville; Oren Lakser; Richard W. Mitchell; Blanca Camoretti-Mercado; Paul Kogut; Julian Solway

Bronchial hyperresponsiveness (BHR), the occurrence of excessive bronchoconstriction in response to relatively small constrictor stimuli, is a cardinal feature of asthma. Here, we consider the role that airway smooth muscle might play in the generation of BHR. The weight of evidence suggests that smooth muscle isolated from asthmatic tissues exhibits normal sensitivity to constrictor agonists when studied during isometric contraction, but the increased muscle mass within asthmatic airways might generate more total force than the lesser amount of muscle found in normal bronchi. Another salient difference between asthmatic and normal individuals lies in the effect of deep inhalation (DI) on bronchoconstriction. DI often substantially reverses induced bronchoconstriction in normals, while it often has much less effect on spontaneous or induced bronchoconstriction in asthmatics. It has been proposed that abnormal dynamic aspects of airway smooth muscle contraction—velocity of contraction or plasticity-elasticity balance—might underlie the abnormal DI response in asthma. We suggest a speculative model in which abnormally long actin filaments might account for abnormally increased elasticity of contracted airway smooth muscle.


Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2009

Disrupting actin-myosin-actin connectivity in airway smooth muscle as a treatment for asthma?

Tera L. Lavoie; Maria L. Dowell; Oren Lakser; William T. Gerthoffer; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Chun Y. Seow; Richard W. Mitchell; Julian Solway

Breathing is known to functionally antagonize bronchoconstriction caused by airway muscle contraction. During breathing, tidal lung inflation generates force fluctuations that are transmitted to the contracted airway muscle. In vitro, experimental application of force fluctuations to contracted airway smooth muscle strips causes them to relengthen. Such force fluctuation-induced relengthening (FFIR) likely represents the mechanism by which breathing antagonizes bronchoconstriction. Thus, understanding the mechanisms that regulate FFIR of contracted airway muscle could suggest novel therapeutic interventions to increase FFIR, and so to enhance the beneficial effects of breathing in suppressing bronchoconstriction. Here we propose that the connectivity between actin filaments in contracting airway myocytes is a key determinant of FFIR, and suggest that disrupting actin-myosin-actin connectivity by interfering with actin polymerization or with myosin polymerization merits further evaluation as a potential novel approach for preventing prolonged bronchoconstriction in asthma.


European Respiratory Journal | 2008

Steroids Augment Relengthening of Contracted Airway Smooth Muscle: Potential Additional Mechanism of Benefit in Asthma

Oren Lakser; Maria L. Dowell; F. L. Hoyte; Bohao Chen; Tera L. Lavoie; C. Ferreira; Lawrence H. Pinto; Nickolai O. Dulin; Paul Kogut; Jason Churchill; Richard W. Mitchell; Julian Solway

Breathing (especially deep breathing) antagonises development and persistence of airflow obstruction during bronchoconstrictor stimulation. Force fluctuations imposed on contracted airway smooth muscle (ASM) in vitro result in its relengthening, a phenomenon called force fluctuation-induced relengthening (FFIR). Because breathing imposes similar force fluctuations on contracted ASM within intact lungs, FFIR represents a likely mechanism by which breathing antagonises bronchoconstriction. While this bronchoprotective effect appears to be impaired in asthma, corticosteroid treatment can restore the ability of deep breaths to reverse artificially induced bronchoconstriction in asthmatic subjects. It has previously been demonstrated that FFIR is physiologically regulated through the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling pathway. While the beneficial effects of corticosteroids have been attributed to suppression of airway inflammation, the current authors hypothesised that alternatively they might exert their action directly on ASM by augmenting FFIR as a result of inhibiting p38 MAPK signalling. This possibility was tested in the present study by measuring relengthening in contracted canine tracheal smooth muscle (TSM) strips. The results indicate that dexamethasone treatment significantly augmented FFIR of contracted canine TSM. Canine tracheal ASM cells treated with dexamethasone demonstrated increased MAPK phosphatase-1 expression and decreased p38 MAPK activity, as reflected in reduced phosphorylation of the p38 MAPK downstream target, heat shock protein 27. These results suggest that corticosteroids may exert part of their therapeutic effect through direct action on airway smooth muscle, by decreasing p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase activity and thus increasing force fluctuation-induced relengthening.


European Respiratory Journal | 2010

MEK modulates force-fluctuation-induced relengthening of canine tracheal smooth muscle

Maria L. Dowell; Tera L. Lavoie; Oren Lakser; Nickolai O. Dulin; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; William T. Gerthoffer; C. Y. Seow; Richard W. Mitchell; Julian Solway

Tidal breathing, and especially deep breathing, is known to antagonise bronchoconstriction caused by airway smooth muscle (ASM) contraction; however, this bronchoprotective effect of breathing is impaired in asthma. Force fluctuations applied to contracted ASM in vitro cause it to relengthen, force-fluctuation-induced relengthening (FFIR). Given that breathing generates similar force fluctuations in ASM, FFIR represents a likely mechanism by which breathing antagonises bronchoconstriction. Thus it is of considerable interest to understand what modulates FFIR, and how ASM might be manipulated to exploit this phenomenon. It was demonstrated previously that p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling regulates FFIR in ASM strips. Here, it was hypothesised that the MAPK kinase (MEK) signalling pathway also modulates FFIR. In order to test this hypothesis, changes in FFIR were measured in ASM treated with the MEK inhibitor, U0126 (1,4-diamino-2,3-dicyano-1,4-bis[2-aminophenylthio]butadiene). Increasing concentrations of U0126 caused greater FFIR. U0126 reduced extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 phosphorylation without affecting isotonic shortening or 20-kDa myosin light chain and p38 MAPK phosphorylation. However, increasing concentrations of U0126 progressively blunted phosphorylation of high-molecular-weight caldesmon (h-caldesmon), a downstream target of MEK. Thus changes in FFIR exhibited significant negative correlation with h-caldesmon phosphorylation. The present data demonstrate that FFIR is regulated through MEK signalling, and suggest that the role of MEK is mediated, in part, through caldesmon.


Clinical Genetics | 2016

Refining the continuum of CFTR‐associated disorders in the era of newborn screening

Hara Levy; Melodee Nugent; Kaitlyn Schneck; D. Stachiw-Hietpas; Anita Laxova; Oren Lakser; Michael J. Rock; Mary K. Dahmer; J. Biller; Samya Z. Nasr; Mei W. Baker; Susanna A. McColley; Pippa Simpson; Philip M. Farrell

Clinical heterogeneity in cystic fibrosis (CF) often causes diagnostic uncertainty in infants without symptoms and in older patients with milder phenotypes. We performed a cross‐sectional evaluation of a comprehensive set of clinical and laboratory descriptors in a physician‐defined cohort (N = 376; Childrens Hospital of Wisconsin and the American Family Childrens Hospital CF centers in Milwaukee and Madison, WI, USA) to determine the robustness of categorizing CF (N = 300), cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR)‐related disorder (N = 19), and CFTR‐related (CRMS) metabolic syndrome (N = 57) according to current consensus guidelines. Outcome measures included patient demographics, clinical measures, sweat chloride levels, CFTR genotype, age at diagnosis, airway microbiology, pancreatic function, infection, and nutritional status. The CF cohort had a significantly higher median sweat chloride level (105 mmol/l) than CFTR‐related disorder patients (43 mmol/l) and CFTR‐related metabolic syndrome patients (35 mmol/l; p ≤ 0.001). Patient groups significantly differed in pancreatic sufficiency, immunoreactive trypsinogen levels, sweat chloride values, genotype, and positive Pseudomonas aeruginosa cultures (p ≤ 0.001). An automated classification algorithm using recursive partitioning demonstrated concordance between physician diagnoses and consensus guidelines. Our analysis suggests that integrating clinical information with sweat chloride levels, CFTR genotype, and pancreatic sufficiency provides a context for continued longitudinal monitoring of patients for personalized and effective treatment.


Mammalian Genome | 2008

Gene-environment interactions in a mutant mouse kindred with native airway constrictor hyperresponsiveness

Lawrence H. Pinto; Emily Eaton; Bohao Chen; Jonah Fleisher; Dmitry Shuster; Joel McCauley; Dalius Kedainis; Sandra M. Siepka; Kazuhiro Shimomura; Eun Joo Song; Aliya N. Husain; Oren Lakser; Richard W. Mitchell; Maria L. Dowell; Melanie Brown; Blanca Camoretti-Mercado; Robert M. Naclerio; Anne I. Sperling; Stephen I. Levin; Fred W. Turek; Julian Solway

We mutagenized male BTBR mice with N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea and screened 1315 of their G3 offspring for airway hyperresponsiveness. A phenovariant G3 mouse with exaggerated methacholine bronchoconstrictor response was identified and his progeny bred in a nonspecific-pathogen-free (SPF) facility where sentinels tested positive for minute virus of mice and mouse parvovirus and where softwood bedding was used. The mutant phenotype was inherited through G11 as a single autosomal semidominant mutation with marked gender restriction, with males exhibiting almost full penetrance and very few females phenotypically abnormal. Between G11 and G12, facility infection eradication was undertaken and bedding was changed to hardwood. We could no longer detect airway hyperresponsiveness in more than 37 G12 offspring of 26 hyperresponsive G11 males. Also, we could not identify the mutant phenotype among offspring of hyperresponsive G8–G10 sires rederived into an SPF facility despite 21 attempts. These two observations suggest that both genetic and environmental factors were needed for phenotype expression. We suspect that rederivation into an SPF facility or altered exposure to pathogens or other unidentified substances modified environmental interactions with the mutant allele, and so resulted in disappearance of the hyperresponsive phenotype. Our experience suggests that future searches for genes that confer susceptibility for airway hyperresponsiveness might not be able to identify some genes that confer susceptibility if the searches are performed in SPF facilities. Experimenters are advised to arrange for multigeneration constancy of mouse care in order to clone mutant genes. Indeed, we were not able to map the mutation before losing the phenotype.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2004

On the terminology for describing the length-force relationship and its changes in airway smooth muscle.

Tony R. Bai; Jason H. T. Bates; Vito Brusasco; Bianca Camoretti-Mercado; Pasquale Chitano; Linhong Deng; Maria L. Dowell; Ben Fabry; Lincoln E. Ford; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; William T. Gerthoffer; Susan H. Gilbert; Susan J. Gunst; Chi-Ming Hai; Andrew J. Halayko; Stuart J. Hirst; Alan James; Luke J. Janssen; Keith A. Jones; Greg King; Oren Lakser; Rodney K. Lambert; Anne Marie Lauzon; Kenneth R. Lutchen; Geoffrey N. Maksym; Richard A. Meiss; Srboljub M. Mijailovich; Howard W. Mitchell; Richard W. Mitchell; Wayne Mitzner


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2003

Do inflammatory mediators influence the contribution of airway smooth muscle contraction to airway hyperresponsiveness in asthma

Darren J. Fernandes; Richard W. Mitchell; Oren Lakser; Maria L. Dowell; Alastair G. Stewart; Julian Solway


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2005

Latrunculin B increases force fluctuation-induced relengthening of ACh-contracted, isotonically shortened canine tracheal smooth muscle.

Maria L. Dowell; Oren Lakser; William T. Gerthoffer; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Gerald L. Stelmack; Andrew J. Halayko; Julian Solway; Richard W. Mitchell

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