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Dive into the research topics where Paige Snider is active.

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Featured researches published by Paige Snider.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

Cardiac fibroblasts are essential for the adaptive response of the murine heart to pressure overload

Norifumi Takeda; Ichiro Manabe; Yuichi Uchino; Kosei Eguchi; Sahohime Matsumoto; Satoshi Nishimura; Takayuki Shindo; Motoaki Sano; Kinya Otsu; Paige Snider; Simon J. Conway; Ryozo Nagai

Fibroblasts, which are the most numerous cell type in the heart, interact with cardiomyocytes in vitro and affect their function; however, they are considered to play a secondary role in cardiac hypertrophy and failure. Here we have shown that cardiac fibroblasts are essential for the protective and hypertrophic myocardial responses to pressure overload in vivo in mice. Haploinsufficiency of the transcription factor-encoding gene Krüppel-like factor 5 (Klf5) suppressed cardiac fibrosis and hypertrophy elicited by moderate-intensity pressure overload, whereas cardiomyocyte-specific Klf5 deletion did not alter the hypertrophic responses. By contrast, cardiac fibroblast-specific Klf5 deletion ameliorated cardiac hypertrophy and fibrosis, indicating that KLF5 in fibroblasts is important for the response to pressure overload and that cardiac fibroblasts are required for cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. High-intensity pressure overload caused severe heart failure and early death in mice with Klf5-null fibroblasts. KLF5 transactivated Igf1 in cardiac fibroblasts, and IGF-1 subsequently acted in a paracrine fashion to induce hypertrophic responses in cardiomyocytes. Igf1 induction was essential for cardioprotective responses, as administration of a peptide inhibitor of IGF-1 severely exacerbated heart failure induced by high-intensity pressure overload. Thus, cardiac fibroblasts play a pivotal role in the myocardial adaptive response to pressure overload, and this role is partly controlled by KLF5. Modulation of cardiac fibroblast function may provide a novel strategy for treating heart failure, with KLF5 serving as an attractive target.


Circulation Research | 2008

Periostin Is Required for Maturation and Extracellular Matrix Stabilization of Noncardiomyocyte Lineages of the Heart

Paige Snider; Robert B. Hinton; Ricardo A. Moreno-Rodriguez; Jian Wang; Rhonda Rogers; Andrew Lindsley; Fang Li; David A. Ingram; Donald R. Menick; Loren J. Field; Anthony B. Firulli; Jeffery D. Molkentin; Roger R. Markwald; Simon J. Conway

The secreted periostin protein, which marks mesenchymal cells in endocardial cushions following epithelial–mesenchymal transformation and in mature valves following remodeling, is a putative valvulogenesis target molecule. Indeed, periostin is expressed throughout cardiovascular morphogenesis and in all 4 adult mice valves (annulus and leaflets). Additionally, periostin is expressed throughout the fibrous cardiac skeleton and endocardial cushions in the developing heart but is absent from both normal and/or pathological mouse cardiomyocytes. Periostin (perilacZ) knockout mice exhibit viable valve disease, with neonatal lethality in a minority and latent disease with leaflet abnormalities in the viable majority. Surviving perilacZ-null leaflets are truncated, contain ectopic cardiomyocytes and smooth muscle, misexpress the cartilage proteoglycan aggrecan, demonstrate disorganized matrix stratification, and exhibit reduced transforming growth factor-&bgr; signaling. Neonatal perilacZ nulls that die (14%) display additional defects, including leaflet discontinuities, delamination defects, and deposition of acellular extracellular matrix. Assessment of collagen production, 3D lattice formation ability, and transforming growth factor-&bgr; responsiveness indicate periostin-deficient fibroblasts are unable to support normal valvular remodeling and establishment of a mature cardiac skeleton. Furthermore, pediatric stenotic bicuspid aortic valves that have lost normal extracellular matrix trilaminar stratification have greatly reduced periostin. This suggests that loss of periostin results in inappropriate differentiation of mesenchymal cushion cells and valvular abnormalities via a transforming growth factor-&bgr;–dependent pathway during establishment of the mature heart. Thus, perilacZ knockouts provide a new model of viable latent valve disease.


Circulation Research | 2009

Origin of Cardiac Fibroblasts and the Role of Periostin

Paige Snider; Kara N. Standley; Jian Wang; Mohamad Azhar; Thomas Doetschman; Simon J. Conway

Cardiac fibroblasts are the most populous nonmyocyte cell type within the mature heart and are required for extracellular matrix synthesis and deposition, generation of the cardiac skeleton, and to electrically insulate the atria from the ventricles. Significantly, cardiac fibroblasts have also been shown to play an important role in cardiomyocyte growth and expansion of the ventricular chambers during heart development. Although there are currently no cardiac fibroblast-restricted molecular markers, it is generally envisaged that the majority of the cardiac fibroblasts are derived from the proepicardium via epithelial-to-mesenchymal transformation. However, still relatively little is known about when and where the cardiac fibroblasts cells are generated, the lineage of each cell, and how cardiac fibroblasts move to reside in their final position throughout all four cardiac chambers. In this review, we summarize the present understanding regarding the function of Periostin, a useful marker of the noncardiomyocyte lineages, and its role during cardiac morphogenesis. Characterization of the cardiac fibroblast lineage and identification of the signals that maintain, expand and regulate their differentiation will be required to improve our understanding of cardiac function in both normal and pathophysiological states.


Cancer Cell | 2008

The Loss of Nf1 Transiently Promotes Self-Renewal but Not Tumorigenesis by Neural Crest Stem Cells

Nancy M. Joseph; Jack T. Mosher; Johanna Buchstaller; Paige Snider; Paul E. McKeever; Megan S. Lim; Simon J. Conway; Luis F. Parada; Yuan Zhu; Sean J. Morrison

Neurofibromatosis is caused by the loss of neurofibromin (Nf1), leading to peripheral nervous system (PNS) tumors, including neurofibromas and malignant peripheral nerve sheath tumors (MPNSTs). A long-standing question has been whether these tumors arise from neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) or differentiated glia. Germline or conditional Nf1 deficiency caused a transient increase in NCSC frequency and self-renewal in most regions of the fetal PNS. However, Nf1-deficient NCSCs did not persist postnatally in regions of the PNS that developed tumors and could not form tumors upon transplantation into adult nerves. Adult P0a-Cre+Nf1(fl/-) mice developed neurofibromas, and Nf1(+/-)Ink4a/Arf(-/-) and Nf1/p53(+/-) mice developed MPNSTs, but NCSCs did not persist postnatally in affected locations in these mice. Tumors appeared to arise from differentiated glia, not NCSCs.


The Scientific World Journal | 2007

Cardiovascular Development and the Colonizing Cardiac Neural Crest Lineage

Paige Snider; Michael Olaopa; Anthony B. Firulli; Simon J. Conway

Although it is well established that transgenic manipulation of mammalian neural crest-related gene expression and microsurgical removal of premigratory chicken and Xenopus embryonic cardiac neural crest progenitors results in a wide spectrum of both structural and functional congenital heart defects, the actual functional mechanism of the cardiac neural crest cells within the heart is poorly understood. Neural crest cell migration and appropriate colonization of the pharyngeal arches and outflow tract septum is thought to be highly dependent on genes that regulate cell-autonomous polarized movement (i.e., gap junctions, cadherins, and noncanonical Wnt1 pathway regulators). Once the migratory cardiac neural crest subpopulation finally reaches the heart, they have traditionally been thought to participate in septation of the common outflow tract into separate aortic and pulmonary arteries. However, several studies have suggested these colonizing neural crest cells may also play additional unexpected roles during cardiovascular development and may even contribute to a crest-derived stem cell population. Studies in both mice and chick suggest they can also enter the heart from the venous inflow as well as the usual arterial outflow region, and may contribute to the adult semilunar and atrioventricular valves as well as part of the cardiac conduction system. Furthermore, although they are not usually thought to give rise to the cardiomyocyte lineage, neural crest cells in the zebrafish (Danio rerio) can contribute to the myocardium and may have different functions in a species-dependent context. Intriguingly, both ablation of chick and Xenopus premigratory neural crest cells, and a transgenic deletion of mouse neural crest cell migration or disruption of the normal mammalian neural crest gene expression profiles, disrupts ventral myocardial function and/or cardiomyocyte proliferation. Combined, this suggests that either the cardiac neural crest secrete factor/s that regulate myocardial proliferation, can signal to the epicardium to subsequently secrete a growth factor/s, or may even contribute directly to the heart. Although there are species differences between mouse, chick, and Xenopus during cardiac neural crest cell morphogenesis, recent data suggest mouse and chick are more similar to each other than to the zebrafish neural crest cell lineage. Several groups have used the genetically defined Pax3 (splotch) mutant mice model to address the role of the cardiac neural crest lineage. Here we review the current literature, the neural crest-related role of the Pax3 transcription factor, and discuss potential function/s of cardiac neural crest-derived cells during cardiovascular developmental remodeling.


Circulation Research | 2014

Cardiogenic Genes Expressed in Cardiac Fibroblasts Contribute to Heart Development and Repair

Milena B. Furtado; Mauro W. Costa; Edward M Adi Pranoto; Ekaterina Salimova; Alexander R. Pinto; Nicholas T. Lam; Anthony Park; Paige Snider; Anjana Chandran; Richard P. Harvey; Richard L. Boyd; Simon J. Conway; James T. Pearson; David M. Kaye; Nadia Rosenthal

Rationale: Cardiac fibroblasts are critical to proper heart function through multiple interactions with the myocardial compartment, but appreciation of their contribution has suffered from incomplete characterization and lack of cell-specific markers. Objective: To generate an unbiased comparative gene expression profile of the cardiac fibroblast pool, identify and characterize the role of key genes in cardiac fibroblast function, and determine their contribution to myocardial development and regeneration. Methods and Results: High-throughput cell surface and intracellular profiling of cardiac and tail fibroblasts identified canonical mesenchymal stem cell and a surprising number of cardiogenic genes, some expressed at higher levels than in whole heart. While genetically marked fibroblasts contributed heterogeneously to interstitial but not cardiomyocyte compartments in infarcted hearts, fibroblast-restricted depletion of one highly expressed cardiogenic marker, T-box 20, caused marked myocardial dysmorphology and perturbations in scar formation on myocardial infarction. Conclusions: The surprising transcriptional identity of cardiac fibroblasts, the adoption of cardiogenic gene programs, and direct contribution to cardiac development and repair provoke alternative interpretations for studies on more specialized cardiac progenitors, offering a novel perspective for reinterpreting cardiac regenerative therapies.


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Periostin Regulates Goblet Cell Metaplasia in a Model of Allergic Airway Inflammation

Sarita Sehra; Weiguo Yao; Evelyn T. Nguyen; Ayele Nati N Ahyi; Florencia M Barbé Tuana; Shawn K. Ahlfeld; Paige Snider; Robert S. Tepper; Irina Petrache; Simon J. Conway; Mark H. Kaplan

Periostin is a 90-kDa member of the fasciclin-containing family and functions as part of the extracellular matrix. Periostin is expressed in a variety of tissues and expression is increased in airway epithelial cells from asthmatic patients. Recent studies have implicated a role for periostin in allergic eosinophilic esophagitis. To further define a role for periostin in Th2-mediated inflammatory diseases such as asthma, we studied the development of allergic pulmonary inflammation in periostin-deficient mice. Sensitization and challenge of periostin-deficient mice with OVA resulted in increased peripheral Th2 responses compared with control mice. In the lungs, periostin deficiency resulted in increased airway resistance and significantly enhanced mucus production by goblet cells concomitant with increased expression of Gob5 and Muc5ac compared with wild type littermates. Periostin also inhibited the expression of Gob5, a putative calcium-activated chloride channel involved in the regulation of mucus production, in primary murine airway epithelial cells. Our studies suggest that periostin may be part of a negative-feedback loop regulating allergic inflammation that could be therapeutic in the treatment of atopic disease.


Development | 2013

Fkbp1a controls ventricular myocardium trabeculation and compaction by regulating endocardial Notch1 activity

Hanying Chen; Wenjun Zhang; Xiaoxin Sun; Momoko Yoshimoto; Zhuang Chen; Wuqiang Zhu; Jijia Liu; Yadan Shen; Weidong Yong; Deqiang Li; Jin Zhang; Yang Lin; Bai-Yan Li; Nathan J. VanDusen; Paige Snider; Robert J. Schwartz; Simon J. Conway; Loren J. Field; Mervin C. Yoder; Anthony B. Firulli; Nadia Carlesso; Jeffrey A. Towbin; Weinian Shou

Trabeculation and compaction of the embryonic myocardium are morphogenetic events crucial for the formation and function of the ventricular walls. Fkbp1a (FKBP12) is a ubiquitously expressed cis-trans peptidyl-prolyl isomerase. Fkbp1a-deficient mice develop ventricular hypertrabeculation and noncompaction. To determine the physiological function of Fkbp1a in regulating the intercellular and intracellular signaling pathways involved in ventricular trabeculation and compaction, we generated a series of Fkbp1a conditional knockouts. Surprisingly, cardiomyocyte-restricted ablation of Fkbp1a did not give rise to the ventricular developmental defect, whereas endothelial cell-restricted ablation of Fkbp1a recapitulated the ventricular hypertrabeculation and noncompaction observed in Fkbp1a systemically deficient mice, suggesting an important contribution of Fkbp1a within the developing endocardia in regulating the morphogenesis of ventricular trabeculation and compaction. Further analysis demonstrated that Fkbp1a is a novel negative modulator of activated Notch1. Activated Notch1 (N1ICD) was significantly upregulated in Fkbp1a-ablated endothelial cells in vivo and in vitro. Overexpression of Fkbp1a significantly reduced the stability of N1ICD and direct inhibition of Notch signaling significantly reduced hypertrabeculation in Fkbp1a-deficient mice. Our findings suggest that Fkbp1a-mediated regulation of Notch1 plays an important role in intercellular communication between endocardium and myocardium, which is crucial in controlling the formation of the ventricular walls.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

HDAC1 and HDAC2 Control the Specification of Neural Crest Cells into Peripheral Glia

Claire Jacob; Pirmin Lötscher; Stefanie Engler; Arianna Baggiolini; Sandra Varum Tavares; Valérie Brügger; Nessy John; Stine Büchmann-Møller; Paige Snider; Simon J. Conway; Teppei Yamaguchi; Patrick Matthias; Lukas Sommer; Ned Mantei; Ueli Suter

Schwann cells, the myelinating glia of the peripheral nervous system (PNS), originate from multipotent neural crest cells that also give rise to other cells, including neurons, melanocytes, chondrocytes, and smooth muscle cells. The transcription factor Sox10 is required for peripheral glia specification. However, all neural crest cells express Sox10 and the mechanisms directing neural crest cells into a specific lineage are poorly understood. We show here that histone deacetylases 1 and 2 (HDAC1/2) are essential for the specification of neural crest cells into Schwann cell precursors and satellite glia, which express the early determinants of their lineage myelin protein zero (P0) and/or fatty acid binding protein 7 (Fabp7). In neural crest cells, HDAC1/2 induced expression of the transcription factor Pax3 by binding and activating the Pax3 promoter. In turn, Pax3 was required to maintain high Sox10 levels and to trigger expression of Fabp7. In addition, HDAC1/2 were bound to the P0 promoter and activated P0 transcription. Consistently, in vivo genetic deletion of HDAC1/2 in mouse neural crest cells led to strongly decreased Sox10 expression, no detectable Pax3, virtually no satellite glia, and no Schwann cell precursors in dorsal root ganglia and peripheral nerves. Similarly, in vivo ablation of Pax3 in the mouse neural crest resulted in strongly reduced expression of Sox10 and Fabp7. Therefore, by controlling the expression of Pax3 and the concerted action of Pax3 and Sox10 on their target genes, HDAC1/2 direct the specification of neural crest cells into peripheral glia.


Developmental Biology | 2011

Pax3 is essential for normal cardiac neural crest morphogenesis but is not required during migration nor outflow tract septation

Michael Olaopa; Hong Ming Zhou; Paige Snider; Jian Wang; Robert J. Schwartz; Anne M. Moon; Simon J. Conway

Systemic loss-of-function studies have demonstrated that Pax3 transcription factor expression is essential for dorsal neural tube, early neural crest and muscle cell lineage morphogenesis. Cardiac neural crest cells participate in both remodeling of the pharyngeal arch arteries and outflow tract septation during heart development, but the lineage specific role of Pax3 in neural crest function has not yet been determined. To gain insight into the requirement of Pax3 within the neural crest, we conditionally deleted Pax3 in both the premigratory and migratory neural crest populations via Wnt1-Cre and Ap2α-Cre and via P0-Cre in only the migratory neural crest, and compared these phenotypes to the pulmonary atresia phenotype observed following the systemic loss of Pax3. Surprisingly, using Wnt1-Cre deletion there are no resultant heart defects despite the loss of Pax3 from the premigratory and migratory neural crest. In contrast, earlier premigratory and migratory Ap2α-Cre mediated deletion resulted in double outlet right ventricle alignment heart defects. In order to assess the tissue-specific contribution of neural crest to heart development, genetic ablation of neural crest lineage using a Wnt1-Cre-activated diphtheria toxin fragment-A cell-killing system was employed. Significantly, ablation of Wnt1-Cre-expressing neural crest cells resulted in fully penetrant persistent truncus arteriosus malformations. Combined, the data show that Pax3 is essential for early neural crest progenitor formation, but is not required for subsequent cardiac neural crest progeny morphogenesis involving their migration to the heart or septation of the outflow tract.

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