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Dive into the research topics where Peter J. Maniak is active.

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Featured researches published by Peter J. Maniak.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2010

Cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator is involved in airway epithelial wound repair.

Katherine R. Schiller; Peter J. Maniak; Scott M. O'Grady

The role of cystic fibrosis (CF) transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) in airway epithelial wound repair was investigated using normal human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) cells and a human airway epithelial cell line (Calu-3) of serous gland origin. Measurements of wound repair were performed using continuous impedance sensing to determine the time course for wound closure. Control experiments showed that the increase in impedance corresponding to cell migration into the wound was blocked by treatment with the actin polymerization inhibitor, cytochalasin D. Time lapse imaging revealed that NHBE and Calu-3 cell wound closure was dependent on cell migration, and that movement occurred as a collective sheet of cells. Selective inhibition of CFTR activity with CFTR(inh)-172 or short hairpin RNA silencing of CFTR expression produced a significant delay in wound repair. The CF cell line UNCCF1T also exhibited significantly slower migration than comparable normal airway epithelial cells. Inhibition of CFTR-dependent anion transport by treatment with CFTR(inh)-172 slowed wound closure to the same extent as silencing CFTR protein expression, indicating that ion transport by CFTR plays a critical role in migration. Moreover, morphologic analysis of migrating cells revealed that CFTR inhibition or silencing significantly reduced lamellipodia protrusion. These findings support the conclusion that CFTR participates in airway epithelial wound repair by a mechanism involving anion transport that is coupled to the regulation of lamellipodia protrusion at the leading edge of the cell.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 2002

Cyclic AMP-dependent Cl secretion is regulated by multiple phosphodiesterase subtypes in human colonic epithelial cells

Scott M. O'Grady; X. Jiang; Peter J. Maniak; W. Birmachu; L.R. Scribner; B. Bulbulian; G.W. Gullikson

The role of phosphodiesterase (PDE) isoforms in regulation of transepithelial Cl secretion was investigated using cultured monolayers of T84 cells grown on membrane filters. Identification of the major PDE isoforms present in these cells was determined using ion exchange chromatography in combination with biochemical assays for cGMP and cAMP hydrolysis. The most abundant PDE isoform in these cells was PDE4 accounting for 70-80% of the total cAMP hydrolysis within the cytosolic and membrane fractions from these cells. The PDE3 isoform was also identified in both cytosolic and membrane fractions accounting for 20% of the total cAMP hydrolysis in the cytosolic fraction and 15-30% of the total cAMP hydrolysis observed in the membrane fraction. A large portion of the total cGMP hydrolysis detected in cytosolic and membrane fractions of T84 cells was mediated by PDE5 (50-75%). Treatment of confluent monolayers of T84 cells with various PDE inhibitors produced significant increases in short-circuit current (Isc). The PDE3-selective inhibitors terqinsin, milrinone and cilostamide produced increases in Isc with EC50 values of 0.6 nM, 8.0 nM and 0.5 microM respectively. These values were in close agreement with the IC50 values for cAMP hydrolysis. The effects of the PDE1-(8-MM-IBMX) and PDE4-(RP-73401) selective inhibitors on Isc were significantly less potent than PDE3 inhibitors with EC50 values of >7 microM and >50 microM respectively. However, the effects of 8-MM-IBMX and terqinsin on Cl secretion were additive, suggesting that inhibition of PDE1 also increases Cl secretion. The effect of PDE inhibitors on Isc were significantly blocked by apical treatment with glibenclamide (an inhibitor of the CFTR Cl channel) and by basolateral bumetanide, an inhibitor of Na-K-2Cl cotransport activity. These results indicate that inhibition of PDE activity in T84 cells stimulates transepithelial Cl secretion and that PDE1 and PDE3 are involved in regulating the rate of secretion.


Journal of Great Lakes Research | 2000

Injured Eurasian Ruffe, Gymnocephalus cernuus, Release an Alarm Pheromone that Could be Used to Control their Dispersal

Peter J. Maniak; Ryan D. Lossing; Peter W. Sorensen

Abstract Eurasian ruffe, an undesirable species of fish that was introduced into the Great Lakes from Eurasia, employs an alarm pheromone which might be useful in bio-control. This pheromone is released from ruffe skin when it is damaged and serves to reduce the swimming and feeding activity of exposed conspecifics while repelling fish from areas treated with it. Responsiveness to this cue is mediated by the olfactory sense and highly specific: ruffe do not respond to the odor of damaged heterospecifics, and heterospecifics (goldfish) do not respond to it. The pheromone retains its activity with freezing but not with passage through the gut of a predator. Extracts of frozen ruffe skin should be considered for use as a repellant to exclude ruffe from areas where they are not wanted such as harbors where ships take on ballast water, spawning grounds, or passages connected to inland waterways.


The Journal of Membrane Biology | 2003

Basolateral Cl- transport is stimulated by terbutaline in adult rat alveolar epithelial cells.

So Yeong Lee; Peter J. Maniak; R. Rhodes; David H. Ingbar; Scott M. O'Grady

Stimulation of adult rat alveolar epithelial cells with terbutaline was previously shown to activate Cl- channels in the apical membrane. In this study, we show that terbutaline stimulates net transepithelial (apical-to-basolateral) Cl- absorption from 0.19 ± 0.13 to 1.43 ± 0.31 mmol × cm-2 × hr-1. Terbutaline also increases net Cl- efflux across the basolateral membrane under conditions where an outward [K+] gradient exists and the membrane voltage is clamped at zero mV. When the [K+] gradient is eliminated, the effect of terbutaline on net Cl- efflux is inhibited to the extent that no significant Cl- efflux can be detected across the basolateral membrane. RT-PCR experiments detected mRNA for three KCl cotransport isoforms (KCC1, KCC3 and KCC4) in monolayer cultures of alveolar epithelial cells. Western blot analysis using antibodies to the four cloned isoforms of KCl cotransporters revealed the presence of KCC1 and KCC4 isoforms in monolayer cultures of these cells. These results provide evidence suggesting a role for KCl cotransport in terbutaline-stimulated transepithelial Cl- absorption.


Allergy | 2017

Oxidative stress serves as a key checkpoint for IL-33 release by airway epithelium

M. Uchida; Erik L. Anderson; Diane L. Squillace; Nandadevi Patil; Peter J. Maniak; Koji Iijima; H. Kita; Scott M. O'Grady

Interleukin (IL)‐33 is implicated in the pathophysiology of asthma and allergic diseases. However, our knowledge is limited regarding how IL‐33 release is controlled. The transcription factor nuclear factor‐erythroid‐2‐related factor 2 (Nrf2) plays a key role in antioxidant response regulation.


The Journal of Physiology | 2013

ATP release and Ca2+ signalling by human bronchial epithelial cells following Alternaria aeroallergen exposure.

Scott M. O'Grady; Nandadavi Patil; Tamene Melkamu; Peter J. Maniak; Cheryl A. Lancto; Hirohito Kita

•  Exposure of human bronchial epithelial (HBE) cells to fungal aeroallergens derived from Alternaria alternata stimulates Ca2+‐dependent and Ca2+‐independent ATP release across the apical membrane. •  The Ca2+‐dependent component was blocked by inhibitors of both ATP uptake and transport of exocytotic vesicles to the plasma membrane. •  Treatment with inhibitors that target cysteine proteases significantly blocked Ca2+‐dependent ATP release evoked by Alternaria in normal HBE cells, but not in cells derived from asthmatic patients. •  The magnitude of ATP release and associated intracellular Ca2+ mobilization was significantly greater in bronchial epithelial cells obtained from patients with asthma. •  These findings establish a novel role for ATP release as a mechanism underlying Alternaria aeroallergen activation of airway mucosal immunity and that cells derived from patients with asthma exhibit greater responsiveness to these allergens.


The Journal of Physiology | 2011

KCa3.1 channels facilitate K+ secretion or Na+ absorption depending on apical or basolateral P2Y receptor stimulation

Melissa L. Palmer; Elizabeth R. Peitzman; Peter J. Maniak; Gary C. Sieck; Y. S. Prakash; Scott M. O’Grady

Non‐technical summary  The epithelial cells lining the ducts of the human mammary gland are responsible for modifying sodium and potassium concentrations in milk by actively absorbing sodium from and secreting potassium into the ductal fluid. In the present study we show that adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and uridine triphosphate (UTP) can stimulate sodium absorption and potassium secretion by a mechanism that involves increasing intracellular calcium and activation of calcium‐dependent potassium channels. We discovered that addition of ATP or UTP to the luminal surface stimulates potassium secretion, whereas addition of the same concentrations to the epithelial surface normally exposed to the blood produces an increase in sodium absorption. These results provide a better understanding of the signalling mechanisms that control the concentrations of sodium and potassium present in milk.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2015

Agonist binding to β-adrenergic receptors on human airway epithelial cells inhibits migration and wound repair.

Elizabeth R. Peitzman; Nathan A. Zaidman; Peter J. Maniak; Scott M. O'Grady

Human airway epithelial cells express β-adrenergic receptors (β-ARs), which regulate mucociliary clearance by stimulating transepithelial anion transport and ciliary beat frequency. Previous studies using airway epithelial cells showed that stimulation with isoproterenol increased cell migration and wound repair by a cAMP-dependent mechanism. In the present study, impedance-sensing arrays were used to measure cell migration and epithelial restitution following wounding of confluent normal human bronchial epithelial (NHBE) and Calu-3 cells by electroporation. Stimulation with epinephrine or the β2-AR-selective agonist salbutamol significantly delayed wound closure and reduced the mean surface area of lamellipodia protruding into the wound. Treatment with the β-AR bias agonist carvedilol or isoetharine also produced a delay in epithelial restitution similar in magnitude to epinephrine and salbutamol. Measurements of extracellular signal-regulated kinase phosphorylation following salbutamol or carvedilol stimulation showed no significant change in the level of phosphorylation compared with untreated control cells. However, inhibition of protein phosphatase 2A activity completely blocked the delay in wound closure produced by β-AR agonists. In Calu-3 cells, where CFTR expression was inhibited by RNAi, salbutamol did not inhibit wound repair, suggesting that β-AR agonist stimulation and loss of CFTR function share a common pathway leading to inhibition of epithelial repair. Confocal images of the basal membrane of Calu-3 cells labeled with anti-β1-integrin (clone HUTS-4) antibody showed that treatment with epinephrine or carvedilol reduced the level of activated integrin in the membrane. These findings suggest that treatment with β-AR agonists delays airway epithelial repair by a G protein- and cAMP-independent mechanism involving protein phosphatase 2A and a reduction in β1-integrin activation in the basal membrane.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2017

Airway epithelial anion secretion and barrier function following exposure to fungal aeroallergens: role of oxidative stress

Nathan A. Zaidman; Kelly E. O’Grady; Nandadevi Patil; Francesca Milavetz; Peter J. Maniak; Hirohito Kita; Scott M. O’Grady

Aeroallergens produced by Alternaria alternata can elicit life-threatening exacerbations of asthma in patients sensitized to this fungus. In this study, the effect of Alternaria on ion transport mechanisms underlying mucociliary clearance and airway epithelial barrier function was investigated in human airway epithelial cells. Apical exposure to Alternaria induced an increase in anion secretion that was inhibited by blockers of CFTR and Ca2+-activated Cl- channels. Stimulation of anion secretion was dependent on Ca2+ uptake from the apical solution. Alternaria exposure also produced an increase in reactive oxygen species (ROS) that was blocked by pretreatment with the oxidant scavenger glutathione (GSH). GSH and the NADPH oxidase inhibitor/complex 1 electron transport inhibitor diphenylene iodonium chloride (DPI) blocked ATP release and the increase in intracellular [Ca2+] evoked by AlternariaAlternaria also decreased transepithelial resistance, and a portion of this effect was dependent on the increase in ROS. However, the Alternaria-induced increase in unidirectional dextran (molecular mass = 4,000 Da) flux across the epithelium could not be accounted for by increased oxidative stress. These results support the conclusion that oxidative stress induced by Alternaria was responsible for regulating Ca2+-dependent anion secretion and tight junction electrical resistance that would be expected to affect mucociliary clearance.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2018

P2Y receptor regulation of K2P channels that facilitate K+ secretion by human mammary epithelial cells

Yotesawee Srisomboon; Nathan A. Zaidman; Peter J. Maniak; Chatsri Deachapunya; Scott M. O'Grady

The objective of this study was to determine the molecular identity of ion channels involved in K+ secretion by the mammary epithelium and to examine their regulation by purinoceptor agonists. Apical membrane voltage-clamp experiments were performed on human mammary epithelial cells where the basolateral membrane was exposed to the pore-forming antibiotic amphotericin B dissolved in a solution with intracellular-like ionic composition. Addition of the Na+ channel inhibitor benzamil reduced the basal current, consistent with inhibition of Na+ uptake across the apical membrane, whereas the KCa3.1 channel blocker TRAM-34 produced an increase in current resulting from inhibition of basal K+ efflux. Treatment with two-pore potassium (K2P) channel blockers quinidine, bupivacaine and a selective TASK1/TASK3 inhibitor (PK-THPP) all produced concentration-dependent inhibition of apical K+ efflux. qRT-PCR experiments detected mRNA expression for nine K2P channel subtypes. Western blot analysis of biotinylated apical membranes and confocal immunocytochemistry revealed that at least five K2P subtypes (TWIK1, TREK1, TREK2, TASK1, and TASK3) are expressed in the apical membrane. Apical UTP also increased the current, but pretreatment with the PKC inhibitor GF109203X blocked the response. Similarly, direct activation of PKC with phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate produced a similar increase in current as observed with UTP. These results support the conclusion that the basal level of K+ secretion involves constitutive activity of apical KCa3.1 channels and multiple K2P channel subtypes. Apical UTP evoked a transient increase in KCa3.1 channel activity, but over time caused persistent inhibition of K2P channel function leading to an overall decrease in K+ secretion.

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So Yeong Lee

Seoul National University

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