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Dive into the research topics where Poonam Rani is active.

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Featured researches published by Poonam Rani.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2011

Depletion of gut commensal bacteria attenuates intestinal ischemia/reperfusion injury

Kazuhisa Yoshiya; Peter H. Lapchak; To-Ha Thai; Lakshmi Kannan; Poonam Rani; Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca; George C. Tsokos

Gut commensal bacteria play important roles in the development and homeostasis of intestinal immunity. However, the role of gut commensals in intestinal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury is unclear. To determine the roles of gut commensal bacteria in intestinal IR injury, we depleted gut microbiota with a broad-spectrum antibiotic cocktail and performed mesenteric I/R (M I/R). First, we confirmed that antibiotic treatment completely depleted gut commensal bacteria and diminished the size of secondary lymphoid tissues such as the Peyers patches. We next found that antibiotic treatment attenuated intestinal injury following M I/R. Depletion of gut commensal bacteria reduced the expression of Toll-like receptor (TLR)2 and TLR4 in the intestine. Both are well-known receptors for gram-positive and -negative bacteria. Decreased expression of TLR2 and TLR4 led to the reduction of inflammatory mediators, such as TNF, IL-6, and cyclooxygenase-2. Intestinal I/R injury is initiated when natural antibodies recognize neo-antigens that are revealed on ischemic cells and activate the complement pathway. Thus we evaluated complement and immunoglobulin (Ig) deposition in the damaged intestine and found that antibiotic treatment decreased the deposition of both C3 and IgM. Interestingly, we also found that the deposition of IgA also increased in the intestine following M I/R compared with control mice and that antibiotic treatment decreased the deposition of IgA in the damaged intestine. These results suggest that depletion of gut commensal bacteria decreases B cells, Igs, and TLR expression in the intestine, inhibits complement activation, and attenuates intestinal inflammation and injury following M I/R.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2010

Spleen tyrosine kinase inhibition prevents tissue damage after ischemia-reperfusion

Omer Nuri Pamuk; Peter H. Lapchak; Poonam Rani; Polly Pine; Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca; George C. Tsokos

Reperfusion injury to tissue following an ischemic event occurs as a consequence of an acute inflammatory response that can cause significant morbidity and mortality. Components of both the innate (complement, immunoglobulin, monocytes, and neutrophils) and adaptive (B and T lymphocytes) immune systems have been demonstrated to mediate tissue injury. Spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) is responsible for membrane-mediated signaling in various cell types including B lymphocytes, macrophages, and T cells. We investigated the ability of a small drug Syk inhibitor, R788, to protect mice against mesenteric ischemia-reperfusion (I/R)-induced local (intestine) and remote lung injury. Mice were fed with chow containing a Syk inhibitor for 6 days before the performance of intestinal I/R, which resulted in silencing of the expression of the active phosphorylated Syk. Syk inhibition significantly suppressed both local and remote lung injury. The beneficial effect was associated with reduced IgM and complement 3 deposition in the tissues and significant reduction of polymorphonuclear cell infiltration. Our data place Syk upstream of events leading to the binding of natural antibodies to the ischemia-conditioned tissues and urge the consideration of the use of Syk inhibitors in the prevention or improvement of tissue injury of organs exposed to ischemia or hypoperfusion.


PLOS ONE | 2012

The Role of Platelet Factor 4 in Local and Remote Tissue Damage in a Mouse Model of Mesenteric Ischemia/ Reperfusion Injury

Peter H. Lapchak; Antonis Ioannou; Poonam Rani; Linda A. Lieberman; Kazuhisa Yoshiya; Lakshmi Kannan; Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca; M. Anna Kowalska; George C. Tsokos

The robust inflammatory response that occurs during ischemia reperfusion (IR) injury recruits factors from both the innate and adaptive immune systems. However the contribution of platelets and their products such as Platelet Factor 4 (PF4; CXCL4), during the pathogenesis of IR injury has not been thoroughly investigated. We show that a deficiency in PF4 protects mice from local and remote tissue damage after 30 minutes of mesenteric ischemia and 3 hours of reperfusion in PF4-/- mice compared to control B6 mice. This protection was independent from Ig or complement deposition in the tissues. However, neutrophil and monocyte infiltration were decreased in the lungs of PF4-/- mice compared with B6 control mice. Platelet-depleted B6 mice transfused with platelets from PF4-/- mice displayed reduced tissue damage compared with controls. In contrast, transfusion of B6 platelets into platelet depleted PF4-/- mice reconstituted damage in both intestine and lung tissues. We also show that PF4 may modulate the release of IgA. Interestingly, we show that PF4 expression on intestinal epithelial cells is increased after IR at both the mRNA and protein levels. In conclusion, these findings demonstrate that may PF4 represent an important mediator of local and remote tissue damage.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2012

Platelets orchestrate remote tissue damage after mesenteric ischemia-reperfusion

Peter H. Lapchak; Lakshmi Kannan; Antonis Ioannou; Poonam Rani; Peter Karian; Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca; George C. Tsokos

Ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) injury is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality. A functional role for platelets in tissue damage after mesenteric I/R is largely unknown. The hypothesis that mesenteric I/R local and remote injury are platelet dependent was tested. Using a murine mesenteric I/R model, we demonstrate that platelets orchestrate remote lung tissue damage that follows mesenteric I/R injury and also contribute, albeit to a lesser degree, to local villi damage. While lung damage is delayed compared with villi damage, it increased over time and was characterized by accumulation of platelets in the pulmonary vasculature early, followed by alveolar capillaries and extravasation into the pulmonary space. Both villi and lung tissues displayed complement deposition. We demonstrate that villi and lung damage are reduced in mice made platelet deficient before I/R injury and that platelet transfusion into previously platelet-depleted mice before I/R increased both villi and lung tissue damage. Increased C3 deposition accompanied platelet sequestration in the lung, which was mostly absent in platelet-depleted mice. In contrast, C3 deposition was only minimally reduced on villi of platelet-depleted mice. Our findings position platelets alongside complement as a significant early upstream component that orchestrates remote lung tissue damage after mesenteric I/R and strongly suggest that reperfusion injury mitigating modalities should consider the contribution of platelets.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2012

Inhibition of Syk activity by R788 in platelets prevents remote lung tissue damage after mesenteric ischemia-reperfusion injury

Peter H. Lapchak; Lakshmi Kannan; Poonam Rani; Omer Nuri Pamuk; Antonis Ioannou; Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca; Polly Pine; George C. Tsokos

Tissue injury following ischemia-reperfusion (I/R) occurs as a consequence of actions of soluble factors and immune cells. Growing evidence supports a role for platelets in the manifestation of tissue damage following I/R. Spleen tyrosine kinase has been well documented to be important in lymphocyte activation and more recently in platelet activation. We performed experiments to evaluate whether inhibition of platelet activation through inhibition of spleen tyrosine kinase prevents tissue damage after mesenteric I/R injury. Platelets isolated from C57BL/6J mice fed with R788 for 10 days were transfused into C57BL/6J mice depleted of platelets 2 days before mesenteric I/R injury. Platelet-depleted mice transfused with platelets from R788-treated mice before mesenteric I/R displayed a significant reduction in the degree of remote lung damage, but with little change in the degree of local intestinal damage compared with control I/R mice. Transfusion of R788-treated platelets also decreased platelet sequestration, C3 deposition, and immunoglobulin deposition in lung, but not in the intestine, compared with control groups. These findings demonstrate that platelet activation is a requisite for sequestration in the pulmonary vasculature to mediate remote tissue injury after mesenteric I/R. The use of small-molecule inhibitors may be valuable to prevent tissue damage in remote organs following I/R injury.


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Platelet-Associated CD40/CD154 Mediates Remote Tissue Damage after Mesenteric Ischemia/Reperfusion Injury

Peter H. Lapchak; Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca; Antonis Ioannou; Lakshmi Kannan; Poonam Rani; George C. Tsokos


Archive | 2015

with complement-dependent injury Murine model of gastrointestinal ischemia associated

Michael C. Montalto; Kristine J. Pfeiffer; Liming Hao; L Gregory; George C. Tsokos; Omer Nuri Pamuk; Peter H. Lapchak; Poonam Rani; Polly Pine; Jurandir J. Dalle; Dalle Lucca; Lakshmi Kannan; Antonis Ioannou; Peter Karian; J Jurandir; Liara M. Gonzalez; Adam J. Moeser; Anthony T. Blikslager


Archive | 2012

in ischemia-reperfusion injury cytoskeleton is one of the major initial events resulting Ischemia-mediated aggregation of the actin

Dalle Lucca; George C. Tsokos; Tong Shi; Vaishali R. Moulton; Peter H. Lapchak; Guo-Min Deng; J Jurandir; Omer Nuri Pamuk; Poonam Rani; Polly Pine; Jurandir J. Dalle


Archive | 2012

Running Title: Platelets and Complement in Reperfusion Injury

Peter H. Lapchak; Lakshmi Kannan; Antonis Ioannou; Poonam Rani; Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca; George C. Tsokos


Journal of Immunology | 2012

Complement Orchestrates T cell response during Mesenteric Ischemia Reperfusion Injury in Autoimmune Prone Mice.

Antonis Ioannou; Peter H. Lapchak; Lakshmi Kannan; Poonam Rani; Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca; John D. Lambris; Tsokos George

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Peter H. Lapchak

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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George C. Tsokos

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Jurandir J. Dalle Lucca

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Lakshmi Kannan

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Antonis Ioannou

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Omer Nuri Pamuk

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Polly Pine

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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Kazuhisa Yoshiya

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Linda A. Lieberman

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Adam J. Moeser

National Institutes of Health

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