Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Rekha Jagadapillai is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Rekha Jagadapillai.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Exposure to the Functional Bacterial Amyloid Protein Curli Enhances Alpha-Synuclein Aggregation in Aged Fischer 344 Rats and Caenorhabditis elegans.

Shu G. Chen; Vilius Stribinskis; Madhavi J. Rane; Donald R. Demuth; Evelyne Gozal; Andrew M. Roberts; Rekha Jagadapillai; Ruolan Liu; Kyonghwan Choe; Bhooma Shivakumar; Francheska Son; Shunying Jin; Richard A. Kerber; Anthony Adame; Eliezer Masliah; Robert P. Friedland

Misfolded alpha-synuclein (AS) and other neurodegenerative disorder proteins display prion-like transmission of protein aggregation. Factors responsible for the initiation of AS aggregation are unknown. To evaluate the role of amyloid proteins made by the microbiota we exposed aged rats and transgenic C. elegans to E. coli producing the extracellular bacterial amyloid protein curli. Rats exposed to curli-producing bacteria displayed increased neuronal AS deposition in both gut and brain and enhanced microgliosis and astrogliosis compared to rats exposed to either mutant bacteria unable to synthesize curli, or to vehicle alone. Animals exposed to curli producing bacteria also had more expression of TLR2, IL-6 and TNF in the brain than the other two groups. There were no differences among the rat groups in survival, body weight, inflammation in the mouth, retina, kidneys or gut epithelia, and circulating cytokine levels. AS-expressing C. elegans fed on curli-producing bacteria also had enhanced AS aggregation. These results suggest that bacterial amyloid functions as a trigger to initiate AS aggregation through cross-seeding and also primes responses of the innate immune system.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Ceftriaxone Preserves Glutamate Transporters and Prevents Intermittent Hypoxia-Induced Vulnerability to Brain Excitotoxic Injury

Rekha Jagadapillai; Nicholas Mellen; Leroy R. Sachleben; Evelyne Gozal

Hypoxia alters cellular metabolism and although the effects of sustained hypoxia (SH) have been extensively studied, less is known about chronic intermittent hypoxia (IH), commonly associated with cardiovascular morbidity and stroke. We hypothesize that impaired glutamate homeostasis after chronic IH may underlie vulnerability to stroke-induced excitotoxicity. P16 organotypic hippocampal slices, cultured for 7 days were exposed for 7 days to IH (alternating 2 min 5% O2 - 15 min 21% O2), SH (5% O2) or RA (21% O2), then 3 glutamate challenges. The first and last exposures were intended as a metabolic stimulus (200 µM glutamate, 15 min); the second emulated excitotoxicity (10 mM glutamate, 10 min). GFAP, MAP2, and EAAT1, EAAT2 glutamate transporters expression were assessed after exposure to each hypoxic protocol. Additionally, cell viability was determined at baseline and after each glutamate challenge, in presence or absence of ceftriaxone that increases glutamate transporter expression. GFAP and MAP2 decreased after 7 days IH and SH. Long-term IH but not SH decreased EAAT1 and EAAT2. Excitotoxic glutamate challenge decreased cell viability and the following 200 µM exposure further increased cell death, particularly in IH-exposed slices. Ceftriaxone prevented glutamate transporter decrease and improved cell viability after IH and excitotoxicity. We conclude that IH is more detrimental to cell survival and glutamate homeostasis than SH. These findings suggest that impaired regulation of extracellular glutamate levels is implicated in the increased brain susceptibility to excitotoxic insult after long-term IH.


International Journal of Molecular Sciences | 2016

Diabetic Microvascular Disease and Pulmonary Fibrosis: The Contribution of Platelets and Systemic Inflammation

Rekha Jagadapillai; Madhavi J. Rane; Xingyu Lin; Andrew M. Roberts; Gary W. Hoyle; Lu Cai; Evelyne Gozal

Diabetes is strongly associated with systemic inflammation and oxidative stress, but its effect on pulmonary vascular disease and lung function has often been disregarded. Several studies identified restrictive lung disease and fibrotic changes in diabetic patients and in animal models of diabetes. While microvascular dysfunction is a well-known complication of diabetes, the mechanisms leading to diabetes-induced lung injury have largely been disregarded. We described the potential involvement of diabetes-induced platelet-endothelial interactions in perpetuating vascular inflammation and oxidative injury leading to fibrotic changes in the lung. Changes in nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activation and decreased NO bioavailability in the diabetic lung increase platelet activation and vascular injury and may account for platelet hyperreactivity reported in diabetic patients. Additionally, the Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription (JAK/STAT) pathway has been reported to mediate pancreatic islet damage, and is implicated in the onset of diabetes, inflammation and vascular injury. Many growth factors and diabetes-induced agonists act via the JAK/STAT pathway. Other studies reported the contribution of the JAK/STAT pathway to the regulation of the pulmonary fibrotic process but the role of this pathway in the development of diabetic lung fibrosis has not been considered. These observations may open new therapeutic perspectives for modulating multiple pathways to mitigate diabetes onset or its pulmonary consequences.


Physiological Reports | 2016

Increased pulmonary arteriolar tone associated with lung oxidative stress and nitric oxide in a mouse model of Alzheimer's disease.

Andrew M. Roberts; Rekha Jagadapillai; Radhika Vaishnav; Robert P. Friedland; Robert Drinovac; Xingyu Lin; Evelyne Gozal

Vascular dysfunction and decreased cerebral blood flow are linked to Alzheimers disease (AD). Loss of endothelial nitric oxide (NO) and oxidative stress in human cerebrovascular endothelium increase expression of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and enhance production of the Aβ peptide, suggesting that loss of endothelial NO contributes to AD pathology. We hypothesize that decreased systemic NO bioavailability in AD may also impact lung microcirculation and induce pulmonary endothelial dysfunction. The acute effect of NO synthase (NOS) inhibition on pulmonary arteriolar tone was assessed in a transgenic mouse model (TgAD) of AD (C57BL/6‐Tg(Thy1‐APPSwDutIowa)BWevn/Mmjax) and age‐matched wild‐type controls (C57BL/6J). Arteriolar diameters were measured before and after the administration of the NOS inhibitor, L‐NAME. Lung superoxide formation (DHE) and formation of nitrotyrosine (3‐NT) were assessed as indicators of oxidative stress, inducible NOS (iNOS) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF‐α) expression as indicators of inflammation. Administration of L‐NAME caused either significant pulmonary arteriolar constriction or no change from baseline tone in wild‐type (WT) mice, and significant arteriolar dilation in TgAD mice. DHE, 3‐NT, TNF‐α, and iNOS expression were higher in TgAD lung tissue, compared to WT mice. These data suggest L‐NAME could induce increased pulmonary arteriolar tone in WT mice from loss of bioavailable NO. In contrast, NOS inhibition with L‐NAME had a vasodilator effect in TgAD mice, potentially caused by decreased reactive nitrogen species formation, while significant oxidative stress and inflammation were present. We conclude that AD may increase pulmonary microvascular tone as a result of loss of bioavailable NO and increased oxidative stress. Our findings suggest that AD may have systemic microvascular implications beyond central neural control mechanisms.


Toxicology | 2014

DEVELOPMENTAL CIGARETTE SMOKE EXPOSURE: HIPPOCAMPUS PROTEOME AND METABOLOME PROFILES IN LOW BIRTH WEIGHT PUPS

Rachel E. Neal; Jing Chen; Rekha Jagadapillai; Hyejeong Jang; Bassam Abomoelak; Guy N. Brock; Robert M. Greene; M. Michele Pisano


Reproductive Toxicology | 2016

Developmental cigarette smoke exposure II: Hippocampus proteome and metabolome profiles in adult offspring

Rachel E. Neal; Rekha Jagadapillai; Jing Chen; Cindy Webb; Kendall Stocke; Robert M. Greene; M. Michele Pisano


Stroke | 2016

Abstract TP281: Increased Susceptibility to Excitotoxic Injury in Rat Hippocampal Slices Exposed to Intermittent Hypoxia

Rekha Jagadapillai; Nicholas Mellen; Leroy R. Sachleben; Evelyne Gozal


Reproductive Toxicology | 2016

Developmental cigarette smoke exposure II: Kidney proteome profile alterations in 6 month old adult offspring

Rachel E. Neal; Rekha Jagadapillai; Jing Chen; Cynthia L. Webb; Kendall Stocke; Cailtin Gambrell; Robert M. Greene; M. Michele Pisano


Neurology | 2016

The Influence of Bacterial Amyloid on Alpha Synuclein (AS) Misfolding in the Rat (P4.334)

Robert P. Friedland; Madave Rane; Evelyne Gozal; Shinying Jin; Rekha Jagadapillai; Andrew M. Roberts; Ruolan Liu; Eliezer Masliah; Vilius Stribinskis


The FASEB Journal | 2015

Platelet-Endothelial Association with Fibrinogen/Fibrin, Coupled with Oxidative Stress, Protein Nitrosylation, and Fibrosis may underlie Pulmonary Endothelial Cell Dysfunction in a Mouse Model of Type 1 Diabetes

Andrew M. Roberts; Rekha Jagadapillai; James T. Dixon; Yi Tan; Lu Cai; Evelyne Gozal

Collaboration


Dive into the Rekha Jagadapillai's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Evelyne Gozal

University of Louisville

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jing Chen

University of Louisville

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rachel E. Neal

University of Louisville

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kendall Stocke

University of Louisville

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge