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Dive into the research topics where Robert P. Casillas is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert P. Casillas.


Experimental and Molecular Pathology | 2011

Structural changes in the skin of hairless mice following exposure to sulfur mustard correlate with inflammation and DNA damage.

Laurie B. Joseph; Donald R. Gerecke; Diane E. Heck; Adrienne T. Black; Patrick J. Sinko; Jessica A. Cervelli; Robert P. Casillas; Michael C. Babin; Debra L. Laskin; Jeffrey D. Laskin

Sulfur mustard (SM, bis(2-chloroethyl)sulfide) is a bifunctional alkylating agent that causes dermal inflammation, edema and blistering. To investigate the pathogenesis of SM-induced injury, we used a vapor cup model which provides an occlusive environment in which SM is in constant contact with the skin. The dorsal skin of SKH-1 hairless mice was exposed to saturated SM vapor or air control. Histopathological changes, inflammatory markers and DNA damage were analyzed 1-14 days later. After 1 day, SM caused epidermal thinning, stratum corneum shedding, basal cell karyolysis, hemorrhage and macrophage and neutrophil accumulation in the dermis. Cleaved caspase-3 and phosphorylated histone 2A.X (phospho-H2A.X), markers of apoptosis and DNA damage, respectively, were increased whereas proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA) was down-regulated after SM exposure. By 3 days, epithelial cell hypertrophy, edema, parakeratosis and loss of epidermal structures were noted. Enzymes generating pro-inflammatory mediators including myeloperoxidase and cyclooxygenase-2 were upregulated. After 7 days, keratin-10, a differentiation marker, was evident in the stratum corneum. This was associated with an underlying eschar, as neoepidermis began to migrate at the wound edges. Trichrome staining revealed increased collagen deposition in the dermis. PCNA expression in the epidermis was correlated with hyperplasia, hyperkeratosis, and parakeratosis. By 14 days, there was epidermal regeneration with extensive hyperplasia, and reduced expression of cleaved caspase-3, cyclooxygenase-2 and phospho-H2A.X. These findings are consistent with the pathophysiology of SM-induced skin injury in humans suggesting that the hairless mouse can be used to investigate the dermatoxicity of vesicants and the potential efficacy of countermeasures.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2013

Sulfur mustard induces an endoplasmic reticulum stress response in the mouse ear vesicant model

Yoke-Chen Chang; James D. Wang; Kathy K.H. Svoboda; Robert P. Casillas; Jeffrey D. Laskin; Marion K. Gordon; Donald R. Gerecke

The endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress response is a cell survival pathway upregulated when cells are under severe stress. Severely damaged mouse ear skin exposed to the vesicant, sulfur mustard (bis-2-chloroethyl sulfide, SM), resulted in increased expression of ER chaperone proteins that accompany misfolded and incorrectly made proteins targeted for degradation. Time course studies with SM using the mouse ear vesicant model (MEVM) showed progressive histopathologic changes including edema, separation of the epidermis from the dermis, persistent inflammation, upregulation of laminin γ2 (one of the chains of laminin-332, a heterotrimeric skin glycoprotein required for wound repair), and delayed wound healing from 24h to 168h post exposure. This was associated with time related increased expression of the cell survival ER stress marker, GRP78/BiP, and the ER stress apoptosis marker, GADD153/CHOP, suggesting simultaneous activation of both cell survival and non-mitochondrial apoptosis pathways. Dual immunofluorescence labeling of a keratinocyte migration promoting protein, laminin γ2 and GRP78/BIP, showed colocalization of the two molecules 72h post exposure indicating that the laminin γ2 was misfolded after SM exposure and trapped within the ER. Taken together, these data show that ER stress is induced in mouse skin within 24h of vesicant exposure in a defensive response to promote cell survival; however, it appears that this response is rapidly overwhelmed by the apoptotic pathway as a consequence of severe SM-induced injury.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2014

Therapeutic potential of a non-steroidal bifunctional anti-inflammatory and anti-cholinergic agent against skin injury induced by sulfur mustard.

Yoke-Chen Chang; James D. Wang; Rita A. Hahn; Marion K. Gordon; Laurie B. Joseph; Diane E. Heck; Ned D. Heindel; Sherri C. Young; Patrick J. Sinko; Robert P. Casillas; Jeffrey D. Laskin; Debra L. Laskin; Donald R. Gerecke

Sulfur mustard (bis(2-chloroethyl) sulfide, SM) is a highly reactive bifunctional alkylating agent inducing edema, inflammation, and the formation of fluid-filled blisters in the skin. Medical countermeasures against SM-induced cutaneous injury have yet to be established. In the present studies, we tested a novel, bifunctional anti-inflammatory prodrug (NDH 4338) designed to target cyclooxygenase 2 (COX2), an enzyme that generates inflammatory eicosanoids, and acetylcholinesterase, an enzyme mediating activation of cholinergic inflammatory pathways in a model of SM-induced skin injury. Adult SKH-1 hairless male mice were exposed to SM using a dorsal skin vapor cup model. NDH 4338 was applied topically to the skin 24, 48, and 72 h post-SM exposure. After 96 h, SM was found to induce skin injury characterized by edema, epidermal hyperplasia, loss of the differentiation marker, keratin 10 (K10), upregulation of the skin wound marker keratin 6 (K6), disruption of the basement membrane anchoring protein laminin 322, and increased expression of epidermal COX2. NDH 4338 post-treatment reduced SM-induced dermal edema and enhanced skin re-epithelialization. This was associated with a reduction in COX2 expression, increased K10 expression in the suprabasal epidermis, and reduced expression of K6. NDH 4338 also restored basement membrane integrity, as evidenced by continuous expression of laminin 332 at the dermal-epidermal junction. Taken together, these data indicate that a bifunctional anti-inflammatory prodrug stimulates repair of SM induced skin injury and may be useful as a medical countermeasure.


Experimental and Molecular Pathology | 2014

Structural changes in hair follicles and sebaceous glands of hairless mice following exposure to sulfur mustard

Laurie B. Joseph; Diane E. Heck; Jessica A. Cervelli; Gabriella M. Composto; Michael C. Babin; Robert P. Casillas; Patrick J. Sinko; Donald R. Gerecke; Debra L. Laskin; Jeffrey D. Laskin

Sulfur mustard (SM) is a bifunctional alkylating agent causing skin inflammation, edema and blistering. A hallmark of SM-induced toxicity is follicular and interfollicular epithelial damage. In the present studies we determined if SM-induced structural alterations in hair follicles and sebaceous glands were correlated with cell damage, inflammation and wound healing. The dorsal skin of hairless mice was treated with saturated SM vapor. One to seven days later, epithelial cell karyolysis within the hair root sheath, infundibulum and isthmus was apparent, along with reduced numbers of sebocytes. Increased numbers of utriculi, some with connections to the skin surface, and engorged dermal cysts were also evident. This was associated with marked changes in expression of markers of DNA damage (phospho-H2A.X), apoptosis (cleaved caspase-3), and wound healing (FGFR2 and galectin-3) throughout pilosebaceous units. Conversely, fatty acid synthase and galectin-3 were down-regulated in sebocytes after SM. Decreased numbers of hair follicles and increased numbers of inflammatory cells surrounding the utriculi and follicular cysts were noted within the wound 3-7 days post-SM exposure. Expression of phospho-H2A.X, cleaved caspase-3, FGFR2 and galectin-3 was decreased in dysplastic follicular epidermis. Fourteen days after SM, engorged follicular cysts which expressed galectin-3 were noted within hyperplastic epidermis. Galectin-3 was also expressed in basal keratinocytes and in the first few layers of suprabasal keratinocytes in neoepidermis formed during wound healing indicating that this lectin is important in the early stages of keratinocyte differentiation. These data indicate that hair follicles and sebaceous glands are targets for SM in the skin.


Cutaneous and Ocular Toxicology | 2016

Clinical progression of ocular injury following arsenical vesicant lewisite exposure

Neera Tewari-Singh; Claire R. Croutch; Richard Tuttle; Dinesh G Goswami; Rama Kant; Eric Peters; Tara Culley; David A. Ammar; Robert W. Enzenauer; J. Mark Petrash; Robert P. Casillas; Rajesh Agarwal

Abstract Ocular injury by lewisite (LEW), a potential chemical warfare and terrorist agent, results in edema of eyelids, inflammation, massive corneal necrosis and blindness. To enable screening of effective therapeutics to treat ocular injury from LEW, useful clinically-relevant endpoints are essential. Hence, we designed an efficient exposure system capable of exposing up to six New-Zealand white rabbits at one time, and assessed LEW vapor-induced progression of clinical ocular lesions mainly in the cornea. The right eye of each rabbit was exposed to LEW (0.2u2009mg/L) vapor for 2.5, 5.0, 7.5 and 10.0u2009min and clinical progression of injury was observed for 28 days post-exposure (dose–response study), or exposed to same LEW dose for 2.5 and 7.5u2009min and clinical progression of injury was observed for up to 56 days post-exposure (time–response study); left eye served as an unexposed control. Increasing LEW exposure caused corneal opacity within 6u2009h post-exposure, which increased up to 3 days, slightly reduced thereafter till 3 weeks, and again increased thereafter. LEW-induced corneal ulceration peaked at 1u2009day post-exposure and its increase thereafter was observed in phases. LEW exposure induced neovascularization starting at 7 days which peaked at 22–35 days post-exposure, and remained persistent thereafter. In addition, LEW exposure caused corneal thickness, iris redness, and redness and swelling of the conjunctiva. Together, these findings provide clinical sequelae of ocular injury following LEW exposure and for the first time establish clinically-relevant quantitative endpoints, to enable the further identification of histopathological and molecular events involved in LEW-induced ocular injury.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2016

Mustard vesicants alter expression of the endocannabinoid system in mouse skin

Irene Wohlman; Gabriella M. Composto; Diane E. Heck; Ned D. Heindel; C. Jeffrey Lacey; Christophe Guillon; Robert P. Casillas; Claire R. Croutch; Donald R. Gerecke; Debra L. Laskin; Laurie B. Joseph; Jeffrey D. Laskin

Vesicants including sulfur mustard (SM) and nitrogen mustard (NM) are bifunctional alkylating agents that cause skin inflammation, edema and blistering. This is associated with alterations in keratinocyte growth and differentiation. Endogenous cannabinoids, including N-arachidonoylethanolamine (anandamide, AEA) and 2-arachidonoyl glycerol (2-AG), are important in regulating inflammation, keratinocyte proliferation and wound healing. Their activity is mediated by binding to cannabinoid receptors 1 and 2 (CB1 and CB2), as well as peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα). Levels of endocannabinoids are regulated by fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH). We found that CB1, CB2, PPARα and FAAH were all constitutively expressed in mouse epidermis and dermal appendages. Topical administration of NM or SM, at concentrations that induce tissue injury, resulted in upregulation of FAAH, CB1, CB2 and PPARα, a response that persisted throughout the wound healing process. Inhibitors of FAAH including a novel class of vanillyl alcohol carbamates were found to be highly effective in suppressing vesicant-induced inflammation in mouse skin. Taken together, these data indicate that the endocannabinoid system is important in regulating skin homeostasis and that inhibitors of FAAH may be useful as medical countermeasures against vesicants.


Experimental and Molecular Pathology | 2016

Mitigation of nitrogen mustard mediated skin injury by a novel indomethacin bifunctional prodrug

Gabriella M. Composto; Jeffrey D. Laskin; Debra L. Laskin; Donald R. Gerecke; Robert P. Casillas; Ned D. Heindel; Laurie B. Joseph; Diane E. Heck

Nitrogen mustard (NM) is a bifunctional alkylating agent that is highly reactive in the skin causing extensive tissue damage and blistering. In the present studies, a modified cutaneous murine patch model was developed to characterize NM-induced injury and to evaluate the efficacy of an indomethacin pro-drug in mitigating toxicity. NM (20μmol) or vehicle control was applied onto 6mm glass microfiber filters affixed to the shaved dorsal skin of CD-1 mice for 6min. This resulted in absorption of approximately 4μmol of NM. NM caused localized skin damage within 1 d, progressing to an eschar within 2-3 d, followed by wound healing after 4-5 d. NM-induced injury was associated with increases in skin thickness, inflammatory cell infiltration, reduced numbers of sebocytes, basal keratinocyte double stranded DNA breaks, as measured by phospho-histone 2A.X expression, mast cell degranulation and increases in inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) and cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). Wound healing was characterized by epidermal hyperplasia and marked increases in basal cells expressing proliferating cell nuclear antigen. A novel indomethacin-anticholinergic prodrug (4338) designed to target cyclooxygenases and acetylcholinesterase (AChE), was found to markedly suppress NM toxicity, decreasing wound thickness and eschar formation. The prodrug also inhibited mast cell degranulation, suppressed keratinocyte expression of iNOS and COX-2, as well as markers of epidermal proliferation. These findings indicate that a novel bifunctional pro-drug is effective in limiting NM mediated dermal injury. Moreover, our newly developed cutaneous patch model is a sensitive and reproducible method to assess the mechanism of action of countermeasures.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2017

Cutaneous exposure to vesicant phosgene oxime: Acute effects on the skin and systemic toxicity

Neera Tewari-Singh; Dinesh G. Goswami; Rama Kant; Claire R. Croutch; Robert P. Casillas; David J. Orlicky; Rajesh Agarwal

ABSTRACT Phosgene Oxime (CX), an urticant or nettle agent categorized as a vesicant, is a potential chemical warfare and terrorist weapon. Its exposure can result in widespread and devastating effects including high mortality due to its fast penetration and ability to cause immediate severe cutaneous injury. It is one of the least studied chemical warfare agents with no effective therapy available. Thus, our goal was to examine the acute effects of CX following its cutaneous exposure in SKH‐1 hairless mice to help establish a relevant injury model. Results from our study show that topical cutaneous exposure to CX vapor causes blanching of exposed skin with an erythematous ring, necrosis, edema, mild urticaria and erythema within minutes after exposure out to 8 h post‐exposure. These clinical skin manifestations were accompanied with increases in skin thickness, apoptotic cell death, mast cell degranulation, myeloperoxidase activity indicating neutrophil infiltration, p53 phosphorylation and accumulation, and an increase in COX‐2 and TNF&agr; levels. Topical CX‐exposure also resulted in the dilatation of the peripheral vessels with a robust increase in RBCs in vessels of the liver, spleen, kidney, lungs and heart tissues. These events could cause a drop in blood pressure leading to shock, hypoxia and death. Together, this is the first report on effects of CX cutaneous exposure, which could help design further comprehensive studies evaluating the acute and chronic skin injuries from CX topical exposure and elucidate the related mechanism of action to aid in the identification of therapeutic targets and mitigation of injury. HIGHLIGHTSPhosgene oxime cutaneous exposure causes skin blanching, edema and urticaria.Penetration of phosgene oxime causes dilation of vasculature in internal organs.Mast cells could play an important role in phosgene oxime‐induced skin injury.Phosgene oxime could induce low blood pressure and hypoxia leading to mortality.Data is significant for developing a phosgene oxime‐induced skin injury model.


Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2018

Expression of cytokines and chemokines in mouse skin treated with sulfur mustard

Yoke-Chen Chang; Melannie Soriano; Rita A. Hahn; Robert P. Casillas; Marion K. Gordon; Jeffrey D. Laskin; Donald R. Gerecke

ABSTRACT Sulfur mustard (2,2′‐dichlorodiethyl sulfide, SM) is a chemical warfare agent that generates an inflammatory response in the skin and causes severe tissue damage and blistering. In earlier studies, we identified cutaneous damage induced by SM in mouse ear skin including edema, erythema, epidermal hyperplasia and microblistering. The present work was focused on determining if SM‐induced injury was associated with alterations in mRNA and protein expression of specific cytokines and chemokines in the ear skin. We found that SM caused an accumulation of macrophages and neutrophils in the tissue within one day which persisted for at least 7days. This was associated with a 2–15 fold increase in expression of the proinflammatory cytokines interleukin‐1&bgr;, interleukin‐6, and tumor necrosis factor &agr; at time points up to 7days post‐SM exposure. Marked increases (20–1000 fold) in expression of chemokines associated with recruitment and activation of macrophages were also noted in the tissue including growth‐regulated oncogene &agr; (GRO&agr;/CXCL1), monocyte chemoattractant protein 1 (MCP‐1/CCL2), granulocyte‐colony stimulating factor (GCSF/CSF3), macrophage inflammatory protein 1&agr; (MIP1&agr;/CCL3), and IFN‐&ggr;‐inducible protein 10 (IP10/CXCL10). The pattern of cytokines/chemokine expression was coordinate with expression of macrophage elastase/MMP12 and neutrophil collagenase/MMP8 suggesting that macrophages and neutrophils were, at least in part, a source of cytokines and chemokines. These data support the idea that inflammatory cell‐derived mediators contribute to the pathogenesis of SM induced skin damage. Modulating the infiltration of inflammatory cells and reducing the expression of inflammatory mediators in the skin may be an important strategy for mitigating SM‐induced cutaneous injury. HIGHLIGHTSWe found elevated mRNA and protein expression of cytokines/chemokines in SM injured skin.We identified an array of significant inflammatory mediators in skin post‐exposure.The infiltration of inflammatory cells was maximum in skin at 168h post‐SM.The alteration of mediator expression was coordinate with the Inflammatory cells.Inflammatory cell‐derived mediators contribute to the SM induced skin damage.


Toxicological Sciences | 2017

Histopathological and Molecular Changes in the Rabbit Cornea From Arsenical Vesicant Lewisite Exposure

Neera Tewari-Singh; Dinesh G. Goswami; Rama Kant; David A. Ammar; Dileep Kumar; Robert W. Enzenauer; Robert P. Casillas; Claire R. Croutch; J. Mark Petrash; Rajesh Agarwal

Lewisite (LEW), a potent arsenical vesicating chemical warfare agent, poses a continuous risk of accidental exposure in addition to its feared use as a terrorist weapon. Ocular tissue is exquisitely sensitive to LEW and exposure can cause devastating corneal lesions. However, detailed pathogenesis of corneal injury and related mechanisms from LEW exposure that could help identify targeted therapies are not available. Using an established consistent and efficient exposure system, we evaluated the pathophysiology of the corneal injury in New Zealand white rabbits following LEW vapor exposure (at 0.2u2009mg/L dose) for 2.5 and 7.5u2009min, for up to 28u2009day post-exposure. LEW led to an increase in total corneal thickness starting at day 1 post-exposure and epithelial degradation starting at day 3 post-exposure, with maximal effect at day 7 postexposure followed by recovery at later time points. LEW also led to an increase in the number of blood vessels and inflammatory cells but a decrease in keratocytes with optimal effects at day 7 postexposure. A significant increase in epithelial-stromal separation was observed at days 7 and 14 post 7.5u2009min LEW exposure. LEW also caused an increase in the expression levels of cyclooxygenase-2, IL-8, vascular endothelial growth factor, and matrix metalloproteinase-9 at all the study time points indicating their involvement in LEW-induced inflammation, vesication, and neovascularization. The outcomes here provide valuable LEW-induced corneal injury endpoints at both lower and higher exposure durations in a relevant model system, which will be helpful to identify and screen therapies against LEW-induced corneal injury.

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Diane E. Heck

New York Medical College

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Neera Tewari-Singh

University of Colorado Denver

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Rama Kant

University of Colorado Denver

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David A. Ammar

University of Colorado Denver

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