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Featured researches published by S. Nicholas Mason.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2009

Maternal Exposure to Particulate Matter Increases Postnatal Ozone-induced Airway Hyperreactivity in Juvenile Mice

Richard L. Auten; Erin N. Potts; S. Nicholas Mason; Bernard M. Fischer; Yuhchin Huang; W. Michael Foster

RATIONALE Epidemiologic studies implicate air pollutant exposure during pregnancy as a risk factor for wheezing in offspring. Ozone exposure is linked to exacerbations of wheezing in children. OBJECTIVES To determine if maternal pulmonary exposure to traffic-related particles during pregnancy augments ozone-induced airway hyperresponsiveness in offspring. METHODS C57BL6 time-mated mice were given NIST SRM#1648 (particulate matter [PM]) 0.48 mg, saline vehicle, or no treatment by tracheal insufflation twice weekly for 3 weeks. PM exposure augmented maternal lung inflammation and placental TNF-alpha, Keratinocyte-derived cytokine (KC), and IL-6 (measured at gestation Day 18). After parturition, dams and litters were exposed to air or ozone 1 ppm 3 h/d, every other day, thrice weekly for 4 weeks. Respiratory system resistance in pups was measured at baseline and after administration of nebulized methacholine. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Ozone increased airway hyperresponsiveness, but the increase was greatest in pups born to PM-treated dams. Whole-lung TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, KC, IL-6, and MCP-1 were increased in ozone-treated pups, with the greatest increase in pups born to dams given PM. Airway epithelial mucous metaplasia estimated by periodic acid-Schiff Alcian blue staining was increased in ozone-exposed pups born to PM-treated dams. Alveolar development, determined by morphometry, and airway smooth muscle bulk, estimated using alpha-actin histochemistry, were unaffected by prenatal or postnatal treatment. CONCLUSIONS Maternal pulmonary exposure to PM during pregnancy augments placental cytokine expression and postnatal ozone-induced pulmonary inflammatory cytokine responses and ozone-induced airway hyperresponsiveness without altering airway structure.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2012

Maternal Diesel Inhalation Increases Airway Hyperreactivity in Ozone-Exposed Offspring

Richard L. Auten; M. Ian Gilmour; Q. Todd Krantz; Erin N. Potts; S. Nicholas Mason; W. Michael Foster

Air pollutant exposure is linked with childhood asthma incidence and exacerbations, and maternal exposure to airborne pollutants during pregnancy increases airway hyperreactivity (AHR) in offspring. To determine if exposure to diesel exhaust (DE) during pregnancy worsened postnatal ozone-induced AHR, timed pregnant C57BL/6 mice were exposed to DE (0.5 or 2.0 mg/m(3)) 4 hours daily from Gestation Day 9-17, or received twice-weekly oropharyngeal aspirations of the collected DE particles (DEPs). Placentas and fetal lungs were harvested on Gestation Day 18 for cytokine analysis. In other litters, pups born to dams exposed to air or DE, or to dams treated with aspirated diesel particles, were exposed to filtered air or 1 ppm ozone beginning the day after birth, for 3 hours per day, 3 days per week for 4 weeks. Additional pups were monitored after a 4-week recovery period. Diesel inhalation or aspiration during pregnancy increased levels of placental and fetal lung cytokines. There were no significant effects on airway leukocytes, but prenatal diesel augmented ozone-induced elevations of bronchoalveolar lavage cytokines at 4 weeks. Mice born to the high-concentration diesel-exposed dams had worse ozone-induced AHR, which persisted in the 4-week recovery animals. Prenatal diesel exposure combined with postnatal ozone exposure also worsened secondary alveolar crest development. We conclude that maternal inhalation of DE in pregnancy provokes a fetal inflammatory response that, combined with postnatal ozone exposure, impairs alveolar development, and causes a more severe and long-lasting AHR to ozone exposure.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2009

Hyperoxia impairs postnatal alveolar epithelial development via NADPH oxidase in newborn mice

Richard L. Auten; S. Nicholas Mason; Kathryn M. Auten; Mulugu V. Brahmajothi

Hyperoxia disrupts postnatal lung development in part through inducing inflammation. To determine the contribution of leukocyte-derived reactive oxygen species, we exposed newborn wild-type and NADPH oxidase p47(phox) subunit null (p47(phox-/-)) mice to air or acute hyperoxia (95% O(2)) for up to 11 days. Hyperoxia-induced pulmonary neutrophil influx was similar in wild-type and p47(-/-) mice at postnatal days (P) 7 and 11. Macrophages were decreased in wild-type hyperoxia-exposed mice compared with p47(phox-/-) mice at P11. Hyperoxia impaired type II alveolar epithelial cell and bronchiolar epithelial cell proliferation, but depression of type II cell proliferation was significantly less in p47(-/-) mice at P3 and P7, when inflammation was minimal. We found reciprocal results for the expression of the cell cycle inhibitor p21(cip/waf) in type II cells, which was induced in 95% O(2)-exposed wild-type mice, but significantly less in p47(phox-/-) littermates at P7. Despite partial preservation of type II cell proliferation, deletion of p47(phox) did not prevent the major adverse effects of hyperoxia on alveolar development estimated by morphometry at P11, but hyperoxia impairment of elastin deposition at alveolar septal crests was significantly worse in wild-type vs. p47(phox-/-) mice at P11. Since we found that p47(phox) is expressed in a subset of alveolar epithelial cells, its deletion may protect postnatal type II alveolar epithelial proliferation from hyperoxia through effects on epithelial as well as phagocyte-generated superoxide.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2010

Transport rather than diffusion-dependent route for nitric oxide gas activity in alveolar epithelium

Mulugu V. Brahmajothi; S. Nicholas Mason; A. Richard Whorton; Timothy J. McMahon; Richard L. Auten

The pathway by which inhaled NO gas enters pulmonary alveolar epithelial cells has not been directly tested. Although the expected mechanism is diffusion, another route is the formation of S-nitroso-L-cysteine, which then enters the cell through the L-type amino acid transporter (LAT). To determine if NO gas also enters alveolar epithelium this way, we exposed alveolar epithelial-rat type I, type II, L2, R3/1, and human A549-cells to NO gas at the air liquid interface in the presence of L- and D-cysteine+/-LAT competitors. NO gas exposure concentration dependently increased intracellular NO and S-nitrosothiol levels in the presence of L- but not D-cysteine, which was inhibited by LAT competitors, and was inversely proportional to diffusion distance. The effect of L-cysteine on NO uptake was also concentration dependent. Without preincubation with L-cysteine, NO uptake was significantly reduced. We found similar effects using ethyl nitrite gas in place of NO. Exposure to either gas induced activation of soluble guanylyl cylase in a parallel manner, consistent with LAT dependence. We conclude that NO gas uptake by alveolar epithelium achieves NO-based signaling predominantly by forming extracellular S-nitroso-L-cysteine that is taken up through LAT, rather than by diffusion. Augmenting extracellular S-nitroso-L-cysteine formation may augment pharmacological actions of inhaled NO gas.


Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2015

Boronic acid-containing aminopyridine- and aminopyrimidinecarboxamide CXCR1/2 antagonists: Optimization of aqueous solubility and oral bioavailability

Aaron D. Schuler; Courtney A. Engles; Dean Y. Maeda; Mark T. Quinn; Liliya N. Kirpotina; Winston N. Wicomb; S. Nicholas Mason; Richard L. Auten; John A. Zebala

The chemokine receptors CXCR1 and CXCR2 are important pharmaceutical targets due to their key roles in inflammatory diseases and cancer progression. We have previously identified 2-[5-(4-fluoro-phenylcarbamoyl)-pyridin-2-ylsulfanylmethyl]-phenylboronic acid (SX-517) and 6-(2-boronic acid-5-trifluoromethoxy-benzylsulfanyl)-N-(4-fluoro-phenyl)-nicotinamide (SX-576) as potent non-competitive boronic acid-containing CXCR1/2 antagonists. Herein we report the synthesis and evaluation of aminopyridine and aminopyrimidine analogs of SX-517 and SX-576, identifying (2-{(benzyl)[(5-boronic acid-2-pyridyl)methyl]amino}-5-pyrimidinyl)(4-fluorophenylamino)formaldehyde as a potent chemokine antagonist with improved aqueous solubility and oral bioavailability.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2000

Lung Inflammation in Hyperoxia Can Be Prevented By Antichemokine Treatment in Newborn Rats

Hui Deng; S. Nicholas Mason; Richard L. Auten


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2002

Blocking Neutrophil Influx Reduces DNA Damage in Hyperoxia-Exposed Newborn Rat Lung

Richard L. Auten; Mary H. Whorton; S. Nicholas Mason


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2004

Antimacrophage chemokine treatment prevents neutrophil and macrophage influx in hyperoxia-exposed newborn rat lung

Michael A. Vozzelli; S. Nicholas Mason; Mary H. Whorton; Richard L. Auten


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2003

Extracellular Superoxide Dismutase Protects Lung Development in Hyperoxia-exposed Newborn Mice

Mohamed Ahmed; Hagir B. Suliman; Rodney J. Folz; Eva Nozik-Grayck; Maria L. Golson; S. Nicholas Mason; Richard L. Auten


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2001

Anti-neutrophil chemokine preserves alveolar development in hyperoxia-exposed newborn rats.

Richard L. Auten; S. Nicholas Mason; David T. Tanaka; Karen E. Welty-Wolf; Mary H. Whorton

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Aaron D. Schuler

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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