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Dive into the research topics where Sara Wojciechowski is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara Wojciechowski.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2015

Interleukin-33 treatment reduces secondary injury and improves functional recovery after contusion spinal cord injury

Yuriy Pomeshchik; Iurii Kidin; Paula Korhonen; Ekaterina Savchenko; Merja Jaronen; Šárka Lehtonen; Sara Wojciechowski; Katja M. Kanninen; Jari Koistinaho; Tarja Malm

Interleukin-33 (IL-33) is a member of the interleukin-1 cytokine family and highly expressed in the naïve mouse brain and spinal cord. Despite the fact that IL-33 is known to be inducible by various inflammatory stimuli, its cellular localization in the central nervous system and role in pathological conditions is controversial. Administration of recombinant IL-33 has been shown to attenuate experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis progression in one study, yet contradictory reports also exist. Here we investigated for the first time the pattern of IL-33 expression in the contused mouse spinal cord and demonstrated that after spinal cord injury (SCI) IL-33 was up-regulated and exhibited a nuclear localization predominantly in astrocytes. Importantly, we found that treatment with recombinant IL-33 alleviated secondary damage by significantly decreasing tissue loss, demyelination and astrogliosis in the contused mouse spinal cord, resulting in dramatically improved functional recovery. We identified both central and peripheral mechanisms of IL-33 action. In spinal cord, IL-33 treatment reduced the expression of pro-inflammatory tumor necrosis factor-alpha and promoted the activation of anti-inflammatory arginase-1 positive M2 microglia/macrophages, which chronically persisted in the injured spinal cord for up to at least 42 days after the treatment. In addition, IL-33 treatment showed a tendency towards reduced T-cell infiltration into the spinal cord. In the periphery, IL-33 treatment induced a shift towards the Th2 type cytokine profile and reduced the percentage and absolute number of cytotoxic, tumor necrosis factor-alpha expressing CD4+ cells in the spleen. Additionally, IL-33 treatment increased expression of T-regulatory cell marker FoxP3 and reduced expression of M1 marker iNOS in the spleen. Taken together, these results provide the first evidence that IL-33 administration is beneficial after CNS trauma. Treatment with IL33 may offer a novel therapeutic strategy for patients with acute contusion SCI.


Experimental Cell Research | 2013

Hyaluronan production enhances shedding of plasma membrane-derived microvesicles

Kirsi Rilla; Sanna Pasonen-Seppänen; Ashik Jawahar Deen; Ville V.T. Koistinen; Sara Wojciechowski; Sanna Oikari; Riikka Kärnä; Genevieve Bart; Kari Törrönen; Raija Tammi; Markku Tammi

Many cell types secrete plasma membrane-bound microvesicles, suggested to play an important role in tissue morphogenesis, wound healing, and cancer spreading. However, the mechanisms of their formation have remained largely unknown. It was found that the tips of long microvilli induced in cells by overexpression of hyaluronan synthase 3 (HAS3) were detach into the culture medium as microvesicles. Moreover, several cell types with naturally active hyaluronan synthesis released high numbers of plasma membrane-derived vesicles, and inhibition of hyaluronan synthesis reduced their formation. The vesicles contained HAS, and were covered with a thick hyaluronan coat, a part of which was retained even after purification with high-speed centrifugation. HAS3 overexpressing MDCK cells cultured in a 3-D matrix as epithelial cysts released large amounts of HAS- and hyaluronan-positive vesicles from their basal surfaces into the extracellular matrix. As far as we know, hyaluronan synthesis is one of the first molecular mechanisms shown to stimulate the production of microvesicles. The microvesicles have a potential to deliver the hyaluronan synthase machinery and membrane and cytoplasmic materials to other cells, influencing tissue regeneration, inflammation and tumor progression.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2015

Immunomodulation by interleukin-33 is protective in stroke through modulation of inflammation

Paula Korhonen; Katja M. Kanninen; Šárka Lehtonen; Katja A. Puttonen; Minna Oksanen; Hiramani Dhungana; Sanna Loppi; Eveliina Pollari; Sara Wojciechowski; Iurii Kidin; Teresa García-Berrocoso; Dolors Giralt; Joan Montaner; Jari Koistinaho; Tarja Malm

Cerebral stroke induces massive Th1-shifted inflammation both in the brain and the periphery, contributing to the outcome of stroke. A Th1-type response is neurotoxic whereas a Th2-type response is accompanied by secretion of anti-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin-4 (IL-4). Interleukin-33 (IL-33) is a cytokine known to induce a shift towards the Th2-type immune response, polarize macrophages/microglia towards the M2-type, and induce production of anti-inflammatory cytokines. We found that the plasma levels of the inhibitory IL-33 receptor, sST2, are increased in human stroke and correlate with a worsened stroke outcome, suggesting an insufficient IL-33-driven Th2-type response. In mouse, peripheral administration of IL-33 reduced stroke-induced cell death and improved the sensitivity of the contralateral front paw at 5days post injury. The IL-33-treated mice had increased levels of IL-4 in the spleen and in the peri-ischemic area of the cortex. Neutralization of IL-4 by administration of an IL-4 antibody partially prevented the IL-33-mediated protection. IL-33 treatment also reduced astrocytic activation in the peri-ischemic area and increased the number of Arginase-1 immunopositive microglia/macrophages at the lesion site. In human T-cells, IL-33 treatment induced IL-4 secretion, and the conditioned media from IL-33-exposed T-cells reduced astrocytic activation. This study demonstrates that IL-33 is protective against ischemic insult by induction of IL-4 secretion and may represent a novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of stroke.


Aging Cell | 2013

Aging aggravates ischemic stroke-induced brain damage in mice with chronic peripheral infection.

Hiramani Dhungana; Tarja Malm; Adam Denes; Piia Valonen; Sara Wojciechowski; Johanna Magga; Ekaterina Savchenko; Neil E. Humphreys; Richard K. Grencis; Nancy J. Rothwell; Jari Koistinaho

Ischemic stroke is confounded by conditions such as atherosclerosis, diabetes, and infection, all of which alter peripheral inflammatory processes with concomitant impact on stroke outcome. The majority of the stroke patients are elderly, but the impact of interactions between aging and inflammation on stroke remains unknown. We thus investigated the influence of age on the outcome of stroke in animals predisposed to systemic chronic infection. Th1‐polarized chronic systemic infection was induced in 18–22 month and 4‐month‐old C57BL/6j mice by administration of Trichuris muris (gut parasite). One month after infection, mice underwent permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion and infarct size, brain gliosis, and brain and plasma cytokine profiles were analyzed. Chronic infection increased the infarct size in aged but not in young mice at 24 h. Aged, ischemic mice showed altered plasma and brain cytokine responses, while the lesion size correlated with plasma prestroke levels of RANTES. Moreover, the old, infected mice exhibited significantly increased neutrophil recruitment and upregulation of both plasma interleukin‐17α and tumor necrosis factor‐α levels. Neither age nor infection status alone or in combination altered the ischemia‐induced brain microgliosis. Our results show that chronic peripheral infection in aged animals renders the brain more vulnerable to ischemic insults, possibly by increasing the invasion of neutrophils and altering the inflammation status in the blood and brain. Understanding the interactions between age and infections is crucial for developing a better therapeutic regimen for ischemic stroke and when modeling it as a disease of the elderly.


Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2013

Western-type diet modulates inflammatory responses and impairs functional outcome following permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion in aged mice expressing the human apolipoprotein E4 allele

Hiramani Dhungana; Taisia Rolova; Ekaterina Savchenko; Sara Wojciechowski; Kaisa Savolainen; Anna-Kaisa Ruotsalainen; Patrick M. Sullivan; Jari Koistinaho; Tarja Malm

BackgroundNumerous clinical trials in stroke have failed, most probably partially due to preclinical studies using young, healthy male rodents with little relevance to the heterogenic conditions of human stroke. Co-morbid conditions such as atherosclerosis and infections coupled with advanced age are known to contribute to increased risk of cerebrovascular diseases. Clinical and preclinical studies have shown that the E4 allele of human apolipoprotein (ApoE4) is linked to poorer outcome in various conditions of brain injury and neurodegeneration, including cerebral ischemia. Since ApoE is a known regulator of lipid homeostasis, we studied the impact of a high-cholesterol diet in aged mice in the context of relevant human ApoE isoforms on the outcome of focal brain ischemia.MethodsAged mice expressing human E3 and E4 isoforms of ApoE in C57BL/6J background and C57BL/6J mice fed on either a high-fat diet or a normal diet underwent permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion. The impact of a high-cholesterol diet was assessed by measuring the serum cholesterol level and the infarction volume was determined by magnetic resonance imaging. Sensorimotor deficits were assessed using an adhesive removal test and the findings were correlated with inflammatory markers.ResultsWe show that expression of human ApoE4 renders aged mice fed with a western-type diet more susceptible to sensorimotor deficits upon stroke. These deficits are not associated with atherosclerosis but are accompanied with altered astroglial activation, neurogenesis, cyclooxygenase-2 immunoreactivity and increased plasma IL-6.ConclusionsOur results support the hypothesis that ApoE alleles modify the inflammatory responses in the brain and the periphery, thus contributing to altered functional outcome following stroke.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2016

UDP-sugar substrates of HAS3 regulate its O-GlcNAcylation, intracellular traffic, extracellular shedding and correlate with melanoma progression

Ashik Jawahar Deen; Uma Thanigai Arasu; Sanna Pasonen-Seppänen; Antti Hassinen; Piia Takabe; Sara Wojciechowski; Riikka Kärnä; Kirsi Rilla; Sakari Kellokumpu; Raija Tammi; Markku Tammi; Sanna Oikari

Hyaluronan content is a powerful prognostic factor in many cancer types, but the molecular basis of its synthesis in cancer still remains unclear. Hyaluronan synthesis requires the transport of hyaluronan synthases (HAS1-3) from Golgi to plasma membrane (PM), where the enzymes are activated. For the very first time, the present study demonstrated a rapid recycling of HAS3 between PM and endosomes, controlled by the cytosolic levels of the HAS substrates UDP-GlcUA and UDP-GlcNAc. Depletion of UDP-GlcNAc or UDP-GlcUA shifted the balance towards HAS3 endocytosis, and inhibition of hyaluronan synthesis. In contrast, UDP-GlcNAc surplus suppressed endocytosis and lysosomal decay of HAS3, favoring its retention in PM, stimulating hyaluronan synthesis, and HAS3 shedding in extracellular vesicles. The concentration of UDP-GlcNAc also controlled the level of O-GlcNAc modification of HAS3. Increasing O-GlcNAcylation reproduced the effects of UDP-GlcNAc surplus on HAS3 trafficking, while its suppression showed the opposite effects, indicating that O-GlcNAc signaling is associated to UDP-GlcNAc supply. Importantly, a similar correlation existed between the expression of GFAT1 (the rate limiting enzyme in UDP-GlcNAc synthesis) and hyaluronan content in early and deep human melanomas, suggesting the association of UDP-sugar metabolism in initiation of melanomagenesis. In general, changes in glucose metabolism, realized through UDP-sugar contents and O-GlcNAc signaling, are important in HAS3 trafficking, hyaluronan synthesis, and correlates with melanoma progression.


Cell Transplantation | 2013

Improved method of producing human neural progenitor cells of high purity and in large quantities from pluripotent stem cells for transplantation studies.

Katja A. Puttonen; Marika Ruponen; Riitta Kauppinen; Sara Wojciechowski; Outi Hovatta; Jari Koistinaho

Transplantation of human neural progenitor cells (hNPCs) is a promising therapeutic approach for various diseases of the central nervous system (CNS). Reliable testing of hNPC transplantation in animal models of neurological diseases requires that these cells can be produced in sufficient amounts, show consistent homogeneity as a neural cell population, and be reliably labeled for in vivo tracking. In addition, the cells should be characterized as being at the optimal state of differentiation favoring successful engraftment. Here, we show that high numbers of purified hNPCs can be produced from human embryonic stem cells (hESCs) by manually selecting specifically sized and shaped spheres followed by fluorescence-activated cell sorting based on the relative cell size. In addition, we report that labeling of hNPCs with ultra-small superparamagnetic iron oxide (USPIO) particles does not affect the cellular morphology or growth. More importantly, we show that the transduction with lentiviral vector encoding green fluorescent protein (GFP) decreases the neurality of the cell population. We conclude that our cost-effective protocol of generating hNPCs is widely applicable for preclinical studies on CNS disorders. This improved method of producing large quantities of high-purity hNPCs maybe useful also when generating hNPCs from human induced pluripotent stem (hiPS) cell lines. However, caution should be used when lenti-GFP transduction is applied for hNPC labeling.


Neurotherapeutics | 2017

The Copper bis(thiosemicarbazone) Complex CuII(atsm) Is Protective Against Cerebral Ischemia Through Modulation of the Inflammatory Milieu

Mikko T. Huuskonen; Qing zhang Tuo; Sanna Loppi; Hiramani Dhungana; Paula Korhonen; Lachlan E. McInnes; Paul S. Donnelly; Alexandra Grubman; Sara Wojciechowski; Katarína Lejavová; Yuriy Pomeshchik; Laura Periviita; Lotta Kosonen; Martina Giordano; Frederick R. Walker; Rong Liu; Ashley I. Bush; Jari Koistinaho; Tarja Malm; Anthony R. White; Peng Lei; Katja M. Kanninen

Developing new therapies for stroke is urgently needed, as this disease is the leading cause of death and disability worldwide, and the existing treatment is only available for a small subset of patients. The interruption of blood flow to the brain during ischemic stroke launches multiple immune responses, characterized by infiltration of peripheral immune cells, the activation of brain microglial cells, and the accumulation of immune mediators. Copper is an essential trace element that is required for many critical processes in the brain. Copper homeostasis is disturbed in chronic neurodegenerative diseases and altered in stroke patients, and targeted copper delivery has been shown to be protective against chronic neurodegeneration. This study was undertaken to assess whether the copper bis(thiosemicarbazone) complex, CuII(atsm), is beneficial in acute brain injury, in preclinical mouse models of ischemic stroke. We demonstrate that the copper complex CuII(atsm) protects neurons from excitotoxicity and N2a cells from OGD in vitro, and is protective in permanent and transient ischemia models in mice as measured by functional outcome and lesion size. Copper delivery in the ischemic brains modulates the inflammatory response, specifically affecting the myeloid cells. It reduces CD45 and Iba1 immunoreactivity, and alters the morphology of Iba1 positive cells in the ischemic brain. CuII(atsm) also protects endogenous microglia against ischemic insult and reduces the proportion of invading monocytes. These results demonstrate that the copper complex CuII(atsm) is an inflammation-modulating compound with high therapeutic potential in stroke and is a strong candidate for the development of therapies for acute brain injury.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Bexarotene targets autophagy and is protective against thromboembolic stroke in aged mice with tauopathy

Mikko T. Huuskonen; Sanna Loppi; Hiramani Dhungana; Velta Keksa-Goldsteine; Paula Korhonen; Sara Wojciechowski; Eveliina Pollari; Piia Valonen; Juho Koponen; Akihiko Takashima; Gary E. Landreth; Gundars Goldsteins; Tarja Malm; Jari Koistinaho; Katja M. Kanninen

Stroke is a highly debilitating, often fatal disorder for which current therapies are suitable for only a minor fraction of patients. Discovery of novel, effective therapies is hampered by the fact that advanced age, primary age-related tauopathy or comorbidities typical to several types of dementing diseases are usually not taken into account in preclinical studies, which predominantly use young, healthy rodents. Here we investigated for the first time the neuroprotective potential of bexarotene, an FDA-approved agent, in a co-morbidity model of stroke that combines high age and tauopathy with thromboembolic cerebral ischemia. Following thromboembolic stroke bexarotene enhanced autophagy in the ischemic brain concomitantly with a reduction in lesion volume and amelioration of behavioral deficits in aged transgenic mice expressing the human P301L-Tau mutation. In in vitro studies bexarotene increased the expression of autophagy markers and reduced autophagic flux in neuronal cells expressing P301L-Tau. Bexarotene also restored mitochondrial respiration deficits in P301L-Tau neurons. These newly described actions of bexarotene add to the growing amount of compelling data showing that bexarotene is a potent neuroprotective agent, and identify a novel autophagy-modulating effect of bexarotene.


Amino Acids | 2014

Enhanced polyamine catabolism disturbs hematopoietic lineage commitment and leads to a myeloproliferative disease in mice overexpressing spermidine/spermine N1-acetyltransferase

Sini Pirnes-Karhu; Pentti Mäntymaa; Reijo Sironen; Petri I. Mäkinen; Sara Wojciechowski; Sisko Juutinen; Jari Koistinaho; Sohvi Hörkkö; Esa Jantunen; Leena Alhonen; Anne Uimari

Spermidine/spermine N1-acetyltransferase (SSAT) regulates intracellular polyamine levels by catabolizing spermidine and spermine which are essential for cell proliferation and differentiation. Hematological characterization of SSAT overexpressing mice (SSAT mice) revealed enhanced myelopoiesis and thrombocytopoiesis leading to increased amounts of myeloid cells in bone marrow, peripheral blood, and spleen compared to wild-type animals. The level of SSAT activity in the bone marrow cells was associated with the bone marrow cellularity and spleen weight which both were significantly increased in SSAT mice. The result of bone marrow transplantations indicated that both the intrinsic SSAT overexpression of bone marrow cells and bone marrow microenvironment had an impact on the observed hematopoietic phenotype. The Lineage-negative Sca-1+ c-Kit+ hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) compartment in SSAT mice, showed enhanced proliferation, increased proportion of long-term HSCs and affected expression of transcription factors associated with lineage priming and myeloid differentiation. The proportions of common myeloid and megakaryocytic/erythroid progenitors were decreased and the proportion of granulocyte–macrophage progenitors was increased in SSAT bone marrow. The data suggest that SSAT overexpression and the concomitantly accelerated polyamine metabolism in hematopoietic cells and bone marrow microenvironment affect lineage commitment and lead to the development of a mouse myeloproliferative disease in SSAT mice.

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Dive into the Sara Wojciechowski's collaboration.

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Jari Koistinaho

University of Eastern Finland

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Tarja Malm

University of Eastern Finland

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Hiramani Dhungana

University of Eastern Finland

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Katja M. Kanninen

University of Eastern Finland

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Ekaterina Savchenko

University of Eastern Finland

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Paula Korhonen

University of Eastern Finland

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Sanna Loppi

University of Eastern Finland

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Eveliina Pollari

University of Eastern Finland

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Johanna Magga

University of Eastern Finland

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Mikko T. Huuskonen

University of Eastern Finland

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