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Dive into the research topics where Stephanie Lang is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephanie Lang.


Development | 2005

aPKC, Crumbs3 and Lgl2 control apicobasal polarity in early vertebrate development

Andrew D. Chalmers; Michael Pambos; Julia Mason; Stephanie Lang; Christopher Wylie; Nancy Papalopulu

In early vertebrate development, apicobasally polarised blastomeres divide to produce inner non-polarised cells and outer polarised cells that follow different fates. How the polarity of these early blastomeres is established is not known. We have examined the role of Crumbs3, Lgl2 and the apical aPKC in the polarisation of frog blastomeres. Lgl2 localises to the basolateral membrane of blastomeres, while Crumbs3 localises to the apical and basolateral membranes. Overexpression aPKC and Crumbs3 expands the apical domain at the expense of the basolateral and repositions tight junctions in the new apical-basolateral interface. Loss of aPKC function causes loss of apical markers and redirects basolateral markers ectopically to the apical membrane. Cell polarity and tight junctions, but not cell adhesion, are lost and outer polarised cells become inner-like apolar cells. Overexpression of Xenopus Lgl2 phenocopies the aPKC knockout, suggesting that Lgl2 and aPKC act antagonistically. This was confirmed by showing that aPKC and Lgl2 can inhibit the localisation of each other and that Lgl2 rescues the apicalisation caused by aPKC. We conclude that an instrumental antagonistic interaction between aPKC and Lgl2 defines apicobasal polarity in early vertebrate development.


Development | 2005

Lysophosphatidic acid signaling controls cortical actin assembly and cytoarchitecture in Xenopus embryos

Brett Lloyd; Qinghua Tao; Stephanie Lang; Christopher Wylie

The mechanisms that control shape and rigidity of early embryos are not well understood, and yet are required for all embryonic processes to take place. In the Xenopus blastula, the cortical actin network in each blastomere is required for the maintenance of overall embryonic shape and rigidity. However, the mechanism whereby each cell assembles the appropriate pattern and number of actin filament bundles is not known. The existence of a similar network in each blastomere suggests two possibilities: cell-autonomous inheritance of instructions from the egg; or mutual intercellular signaling mediated by cell contact or diffusible signals. We show that intercellular signaling is required for the correct pattern of cortical actin assembly in Xenopus embryos, and that lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and its receptors, corresponding to LPA1 and LPA2 in mammals, are both necessary and sufficient for this function.


Wound Repair and Regeneration | 2012

Tissue-engineered provisional matrix as a novel approach to enhance diabetic wound healing.

Swathi Balaji; Sachin S. Vaikunth; Stephanie Lang; Abdul Q. Sheikh; Foong Y. Lim; Timothy M. Crombleholme; Daria A. Narmoneva

Inherent pathologies associated with diabetic wound microenvironment including increased proteolysis, inflammatory dysregulation, and impaired neovascularization prevent timely resolution of chronic diabetic ulcers. It is hypothesized that augmentation of local wound microenvironment with a stable provisional matrix formed by proteolysis‐resistant angiogenic peptide nanofibers (NFs) will create permissive environment for attenuated inflammation, enhanced neovascularization, and improved diabetic wound healing. Using murine excisional wound healing models, full‐thickness dorsal skin wounds were treated with either NFs or control solutions (phosphate buffered saline; hyaluronic acid) and analyzed for morphology, inflammatory response, neovascularization, and biomechanical properties. NF treatment of diabetic wounds stimulated formation of a robust pro‐angiogenic in situ tissue‐engineered provisional matrix leading to a significant decrease in wound inflammatory cell infiltration and proinflammatory interleukin‐6 levels, a significant increase in endothelial and endothelial progenitor cell infiltration, vascular endothelial growth factor levels, and neovascularization (day 7), as well as improved wound morphology, accelerated wound closure, and significantly stronger repair tissue (day 28). These results suggest that appropriate design of provisional matrix may compensate for some of the complex disruptions in diabetic wound microenvironment and provide missing cues to cells and direct in situ responses toward improved healing, which is promising for future development of new therapies for diabetic ulcers.


Development | 2005

A novel G protein-coupled receptor, related to GPR4, is required for assembly of the cortical actin skeleton in early Xenopus embryos

Qinghua Tao; Brett Lloyd; Stephanie Lang; Douglas W. Houston; Aaron M. Zorn; Christopher Wylie

As the fertilized Xenopus egg undergoes sequential cell divisions to form a blastula, each cell develops a network of cortical actin that provides shape and skeletal support for the whole embryo. Disruption of this network causes loss of shape and rigidity of the embryo, and disrupts gastrulation movements. We previously showed that lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) signaling controls the change in cortical actin density that occurs at different stages of the cell cycle. Here, we use a gain-of-function screen, using an egg cDNA expression library, to identify an orphan G protein-coupled cell-surface receptor (XFlop) that controls the overall amount of cortical F-actin. Overexpression of XFlop increases the amount of cortical actin, as well as embryo rigidity and wound healing, whereas depletion of maternal XFlop mRNA does the reverse. Both overexpression and depletion of XFlop perturb gastrulation movements. Reciprocal rescue experiments, and comparison of the effects of their depletion in early embryos, show that the XLPA and XFlop signaling pathways play independent roles in cortical actin assembly, and thus that multiple signaling pathways control the actin skeleton in the blastula.


Developmental Biology | 2008

Long- and short-range signals control the dynamic expression of an animal hemisphere-specific gene in Xenopus

Adnan Mir; Matthew Kofron; Janet Heasman; Melissa Mogle; Stephanie Lang; Bilge Birsoy; Christopher Wylie

Little is known of the control of gene expression in the animal hemisphere of the Xenopus embryo. Here we show that expression of FoxI1e, a gene essential for normal ectoderm formation, is expressed regionally within the animal hemisphere, in a highly dynamic fashion. In situ hybridization shows that FoxI1e is expressed in a wave-like fashion that is initiated on the dorsal side of the animal hemisphere, extends across to the ventral side by the mid-gastrula stage, and is then turned off in the dorsal ectoderm, the neural plate, at the neurula stage. It is confined to the inner layers of cells in the animal cap, and is expressed in a mosaic fashion throughout. We show that this dynamic pattern of expression is controlled by both short- and long-range signals. Notch signaling controls both the mosaic, and dorsal/ventral changes in expression, and is controlled, in turn, by Vg1 signaling from the vegetal mass. FoxI1e expression is also regulated by nodal signaling downstream of VegT. Canonical Wnt signaling contributes only to late changes in the FoxI1e expression pattern. These results provide new insights into the roles of vegetally localized mRNAs in controlling zygotic genes expressed in the animal hemisphere by long-range signaling. They also provide novel insights into the role of Notch signaling at the earliest stages of vertebrate development.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2008

The Xenopus laevis Isoform of G Protein-Coupled Receptor 3 (GPR3) Is a Constitutively Active Cell Surface Receptor that Participates in Maintaining Meiotic Arrest in X. laevis Oocytes

James Deng; Stephanie Lang; Christopher Wylie; Stephen R. Hammes


Journal of Surgical Research | 2012

Endothelial Progenitor Cells Dependent Post-Pneumonectomy Compensatory Lung Growth (PPCLG): Role of Proliferation and Apoptosis

N. Ghobril; S.G. Keswani; Stephanie Lang; Swathi Balaji; A. Leung; Khaled Omar; Helen Jones; Mounira Habli; Foong Y. Lim; Timothy M. Crombleholme


/data/revues/00029378/v204i1sS/S0002937810017114/ | 2011

433: Vasopressin concentrations in amniotic fluid of the recipient fetus with twin-twin transfusion syndrome

Sammy Tabbah; Mounira Habli; Stephanie Lang; James Cnota; Erik Michelfelder; Foong Y. Lim; Sundeep Keswani; Ronald Jaekle; Timothy M. Crombleholme


/data/revues/00029378/v204i1sS/S0002937810017114/ | 2011

Iconography : 433: Vasopressin concentrations in amniotic fluid of the recipient fetus with twin-twin transfusion syndrome

Sammy Tabbah; Mounira Habli; Stephanie Lang; James Cnota; Erik Michelfelder; Foong Y. Lim; Sundeep Keswani; Ronald Jaekle; Timothy M. Crombleholme


Developmental Biology | 2006

The role of LPA signaling in development of the anterior nervous system

Robert B. Lloyd; Stephanie Lang; Kyle Schaible; Christopher Wylie

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Foong Y. Lim

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Mounira Habli

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Erik Michelfelder

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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James Cnota

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Qinghua Tao

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Ronald Jaekle

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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Sammy Tabbah

University of Cincinnati Academic Health Center

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