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Dive into the research topics where Stephen J. Langer is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen J. Langer.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

A Role for Proinflammatory Cytokines and Fractalkine in Analgesia, Tolerance, and Subsequent Pain Facilitation Induced by Chronic Intrathecal Morphine

Ian Johnston; Erin D. Milligan; Julie Wieseler-Frank; Matthew G. Frank; Varlin Zapata; Jay Campisi; Stephen J. Langer; David Martin; Paula Green; Monika Fleshner; Leslie A. Leinwand; Steven F. Maier; Linda R. Watkins

The present experiments examined the role of spinal proinflammatory cytokines [interleukin-1β (IL-1)] and chemokines (fractalkine) in acute analgesia and in the development of analgesic tolerance, thermal hyperalgesia, and tactile allodynia in response to chronic intrathecal morphine. Chronic (5 d), but not acute (1 d), intrathecal morphine was associated with a rapid increase in proinflammatory cytokine protein and/or mRNA in dorsal spinal cord and lumbosacral CSF. To determine whether IL-1 release modulates the effects of morphine, intrathecal morphine was coadministered with intrathecal IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra). This regimen potentiated acute morphine analgesia and inhibited the development of hyperalgesia, allodynia, and analgesic tolerance. Similarly, intrathecal IL-1ra administered after the establishment of morphine tolerance reversed hyperalgesia and prevented the additional development of tolerance and allodynia. Fractalkine also appears to modulate the effects of intrathecal morphine because coadministration of morphine with intrathecal neutralizing antibody against the fractalkine receptor (CX3CR1) potentiated acute morphine analgesia and attenuated the development of tolerance, hyperalgesia, and allodynia. Fractalkine may be exerting these effects via IL-1 because fractalkine (CX3CL1) induced the release of IL-1 from acutely isolated dorsal spinal cord in vitro. Finally, gene therapy with an adenoviral vector encoding for the release of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 also potentiated acute morphine analgesia and attenuated the development of tolerance, hyperalgesia, and allodynia. Taken together, these results suggest that IL-1 and fractalkine are endogenous regulators of morphine analgesia and are involved in the increases in pain sensitivity that occur after chronic opiates.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Controlling pathological pain by adenovirally driven spinal production of the anti-inflammatory cytokine, interleukin-10.

Erin D. Milligan; Stephen J. Langer; Evan M. Sloane; Lin He; Julie Wieseler-Frank; Kevin A. O'Connor; David Martin; John Forsayeth; Steven F. Maier; Kirk W. Johnson; Raymond A. Chavez; Leslie A. Leinwand; Linda R. Watkins

Gene therapy for the control of pain has, to date, targeted neurons. However, recent evidence supports that spinal cord glia are critical to the creation and maintenance of pain facilitation through the release of proinflammatory cytokines. Because of the ability of interleukin‐10 (IL‐10) to suppress proinflammatory cytokines, we tested whether an adenoviral vector encoding human IL‐10 (AD‐h‐IL10) would block and reverse pain facilitation. Three pain models were examined, all of which are mediated by spinal pro‐inflammatory cytokines. Acute intrathecal administration of rat IL‐10 protein itself briefly reversed chronic constriction injury‐induced mechanical allodynia and thermal hyperalgesia. The transient reversal caused by IL‐10 protein paralleled the half‐life of human IL‐10 protein in the intrathecal space (t1/2 ∼ 2 h). IL‐10 gene therapy both prevented and reversed thermal hyperalgesia and mechanical allodynia, without affecting basal responses to thermal or mechanical stimuli. Extra‐territorial, as well as territorial, pain changes were reversed by this treatment. Intrathecal AD‐h‐IL10 injected over lumbosacral spinal cord led to elevated lumbosacral cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) levels of human IL‐10, with far less human IL‐10 observed in cervical CSF. In keeping with IL‐10s known anti‐inflammatory actions, AD‐h‐IL10 lowered CSF levels of IL‐1, relative to control AD. These studies support that this gene therapy approach provides an alternative to neuronally focused drug and gene therapies for clinical pain control.


Molecular Pain | 2005

Controlling neuropathic pain by adeno-associated virus driven production of the anti-inflammatory cytokine, interleukin-10

Erin D. Milligan; Evan M. Sloane; Stephen J. Langer; Pedro E. Cruz; Marucia Chacur; Leah Spataro; Julie Wieseler-Frank; Sayamwong E. Hammack; Steven F. Maier; Terence R. Flotte; John Forsayeth; Leslie A. Leinwand; Raymond A. Chavez; Linda R. Watkins

Despite many decades of drug development, effective therapies for neuropathic pain remain elusive. The recent recognition of spinal cord glia and glial pro-inflammatory cytokines as important contributors to neuropathic pain suggests an alternative therapeutic strategy; that is, targeting glial activation or its downstream consequences. While several glial-selective drugs have been successful in controlling neuropathic pain in animal models, none are optimal for human use. Thus the aim of the present studies was to explore a novel approach for controlling neuropathic pain. Here, an adeno-associated viral (serotype II; AAV2) vector was created that encodes the anti-inflammatory cytokine, interleukin-10 (IL-10). This anti-inflammatory cytokine is known to suppress the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Upon intrathecal administration, this novel AAV2-IL-10 vector was successful in transiently preventing and reversing neuropathic pain. Intrathecal administration of an AAV2 vector encoding beta-galactosidase revealed that AAV2 preferentially infects meningeal cells surrounding the CSF space. Taken together, these data provide initial support that intrathecal gene therapy to drive the production of IL-10 may prove to be an efficacious treatment for neuropathic pain.


Pain | 2006

Repeated intrathecal injections of plasmid DNA encoding interleukin-10 produce prolonged reversal of neuropathic pain

Erin D. Milligan; Evan M. Sloane; Stephen J. Langer; Travis S. Hughes; Brian M. Jekich; Matthew G. Frank; John H. Mahoney; Lindsay H. Levkoff; Steven F. Maier; Pedro E. Cruz; Terence R. Flotte; Kirk W. Johnson; Melissa M. Mahoney; Raymond A. Chavez; Leslie A. Leinwand; Linda R. Watkins

&NA; Neuropathic pain is a major clinical problem unresolved by available therapeutics. Spinal cord glia play a pivotal role in neuropathic pain, via the release of proinflammatory cytokines. Anti‐inflammatory cytokines, like interleukin‐10 (IL‐10), suppress proinflammatory cytokines. Thus, IL‐10 may provide a means for controlling glial amplification of pain. We recently documented that intrathecal IL‐10 protein resolves neuropathic pain, albeit briefly (˜2–3 h), given its short half‐life. Intrathecal gene therapy using viruses encoding IL‐10 can also resolve neuropathic pain, but for only ˜2 weeks. Here, we report a novel approach that dramatically increases the efficacy of intrathecal IL‐10 gene therapy. Repeated intrathecal delivery of plasmid DNA vectors encoding IL‐10 (pDNA‐IL‐10) abolished neuropathic pain for greater than 40 days. Naked pDNA‐IL‐10 reversed chronic constriction injury (CCI)‐induced allodynia both shortly after nerve injury as well as 2 months later. This supports that spinal proinflammatory cytokines are important in both the initiation and maintenance of neuropathic pain. Importantly, pDNA‐IL‐10 gene therapy reversed mechanical allodynia induced by CCI, returning rats to normal pain responsiveness, without additional analgesia. Together, these data suggest that intrathecal IL‐10 gene therapy may provide a novel approach for prolonged clinical pain control.


Neuron Glia Biology | 2006

Intrathecal polymer-based interleukin-10 gene delivery for neuropathic pain

Erin D. Milligan; Ryan G. Soderquist; Stephanie M. Malone; John H. Mahoney; Travis S. Hughes; Stephen J. Langer; Evan M. Sloane; Steven F. Maier; Leslie A. Leinwand; Linda R. Watkins; Melissa J. Mahoney

Research on communication between glia and neurons has increased in the past decade. The onset of neuropathic pain, a major clinical problem that is not resolved by available therapeutics, involves activation of spinal cord glia through the release of proinflammatory cytokines in acute animal models of neuropathic pain. Here, we demonstrate for the first time that the spinal action of the proinflammatory cytokine, interleukin 1 (IL-1) is involved in maintaining persistent (2 months) allodynia induced by chronic-constriction injury (CCI). The anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 can suppress proinflammatory cytokines and spinal cord glial amplification of pain. Given that IL-1 is a key mediator of neuropathic pain, developing a clinically viable means of long-term delivery of IL-10 to the spinal cord is desirable. High doses of intrathecal IL-10-gene therapy using naked plasmid DNA (free pDNA-IL-10) is effective, but the dose required limits its potential clinical utility. Here we show that intrathecal gene therapy for neuropathic pain is improved sufficiently using two, distinct synthetic polymers, poly(lactic-co-glycolic) and polyethylenimine, that substantially lower doses of pDNA-IL-10 are effective. In conclusion, synthetic polymers used as i.t. gene-delivery systems are well-tolerated and improve the long-duration efficacy of pDNA-IL-10 gene therapy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Hydrogels preserve native phenotypes of valvular fibroblasts through an elasticity-regulated PI3K/AKT pathway

Huan Wang; Mark W. Tibbitt; Stephen J. Langer; Leslie A. Leinwand; Kristi S. Anseth

Significance Valvular interstitial cells (VICs) are the principal cellular component of cardiac valves and maintain normal valve homeostasis. During valvular fibrosis, VICs differentiate into myofibroblasts and stiffen the valve matrix. The results in this report demonstrate that standard techniques of culturing VICs on supraphysiologically stiff, tissue-culture polystyrene cause a dramatic induction of myofibroblast differentiation. In contrast, culturing VICs on soft, poly(ethylene glycol)-based hydrogels preserves the native, quiescent phenotype. A detailed study of VIC mechano-sensing reveals that matrix elasticity elicits pathologic changes in VICs through PI3K/AKT signaling. A more complete understanding of the molecular mechanisms of VIC mechano-biology may facilitate development of novel therapeutics targeting downstream signaling in matrix-stiffness–associated diseases, and may be applicable to fibrotic diseases in different tissues. Matrix elasticity regulates proliferation, apoptosis, and differentiation of many cell types across various tissues. In particular, stiffened matrix in fibrotic lesions has been shown to promote pathogenic myofibroblast activation. To better understand the underlying pathways by which fibroblasts mechano-sense matrix elasticity, we cultured primary valvular interstitial cells (VICs) isolated from porcine aortic valves on poly(ethylene glycol)-based hydrogels with physiologically relevant and tunable elasticities. We show that soft hydrogels preserve the quiescent fibroblast phenotype of VICs much better than stiff plastic plates. We demonstrate that the PI3K/AKT pathway is significantly up-regulated when VICs are cultured on stiff gels or tissue culture polystyrene compared with freshly isolated VICs. In contrast, myofibroblasts de-activate and pAKT/AKT decreases as early as 2 h after reducing the substrate modulus. When PI3K or AKT is inhibited on stiff substrates, myofibroblast activation is blocked. When constitutively active PI3K is overexpressed, the myofibroblast phenotype is promoted even on soft substrates. These data suggest that valvular fibroblasts are sensing the changes in matrix elasticity through the PI3K/AKT pathway. This mechanism may be used by other mechano-sensitive cells in response to substrate modulus, and this pathway may be a worthwhile target for treating matrix stiffness-associated diseases. Furthermore, hydrogels can be designed to recapitulate important mechanical cues in native tissues to preserve aspects of the native phenotype of primary cells for understanding basic cellular responses to biophysical and biochemical signals, and for tissue-engineering applications.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

The Ku Protein Complex Interacts with YY1, Is Up-Regulated in Human Heart Failure, and Represses α Myosin Heavy-Chain Gene Expression

Carmen C. Sucharov; Steve M. Helmke; Stephen J. Langer; M. Benjamin Perryman; Michael R. Bristow; Leslie A. Leinwand

ABSTRACT Human heart failure is accompanied by repression of genes such as α myosin heavy chain (αMyHC) and SERCA2A and the induction of fetal genes such as βMyHC and atrial natriuretic factor. It seems likely that changes in MyHC isoforms contribute to the poor contractility seen in heart failure, because small changes in isoform composition can have a major effect on the contractility of cardiac myocytes and the heart. Our laboratory has recently shown that YY1 protein levels are increased in human heart failure and that YY1 represses the activity of the human αMyHC promoter. We have now identified a region of the αMyHC promoter that binds a factor whose expression is increased sixfold in failing human hearts. Through peptide mass spectrometry, we identified this binding activity to be a heterodimer of Ku70 and Ku80. Expression of Ku represses the human αMyHC promoter in neonatal rat ventricular myocytes. Moreover, overexpression of Ku70/80 decreases αMyHC mRNA expression and increases skeletal α-actin. Interestingly, YY1 interacts with Ku70 and Ku80 in HeLa cells. Together, YY1, Ku70, and Ku80 repress the αMyHC promoter to an extent that is greater than that with YY1 or Ku70/80 alone. Our results suggest that Ku is an important factor in the repression of the human αMyHC promoter during heart failure.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

The Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Myosin Mutation R453C Alters ATP Binding and Hydrolysis of Human Cardiac β-Myosin

Marieke J. Bloemink; John C. Deacon; Stephen J. Langer; Carlos Vera; Ariana Combs; Leslie A. Leinwand; Michael A. Geeves

Background: R453C is a mutation in human cardiac myosin and is associated with a high incidence of sudden cardiac death. Results: R453C alters few kinetic parameters, except for the conformational changes associated with ATP binding and hydrolysis. Conclusion: The closure of switch-2 on ATP is disrupted by R453C. Significance: This is the first detailed kinetic analysis of the motor domain of the human β-cardiac myosin carrying the R453C mutation. The human hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutation R453C results in one of the more severe forms of the myopathy. Arg-453 is found in a conserved surface loop of the upper 50-kDa domain of the myosin motor domain and lies between the nucleotide binding pocket and the actin binding site. It connects to the cardiomyopathy loop via a long α-helix, helix O, and to Switch-2 via the fifth strand of the central β-sheet. The mutation is, therefore, in a position to perturb a wide range of myosin molecular activities. We report here the first detailed biochemical kinetic analysis of the motor domain of the human β-cardiac myosin carrying the R453C mutation. A recent report of the same mutation (Sommese, R. F., Sung, J., Nag, S., Sutton, S., Deacon, J. C., Choe, E., Leinwand, L. A., Ruppel, K., and Spudich, J. A. (2013) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 110, 12607–12612) found reduced ATPase and in vitro motility but increased force production using an optical trap. Surprisingly, our results show that the mutation alters few biochemical kinetic parameters significantly. The exceptions are the rate constants for ATP binding to the motor domain (reduced by 35%) and the ATP hydrolysis step/recovery stroke (slowed 3-fold), which could be the rate-limiting step for the ATPase cycle. Effects of the mutation on the recovery stroke are consistent with a perturbation of Switch-2 closure, which is required for the recovery stroke and the subsequent ATP hydrolysis.


Science Advances | 2015

Contractility parameters of human β-cardiac myosin with the hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutation R403Q show loss of motor function

Suman Nag; Ruth F. Sommese; Zoltán Ujfalusi; Ariana Combs; Stephen J. Langer; Shirley Sutton; Leslie A. Leinwand; Michael A. Geeves; Kathleen M. Ruppel; James A. Spudich

Force parameters of human β-cardiac myosin with the hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutation R403Q show loss of molecular motor function. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most frequently occurring inherited cardiovascular disease. It is caused by mutations in genes encoding the force-generating machinery of the cardiac sarcomere, including human β-cardiac myosin. We present a detailed characterization of the most debated HCM-causing mutation in human β-cardiac myosin, R403Q. Despite numerous studies, most performed with nonhuman or noncardiac myosin, there is no consensus about the mechanism of action of this mutation on the function of the enzyme. We use recombinant human β-cardiac myosin and new methodologies to characterize in vitro contractility parameters of the R403Q myosin compared to wild type. We extend our studies beyond pure actin filaments to include the interaction of myosin with regulated actin filaments containing tropomyosin and troponin. We find that, with pure actin, the intrinsic force generated by R403Q is ~15% lower than that generated by wild type. The unloaded velocity is, however, ~10% higher for R403Q myosin, resulting in a load-dependent velocity curve that has the characteristics of lower contractility at higher external loads compared to wild type. With regulated actin filaments, there is no increase in the unloaded velocity and the contractility of the R403Q myosin is lower than that of wild type at all loads. Unlike that with pure actin, the actin-activated adenosine triphosphatase activity for R403Q myosin with Ca2+-regulated actin filaments is ~30% lower than that for wild type, predicting a lower unloaded duty ratio of the motor. Overall, the contractility parameters studied fit with a loss of human β-cardiac myosin contractility as a result of the R403Q mutation.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

A randomized library approach to identifying functional lox site domains for the Cre recombinase

Jamie E. Sheren; Stephen J. Langer; Leslie A. Leinwand

The bacteriophage P1 Cre/loxP site-specific recombination system is a useful tool in a number of genetic engineering processes. The Cre recombinase has been shown to act on DNA sequences that vary considerably from that of its bacteriophage recognition sequence, loxP. However, little is known about the sequence requirements for functional lox-like sequences. In this study, we have implemented a randomized library approach to identify the sequence characteristics of functional lox site domains. We created a randomized spacer library and a randomized arm library, and then tested them for recombination in vivo and in vitro. Results from the spacer library show that, while there is great plasticity, identity between spacer pairs is the most important factor influencing function, especially in in vitro reactions. The presence of one completely randomized arm in a functional loxP recombination reaction revealed that only three wild-type loxP arms are necessary for successful recombination in Cre-expressing bacteria, and that there are nucleotide preferences at the first three and last three positions of the randomized arm for the most efficiently recombined sequences. Finally, we found that in vitro Cre recombination reactions are much more stringent for evaluating which sequences can support efficient recombination compared to the 294-CRE system.

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Leslie A. Leinwand

University of Colorado Boulder

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Erin D. Milligan

University of Colorado Boulder

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Linda R. Watkins

University of Colorado Boulder

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Evan M. Sloane

University of Colorado Boulder

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Steven F. Maier

University of Colorado Boulder

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Travis S. Hughes

University of Colorado Boulder

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John H. Mahoney

University of Colorado Boulder

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Brian M. Jekich

University of Colorado Boulder

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