Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Tera L. Lavoie is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Tera L. Lavoie.


Biochemical Genetics | 2005

Molecular Cloning and Characterization of Canine Pre-B-Cell Colony-Enhancing Factor

James R. McGlothlin; Li Gao; Tera L. Lavoie; Brett A. Simon; R. Blaine Easley; Shwu Fan Ma; Bernice B. Rumala; Joe G. N. Garcia; Shui Qing Ye

During our previous attempt to search for the candidate genes to acute lung injury (ALI), we unexpectedly identified PBEF as the most highly upregulated gene in a canine model of ALI by crosshybridizing canine lung cRNA to the Affymetrix human gene chip HG-U133A. The result suggested that PBEF may be a potential biomarker in ALI. To extend and translate that finding, we have performed the molecular cloning and characterization of canine PBEF cDNA in this study. Deduced amino acid sequence alignment revealed that the PBEF gene is evolutionarily highly conserved, with the canine PBEF protein sequence 96% identical to human PBEF and 94% identical to both murine and rat PBEF counterparts. Canine PBEF protein was successfully expressed both by in vitro transcription coupled with translation in a cell-free system and by transfection of canine PBEF cDNA into the human lung type II alveolar adenocarcinoma cell line A549. The expressed canine PBEF protein was visualized by either an anti-V5 tag peptide polyclonal antibody or an anti-canine PBEF peptide polyclonal antibody. RT-PCR assay indicates that canine PBEF is expressed in canine lung, brain, heart, liver, spleen, kidney, pancreas, and muscle, with liver showing the highest expression, followed by muscle. Isolation of the canine PBEF cDNA and expression of its recombinant protein may provide molecular tools to study the molecular mechanism of ALI in the canine model and to elucidate the potential role of PBEF as an ALI biomarker.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2012

Dilatation of the Constricted Human Airway by Tidal Expansion of Lung Parenchyma

Tera L. Lavoie; Ramaswamy Krishnan; Harrison R. Siegel; Essence D. Maston; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Julian Solway; Maria L. Dowell

RATIONALE In the normal lung, breathing and deep inspirations potently antagonize bronchoconstriction, but in the asthmatic lung this salutary effect is substantially attenuated or even reversed. To explain these findings, the prevailing hypothesis focuses on contracting airway smooth muscle and posits a nonlinear dynamic interaction between actomyosin binding and the tethering forces imposed by tidally expanding lung parenchyma. OBJECTIVE This hypothesis has never been tested directly in bronchial smooth muscle embedded within intraparenchymal airways. Our objective here is to fill that gap. METHODS We designed a novel system to image contracting intraparenchymal human airways situated within near-normal lung architecture and subjected to dynamic parenchymal expansion that simulates breathing. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Reversal of bronchoconstriction depended on the degree to which breathing actually stretched the airway, which in turn depended negatively on severity of constriction and positively on the depth of breathing. Such behavior implies positive feedbacks that engender airway instability. OVERALL CONCLUSIONS These findings help to explain heterogeneity of airflow obstruction as well as why, in people with asthma, deep inspirations are less effective in reversing bronchoconstriction.


Proceedings of the American Thoracic Society | 2009

Disrupting actin-myosin-actin connectivity in airway smooth muscle as a treatment for asthma?

Tera L. Lavoie; Maria L. Dowell; Oren Lakser; William T. Gerthoffer; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Chun Y. Seow; Richard W. Mitchell; Julian Solway

Breathing is known to functionally antagonize bronchoconstriction caused by airway muscle contraction. During breathing, tidal lung inflation generates force fluctuations that are transmitted to the contracted airway muscle. In vitro, experimental application of force fluctuations to contracted airway smooth muscle strips causes them to relengthen. Such force fluctuation-induced relengthening (FFIR) likely represents the mechanism by which breathing antagonizes bronchoconstriction. Thus, understanding the mechanisms that regulate FFIR of contracted airway muscle could suggest novel therapeutic interventions to increase FFIR, and so to enhance the beneficial effects of breathing in suppressing bronchoconstriction. Here we propose that the connectivity between actin filaments in contracting airway myocytes is a key determinant of FFIR, and suggest that disrupting actin-myosin-actin connectivity by interfering with actin polymerization or with myosin polymerization merits further evaluation as a potential novel approach for preventing prolonged bronchoconstriction in asthma.


European Respiratory Journal | 2008

Steroids Augment Relengthening of Contracted Airway Smooth Muscle: Potential Additional Mechanism of Benefit in Asthma

Oren Lakser; Maria L. Dowell; F. L. Hoyte; Bohao Chen; Tera L. Lavoie; C. Ferreira; Lawrence H. Pinto; Nickolai O. Dulin; Paul Kogut; Jason Churchill; Richard W. Mitchell; Julian Solway

Breathing (especially deep breathing) antagonises development and persistence of airflow obstruction during bronchoconstrictor stimulation. Force fluctuations imposed on contracted airway smooth muscle (ASM) in vitro result in its relengthening, a phenomenon called force fluctuation-induced relengthening (FFIR). Because breathing imposes similar force fluctuations on contracted ASM within intact lungs, FFIR represents a likely mechanism by which breathing antagonises bronchoconstriction. While this bronchoprotective effect appears to be impaired in asthma, corticosteroid treatment can restore the ability of deep breaths to reverse artificially induced bronchoconstriction in asthmatic subjects. It has previously been demonstrated that FFIR is physiologically regulated through the p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling pathway. While the beneficial effects of corticosteroids have been attributed to suppression of airway inflammation, the current authors hypothesised that alternatively they might exert their action directly on ASM by augmenting FFIR as a result of inhibiting p38 MAPK signalling. This possibility was tested in the present study by measuring relengthening in contracted canine tracheal smooth muscle (TSM) strips. The results indicate that dexamethasone treatment significantly augmented FFIR of contracted canine TSM. Canine tracheal ASM cells treated with dexamethasone demonstrated increased MAPK phosphatase-1 expression and decreased p38 MAPK activity, as reflected in reduced phosphorylation of the p38 MAPK downstream target, heat shock protein 27. These results suggest that corticosteroids may exert part of their therapeutic effect through direct action on airway smooth muscle, by decreasing p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase activity and thus increasing force fluctuation-induced relengthening.


European Respiratory Journal | 2010

MEK modulates force-fluctuation-induced relengthening of canine tracheal smooth muscle

Maria L. Dowell; Tera L. Lavoie; Oren Lakser; Nickolai O. Dulin; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; William T. Gerthoffer; C. Y. Seow; Richard W. Mitchell; Julian Solway

Tidal breathing, and especially deep breathing, is known to antagonise bronchoconstriction caused by airway smooth muscle (ASM) contraction; however, this bronchoprotective effect of breathing is impaired in asthma. Force fluctuations applied to contracted ASM in vitro cause it to relengthen, force-fluctuation-induced relengthening (FFIR). Given that breathing generates similar force fluctuations in ASM, FFIR represents a likely mechanism by which breathing antagonises bronchoconstriction. Thus it is of considerable interest to understand what modulates FFIR, and how ASM might be manipulated to exploit this phenomenon. It was demonstrated previously that p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) signalling regulates FFIR in ASM strips. Here, it was hypothesised that the MAPK kinase (MEK) signalling pathway also modulates FFIR. In order to test this hypothesis, changes in FFIR were measured in ASM treated with the MEK inhibitor, U0126 (1,4-diamino-2,3-dicyano-1,4-bis[2-aminophenylthio]butadiene). Increasing concentrations of U0126 caused greater FFIR. U0126 reduced extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 phosphorylation without affecting isotonic shortening or 20-kDa myosin light chain and p38 MAPK phosphorylation. However, increasing concentrations of U0126 progressively blunted phosphorylation of high-molecular-weight caldesmon (h-caldesmon), a downstream target of MEK. Thus changes in FFIR exhibited significant negative correlation with h-caldesmon phosphorylation. The present data demonstrate that FFIR is regulated through MEK signalling, and suggest that the role of MEK is mediated, in part, through caldesmon.


Integrative Biology | 2015

High-throughput screening for modulators of cellular contractile force

Chan Young Park; Enhua H. Zhou; Dhananjay Tambe; Bohao Chen; Tera L. Lavoie; Maria L. Dowell; Anton Simeonov; David J. Maloney; Aleksandar Marinkovic; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Stephanie Burger; Matthew Frykenberg; James P. Butler; W. Daniel Stamer; Mark Johnson; Julian Solway; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Ramaswamy Krishnan

When cellular contractile forces are central to pathophysiology, these forces comprise a logical target of therapy. Nevertheless, existing high-throughput screens are limited to upstream signalling intermediates with poorly defined relationships to such a physiological endpoint. Using cellular force as the target, here we report a new screening technology and demonstrate its applications using human airway smooth muscle cells in the context of asthma and Schlemms canal endothelial cells in the context of glaucoma. This approach identified several drug candidates for both asthma and glaucoma. We attained rates of 1000 compounds per screening day, thus establishing a force-based cellular platform for high-throughput drug discovery.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Stiffness-Activated GEF-H1 Expression Exacerbates LPS-Induced Lung Inflammation

Isa Mambetsariev; Yufeng Tian; Tinghuai Wu; Tera L. Lavoie; Julian Solway; Konstantin G. Birukov; Anna A. Birukova

Acute lung injury (ALI) is accompanied by decreased lung compliance. However, a role of tissue mechanics in modulation of inflammation remains unclear. We hypothesized that bacterial lipopolysacharide (LPS) stimulates extracellular matrix (ECM) production and vascular stiffening leading to stiffness-dependent exacerbation of endothelial cell (EC) inflammatory activation and lung barrier dysfunction. Expression of GEF-H1, ICAM-1, VCAM-1, ECM proteins fibronectin and collagen, lysyl oxidase (LOX) activity, interleukin-8 and activation of Rho signaling were analyzed in lung samples and pulmonary EC grown on soft (1.5 or 2.8 kPa) and stiff (40 kPa) substrates. LPS induced EC inflammatory activation accompanied by expression of ECM proteins, increase in LOX activity, and activation of Rho signaling. These effects were augmented in EC grown on stiff substrate. Stiffness-dependent enhancement of inflammation was associated with increased expression of Rho activator, GEF-H1. Inhibition of ECM crosslinking and stiffening by LOX suppression reduced EC inflammatory activation and GEF-H1 expression in response to LPS. In vivo, LOX inhibition attenuated LPS-induced expression of GEF-H1 and lung dysfunction. These findings present a novel mechanism of stiffness-dependent exacerbation of vascular inflammation and escalation of ALI via stimulation of GEF-H1 - Rho pathway. This pathway represents a fundamental mechanism of positive feedback regulation of inflammation.


Current Opinion in Pulmonary Medicine | 2014

Airway smooth muscle: a potential target for asthma therapy.

Maria L. Dowell; Tera L. Lavoie; Julian Solway; Ramaswamy Krishnan

Purpose of review Asthma is a major public health problem that afflicts nearly one in 20 people worldwide. Despite available treatments, asthma symptoms remain poorly controlled in a significant minority of asthma patients, especially those with severe disease. Accordingly, much ongoing effort has been directed at developing new therapeutic strategies; these efforts are described in detail below. Recent findings Although mucus hypersecretion is an important component of asthma pathobiology, the primary mechanism of morbidity and mortality in asthma is excessive narrowing of the airway. The key end- effector of excessive airway narrowing is airway smooth muscle (ASM) contraction; overcoming ASM contraction is therefore a prominent therapeutic strategy. Here, we review exciting new advances aimed at ASM relaxation. Summary Exciting advances in ASM biology have identified new therapeutic targets for the prevention or reversal of bronchoconstriction in asthma.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2014

Airway Contractility in the Precision-Cut Lung Slice after Cryopreservation

Sonia R. Rosner; Sumati Ram-Mohan; Jesus Paez-Cortez; Tera L. Lavoie; Maria L. Dowell; Lei Yuan; Xingbin Ai; Alan Fine; William C. Aird; Julian Solway; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Ramaswamy Krishnan

An emerging tool in airway biology is the precision-cut lung slice (PCLS). Adoption of the PCLS as a model for assessing airway reactivity has been hampered by the limited time window within which tissues remain viable. Here we demonstrate that the PCLS can be frozen, stored long-term, and then thawed for later experimental use. Compared with the never-frozen murine PCLS, the frozen-thawed PCLS shows metabolic activity that is decreased to an extent comparable to that observed in other cryopreserved tissues but shows no differences in cell viability or in airway caliber responses to the contractile agonist methacholine or the relaxing agonist chloroquine. These results indicate that freezing and long-term storage is a feasible solution to the problem of limited viability of the PCLS in culture.


Blood | 2005

Transcriptional regulation of vascular endothelial cell responses to hypoxia by HIF-1

Dominador J. Manalo; Ashley Rowan; Tera L. Lavoie; Lakshmi Natarajan; Brian D. Kelly; Shui Q. Ye; Joe G. N. Garcia; Gregg L. Semenza

Collaboration


Dive into the Tera L. Lavoie's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ramaswamy Krishnan

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shui Q. Ye

Johns Hopkins University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ashley Rowan

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dominador J. Manalo

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge