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Dive into the research topics where Wendy A. Boivin is active.

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Featured researches published by Wendy A. Boivin.


Laboratory Investigation | 2009

Intracellular versus extracellular granzyme B in immunity and disease: challenging the dogma.

Wendy A. Boivin; Dawn Cooper; Paul R. Hiebert; David J. Granville

The cytotoxic granzyme B (GrB)/perforin pathway has been traditionally viewed as a primary mechanism that is used by cytotoxic lymphocytes to eliminate allogeneic, virally infected and/or transformed cells. Although originally proposed to have intracellular and extracellular functions, upon the discovery that perforin, in combination with GrB, could induce apoptosis, other potential functions for this protease were, for the most part, disregarded. As there are 5 granzymes in humans and 11 granzymes in mice, many studies used perforin knockout mice as an initial screen to evaluate the role of granzymes in disease. However, in recent years, emerging clinical and biochemical evidence has shown that the latter approach may have overlooked a critical perforin-independent, pathogenic role for these proteases in disease. This review focuses on GrB, the most characterized of the granzyme family, in disease. Long known to be a pro-apoptotic protease expressed by cytotoxic lymphocytes and natural killer cells, it is now accepted that GrB can be expressed in other cell types of immune and nonimmune origin. To the latter, an emerging immune-independent role for GrB has been forwarded due to recent discoveries that GrB may be expressed in nonimmune cells such as smooth muscle cells, keratinocytes, and chondrocytes in certain disease states. Given that GrB retains its activity in the blood, can cleave extracellular matrix, and its levels are often elevated in chronic inflammatory diseases, this protease may be an important contributor to certain pathologies. The implications of sustained elevations of intracellular and extracellular GrB in chronic vascular, dermatological, and neurological diseases, among others, are developing. This review examines, for the first time, the multiple roles of GrB in disease pathogenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Granzyme B cleaves decorin, biglycan and soluble betaglycan, releasing active transforming growth factor-β1.

Wendy A. Boivin; Marlo Shackleford; Amanda Vanden Hoek; Hongyan Zhao; Tillie L. Hackett; Darryl A. Knight; David J. Granville

Objective Granzyme B (GrB) is a pro-apoptotic serine protease that contributes to immune-mediated target cell apoptosis. However, during inflammation, GrB accumulates in the extracellular space, retains its activity, and is capable of cleaving extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. Recent studies have implicated a pathogenic extracellular role for GrB in cardiovascular disease, yet the pathophysiological consequences of extracellular GrB activity remain largely unknown. The objective of this study was to identify proteoglycan (PG) substrates of GrB and examine the ability of GrB to release PG-sequestered TGF-β1 into the extracellular milieu. Methods/Results Three extracellular GrB PG substrates were identified; decorin, biglycan and betaglycan. As all of these PGs sequester active TGF-β1, cytokine release assays were conducted to establish if GrB-mediated PG cleavage induced TGF-β1 release. Our data confirmed that GrB liberated TGF-β1 from all three substrates as well as from endogenous ECM and this process was inhibited by the GrB inhibitor 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin. The released TGF-β1 retained its activity as indicated by the induction of SMAD-3 phosphorylation in human coronary artery smooth muscle cells. Conclusion In addition to contributing to ECM degradation and the loss of tissue structural integrity in vivo, increased extracellular GrB activity is also capable of inducing the release of active TGF-β1 from PGs.


American Journal of Pathology | 2010

Perforin-Independent Extracellular Granzyme B Activity Contributes to Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm

Ciara Chamberlain; Lisa S. Ang; Wendy A. Boivin; Dawn Cooper; Sarah Williams; Hongyan Zhao; Alon Hendel; Maggie Folkesson; Jesper Swedenborg; Michael F. Allard; Bruce M. McManus; David J. Granville

Granzyme B (GZMB) is a serine protease that is abundantly expressed in advanced human atherosclerotic lesions and may contribute to plaque instability. Perforin is a pore-forming protein that facilitates GZMB internalization and the induction of apoptosis. Recently a perforin-independent, extracellular role for GZMB has been proposed. In the current study, the role of GZMB in abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) was assessed. Apolipoprotein E (APOE)(-/-) x GZMB(-/-) and APOE(-/-) x perforin(-/-) double knockout (GDKO, PDKO) mice were generated to test whether GZMB exerted a causative role in aneurysm formation. To induce aneurysm, mice were given angiotensin II (1000 ng/kg/min) for 28 days. GZMB was found to be abundant in both murine and human AAA specimens. GZMB deficiency was associated with a decrease in AAA and increased survival compared with APOE-KO and PDKO mice. Although AAA rupture was observed frequently in APOE-KO (46.7%; n = 15) and PDKO (43.3%; n = 16) mice, rupture was rarely observed in GDKO (7.1%; n = 14) mice. APOE-KO mice exhibited reduced fibrillin-1 staining compared with GDKO mice, whereas in vitro protease assays demonstrated that fibrillin-1 is a substrate of GZMB. As perforin deficiency did not affect the outcome, our results suggest that GZMB contributes to AAA pathogenesis via a perforin-independent mechanism involving extracellular matrix degradation and subsequent loss of vessel wall integrity.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2010

Granzymes in age-related cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases

Alon Hendel; P R Hiebert; Wendy A. Boivin; Sarah Williams; David J. Granville

Chronic inflammation is a hallmark of age-related cardiovascular and pulmonary diseases. Granzymes are a family of serine proteases that have been traditionally viewed as initiators of immune-mediated cell death. However, recent findings suggest that the pathophysiological role of granzymes is complex. Emerging functions for granzymes in extracellular matrix degradation, autoimmunity, and inflammation suggests a multifactorial mechanism by which these enzymes are capable of mediating tissue damage. Recent discoveries showing that granzymes can be produced and secreted by nonimmune cells during disease provide an additional layer of intricacy. This review examines the emerging biochemical and clinical evidence pertaining to intracellular and/or extracellular granzymes in the pathogenesis of aging and cardiopulmonary diseases.


Experimental Gerontology | 2011

Granzyme B contributes to extracellular matrix remodeling and skin aging in apolipoprotein E knockout mice.

Paul R. Hiebert; Wendy A. Boivin; Thomas Abraham; Sara Pazooki; Hongyan Zhao; David J. Granville

Apolipoprotein E knockout (apoE-KO) mice have been utilized for decades as a model of atherosclerosis. However, in addition to atherosclerosis, apoE-KO mice develop extensive cutaneous xanthomatosis, accelerated skin aging and frailty when fed a high fat diet. Granzyme B (GrB) is a pro-apoptotic serine protease that has recently been shown to exhibit extracellular proteolytic activity in certain pathologies. In the present study, the role of GrB in skin aging and pathology was assessed using the apoE-KO model of skin aging. Male C57BL/6 wild type and apoE-KO mice were grown for 0, 5, 15 or 30 weeks on either a high fat (21.2% fat, 0.2% cholesterol) or regular chow diet (7% fat). ApoE/GrB double knockout (DKO) mice were also generated and assessed after being fed either diet for 30 weeks. Skin was removed from the mid to lower back and examined for age-related changes such as hair loss, skin thinning and collagen remodeling and disorganization. ApoE-KO mice exhibited signs of frailty, hair graying, hair loss, skin thinning, loss of collagen density and increased skin pathologies featuring collagen remodeling and reduced decorin compared to wild type controls. These phenotypes occurred earlier and were more severe when fed a high fat diet. In addition, we also observed increased GrB expression in proximity to areas of decorin degradation and reduced collagen density in the skin of apoE-KO mice. DKO mice exhibited protection against skin thinning, ECM degradation and loss of dermal collagen density. In summary, our results provide novel insights into the effects of a high fat diet and apoE deficiency on skin aging and pathology and suggest a role for GrB in age-related skin thinning and frailty.


Cell Death and Disease | 2011

Serpina3n attenuates granzyme B-mediated decorin cleavage and rupture in a murine model of aortic aneurysm

L S Ang; Wendy A. Boivin; S J Williams; Hongyan Zhao; Thomas Abraham; K Carmine-Simmen; Bruce M. McManus; R C Bleackley; David J. Granville

Granzyme B (GZMB) is a proapoptotic serine protease that is released by cytotoxic lymphocytes. However, GZMB can also be produced by other cell types and is capable of cleaving extracellular matrix (ECM) proteins. GZMB contributes to abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA) through an extracellular, perforin-independent mechanism involving ECM cleavage. The murine serine protease inhibitor, Serpina3n (SA3N), is an extracellular inhibitor of GZMB. In the present study, administration of SA3N was assessed using a mouse Angiotensin II-induced AAA model. Mice were injected with SA3N (0–120 μg/kg) before pump implantation. A significant dose-dependent reduction in the frequency of aortic rupture and death was observed in mice that received SA3N treatment compared with controls. Reduced degradation of the proteoglycan decorin was observed while collagen density was increased in the aortas of mice receiving SA3N treatment compared with controls. In vitro studies confirmed that decorin, which regulates collagen spacing and fibrillogenesis, is cleaved by GZMB and that its cleavage can be prevented by SA3N. In conclusion, SA3N inhibits GZMB-mediated decorin degradation leading to enhanced collagen remodelling and reinforcement of the adventitia, thereby reducing the overall rate of rupture and death in a mouse model of AAA.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Perforin and granzyme B have separate and distinct roles during atherosclerotic plaque development in apolipoprotein E knockout mice.

Paul R. Hiebert; Wendy A. Boivin; Hongyan Zhao; Bruce M. McManus; David J. Granville

The granzyme B/perforincytotoxic pathway is a well established mechanism of initiating target cell apoptosis. Previous studies have suggested a role for the granzyme B/perforin cytotoxic pathway in vulnerable atherosclerotic plaque formation. In the present study, granzyme B deficiency resulted in reduced atherosclerotic plaque development in the descending aortas of apolipoprotein E knockout mice fed a high fat diet for 30 weeks while perforindeficiency resulted in greater reduction in plaque development with significantly less plaque area than granzyme Bdeficient mice. In contrast to the descending aorta, no significant change in plaque size was observed in aortic roots from either granzyme Bdeficient or perforindeficient apolipoprotein E knockout mice. However, atherosclerotic plaques in the aortic roots did exhibit significantly more collagen in granzyme B, but not perforin deficient mice. Together these results suggest significant, yet separate roles for granzyme B and perforin in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis that go beyond the traditional apoptotic pathway with additional implications in plaque development, stability and remodelling of extracellular matrix.


Methods in molecular medicine | 2007

Detection and Quantification of Apoptosis in the Vasculature

Wendy A. Boivin; David J. Granville

The integral role of apoptosis in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases has been extensively studied and characterized in recent years. The study of cell death in the vasculature has significantly contributed to our knowledge of vascular disease pathology and has played a role in identifying potential therapeutic strategies for these diseases. This chapter describes a number of standard, widely used protocols for detecting and quantifying apoptosis in vessel wall cells and tissue. These techniques include terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick-end labeling staining for DNA fragmentation, Hoechst staining for chromatin condensation, Annexin V staining, labeling for phosphatidylserine externalization, Western blot assessment of caspase cleavage, immunofluorescence detection of caspase activation, assessment of mitochondrial membrane depolarization and cytochrome c release, and a splenocyte assay for quantifying susceptibility to immune cell-mediated apoptosis.


Archive | 2011

Granzyme b inhibitor compositions, methods and uses for promoting wound healing

Paul R. Hiebert; Darryl A. Knight; David J. Granville; Wendy A. Boivin; Dawn Cooper


Circulation | 2008

Abstract 5488: Granzyme B Contributes to Extracellular Matrix Degradation and Advanced Atherosclerotic Plaque Formation

Wendy A. Boivin; Rani P. Cruz; Hongyan Zhao; Pooja Rauniyar; David C. Walker; Bruce M. McManus; David J. Granville

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David J. Granville

University of British Columbia

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Hongyan Zhao

University of British Columbia

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Bruce M. McManus

University of Nebraska Medical Center

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Rani P. Cruz

University of British Columbia

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Ciara Chamberlain

University of British Columbia

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Paul R. Hiebert

University of British Columbia

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Sarah Williams

University of British Columbia

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Lisa S. Ang

University of British Columbia

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Dawn Cooper

University of British Columbia

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