Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Articles 1 - 20 of 20

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Effect Of Lactoferrin To Increase Drug Permeability Of Primary Pulmonary Mycobacterial Granulomas, Thao Nguyen, Thao Kt Nguyen Aug 2021

Effect Of Lactoferrin To Increase Drug Permeability Of Primary Pulmonary Mycobacterial Granulomas, Thao Nguyen, Thao Kt Nguyen

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Despite extensive research and worldwide eradication efforts, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) remains a major infectious pathogen to the human population with about 10 million cases of infection per year globally. The host-pathogen interaction, pulmonary granuloma formation, and Mtb adaptions result in increased complexity of the disease. Granulomas are formed by active immune responses generated during Mtb infection, and serve to contain and limit bacterial dissemination. The major mycobacterial surface mycolic acid, trehalose 6,6'-dimycolate (TDM), functions in multiple ways to enhance immune cell recruitment of sites of infection, to induce inflammation and granulomatous responses, and to initiate survival strategies for …


Epithelial Memory Of Resolved Inflammation Limits Tissue Damage While Promoting Pancreatic Tumorigenesis, I-Lin Ho Aug 2021

Epithelial Memory Of Resolved Inflammation Limits Tissue Damage While Promoting Pancreatic Tumorigenesis, I-Lin Ho

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Inflammation is a major risk factor for pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma. When occurring in the context of pancreatitis, mutations of KRAS accelerate tumor development. We discovered that long after its complete resolution, a transient inflammatory event primes pancreatic epithelial cells to subsequent transformation by oncogenic KRAS. Upon recovery from acute inflammation, epithelial cells of the pancreas display an enduring adaptive response associated with sustained transcriptional and epigenetic reprogramming. Such adaptation enables the prompt reactivation of acinar-to-ductal metaplasia (ADM) upon subsequent inflammatory events, thus efficiently limiting tissue damage via rapid decrease of zymogen production. We propose that since activating mutations of KRAS …


Endogenous Mechanisms Regulating Myeloid Cell Mediated Inflammation During Acute Lung Injuries, Nathaniel Berg May 2021

Endogenous Mechanisms Regulating Myeloid Cell Mediated Inflammation During Acute Lung Injuries, Nathaniel Berg

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Acute lung injuries (ALI) can result from both direct insults (e.g. pneumonia or inhalation injury), or systemic conditions such as sepsis or trauma. Current treatment options for patients are limited to supportive care and novel approaches are urgently needed. Appreciating the role of excessive inflammation that underlies the pathophysiology of ALI, we sought to identify endogenous mechanisms that dampen inflammation. Here we investigated two pathways that worked to limit excessive pulmonary inflammation in myeloid cells using a mouse model of sepsis-associated ALI. In the first approach we screened for microRNAs during the recovery phase of ALI that could potentially regulate …


Reversal Of Neurodegeneration By Engineered Monocytes In Alzheimer’S Disease, Chao-Hsien Chen Dec 2020

Reversal Of Neurodegeneration By Engineered Monocytes In Alzheimer’S Disease, Chao-Hsien Chen

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

The health challenges posed by Alzheimer’s disease (AD) continue to grow as societies age worldwide. Accumulation of Tau-associated pathology correlates with clinical cognitive deterioration in AD. Resident myeloid cells within the central nervous system (CNS) have a limited capacity to uptake and degrade Tau; however, the resulting secretion of proinflammatory cytokines only acts to accelerate neurodegeneration. Therapeutic antibodies can reduce the neurotoxic oligomeric form of Tau (o-Tau), but in doing so they also aggravate inflammation. Attenuating mutation of the antibody Fc region can silence inflammation but also eliminates its capacity to mediate o-Tau clearance by CNS myeloid cells. Thus, there …


Relationships Among Optimism, Inflammation, And Stroke Recovery, Yun-Ju Lai May 2019

Relationships Among Optimism, Inflammation, And Stroke Recovery, Yun-Ju Lai

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Objective: Post-stroke inflammation is detrimental to the brain and results in an unfavorable recovery. Optimism has been associated with lower inflammation and better health outcomes among people with medical conditions, but no studies have assessed this association in the stroke population. The overall goals were to examine the relationships among optimism, stroke severity, physical disability, and inflammation during hospitalization and evaluate the relationships among optimism, inflammation, and stroke recovery over the three-month post-stroke period.

Methods: This study was a secondary analysis of data collected from the BioRepository of Neurological Diseases biobank. Outcomes included optimism, stroke severity, physical recovery, and inflammatory …


Behavioral Insights Into Nociceptor Function: A Systematic Approach To Understanding Postsurgical And Neuropathic Pain Mechanisms In Rats, Max Odem Dec 2018

Behavioral Insights Into Nociceptor Function: A Systematic Approach To Understanding Postsurgical And Neuropathic Pain Mechanisms In Rats, Max Odem

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Postsurgical and neuropathic pain are each clinically common, and often associated with ongoing pain. Ongoing pain has been linked to ongoing activity (OA) in human C-fiber nociceptors. Preclinical studies using rodent neuropathic models have concentrated on allodynia driven by OA generated in non-nociceptive Aβ fibers, but little attention has been paid to postsurgical pain in sham controls or to C-fiber nociceptor OA promoting ongoing pain.

Operant assays that reveal negative motivational and cognitive aspects of voluntary pain-related behavior may be particularly sensitive to pain-related alterations. In the mechanical conflict (MC) test, rodents can freely choose to escape from a brightly …


Changes In The Testes Following Spinal Cord Injury And The Attenuating Effects Of Licofelone, Ryan Fortune Aug 2018

Changes In The Testes Following Spinal Cord Injury And The Attenuating Effects Of Licofelone, Ryan Fortune

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Spinal cord injury is a devastating disease that researchers have had very limited success in treating. In addition to interrupted innervation, spinal cord injury causes pathologic changes in a multitude of organ systems. Male infertility is one such complication that is particularly devastating because the patient population is predominantly young men. Our lab has previously shown that the blood testis barrier breaks down after spinal cord injury. This dissertation shows the local metabolomic and mRNA changes that spinal cord injury causes within the testes using a Sprague Dawley rat model, including the elevation in eicosanoids, increased oxidative stress, chronically elevated …


Aging Exacerbates Neutrophil Pathogenicity In Ischemic Stroke, Meaghan Roy-O'Reilly Aug 2018

Aging Exacerbates Neutrophil Pathogenicity In Ischemic Stroke, Meaghan Roy-O'Reilly

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Ischemic stroke is a major cause of disability and mortality worldwide. As most patients cannot receive the currently approved therapies for ischemic stroke, novel treatments are critically needed. Cerebral ischemia causes irreversible tissue damage, referred to as the “tissue core”, which is surrounded by a salvageable penumbral region. Excitotoxicity, oxidative stress and inflammation can further damage this “tissue-at-risk”, resulting in even greater functional loss and poorer injury outcomes.

Aging represents the single strongest risk factor for high mortality and poor outcome after stroke in patients. This phenotype is also seen in animal models, with aged mice experiencing higher mortality and …


Dissecting The Molecular Mechanism Of Early Tumor Dissemination In Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer, Xingtong Liu Jun 2018

Dissecting The Molecular Mechanism Of Early Tumor Dissemination In Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer, Xingtong Liu

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Lung cancer is the most common cause of cancer related death in the United States and worldwide. It has been shown that 30%-55% of patients with early stages of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) developed and died of recurrence after curative resection, suggesting that tumor cell dissemination occurred early in those patients before surgery. However, molecular evidence, underline mechanisms and risk factors for the NSCLC relapse remain largely unknown. Addressing these questions will be critical for the development of strategies to stratify the risk of recurrence and approaches to reduce these risks. My thesis focused on dissecting the molecular basis …


Preeclampsia: The Roles Of Acute Inflammation And Intrauterine Stress, Nicholas Parchim May 2016

Preeclampsia: The Roles Of Acute Inflammation And Intrauterine Stress, Nicholas Parchim

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Preeclampsia (PE) is a severe, acute disease of pregnancy affecting approximately 8% of pregnant women after week 20 of gestation. PE is characterized by hypertension and renal damage reflected by proteinuria and has significant morbidity to both mother and fetus. Maternal symptoms range from headaches, nausea, edema, to visual changes, but once maternal symptoms present, damage to the fetus has begun. Mothers who progress untreated through the disease can also experience a condition called eclampsia characterized by seizure, coma, and, ultimately, death. PE-affected newborns experience features similar to prematurity—abnormal lung and renal development, intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), and, possibly, fetal …


Dissecting The Roles Of Trim24 In Regulation Of Hepatic Lipid Metabolism And Inflammation, Lindsey C. Minter Aug 2014

Dissecting The Roles Of Trim24 In Regulation Of Hepatic Lipid Metabolism And Inflammation, Lindsey C. Minter

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

DISSECTING THE ROLES OF TRIM24 IN REGULATION OF HEPATIC LIPID

METABOLISM AND INFLAMMATION

Lindsey Cauthen Minter, B.S., B.A.

Advisory Professor: Michelle C. Barton, Ph.D.

In this dissertation, I report the characterization of a new mouse model that recapitulates development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) following spontaneous hepatic lipid accumulation, inflammation, and damage of liver tissue, due to complete loss of Trim24 expression. In human HCC and other cancers, TRIM24 expression is aberrantly high, while deletion of TRIM24 in the mouse has been shown to act as a liver specific tumor suppressor. The hypothesis tested here was that TRIM24, the E3 ubiquitin …


Characterization Of The Role Of Carma3 In Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress-Induced Nf-Κb Activation, Zhicheng Zhou Mr May 2013

Characterization Of The Role Of Carma3 In Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress-Induced Nf-Κb Activation, Zhicheng Zhou Mr

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress-induced inflammation plays an important role in the progression of many diseases, such as type II diabetes, insulin resistance, cancers, and so on. NF-κB is believed to be a central regulator of ER stress-induced inflammation. However, studies on how ER stress induces NF-κB activation are limited and, in some cases, controversial. In the present study, we utilized two commonly used ER stress inducers, thapsigargin and tunicamycin, to study the mechanism. We found that two caspase-recruitment domain (CARD)-containing proteins, CARMA3 and BCL10, play a crucial roles on ER stress-induced NF-κB activation by regulating IκBα kinase activity. Consistently, we …


A Novel Mechanism Of Skin Tumor Promotion Involving Interferon-Gamma (Ifnγ)/Signal Transducer And Activator Of Transcription-1 (Stat1) Signaling In Epidermis, Ronald Bozeman May 2013

A Novel Mechanism Of Skin Tumor Promotion Involving Interferon-Gamma (Ifnγ)/Signal Transducer And Activator Of Transcription-1 (Stat1) Signaling In Epidermis, Ronald Bozeman

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

The JAK-STAT pathway is a major signaling pathway involved in many biological processes including proliferation, apoptosis, and differentiation. Aberrant expression of STATs has been reported in multiple human cancers and murine mouse models of tumorigenesis. Previous studies from our lab and others have established a critical role for Stat3 in epithelial tumorigenesis, but the role of Stat1 is largely unknown. The current study was designed to explore the role of Stat1 during multistage skin carcinogenesis. Topical treatment with both TPA and the anthrone derivative chrysarobin (CHRY) led to rapid phosphorylation of Stat1 on both tyrosine (Tyr701) and serine (Ser727) residues …


Stimulation Through Tlr4 Increases Fviii Inhibitor Formation In A Mouse Model Of Hemophilia A, Claire K. Holley May 2013

Stimulation Through Tlr4 Increases Fviii Inhibitor Formation In A Mouse Model Of Hemophilia A, Claire K. Holley

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Hemophilia A is a clotting disorder caused by functional factor VIII (FVIII) deficiency. About 25% of patients treated with therapeutic recombinant FVIII develop antibodies (inhibitors) that render subsequent FVIII treatments ineffective. The immune mechanisms of inhibitor formation are not entirely understood, but circumstantial evidence indicates a role for increased inflammatory response, possibly via stimulation of Toll-like receptors (TLRs), at the time of FVIII immunization. I hypothesized that stimulation through TLR4 in conjunction with FVIII treatments would increase the formation of FVIII inhibitors. To test this hypothesis, FVIII K.O. mice were injected with recombinant human FVIII with or without concomitant doses …


Inflammatory Breast Cancer: The Immune Perspective, Evan N. Cohen May 2013

Inflammatory Breast Cancer: The Immune Perspective, Evan N. Cohen

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is the most insidious form of locally advanced disease. Although rare and less than 2% of all breast cancer, IBC is responsible for up to 10% of all breast cancer deaths. Despite the name, very little is known about the role of inflammation or immune mediators in IBC. Therefore, we analyzed blood samples from IBC patients and non-IBC patients, as well as healthy donor controls to establish an IBC-specific profile of peripheral blood leukocyte phenotype and function of T cells and dendritic cells and serum inflammatory cytokines.

Emerging evidence suggests that host factors in the microenviromement …


Role Of Mir-19a Released By Inflammatory Breast Cancer Cells In The Regulation Of Dendritic Cell Functions: In Vitro Model Of Crosstalk In The Tumor Microenvironment Of Inflammatory Breast Cancer, Simone Anfossi May 2013

Role Of Mir-19a Released By Inflammatory Breast Cancer Cells In The Regulation Of Dendritic Cell Functions: In Vitro Model Of Crosstalk In The Tumor Microenvironment Of Inflammatory Breast Cancer, Simone Anfossi

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Inflammatory breast cancer (IBC) is a rare but very aggressive form of locally advanced breast cancer (1-6% of total breast cancer patients in United States), with a 5-year overall survival rate of only 40.5%, compared with 85% of the non-IBC patients. So far, a unique molecular signature for IBC able to explain the dramatic differences in the tumor biology between IBC and non-IBC has not been identified. As immune cells in the tumor microenvironment plays an important role in regulating tumor progression, we hypothesized that tumor-associated dendritic cells (TADC) may be responsible for regulating the development of the aggressive characteristics …


Cellular Uptake Of Neutrohpil Elastase Links Inflammation To Adaptive Immunity, Elizabeth A. Mittendorf Dec 2012

Cellular Uptake Of Neutrohpil Elastase Links Inflammation To Adaptive Immunity, Elizabeth A. Mittendorf

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Many tumors arise from sites of inflammation providing evidence that innate immunity is a critical component in the development and progression of cancer. Neutrophils are primary mediators of the innate immune response. Upon activation, an important function of neutrophils is release of an assortment of proteins from their granules including the serine protease neutrophil elastase (NE). The effect of NE on cancer has been attributed primarily to its ability to degrade the extracellular matrix thereby promoting invasion and metastasis. Recently, it was shown that NE could be taken up by lung cancer cells leading to degradation of insulin receptor substrate-1 …


Novel Use Of Dual Anti-Inflammatory Therapy To Overcome Drug Resistance And Improve Functional Recovery Following Spinal Cord Injury, Jennifer Dulin May 2012

Novel Use Of Dual Anti-Inflammatory Therapy To Overcome Drug Resistance And Improve Functional Recovery Following Spinal Cord Injury, Jennifer Dulin

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Over 1.2 million Americans are currently living with a traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI). Despite the need for effective therapies, there are currently no proven effective treatments that can improve recovery of function in SCI patients. Many therapeutic compounds have shown promise in preclinical models of SCI, but all of these have fallen short in clinical trials.

P-glycoprotein (Pgp) is an active transporter expressed on capillary endothelial cell membranes at the blood-spinal cord barrier (BSCB). Pgp limits passive diffusion of blood-borne drugs into the CNS, by actively extruding drugs from the endothelial cell membrane. Pgp can become pathologically up-regulated, thus …


Autoimmune Responses To Atherosclerotic Lipids: A Study In Murine Models Of Atherosclerosis And Obesity, Hanjing Wu Sep 2011

Autoimmune Responses To Atherosclerotic Lipids: A Study In Murine Models Of Atherosclerosis And Obesity, Hanjing Wu

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

Atherosclerosis is a chronic, complex arterial disease characterized by intimal lipid accumulation and inflammation. A unique lipid-binding molecule, namely cluster of differentiation 1d (CD1d), may impact atherosclerosis. Structurally, CD1d acts as a nonpolymorphic cell-surface receptor, resembling the major histocompatibility complex-I (MHC-I). While MHC-I restricts peptide antigen presentation to T cells, CD1d presents lipid antigens to T cells named CD1d-restrictedd T cells. Although increased expression of CD1d has been found in human plaques, the exact nature of CD1d-recognized lipids in atherosclerosis remains to be determined. Three groups of lipids may undergo oxidation in atherosclerosis producing atherogenic lipids: phospholipids, fatty acids, and …


Gene By Bmi Interactions Influencing C-Reactive Protein Levels In European-Americans, Sarah Tudor Aug 2011

Gene By Bmi Interactions Influencing C-Reactive Protein Levels In European-Americans, Sarah Tudor

Dissertations & Theses (Open Access)

C-Reactive Protein (CRP) is a biomarker indicating tissue damage, inflammation, and infection. High-sensitivity CRP (hsCRP) is an emerging biomarker often used to estimate an individual’s risk for future coronary heart disease (CHD). hsCRP levels falling below 1.00 mg/l indicate a low risk for developing CHD, levels ranging between 1.00 mg/l and 3.00 mg/l indicate an elevated risk, and levels exceeding 3.00 mg/l indicate high risk. Multiple Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS) have identified a number of genetic polymorphisms which influence CRP levels. SNPs implicated in such studies have been found in or near genes of interest including: CRP, APOE, APOC, IL-6, …