The overall goal of this SCCOR program is to identify the alveolar and airway events that are critical to the diagnosis, pathogenesis, and treatment of COPD. This alveolar/airway theme was chosen to capture our proposal that both components are critical to COPD and to take advantage of our longstanding expertise in research on emphysema and chronic airway disease. The SCOR consists of five interrelated Projects. Project I aims at detection of alveolar versus airway disease in COPD by taking advantage of whole lungs from COPD patients undergoing lung transplantation and a new approach to lung imaging and profiling. This project takes special aim at T cell and macrophage activation, but also assumes a global approach that provides a substrate for other project targets. One of these targets is elastolytic activity, and Project II accordingly focuses on genetic determinants of emphysema in studies of the quality and quantity of elastin. This project capitalizes on a naturally occurring variation in the elastin gene that predisposes to emphysema and extends this approach to new genetic variations as well. Project III continues in emphysema studies using a complimentary approach aimed at the role of additional matrix metalloproteinases in emphysema. This project concentrates on a newly defined interaction between MTI-MMP and a potential inducer, i.e., EMMPRIN, and how this pathway influences cigarette smoke-induced monocyte/macrophage activation, inflammation, and consequent alveolar destruction. Project IV continues this theme in the study of macrophage activation. This project identifies and pursues a novel NKT cell-macrophage activation pathway that drives chronic IL-13 production and mucous cell metaplasia in the setting of cigarette smoke exposure. Project V continues on this tact, focusing on the responsiveness of this axis of the immune system to glucocorticoid treatment. The project capitalizes on expertise in glucocorticoid receptor biology to define sequence polymorphisms and other patient characteristics that are linked with responsiveness to treatment. The projects thereby weave studies from detection to pathogenesis to treatment together to explain the basis for COPD;and each provides for a predominant emphasis on clinical research based on development from experimental models. Common scientific goals create a synergistic program that can be supported by a common set of cores: the Administrative Core will perform administrative functions and will provide computer support for electronic communication and data analysis. The Registry and Data Analysis Core catalogues all clinical research materials and assures uniformity among clinical protocols. The Imaging Core provides support for high-resolution CT and helium-MRI studies. The Morphology &Microscopy Core provides for tissue processing and analysis. The Mouse Core develops transgenic mice and provides facilities for smoke exposure and physiologic measurements. Core/Project interactions are based on the principle that projects collaborate to translate any findings in experimental models to studies of patients with COPD.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Specialized Center (P50)
Project #
5P50HL084922-05
Application #
8004055
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZHL1-CSR-A (M1))
Program Officer
Punturieri, Antonello
Project Start
2007-01-12
Project End
2012-04-30
Budget Start
2011-01-01
Budget End
2012-04-30
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$2,803,266
Indirect Cost
Name
Washington University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
068552207
City
Saint Louis
State
MO
Country
United States
Zip Code
63130
Yablonskiy, Dmitriy A; Sukstanskii, Alexander L; Quirk, James D (2017) Diffusion lung imaging with hyperpolarized gas MRI. NMR Biomed 30:
Schlabritz-Loutsevitch, N; Apostolakis-Kyrus, K; Krutilina, R et al. (2016) Pregnancy-driven cardiovascular maternal miR-29 plasticity in obesity. J Med Primatol 45:297-303
Wu, Kangyun; Byers, Derek E; Jin, Xiaohua et al. (2015) TREM-2 promotes macrophage survival and lung disease after respiratory viral infection. J Exp Med 212:681-97
Coghlan, Meghan A; Shifren, Adrian; Huang, Howard J et al. (2014) Sequencing of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis-related genes reveals independent single gene associations. BMJ Open Respir Res 1:e000057
Philippot, Quentin; Deslée, Gaëtan; Adair-Kirk, Tracy L et al. (2014) Increased iron sequestration in alveolar macrophages in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. PLoS One 9:e96285
Yablonskiy, Dmitriy A; Sukstanskii, Alexander L; Quirk, James D et al. (2014) Probing lung microstructure with hyperpolarized noble gas diffusion MRI: theoretical models and experimental results. Magn Reson Med 71:486-505
Lutey, Barbara A; Conradi, Susan H; Atkinson, Jeffrey J et al. (2013) Accurate measurement of small airways on low-dose thoracic CT scans in smokers. Chest 143:1321-1329
Magalotti, Selena; Gustafson, Tiffany P; Cao, Qian et al. (2013) Evaluation of inflammatory response to acute ischemia using near-infrared fluorescent reactive oxygen sensors. Mol Imaging Biol 15:423-30
Betsuyaku, Tomoko; Fuke, Satoshi; Inomata, Takashi et al. (2013) Bronchiolar epithelial catalase is diminished in smokers with mild COPD. Eur Respir J 42:42-53
Sugitani, Hideki; Hirano, Eiichi; Knutsen, Russell H et al. (2012) Alternative splicing and tissue-specific elastin misassembly act as biological modifiers of human elastin gene frameshift mutations associated with dominant cutis laxa. J Biol Chem 287:22055-67

Showing the most recent 10 out of 48 publications