Roscoe Warner - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by Roscoe Warner
Food and Chemical Toxicology, 1990
Recent investigations indicate that dietary exposure to the trichothecene vomitoxin increases tot... more Recent investigations indicate that dietary exposure to the trichothecene vomitoxin increases total and antigen-specific serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) and glomerular IgA accumulation in mice. In this study, the effects of 25 ppm dietary vomitoxin on the histological and lymphocytic profile of component immune organs in the mucosal lymphocyte migratory pathway were evaluated in the B6C3F1 mouse. Vomitoxin administration resulted in marked stimulation of the size and frequency of germinal centres in Peyer's patches, mesenteric lymph nodes and the spleen. A slight increase in the percentage of B cells in the Peyer's patch was observed, although vomitoxin treatment had no effect on the percentage of B cells in the spleen. The percentage of IgA+ cells in Peyer's patches and spleen were approximately twice that of controls at 4, 8 and 12 wk of vomitoxin exposure whereas the percentage of IgG+ cells decreased in these two organs. Exposure to vomitoxin increased the percentage of T cells in Peyer's patches and the spleen. The percentage of CD4+ cells (T helper subset) increased slightly in Peyer's patches and more markedly (30-50%) in the spleen following vomitoxin treatment. Contrastingly, there was only a slight increase in the percentage of CD8+ cells (T cytotoxic/suppressor subset) in the spleens of vomitoxin-treated mice in comparison with controls, and no effect in Peyer's patches. The relative effects of vomitoxin on these two T cells populations was also reflected in increased CD4+: CD8+ ratios in Peyer's patches and spleen. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that dietary vomitoxin modulates normal regulation of the IgA response at the Peyer's patch level and that this is manifested in an altered lymphocyte distribution pattern in both the mucosal and systemic compartment. Notably increased levels of IgA+ and CD4+ cells are indicative of IgA-producing progenitors and T helper subsets, respectively, that in tandem could favour IgA hyperproduction and elevated IgA in serum.
The FASEB Journal, Mar 1, 2006
Clinicians are constantly challenged by patients who demonstrate the ill effects of an uncontroll... more Clinicians are constantly challenged by patients who demonstrate the ill effects of an uncontrolled host inflammatory response. Patients with sepsis and adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are frequently encountered examples of this syndrome. Despite advances in intensive care, mortality from these syndromes remains unchanged over the past two decades. In order to gain a better understanding of this pathophysiological response and to identify more specific therapeutic targets, the techniques of molecular biology have been applied to in vivo inflammatory models. Recent data indicate that the inflammatory response is dependent on the presence of both cytokines and adhesion molecules that mediate neutrophil-endothelial cell adhesive interactions. In this article, we review our experience using a lung model of inflammation that has provided insight into the events leading to injury. Cytokines [particularly, interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor ~ (TNF-~)], and endothelial, as well as leukocyte, adhesion molecules appear to coordinate a cascade of interactions between leukocytes and endothelial cells, which results in tissue injury.
International Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 1995
PubMed, Jan 15, 1998
Alpha d is a newly cloned adhesion molecule that forms a heterodimer with CD18. The requirement f... more Alpha d is a newly cloned adhesion molecule that forms a heterodimer with CD18. The requirement for alpha d in IgG immune complex-induced lung injury in rats has been evaluated by the use of blocking polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to rat alpha d. Using whole lung extracts, Northern and Western blot analyses have revealed up-regulation of mRNA and alpha d protein in inflamed lungs. Immunostaining has revealed the presence of alpha d in lung tissue and in alveolar macrophages as early as 1 h after initiation of the inflammatory reaction. When polyclonal rabbit Ab to rat alpha d was coinstilled into lung together with Ab to BSA, lung injury (as determined by leakage of [125I]albumin into lung parenchyma) was significantly diminished. In parallel, there was reduced accumulation of neutrophils recoverable in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluids. These findings were associated with reduced levels of TNF-alpha as well as NO2-/NO3- in BAL fluids. A hamster mAb to rat alpha d was also protective in this lung injury model. Anti-alpha d inhibited in vitro production of NO2-/NO3- by rat alveolar macrophages (stimulated with LPS and IFN-gamma) by approximately 60%. These data suggest that, in the lung inflammatory model employed, alpha d up-regulation occurs in lung macrophages and is necessary for expression of TNF-alpha, recruitment of neutrophils, and full development of lung injury.
Journal of Food Protection, Jun 1, 1987
Food and Chemical Toxicology, 1990
Journal of Immunology, Feb 1, 1995
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, Jun 1, 1999
ABSTRACT Evidence presented in the accompanying article (Gibbs, D. F., T. P. Shanley, R. L. Warne... more ABSTRACT Evidence presented in the accompanying article (Gibbs, D. F., T. P. Shanley, R. L. Warner, H. S. Murphy, J. Varani, and K. J. Johnson, 1999. Role of matrix metalloproteinases in models of macrophage-dependent acute lung injury: evidence for alveolar macrophage as source of proteinases. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. 20;1145-1154) implicates alveolar macrophage matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in two models of acute lung inflammation in the rat. As a prerequisite to understanding which specific MMPs might be involved in the injury and how they might function, it was necessary to know the spectrum of enzymes present. To this end, alveolar macrophages were obtained from normal rat lungs by bronchoalveolar lavage, placed in culture with and without various agonists, and assessed by a variety of techniques for MMPs. The identification process involved characterization by gelatin, β-cascin, and κ-elastin zymography, with confirmation of identity by Western blot/immunoprecipitation. Message levels of detected MMPs were assessed by Northern blot. Rat alveolar macrophages were found to produce a low constitutive level of MMP-2 (72-kD gelatinase A) that was only modestly upregulated following stimulation with phorbol myristate acetate, bacterial lipopolysaccharide, or immunoglobulin A-containing immune complexes. Although control cells were found to produce little or no MMP-9 (92-kD gelatinase B) or MMP-12 (metalloelastase), both enzymes were markedly upregulated upon stimulation. In the same stimulated macrophages there was little activity against type 1 collagen (associated with MMP-13 [collagenase-3] on the basis of Western blotting), no activity suggestive of stromelysin or matrilysin, and no measurable secretion of the serine proteinases, elastase and cathepsin G. These data demonstrate the ability of rat alveolar macrophages to elaborate certain MMPs under proinflammatory conditions, consistent with their possible involvement in the progression of acute inflammation.
The FASEB Journal, Dec 1, 1997
Toxicology Letters, Oct 1, 2016
ACR open rheumatology, Nov 18, 2021
The FASEB Journal, Dec 1, 1997
Poster presentations, Jun 1, 2017
Nature Medicine, May 21, 2006
The FASEB Journal, Mar 1, 2006
The FASEB Journal, Mar 1, 2006
Toxicology Letters, Sep 1, 2016
Food and Chemical Toxicology, 1989
The effect of dietary exposure to vomitoxin on serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) was evaluated in the ... more The effect of dietary exposure to vomitoxin on serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) was evaluated in the B6C3F1 mouse. Levels of serum IgA were elevated maximally in mice fed 25 ppm vomitoxin in comparison with levels in mice fed 2, 10 or 50 ppm vomitoxin. Significant increases were detectable after as few as 4 wk in mice fed 25 ppm vomitoxin, and IgA levels were increased more than 17-fold after 24 wk of toxin exposure. Serum IgA also exhibited a marked shift from primarily monomeric IgA to primarily polymeric IgA during vomitoxin treatment. Serum IgG and IgM decreased in treated mice, suggesting that the effect was isotype-specific. Elevated serum IgA was not observed in mice when control diet was fed at levels equivalent to those consumed by vomitoxin-treated mice, which exhibited feed refusal. IgA production was significantly increased in both spontaneous and mitogen-stimulated splenocyte cultures from mice exposed to vomitoxin in comparison with cultures prepared from ad lib. or feed-restricted controls. Immunofluorescence staining revealed marked accumulation of mesangial IgA and electron microscopy showed electron-dense deposits in the glomeruli of vomitoxin-treated mice but not in those of controls. Dysregulation of IgA production and accumulation of glomerular IgA as observed in this study were highly analogous to the characteristics of human IgA nephropathy, the most common form of glomerulonephritis worldwide.
Food and Chemical Toxicology, 1990
Recent investigations indicate that dietary exposure to the trichothecene vomitoxin increases tot... more Recent investigations indicate that dietary exposure to the trichothecene vomitoxin increases total and antigen-specific serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) and glomerular IgA accumulation in mice. In this study, the effects of 25 ppm dietary vomitoxin on the histological and lymphocytic profile of component immune organs in the mucosal lymphocyte migratory pathway were evaluated in the B6C3F1 mouse. Vomitoxin administration resulted in marked stimulation of the size and frequency of germinal centres in Peyer's patches, mesenteric lymph nodes and the spleen. A slight increase in the percentage of B cells in the Peyer's patch was observed, although vomitoxin treatment had no effect on the percentage of B cells in the spleen. The percentage of IgA+ cells in Peyer's patches and spleen were approximately twice that of controls at 4, 8 and 12 wk of vomitoxin exposure whereas the percentage of IgG+ cells decreased in these two organs. Exposure to vomitoxin increased the percentage of T cells in Peyer's patches and the spleen. The percentage of CD4+ cells (T helper subset) increased slightly in Peyer's patches and more markedly (30-50%) in the spleen following vomitoxin treatment. Contrastingly, there was only a slight increase in the percentage of CD8+ cells (T cytotoxic/suppressor subset) in the spleens of vomitoxin-treated mice in comparison with controls, and no effect in Peyer's patches. The relative effects of vomitoxin on these two T cells populations was also reflected in increased CD4+: CD8+ ratios in Peyer's patches and spleen. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that dietary vomitoxin modulates normal regulation of the IgA response at the Peyer's patch level and that this is manifested in an altered lymphocyte distribution pattern in both the mucosal and systemic compartment. Notably increased levels of IgA+ and CD4+ cells are indicative of IgA-producing progenitors and T helper subsets, respectively, that in tandem could favour IgA hyperproduction and elevated IgA in serum.
The FASEB Journal, Mar 1, 2006
Clinicians are constantly challenged by patients who demonstrate the ill effects of an uncontroll... more Clinicians are constantly challenged by patients who demonstrate the ill effects of an uncontrolled host inflammatory response. Patients with sepsis and adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) are frequently encountered examples of this syndrome. Despite advances in intensive care, mortality from these syndromes remains unchanged over the past two decades. In order to gain a better understanding of this pathophysiological response and to identify more specific therapeutic targets, the techniques of molecular biology have been applied to in vivo inflammatory models. Recent data indicate that the inflammatory response is dependent on the presence of both cytokines and adhesion molecules that mediate neutrophil-endothelial cell adhesive interactions. In this article, we review our experience using a lung model of inflammation that has provided insight into the events leading to injury. Cytokines [particularly, interleukin 1 (IL-1) and tumor necrosis factor ~ (TNF-~)], and endothelial, as well as leukocyte, adhesion molecules appear to coordinate a cascade of interactions between leukocytes and endothelial cells, which results in tissue injury.
International Archives of Allergy and Immunology, 1995
PubMed, Jan 15, 1998
Alpha d is a newly cloned adhesion molecule that forms a heterodimer with CD18. The requirement f... more Alpha d is a newly cloned adhesion molecule that forms a heterodimer with CD18. The requirement for alpha d in IgG immune complex-induced lung injury in rats has been evaluated by the use of blocking polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies to rat alpha d. Using whole lung extracts, Northern and Western blot analyses have revealed up-regulation of mRNA and alpha d protein in inflamed lungs. Immunostaining has revealed the presence of alpha d in lung tissue and in alveolar macrophages as early as 1 h after initiation of the inflammatory reaction. When polyclonal rabbit Ab to rat alpha d was coinstilled into lung together with Ab to BSA, lung injury (as determined by leakage of [125I]albumin into lung parenchyma) was significantly diminished. In parallel, there was reduced accumulation of neutrophils recoverable in bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) fluids. These findings were associated with reduced levels of TNF-alpha as well as NO2-/NO3- in BAL fluids. A hamster mAb to rat alpha d was also protective in this lung injury model. Anti-alpha d inhibited in vitro production of NO2-/NO3- by rat alveolar macrophages (stimulated with LPS and IFN-gamma) by approximately 60%. These data suggest that, in the lung inflammatory model employed, alpha d up-regulation occurs in lung macrophages and is necessary for expression of TNF-alpha, recruitment of neutrophils, and full development of lung injury.
Journal of Food Protection, Jun 1, 1987
Food and Chemical Toxicology, 1990
Journal of Immunology, Feb 1, 1995
American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology, Jun 1, 1999
ABSTRACT Evidence presented in the accompanying article (Gibbs, D. F., T. P. Shanley, R. L. Warne... more ABSTRACT Evidence presented in the accompanying article (Gibbs, D. F., T. P. Shanley, R. L. Warner, H. S. Murphy, J. Varani, and K. J. Johnson, 1999. Role of matrix metalloproteinases in models of macrophage-dependent acute lung injury: evidence for alveolar macrophage as source of proteinases. Am. J. Respir. Cell Mol. Biol. 20;1145-1154) implicates alveolar macrophage matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) in two models of acute lung inflammation in the rat. As a prerequisite to understanding which specific MMPs might be involved in the injury and how they might function, it was necessary to know the spectrum of enzymes present. To this end, alveolar macrophages were obtained from normal rat lungs by bronchoalveolar lavage, placed in culture with and without various agonists, and assessed by a variety of techniques for MMPs. The identification process involved characterization by gelatin, β-cascin, and κ-elastin zymography, with confirmation of identity by Western blot/immunoprecipitation. Message levels of detected MMPs were assessed by Northern blot. Rat alveolar macrophages were found to produce a low constitutive level of MMP-2 (72-kD gelatinase A) that was only modestly upregulated following stimulation with phorbol myristate acetate, bacterial lipopolysaccharide, or immunoglobulin A-containing immune complexes. Although control cells were found to produce little or no MMP-9 (92-kD gelatinase B) or MMP-12 (metalloelastase), both enzymes were markedly upregulated upon stimulation. In the same stimulated macrophages there was little activity against type 1 collagen (associated with MMP-13 [collagenase-3] on the basis of Western blotting), no activity suggestive of stromelysin or matrilysin, and no measurable secretion of the serine proteinases, elastase and cathepsin G. These data demonstrate the ability of rat alveolar macrophages to elaborate certain MMPs under proinflammatory conditions, consistent with their possible involvement in the progression of acute inflammation.
The FASEB Journal, Dec 1, 1997
Toxicology Letters, Oct 1, 2016
ACR open rheumatology, Nov 18, 2021
The FASEB Journal, Dec 1, 1997
Poster presentations, Jun 1, 2017
Nature Medicine, May 21, 2006
The FASEB Journal, Mar 1, 2006
The FASEB Journal, Mar 1, 2006
Toxicology Letters, Sep 1, 2016
Food and Chemical Toxicology, 1989
The effect of dietary exposure to vomitoxin on serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) was evaluated in the ... more The effect of dietary exposure to vomitoxin on serum immunoglobulin A (IgA) was evaluated in the B6C3F1 mouse. Levels of serum IgA were elevated maximally in mice fed 25 ppm vomitoxin in comparison with levels in mice fed 2, 10 or 50 ppm vomitoxin. Significant increases were detectable after as few as 4 wk in mice fed 25 ppm vomitoxin, and IgA levels were increased more than 17-fold after 24 wk of toxin exposure. Serum IgA also exhibited a marked shift from primarily monomeric IgA to primarily polymeric IgA during vomitoxin treatment. Serum IgG and IgM decreased in treated mice, suggesting that the effect was isotype-specific. Elevated serum IgA was not observed in mice when control diet was fed at levels equivalent to those consumed by vomitoxin-treated mice, which exhibited feed refusal. IgA production was significantly increased in both spontaneous and mitogen-stimulated splenocyte cultures from mice exposed to vomitoxin in comparison with cultures prepared from ad lib. or feed-restricted controls. Immunofluorescence staining revealed marked accumulation of mesangial IgA and electron microscopy showed electron-dense deposits in the glomeruli of vomitoxin-treated mice but not in those of controls. Dysregulation of IgA production and accumulation of glomerular IgA as observed in this study were highly analogous to the characteristics of human IgA nephropathy, the most common form of glomerulonephritis worldwide.