2020
Origin and Function of Stress-Induced IL-6 in Murine Models
Qing H, Desrouleaux R, Israni-Winger K, Mineur YS, Fogelman N, Zhang C, Rashed S, Palm NW, Sinha R, Picciotto MR, Perry RJ, Wang A. Origin and Function of Stress-Induced IL-6 in Murine Models. Cell 2020, 182: 372-387.e14. PMID: 32610084, PMCID: PMC7384974, DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2020.05.054.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdipose Tissue, BrownAnimalsBone Marrow CellsBone Marrow TransplantationBrainChemokinesCytokinesDisease Models, AnimalGluconeogenesisHyperglycemiaInterleukin-6LiverMaleMiceMice, Inbred C57BLMice, KnockoutReceptors, Adrenergic, beta-3Receptors, Interleukin-6Stress, PsychologicalUncoupling Protein 1ConceptsInterleukin-6Subsequent inflammatory challengeAcute psychological stressBrown adipose tissueDominant cytokineImmunometabolic reprogrammingInflammatory challengeEndocrine organMurine modelMouse modelAdipose tissueNeuropsychiatric diseasesAcute stressHepatic gluconeogenesisStress hormonesBrown adipocytesPsychological stressDependent fashionDiseaseInstructive signalsHyperglycemiaInflammationCytokinesMortalityHormone
2009
CXCR4/CXCL12 Hyperexpression Plays a Pivotal Role in the Pathogenesis of Lupus
Wang A, Fairhurst AM, Tus K, Subramanian S, Liu Y, Lin F, Igarashi P, Zhou XJ, Batteux F, Wong D, Wakeland EK, Mohan C. CXCR4/CXCL12 Hyperexpression Plays a Pivotal Role in the Pathogenesis of Lupus. The Journal Of Immunology 2009, 182: 4448-4458. PMID: 19299746, PMCID: PMC2946082, DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.0801920.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsMurine modelIncreased CXCR4 expressionPathogenesis of lupusB cell subsetsPromising therapeutic targetCXCR4/CXCL12Multiple murine modelsB cell survivalLupus nephritisActive nephritisSerum autoantibodiesCell subsetsCXCR4 expressionInflammatory cytokinesNephritic kidneysOrgan diseasePathogenic rolePlasma cellsLeukocyte traffickingTherapeutic targetLupusPeptide antagonistCXCR4Surface moleculesNephritis
2006
Identification of the Yaa lupus gene as a Tlr-7 gene duplication event
Wang A, Mohan C. Identification of the Yaa lupus gene as a Tlr-7 gene duplication event. International Journal Of Clinical Rheumatology 2006, 1: 563-565. DOI: 10.2217/17460816.1.5.563.Peer-Reviewed Original Research