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- Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers (4)
- Journal Articles: Genetics, Cell Biology & Anatomy (3)
- Journal Articles: Pathology and Microbiology (3)
- Rowan-Virtua Research Day (3)
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- All ETDs from UAB (1)
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- Internal Medicine Faculty Publications (1)
- Journal Articles: Biochemistry & Molecular Biology (1)
- Kimmel Cancer Center Faculty Papers (1)
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Articles 1 - 30 of 30
Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences
Fos Expression In Lateral Hypothalamus/Perifornical Area Is Correlated With Psychosocial Stress-Induced Cocaine-Seeking Behavior In A Sex-Specific Manner, Milena Sudarikov, Nicole M. Hinds, Ireneusz D. Wojtas, Desta M. Pulley, Daniel F. Manvich
Fos Expression In Lateral Hypothalamus/Perifornical Area Is Correlated With Psychosocial Stress-Induced Cocaine-Seeking Behavior In A Sex-Specific Manner, Milena Sudarikov, Nicole M. Hinds, Ireneusz D. Wojtas, Desta M. Pulley, Daniel F. Manvich
Rowan-Virtua Research Day
Cocaine Use Disorder persists as a significant public health concern in the United States. Recent epidemiological data indicate that rates of cocaine-involved overdose deaths are rising, and treatment of Cocaine Use Disorder is challenging due to a lack of FDA-approved medications to help patients achieve abstinence and avoid relapse. Stress can precipitate cocaine craving and trigger relapse episodes, however the underlying neural circuitry by which stressors drive cocaine seeking is not completely understood. Our laboratory has recently identified the potential involvement of the rostrolateral aspect of the periaqueductal gray (rlPAG) in psychosocial stress-induced cocaine-seeking behavior using a rodent model of …
How Does Schizophrenia Affect The Expression Of Alpha 7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors In The Brain?, Shruti Varshney, Nimish Acharya
How Does Schizophrenia Affect The Expression Of Alpha 7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors In The Brain?, Shruti Varshney, Nimish Acharya
Rowan-Virtua Research Day
Schizophrenia (SZ) is a psychiatric disorder with a pathophysiology that has not yet been fully understood. This mental illness is characterized by disruptions in cognition, social activity, affect, and perception, and affects approximately 0.085% of individuals worldwide. The Alpha 7 Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptor (α7nAChR) has been connected to auditory function gating deficits. The purpose of this review is to understand the current literature in how the levels of α7nAChR expression and function are affected by SZ, information that could be used to develop therapies to modulate auditory hallucinations in patients with SZ. A literature search was conducted for peer-reviewed journal …
Comparative Analysis Of The Effects Of Actual Versus Assumed Opioid Experience On The Regulation Of Ventral Striatal Opioid Receptor Gene Expression, Indu Mithra Madhuranthakam, Martin Job
Comparative Analysis Of The Effects Of Actual Versus Assumed Opioid Experience On The Regulation Of Ventral Striatal Opioid Receptor Gene Expression, Indu Mithra Madhuranthakam, Martin Job
Rowan-Virtua Research Day
Rationale: We conducted experiments to assess the effect of prior opioid experience on gene expression changes. We compared the current experimenter-imposed short versus extended-access conditions of opioid self-administration and developed a new quantitative method to determine their effectiveness in identifying the role of opioid experience in regulating opioid receptor expression levels in the ventral striatum (VS) using an oxycodone self-administration/abstinence model.
Methods: In this study, male Sprague-Dawley rats (n=36) were trained for 20 days to self-administer oxycodone at 0.1 mg/kg/infusion under short access (n=15, or saline as controls n=3, for 3h/day) or extended access (n=15, or saline as controls n=3, …
Patterns Of Crystallin Gene Expression In Differentiation State Specific Regions Of The Embryonic Chicken Lens, Zhiwei Ma, Daniel Chauss, Joshua Disatham, Xiaodong Jiao, Lisa Ann Brennan, A Sue Menko, Marc Kantorow, J Fielding Hejtmancik
Patterns Of Crystallin Gene Expression In Differentiation State Specific Regions Of The Embryonic Chicken Lens, Zhiwei Ma, Daniel Chauss, Joshua Disatham, Xiaodong Jiao, Lisa Ann Brennan, A Sue Menko, Marc Kantorow, J Fielding Hejtmancik
Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers
Purpose: Transition from lens epithelial cells to lens fiber cell is accompanied by numerous changes in gene expression critical for lens transparency. We identify expression patterns of highly prevalent genes including ubiquitous and enzyme crystallins in the embryonic day 13 chicken lens.
Methods: Embryonic day 13 chicken lenses were dissected into central epithelial cell (EC), equatorial epithelial cell (EQ), cortical fiber cell (FP), and nuclear fiber cell (FC) compartments. Total RNA was prepared, subjected to high-throughput unidirectional mRNA sequencing, analyzed, mapped to the chicken genome, and functionally grouped.
Results: A total of 77,097 gene-specific transcripts covering 17,450 genes were expressed, …
Advancing Single Cell And Crispr/Dcas9 Technologies For The Study Of Reward Learning And Addiction, Corey Grant Duke
Advancing Single Cell And Crispr/Dcas9 Technologies For The Study Of Reward Learning And Addiction, Corey Grant Duke
All ETDs from UAB
Drug addiction is a chronic relapsing condition inflicting tremendous harm to individuals and society with ineffective treatment options available to most people. Drugs of abuse elevate dopamine levels in a brain region known as the nucleus accumbens (NAc), and activate gene programs considered essential for producing lasting synaptic and cell state changes which underlie the generation of addictive behavior. These gene expression changes remain poorly understood due to a complex heterogenous cellular architecture, and the rapidly fluctuating nature of the transcriptional processes themselves which make investigation difficult. Recent technical advances increase access to both profiling and manipulating these transcriptional changes …
Rna-Seq Reveals Transcriptomic Program Associated With Stemness In Taxane Resistant Prostate Cancer, Christina K. Cajigas-Du Ross
Rna-Seq Reveals Transcriptomic Program Associated With Stemness In Taxane Resistant Prostate Cancer, Christina K. Cajigas-Du Ross
Loma Linda University Electronic Theses, Dissertations & Projects
There is no cure for advanced prostate cancer (PCa), and taxane chemotherapy is the only treatment option once other therapies have failed. However, this is problematic since all patients eventually develop chemoresistance. Emerging treatments for advanced PCa have shown promise at the benchside, but clinical trials have not resulted in newly approved drugs due in part to redundant survival pathways utilized by prostate tumor cells to maintain therapy-resistance. Using RNAsequencing—an innovative approach for quantifying gene expression changes—this dissertation sought to elucidate chemoresistance-associated molecular pathways as a catalyst to develop new therapeutic targets. Results revealed a differential upregulation of stemness-associated genes …
A Customized Quantitative Pcr Microrna Panel Provides A Technically Robust Context For Studying Neurodegenerative Disease Biomarkers And Indicates A High Correlation Between Cerebrospinal Fluid And Choroid Plexus Microrna Expression, Wang-Xia Wang, David W. Fardo, Gregory A. Jicha, Peter T. Nelson
A Customized Quantitative Pcr Microrna Panel Provides A Technically Robust Context For Studying Neurodegenerative Disease Biomarkers And Indicates A High Correlation Between Cerebrospinal Fluid And Choroid Plexus Microrna Expression, Wang-Xia Wang, David W. Fardo, Gregory A. Jicha, Peter T. Nelson
Sanders-Brown Center on Aging Faculty Publications
MicroRNA (miRNA) expression varies in association with different tissue types and in diseases. Having been found in body fluids including blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), miRNAs constitute potential biomarkers. CSF miRNAs have been proposed as biomarkers for neurodegenerative diseases; however, there is a lack of consensus about the best candidate miRNA biomarkers and there has been variability in results from different research centers, perhaps due to technical factors. Here, we sought to optimize technical parameters for CSF miRNA studies. We examined different RNA isolation methods and performed miRNA expression profiling with TaqMan® miRNA Arrays. More specifically, we developed a customized …
Replication-Transciption Switch In Human Mitochondria, Karen Agaronyan
Replication-Transciption Switch In Human Mitochondria, Karen Agaronyan
Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences Theses and Dissertations
Coordinated replication and expression of mitochondrial genome is critical for metabolically active cells during various stages of development. However, it is not known whether replication and transcription can occur simultaneously without interfering with each other and whether mtDNA copy number can be regulated by the transcription machinery. Human mitochondrial RNA polymerase (mtRNAP) is a central enzyme involved in gene expression in mitochondria. It generates genome-size polycistronic transcripts and also makes replication primers at two origins of replication. MtRNAP is distantly related to phage T7 RNAP. While T7 RNAP is optimized to produce large amounts of transcripts to overcompete the bacterial …
Gene Expression Profiling In An Alzheimer's Disease Mouse Model, Matthew R. Dalton
Gene Expression Profiling In An Alzheimer's Disease Mouse Model, Matthew R. Dalton
Senior Honors Theses
Explaining precisely how Alzheimer’s disease (AD)—the world’s most common form of dementia—materializes in the human brain has proven to be one of the most elusive ends in modern medicine. Progressive memory loss, neurodegeneration, and the presence of abnormal protein aggregates of amyloid-beta (Aβ) and neurofibrillary tangles (NFT) characterize this disease. Genome sequencing provides researchers with the ability to better identify disease-related changes in gene expression, some of which may play a role in the initiation and progression toward the AD-like state. Intimate interactions between tissues have been observed in many diseases, particularly between the brain and blood. This analysis seeks …
Microvascular Endothelial Cells-Derived Microvesicles Imply In Ischemic Stroke By Modulating Astrocyte And Blood Brain Barrier Function And Cerebral Blood Flow, Qunwen Pan, Caixia He, Hua Liu, Xiaorong Liao, Bingyan Dai, Yanfang Chen, Yi Yang, Bin Zhao, Ji C. Bihl, Xiaotang Ma
Microvascular Endothelial Cells-Derived Microvesicles Imply In Ischemic Stroke By Modulating Astrocyte And Blood Brain Barrier Function And Cerebral Blood Flow, Qunwen Pan, Caixia He, Hua Liu, Xiaorong Liao, Bingyan Dai, Yanfang Chen, Yi Yang, Bin Zhao, Ji C. Bihl, Xiaotang Ma
Pharmacology and Toxicology Faculty Publications
Background
Endothelial cell (EC) released microvesicles (EMVs) can affect various target cells by transferring carried genetic information. Astrocytes are the main components of the blood brain barrier (BBB) structure in the brain and participate in regulating BBB integrity and blood flow. The interactions between ECs and astrocytes are essential for BBB integrity in homeostasis and pathological conditions. Here, we studied the effects of human brain microvascular ECs released EMVs on astrocyte functions. Additionally, we investigated the effects of EMVs treated astrocytes on regulating BBB function and cerebral ischemic damage.
Results
EMVs prepared from ECs cultured in normal condition (n-EMVs) or …
Atomic Structure Of Grk5 Reveals Distinct Structural Features Novel For G Protein-Coupled Receptor Kinases, Konstantin E. Komolov, Anshul Bhardwaj, Jeffrey L. Benovic
Atomic Structure Of Grk5 Reveals Distinct Structural Features Novel For G Protein-Coupled Receptor Kinases, Konstantin E. Komolov, Anshul Bhardwaj, Jeffrey L. Benovic
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Faculty Papers
G protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs) are members of the protein kinase A, G, and C families (AGC) and play a central role in mediating G protein-coupled receptor phosphorylation and desensitization. One member of the family, GRK5, has been implicated in several human pathologies, including heart failure, hypertension, cancer, diabetes, and Alzheimer disease. To gain mechanistic insight into GRK5 function, we determined a crystal structure of full-length human GRK5 at 1.8 Å resolution. GRK5 in complex with the ATP analog 5'-adenylyl β,γ-imidodiphosphate or the nucleoside sangivamycin crystallized as a monomer. The C-terminal tail (C-tail) of AGC kinase domains is a highly …
B Lymphocytes Are Required During The Early Priming Of Cd4+ T Cells For Clearance Of Pneumocystis Infection In Mice, Michael M. Opata, Melissa L. Hollifield, Frances E. Lund, Troy D. Randall, Robert Dunn, Beth A. Garvy, David J. Feola
B Lymphocytes Are Required During The Early Priming Of Cd4+ T Cells For Clearance Of Pneumocystis Infection In Mice, Michael M. Opata, Melissa L. Hollifield, Frances E. Lund, Troy D. Randall, Robert Dunn, Beth A. Garvy, David J. Feola
Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics Faculty Publications
B cells play a critical role in the clearance of Pneumocystis. In addition to production of Pneumocystis-specific Abs, B cells are required during the priming phase for CD4+ T cells to expand normally and generate memory. Clearance of Pneumocystis was found to be dependent on Ag specific B cells and on the ability of B cells to secrete Pneumocystis-specific Ab, as mice with B cells defective in these functions or with a restricted BCR were unable to control Pneumocystis infection. Because Pneumocystis-specific antiserum was only able to partially protect B cell–deficient mice from infection, we …
Clinical And Biochemical Function Of Polymorphic Nr0b1 Ggaa-Microsatellites In Ewing Sarcoma: A Report From The Children's Oncology Group., Michael J. Monument, Kirsten M. Johnson, Elizabeth Mcilvaine, Lisa Abegglen, W. Scott Watkins, Lynn B. Jorde, Richard B. Womer, Natalie Beeler, Laura Monovich, Elizabeth R. Lawlor, Julia A. Bridge, Joshua D. Schiffman, Mark D Krailo, R. Lor Randall, Stephen L. Lessnick
Clinical And Biochemical Function Of Polymorphic Nr0b1 Ggaa-Microsatellites In Ewing Sarcoma: A Report From The Children's Oncology Group., Michael J. Monument, Kirsten M. Johnson, Elizabeth Mcilvaine, Lisa Abegglen, W. Scott Watkins, Lynn B. Jorde, Richard B. Womer, Natalie Beeler, Laura Monovich, Elizabeth R. Lawlor, Julia A. Bridge, Joshua D. Schiffman, Mark D Krailo, R. Lor Randall, Stephen L. Lessnick
Journal Articles: Pathology and Microbiology
BACKGROUND: The genetics involved in Ewing sarcoma susceptibility and prognosis are poorly understood. EWS/FLI and related EWS/ETS chimeras upregulate numerous gene targets via promoter-based GGAA-microsatellite response elements. These microsatellites are highly polymorphic in humans, and preliminary evidence suggests EWS/FLI-mediated gene expression is highly dependent on the number of GGAA motifs within the microsatellite.
OBJECTIVES: Here we sought to examine the polymorphic spectrum of a GGAA-microsatellite within the NR0B1 promoter (a critical EWS/FLI target) in primary Ewing sarcoma tumors, and characterize how this polymorphism influences gene expression and clinical outcomes.
RESULTS: A complex, bimodal pattern of EWS/FLI-mediated gene expression was observed …
Anti-Cancer Effects Of Glypican-3 On Huh-7 Hepatocellular Carcinoma Cells, Jiyu Wen, Xiaojun Wen, Jinju Wang, Yang Shu, Zhidong Qiu, Zhongkao Liu, Ran Li, Guofang Zeng, Shiting Bao, Huilai Miao, Yanfang Chen, Mingyi Li
Anti-Cancer Effects Of Glypican-3 On Huh-7 Hepatocellular Carcinoma Cells, Jiyu Wen, Xiaojun Wen, Jinju Wang, Yang Shu, Zhidong Qiu, Zhongkao Liu, Ran Li, Guofang Zeng, Shiting Bao, Huilai Miao, Yanfang Chen, Mingyi Li
Pharmacology and Toxicology Faculty Publications
Aim: Previous studies have suggested Glypican-3 (GPC3) could be a valuable diagnostic marker for hepatocellular carcinoma. This study examined the effects of overexpression of GPC3 on Huh-7 hepatoma cells.
Methods: We constructed a recombinant plasmid vector pcDNA3.1 (+)-GPC3 for GPC3 overexpression studies in Huh-7 cells. RT-PCR and Western blotting were used to confirm GPC3 gene expression. Cell proliferation was evaluated by 5-ethynyl-2-deoxyuridine (EdU) incorporation assay. Cell cycle progression and apoptosis were determined by flow cytometry using propidium iodide (PI) and Annexin V-FITC/PI staining, respectively. Cell migration and invasion were examined by Boyden Transewll and Matrigel assays.
Results: GPC3 overexpression effectively …
Inflammatory Cytokine Gene Expression In Mesenteric Adipose Tissue During Acute Experimental Colitis, William Conan Mustain, Marlene E. Starr, Joseph Daniel Valentino, Donald A. Cohen, Daiki Okamura, Chi Wang, B. Mark Evers, Hiroshi Saito
Inflammatory Cytokine Gene Expression In Mesenteric Adipose Tissue During Acute Experimental Colitis, William Conan Mustain, Marlene E. Starr, Joseph Daniel Valentino, Donald A. Cohen, Daiki Okamura, Chi Wang, B. Mark Evers, Hiroshi Saito
Markey Cancer Center Faculty Publications
BACKGROUND: Production of inflammatory cytokines by mesenteric adipose tissue (MAT) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Animal models of colitis have demonstrated inflammatory changes within MAT, but it is unclear if these changes occur in isolation or as part of a systemic adipose tissue response. It is also unknown what cell types are responsible for cytokine production within MAT. The present study was designed to determine whether cytokine production by MAT during experimental colitis is depot-specific, and also to identify the source of cytokine production within MAT.
METHODS: Experimental colitis was induced in 6-month-old C57BL/6 …
Competition For Antigen At The Level Of The Apc Is A Major Determinant Of Immunodominance During Memory Inflation In Murine Cytomegalovirus Infection., Lila A Farrington, Tameka A Smith, Finn Grey, Ann B Hill, Christopher M. Snyder
Competition For Antigen At The Level Of The Apc Is A Major Determinant Of Immunodominance During Memory Inflation In Murine Cytomegalovirus Infection., Lila A Farrington, Tameka A Smith, Finn Grey, Ann B Hill, Christopher M. Snyder
Department of Microbiology and Immunology Faculty Papers
The unique ability of CMV to drive the expansion of virus-specific T cell populations during the course of a lifelong, persistent infection has generated interest in the virus as a potential vaccine strategy. When designing CMV-based vaccine vectors to direct immune responses against HIV or tumor Ags, it becomes important to understand how and why certain CMV-specific populations are chosen to inflate over time. To investigate this, we designed recombinant murine CMVs (MCMVs) encoding a SIINFEKL-enhanced GFP fusion protein under the control of endogenous immediate early promoters. When mice were infected with these viruses, T cells specific for the SIINFEKL …
Overexpression Of A Novel Cell Cycle Regulator Ecdysoneless In Breast Cancer: A Marker Of Poor Prognosis In Her2/Neu-Overexpressing Breast Cancer Patients., Xiangshan Zhao, Sameer Mirza, Alaa Alshareeda, Ying Zhang, Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy, Aditya Bele, Jun Hyun Kim, Shakur Mohibi, Monica Goswami, Subodh M. Lele, William West, Fang Qiu, Ian O. Ellis, Emad A. Rakha, Andrew R. Green, Hamid Band, Vimla Band
Overexpression Of A Novel Cell Cycle Regulator Ecdysoneless In Breast Cancer: A Marker Of Poor Prognosis In Her2/Neu-Overexpressing Breast Cancer Patients., Xiangshan Zhao, Sameer Mirza, Alaa Alshareeda, Ying Zhang, Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy, Aditya Bele, Jun Hyun Kim, Shakur Mohibi, Monica Goswami, Subodh M. Lele, William West, Fang Qiu, Ian O. Ellis, Emad A. Rakha, Andrew R. Green, Hamid Band, Vimla Band
Journal Articles: Genetics, Cell Biology & Anatomy
Uncontrolled proliferation is one of the hallmarks of breast cancer. We have previously identified the human Ecd protein (human ortholog of Drosophila Ecdysoneless, hereafter called Ecd) as a novel promoter of mammalian cell cycle progression, a function related to its ability to remove the repressive effects of Rb-family tumor suppressors on E2F transcription factors. Given the frequent dysregulation of cell cycle regulatory components in human cancer, we used immunohistochemistry of paraffin-embedded tissues to examine Ecd expression in normal breast tissue versus tissues representing increasing breast cancer progression. Initial studies of a smaller cohort without outcomes information showed that Ecd expression …
Enteric Alpha Defensins In Norm And Pathology., Nikolai A Lisitsyn, Yulia A Bukurova, Inna G Nikitina, George S Krasnov, Yuri Sykulev, Sergey F Beresten
Enteric Alpha Defensins In Norm And Pathology., Nikolai A Lisitsyn, Yulia A Bukurova, Inna G Nikitina, George S Krasnov, Yuri Sykulev, Sergey F Beresten
Kimmel Cancer Center Faculty Papers
ABSTRACT: Microbes living in the mammalian gut exist in constant contact with immunity system that prevents infection and maintains homeostasis. Enteric alpha defensins play an important role in regulation of bacterial colonization of the gut, as well as in activation of pro- and anti-inflammatory responses of the adaptive immune system cells in lamina propria. This review summarizes currently available data on functions of mammalian enteric alpha defensins in the immune defense and changes in their secretion in intestinal inflammatory diseases and cancer.
The Dermatan Sulfate Proteoglycan Decorin Modulates Α2Β1 Integrin And The Vimentin Intermediate Filament System During Collagen Synthesis., Oliver Jungmann, Katerina Nikolovska, Christian Stock, Jan-Niklas Schulz, Beate Eckes, Christoph Riethmüller, Rick T Owens, Renato V Iozzo, Daniela G Seidler
The Dermatan Sulfate Proteoglycan Decorin Modulates Α2Β1 Integrin And The Vimentin Intermediate Filament System During Collagen Synthesis., Oliver Jungmann, Katerina Nikolovska, Christian Stock, Jan-Niklas Schulz, Beate Eckes, Christoph Riethmüller, Rick T Owens, Renato V Iozzo, Daniela G Seidler
Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers
Decorin, a small leucine-rich proteoglycan harboring a dermatan sulfate chain at its N-terminus, is involved in regulating matrix organization and cell signaling. Loss of the dermatan sulfate of decorin leads to an Ehlers-Danlos syndrome characterized by delayed wound healing. Decorin-null (Dcn(-/-)) mice display a phenotype similar to that of EDS patients. The fibrillar collagen phenotype of Dcn(-/-) mice could be rescued in vitro by decorin but not with decorin lacking the glycosaminoglycan chain. We utilized a 3D cell culture model to investigate the impact of the altered extracellular matrix on Dcn(-/-) fibroblasts. Using 2D gel electrophoresis followed by mass spectrometry, …
A Conserved Tissue-Specific Homeodomain-Less Isoform Of Meis1 Is Downregulated In Colorectal Cancer., Richard C Crist, Jacquelyn J Roth, Scott A Waldman, Arthur M Buchberg
A Conserved Tissue-Specific Homeodomain-Less Isoform Of Meis1 Is Downregulated In Colorectal Cancer., Richard C Crist, Jacquelyn J Roth, Scott A Waldman, Arthur M Buchberg
Department of Microbiology and Immunology Faculty Papers
Colorectal cancer is one of the most common cancers in developed nations and is the result of both environmental and genetic factors. Many of the genetic lesions observed in colorectal cancer alter expression of homeobox genes, which encode homeodomain transcription factors. The MEIS1 homeobox gene is known to be involved in several hematological malignancies and solid tumors and recent evidence suggests that expression of the MEIS1 transcript is altered in colorectal cancer. Despite this potential connection, little is known about the role of the gene in the intestines. We probed murine gastrointestinal tissue samples with an N-terminal Meis1 antibody, revealing …
Mitochondrial Oxidative Stress Drives Tumor Progression And Metastasis: Should We Use Antioxidants As A Key Component Of Cancer Treatment And Prevention?, Federica Sotgia, Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn, Michael P Lisanti
Mitochondrial Oxidative Stress Drives Tumor Progression And Metastasis: Should We Use Antioxidants As A Key Component Of Cancer Treatment And Prevention?, Federica Sotgia, Ubaldo E Martinez-Outschoorn, Michael P Lisanti
Department of Stem Cell Biology and Regenerative Medicine Faculty Papers & Presentations
The functional role of oxidative stress in cancer pathogenesis has long been a hotly debated topic. A study published this month in BMC Cancer by Goh et al., directly addresses this issue by using a molecular genetic approach, via an established mouse animal model of human breast cancer. More specifically, alleviation of mitochondrial oxidative stress, via transgenic over-expression of catalase (an anti-oxidant enzyme) targeted to mitochondria, was sufficient to lower tumor grade (from high-to-low) and to dramatically reduce metastatic tumor burden by >12-fold. Here, we discuss these new findings and place them in the context of several other recent studies …
T-Lymphocyte Responses To Intestinally Absorbed Antigens Can Contribute To Adipose Tissue Inflammation And Glucose Intolerance During High Fat Feeding, Yuehui Wang, Jianing Li, Lihua Tang, Yu Wang, Richard Charnigo, Willem De Villiers, Erik Eckhardt
T-Lymphocyte Responses To Intestinally Absorbed Antigens Can Contribute To Adipose Tissue Inflammation And Glucose Intolerance During High Fat Feeding, Yuehui Wang, Jianing Li, Lihua Tang, Yu Wang, Richard Charnigo, Willem De Villiers, Erik Eckhardt
Internal Medicine Faculty Publications
BACKGROUND: Obesity is associated with inflammation of visceral adipose tissues, which increases the risk for insulin resistance. Animal models suggest that T-lymphocyte infiltration is an important early step, although it is unclear why these cells are attracted. We have recently demonstrated that dietary triglycerides, major components of high fat diets, promote intestinal absorption of a protein antigen (ovalbumin, "OVA"). The antigen was partly transported on chylomicrons, which are prominently cleared in adipose tissues. We hypothesized that intestinally absorbed gut antigens may cause T-lymphocyte associated inflammation in adipose tissue.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Triglyceride absorption promoted intestinal absorption of OVA into adipose tissue, …
Jnk1-Dependent Puma Expression Contributes To Hepatocyte Lipoapoptosis., Sophie C. Cazanave, Justin L. Mott, Nafisa A. Elmi, Steven F. Bronk, Nathan W. Werneburg, Yuko Akazawa, Alisan Kahraman, Sean P. Garrison, Gerard P. Zambetti, Michael R. Charlton, Gregory J. Gores
Jnk1-Dependent Puma Expression Contributes To Hepatocyte Lipoapoptosis., Sophie C. Cazanave, Justin L. Mott, Nafisa A. Elmi, Steven F. Bronk, Nathan W. Werneburg, Yuko Akazawa, Alisan Kahraman, Sean P. Garrison, Gerard P. Zambetti, Michael R. Charlton, Gregory J. Gores
Journal Articles: Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Free fatty acids (FFA) induce hepatocyte lipoapoptosis by a c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK)-dependent mechanism. However, the cellular processes by which JNK engages the core apoptotic machinery during lipotoxicity, especially activation of BH3-only proteins, remain incompletely understood. Thus, our aim was to determine whether JNK mediates induction of BH3-only proteins during hepatocyte lipoapoptosis. The saturated FFA palmitate, but not the monounsaturated FFA oleate, induces an increase in PUMA mRNA and protein levels. Palmitate induction of PUMA was JNK1-dependent in primary murine hepatocytes. Palmitate-mediated PUMA expression was inhibited by a dominant negative c-Jun, and direct binding of a phosphorylated c-Jun containing the …
Role Of Mammalian Ecdysoneless In Cell Cycle Regulation., Jun Hyun Kim, Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy, Mayumi Naramura, Ying Zhang, Andrew T. Dudley, Lynn Doglio, Hamid Band, Vimla Band
Role Of Mammalian Ecdysoneless In Cell Cycle Regulation., Jun Hyun Kim, Channabasavaiah B. Gurumurthy, Mayumi Naramura, Ying Zhang, Andrew T. Dudley, Lynn Doglio, Hamid Band, Vimla Band
Journal Articles: Genetics, Cell Biology & Anatomy
The Ecdysoneless (Ecd) protein is required for cell-autonomous roles in development and oogenesis in Drosophila, but the function of its evolutionarily conserved mammalian orthologs is not clear. To study the cellular function of Ecd in mammalian cells, we generated Ecd(lox/lox) mouse embryonic fibroblast cells from Ecd floxed mouse embryos. Cre-mediated deletion of Ecd in Ecd(lox/lox) mouse embryonic fibroblasts led to a proliferative block due to a delay in G(1)-S cell cycle progression; this defect was reversed by the introduction of human Ecd. Loss of Ecd led to marked down-regulation of E2F target gene expression. Furthermore, Ecd directly bound to Rb …
The Significance Of Gata3 Expression In Breast Cancer: A 10-Year Follow-Up Study., Vincenzo Ciocca, Constantine Daskalakis, Robin M. Ciocca, Alejandra Ruiz-Orrico, Juan P. Palazzo
The Significance Of Gata3 Expression In Breast Cancer: A 10-Year Follow-Up Study., Vincenzo Ciocca, Constantine Daskalakis, Robin M. Ciocca, Alejandra Ruiz-Orrico, Juan P. Palazzo
Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers
GATA3 is a transcription factor closely associated with estrogen receptor alpha in breast carcinoma, with a potential prognostic utility. This study investigated the immunohistochemical expression of GATA3 in estrogen receptor alpha-positive and estrogen receptor alpha-negative breast carcinomas. One hundred sixty-six cases of invasive breast carcinomas with 10-year follow-up information were analyzed. Positive GATA3 and estrogen receptor alpha cases were defined as greater than 20% of cells staining. Time to cancer recurrence and time to death were analyzed with survival methods. Of 166 patients, 40 were estrogen receptor alpha negative and 121 estrogen receptor alpha positive. Thirty-eight (23%) recurrences and 51 …
Stromal Gene Signatures In Large-B-Cell Lymphomas., G Lenz, G Wright, S S Dave, W Xiao, J Powell, H Zhao, W Xu, B Tan, N Goldschmidt, Javeed Iqbal, Julie M. Vose, M Bast, Kai Fu, D D. Weisenburger, T C Greiner, James O. Armitage, A Kyle, L May, R D Gascoyne, J M Connors, G Troen, H Holte, S Kvaloy, D Dierickx, G Verhoef, J Delabie, E B Smeland, P Jares, A Martinez, A Lopez-Guillermo, E Montserrat, E Campo, R M Braziel, T P Miller, L M Rimsza, J R Cook, B Pohlman, J Sweetenham, R R Tubbs, R I Fisher, E Hartmann, A Rosenwald, G Ott, H-K Muller-Hermelink, D Wrench, T A Lister, E S Jaffe, W H Wilson, W C. Chan, L M Staudt
Stromal Gene Signatures In Large-B-Cell Lymphomas., G Lenz, G Wright, S S Dave, W Xiao, J Powell, H Zhao, W Xu, B Tan, N Goldschmidt, Javeed Iqbal, Julie M. Vose, M Bast, Kai Fu, D D. Weisenburger, T C Greiner, James O. Armitage, A Kyle, L May, R D Gascoyne, J M Connors, G Troen, H Holte, S Kvaloy, D Dierickx, G Verhoef, J Delabie, E B Smeland, P Jares, A Martinez, A Lopez-Guillermo, E Montserrat, E Campo, R M Braziel, T P Miller, L M Rimsza, J R Cook, B Pohlman, J Sweetenham, R R Tubbs, R I Fisher, E Hartmann, A Rosenwald, G Ott, H-K Muller-Hermelink, D Wrench, T A Lister, E S Jaffe, W H Wilson, W C. Chan, L M Staudt
Journal Articles: Pathology and Microbiology
BACKGROUND: The addition of rituximab to combination chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and prednisone (CHOP), or R-CHOP, has significantly improved the survival of patients with diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma. Whether gene-expression signatures correlate with survival after treatment of diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma is unclear.
METHODS: We profiled gene expression in pretreatment biopsy specimens from 181 patients with diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma who received CHOP and 233 patients with this disease who received R-CHOP. A multivariate gene-expression-based survival-predictor model derived from a training group was tested in a validation group.
RESULTS: A multivariate model created from three gene-expression signatures--termed "germinal-center B-cell," "stromal-1," and "stromal-2"--predicted …
Fibrocystin/Polyductin, Found In The Same Protein Complex With Polycystin-2, Regulates Calcium Responses In Kidney Epithelia, Shizuan Wang, Jingjing Zhang, Surya M. Nauli, Xiaogang Li, Patrick G. Starremans, Ying Luo, Kristina A. Roberts, Jing Zhou
Fibrocystin/Polyductin, Found In The Same Protein Complex With Polycystin-2, Regulates Calcium Responses In Kidney Epithelia, Shizuan Wang, Jingjing Zhang, Surya M. Nauli, Xiaogang Li, Patrick G. Starremans, Ying Luo, Kristina A. Roberts, Jing Zhou
Pharmacy Faculty Articles and Research
Recent evidence suggests that fibrocystin/polyductin (FPC), polycystin-1 (PC1), and polycystin-2 (PC2) are all localized at the plasma membrane and the primary cilium, where PC1 and PC2 contribute to fluid How sensation and may function in the same mechanotransduction pathways. To further define the exact subcellular localization of FPC, the protein product encoded by the PKHD1 gene responsible for autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (PKD) in humans, and whether FPC has direct and/or indirect cross talk with PC2, which, in turn, is pivotal for the pathogenesis of autosomal dominant PKD, we performed double immunostaining and coimmunoprecipitation as well as a microfluorimetry …
Molecular Diagnosis Of Burkitt's Lymphoma., Sandeep S. Dave, Kai Fu, George W. Wright, Lloyd T. Lam, Philip Kluin, Evert-Jan Boerma, Timothy Greiner, Dennis D. Weisenburger, Andreas Rosenwald, German Ott, Hans-Konrad Müller-Hermelink, Randy D. Gascoyne, Jan Delabie, Lisa M. Rimsza, Rita M. Braziel, Thomas M. Grogan, Elias Campo, Elaine S. Jaffe, Bhavana J. Dave, Warren Sanger, M Bast, Julie M. Vose, James O. Armitage, Joseph M. Connors, Erlend B. Smeland, Stein Kvaloy, Harald Holte, Richard I. Fisher, Thomas P. Miller, Emilio Montserrat, Wyndham H. Wilson, Manisha Bahl, Hong Zhao, Liming Yang, John Powell, Richard Simon, Wing C. Chan, Louis M. Staudt
Molecular Diagnosis Of Burkitt's Lymphoma., Sandeep S. Dave, Kai Fu, George W. Wright, Lloyd T. Lam, Philip Kluin, Evert-Jan Boerma, Timothy Greiner, Dennis D. Weisenburger, Andreas Rosenwald, German Ott, Hans-Konrad Müller-Hermelink, Randy D. Gascoyne, Jan Delabie, Lisa M. Rimsza, Rita M. Braziel, Thomas M. Grogan, Elias Campo, Elaine S. Jaffe, Bhavana J. Dave, Warren Sanger, M Bast, Julie M. Vose, James O. Armitage, Joseph M. Connors, Erlend B. Smeland, Stein Kvaloy, Harald Holte, Richard I. Fisher, Thomas P. Miller, Emilio Montserrat, Wyndham H. Wilson, Manisha Bahl, Hong Zhao, Liming Yang, John Powell, Richard Simon, Wing C. Chan, Louis M. Staudt
Journal Articles: Pathology and Microbiology
BACKGROUND: The distinction between Burkitt's lymphoma and diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma is crucial because these two types of lymphoma require different treatments. We examined whether gene-expression profiling could reliably distinguish Burkitt's lymphoma from diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma.
METHODS: Tumor-biopsy specimens from 303 patients with aggressive lymphomas were profiled for gene expression and were also classified according to morphology, immunohistochemistry, and detection of the t(8;14) c-myc translocation.
RESULTS: A classifier based on gene expression correctly identified all 25 pathologically verified cases of classic Burkitt's lymphoma. Burkitt's lymphoma was readily distinguished from diffuse large-B-cell lymphoma by the high level of expression of c-myc target …
Single-Channel Properties In Endoplasmic Reticulum Membrane Of Recombinant Type 3 Inositol Trisphosphate Receptor., D O Mak, S Mcbride, V Raghuram, Y Yue, Suresh K. Joseph, J K Foskett
Single-Channel Properties In Endoplasmic Reticulum Membrane Of Recombinant Type 3 Inositol Trisphosphate Receptor., D O Mak, S Mcbride, V Raghuram, Y Yue, Suresh K. Joseph, J K Foskett
Department of Pathology, Anatomy, and Cell Biology Faculty Papers
The inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate receptor (InsP(3)R) is an intracellular Ca(2+)-release channel localized in endoplasmic reticulum (ER) with a central role in complex Ca(2+) signaling in most cell types. A family of InsP(3)Rs encoded by several genes has been identified with different primary sequences, subcellular locations, variable ratios of expression, and heteromultimer formation. This diversity suggests that cells require distinct InsP(3)Rs, but the functional correlates of this diversity are largely unknown. Lacking are single-channel recordings of the recombinant type 3 receptor (InsP(3)R-3), a widely expressed isoform also implicated in plasma membrane Ca(2+) influx and apoptosis. Here, we describe functional expression and single-channel …
Interaction Between Fgf And Bmp Signaling Pathways Regulates Development Of Metanephric Mesenchyme., Andrew T. Dudley, R. E. Godin, E. J. Robertson
Interaction Between Fgf And Bmp Signaling Pathways Regulates Development Of Metanephric Mesenchyme., Andrew T. Dudley, R. E. Godin, E. J. Robertson
Journal Articles: Genetics, Cell Biology & Anatomy
Nephrogenesis in the mouse kidney begins at embryonic day 11 and ends approximately 10 days postpartum. During this period, new nephrons are continually being generated from a stem-cell population-the nephrogenic mesenchyme-in response to signals emanating from the tips of the branching ureter. Relatively little is known about the mechanism by which the nephrogenic mesenchyme cell population is maintained at the tips of the ureter in the presence of signals promoting tubulogenesis. Previous studies have shown that a loss of Bmp7 function leads to kidney defects that are a likely result of progressive loss of nephrogenic mesenchyme by apoptosis. The studies …