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Dive into the research topics where Alvin T. Kho is active.

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Featured researches published by Alvin T. Kho.


Cancer Cell | 2008

Acquisition of Granule Neuron Precursor Identity Is a Critical Determinant of Progenitor Cell Competence to Form Shh-Induced Medulloblastoma

Ulrich Schüller; Vivi M. Heine; Junhao Mao; Alvin T. Kho; Allison K. Dillon; Young-Goo Han; Emmanuelle Huillard; Tao Sun; Azra H. Ligon; Ying Qian; Qiufu Ma; Arturo Alvarez-Buylla; Andrew P. McMahon; David H. Rowitch; Keith L. Ligon

Whether the brain tumor medulloblastoma originates from stem cells or restricted progenitor cells is unclear. To investigate this, we activated oncogenic Hedgehog (Hh) signaling in multipotent and lineage-restricted central nervous system (CNS) progenitors. We observed that normal unipotent cerebellar granule neuron precursors (CGNPs) derive from hGFAP(+) and Olig2(+) rhombic lip progenitors. Hh activation in a spectrum of early- and late-stage CNS progenitors generated similar medulloblastomas, but not other brain cancers, indicating that acquisition of CGNP identity is essential for tumorigenesis. We show in human and mouse medulloblastoma that cells expressing the glia-associated markers Gfap and Olig2 are neoplastic and retain features of embryonic-type granule lineage progenitors. Thus, oncogenic Hh signaling promotes medulloblastoma from lineage-restricted granule cell progenitors.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

Feedback amplification of fibrosis through matrix stiffening and COX-2 suppression

Fei Liu; Justin D. Mih; Barry S. Shea; Alvin T. Kho; Asma S. Sharif; Andrew M. Tager; Daniel J. Tschumperlin

In response to tissue stiffening, fibroblasts increase production of extracellular matrix while decreasing production of matrix-degrading enzymes and the fibrosis inhibitor prostaglandin E2.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Dysferlin interacts with annexins A1 and A2 and mediates sarcolemmal wound-healing.

Niall J. Lennon; Alvin T. Kho; Brian J. Bacskai; Sarah L. Perlmutter; Bradley T. Hyman; Robert H. Brown

Mutations in the dysferlin gene cause limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B and Miyoshi myopathy. We report here the results of expression profile analyses and in vitro investigations that point to an interaction between dysferlin and the Ca2+ and lipid-binding proteins, annexins A1 and A2, and define a role for dysferlin in Ca2+-dependent repair of sarcolemmal injury through a process of vesicle fusion. Expression profiling identified a network of genes that are co-regulated in dysferlinopathic mice. Co-immunofluorescence, co-immunoprecipitation, and fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy revealed that dysferlin normally associates with both annexins A1 and A2 in a Ca2+ and membrane injury-dependent manner. The distribution of the annexins and the efficiency of sarcolemmal wound-healing are significantly disrupted in dysferlin-deficient muscle. We propose a model of muscle membrane healing mediated by dysferlin that is relevant to both normal and dystrophic muscle and defines the annexins as potential muscular dystrophy genes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Gene expression comparison of biopsies from Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and normal skeletal muscle

Judith N. Haslett; Despina Sanoudou; Alvin T. Kho; Richard R. Bennett; Steven A. Greenberg; Isaac S. Kohane; Alan H. Beggs; Louis M. Kunkel

The primary cause of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a mutation in the dystrophin gene leading to the absence of the corresponding RNA transcript and protein. Absence of dystrophin leads to disruption of the dystrophin-associated protein complex and substantial changes in skeletal muscle pathology. Although the histological pathology of dystrophic tissue has been well documented, the underlying molecular pathways remain poorly understood. To examine the pathogenic pathways and identify new or modifying factors involved in muscular dystrophy, expression microarrays were used to compare individual gene expression profiles of skeletal muscle biopsies from 12 DMD patients and 12 unaffected control patients. Two separate statistical analysis methods were used to interpret the resulting data: t test analysis to determine the statistical significance of differential expression and geometric fold change analysis to determine the extent of differential expression. These analyses identified 105 genes that differ significantly in expression level between unaffected and DMD muscle. Many of the differentially expressed genes reflect changes in histological pathology. For instance, immune response signals and extracellular matrix genes are overexpressed in DMD muscle, an indication of the infiltration of inflammatory cells and connective tissue. Significantly more genes are overexpressed than are underexpressed in dystrophic muscle, with dystrophin underexpressed, whereas other genes encoding muscle structure and regeneration processes are overexpressed, reflecting the regenerative nature of the disease.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2007

High abundance synovial fluid proteome: distinct profiles in health and osteoarthritis

Reuben Gobezie; Alvin T. Kho; Bryan Krastins; David Sarracino; Thomas S. Thornhill; Michael R. Chase; Peter J. Millett; David M. Lee

The development of increasingly high-throughput and sensitive mass spectroscopy-based proteomic techniques provides new opportunities to examine the physiology and pathophysiology of many biologic fluids and tissues. The purpose of this study was to determine protein expression profiles of high-abundance synovial fluid (SF) proteins in health and in the prevalent joint disease osteoarthritis (OA). A cross-sectional study of 62 patients with early OA (n = 21), patients with late OA (n = 21), and control individuals (n = 20) was conducted. SF proteins were separated by using one-dimensional PAGE, and the in-gel digested proteins were analyzed by electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry. A total of 362 spots were examined and 135 high-abundance SF proteins were identified as being expressed across all three study cohorts. A total of 135 SF proteins were identified. Eighteen proteins were found to be significantly differentially expressed between control individuals and OA patients. Two subsets of OA that are not dependent on disease duration were identified using unsupervised analysis of the data. Several novel SF proteins were also identified. Our analyses demonstrate no disease duration-dependent differences in abundant protein composition of SF in OA, and we clearly identified two previously unappreciated yet distinct subsets of protein profiles in this disease cohort. Additionally, our findings reveal novel abundant protein species in healthy SF whose functional contribution to SF physiology was not previously recognized. Finally, our studies identify candidate biomarkers for OA with potential for use as highly sensitive and specific tests for diagnostic purposes or for evaluating therapeutic response.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2016

Patterns of Growth and Decline in Lung Function in Persistent Childhood Asthma.

Michael J. McGeachie; Katherine P. Yates; Xiaobo Zhou; Feng Guo; Alice L. Sternberg; Mark L. Van Natta; Robert A. Wise; Stanley J. Szefler; Sunita Sharma; Alvin T. Kho; Michael H. Cho; Damien C. Croteau-Chonka; Peter J. Castaldi; Gaurav Jain; Amartya Sanyal; Ye Zhan; Bryan R. Lajoie; Job Dekker; John A. Stamatoyannopoulos; Ronina A. Covar; Robert S. Zeiger; N. Franklin Adkinson; Paul T. Williams; H. William Kelly; Hartmut Grasemann; Judith M. Vonk; Gerard H. Koppelman; Dirkje S. Postma; Benjamin A. Raby; Isaac Houston

BACKGROUND Tracking longitudinal measurements of growth and decline in lung function in patients with persistent childhood asthma may reveal links between asthma and subsequent chronic airflow obstruction. METHODS We classified children with asthma according to four characteristic patterns of lung-function growth and decline on the basis of graphs showing forced expiratory volume in 1 second (FEV1), representing spirometric measurements performed from childhood into adulthood. Risk factors associated with abnormal patterns were also examined. To define normal values, we used FEV1 values from participants in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey who did not have asthma. RESULTS Of the 684 study participants, 170 (25%) had a normal pattern of lung-function growth without early decline, and 514 (75%) had abnormal patterns: 176 (26%) had reduced growth and an early decline, 160 (23%) had reduced growth only, and 178 (26%) had normal growth and an early decline. Lower baseline values for FEV1, smaller bronchodilator response, airway hyperresponsiveness at baseline, and male sex were associated with reduced growth (P<0.001 for all comparisons). At the last spirometric measurement (mean [±SD] age, 26.0±1.8 years), 73 participants (11%) met Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease spirometric criteria for lung-function impairment that was consistent with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD); these participants were more likely to have a reduced pattern of growth than a normal pattern (18% vs. 3%, P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS Childhood impairment of lung function and male sex were the most significant predictors of abnormal longitudinal patterns of lung-function growth and decline. Children with persistent asthma and reduced growth of lung function are at increased risk for fixed airflow obstruction and possibly COPD in early adulthood. (Funded by the Parker B. Francis Foundation and others; ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00000575.).


Nature Materials | 2015

Unjamming and cell shape in the asthmatic airway epithelium

Jin-Ah Park; Jae Hun Kim; Dapeng Bi; Jennifer A. Mitchel; Nader Taheri Qazvini; Kelan G. Tantisira; Chan Young Park; Maureen McGill; Sae Hoon Kim; Bomi Gweon; Jacob Notbohm; Robert L. Steward; Stephanie Burger; Scott H. Randell; Alvin T. Kho; Dhananjay Tambe; Corey Hardin; Stephanie A. Shore; Elliot Israel; David A. Weitz; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Elizabeth P. Henske; Scott T. Weiss; M. Lisa Manning; James P. Butler; Jeffrey M. Drazen; Jeffrey J. Fredberg

From coffee beans flowing in a chute to cells remodelling in a living tissue, a wide variety of close-packed collective systems-both inert and living-have the potential to jam. The collective can sometimes flow like a fluid or jam and rigidify like a solid. The unjammed-to-jammed transition remains poorly understood, however, and structural properties characterizing these phases remain unknown. Using primary human bronchial epithelial cells, we show that the jamming transition in asthma is linked to cell shape, thus establishing in that system a structural criterion for cell jamming. Surprisingly, the collapse of critical scaling predicts a counter-intuitive relationship between jamming, cell shape and cell-cell adhesive stresses that is borne out by direct experimental observations. Cell shape thus provides a rigorous structural signature for classification and investigation of bronchial epithelial layer jamming in asthma, and potentially in any process in disease or development in which epithelial dynamics play a prominent role.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Cell Elasticity Determines Macrophage Function

Naimish R. Patel; Medhavi Bole; Cheng Chen; C. Corey Hardin; Alvin T. Kho; Justin D. Mih; Linhong Deng; James P. Butler; Daniel J. Tschumperlin; Jeffrey J. Fredberg; Ramaswamy Krishnan; Henryk Koziel

Macrophages serve to maintain organ homeostasis in response to challenges from injury, inflammation, malignancy, particulate exposure, or infection. Until now, receptor ligation has been understood as being the central mechanism that regulates macrophage function. Using macrophages of different origins and species, we report that macrophage elasticity is a major determinant of innate macrophage function. Macrophage elasticity is modulated not only by classical biologic activators such as LPS and IFN-γ, but to an equal extent by substrate rigidity and substrate stretch. Macrophage elasticity is dependent upon actin polymerization and small rhoGTPase activation, but functional effects of elasticity are not predicted by examination of gene expression profiles alone. Taken together, these data demonstrate an unanticipated role for cell elasticity as a common pathway by which mechanical and biologic factors determine macrophage function.


Neurogenetics | 2003

Gene expression profiling of Duchenne muscular dystrophy skeletal muscle

Judith N. Haslett; Despoina Sanoudou; Alvin T. Kho; Mei Han; Richard R. Bennett; Isaac S. Kohane; Alan H. Beggs; Louis M. Kunkel

Abstract.The primary cause of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a mutation in the dystrophin gene, leading to absence of the corresponding protein, disruption of the dystrophin-associated protein complex, and substantial changes in skeletal muscle pathology. Although the primary defect is known and the histological pathology well documented, the underlying molecular pathways remain in question. To clarify these pathways, we used expression microarrays to compare individual gene expression profiles for skeletal muscle biopsies from DMD patients and unaffected controls. We have previously published expression data for the 12,500 known genes and full-length expressed sequence tags (ESTs) on the Affymetrix HG-U95Av2 chips. Here we present comparative expression analysis of the 50,000 EST clusters represented on the remainder of the Affymetrix HG-U95 set. Individual expression profiles were generated for biopsies from 10 DMD patients and 10 unaffected control patients. Two methods of statistical analysis were used to interpret the resulting data (t-test analysis to determine the statistical significance of differential expression and geometric fold change analysis to determine the extent of differential expression). These analyses identified 183 probe sets (59 of which represent known genes) that differ significantly in expression level between unaffected and disease muscle. This study adds to our knowledge of the molecular pathways that are altered in the dystrophic state. In particular, it suggests that signaling pathways might be substantially involved in the disease process. It also highlights a large number of unknown genes whose expression is altered and whose identity therefore becomes important in understanding the pathogenesis of muscular dystrophy.


Stem Cells | 2006

Defective Ribosomal Protein Gene Expression Alters Transcription, Translation, Apoptosis, and Oncogenic Pathways in Diamond‐Blackfan Anemia

Hanna T. Gazda; Alvin T. Kho; Despina Sanoudou; Jan Maciej Zaucha; Isaac S. Kohane; Colin A. Sieff; Alan H. Beggs

Diamond‐Blackfan anemia (DBA) is a broad developmental disease characterized by anemia, bone marrow (BM) erythroblastopenia, and an increased incidence of malignancy. Mutations in ribosomal protein gene S19 (RPS19) are found in ∼25% of DBA patients; however, the role of RPS19 in the pathogenesis of DBA remains unknown. Using global gene expression analysis, we compared highly purified multipotential, erythroid, and myeloid BM progenitors from RPS19 mutated and control individuals. We found several ribosomal protein genes downregulated in all DBA progenitors. Apoptosis genes, such as TNFRSF10B and FAS, transcriptional control genes, including the erythropoietic transcription factor MYB (encoding c‐myb), and translational genes were greatly dysregulated, mostly in diseased erythroid cells. Cancer‐related genes, including RAS family oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes, were significantly dysregulated in all diseased progenitors. In addition, our results provide evidence that RPS19 mutations lead to codownregulation of multiple ribosomal protein genes, as well as downregulation of genes involved in translation in DBA cells. In conclusion, the altered expression of cancer‐related genes suggests a molecular basis for malignancy in DBA. Downregulation of c‐myb expression, which causes complete failure of fetal liver erythropoiesis in knockout mice, suggests a link between RPS19 mutations and reduced erythropoiesis in DBA.

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Scott T. Weiss

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Kelan G. Tantisira

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Sunita Sharma

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Louis M. Kunkel

Boston Children's Hospital

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Roger Gaedigk

Children's Mercy Hospital

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Alan H. Beggs

Boston Children's Hospital

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Vincent J. Carey

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Benjamin A. Raby

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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