Begonia Y. Ho
Procter & Gamble
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Featured researches published by Begonia Y. Ho.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2008
David Proud; Ronald B. Turner; Birgit Winther; Shahina Wiehler; Jay P. Tiesman; Tim Reichling; Kenton Duane Juhlin; Andy W. Fulmer; Begonia Y. Ho; Amy Ann Walanski; Cathy L. Poore; Haruko Mizoguchi; Lynn Jump; Marsha L. Moore; Claudine Killar Zukowski; Jeffrey W. Clymer
RATIONALE Human rhinovirus infections cause colds and trigger exacerbations of lower airway diseases. OBJECTIVES To define changes in gene expression profiles during in vivo rhinovirus infections. METHODS Nasal epithelial scrapings were obtained before and during experimental rhinovirus infection, and gene expression was evaluated by microarray. Naturally acquired rhinovirus infections, cultured human epithelial cells, and short interfering RNA knockdown were used to further evaluate the role of viperin in rhinovirus infections. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Symptom scores and viral titers were measured in subjects inoculated with rhinovirus or sham control, and changes in gene expression were assessed 8 and 48 hours after inoculation. Real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction for viperin and rhinoviruses was used in naturally acquired infections, and viperin mRNA levels and viral titers were measured in cultured cells. Rhinovirus-induced changes in gene expression were not observed 8 hours after viral infection, but 11,887 gene transcripts were significantly altered in scrapings obtained 2 days postinoculation. Major groups of up-regulated genes included chemokines, signaling molecules, interferon-responsive genes, and antivirals. Viperin expression was further examined and also was increased in naturally acquired rhinovirus infections, as well as in cultured human epithelial cells infected with intact, but not replication-deficient, rhinovirus. Knockdown of viperin with short interfering RNA increased rhinovirus replication in infected epithelial cells. CONCLUSIONS Rhinovirus infection significantly alters the expression of many genes associated with the immune response, including chemokines and antivirals. The data obtained provide insights into the host response to rhinovirus infection and identify potential novel targets for further evaluation.
Journal of Periodontology | 2009
Steven Offenbacher; Silvana P. Barros; David W. Paquette; J. Leslie Winston; Biesbrock Ar; Ryan G. Thomason; Roger D. Gibb; Andy W. Fulmer; Jay P. Tiesman; Kenton Duane Juhlin; Shuo L. Wang; Tim Reichling; Ker Sang Chen; Begonia Y. Ho
BACKGROUND To our knowledge, changes in the patterns of whole-transcriptome gene expression that occur during the induction and resolution of experimental gingivitis in humans were not previously explored using bioinformatic tools. METHODS Gingival biopsy samples collected from 14 subjects during a 28-day stent-induced experimental gingivitis model, followed by treatment, and resolution at days 28 through 35 were analyzed using gene-expression arrays. Biopsy samples were collected at different sites within each subject at baseline (day 0), at the peak of gingivitis (day 28), and at resolution (day 35) and processed using whole-transcriptome gene-expression arrays. Gene-expression data were analyzed to identify biologic themes and pathways associated with changes in gene-expression profiles that occur during the induction and resolution of experimental gingivitis using bioinformatic tools. RESULTS During disease induction and resolution, the dominant expression pathway was the immune response, with 131 immune response genes significantly up- or downregulated during induction, during resolution, or during both at P <0.05. During induction, there was significant transient increase in the expression of inflammatory and oxidative stress mediators, including interleukin (IL)-1 alpha (IL1A), IL-1 beta (IL1B), IL8, RANTES, colony stimulating factor 3 (CSF3), and superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2), and a decreased expression of IP10, interferon inducible T-cell alpha chemoattractant (ITAC), matrix metalloproteinase 10 (MMP10), and beta 4 defensin (DEFB4). These genes reversed expression patterns upon resolution in parallel with the reversal of gingival inflammation. CONCLUSIONS A relatively small subset (11.9%) of the immune response genes analyzed by array was transiently activated in response to biofilm overgrowth, suggesting a degree of specificity in the transcriptome-expression response. The fact that this same subset demonstrates a reversal in expression patterns during clinical resolution implicates these genes as being critical for maintaining tissue homeostasis at the biofilm-gingival interface. In addition to the immune response pathway as the dominant response theme, new candidate genes and pathways were identified as being selectively modulated in experimental gingivitis, including neural processes, epithelial defenses, angiogenesis, and wound healing.
Archive | 2007
Matthew Joseph Doyle; Leo Timothy Ii Laughlin; Todd Laurence Underiner; Begonia Y. Ho; Rowan Andrew Grayling
Archive | 2008
Mary Lynn Jump; Jeffrey W. Clymer; Begonia Y. Ho; Amy Ann Walanski; Cynthia Elodi Francis
Archive | 2006
Charles Carson Bascom; Robert Scott Youngquist; Amy Ann Walanski; Begonia Y. Ho; Gary Richard Fuentes
Archive | 2006
Jeffrey W. Clymer; Begonia Y. Ho; Mary Lynn Jump; Leonard Edwin Small; Amy Ann Walanski; Paul John Rennie; Claudine Killar Zukowski
Archive | 2010
David S. Salloum; Douglas Craig Scott; Donald James White; John Christian Haught; Begonia Y. Ho; Malgorzata Klukowska
Archive | 2006
Jeffrey W. Clymer; Begonia Y. Ho; Mary Lynn Jump; Amy Ann Walanski; Claudine Killar Zukowski
Archive | 2010
David S. Salloum; Douglas Craig Scott; Donald James White; John Christian Haught; Begonia Y. Ho; Malgorzata Klukowska
Archive | 2007
Matthew Joseph Doyle; Leo Timothy Ii Laughlin; Todd Laurence Underiner; Begonia Y. Ho; Rowan Andrew Grayling