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Featured researches published by Bryan D. Volpp.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1990

Two cytosolic components of the human neutrophil respiratory burst oxidase translocate to the plasma membrane during cell activation.

Robert A. Clark; Bryan D. Volpp; Kevin G. Leidal; William M. Nauseef

The superoxide-forming respiratory burst oxidase of human neutrophils is composed of membrane-associated catalytic components and cytosolic constituents required for oxidase activation. This study concerns the hypothesis that cytosolic oxidase components translocate to a membrane fraction when neutrophils are stimulated and the oxidase is activated. A polyclonal antiserum that recognizes two discrete cytosolic oxidase components of 47 and 67 kD was used to probe transfer blots of electrophoresed membrane and cytosol fractions of resting and stimulated neutrophils. In contrast to their strictly cytosolic localization in unstimulated cells, both proteins were detected in membrane fractions of neutrophils activated by phorbol esters and other stimuli. This translocation event was a function of stimulus concentration as well as time and temperature of exposure to the stimulus. It was inhibited by concentrations of N-ethylmaleimide that blocked superoxide formation but was unaffected by 2-deoxyglucose. There was a correlation between translocation of the cytosolic proteins and activation of the oxidase as determined by superoxide formation. Quantitative analyses suggested that approximately 10% of total cellular p47 and p67 became membrane-associated during phorbol ester activation of the oxidase. Analysis of Percoll density gradient fractions indicated that the target membrane for translocation of both proteins was the plasma membrane rather than membranes of either specific or azurophilic granules. In the cell-free oxidase system arachidonate-dependent but membrane-independent precipitation of the cytosolic oxidase proteins was demonstrated. The data show that activation of the respiratory burst oxidase in stimulated human neutrophils is closely associated with translocation of the 47- and 67-kD cytosolic oxidase components to the plasma membrane. We suggest that this translocation event is important in oxidase activation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1991

Neutrophil nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase assembly. Translocation of p47-phox and p67-phox requires interaction between p47-phox and cytochrome b558.

Paul G. Heyworth; John T. Curnutte; William M. Nauseef; Bryan D. Volpp; Doran W. Pearson; Henry Rosen; Robert A. Clark

Two of the cytosolic NADPH oxidase components, p47-phox and p67-phox, translocate to the plasma membrane in normal neutrophils stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate (PMA). We have now studied the translocation process in neutrophils of patients with chronic granulomatous disease (CGD), an inherited syndrome in which the oxidase system fails to produce superoxide due to lesions affecting any one of its four known components: the gp91-phox and p22-phox subunits of cytochrome b558 (the membrane-bound terminal electron transporter of the oxidase), p47-phox, and p67-phox. In contrast to normal cells, neither p47-phox nor p67-phox translocated to the membrane in PMA-stimulated CGD neutrophils which lack cytochrome b558. In one patient with a rare X-linked form of CGD caused by a Pro----His substitution in gp91-phox, but whose neutrophils have normal levels of this mutant cytochrome b558, translocation was normal. In two patients with p47-phox deficiency, p67-phox failed to translocate, whereas p47-phox was detected in the particulate fraction of PMA-stimulated neutrophils from two patients deficient in p67-phox. Our data suggest that cytochrome b558 or a closely linked factor provides an essential membrane docking site for the cytosolic oxidase components and that it is p47-phox that mediates the assembly of these components on the membrane.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 1989

Genetic Variants of Chronic Granulomatous Disease: Prevalence of Deficiencies of Two Cytosolic Components of the NADPH Oxidase System

Robert A. Clark; Harry L. Malech; John I. Gallin; Hiroyuki Nunoi; Bryan D. Volpp; Doran W. Pearson; William M. Nauseef; John T. Curnutte

Chronic granulomatous disease, a syndrome of recurrent infections and failure of oxidative microbicidal activity in phagocytes, results from defects in the gene for one of several components of an oxidase system that can undergo activation. To determine the relative prevalence of certain of the genetic variants of this disorder, we used immunoblotting to detect two specific neutrophil cytosolic proteins of 47 and 67 kd recently shown to be required for oxidase activation. Chronic granulomatous disease is usually an X-linked disorder associated with the absence of membrane cytochrome b558. Of our 94 patients with chronic granulomatous disease, however, 36 had a phenotype characterized by autosomal inheritance, normal membrane oxidase components (including cytochrome b558), and functionally defective cytosolic activity in a cell-free oxidase system. We studied 25 of these 36 patients and found that 22 lacked the 47-kd cytosolic protein, and the remaining 3 were missing the 67-kd component. Patients with chronic granulomatous disease whose functional defect was localized to the neutrophil membrane (classic X-linked cytochrome b-negative type and two other rare variants) had normal amounts of both cytosolic components. We estimate that approximately 33 percent of all patients with chronic granulomatous disease are missing the 47-kd cytosolic oxidase component and about 5 percent of patients are missing the 67-kd component. Chronic granulomatous disease caused by a defect in any cytosolic factors other than the 47-kd and 67-kd proteins, if it exists, is apparently rare.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1993

Protein kinase C isotypes and signal-transduction in human neutrophils: Selective substrate specificity of calcium-dependent β-PKC and novel calcium-independent nPKC

Subrata Majumdar; Lauren H. Kane; Michael W. Rossi; Bryan D. Volpp; William M. Nauseef; Helen M. Korchak

Neutrophils possess at least two phospholipid-dependent forms of protein kinase C, a classical Ca/PS/DG-dependent beta-isotype of protein kinase C and a Ca-independent but PS/DG-dependent novel protein kinase C (nPKC) which we now demonstrate to have different substrate specificities. Activation of human neutrophils triggers assembly of an NADPH oxidase in the membrane and generation of O2-. A role for the major Ca-dependent isotype beta-PKC in neutrophils is proposed in stimulus-induced phosphorylation and association of a cytosolic 47 kDa protein (p47-phox) with the membrane NADPH oxidase. In this study we demonstrate that purified beta-PKC and nPKC have very different substrate specificities; beta-PKC but not nPKC phosphorylated both endogenous and recombinant p47-phox. In addition, beta-PKC but not nPKC phosphorylated [ser25]PKC(19-31), the substrate peptide based on a sequence in the Ca-dependent alpha, beta and gamma-isotypes. Pseudosubstrate(19-36), derived from the C-terminus of Ca-dependent PKC isotypes, inhibited beta-PKC but not nPKC activity using either Histone IIIS or peptide(19-31) as substrate. Pseudosubstrate(19-36) also inhibited beta-PKC catalyzed phosphorylation of endogenous and recombinant p47-phox. Pseudosubstrate(19-36) also inhibited the O2- generation triggered by GTP gamma S in electroporated neutrophils by 50%. 32P-Labelled neutrophils electroporated in the presence of GTP gamma S showed phosphorylation of multiple cytosolic proteins including a 47 kDa band, and phosphorylation of membrane-associated 34 kDa, 47 kDa and 54 kDa proteins. Pseudosubstrate(19-36) inhibited phosphorylation of p47-phox in the membrane but not in the cytosol. These findings suggest translocatable, Ca-dependent isotypes of PKC such as beta-PKC may play a role in the phosphorylation of membrane associated p47-phox and the assembly or maintenance of an active NADPH oxidase.


Science | 1990

Cloning of a 67-kD neutrophil oxidase factor with similarity to a noncatalytic region of p60c-src.

Thomas L. Leto; Karen J. Lomax; Bryan D. Volpp; Hiroyuki Nunoi; Joan M.G. Sechler; William M. Nauseef; Robert A. Clark; John I. Gallin; Harry L. Malech


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1991

Assembly of the neutrophil respiratory burst oxidase. Protein kinase C promotes cytoskeletal and membrane association of cytosolic oxidase components.

William M. Nauseef; Bryan D. Volpp; Sally McCormick; Kevin G. Leidal; Robert A. Clark


Science | 1988

Two cytosolic neutrophil oxidase components absent in autosomal chronic granulomatous disease

Bryan D. Volpp; William M. Nauseef; Robert A. Clark


Journal of Immunology | 1989

Subcellular distribution and membrane association of human neutrophil substrates for ADP-ribosylation by pertussis toxin and cholera toxin.

Bryan D. Volpp; William M. Nauseef; Robert A. Clark


Blood | 1990

Immunochemical and electrophoretic analyses of phosphorylated native and recombinant neutrophil oxidase component p47-phox

William M. Nauseef; Bryan D. Volpp; Robert A. Clark


Transactions of the Association of American Physicians | 1989

Translocation of cytosolic components of neutrophil NADPH oxidase.

Robert A. Clark; Bryan D. Volpp; Kevin G. Leidal; William M. Nauseef

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William M. Nauseef

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Doran W. Pearson

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Harry L. Malech

National Institutes of Health

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Hiroyuki Nunoi

National Institutes of Health

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John I. Gallin

National Institutes of Health

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Helen M. Korchak

University of Pennsylvania

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Henry Rosen

University of Washington

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