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Dive into the research topics where Daniel P. Reay is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel P. Reay.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

NF-κB inhibition delays DNA damage–induced senescence and aging in mice

Jeremy S. Tilstra; Andria Rasile Robinson; Jin Wang; Siobhán Q. Gregg; Cheryl L. Clauson; Daniel P. Reay; Luigi Aurelio Nasto; Claudette M. St. Croix; Arvydas Usas; Nam Vo; Johnny Huard; Paula R. Clemens; Donna B. Stolz; Denis C. Guttridge; Simon C. Watkins; George A. Garinis; Yinsheng Wang; Laura J. Niedernhofer; Paul D. Robbins

The accumulation of cellular damage, including DNA damage, is thought to contribute to aging-related degenerative changes, but how damage drives aging is unknown. XFE progeroid syndrome is a disease of accelerated aging caused by a defect in DNA repair. NF-κB, a transcription factor activated by cellular damage and stress, has increased activity with aging and aging-related chronic diseases. To determine whether NF-κB drives aging in response to the accumulation of spontaneous, endogenous DNA damage, we measured the activation of NF-κB in WT and progeroid model mice. As both WT and progeroid mice aged, NF-κB was activated stochastically in a variety of cell types. Genetic depletion of one allele of the p65 subunit of NF-κB or treatment with a pharmacological inhibitor of the NF-κB-activating kinase, IKK, delayed the age-related symptoms and pathologies of progeroid mice. Additionally, inhibition of NF-κB reduced oxidative DNA damage and stress and delayed cellular senescence. These results indicate that the mechanism by which DNA damage drives aging is due in part to NF-κB activation. IKK/NF-κB inhibitors are sufficient to attenuate this damage and could provide clinical benefit for degenerative changes associated with accelerated aging disorders and normal aging.


Gene Therapy | 2010

Inhibition of the IKK/NF-κB pathway by AAV gene transfer improves muscle regeneration in older mdx mice.

Ying Tang; Daniel P. Reay; Melissa Nicole Salay; M Y Mi; Paula R. Clemens; Denis C. Guttridge; Paul D. Robbins; Johnny Huard; Bing Wang

The IκB kinase (IKKα, β and the regulatory subunit IKKγ) complex regulates nuclear factor of κB (NF-κB) transcriptional activity, which is upregulated in many chronic inflammatory diseases. NF-κB signaling promotes inflammation and limits muscle regeneration in Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), resulting in fibrotic and fatty tissue replacement of muscle that exacerbates the wasting process in dystrophic muscles. Here, we examined whether dominant-negative forms of IKKα (IKKα-dn) and IKKβ (IKKβ-dn) delivered by adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors to the gastrocnemius (GAS) and tibialis anterior (TA) muscles of 1, 2 and 11-month-old mdx mice, a murine DMD model, block NF-κB activation and increase muscle regeneration. At 1 month post-treatment, the levels of nuclear NF-κB in locally treated muscle were decreased by gene transfer with either AAV-CMV-IKKα-dn or AAV-CMV-IKKβ-dn, but not by IKK wild-type controls (IKKα and β) or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Although treatment with AAV-IKKα-dn or AAV-IKKβ-dn vectors had no significant effect on muscle regeneration in young mdx mice treated at 1 and 2 months of age and collected 1 month later, treatment of old (11 months) mdx with AAV-CMV-IKKα-dn or AAV-CMV-IKKβ-dn significantly increased levels of muscle regeneration. In addition, there was a significant decrease in myofiber necrosis in the AAV-IKKα-dn- and AAV-IKKβ-dn-treated mdx muscle in both young and old mice. These results demonstrate that inhibition of IKKα or IKKβ in dystrophic muscle reduces the adverse effects of NF-κB signaling, resulting in a therapeutic effect. Moreover, these results clearly demonstrate the therapeutic benefits of inhibiting NF-κB activation by AAV gene transfer in dystrophic muscle to promote regeneration, particularly in older mdx mice, and block necrosis.


Gene Therapy | 2008

Full-length dystrophin gene transfer to the mdx mouse in utero.

Daniel P. Reay; Roberto Bilbao; Bhanu Munil Koppanati; L Cai; T L O'Day; Z Jiang; Heng Zheng; Jon F. Watchko; Paula R. Clemens

In utero gene therapy for genetic diseases, such as muscular dystrophies, offers potential advantages over postnatal treatment including vector delivery at the earliest point in the disease and treatment prior to full maturation of the immune system. This study examines in utero gene delivery of full-length murine dystrophin to the murine mdx model for Duchenne muscular dystrophy using a high-capacity adenoviral vector. We examined dystrophin expression, spread of vector, morphology and specific force production of the tibialis anterior muscle 9 weeks after intramuscular in utero injection. Recombinant dystrophin was expressed in the hindlimb muscles, with the majority of animals having expression in two muscles of the injected hindlimb. The dystrophin–glycoprotein complex was restored in those muscle fibers expressing recombinant dystrophin. Analysis of the percentage of dystrophin-expressing muscle fibers with centrally placed nuclei revealed effective protection from cycles of degeneration and regeneration normally seen in muscle fibers lacking dystrophin. However, due to low levels of muscle gene transfer, further advances in the efficiency of adenoviral vector-mediated gene delivery would be required for clinical applications of in utero gene therapy for primary myopathies such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2011

Systemic delivery of NEMO binding domain/IKKγ inhibitory peptide to young mdx mice improves dystrophic skeletal muscle histopathology.

Daniel P. Reay; Michele Yang; Jon F. Watchko; Molly Daood; Terrence O'Day; Khaleel K. Rehman; Denis C. Guttridge; Paul D. Robbins; Paula R. Clemens

The activation of nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) contributes to muscle degeneration that results from dystrophin deficiency in human Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and in the mdx mouse. In dystrophic muscle, NF-κB participates in inflammation and failure of muscle regeneration. Peptides containing the NF-κB Essential Modulator (NEMO) binding domain (NBD) disrupt the IκB kinase complex, thus blocking NF-κB activation. The NBD peptide, which is linked to a protein transduction domain to achieve in vivo peptide delivery to muscle tissue, was systemically delivered to mdx mice for 4 or 7 weeks to study NF-κB activation, histological changes in hind limb and diaphragm muscle and ex vivo function of diaphragm muscle. Decreased NF-κB activation, decreased necrosis and increased regeneration were observed in hind limb and diaphragm muscle in mdx mice treated systemically with NBD peptide, as compared to control mdx mice. NBD peptide treatment resulted in improved generation of specific force and greater resistance to lengthening activations in diaphragm muscle ex vivo. Together these data support the potential of NBD peptides for the treatment of DMD by modulating dystrophic pathways in muscle that are downstream of dystrophin deficiency.


Gene Therapy | 2005

Comparison of high-capacity and first-generation adenoviral vector gene delivery to murine muscle in utero

Roberto Bilbao; Daniel P. Reay; E Wu; H Zheng; V Biermann; Stefan Kochanek; Paula R. Clemens

In utero gene delivery could offer the advantage of treatment at an early stage for genetic disorders such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) in which the inevitable process of muscle degeneration is already initiated at birth. Furthermore, treatment of fetal muscle with adenoviral (Ad) vectors is attractive because of a high density of Ad receptors, easy vector accessibility due to immaturity of the basal lamina and the possibility of treating stem cells. Previously, we demonstrated the efficient transduction of fetal muscle by high-capacity Ad (HC-Ad) vectors. In this study, we compared HC-Ad and first-generation Ad (FG-Ad) vectors for longevity of lacZ transgene expression, toxicity and induction of immunity after direct vector-mediated in utero gene delivery to fetal C57BL/6 mice muscle 16 days after conception (E-16). The total amount of β-galactosidase (βgal) expressed from the HC-Ad vector remained stable for the 5 months of the study, although the concentration of βgal decreased due to muscle growth. Higher survival rates that reflect lower levels of toxicity were observed in those mice transduced with an HC-Ad vector as compared to an FG-Ad vector. The toxicity induced by FG-Ad vector gene delivery was dependent on mouse strain and vector dose. Animals treated with either HC-Ad and FG-Ad vectors developed non-neutralizing antibodies against Ad capsid and antibodies against βgal, but these antibodies did not cause loss of vector genomes from transduced muscle. In a mouse model of DMD, dystrophin gene transfer to muscle in utero using an HC-Ad vector restored the dystrophin-associated glycoproteins. Our results demonstrate that long-term transgene expression can be achieved by HC-Ad vector-mediated gene delivery to fetal muscle, although strategies of vector integration may need to be considered to accommodate muscle growth.


Gene Therapy | 2003

Fetal muscle gene transfer is not enhanced by an RGD capsid modification to high-capacity adenoviral vectors

Roberto Bilbao; Daniel P. Reay; T Hughes; V Biermann; C Volpers; Laura R. Goldberg; J Bergelson; Stefan Kochanek; Paula R. Clemens

High levels of αv integrin expression by fetal muscle suggested that vector re-targeting to integrins could enhance adenoviral vector-mediated transduction, thereby increasing safety and efficacy of muscle gene transfer in utero. High-capacity adenoviral (HC-Ad) vectors modified by an Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) peptide motif in the HI loop of the adenoviral fiber (RGD-HC-Ad) have demonstrated efficient gene transfer through binding to αv integrins. To test integrin targeting of HC-Ad vectors for fetal muscle gene transfer, we compared unmodified and RGD-modified HC-Ad vectors. In vivo, unmodified HC-Ad vector transduced fetal mouse muscle with four-fold higher efficiency compared to RGD-HC-Ad vector. Confirming that the difference was due to muscle cell autonomous factors and not mechanical barriers, transduction of primary myogenic cells isolated from murine fetal muscle in vitro demonstrated a three-fold better transduction by HC-Ad vector than by RGD-HC-Ad vector. We hypothesized that the high expression level of coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (CAR), demonstrated in fetal muscle cells both in vitro and in vivo, was the crucial variable influencing the relative transduction efficiencies of HC-Ad and RGD-HC-Ad vectors. To explore this further, we studied transduction by HC-Ad and RGD-HC-Ad vectors in paired cell lines that expressed αv integrins and differed only by the presence or absence of CAR expression. The results increase our understanding of factors that will be important for retargeting HC-Ad vectors to enhance gene transfer to fetal muscle.


Human Gene Therapy | 2003

Binding of Adenoviral Fiber Knob to the Coxsackievirus- Adenovirus Receptor Is Crucial for Transduction of Fetal Muscle

Roberto Bilbao; Suchitra Srinivasan; Daniel P. Reay; Laura R. Goldberg; Tiffany Hughes; Peter W. Roelvink; David A. Einfeld; Thomas J. Wickham; Paula R. Clemens

Adenoviral (Ad) infection involves attachment mediated by the Ad fiber protein binding to the coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor (CAR) of a target cell and internalization facilitated by the interaction of the Ad penton base protein with alpha(v) integrins. To understand the relative importance of the Ad binding and internalization steps for the transduction of fetal skeletal muscle, we used a panel of genetically modified vectors that specifically ablate the fiber-CAR interaction (AdL.F*), the penton base-alpha(v) integrin interaction (AdL.PB*), or both (AdL.PB*F*) to transduce embryonic day 16 (E-16) mouse muscle in vivo and primary E-16 muscle cells in vitro. Quantification of transgene expression and vector genome copies revealed a striking absence of E-16 muscle transduction by AdL.F* and AdL.PB*F*. In contrast, fetal muscle transduction with AdL.PB* was not significantly different than with the unmodified vector. Similar results were observed with in vitro Ad infection studies in primary E-16 muscle cells. From these data we conclude that the fiber-CAR interaction is important for the transduction of fetal muscle by Ad vectors. The high dependence on fiber-CAR binding will impact the development of strategies for Ad vector retargeting to achieve muscle-specific transduction in utero.


Molecular Medicine | 2012

Effect of Nuclear Factor κB Inhibition on Serotype 9 Adeno-Associated Viral (AAV9) Minidystrophin Gene Transfer to the mdx Mouse

Daniel P. Reay; Gabriela Niizawa; Jon F. Watchko; Molly Daood; Ja’Nean C Reay; Eugene Raggi; Paula R. Clemens

Gene therapy studies for Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) have focused on viral vector-mediated gene transfer to provide therapeutic protein expression or treatment with drugs to limit dystrophic changes in muscle. The pathological activation of the nuclear factor (NF)-κB signaling pathway has emerged as an important cause of dystrophic muscle changes in muscular dystrophy. Furthermore, activation of NF-κB may inhibit gene transfer by promoting inflammation in response to the transgene or vector. Therefore, we hypothesized that inhibition of pathological NF-κB activation in muscle would complement the therapeutic benefits of dystrophin gene transfer in the mdx mouse model of DMD. Systemic gene transfer using serotype 9 adeno-associated viral (AAV9) vectors is promising for treatment of preclinical models of DMD because of vector tropism to cardiac and skeletal muscle. In quadriceps of C57BL/10ScSn-Dmdmdx/J (mdx) mice, the addition of octalysine (8K)-NF-κB essential modulator (NEMO)-binding domain (8K-NBD) peptide treatment to AAV9 minidystrophin gene delivery resulted in increased levels of recombinant dystrophin expression suggesting that 8K-NBD treatment promoted an environment in muscle tissue conducive to higher levels of expression. Indices of necrosis and regeneration were diminished with AAV9 gene delivery alone and to a greater degree with the addition of 8K-NBD treatment. In diaphragm muscle, high-level transgene expression was achieved with AAV9 minidystoophin gene delivery alone; therefore, improvements in histological and physiological indices were comparable in the two treatment groups. The data support benefit from 8K-NBD treatment to complement gene transfer therapy for DMD in muscle tissue that receives incomplete levels of transduction by gene transfer, which may be highly significant for clinical applications of muscle gene delivery.


Molecular Medicine | 2015

D-Amino Acid Substitution of Peptide-Mediated NF-κB Suppression in mdx Mice Preserves Therapeutic Benefit in Skeletal Muscle, but Causes Kidney Toxicity.

Daniel P. Reay; Sheldon Bastacky; Kathryn E. Wack; Donna B. Stolz; Paul D. Robbins; Paula R. Clemens

In Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients and the mdx mouse model of DMD, chronic activation of the classical nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) pathway contributes to the pathogenesis that causes degeneration of muscle fibers, inflammation and fibrosis. Prior studies demonstrate that inhibition of inhibitor of κB kinase (IKK)-mediated NF-κB activation using l-isomer NF-κB essential modulator (NEMO)-binding domain (NBD) peptide-based approaches reduce muscle pathology in the mdx mouse. For our studies, the NBD peptide is synthesized as a fusion peptide with an eight-lysine (8K) protein transduction domain to facilitate intracellular delivery. We hypothesized that the d-isoform peptide could have a greater effect than the naturally occurring l-isoform peptide due to the longer persistence of the d-isoform peptide in vivo. In this study, we compared systemic treatment with low (1 mg/kg) and high (10 mg/kg) doses of l- and d-isomer 8K-wild-type-NBD peptide in mdx mice. Treatment with both l- or d-isoform 8K-wild-type-NBD peptide resulted in decreased activation of NF-κB and improved histology in skeletal muscle of the mdx mouse. However, we observed kidney toxicity (characterized by proteinuria), increased serum creatinine, activation of NF-κB and pathological changes in kidney cortex that were most severe with treatment with the d-isoform of 8K-wild-type-NBD peptide. The observed toxicity was also seen in normal mice.


Annals of Neurology | 2009

Gene therapy for muscular dystrophy reaches human clinical trial

Paula R. Clemens; Saman Eghtesad; Daniel P. Reay

tified than at other times. Consideration of the percentage decrease in cognitive ability in a general population may be a powerful way of indentifying new causes of abnormal brain development. Indeed, with this method, it is possible to include large numbers of subjects systematically, improving confidence intervals. What mechanism is responsible of the observed effect? This point is carefully discussed by the authors. One possibility is mother-to-child transmission of the virus, as for rubella, CMV, varicella-zoster virus, or human immunodeficiency virus-1 infection, in a small percentage of infected women (influenced by the specific virus and the intensity of viremia, the socalled “viral load”). As for other viruses, following flu pandemics, increases in spontaneous abortions and brain malformations have been described. However, the relatively small decrease in IQ described here in otherwise apparently normal individuals seems less consistent with direct viral replication in the fetal brain as the underlying cause. Instead, it suggests a role for indirect factors linked to the maternal illness (including soluble factors of inflammation and the consequences of transient breathing or eating difficulties in the mother) early in gestation.

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Roberto Bilbao

University of Pittsburgh

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Paul D. Robbins

Scripps Research Institute

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Jon F. Watchko

University of Pittsburgh

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Donna B. Stolz

University of Pittsburgh

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Johnny Huard

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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Juan Li

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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