Darryl A. Higuchi
Washington University in St. Louis
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Darryl A. Higuchi.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1983
Robert H. McKay; Darryl A. Higuchi; William W. Winder; Ronald D. Fell; Elmer B. Brown
Measurements of succinate dehydrogenase and mitochondrial glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activities, iron, cytochrome c and myoglobin, were made on various hind-leg muscles, fast-twitch red and white muscle and heart and liver of male Wistar rats fed an iron-deficient diet on weaning. Rats fed the same diet and given 20 mg iron intraperitoneally as iron-dextran (Imferon) served as controls. For iron-repletion studies anemic rats (hemoglobin less than 7 g/dl) were given a single injection of 10 mg iron (Imferon) and the time course of change in the above parameters was followed up to 22 days after injection. The iron concentration of most iron-deficient muscles dropped to approx. 35% of control, the heart to 60% and liver to 13%. On repletion, the iron concentration of all tissues increase significantly by 4 days. While the levels of cytochrome c and myoglobin approximated the iron levels in muscle, they did not change significantly in the heart. Succinate dehydrogenase activity dropped profoundly in muscle, to 10-30% of control; on repletion, the activity increased significantly. Mitochondrial glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase activity showed only small changes in iron-deficient tissues.
Genes and Immunity | 2010
Darryl A. Higuchi; Patrick Cahan; Jian Gao; Stephen T. Ferris; Jennifer Poursine-Laurent; Timothy A. Graubert; Wayne M. Yokoyama
The natural killer gene complex (NKC) on chromosome 6 contains clusters of genes that encode both activation and inhibitory receptors expressed on mouse natural killer (NK) cells. NKC genes, particularly belonging to the Nkrp1 and Ly49 gene families, display haplotype differences between different mouse strains and allelic polymorphisms of individual genes, as previously revealed by conventional analysis in a small number of inbred mouse strains. Herein we used array-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) to efficiently compare the NKC in 21 mouse strains to the reference C57BL/6 strain. By using unsupervised clustering methods, we could sort these variations into the same groups as determined by previous RFLP analyses of Nkrp1 and Ly49 genes. Prospective analyses of aCGH and RFLP data validated these relationships. Moreover, aCGH data predicted monoclonal antibody reactivity with an allospecific determinant on molecules expressed by NK cells. Taken together, these data demonstrate the structural variation in the NKC between mouse strains as well as the usefulness of aCGH in analysis of complex, polymorphic gene clusters.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
John B. Sunwoo; Sungjin Kim; Liping Yang; Tina Naik; Darryl A. Higuchi; John L.R. Rubenstein; Wayne M. Yokoyama
Natural killer (NK) cells constitute a subpopulation of lymphocytes that develop from precursors in the bone marrow (BM), but the transcriptional regulation of their development and maturation is only beginning to be understood, in part due to their relatively rare abundance, especially of developmental subsets. Using a mouse model in which NK cells are arrested at an immature stage of development, and a gene expression profiling approach, we uncovered transient normal NK cell expression of a homeobox transcription factor (TF) family, called Distal-less (Dlx), which had been primarily implicated in murine CNS, craniofacial, limb, and skin development. Our studies demonstrate that Dlx1, Dlx2, and Dlx3 are transiently expressed in immature Mac-1lo NK cells within the BM, with Dlx3 being the predominantly expressed member. These genes are expressed in a temporally regulated pattern with overlapping waves of expression, and they display functional redundancy. Expression is extinguished in fully mature splenic NK cells, and persistent expression of Dlx genes leads to functionally immature NK cells arrested at the Mac-1lo stage. Whereas conventional splenic NK cells develop but are arrested at an immature stage, there appears to be a complete failure to develop CD127+ thymic NK cells when Dlx genes are persistently expressed. We also observed that T and B cells fail to develop in the context of persistent Dlx1 expression. Thus, these studies indicate that Dlx TFs play a functional role in lymphocyte development.
Journal of Immunology | 2018
Dorothy K. Sojka; Liping Yang; Beatrice Plougastel-Douglas; Darryl A. Higuchi; B. Anne Croy; Wayne M. Yokoyama
NK cells accumulate in adult murine and human uteri during decidualization induced physiologically, pathologically, or experimentally. Adoptive transfer studies indicate that uterine NK (uNK) cells arise from circulating progenitors. However, virgin uteri contain few circulating NK1.1+CD49a− conventional NK cells, whereas NK1.1+CD49a+ tissue-resident NK (trNK) cells are abundant. In this study, we employed a novel, immune-competent NK cell–specific reporter mouse to track accumulation of uNK cells during unmanipulated pregnancies. We identified conventional NK and trNK cells accumulating in both decidua basalis and myometrium. Only trNK cells showed evidence of proliferation. In parabiosis studies using experimentally induced deciduomata, the accumulated uNK cells were proliferating trNK cells; migrating NK cells made no contribution. Together, these data suggest proliferating trNK cells are the source of uNK cells during endometrial decidualization.
Blood | 1988
Gj Jr Broze; Louise A. Warren; William F. Novotny; Darryl A. Higuchi; Jj Girard; Joseph P. Miletich
Science | 1990
Smith Rp; Darryl A. Higuchi; George J. Broze
Blood | 1997
Zhong-Fu Huang; Darryl A. Higuchi; Nina Lasky; George J. Broze
Blood | 1996
George J. Broze; Darryl A. Higuchi
Blood | 1992
Darryl A. Higuchi; Tze-Chein Wun; Karen Likert; George J. Broze
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1995
Masaaki Narita; Guojun Bu; Gillian M. Olins; Darryl A. Higuchi; Joachim Herz; George J. Broze; Alan L. Schwartz