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Dive into the research topics where Denise R. Cooper is active.

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Featured researches published by Denise R. Cooper.


Experimental Neurology | 2000

Adult Bone Marrow Stromal Cells Differentiate into Neural Cells in Vitro

Juan Sanchez-Ramos; S. Song; Fernando Cardozo-Pelaez; C. Hazzi; Todd Stedeford; A.E. Willing; Thomas B. Freeman; Samuel Saporta; W. Janssen; Niketa A. Patel; Denise R. Cooper; Paul R. Sanberg

Bone marrow stromal cells (BMSC) normally give rise to bone, cartilage, and mesenchymal cells. Recently, bone marrow cells have been shown to have the capacity to differentiate into myocytes, hepatocytes, and glial cells. We now demonstrate that human and mouse BMSC can be induced to differentiate into neural cells under experimental cell culture conditions. BMSC cultured in the presence of EGF or BDNF expressed the protein and mRNA for nestin, a marker of neural precursors. These cultures also expressed glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and neuron-specific nuclear protein (NeuN). When labeled human or mouse BMSC were cultured with rat fetal mesencephalic or striatal cells, a small proportion of BMSC-derived cells differentiated into neuron-like cells expressing NeuN and glial cells expressing GFAP.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Hypoxia-associated induction of early growth response-1 gene expression.

Shi Fang Yan; Jiesheng Lu; Yu Shan Zou; Jae Soh-Won; David M. Cohen; Peter M. Buttrick; Denise R. Cooper; Susan F. Steinberg; Nigel Mackman; David J. Pinsky; David M. Stern

The paradigm for the response to hypoxia is erythropoietin gene expression; activation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1 (HIF-1) results in erythropoietin production. Previously, we found that oxygen deprivation induced tissue factor, especially in mononuclear phagocytes, by an early growth response (Egr-1)-dependent pathway without involvement of HIF-1 (Yan, S.-F., Zou, Y.-S., Gao, Y., Zhai, C., Mackman, N., Lee, S., Milbrandt, J., Pinsky, D., Kisiel, W., and Stern, D. (1998) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 95, 8298–8303). Now, we show that cultured monocytes subjected to hypoxia (pO2 ≈ 12 torr) displayed increasedEgr-1 expression because of de novobiosynthesis, with a ≈10-fold increased rate of transcription. Transfection of monocytes with Egr-1 promoter-luciferase constructs localized elements responsible for hypoxia-enhanced expression to −424/−65, a region including EBS (ets binding site)-SRE (serum response element)-EBS and SRE-EBS-SRE sites. Further studies with each of these regions ligated to the basal thymidine kinase promoter and luciferase demonstrated that EBS sites in the element spanning −424/−375 were critical for hypoxia-enhanceable gene expression. These data suggested that an activated ets factor, such as Elk-1, in complex with serum response factor, was the likely proximal trigger of Egr-1 transcription. Indeed, hypoxia induced activation of Elk-1, and suppression of Elk-1 blocked up-regulation ofEgr-1 transcription. The signaling cascade preceding Elk-1 activation in response to oxygen deprivation was traced to activation of protein kinase C-βII, Raf, mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase kinase and mitogen-activated protein kinases. Comparable hypoxia-mediatedEgr-1 induction and activation were observed in cultured hepatoma-derived cells deficient in HIF-1β and wild-type hepatoma cells, indicating that the HIF-1 and Egr-1 pathways are initiated independently in response to oxygen deprivation. We propose that activation of Egr-1 in response to hypoxia induces a different facet of the adaptive response than HIF-1, one component of which causes expression of tissue factor, resulting in fibrin deposition.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Leptin and high glucose stimulate cell proliferation in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells: reciprocal involvement of PKC-α and PPAR expression

Mie Okumura; Mayumi Yamamoto; Hiroya Sakuma; Toshihiro Kojima; Takako Maruyama; Marjan Jamali; Denise R. Cooper; Keigo Yasuda

Glucose concentration may be an important factor in breast cancer cell proliferation, and the prevalence of breast cancer is high in diabetic patients. Leptin may also be an important factor since plasma levels of leptin correlated with TNM staging for breast cancer patients. The effects of glucose and leptin on breast cancer cell proliferation were evaluated by examining cell doubling time, DNA synthesis, levels of cell cycle related proteins, protein kinase C (PKC) isozyme expression, and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR) subtypes were determined following glucose exposure at normal (5.5 mM) and high (25 mM) concentrations with/without leptin in MCF-7 human breast cancer cells. In MCF-7 cells, leptin and high glucose stimulated cell proliferation as demonstrated by the increases in DNA synthesis and expression of cdk2 and cyclin D1. PKC-alpha, PPARgamma, and PPARalpha protein levels were up-regulated following leptin and high glucose treatment in drug-sensitive MCF-7 cells. However, there was no significant effect of leptin and high glucose on cell proliferation, DNA synthesis, levels of cell cycle proteins, PKC isozymes, or PPAR subtypes in multidrug-resistant human breast cancer NCI/ADR-RES cells. These results suggested that hyperglycemia and hyperleptinemia increase breast cancer cell proliferation through accelerated cell cycle progression with up-regulation of cdk2 and cyclin D1 levels. This suggests the involvement of PKC-alpha, PPARalpha, and PPARgamma.


The EMBO Journal | 1998

TLS/FUS, a pro-oncogene involved in multiple chromosomal translocations, is a novel regulator of BCR/ABL-mediated leukemogenesis.

Danilo Perrotti; Silvia Bonatti; Rossana Trotta; Robert Martinez; Tomasz Skorski; Paolo Salomoni; Emanuela Grassilli; Renato V. Iozzo; Denise R. Cooper; Bruno Calabretta

The leukemogenic potential of BCR/ABL oncoproteins depends on their tyrosine kinase activity and involves the activation of several downstream effectors, some of which are essential for cell transformation. Using electrophoretic mobility shift assays and Southwestern blot analyses with a double‐stranded oligonucleotide containing a zinc finger consensus sequence, we identified a 68 kDa DNA‐binding protein specifically induced by BCR/ABL. The peptide sequence of the affinity‐purified protein was identical to that of the RNA‐binding protein FUS (also called TLS). Binding activity of FUS required a functional BCR/ABL tyrosine kinase necessary to induce PKCβII‐dependent FUS phosphorylation. Moreover, suppression of PKCβII activity in BCR/ABL‐expressing cells by treatment with the PKCβII inhibitor CGP53353, or by expression of a dominant‐negative PKCβII, markedly impaired the ability of FUS to bind DNA. Suppression of FUS expression in myeloid precursor 32Dcl3 cells transfected with a FUS antisense construct was associated with upregulation of the granulocyte‐colony stimulating factor receptor (G‐CSFR) and downregulation of interleukin‐3 receptor (IL‐3R) β‐chain expression, and accelerated G‐CSF‐stimulated differentiation. Downregulation of FUS expression in BCR/ABL‐expressing 32Dcl3 cells was associated with suppression of growth factor‐independent colony formation, restoration of G‐CSF‐induced granulocytic differentiation and reduced tumorigenic potential in vivo. Together, these results suggest that FUS might function as a regulator of BCR/ABL leukemogenesis, promoting growth factor independence and preventing differentiation via modulation of cytokine receptor expression.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Molecular and genetic studies imply Akt-mediated signaling promotes protein kinase CbetaII alternative splicing via phosphorylation of serine/arginine-rich splicing factor SRp40.

Niketa A. Patel; Satoshi Kaneko; Hercules Apostolatos; Sun Sik Bae; James E. Watson; Karen Davidowitz; David S. Chappell; Morris J. Birnbaum; Jin Q. Cheng; Denise R. Cooper

Insulin regulates alternative splicing of PKCβII mRNA by phosphorylation of SRp40 via a phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathway (Patel, N. A., Chalfant, C. E., Watson, J. E., Wyatt, J. R., Dean, N. M., Eichler, D. C., and Cooper, D. C. (2001) J. Biol. Chem. 276, 22648–22654). Transient transfection of constitutively active Akt2 kinase promotes PKCβII exon inclusion. Serine/arginine-rich (SR) RNA-binding proteins regulating the selection of alternatively spliced exons are potential substrates of Akt kinase because many of them contain RXRXX(S/T) motifs. Here we show that Akt2 kinase phosphorylated SRp40 in vivo and in vitro. Mutation of Ser86 on SRp40 blocked in vitro phosphorylation. In control Akt2(+/+) fibroblasts, insulin treatment increased the phosphorylation of endogenous SR proteins, but their phosphorylation state remained unaltered by insulin in fibroblasts from Akt2(-/-) mice. Levels of PKCβII protein were up-regulated by insulin in Akt2(+/+) cells; however, only very low levels of PKCβII were detected in Akt2(-/-) cells and did not change following insulin treatment. Endogenous PKCβI and -βII mRNA levels in Akt2(+/+) and Akt2(-/-) gastrocnemius muscle tissues were compared using quantitative real time PCR. The results indicated a 54% decrease in the expression of PKCβII levels in Akt(-/-), whereas PKCβI levels remained unchanged in both samples. Further, transfection of Akt2(-/-) cells with a PKCβII splicing minigene revealed defective βII exon inclusion. Co-transfection of the mutated SRp40 attenuated βII exon inclusion. This study provides in vitro and in vivo evidence showing Akt2 kinase directly phosphorylated SRp40, thereby connecting the insulin, PI 3-kinase/Akt pathway with phosphorylation of a site on a nuclear splicing protein promoting exon inclusion. This model is upheld in Akt2-deficient mice with insulin resistance leading to diabetes mellitus.


Diabetes | 1990

Effects of Insulin on Diacylglycerol–Protein Kinase C Signaling in Rat Diaphragm and Soleus Muscles and Relationship to Glucose Transport

Tatsuo Ishizuka; Denise R. Cooper; Herman Hernandez; Donna J. Buckley; Mary L. Standaert; Robert V. Farese

Insulin was found to provoke rapid increases in diacylglycerol (DAG) content and [3H]glycerol incorporation into DAG and other lipids during incubations of rat hemidiaphragms and soleus muscles. Insulin also rapidly increased phosphatidic acid and total glycerolipid labeling by [3H]glycerol, suggesting that insulin increases DAG production at least partly through stimulation of the de novo pathway. Increased DAG production may activate protein kinase C (PKC) as reported previously in the rat diaphragm. We also observed apparent insulininduced translocation of PKC from cytosol to membrane in the rat soleus muscle. The importance of insulin-induced increases in DAG-PKC signaling in the stimulation of glucose transport in rat diaphragm and soleus muscles was suggested by 1) PKC activators phorbol esters and phospholipase C stimulation of [3H]-2-deoxyglucose (DOG) uptake and 2) PKC inhibitors staurosporine and polymixin B inhibition of insulin effects on [3H]-2-DOG uptake. Although phorbol ester was much less effective than insulin in the diaphragm, phospholipase C provoked increases in [3H]-2-DOG uptake that equaled or exceeded those of insulin. In the soleus muscle, phorbol ester, like phospholipase C, was only slightly but not significantly less effective than insulin. Similar variability in effectiveness of phorbol ester has also been noted previously in rat adipocytes (weak) and BC3HI myocytes (strong), whereas DAG, added exogenously or generated by phospholipase C treatment, stimulates glucose transport to a degree that is quantitatively more comparable to that of insulin in each of the four tissues. Differences in effectiveness of phorbol ester and DAG could not be readily explained by postulating that the latter acts independently of PKC, because DAG provoked the apparent translocation of the enzyme from cytosol to membranes in rat adipocytes, and effects of DAG on [3H]-2-DOG uptake were blocked by inhibitors of PKC in both rat adipocytes and BC3H1 myocytes. Collectively, our findings provide further support for the hypothesis that insulin increases DAG production and PKC activity, and these processes are important in the stimulation of glucose transport in rat skeletal muscle and other tissues.


Pharmaceutical Research | 2000

Protein kinases as therapeutic targets.

Rajagopalan Sridhar; Olivia Hanson-Painton; Denise R. Cooper

Protein kinases and phosphatases are likely targets for the development of therapeutic drugs since they are involved in specific signaling pathways which regulate cell functions such as metabolism, cell cycle progression, cell adhesion, vascular function and angiogenesis. Protein phosphorylation and dephosphorylation serve as molecular switches for modulating these processes and the level and duration of each is a highly regulated process in normal cells. Several compounds that inhibit the activity of tyrosine kinases are being evaluated as cancer therapeutic agents in clinical trials. Diabetes and complications of diabetes also involve deregulated levels of protein kinases. New approaches for regulating kinase gene expression include specific antisense oligonucleotides for inhibiting post-transcriptional processing of the messenger RNA, naturally occurring products and their chemical derivatives to inhibit kinase activity, and monoclonal antibodies to inhibit receptor linked kinases. Inhibition of phosphatases also serves to alter the duration of phosphorylation by kinases. Considerations for development of effective inhibitors include non-specific actions of compounds, cellular uptake, multiple intracellular targets that can dilute the effective cellular concentration of an agent, and tissue specificity. Kinase inhibitors may allow other therapeutic agents additional time to become effective and they may act synergistically with current treatments.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

Intravenous Transplants of Human Adipose-Derived Stem Cell Protect the Brain from Traumatic Brain Injury-Induced Neurodegeneration and Motor and Cognitive Impairments: Cell Graft Biodistribution and Soluble Factors in Young and Aged Rats

Naoki Tajiri; Sandra Acosta; Shahaduzzaman M; Hiroto Ishikawa; Kazutaka Shinozuka; Mibel Pabon; Diana G. Hernandez-Ontiveros; Dae-Won Kim; Christopher Metcalf; Meaghan Staples; Travis Dailey; Julie Vasconcellos; Giorgio Franyuti; Gould L; Niketa A. Patel; Denise R. Cooper; Kaneko Y; Cesar V. Borlongan; Paula C. Bickford

Traumatic brain injury (TBI) survivors exhibit motor and cognitive symptoms from the primary injury that can become aggravated over time because of secondary cell death. In the present in vivo study, we examined the beneficial effects of human adipose-derived stem cells (hADSCs) in a controlled cortical impact model of mild TBI using young (6 months) and aged (20 months) F344 rats. Animals were transplanted intravenously with 4 × 106 hADSCs (Tx), conditioned media (CM), or vehicle (unconditioned media) at 3 h after TBI. Significant amelioration of motor and cognitive functions was revealed in young, but not aged, Tx and CM groups. Fluorescent imaging in vivo and ex vivo revealed 1,1′ dioactadecyl-3-3-3′,3′-tetramethylindotricarbocyanine iodide-labeled hADSCs in peripheral organs and brain after TBI. Spatiotemporal deposition of hADSCs differed between young and aged rats, most notably reduced migration to the aged spleen. Significant reduction in cortical damage and hippocampal cell loss was observed in both Tx and CM groups in young rats, whereas less neuroprotection was detected in the aged rats and mainly in the Tx group but not the CM group. CM harvested from hADSCs with silencing of either NEAT1 (nuclear enriched abundant transcript 1) or MALAT1 (metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript 1), long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) known to play a role in gene expression, lost the efficacy in our model. Altogether, hADSCs are promising therapeutic cells for TBI, and lncRNAs in the secretome is an important mechanism of cell therapy. Furthermore, hADSCs showed reduced efficacy in aged rats, which may in part result from decreased homing of the cells to the spleen.


FEBS Letters | 1989

Insulin stimulates the translocation of protein kinase C in rat adipocytes

Tatsuo Ishizuka; Denise R. Cooper; Robert V. Farese

Insulin‐induced changes in protein kinase C were examined in cytosol and membrane fractions of rat adipocytes enzymatically after Mono Q column chromatography and by immunoblotting. During a 5–20 min period of insulin treatment, cytosolic protein kinase C decreased by approximately 50%, whereas membrane protein kinase C increased nearly 2‐fold. These findings suggest that insulin stimulates the translocation of protein kinase C in rat adipocytes.


Endocrinology | 2009

Akt2 Regulation of Cdc2-Like Kinases (Clk/Sty), Serine/Arginine-Rich (SR) Protein Phosphorylation, and Insulin-Induced Alternative Splicing of PKCβII Messenger Ribonucleic Acid

Kun Jiang; Niketa A. Patel; James E. M. Watson; Hercules Apostolatos; Eden Kleiman; Olivia Hanson; Masatoshi Hagiwara; Denise R. Cooper

Serine/arginine-rich (SR) proteins play essential roles in the constitutive and regulated splicing of precursor mRNAs. Phosphorylation of the arginine/serine dipeptide-rich (RS) domain by SR protein kinases such as Cdc2-like kinases (Clk/Sty) modulates their subcellular localization and activation. However, it remains unclear how these kinases and their target SR proteins are regulated by extracellular signals. Regulation of protein kinase C betaII (PKCbetaII) pre-mRNA alternative splicing via exon inclusion by Akt2, a central kinase in insulin action, involves phosphorylation of SR proteins. Here we showed that Akt2, in response to insulin, resulted in phosphorylation of Clk/Sty, which then altered SR protein phosphorylation in concert with Akt2. Insulin-stimulated PKCbetaII pre-mRNA splicing was blocked by Clk/Sty and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase inhibitors, and diabetic Akt2-null mouse tissues had impaired phospho-Clk/Sty, SR protein phosphorylation, and PKCbetaII expression. Furthermore, we observed that Akt2 phosphorylated several SR proteins distinct from Clk/Sty in response to insulin. Akt2-catalyzed phosphorylation of Clk/Sty and SR proteins revealed a role for both kinases in splicing regulation indicating dual functions for Akt2 in response to insulin in this pathway.

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Niketa A. Patel

University of South Florida

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Mary L. Standaert

University of South Florida

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James E. Watson

University of South Florida

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Herman Hernandez

University of South Florida

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R V Farese

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Robert J. Pollet

University of South Florida

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