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Dive into the research topics where Derrick Ryan Witcher is active.

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Featured researches published by Derrick Ryan Witcher.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Ghrelin octanoylation mediated by an orphan lipid transferase

Jesus A. Gutierrez; Patricia J. Solenberg; Douglas Raymond Perkins; Jill A. Willency; Michael D. Knierman; Zhaoyan Jin; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Shuang Luo; Jude E. Onyia; John E. Hale

The peptide hormone ghrelin is the only known protein modified with an O-linked octanoyl side group, which occurs on its third serine residue. This modification is crucial for ghrelins physiological effects including regulation of feeding, adiposity, and insulin secretion. Despite the crucial role for octanoylation in the physiology of ghrelin, the lipid transferase that mediates this novel modification has remained unknown. Here we report the identification and characterization of human GOAT, the ghrelin O-acyl transferase. GOAT is a conserved orphan membrane-bound O-acyl transferase (MBOAT) that specifically octanoylates serine-3 of the ghrelin peptide. Transcripts for both GOAT and ghrelin occur predominantly in stomach and pancreas. GOAT is conserved across vertebrates, and genetic disruption of the GOAT gene in mice leads to complete absence of acylated ghrelin in circulation. The occurrence of ghrelin and GOAT in stomach and pancreas tissues demonstrates the relevance of GOAT in the acylation of ghrelin and further implicates acylated ghrelin in pancreatic function.


Blood | 2009

Regulation of iron homeostasis in anemia of chronic disease and iron deficiency anemia: diagnostic and therapeutic implications.

Igor Theurl; Elmar Aigner; Milan Theurl; Manfred Nairz; Markus Seifert; Andrea Schroll; Thomas Sonnweber; Lukas Eberwein; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Anthony T. Murphy; Victor J. Wroblewski; Eva Wurz; Christian Datz; Guenter Weiss

The anemia of chronic disease (ACD) is characterized by macrophage iron retention induced by cytokines and the master regulator hepcidin. Hepcidin controls cellular iron efflux on binding to the iron export protein ferroportin. Many patients, however, present with both ACD and iron deficiency anemia (ACD/IDA), the latter resulting from chronic blood loss. We used a rat model of ACD resulting from chronic arthritis and mimicked ACD/IDA by additional phlebotomy to define differing iron-regulatory pathways. Iron retention during inflammation occurs in macrophages and the spleen, but not in the liver. In rats and humans with ACD, serum hepcidin concentrations are elevated, which is paralleled by reduced duodenal and macrophage expression of ferroportin. Individuals with ACD/IDA have significantly lower hepcidin levels than ACD subjects, and ACD/IDA persons, in contrast to ACD subjects, were able to absorb dietary iron from the gut and to mobilize iron from macrophages. Circulating hepcidin levels affect iron traffic in ACD and ACD/IDA and are more responsive to the erythropoietic demands for iron than to inflammation. Hepcidin determination may aid to differentiate between ACD and ACD/IDA and in selecting appropriate therapy for these patients.


Endocrinology | 2009

Identification and Characterization of Nesfatin-1 Immunoreactivity in Endocrine Cell Types of the Rat Gastric Oxyntic Mucosa

Andreas Stengel; Miriam Goebel; Iskandar Yakubov; Lixin Wang; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Tamer Coskun; Yvette Taché; George Sachs; Nils Lambrecht

Hypothalamic nesfatin-1, derived from the nucleobindin2 (NUCB2) precursor, inhibits nocturnal food intake and body weight gain in rats. Nesfatin-1 is able to cross the blood-brain barrier, suggesting a peripheral source of nesfatin-1. Many centrally acting food intake regulatory neuropeptides are also produced in the periphery, especially in the gastrointestinal tract. Therefore, we investigated the gene expression of NUCB2 and distribution of nesfatin-1-immunoreactive cells in the stomach. Microarray mRNA expression profiles in purified small endocrine cells of the gastric mucosa substantiated by quantitative RT-PCR showed significantly higher NUCB2 mRNA expression compared with brain and heart. Western blot confirmed the expression of NUCB2 protein and its transport into a secretory soluble fraction of gastric mucosal endocrine cell homogenates. Immunohistochemical colabeling for nesfatin-1 and ghrelin, histidine decarboxylase, or somatostatin revealed two subtypes of nesfatin-1-positive endocrine cells. Cells in the midportion of the glands coexpressed nesfatin-1 and ghrelin, whereas few cells in the glandular base coexpressed nesfatin-1 and somatostatin or histidine decarboxylase. High-resolution three-dimensional volume imaging revealed two separate populations of intracytoplasmic vesicles in these cells, one containing nesfatin-1 and the other ghrelin immunoreactivity. Microarray rat genome expression data of NUCB2 in small gastric endocrine cells confirmed by quantitative RT-PCR showed significant down-regulation of NUCB2 after 24 h fasting. In summary, NUCB2 mRNA expression as well as protein content is present in a specific subset of gastric endocrine cells, most of which coexpress ghrelin. NUCB2 gene expression is significantly regulated by nutritional status, suggesting a regulatory role of peripheral nesfatin-1 in energy homeostasis.


Molecular Breeding | 1999

Commercial production of aprotinin in transgenic maize seeds

Gan-Yuan Zhong; David J. Peterson; Donna E. Delaney; Michele Bailey; Derrick Ryan Witcher; James C. Register; Diane Bond; Chun-Ping Li; Lisa Marshall; Ellen Kulisek; David Ritland; Terry EuClaire Meyer; Elizabeth E. Hood; John A. Howard

The development of genetic transformation technology for plants has stimulated an interest in using transgenic plants as a novel manufacturing system for producing different classes of proteins of industrial and pharmaceutical value. In this regard, we report the generation and characterization of transgenic maize lines producing recombinant aprotinin. The transgenic aprotinin lines recovered were transformed with the aprotinin gene using the bar gene as a selectable marker. The bar and aprotinin genes were introduced into immature maize embryos via particle bombardment. Aprotinin gene expression was driven by the maize ubiquitin promoter and protein accumulation was targeted to the extracellular matrix. One line that showed a high level of aprotinin expression was characterized in detail. The protein accumulates primarily in the embryo of the seed. Southern blot analysis showed that the line had at least 20 copies of the bar and aprotinin genes. Further genetic analysis revealed that numerous plants derived from this transgenic line had a large range of levels of expression of the aprotinin gene (0–0.069%) of water-soluble protein in T2 seeds. One plant lineage that showed stable expression after 4 selfing generations was recovered from the parental transgenic line. This line showed an accumulation of the protein in seeds that was comparable to the best T2 lines, and the recombinant aprotinin could be effectively recovered and purified from seeds. Biochemical analysis of the purified aprotinin from seeds revealed that the recombinant aprotinin had the same molecular weight, N-terminal amino acid sequence, isoelectric point, and trypsin inhibition activity as native aprotinin. The demonstration that the recombinant aprotinin protein purified from transgenic maize seeds has biochemical and functional properties identical to its native counterpart provides a proof-of-concept example for producing new generation products for the pharmaceutical industry.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2006

Humanized IgG1 Variants with Differential Binding Properties to the Neonatal Fc Receptor: Relationship to Pharmacokinetics in Mice and Primates

Amita Datta-Mannan; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Ying Tang; Jeffry Watkins; Weidong Jiang; Victor J. Wroblewski

It is well established that the neonatal Fc receptor (FcRn) plays a critical role in regulating IgG homeostasis in vivo. As such, modification of the interaction of IgG with FcRn has been the focus of protein-engineering strategies designed to generate therapeutic antibodies with improved pharmacokinetic properties. In the current work, we characterized differences in interaction of IgG between mouse and primate receptors using three humanized anti-tumor necrosis factor α antibodies with variant IgG1 Fc regions. The wild-type and variant IgG showed a differential combination of improved affinity, modified dissociation kinetics, and altered pH-dependent complex dissociation when evaluated on the primate and murine receptors. The observed in vitro binding differences within and between species allowed us to more completely relate these parameters to their influence on the in vivo pharmacokinetics in mice and cynomolgus monkeys. The variant antibodies have different pharmacokinetic behavior in cynomolgus monkeys and mice, which appears to be related to the unique binding characteristics observed with the murine receptor. However, we did not observe a direct relationship between increased binding affinity to the receptor and improved pharmacokinetic properties for these molecules in either species. This work provides further insights into how the FcRn/IgG interaction may be modulated to develop monoclonal antibodies with improved therapeutic properties.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2008

Neonatal Fc Receptor Mediates Internalization of Fc in Transfected Human Endothelial Cells

Nancy Goebl; Clifford M. Babbey; Amita Datta-Mannan; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Victor J. Wroblewski; Kenneth W. Dunn

The neonatal Fc receptor, FcRn mediates an endocytic salvage pathway that prevents degradation of IgG, thus contributing to the homeostasis of circulating IgG. Based on the low affinity of IgG for FcRn at neutral pH, internalization of IgG by endothelial cells is generally believed to occur via fluid-phase endocytosis. To investigate the role of FcRn in IgG internalization, we used quantitative confocal microscopy to characterize internalization of fluorescent Fc molecules by HULEC-5A lung microvascular endothelia transfected with GFP fusion proteins of human or mouse FcRn. In these studies, cells transfected with FcRn accumulated significantly more intracellular Fc than untransfected cells. Internalization of FcRn-binding forms of Fc was proportional to FcRn expression level, was enriched relative to dextran internalization in proportion to FcRn expression level, and was blocked by incubation with excess unlabeled Fc. Because we were unable to detect either surface expression of FcRn or surface binding of Fc, these results suggest that FcRn-dependent internalization of Fc may occur through sequestration of Fc by FcRn in early endosomes. These studies indicate that FcRn-dependent internalization of IgG may be important not only in cells taking up IgG from an extracellular acidic space, but also in endothelial cells participating in homeostatic regulation of circulating IgG levels.


Gut | 2014

Hypoxia induced downregulation of hepcidin is mediated by platelet derived growth factor BB

Thomas Sonnweber; David Nachbaur; Andrea Schroll; Manfred Nairz; Markus Seifert; Egon Demetz; David Haschka; Mitterstiller Am; Kleinsasser A; Burtscher M; Trübsbach S; Anthony T. Murphy; Wroblewski; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Mleczko-Sanecka K; Chiara Vecchi; Martina U. Muckenthaler; Antonello Pietrangelo; Igor Theurl; Günter Weiss

Objective Hypoxia affects body iron homeostasis; however, the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. Design Using a standardised hypoxia chamber, 23 healthy volunteers were subjected to hypoxic conditions, equivalent to an altitude of 5600u2005m, for 6u2005h. Subsequent experiments were performed in C57BL/6 mice, CREB-H knockout mice, primary hepatocytes and HepG2 cells. Results Exposure of subjects to hypoxia resulted in a significant decrease of serum levels of the master regulator of iron homeostasis hepcidin and elevated concentrations of platelet derived growth factor (PDGF)-BB. Using correlation analysis, we identified PDGF-BB to be associated with hypoxia mediated hepcidin repression in humans. We then exposed mice to hypoxia using a standardised chamber and observed downregulation of hepatic hepcidin mRNA expression that was paralleled by elevated serum PDGF-BB protein concentrations and higher serum iron levels as compared with mice housed under normoxic conditions. PDGF-BB treatment in vitro and in vivo resulted in suppression of both steady state and BMP6 inducible hepcidin expression. Mechanistically, PDGF-BB inhibits hepcidin transcription by downregulating the protein expression of the transcription factors CREB and CREB-H, and pharmacological blockade or genetic ablation of these pathways abrogated the effects of PDGF-BB toward hepcidin expression. Conclusions Hypoxia decreases hepatic hepcidin expression by a novel regulatory pathway exerted via PDGF-BB, leading to increased availability of circulating iron that can be used for erythropoiesis.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2012

High-fat diet causes iron deficiency via hepcidin-independent reduction of duodenal iron absorption ☆ ☆☆

Thomas Sonnweber; Claudia Ress; Manfred Nairz; Igor Theurl; Andrea Schroll; Anthony T. Murphy; Victor J. Wroblewski; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Patrizia Moser; Christoph F. Ebenbichler; Susanne Kaser; Günter Weiss

Obesity is often associated with disorders of iron homeostasis; however, the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. Hepcidin is a key regulator of iron metabolism and may be responsible for obesity-driven iron deficiency. Herein, we used an animal model of diet-induced obesity to study high-fat-diet-induced changes in iron homeostasis. C57BL/6 mice were fed a standard (SD) or high-fat diet (HFD) for 8 weeks, and in addition, half of the mice received high dietary iron (Fe+) for the last 2 weeks. Surprisingly, HFD led to systemic iron deficiency which was traced back to reduced duodenal iron absorption. The mRNA and protein expressions of the duodenal iron transporters Dmt1 and Tfr1 were significantly higher in HFD- than in SD-fed mice, indicating enterocyte iron deficiency, whereas the mRNA levels of the duodenal iron oxidoreductases Dcytb and hephaestin were lower in HFD-fed mice. Neither hepatic and adipose tissue nor serum hepcidin concentrations differed significantly between SD- and HFD-fed mice, whereas dietary iron supplementation resulted in increased hepatic hepcidin mRNA expression and serum hepcidin levels in SD as compared to HFD mice. Our study suggests that HFD results in iron deficiency which is neither due to intake of energy-dense nutrient poor food nor due to increased sequestration in the reticulo-endothelial system but is the consequence of diminished intestinal iron uptake. We found that impaired iron absorption is independent of hepcidin but rather results from reduced metal uptake into the mucosa and discordant oxidoreductases expressions despite enterocyte iron deficiency.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

Identification of a common variant in the TFR2 gene implicated in the physiological regulation of serum iron levels

Irene Pichler; Cosetta Minelli; Serena Sanna; Toshiko Tanaka; Christine Schwienbacher; Silvia Naitza; Eleonora Porcu; Cristian Pattaro; Fabio Busonero; Alessandra Zanon; Andrea Maschio; Scott A. Melville; Maria Grazia Piras; Dan L. Longo; Jack M. Guralnik; Dena Hernandez; Stefania Bandinelli; Elmar Aigner; Anthony T. Murphy; Victor J. Wroblewski; Fabio Marroni; Igor Theurl; Carsten Gnewuch; Eric E. Schadt; Manfred Mitterer; David Schlessinger; Luigi Ferrucci; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Andrew A. Hicks; Günter Weiss

The genetic determinants of variation in iron status are actively sought, but remain incompletely understood. Meta-analysis of two genome-wide association (GWA) studies and replication in three independent cohorts was performed to identify genetic loci associated in the general population with serum levels of iron and markers of iron status, including transferrin, ferritin, soluble transferrin receptor (sTfR) and sTfR-ferritin index. We identified and replicated a novel association of a common variant in the type-2 transferrin receptor (TFR2) gene with iron levels, with effect sizes highly consistent across samples. In addition, we identified and replicated an association between the HFE locus and ferritin and confirmed previously reported associations with the TF, TMPRSS6 and HFE genes. The five replicated variants were tested for association with expression levels of the corresponding genes in a publicly available data set of human liver samples, and nominally statistically significant expression differences by genotype were observed for all genes, although only rs3811647 in the TF gene survived the Bonferroni correction for multiple testing. In addition, we measured for the first time the effects of the common variant in TMPRSS6, rs4820268, on hepcidin mRNA in peripheral blood (n = 83 individuals) and on hepcidin levels in urine (n = 529) and observed an association in the same direction, though only borderline significant. These functional findings require confirmation in further studies with larger sample sizes, but they suggest that common variants in TMPRSS6 could modify the hepcidin-iron feedback loop in clinically unaffected individuals, thus making them more susceptible to imbalances of iron homeostasis.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2005

Blockade of the Fas/FasL system improves pneumococcal clearance from the lungs without preventing dissemination of bacteria to the spleen

Gustavo Matute-Bello; W. Conrad Liles; Charles W. Frevert; Shireesha Dhanireddy; Kimberly Ballman; Venus A. Wong; Richard Green; Ho Yeong Song; Derrick Ryan Witcher; Joseph A. Jakubowski; Thomas R. Martin

BACKGROUNDnThe Fas/FasL system is both proapoptotic and proinflammatory. FasL is inhibited by decoy receptor-3 (DcR3), a naturally occurring decoy receptor. We determined the effects of systemic blockade of the Fas/FasL system by a DcR3 analog (DcR3-a) in mice with pneumococcal pneumonia.nnnMETHODSnStreptococcus pneumoniae (7.2 x 105 or 1.9 x 107 cfu/mL) was instilled intratracheally into untreated C57Bl/6 mice, C57Bl/6 mice treated with DcR3-a, or Fas-deficient lpr mice, and the mice were studied 48 h later.nnnRESULTSnAfter instillation of the lower bacterial dose, disruption of the Fas/FasL system by either DcR3-a or the lpr mutation resulted in improved clearance of bacteria in the lungs (mean +/- SE, 4.6+/-2.1 x 10(6) and 3.5 +/- 1.6 x 10(6) cfu/lung, respectively, vs. 21.9+/-9.3 x 10(6) cfu/lung in untreated C57Bl/6 mice; P<.05) and decreased percentage of polymorphonuclear neutrophils in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (mean +/- SE, 19.3%+/-9.5% and 20.2%+/-7.8%, respectively, vs. 55.0%+/-12.2% in untreated C57Bl/6 mice; P<.05). These changes were associated with decreased lung concentrations of the proinflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor- alpha and macrophage inflammatory protein-2 and with a decrease in apoptotic cells in the alveolar walls.nnnCONCLUSIONnBlockade of the Fas/FasL system by DcR3-a in the lungs improves clearance of bacteria in mice with pneumococcal pneumonia.

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Ying Tang

Eli Lilly and Company

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Jirong Lu

Eli Lilly and Company

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