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Dive into the research topics where Douglas A. Harrison is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas A. Harrison.


Journal of Cell Science | 2004

The JAK/STAT signaling pathway

Jason S. Rawlings; Kristin M. Rosler; Douglas A. Harrison

The Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK/STAT) pathway is one of a handful of pleiotropic cascades used to transduce a multitude of signals for development and homeostasis in animals, from humans to flies. In mammals, the JAK/STAT pathway is the principal signaling


The EMBO Journal | 1995

ACTIVATION OF A DROSOPHILA JANUS KINASE (JAK) CAUSES HEMATOPOIETIC NEOPLASIA AND DEVELOPMENTAL DEFECTS

Douglas A. Harrison; Richard Binari; Nahreini Ts; Matthew D. Gilman; Norbert Perrimon

In mammals, many cytokines and growth factors stimulate members of the Janus kinase (JAK) family to transduce signals for the proliferation and differentiation of various cell types, particularly in hematopoietic lineages. Mutations in the Drosophila hopscotch (hop) gene, which encodes a JAK, also cause proliferative defects. Loss‐of‐function alleles result in lethality and underproliferation of diploid tissues of the larva. A dominant gain‐of‐function allele, Tumorous‐lethal (hopTum‐l), leads to formation of melanotic tumors and hypertrophy of the larval lymph glands, the hematopoietic organs. We show that a single amino acid change in Hop is associated with the hopTum‐l mutation. Overexpression of either wild‐type hop or hopTum‐l in the larval lymph glands causes melanotic tumors and lymph gland hypertrophy indistinguishable from the original hopTum‐l mutation. In addition, overexpression of Hop in other tissues of the larva leads to pattern defects in the adult or to lethality. Finally, overexpression of either hop or hopTum‐l in Drosophila cell culture results in tyrosine phosphorylation of Hop protein. However, overexpression of hopTum‐l results in greater phosphorylation than overexpression of the wild‐type. We conclude that hopTum‐l encodes a hyperactive Hop kinase and that overactivity of Hop in lymph glands causes malignant neoplasia of Drosophila blood cells.


Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology | 2012

The JAK/STAT Pathway

Douglas A. Harrison

The Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK/STAT) signaling pathway mediates cellular responses to cytokines (e.g., IL-6) and growth factors (e.g., EGF).


Developmental Cell | 2003

A Gradient of JAK Pathway Activity Patterns the Anterior-Posterior Axis of the Follicular Epithelium

Rongwen Xi; Jennifer R. McGregor; Douglas A. Harrison

The Drosophila egg develops through closely coordinated activities of associated germline and somatic cells. An essential aspect of egg development is the differentiation of the somatic follicle cells into several distinct subpopulations with specific functions. Here we demonstrate that the graded activity of the Janus kinase (JAK) pathway, stimulated by the Unpaired ligand, patterns the anterior-posterior axis of the follicular epithelium. Different levels of JAK activity instruct adoption of distinct anterior cell fates. Further, the coordinated activities of the JAK/STAT and epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) pathways are required to specify the posterior terminal cell fate. We propose that Upd secreted from the polar cells may act as a morphogen to stimulate A/P-derived follicular fates through JAK pathway activation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

A brain-specific cytochrome P450 responsible for the majority of deltamethrin resistance in the QTC279 strain of Tribolium castaneum

Fang Zhu; R. Parthasarathy; Hua Bai; Katharina Woithe; Martin Kaussmann; Ralf Nauen; Douglas A. Harrison; Subba R. Palli

Cytochrome P450-mediated detoxification is one of the most important mechanisms involved in insecticide resistance. However, the molecular basis of this mechanism and the physiological functions of P450s associated with insecticide resistance remain largely unknown. Here, we exploited the functional genomics and reverse genetic approaches to identify and characterize a P450 gene responsible for the majority of deltamethrin resistance observed in the QTC279 strain of Tribolium castaneum. We used recently completed whole-genome sequence of T. castaneum to prepare custom microarrays and identified a P450 gene, CYP6BQ9, which showed more than a 200-fold higher expression in the deltamethrin-resistant QTC279 strain when compared with its expression in the deltamethrin-susceptible Lab-S strain. Functional studies using both double-strand RNA (dsRNA)-mediated knockdown in the expression of CYP6BQ9 and transgenic expression of CYP6BQ9 in Drosophila melanogaster showed that CYP6BQ9 confers deltamethrin resistance. Furthermore, CYP6BQ9 enzyme expressed in baculovirus metabolizes deltamethrin to 4-hydroxy deltamethrin. Strikingly, we also found that unlike many P450 genes involved in insecticide resistance that were reported previously, CYP6BQ9 is predominantly expressed in the brain, a part of the central nervous system (CNS) containing voltage-gated sodium channels targeted by deltamethrin. Taken together, the current studies on the brain-specific insect P450 involved in deltamethrin resistance shed new light on the understanding of the molecular basis and evolution of insecticide resistance.


Current Biology | 1993

Simple and efficient generation of marked clones in Drosophila

Douglas A. Harrison; Norbert Perrimon

BACKGROUND Cell lineage analysis and mosaic analysis of mutations are important techniques that are used to study the development of many organisms. Unfortunately, the methods employed for such analyses are usually inefficient, technically demanding or labor intensive. In Drosophila, the most common methodology used for the generation of mosaic animals is mitotic recombination, which is induced by X-rays. Although this technique is simple, it has the undesirable characteristics of a low efficiency and a high rate of cell death. Furthermore, although a large number of marker systems has been employed to detect mitotic recombinants, none allows easy identification of clones for all cell types. RESULTS A system is described here that allows a highly efficient generation of clones with the concomitant expression of an easily detectable cellular marker. This method can be applied to cell lineage and mosaic analysis in Drosophila. The site-specific yeast FLP recombinase, under the control of a heat shock-inducible promoter, efficiently catalyses mitotic recombination specifically at the site of a FLP recombination target (FRT). In this system, recombination fuses the alpha-tubulin promoter to the lacZ gene, allowing transcription of the marker. Recombinant cells and their progeny can, therefore, be detected by standard assays for beta-galactosidase. Of particular importance is the fact that only the cells of interest stain, thus allowing their simple detection in any tissue. CONCLUSIONS We demonstrate that, by intermolecular recombination, we can use FLIP recombinase to generate marked clones efficiently in embryonic, larval and adult tissues. This simple and efficient technique is well suited to cell-lineage analysis and can be easily extended to the generation and detection of mutant clones in mosaic animals.


BMC Cell Biology | 2004

Two Drosophila suppressors of cytokine signaling (SOCS) differentially regulate JAK and EGFR pathway activities

Jason S. Rawlings; Gabriela Rennebeck; Susan M.W. Harrison; Rongwen Xi; Douglas A. Harrison

BackgroundThe Janus kinase (JAK) cascade is an essential and well-conserved pathway required to transduce signals for a variety of ligands in both vertebrates and invertebrates. While activation of the pathway is essential to many processes, mutations from mammals and Drosophila demonstrate that regulation is also critical. The SOCS (S uppressor O f C ytokine S ignaling) proteins in mammals are regulators of the JAK pathway that participate in a negative feedback loop, as they are transcriptionally activated by JAK signaling. Examination of one Drosophila SOCS homologue, Socs36E, demonstrated that its expression is responsive to JAK pathway activity and it is capable of downregulating JAK signaling, similar to the well characterized mammalian SOCS.ResultsBased on sequence analysis of the Drosophila genome, there are three identifiable SOCS homologues in flies. All three are most similar to mammalian SOCS that have not been extensively characterized: Socs36E is most similar to mammalian SOCS5, while Socs44A and Socs16D are most similar to mammalian SOCS6 and 7. Although Socs44A is capable of repressing JAK activity in some tissues, its expression is not regulated by the pathway. Furthermore, Socs44A can enhance the activity of the EGFR/MAPK signaling cascade, in contrast to Socs36E.ConclusionsTwo Drosophila SOCS proteins have some overlapping and some distinct capabilities. While Socs36E behaves similarly to the canonical vertebrate SOCS, Socs44A is not part of a JAK pathway negative feedback loop. Nonetheless, both SOCS regulate JAK and EGFR signaling pathways, albeit differently. The non-canonical properties of Socs44A may be representative of the class of less characterized vertebrate SOCS with which it shares greatest similarity.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011

An evolutionarily conserved Rit GTPase-p38 MAPK signaling pathway mediates oxidative stress resistance

Weikang Cai; Jennifer L. Rudolph; Susan M.W. Harrison; Ling Jin; Aubrey L. Frantz; Douglas A. Harrison; Douglas A. Andres

Rit knockout mice and D-Ric null Drosophila were used to identify the Rit/RIC subfamily of Ras-related GTPases as regulators of an evolutionarily conserved, p38-dependent signaling cascade that functions as a survival mechanism for cells in response to reactive oxygen species exposure.


Development | 2012

Glypicans regulate JAK/STAT signaling and distribution of the Unpaired morphogen

Yoshiki Hayashi; Travis Sexton; Katsufumi Dejima; Dustin W. Perry; Masahiko Takemura; Satoru Kobayashi; Hiroshi Nakato; Douglas A. Harrison

In Drosophila, ligands of the Unpaired (Upd) family activate the Janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (JAK/STAT) pathway. The JAK/STAT pathway controls many developmental events, including multiple functions in the ovary. These include an early role in the germarium for specification of stalk cells and a later role in the vitellarium to pattern the follicular epithelium surrounding each cyst. In this latter role, graded JAK/STAT activation specifies three distinct anterior follicular cell fates, suggesting that Upd is a morphogen in this system. Consistent with the JAK/STAT activation pattern in the vitellarium, Upd forms a concentration gradient on the apical surface of the follicular epithelium with a peak at its source, the polar cells. Like many morphogens, signaling and distribution of Upd are regulated by the heparan sulfate proteoglycans (HSPGs) Dally and Dally-like. Mutations in these glypican genes and in heparan sulfate biosynthetic genes result in disruption of JAK/STAT signaling, loss or abnormal formation of the stalk and significant reduction in the accumulation of extracellular Upd. Conversely, forced expression of Dally causes ectopic accumulation of Upd in follicular cells. Furthermore, biochemical studies reveal that Upd and Dally bind each other on the surface of the cell membrane. Our findings demonstrate that Drosophila glypicans regulate formation of the follicular gradient of the Upd morphogen, Upd. Furthermore, we establish the follicular epithelium as a new model for morphogen signaling in complex organ development.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

Crooked neck is a component of the human spliceosome and implicated in the splicing process

Seyung Chung; Zhaolan Zhou; Kathleen A. Huddleston; Douglas A. Harrison; Robin Reed; Timothy A. Coleman; Brian C. Rymond

The Drosophila crooked neck (crn) gene is essential for embryogenesis and has been implicated in cell cycle progression and in pre-mRNA splicing although a direct role in either process has not been established. Here we report isolation of the human crooked neck homolog, HCRN, and provide evidence for its function in splicing. HCRN encodes an unusual protein composed largely of tetratricopeptide repeat (TPR) elements. The crooked neck protein co-localizes with the SR and Sm protein splicing factors in discrete subnuclear domains implicated in snRNP biogenesis. In vitro assembly experiments show that an 83 kDa hcrn isoform is stably recruited to splicing complexes coincident with the addition of the U4/U6.U5 tri-snRNP particle. Crooked neck activity appears essential as extracts depleted of hcrn fail to splice pre-mRNA. These and related data support the view that crooked neck is a phylogenetically conserved pre-mRNA splicing factor.

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Rongwen Xi

Peking Union Medical College

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Carl Spana

Johns Hopkins University

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