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Dive into the research topics where Edward J. Carroll is active.

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Featured researches published by Edward J. Carroll.


Zygote | 2007

Microplate assay for quantifying developmental morphologies: effects of exogenous hyalin on sea urchin gastrulation

Ziba Razinia; Edward J. Carroll; Steven B. Oppenheimer

It is often difficult to determine the effects of various substances on the development of the sea urchin embryo due to the lack of appropriate quantitative microassays. Here, a microplate assay has been developed for quantitatively evaluating the effects of substances, such as hyalin, on living sea urchin embryos. Hyalin (330 kDa) is a major constituent of the sea urchin hyaline layer, an extracellular matrix that develops 20 min postinsemination. Function of the hyaline layer and its major constituent, is the adhesion of cells during morphogenesis. Using wide-mouthed pipette tips, 25 microl of 24-h Strongylocentrotus purpuratus embryos were transferred to each well of a 96-well polystyrene flat-bottom microplate yielding about 12 embryos per well. Specific concentrations of purified hyalin diluted in low calcium seawater were added to the wells containing the embryos, which were then incubated for 24 h at 15 degree C. The hyalin-treated and control samples were observed live and after fixation with 10% formaldehyde using a Zeiss Axiolab photomicroscope. The small number of embryos in each well allowed quantification of the developmental effects of the added media. Specific archenteron morphologies-attached, unattached, no invagination and exogastrula-were scored and a dose-dependent response curve was generated. Hyalin at high concentrations blocked invagination. At low concentrations, it inhibited archenteron elongation/attachment to the blastocoel roof. While many studies have implicated hyalin in a variety of interactions during morphogenesis, we are not aware of any past studies that have quantitatively examined the effects of exogenous hyalin on specific gastrulation events in whole embryos.


Zygote | 2008

Exogenous hyalin and sea urchin gastrulation, Part II: hyalin, an interspecies cell adhesion molecule

Maribel Alvarez; Jennifer Nnoli; Edward J. Carroll; Virginia Hutchins-Carroll; Z. Razinia; Steven B. Oppenheimer

The 330 kDa fibrillar glycoprotein hyalin is a well known component of the sea urchin embryo extracellular hyaline layer. Only recently, the main component of hyalin, the hyalin repeat domain, has been identified in organisms as widely divergent as bacteria and humans using the GenBank database and therefore its possible function has garnered a great deal of interest. In the sea urchin, hyalin serves as an adhesive substrate in the developing embryo and we have recently shown that exogenously added purified hyalin from Strongylocentrotus purpuratus embryos blocks a model cellular interaction in these embryos, archenteron elongation/attachment to the blastocoel roof. It is important to demonstrate the generality of this result by observing if hyalin from one species of sea urchin blocks archenteron elongation/attachment in another species. Here we show in three repeated experiments, with 30 replicate samples for each condition, that the same concentration of S. purpuratus hyalin (57 microg/ml) that blocked the interaction in living S. purpuratus embryos blocked the same interaction in living Lytechinus pictus embryos. These results correspond with the known crossreactivity of antibody against S. purpuratus hyalin with L. pictus hyalin. We propose that hyalin-hyalin receptor binding may mediate this adhesive interaction. The use of a microplate assay that allows precise quantification of developmental effects should help facilitate identification of the function of hyalin in organisms as divergent as bacteria and humans.


Acta Histochemica | 2008

Hyalin is a cell adhesion molecule involved in mediating archenteron–blastocoel roof attachment

Edward J. Carroll; Virginia Hutchins-Carroll; Catherine Coyle-Thompson; Steven B. Oppenheimer

The US National Institutes of Health has designated the sea urchin embryo as a model organism because around 25 discoveries in this system have led to insights into the physiology of higher organisms, including humans. Hyalin is a large glycoprotein in the hyaline layer of sea urchin embryos that functions to maintain general adhesive relationships in the developing embryo. It consists of the hyalin repeat domain that has been identified in organisms as diverse as bacteria, worms, flies, mice, sea urchins and humans. Here we show, using a polyclonal antibody raised against the 11.6 S species of hyalin, that it localizes at the tip of the archenteron and on the roof of the blastocoel exactly where these two structures bond in an adhesive interaction that has been of interest for over a century. In addition, the antibody blocks the interaction between the archenteron tip and blastocoel roof. These results, in addition to other recent findings from this laboratory that will be discussed, suggest that hyalin is involved in mediating this cellular interaction. This is the first demonstration that suggests that hyalin functions as a cell adhesion molecule in many organisms, including humans.


Zygote | 2014

A role for polyglucans in a model sea urchin embryo cellular interaction.

Suprita Singh; Eddie Karabidian; Alexander Kandel; Stan Metzenberg; Edward J. Carroll; Steven B. Oppenheimer

The enzymatic activities of commercially prepared glycosidases were verified by direct chemical assays using defined substrates and fixed and live sea urchin (Lytechinus pictus) embryos to determine if a model cellular interaction of interest to developmental biologists for over a century (interaction of archenteron tip and roof of the blastocoel) was mediated by glycans. Glycosidases (active and denatured) were incubated with microdissected archenterons and blastocoel roofs in a direct assay to learn if their enzymatic activities could prevent the normal adhesive interaction. Of the five glycosidases tested only β-amylase (an exoglycosidase) immediately inhibited the interaction at relatively low unit activity. α-Amylase (an endoglycosidase) had no measurable effect, while other glycosidases (α-glucosidase, β-glucosidase, β-galactosidase) only substantially inhibited adhesion after a 12-h incubation. We demonstrated that the five glycosidases were active (not inhibited) in the presence of embryo materials, and that cleaved sugars could be detected directly after incubation of some enzymes with the embryos. The biochemical purity of the enzymes was examined using gel electrophoresis under denaturing conditions, and the absence of contaminating proteases was confirmed using Azocoll™ substrate. As we cannot entirely rule out the presence of minor contaminating enzymatic activities, only inhibitions of adhesion after very short incubations with enzyme were considered significant and biologically relevant. Although glycans in indirect experiments have been implicated in mediating the interaction of the tip of the archenteron and roof of the blastocoel, to our knowledge, this is the first study that directly implicates polyglucans with terminal 1,4-linked glucose residues in this adhesive event.


Experimental Cell Research | 2010

Use of specific glycosidases to probe cellular interactions in the sea urchin embryo

Brian Idoni; Haike Ghazarian; Stan Metzenberg; Virginia Hutchins-Carroll; Steven B. Oppenheimer; Edward J. Carroll

We present an unusual and novel model for initial investigations of a putative role for specifically conformed glycans in cellular interactions. We have used alpha- and ss-amylase and alpha- and ss-glucosidase in dose-response experiments evaluating their effects on archenteron organization using the NIH designated sea urchin embryo model. In quantitative dose-response experiments, we show that defined activity levels of alpha-glucosidase and ss-amylase inhibited archenteron organization in living Lytechinus pictus gastrula embryos, whereas all concentrations of ss-glucosidase and alpha-amylase were without substantial effects on development. Product inhibition studies suggested that the enzymes were acting by their specific glycosidase activities and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis suggested that there was no detectable protease contamination in the active enzyme samples. The results provide evidence for a role of glycans in sea urchin embryo cellular interactions with special reference to the possible structural conformation of these glycans based on the differential activities of the alpha- and ss-glycosidases.


Zygote | 2008

Exogenous hyalin and sea urchin gastrulation. Part III: biological activity of hyalin isolated from Lytechinus pictus embryos.

Azalia Contreras; John Vitale; Virginia Hutchins-Carroll; Edward J. Carroll; Steven B. Oppenheimer

Hyalin is a large glycoprotein, consisting of the hyalin repeat domain and non-repeated regions, and is the major component of the hyaline layer in the early sea urchin embryo of Strongylocentrotus purpuratus. The hyalin repeat domain has been identified in proteins from organisms as diverse as bacteria, sea urchins, worms, flies, mice and humans. While the specific function of hyalin and the hyalin repeat domain is incompletely understood, many studies suggest that it has a functional role in adhesive interactions. In part I of this series, we showed that hyalin isolated from the sea urchin S. purpuratus blocked archenteron elongation and attachment to the blastocoel roof occurring during gastrulation in S. purpuratus embryos, (Razinia et al., 2007). The cellular interactions that occur in the sea urchin, recognized by the U.S. National Institutes of Health as a model system, may provide insights into adhesive interactions that occur in human health and disease. In part II of this series, we showed that S. purpuratus hyalin heterospecifically blocked archenteron-ectoderm interaction in Lytechinus pictus embryos (Alvarez et al., 2007). In the current study, we have isolated hyalin from the sea urchin L. pictus and demonstrated that L. pictus hyalin homospecifically blocks archenteron-ectoderm interaction, suggesting a general role for this glycoprotein in mediating a specific set of adhesive interactions. We also found one major difference in hyalin activity in the two sea urchin species involving hyalin influence on gastrulation invagination.


Zygote | 2010

Exogenous hyalin and sea urchin gastrulation. Part IV: a direct adhesion assay - progress in identifying hyalin's active sites.

Haike Ghazarian; Catherine Coyle-Thompson; William Dalrymple; Virginia Hutchins-Carroll; Stan Metzenberg; Ziba Razinia; Edward J. Carroll; Steven B. Oppenheimer


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Purification and Characterization of Hyalin by Chromatography

Keith M. Stancu; Edward J. Carroll


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Use of post-fertilization aggregates of sea urchin embryos from denuded eggs to study self-adhesive properties of the hyaline layer: glycosidases

Krystal Jarvis; Brian Idoni; Justin Dreyfuss; Catherine Coyle-Thompson; Edward J. Carroll; Steven B. Oppenheimer; Virginia Hutchins-Carroll


The FASEB Journal | 2009

Periodate oxidation of sea urchin hyalin(s): A glycobiological study towards understanding of hyalin's function as a specific cell adhesion molecule

Haike Ghazarian; Virginia Hutchins-Carroll; Catherine Coyle-Thompson; Stan Metzenberg; Ziba Razinia; William Dalrymple; Edward J. Carroll; Steven B. Oppenheimer

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Stan Metzenberg

California State University

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Haike Ghazarian

California State University

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Azalia Contreras

California State University

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Brian Idoni

California State University

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Jennifer Nnoli

California State University

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John Vitale

California State University

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