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Featured researches published by Eileen Hickey.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

A Role for p38MAPK/HSP27 Pathway in Smooth Muscle Cell Migration

Jason C. Hedges; Melissa A. Dechert; Ilia A. Yamboliev; Jody L. Martin; Eileen Hickey; Lee A. Weber; William T. Gerthoffer

Smooth muscle cells are exposed to growth factors and cytokines that contribute to pathological states including airway hyperresponsiveness, atherosclerosis, angiogenesis, smooth muscle hypertrophy, and hyperplasia. A common feature of several of these conditions is migration of smooth muscle beyond the initial boundary of the organ. Signal transduction pathways activated by extracellular signals that instigate migration are mostly undefined in smooth muscles. We measured migration of cultured tracheal myocytes in response to platelet-derived growth factor, interleukin-1β, and transforming growth factor-β. Cellular migration was blocked by SB203580, an inhibitor of p38MAPK. Time course experiments demonstrated increased phosphorylation of p38MAPK. Activation of p38MAPK resulted in the phosphorylation of HSP27 (heat shockprotein 27), which may modulate F-actin polymerization. Inhibition of p38MAPK activity inhibited phosphorylation of HSP27. Adenovirus-mediated expression of activated mutant MAPK kinase 6b(E), an upstream activator for p38MAPK, increased cell migration, whereas overexpression of p38α MAPK dominant negative mutant and an HSP27 phosphorylation mutant blocked cell migration completely. The results indicate that activation of the p38MAPK pathway by growth factors and proinflammatory cytokines regulates smooth muscle cell migration and may contribute to pathological states involving smooth muscle dysfunction.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1991

Changes in the stability of a human H3 histone mRNA during the HeLa cell cycle.

Timothy D. Morris; Lee A. Weber; Eileen Hickey; Gary S. Stein; Janet L. Stein

A major component of the regulation of histone protein synthesis during the cell cycle is the modulation of the half-life of histone mRNA. We have uncoupled transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulation by using a Drosophila hsp70-human H3 histone fusion gene that produces a marked human H3 histone mRNA upon heat induction. Transcription of this gene can be switched on and off by raising and lowering cell culture temperatures, respectively. HeLa cell lines containing stably integrated copies of the fusion gene were synchronized by double thymidine block. Distinct populations of H3 histone mRNA were produced by heat induction in early S-phase, late S-phase, or G2-phase cells, and the stability of the induced H3 histone mRNA was measured. The H3 histone mRNA induced during early S phase decayed with a half-life of 110 min, whereas the same transcript induced during late S phase had a half-life of 10 to 15 min. The H3 histone mRNA induced in non-S-phase cells is more stable than that induced in late S phase, with a half-life of 40 min. Thus, the stability of histone mRNA is actively regulated throughout the cell cycle. Our results are consistent with an autoregulatory model in which the stability of histone mRNA is determined by the level of free histone protein in the cytoplasm.


Cell Stress & Chaperones | 2002

Stress protection by a fluorescent Hsp27 chimera that is independent of nuclear translocation or multimeric dissociation

Michael J. Borrelli; Laura J. Bernock; Jacques Landry; Douglas R. Spitz; Lee A. Weber; Eileen Hickey; Peter M. Corry

Abstract A chimeric protein consisting of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) fused to the N-terminus of human Hsp27 conferred stress protection in human A549 lung carcinoma and murine L929 cells that were stably transfected to express the chimera constitutively. The resultant protection was comparable with that in the same cell lines when they were transfected to express corresponding levels of Hsp27. Unlike L929 cells, A549 cells exhibit endogenous Hsp27 expression, whose expression was inhibited in proportion to the amount of fluorescent chimera expressed, suggesting that the A549 cells recognized the latter as Hsp27. Upregulation of Hsp27 or chimeric Hsp27 in all transfected cell lines (stable or transient transfection) caused no measurable change in cellular glutathione levels, indicating that glutathione played no role in the stress protection associated with either protein. Chimeric Hsp27 had a monomeric molecular weight of 55 kDa (that of Hsp27 plus EGFP) in both cell types and formed a 16-mer complex twice as massive as that formed by Hsp27. Heat shock or sodium arsenite induced phosphorylation of both chimeric Hsp27 and Hsp27, which resulted in the disaggregation of Hsp27 multimers in both cell types and disaggregation of 20% of the chimeric multimers in L929 cells. But chimeric Hsp27 multimers did not disaggregate after stress in A549 cells. Epifluorescence and confocal microscopy demonstrated that chimeric Hsp27 was restricted to the cytoplasm under normal growth conditions and after heat shock in all cells. This study supports the conclusions that Hsp27 stress protection requires neither its translocation into the nucleus nor the dissociation of its multimeric complex. Furthermore, it demonstrates that fluorescent chimeras of heat shock proteins can be functional and used to observe the proteins distribution within living cells.


Gene | 1995

Cloning and sequencing of a cDNA encoding the canine HSP27 protein

Janice K. Larsen; William T. Gerthoffer; Eileen Hickey; Lee A. Weber

The nucleotide (nt) sequence encoding a 27-kDa heat-shock protein (HSP27) was determined from cDNAs cloned from a canine smooth muscle library. The primary structure deduced from the nt sequence reveals a 209-amino-acid protein having 86-89% identity with human, mouse, rat and hamster small HSP. Similar to human HSP27, the canine protein contains three Ser residues that are potential MAPKAP kinase II substrates.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1993

Modulation of actin microfilament dynamics and fluid phase pinocytosis by phosphorylation of heat shock protein 27.

Josée N. Lavoie; Eileen Hickey; Lee A. Weber; Jacques Landry


Nucleic Acids Research | 1986

Sequence and organization of genes encoding the human 27 kDa heat shock protein

Eileen Hickey; Susan E. Brandon; Robert Potter; Gary S. Stein; Janet L. Stein; Lee A. Weber


Cancer Research | 1996

Effect of Overexpression of the Small Heat Shock Protein HSP27 on the Heat and Drug Sensitivities of Human Testis Tumor Cells

Elaine H. Richards; Eileen Hickey; Lee A. Weber; John R. W. Masters


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 1992

Expression of heat shock genes during differentiation of mammalian osteoblasts and promyelocytic leukemia cells

Abdul Rauf Shakoori; Annette M. Oberdorf; Thomas A. Owen; Lee A. Weber; Eileen Hickey; Janet L. Stein; Jane B. Lian; Gary S. Stein


Biochemistry | 1982

Modulation of heat-shock polypeptide synthesis in HeLa cells during hyperthermia and recovery.

Eileen Hickey; Lee A. Weber


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1977

Inhibition of protein synthesis by Cl

Lee A. Weber; Eileen Hickey; P A Maroney; Corrado Baglioni

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Abdul Rauf Shakoori

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Annette M. Oberdorf

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Corrado Baglioni

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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