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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth S. Barrie is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth S. Barrie.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2012

mRNA Transcript Diversity Creates New Opportunities for Pharmacological Intervention

Elizabeth S. Barrie; Ryan M. Smith; Jonathan C. Sanford; Wolfgang Sadee

Most protein coding genes generate multiple RNA transcripts through alternative splicing, variable 3′ and 5′UTRs, and RNA editing. Although drug design typically targets the main transcript, alternative transcripts can have profound physiological effects, encoding proteins with distinct functions or regulatory properties. Formation of these alternative transcripts is tissue-selective and context-dependent, creating opportunities for more effective and targeted therapies with reduced adverse effects. Moreover, genetic variation can tilt the balance of alternative versus constitutive transcripts or generate aberrant transcripts that contribute to disease risk. In addition, environmental factors and drugs modulate RNA splicing, affording new opportunities for the treatment of splicing disorders. For example, therapies targeting specific mRNA transcripts with splice-site–directed oligonucleotides that correct aberrant splicing are already in clinical trials for genetic disorders such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy. High-throughput sequencing technologies facilitate discovery of novel RNA transcripts and protein isoforms, applications ranging from neuromuscular disorders to cancer. Consideration of a genes transcript diversity should become an integral part of drug design, development, and therapy.


Circulation Research | 2014

Regulatory Polymorphisms in Human DBH Affect Peripheral Gene Expression and Sympathetic Activity

Elizabeth S. Barrie; David Weinshenker; Anurag Verma; Sarah A. Pendergrass; Leslie A. Lange; Marylyn D. Ritchie; James G. Wilson; Helena Kuivaniemi; Gerard Tromp; David J. Carey; Glenn S. Gerhard; Murray H. Brilliant; Scott J. Hebbring; Joseph F. Cubells; Julia K. Pinsonneault; Greg J. Norman; Wolfgang Sadee

Rationale: Dopamine &bgr;-hydroxylase (DBH) catalyzes the conversion of dopamine to norepinephrine in the central nervous system and peripherally. DBH variants are associated with large changes in circulating DBH and implicated in multiple disorders; yet causal relationships and tissue-specific effects remain unresolved. Objective: To characterize regulatory variants in DBH, effect on mRNA expression, and role in modulating sympathetic tone and disease risk. Methods and Results: Analysis of DBH mRNA in human tissues confirmed high expression in the locus coeruleus and adrenal gland, but also in sympathetically innervated organs (liver>lung>heart). Allele-specific mRNA assays revealed pronounced allelic expression differences in the liver (2- to 11-fold) attributable to promoter rs1611115 and exon 2 rs1108580, but only small differences in locus coeruleus and adrenals. These alleles were also associated with significantly reduced mRNA expression in liver and lung. Although DBH protein is expressed in other sympathetically innervated organs, mRNA levels were too low for analysis. In mice, hepatic Dbh mRNA levels correlated with cardiovascular risk phenotypes. The minor alleles of rs1611115 and rs1108580 were associated with sympathetic phenotypes, including angina pectoris. Testing combined effects of these variants suggested protection against myocardial infarction in 3 separate clinical cohorts. Conclusions: We demonstrate profound effects of DBH variants on expression in 2 sympathetically innervated organs, liver and lung, but not in adrenals and brain. Preliminary results demonstrate an association of these variants with clinical phenotypes responsive to peripheral sympathetic tone. We hypothesize that in addition to endocrine effects via circulating DBH and norepinephrine, the variants act in sympathetically innervated target organs.


Pharmacogenetics and Genomics | 2016

Regulatory effects of genomic translocations at the human carboxylesterase-1 (CES1) gene locus.

Jonathan C. Sanford; Xinwen Wang; Jian Shi; Elizabeth S. Barrie; Danxin Wang; Hao Jie Zhu; Wolfgang Sadee

Objective CES1 encodes carboxylesterase-1, an important drug-metabolizing enzyme with high expression in the liver. Previous studies have reported a genomic translocation of the 5′ region from the poorly expressed pseudogene CES1P1, to CES1, yielding the structural variant CES1VAR. The aim of this study was to characterize this translocation and its effect on CES1 expression in the human liver. Materials and methods Experiments were conducted in human liver tissues and cell culture (HepG2). The promoter and exon 1 of CES1 were sequenced by Sanger and Ion Torrent sequencing to identify gene translocations. The effects of CES1 5′UTRs on mRNA and protein expression were assessed by quantitative real-time PCR, allelic ratio mRNA analysis by primer extension (SNaPshot), quantitative targeted proteomics, and luciferase reporter gene assays. Results Sequencing of CES1 identified two translocations: first, CES1VAR (17% minor allele frequency) comprising the 5′UTR, exon 1, and part of intron 1. A second shorter translocation, CES1SVAR, was observed excluding exon 1 and intron 1 regions (<0.01% minor allele frequency). CES1VAR is associated with 2.6-fold decreased CES1 mRNA and ∼1.35-fold lower allelic mRNA. Luciferase reporter constructs showed that CES1VAR decreases luciferase activity 1.5-fold, whereas CES1SVAR slightly increases activity. CES1VAR was not associated with CES1 protein expression or metabolism of the CES1 substrates enalapril, clopidogrel, or methylphenidate in the liver. Conclusion The frequent translocation variant CES1VAR reduces mRNA expression of CES1 in the liver by ∼30%, but protein expression and metabolizing activity in the liver were not detectably altered – possibly because of variable CES1 expression masking small allelic effects. Whether drug therapies are affected by CES1VAR will require further in-vivo studies.


Human Mutation | 2017

The CHRNA5/CHRNA3/CHRNB4 Nicotinic Receptor Regulome: Genomic Architecture, Regulatory Variants, and Clinical Associations

Elizabeth S. Barrie; Katherine Hartmann; Sung-Ha Lee; John T. Frater; Michal Seweryn; Danxin Wang; Wolfgang Sadee

Functionally related genes often cluster into a genome region under coordinated regulation, forming a local regulome. To understand regulation of the CHRNA5/CHRNA3/CHRNB4 nicotinic receptor gene cluster, we integrate large‐scale RNA expression data (brain and peripheral) from GTEx (Genotype Tissue Expression), clinical associations (GRASP), and linkage disequilibrium data (1000 Genomes) to find candidate SNPs representing independent regulatory variants. CHRNA3, CHRNA5, CHRNB4 mRNAs, and a well‐expressed CHRNA5 antisense RNA (RP11‐650L12.2) are co‐expressed in many human tissues, suggesting common regulatory elements. The CHRNA5 enhancer haplotype tagged by rs880395 not only increases CHRNA5 mRNA expression in all tissues, but also enhances RP11‐650L12.2 and CHRNA3 expression, suggesting DNA looping to multiple promoters. However, in nucleus accumbens and putamen, but not other brain regions, CHRNA3 expression associates uniquely with a haplotype tagged by rs1948 (located in the CHRNB4 3′UTR). Haplotype/diplotype analysis of rs880395 and rs1948 plus rs16969968 (a nonsynonymous CHRNA5 risk variant) in GWAS (COGEND, UW‐TTURC, SAGE) yields a nicotine dependence risk profile only partially captured by rs16969968 alone. An example of local gene clusters, this nicotinic regulome is controlled by complex genetic variation, with broad implications for interpreting GWAS.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Human Bacterial Artificial Chromosome (BAC) Transgenesis Fully Rescues Noradrenergic Function in Dopamine β-Hydroxylase Knockout Mice

Joseph F. Cubells; Jason P. Schroeder; Elizabeth S. Barrie; Daniel F. Manvich; Wolfgang Sadee; Tiina Berg; Kristina B. Mercer; Taylor A. Stowe; L. Cameron Liles; Katherine E. Squires; Andrew Mezher; Patrick Curtin; Dannie L. Perdomo; Patricia Szot; David Weinshenker

Dopamine β-hydroxylase (DBH) converts dopamine (DA) to norepinephrine (NE) in noradrenergic/adrenergic cells. DBH deficiency prevents NE production and causes sympathetic failure, hypotension and ptosis in humans and mice; DBH knockout (Dbh -/-) mice reveal other NE deficiency phenotypes including embryonic lethality, delayed growth, and behavioral defects. Furthermore, a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the human DBH gene promoter (-970C>T; rs1611115) is associated with variation in serum DBH activity and with several neurological- and neuropsychiatric-related disorders, although its impact on DBH expression is controversial. Phenotypes associated with DBH deficiency are typically treated with L-3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine (DOPS), which can be converted to NE by aromatic acid decarboxylase (AADC) in the absence of DBH. In this study, we generated transgenic mice carrying a human bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) encompassing the DBH coding locus as well as ~45 kb of upstream and ~107 kb of downstream sequence to address two issues. First, we characterized the neuroanatomical, neurochemical, physiological, and behavioral transgenic rescue of DBH deficiency by crossing the BAC onto a Dbh -/- background. Second, we compared human DBH mRNA abundance between transgenic lines carrying either a “C” or a “T” at position -970. The BAC transgene drove human DBH mRNA expression in a pattern indistinguishable from the endogenous gene, restored normal catecholamine levels to the peripheral organs and brain of Dbh -/- mice, and fully rescued embryonic lethality, delayed growth, ptosis, reduced exploratory activity, and seizure susceptibility. In some cases, transgenic rescue was superior to DOPS. However, allelic variation at the rs1611115 SNP had no impact on mRNA levels in any tissue. These results indicate that the human BAC contains all of the genetic information required for tissue-specific, functional expression of DBH and can rescue all measured Dbh deficiency phenotypes, but did not reveal an impact of the rs11115 variant on DBH expression in mice.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2015

Role of ITGAE in the development of autoimmune diabetes in non-obese diabetic mice

Elizabeth S. Barrie; Mels Lodder; Paul H. Weinreb; Jill Buss; Amer Rajab; Christopher A. Adin; Qing-Sheng Mi; Gregg A. Hadley

There is compelling evidence that autoreactive CD8(+)T cells play a central role in precipitating the development of autoimmune diabetes in non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Given that ITGAE (CD103) recognizes an islet-restricted ligand (E-cadherin), we postulated that its expression is required for initiation of disease. We herein use a mouse model of autoimmune diabetes (NOD/ShiLt mice) to test this hypothesis. We demonstrate that ITGAE is expressed by a discrete subset of CD8(+)T cells that infiltrate pancreatic islets before the development of diabetes. Moreover, we demonstrate that development of diabetes in Itgae-deficient NOD mice is significantly delayed at early but not late time points, indicating that ITGAE is preferentially involved in early diabetes development. To rule out a potential contribution by closely linked loci to this delay, we treated WT NOD mice beginning at 2 weeks of age through 5 weeks of age with a depleting anti-ITGAE mAb and found a decreased incidence of diabetes following anti-ITGAE mAb treatment compared with mice that received isotype control mAbs or non-depleting mAbs to ITGAE. Moreover, a histological examination of the pancreas of treated mice revealed that NOD mice treated with a depleting mAb were resistant to immune destruction. These results indicate that ITGAE(+) cells play a key role in the development of autoimmune diabetes and are consistent with the hypothesis that ITGAE(+)CD8(+)T effectors initiate the disease process.


Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine | 2018

Alpha-synuclein mRNA isoform formation and translation affected by polymorphism in the human SNCA 3ʹUTR

Elizabeth S. Barrie; Sung-Ha Lee; John T. Frater; Maria Kataki; Douglas W. Scharre; Wolfgang Sadee

Multiple variants in SNCA, encoding alpha‐synuclein, a main component of Lewy bodies, are implicated in Parkinsons disease.


Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities | 2018

Testing Genetic Modifiers of Behavior and Response to Atomoxetine in Autism Spectrum Disorder with ADHD

Elizabeth S. Barrie; Julia K. Pinsonneault; Wolfgang Sadee; Jill A. Hollway; Benjamin L. Handen; Tristram Smith; L. Eugene Arnold; Eric Butter; Emily Hansen-Kiss; Gail E. Herman; Michael G. Aman


Archive | 2016

A Collaborative Translational Autism Research Program for the Military

Gail E. Herman; Emily Hansen-Kiss; Wolfgang Sadee; Elizabeth S. Barrie


Archive | 2014

1 Title Page 2 3 Role of CD103 in the development of autoimmune diabetes in NOD mice 4 5 Running title: Role of CD103 in autoimmune diabetes

Elizabeth S. Barrie; Mels Lodder; Paul H. Weinreb; Jill Buss; Amer Rajab; Christopher A. Adin; Qing-Sheng Mi; Gregg A. Hadley

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Christopher A. Adin

North Carolina State University

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Emily Hansen-Kiss

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Gail E. Herman

Nationwide Children's Hospital

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Jill Buss

Ohio State University

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