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Dive into the research topics where Eric F. Wawrousek is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric F. Wawrousek.


Nature | 2007

Protective and therapeutic role for αB-crystallin in autoimmune demyelination

Shalina S. Ousman; Beren Tomooka; Johannes M. van Noort; Eric F. Wawrousek; Kevin O’Conner; David A. Hafler; Raymond A. Sobel; William H. Robinson; Lawrence Steinman

αB-crystallin (CRYAB) is the most abundant gene transcript present in early active multiple sclerosis lesions, whereas such transcripts are absent in normal brain tissue. This crystallin has anti-apoptotic and neuroprotective functions. CRYAB is the major target of CD4+ T-cell immunity to the myelin sheath from multiple sclerosis brain. The pathophysiological implications of this immune response were investigated here. We demonstrate that CRYAB is a potent negative regulator acting as a brake on several inflammatory pathways in both the immune system and central nervous system (CNS). Cryab-/- mice showed worse experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) at the acute and progressive phases, with higher Th1 and Th17 cytokine secretion from T cells and macrophages, and more intense CNS inflammation, compared with their wild-type counterparts. Furthermore, Cryab-/- astrocytes showed more cleaved caspase-3 and more TUNEL staining, indicating an anti-apoptotic function of Cryab. Antibody to CRYAB was detected in cerebrospinal fluid from multiple sclerosis patients and in sera from mice with EAE. Administration of recombinant CRYAB ameliorated EAE. Thus, the immune response against a negative regulator of inflammation, CRYAB, in multiple sclerosis, would exacerbate inflammation and demyelination. This can be countered by giving CRYAB itself for therapy of ongoing disease.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012

The Rd8 Mutation of the Crb1 Gene Is Present in Vendor Lines of C57BL/6N Mice and Embryonic Stem Cells, and Confounds Ocular Induced Mutant Phenotypes

Mary J. Mattapallil; Eric F. Wawrousek; Chi-Chao Chan; Hui Zhao; Jayeeta Roychoudhury; Thomas A. Ferguson; Rachel R. Caspi

PURPOSE We noted an unexpected inheritance pattern of lesions in several strains of gene-manipulated mice with ocular phenotypes. The lesions, which appeared at various stages of backcross to C57BL/6, bore resemblance to the rd8 retinal degeneration phenotype. We set out to examine the prevalence of this mutation in induced mutant mouse lines, vendor C57BL/6 mice and in widely used embryonic stem cells. METHODS Ocular lesions were evaluated by fundus examination and histopathology. Detection of the rd8 mutation at the genetic level was performed by PCR with appropriate primers. Data were confirmed by DNA sequencing in selected cases. RESULTS Analysis of several induced mutant mouse lines with ocular disease phenotypes revealed that the disease was associated 100% with the presence of the rd8 mutation in the Crb1 gene rather than with the gene of interest. DNA analysis of C57BL/6 mice from common commercial vendors demonstrated the presence of the rd8 mutation in homozygous form in all C57BL/6N substrains, but not in the C57BL/6J substrain. A series of commercially available embryonic stem cells of C57BL/6N origin and C57BL/6N mouse lines used to generate ES cells also contained the rd8 mutation. Affected mice displayed ocular lesions typical of rd8, which were detectable by funduscopy and histopathology as early as 6 weeks of age. CONCLUSIONS These findings identify the presence of the rd8 mutation in the C57BL/6N mouse substrain used widely to produce transgenic and knockout mice. The results have grave implications for the vision research community who develop mouse lines to study eye disease, as presence of rd8 can produce significant disease phenotypes unrelated to the gene or genes of interest. It is suggested that researchers screen for rd8 if their mouse lines were generated on the C57BL/6N background, bear resemblance to the rd8 phenotype, or are of indeterminate origin.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1989

Expression of the murine alpha B-crystallin gene is not restricted to the lens.

Robert A. Dubin; Eric F. Wawrousek; Joram Piatigorsky

The murine alpha B-crystallin gene was cloned and its expression was examined. In the mouse, significant levels of alpha B-crystallin RNA were detected not only in lens but also in heart, skeletal muscle, kidney, and lung; low and trace levels were detected in brain and spleen, respectively. The RNA species in lung, brain, and spleen was 400 to 500 bases larger than that in the other tissues. Transcription in lens, heart, skeletal muscle, kidney, and brain initiated at the same position. A mouse alpha B-crystallin mini-gene was constructed and was introduced into the germ line of mice, and its expression was demonstrated to parallel that of the endogenous gene. Transgene RNA was always detected in lens, heart, and skeletal muscle, while expression in kidney and lung was variable; it remains uncertain whether there is transgene expression in brain and spleen. These results demonstrate that regulatory sequences controlling expression of the alpha B-crystallin gene lie between sequences 666 base pairs upstream of the transcription initiation site and 2.4 kilobase pairs downstream of the poly(A) addition site and are not located within the introns. Transfection studies with a series of alpha B-crystallin mini-gene deletion mutants revealed that sequences between positions -222 and -167 were required for efficient expression in primary embryonic chick lens cells; sequences downstream of the poly(A) addition signal were dispensable for expression in this in vitro system.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

VEGF-B is dispensable for blood vessel growth but critical for their survival, and VEGF-B targeting inhibits pathological angiogenesis

Fan Zhang; Zhongshu Tang; Xu Hou; Johan Lennartsson; Yang Li; Alexander W. Koch; Pierre Scotney; Chunsik Lee; Pachiappan Arjunan; Lijin Dong; Anil Kumar; Tuomas T. Rissanen; Bin Wang; Nobuo Nagai; Pierre Fons; Robert N. Fariss; Yongqing Zhang; Eric F. Wawrousek; Ginger Tansey; James Raber; Guo-Hua Fong; Hao Ding; David A. Greenberg; Kevin G. Becker; Jean-Marc Herbert; Andrew D. Nash; Seppo Ylä-Herttuala; Yihai Cao; Ryan J. Watts; Xuri Li

VEGF-B, a homolog of VEGF discovered a long time ago, has not been considered an important target in antiangiogenic therapy. Instead, it has received little attention from the field. In this study, using different animal models and multiple types of vascular cells, we revealed that although VEGF-B is dispensable for blood vessel growth, it is critical for their survival. Importantly, the survival effect of VEGF-B is not only on vascular endothelial cells, but also on pericytes, smooth muscle cells, and vascular stem/progenitor cells. In vivo, VEGF-B targeting inhibited both choroidal and retinal neovascularization. Mechanistically, we found that the vascular survival effect of VEGF-B is achieved by regulating the expression of many vascular prosurvival genes via both NP-1 and VEGFR-1. Our work thus indicates that the function of VEGF-B in the vascular system is to act as a “survival,” rather than an “angiogenic” factor and that VEGF-B inhibition may offer new therapeutic opportunities to treat neovascular diseases.


Nature | 2013

Suppression of neuroinflammation by astrocytic dopamine D2 receptors via aB-crystallin

Wei Shao; Shuzhen Zhang; Mi Tang; Xinhua Zhang; Zheng Zhou; Yanqing Yin; Yuan-yuan Huang; Yingjun Liu; Eric F. Wawrousek; Chen T; Shengbin Li; Ming Xu; Jiang-ning Zhou; Gang Hu; Jiawei Zhou

Chronic neuroinflammation is a common feature of the ageing brain and some neurodegenerative disorders. However, the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying the regulation of innate immunity in the central nervous system remain elusive. Here we show that the astrocytic dopamine D2 receptor (DRD2) modulates innate immunity through αB-crystallin (CRYAB), which is known to suppress neuroinflammation. We demonstrate that knockout mice lacking Drd2 showed remarkable inflammatory response in multiple central nervous system regions and increased the vulnerability of nigral dopaminergic neurons to neurotoxin 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP)-induced neurotoxicity. Astrocytes null for Drd2 became hyper-responsive to immune stimuli with a marked reduction in the level of CRYAB. Preferential ablation of Drd2 in astrocytes robustly activated astrocytes in the substantia nigra. Gain- or loss-of-function studies showed that CRYAB is critical for DRD2-mediated modulation of innate immune response in astrocytes. Furthermore, treatment of wild-type mice with the selective DRD2 agonist quinpirole increased resistance of the nigral dopaminergic neurons to MPTP through partial suppression of inflammation. Our study indicates that astrocytic DRD2 activation normally suppresses neuroinflammation in the central nervous system through a CRYAB-dependent mechanism, and provides a new strategy for targeting the astrocyte-mediated innate immune response in the central nervous system during ageing and disease.


Journal of Immunology | 2008

Phenotype Switching by Inflammation-Inducing Polarized Th17 Cells, but not by Th1 Cells

Guangpu Shi; Catherine A. Cox; Barbara P. Vistica; Cuiyan Tan; Eric F. Wawrousek; Igal Gery

Th1 and Th17 cells are characterized by their expression of IFN-γ or IL-17, respectively. The finding of Th cells producing both IL-17 and IFN-γ suggested, however, that certain Th cells may modify their selective cytokine expression. In this study, we examined changes in cytokine expression in an experimental system in which polarized Th1 or Th17 cells specific against hen egg lysozyme induce ocular inflammation in recipient mice expressing hen egg lysozyme in their eyes. Whereas only IFN-γ was expressed in eyes of Th1 recipient mice, substantial proportions of donor cells expressed IFN-γ or both IFN-γ and IL-17 in Th17 recipient eyes. The possibility that nonpolarized cells in Th17 preparations were responsible for expression of IFN-γ or IFN-γ/IL-17 in Th17 recipient eyes was contradicted by the finding that the proportions of such cells were larger in recipients of Th17 preparations with 20–25% nonpolarized cells than in recipients of 35–40% preparations. Moreover, whereas incubation in vitro of Th1 cells with Th17-polarizing mixture had no effect on their phenotype, incubation of Th17 with Th1-polarizing mixture, or in the absence of cytokines, converted most of these cells into IFN-γ or IFN-γ/IL-17-expressing cells. In addition, Th17 incubated with the Th1 mixture expressed T-bet, whereas no ROR-γt was detected in Th1 incubated with Th17 mixture. Thus, polarized Th1 cells retain their phenotype in the tested systems, whereas Th17 may switch to express IFN-γ or IFN-γ/IL-17 following activation in the absence of cytokines, or exposure to certain cytokine milieus at the inflammation site or in culture.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Inflammatory Mediators in Uveitis: Differential Induction of Cytokines and Chemokines in Th1- Versus Th2-Mediated Ocular Inflammation

Ellen F. Foxman; Meifen Zhang; Stephen D. Hurst; Tony Muchamuel; Defen Shen; Eric F. Wawrousek; Chi-Chao Chan; Igal Gery

Ocular inflammation leads to vision loss through the destruction and scarring of delicate tissues along the visual axis. To identify inflammatory mediators involved in this process, we used real time RT-PCR to quantify the expression of mRNA transcripts of 34 cytokines, 26 chemokines, and 14 chemokine receptors at certain time points during T cell-mediated ocular inflammation. We induced disease by adoptive transfer of Ag-specific Th1 or Th2 cells into recipients expressing the target Ag in their eyes. We also compared the mediator expression patterns seen in adoptive transfer-induced inflammation with that seen in mouse eyes developing experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis. In addition, we used laser capture microdissection to examine chemokine mRNA production by both retinal pigment epithelium cells and infiltrating leukocytes in inflamed eyes. Major findings included the following: 1) Three patterns of expression of the inflammation-related molecules were seen in recipients of adoptively transferred Th cells: preferential expression in Th1 recipients, or in Th2 recipients, or similar expression in both recipient groups. 2) In experimental autoimmune uveoretinitis, the inflammatory mediator expression pattern largely paralleled that seen in Th1-induced disease. 3) Both retinal pigment epithelium and infiltrating leukocytes expressed chemokine transcripts in distinct, but overlapping patterns in inflamed eyes. 4) Interestingly, trancripts of multiple cytokines, chemokines, and chemokine receptors were constitutively expressed in high levels in mouse eyes. Seven of these molecules have not been previously associated with the eye. These data underscore the multiplicity of mediators that participate in the pathogenesis of eye inflammation and point to upstream cytokines as potential therapeutic targets.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000

Differential Protective Activity of αA- and αB-crystallin in Lens Epithelial Cells

Usha P. Andley; Zheng Song; Eric F. Wawrousek; Timothy P. Fleming; Steven Bassnett

αA- and αB-crystallins are molecular chaperones expressed at low levels in lens epithelial cells, and their expression increases dramatically during differentiation to lens fibers. However, the functions of αA- and αB-crystallins in lens epithelial cells have not been studied in detail. In this study, the relative ability of αA- and αB-crystallin, in protecting lens epithelial cells from apoptotic cell death was determined. The introduction of αA-crystallin in the transformed human lens epithelial (HLE) B-3 lens epithelial cell line (which expresses low endogenous levels of αB-crystallin) led to a nearly complete protection of cell death induced by staurosporine, Fas monoclonal antibody, or the cytokine tumor necrosis factor α. To further study the relative protective activities of αA- and αB-crystallins, we created a cell line derived from αA−/−αB−/− double knockout mouse lens epithelia by infecting primary cells with Ad12-SV40 hybrid virus. The transformed cell line αAαBKO1 derived from αA/αB double knockout cells was transfected with αA- or αB-crystallin cDNA contained in pCIneo mammalian expression vector. Cells expressing different amounts of either αA-crystallin or αB-crystallin were isolated. The ability of αA- or αB-crystallin to confer protection from apoptotic cell death was determined by annexin labeling and flow cytometry of staurosporine- or UVA- treated cells. The results indicate that the anti-apoptotic activity of αA-crystallin was two to three-fold higher than that of αB-crystallin. Our work suggests that comparing the in vitro annexin labeling of lens epithelial cells is an effective way to measure the protective activity of αA- and αB-crystallin. Since the expression of αA-crystallin is largely restricted to the lens, its greater protective effect against apoptosis suggests that it may play a significant role in protecting lens epithelial cells from stress.


Circulation Research | 2005

Intrasarcoplasmic Amyloidosis Impairs Proteolytic Function of Proteasomes in Cardiomyocytes by Compromising Substrate Uptake

Quanhai Chen; Jin Bao Liu; Kathleen M. Horak; Hanqiao Zheng; Asangi R. Kumarapeli; Jie Li; Faqian Li; A. Martin Gerdes; Eric F. Wawrousek; Xuejun Wang

The presence of increased ubiquitinated proteins and amyloid oligomers in failing human hearts strikingly resembles the characteristic pathology in the brain of many neurodegenerative diseases. The ubiquitin–proteasome system (UPS) is responsible for degradation of most cellular proteins and plays essential roles in virtually all cellular processes. UPS impairment by aberrant protein aggregation was previously shown in cell culture but remains to be demonstrated in intact animals. Mechanisms underlying the impairment are poorly understood. We report here that UPS proteolytic function is severely impaired in the heart of a mouse model of intrasarcoplasmic amyloidosis caused by cardiac-restricted expression of a human desmin–related myopathy-linked missense mutation of &agr;B-crystallin (CryABR120G). The UPS impairment was detected before cardiac hypertrophy, and failure became discernible, suggesting that defective protein turnover likely contributes to cardiac remodeling and failure in this model. Further analyses reveal that the impairment is likely attributable to insufficient delivery of substrate proteins into the 20S proteasomes, and depletion of key components of the 19S subcomplex may be responsible. The derangement is likely caused by aberrant protein aggregation rather than loss of function of the CryAB gene because UPS malfunction was not evident in CryAB-null hearts and inhibition of aberrant protein aggregation by Congo red or a heat shock protein significantly attenuated CryABR120G-induced UPS malfunction in cultured cardiomyocytes. Because of the central role of the UPS in cell regulation and the high intrasarcoplasmic amyloidosis prevalence in failing human hearts, our data suggest a novel pathogenic process in cardiac disorders with abnormal protein aggregation.


Blood | 2010

AlphaB crystallin regulation of angiogenesis by modulation of VEGF

Satoru Kase; Shikun He; Shozo Sonoda; Mizuki Kitamura; Christine Spee; Eric F. Wawrousek; Stephen J. Ryan; Ram Kannan; David R. Hinton

alphaB-crystallin is a chaperone belonging to the small heat shock protein family. Herein we show attenuation of intraocular angiogenesis in alphaB-crystallin knockout (alphaB-crystallin(-/-)) mice in 2 models of intraocular disease: oxygen-induced retinopathy and laser-induced choroidal neovascularization. Vascular endothelial growth factor A (VEGF-A) mRNA and hypoxia inducible factor-1alpha protein expression were induced during retinal angiogenesis, but VEGF-A protein expression remained low in alphaB-crystallin(-/-) retina versus wild-type mice, whereas VEGF-R2 expression was not affected. Both alphaB-crystallin and its phosphorylated serine59 formwere expressed, and immunoprecipitation revealed alphaB-crystallin binding to VEGF-A but not transforming growth factor-beta in cultured retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells. alphaB-crystallin and VEGF-A are colocalized in the endoplasmic reticulum in RPE cells under chemical hypoxia. alphaB-crystallin(-/-) RPE showed low VEGF-A secretion under serum-starved conditions compared with wild-type cells. VEGF-A is polyubiquitinated in control and alphaB-crystallin siRNA treated RPE; however, mono-tetra ubiquitinated VEGF-A increases with alphaB-crystallin knockdown. Endothelial cell apoptosis in newly formed vessels was greater in alphaB-crystallin(-/-) than wild-type mice. Proteasomal inhibition in alphaB-crystallin(-/-) mice partially restores VEGF-A secretion and angiogenic phenotype in choroidal neovascularization. Our studies indicate an important role for alphaB-crystallin as a chaperone for VEGF-A in angiogenesis and its potential as a therapeutic target.

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Igal Gery

National Institutes of Health

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Barbara P. Vistica

National Institutes of Health

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Guangpu Shi

National Institutes of Health

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Chi-Chao Chan

Washington University in St. Louis

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Joram Piatigorsky

National Institutes of Health

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Cuiyan Tan

National Institutes of Health

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Jun Chen

National Institutes of Health

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Stacey Hose

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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J. Samuel Zigler

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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C.-C. Chan

National Institutes of Health

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