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Dive into the research topics where Eugene Gregory is active.

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Featured researches published by Eugene Gregory.


Infection and Immunity | 2002

Acquisition of Regulators of Complement Activation by Streptococcus pyogenes Serotype M1

Vinod Pandiripally; Eugene Gregory; David Cue

ABSTRACT Opsonization of bacteria by complement proteins is an important component of the immune response. The pathogenic bacterium Streptococcus pyogenes has evolved multiple mechanisms for the evasion of complement-mediated opsonization. One mechanism involves the binding of human regulators of complement activation such as factor H (FH) and FH-like protein 1 (FHL-1). Acquisition of these regulatory proteins can limit deposition of the opsonin C3b on bacteria, thus decreasing the pathogens susceptibility to phagocytosis. Binding of complement regulatory proteins by S. pyogenes has previously been attributed to the streptococcal M and M-like proteins. Here, we report that the S. pyogenes cell surface protein Fba can mediate binding of FH and FHL-1. We constructed mutant derivatives of S. pyogenes that lack Fba, M1 protein, or both proteins and assayed the strains for FH binding, susceptibility to phagocytosis, and C3 deposition. Fba expression was found to be sufficient for binding of purified FH as well as for binding of FH and FHL-1 from human plasma. Plasma adsorption experiments also revealed that M1+ Fba+ streptococci preferentially bind FHL-1, whereas M1− Fba+ streptococci have similar affinities for FH and FHL-1. Fba was found to contribute to the survival of streptococci incubated with human blood and to inhibit C3 deposition on bacterial cells. Streptococci harvested from log-phase cultures readily bound FH, but binding was greatly reduced for bacteria obtained from stationary-phase cultures. Bacteria cultured in the presence of the protease inhibitor E64 maintained FH binding activity in stationary phase, suggesting that Fba is removed from the cell surface via proteolysis. Western analyses confirmed that E64 stabilizes cell surface expression of Fba. These data indicate that Fba is an antiopsonic, antiphagocytic protein that may be regulated by cell surface proteolysis.


FEBS Letters | 1994

Cross-linking of β-amyloid protein precursor catalysed by tissue transglutaminase

Gilbert J. Ho; Eugene Gregory; Irina V. Smirnova; Mikhail N. Zoubine; Barry W. Festoff

Alzheimers disease is characterized by progressive dementia, cortical atrophy with synaptic loss, and the accumulation of neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques containing β‐amyloid. The β‐amyloid protein precursor (β‐APP), may normally be involved in cell adhesion related to synaptic maintenance. Loss of synapses correlates with dementia, suggesting that synaptic deficits may underlie the disease. Synapse stability may depend on the action of tissue transglutaminase (tTG), an enzyme capable of crosslinking large, multi‐domain extracellular glycoproteins, that is active and present at synapses. We now show that β‐APP is a substrate for tTG in vitro that results in dimers and multimers by silver staining and immunoblotting. This novel post‐translational modification suggests further roles for β‐APP in synaptic function as well as in Alzheimers disease.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002

Neural Thrombin and Protease Nexin I Kinetics After Murine Peripheral Nerve Injury

Irina V. Smirnova; Jianxin Y. Ma; Bruce A. Citron; Keith T. Ratzlaff; Eugene Gregory; Mohammed Akaaboune; Barry W. Festoff

Abstract: We addressed the balance between thrombin and its serpin protease nexin I (PNI) after sciatic nerve injury in the mouse. Prothrombin levels increased twofold 24 h after nerve crush, as measured by a specific chromogenic assay, and peaked at day 3. Thrombin activity also increased 2–4 days after injury in distal sciatic nerve segments. Nerve RNA analysis using reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) assay confirmed that prothrombin was synthesized locally. We also monitored PNI levels in these injured nerve samples by complex formation with an 125I‐labeled target protease and found peak activity occurring later, 6–9 days after the thrombin induction. These data indicate that nerve injury first induces the synthesis of prothrombin, which is subsequently converted to active thrombin. Nerve crush‐induced thrombin is followed by the generation of functionally active PNI and may be directly responsible for its induction. By immunocytochemistry with anti‐PNI antibody, we found that activated Schwann cells were the source of induced PNI. These results support the concept that the balance between serine proteases and their serpins is dysregulated during nerve injury and suggests a role for its reestablishment in nerve damage repair.


Experimental Neurology | 2012

Effects of aging on blood brain barrier and matrix metalloproteases following controlled cortical impact in mice

Phil Lee; Jieun Kim; Rachel Williams; Rajat Sandhir; Eugene Gregory; William M. Brooks; Nancy E.J. Berman

Aging alters the ability of the brain to respond to injury. One of the major differences between the adult and aged brain is that comparable injuries lead to greater blood brain barrier disruption in the aged brain. The goals of these studies were to quantify the effects of age on BBB permeability using high field strength MRI T1 mapping and to determine whether activation of matrix metalloproteases, their inhibitors, or expression of blood brain barrier structural proteins, occludin, zonnula occludins-1 (ZO-1) and claudin-5 were altered following injury to the aged C57/BL6 mouse brain. T1 mapping studies revealed greater blood brain barrier permeability in the aged (21-24 months old) brain than in the adult (4-6 months old) following controlled cortical impact. The increased blood brain barrier permeability in the pericontusional region was confirmed with IgG immunohistochemistry. MMP-9 activity was increased following controlled cortical impact in the aged brain, and this was accompanied by increased MMP-9 gene expression. MMP-2 activity was higher in the uninjured aged brain than in the adult brain. Occludin and ZO-1 mRNA levels were unchanged following injury in either age group, but claudin-5 mRNA levels were lower in the aged than the adult brain following injury. These results demonstrate quantitative increases in blood brain barrier permeability in the aged brain following injury that are accompanied by increased MMP-9 activation and decreased blood brain barrier repair responses.


Headache | 2011

Sex Differences in Behavior and Expression of CGRP-Related Genes in a Rodent Model of Chronic Migraine

Nicholas L. Stucky; Eugene Gregory; Michelle K. Winter; Yong-Yue He; Eric S. Hamilton; Kenneth E. McCarson; Nancy E.J. Berman

(Headache 2011;51:674‐692)


Infection and Immunity | 2005

Impact of the SpeB Protease on Binding of the Complement Regulatory Proteins Factor H and Factor H-Like Protein 1 by Streptococcus pyogenes

Lin Wei; Vinod Pandiripally; Eugene Gregory; Micaya Clymer; David Cue

ABSTRACT Microbial pathogens often exploit human complement regulatory proteins such as factor H (FH) and factor H-like protein 1 (FHL-1) for immune evasion. Fba is an FH and FHL-1 binding protein expressed on the surface of the human pathogenic bacterium Streptococcus pyogenes, a common agent of pharyngeal, skin, and soft-tissue infections. Fba has been shown to contribute to phagocytosis resistance, intracellular invasion, and virulence in mice. Here, we look at the role of Fba in recruitment of FH and FHL-1 by five serotype M1 isolates of streptococci. Inactivation of fba greatly inhibited binding of FH and FHL-1 by all isolates, indicating that Fba is a major FH and FHL-1 binding factor of serotype M1 streptococci. For three isolates, FH binding was significantly reduced in stationary-phase cultures and correlated with high levels of protease activity and SpeB (an extracellular cysteine protease) protein in culture supernatants. Analysis of a speB mutant confirmed that SpeB accounts for the loss of Fba from the cell surface, suggesting that the protease may modulate FH and FHL-1 recruitment during infection. Comparisons of fba DNA sequences revealed that the FH and FHL-1 binding site in Fba is conserved among the M1 isolates. Although the ligand binding site is not strictly conserved in Fba from a serotype M49 isolate, the M49 Fba protein was found to bind both FH and FHL-1. Collectively, these data indicate that binding of FH and FHL-1 is a conserved function of Fba while modulation of Fba function by SpeB is variable.


Neurochemistry International | 2014

Differential response of miRNA-21 and its targets after traumatic brain injury in aging mice

Rajat Sandhir; Eugene Gregory; Nancy E.J. Berman

The present study investigated the possible role of miR-21, a miRNA that has known prosurvival function, in poor outcomes in the elderly following traumatic brain injury compared to adults. Controlled cortical impact injury was induced in adult (5-6 months) and aged (22-24 months) C57/BL6 mice. miR-21 and four of its targets (PDCD4, TIMP3, RECK, PTEN) were analyzed at 1, 3, 7 days post injury in samples of injured cortex using real-time PCR analysis. Basal miR-21 expression was higher in the aged brain than in the adult brain. In the adult brain, miR-21 expression increased in response to injury, with the maximum increase 24 hours after injury followed by a gradual decrease, returning to baseline 7 days post-injury. In contrast, in aged mice, miR21 showed no injury response, and expression of miR-21 target genes (PTEN, PDCD4, RECK, TIMP3) was up-regulated at all post injury time points, with a maximal increase at 24 hours post injury. Based on these results, we conclude that the diminished miR21 injury response in the aged brain leads to up-regulation of its targets, with the potential to contribute to the poor prognosis following TBI in aging brain. Therefore, strategies aimed at up-regulation of miR-21 and/or down regulation of its targets might be useful in improving outcomes in the elderly following TBI.


Toxicological Sciences | 2014

Exposure to Bisphenol A Exacerbates Migraine-Like Behaviors in a Multibehavior Model of Rat Migraine

Lydia M.M. Vermeer; Eugene Gregory; Michelle K. Winter; Kenneth E. McCarson; Nancy E.J. Berman

Migraine is a common and debilitating neurological disorder suffered worldwide. Women experience this condition 3 times more frequently than men, with estrogen strongly implicated to play a role. Bisphenol A (BPA), a highly prevalent xenoestrogen, is known to have estrogenic activity and may have an effect in migraine onset, intensity, and duration through estrogen receptor signaling. It was hypothesized that BPA exposure exacerbates migraine symptoms through estrogen signaling and downstream activation of nociception related pathways. Utilizing a multibehavior model of migraine in ovariectomized female rats, changes in locomotion, light and sound sensitivity, grooming, and acoustic startle were examined. Furthermore, changes in the expression of genes related to estrogen (ERα, GPR30), and nociception (extracellular signal regulated kinase, ERK, sodium gated channel, Nav1.8, and fatty acid amide hydrolase, FAAH) were studied following behavioral experiments. The following results were obtained: BPA treatment significantly exacerbated migraine-like behaviors in rats. Rats exposed to BPA demonstrated decreased locomotion, exacerbated light and sound aversion, altered grooming habits, and enhanced startle reflexes. Furthermore, BPA exposure increased mRNA expression of estrogen receptors, total ERK mRNA and ERK activation, as well as Nav1.8, and FAAH mRNA, indicative of altered estrogen signaling and altered nociception. These results show that BPA, an environmentally pervasive xenoestrogen, exacerbates migraine-like behavior in a rat model and alters expression of estrogen and nociception-related genes.


Neurochemistry International | 2000

Regulation of the dual function tissue transglutaminase/Gαh during murine neuromuscular development : gene and enzyme isoform expression

Bruce A. Citron; Eugene Gregory; D.S. Steigerwalt; F. Qin; Barry W. Festoff

Coagulation Factor XIII (F. VIII), a member of the transglutaminase (TGase) superfamily, is activated by thrombin, cross-links fibrin and stabilizes clots. Another member of this family, tissue TGase (tTG), having similar enzymatic activity, is implicated in neural development and synapse stabilization. Our previous studies indicated that synapse formation and maintenance at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) involved components of the coagulation cascade in development. Others then showed that either F. XIII or tTG were localized at NMJs in a developmentally-regulated fashion. In the current studies, we addressed the temporal course of skeletal muscle tTG gene expression and found maximal expression at birth and continuing into the immediate postnatal period. Subcellular fractionation revealed a relatively constant particulate isoform of TGase activity which predominated in early embryonic muscle development. In contrast, cytosolic TGase specific activity became the major isoform in the postnatal period. The timing of muscle TGase activity correlated well with expression of tTG mRNA and we now present novel data of Tgm 2 gene expression for tTG in skeletal muscle. Confirming and extending the previous studies, TGase becomes localized at NMJs in the early, further ramifying in the late, neonatal period. These data suggest that the early pulse of particulate activity could coincide with the period of myoblast cell death in embryonic muscle. On the other hand, the peak cytosolic TGase activity occurs in the neonatal period, correlating temporally with muscle prothrombin expression during activity-dependent synapse elimination and possibly the source of the enzyme localized to the NMJ extracellular matrix resulting in synaptic stabilization.


Neuroscience Letters | 2014

Neuroglobin overexpression improves sensorimotor outcomes in a mouse model of traumatic brain injury.

Jordan M. Taylor; Brian Kelley; Eugene Gregory; Nancy E.J. Berman

There is a significant need for novel treatments that will improve traumatic brain injury (TBI) outcomes. One potential neuroprotective mechanism is to increase oxygen binding proteins such as neuroglobin. Neuroglobin has a high affinity for oxygen, is an effective free radical scavenger, and is neuroprotective within the brain following hypoxia and ischemia. The purpose of this study was to determine whether neuroglobin overexpression improves sensorimotor outcomes following TBI in transgenic neuroglobin overexpressing (NGB) mice. Additional study aims were to determine if and when an endogenous neuroglobin response occurred following TBI in wild-type (WT) mice, and in what brain regions and cell types the response occurred. Controlled cortical impact (CCI) was performed in adult (5 month) C57/BL6 WT mice, and NGB mice constitutively overexpressing neuroglobin via the chicken beta actin promoter coupled with the cytomegalovirus distal enhancer. The gridwalk task was used for sensorimotor testing of both WT and NGB mice, prior to injury, and at 2, 3, and 7 days post-TBI. NGB mice displayed significant reductions in the average number of foot faults per minute walking at 2, 3, and 7 days post-TBI when compared to WT mice at each time point. Neuroglobin mRNA expression was assessed in the injured cortex of WT mice prior to injury, and at 1, 3, 7, and 14 days post-TBI using quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR). Neuroglobin mRNA was significantly increased at 7 days post-TBI. Immunostaining showed neuroglobin primarily localized to neurons and glial cells in the injured cortex and ipsilateral hippocampus of WT mice, while neuroglobin was present in all brain regions of NGB mice at 7 days post-TBI. These results showed that overexpression of neuroglobin reduced sensorimotor deficits following TBI, and that an endogenous increase in neuroglobin expression occurs during the subacute period. Increasing neuroglobin expression through novel therapeutic interventions during the acute period after TBI may improve recovery.

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