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Dive into the research topics where Fabio V. Fonseca is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabio V. Fonseca.


Blood | 2012

A novel pathway for human endothelial cell activation by antiphospholipid/anti-β2 glycoprotein I antibodies

Kristi L. Allen; Fabio V. Fonseca; Venkaiah Betapudi; Belinda Willard; Jainwei Zhang; Keith R. McCrae

Antiphospholipid Abs (APLAs) are associated with thrombosis and recurrent fetal loss. These Abs are primarily directed against phospholipid-binding proteins, particularly β(2)GPI, and activate endothelial cells (ECs) in a β(2)GPI-dependent manner after binding of β(2)GPI to EC annexin A2. Because annexin A2 is not a transmembrane protein, the mechanisms of APLA/anti-β(2)GPI Ab-mediated EC activation are uncertain, although a role for a TLR4/myeloid differentiation factor 88-dependent pathway leading to activation of NF-κB has been proposed. In the present study, we confirm a critical role for TLR4 in anti-β(2)GPI Ab-mediated EC activation and demonstrate that signaling through TLR4 is mediated through the assembly of a multiprotein signaling complex on the EC surface that includes annexin A2, TLR4, calreticulin, and nucleolin. An essential role for each of these proteins in cell activation is suggested by the fact that inhibiting the expression of each using specific siRNAs blocked EC activation mediated by APLAs/anti-β(2)GPI Abs. These results provide new evidence for novel protein-protein interactions on ECs that may contribute to EC activation and the pathogenesis of APLA/anti-β(2)GPI-associated thrombosis and suggest potential new targets for therapeutic intervention in antiphospholipid syndrome.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2010

Shear stress stimulates nitric oxide signaling in pulmonary arterial endothelial cells via a reduction in catalase activity: role of protein kinase Cδ

Sanjiv Kumar; Neetu Sud; Fabio V. Fonseca; Yali Hou; Stephen M. Black

Previous studies have indicated that acute increases in shear stress can stimulate endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) activity through increased PI3 kinase/Akt signaling and phosphorylation of Ser1177. However, the mechanism by which shear stress activates this pathway has not been adequately resolved nor has the potential role of reactive oxygen species (ROS) been evaluated. Thus, the purpose of this study was to determine if shear-mediated increases in ROS play a role in stimulating Ser1177 phosphorylation and NO signaling in pulmonary arterial endothelial cells (PAEC) exposed to acute increases in shear stress. Our initial studies demonstrated that although shear stress did not increase superoxide levels in PAEC, there was an increase in H2O2 levels. The increases in H2O2 were associated with a decrease in catalase activity but not protein levels. In addition, we found that acute shear stress caused an increase in eNOS phosphorylation at Ser1177 phosphorylation and a decrease in phosphorylation at Thr495. We also found that the overexpression of catalase significantly attenuated the shear-mediated increases in H2O2, phospho-Ser1177 eNOS, and NO generation. Further investigation identified a decrease in PKCdelta activity in response to shear stress, and the overexpression of PKCdelta attenuated the shear-mediated decrease in Thr495 phosphorylation and the increase in NO generation, and this led to increased eNOS uncoupling. PKCdelta overexpression also attenuated Ser1177 phosphorylation through a posttranslational increase in catalase activity, mediated via a serine phosphorylation event, reducing shear-mediated increases in H2O2. Together, our data indicate that shear stress decreases PKCdelta activity, altering the phosphorylation pattern catalase, leading to decreased catalase activity and increased H2O2 signaling, and this in turn leads to increases in phosphorylation of eNOS at Ser1177 and NO generation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

β-Actin Association with Endothelial Nitric-oxide Synthase Modulates Nitric Oxide and Superoxide Generation from the Enzyme

Dmitry Kondrikov; Fabio V. Fonseca; Shawn Elms; David Fulton; Steven M. Black; Edward R. Block; Yunchao Su

Protein-protein interactions represent an important post-translational mechanism for endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) regulation. We have previously reported that β-actin is associated with eNOS oxygenase domain and that association of eNOS with β-actin increases eNOS activity and nitric oxide (NO) production. In the present study, we found that β-actin-induced increase in NO production was accompanied by decrease in superoxide formation. A synthetic actin-binding sequence (ABS) peptide 326 with amino acid sequence corresponding to residues 326–333 of human eNOS, one of the putative ABSs, specifically bound to β-actin and prevented eNOS association with β-actin in vitro. Peptide 326 also prevented β-actin-induced decrease in superoxide formation and increase in NO and l-citrulline production. A modified peptide 326 replacing hydrophobic amino acids leucine and tryptophan with neutral alanine was unable to interfere with eNOS-β-actin binding and to prevent β-actin-induced changes in NO and superoxide formation. Site-directed mutagenesis of the actin-binding domain of eNOS replacing leucine and tryptophan with alanine yielded an eNOS mutant that exhibited reduced eNOS-β-actin association, decreased NO production, and increased superoxide formation in COS-7 cells. Disruption of eNOS-β-actin interaction in endothelial cells using ABS peptide 326 resulted in decreased NO production, increased superoxide formation, and decreased endothelial monolayer wound repair, which was prevented by PEG-SOD and NO donor NOC-18. Taken together, this novel finding indicates that β-actin binding to eNOS through residues 326–333 in the eNOS protein results in shifting the enzymatic activity from superoxide formation toward NO production. Modulation of NO and superoxide formation from eNOS by β-actin plays an important role in endothelial function.


Thrombosis Research | 2015

Circulating microparticles in patients with antiphospholipid antibodies: Characterization and associations

Shruti Chaturvedi; Erin Cockrell; Ricardo Espinola; Linda Hsi; Stacey Fulton; M.K. Khan; Liang Li; Fabio V. Fonseca; Suman Kundu; Keith R. McCrae

The antiphospholipid syndrome is characterized by venous or arterial thrombosis and/or recurrent fetal loss in the presence of circulating antiphospholipid antibodies. These antibodies cause activation of endothelial and other cell types leading to the release of microparticles with procoagulant and pro-inflammatory properties. The aims of this study were to characterize the levels of endothelial cell, monocyte or platelet derived, and tissue factor-bearing microparticles in patients with antiphospholipid antibodies, to determine the association of circulating microparticles with anticardiolipin and anti-β2-glycoprotein antibodies, and to define the cellular origin of microparticles that express tissue factor. Microparticle content within citrated blood from 47 patients with antiphospholipid antibodies and 144 healthy controls was analyzed within 2hours of venipuncture. Levels of Annexin-V, CD105 and CD144 (endothelial derived), CD41 (platelet derived) and tissue factor positive microparticles were significantly higher in patients than controls. Though levels of CD14 (monocyte-derived) microparticles in patient plasma were not significantly increased, increased levels of CD14 and tissue factor positive microparticles were observed in patients. Levels of microparticles that stained for CD105 and CD144 showed a positive correlation with IgG (R=0.60, p=0.006) and IgM anti-beta2-glycoprotein I antibodies (R=0.58, p=0.006). The elevation of endothelial and platelet derived microparticles in patients with antiphospholipid antibodies and their correlation with anti-β2-glycoprotein I antibodies suggests a chronic state of vascular cell activation in these individuals and an important role for β2-glycoprotein I in development of the pro-thrombotic state associated with antiphospholipid antibodies.


DNA and Cell Biology | 2010

Mass Spectroscopy and Molecular Modeling Predict Endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase Dimer Collapse by Hydrogen Peroxide Through Zinc Tetrathiolate Metal-Binding Site Disruption

Fabio V. Fonseca; Kandasamy Ravi; Dean A. Wiseman; Monorama Tummala; Cynthia Harmon; Victor Ryzhov; Jeffrey R. Fineman; Stephen M. Black

Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is inhibited by hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)), but the mechanism has not been determined. Thus, the purpose of this study was to delineate the mechanism by which H(2)O(2) inhibits eNOS activity. Using mass spectroscopy, we found that the tetrathiolate cysteine residues 94 and 99 were susceptible to oxidation by H(2)O(2). Molecular modeling predicted that these cysteic acid modifications would disrupt the van der Waals interactions and the hydrogen bonding network mediated by the tetrathiolate cysteines 94 and 99 resulting in changes in quaternary structure, zinc release, and dimer collapse. Using recombinant human eNOS (heNOS) to test the predictions of the molecular modeling we found that H(2)O(2) caused disruption of the heNOS dimer and this was accompanied by zinc release and decreased NO generation. We also found that H(2)O(2) increased the oxidation of tetrahydrobiopterin (BH(4)) to dihydrobiopterin (BH(2)), whereas preincubation of heNOS with excess BH(4) prevented the destruction of zinc tetrathiolate and dimer collapse and preserved activity. Interestingly, we found that the dimmer-stabilizing effect of BH(4) is due to its ability to act as a catalase mimetic. Further, we confirmed that, in ovine aortic endothelial cells, H(2)O(2) could also induce dimer collapse and that increasing cellular BH(4) levels could maintain eNOS in its dimeric form and NO signaling when cells were challenged with H(2)O(2). This study links the inhibitory action of H(2)O(2) on heNOS through the destruction of zinc tetrathiolate metal-binding site and dimer collapse both in vitro and in vivo.


European Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 2008

Identification of the tyrosine nitration sites in human endothelial nitric oxide synthase by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry

Michael A. Zickus; Fabio V. Fonseca; Monorama Tummala; Stephen M. Black; Victor Ryzhov

The formation of nitric oxide (NO) in biological systems has led to the discovery of a number of post-translational protein modifications that can affect biological conditions such as vasodilation. Studies both from our laboratory and others have shown that beside its effect on cGMP generation from soluble guanylate cylcase, NO can produce protein modifications through both S-nitrosylation of cysteine residues. Previously, we have identified the potential S-nitrosylation sites on endothelial NO synthase (eNOS). Thus, the goal of this study was to further increase our understanding of reactive nitrogen protein modifications of eNOS by identifing tyrosine residues within eNOS that are susceptible to nitration in vitro. To accomplish this, nitration was carried out using tetranitromethane followed by tryptic digest of the protein. The resulting tryptic peptides were analyzed by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (LC/MS) and the position of nitrated tyrosines in eNOS were identified. The eNOS sequence contains 30 tyrosine residues and our data indicate that multiple tyrosine residues are capable of being nitrated. We could identify 25 of the 30 residues in our tryptic digests and 19 of these were susceptible to nitration. Interstingly, our data identified four tyrosine residues that can be modified by nitration that are located in the region of eNOS responsible for the binding to heat shock protein 90 (Hsp90), which is responsible for ensuring efficient coupling of eNOS.


Journal of Endocrinology | 2011

eNOS activation and NO function: Structural motifs responsible for the posttranslational control of endothelial nitric oxide synthase activity

Ruslan Rafikov; Fabio V. Fonseca; Sanjiv Kumar; Daniel Pardo; Charles Darragh; Shawn Elms; David Fulton; Stephen M. Black


Blood | 2010

Antiphospholipid/Anti-β 2 gpi Antibodies Induce Endothelial Cell Activation through Formation of a Multi-Protein Signaling Complex Consisting of Annexin A2, Toll-Like Receptor 4, Calreticulin and Nucleolin

Fabio V. Fonseca; Kristi L. Allen; Keith R. McCrae


Archive | 2012

glycoprotein I antibodies 2 β antiphospholipid/anti- A novel pathway for human endothelial cell activation by

Kristi L. Allen; Fabio V. Fonseca; Venkaiah Betapudi; Belinda Willard; Jainwei Zhang; R and Keith


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2010

Basic Amino Acid Residues Within (aa105-125) eNOS Region are Responsible for the “Flexible Arm” Movement and the Inhibition of ZnS4 Mutants

Ruslan Rafikov; Fabio V. Fonseca; Sanjiv Kumar; Shawn Elms; David Fulton; Stephen M. Black

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David Fulton

Georgia Regents University

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Sanjiv Kumar

Georgia Regents University

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Shawn Elms

Georgia Regents University

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Jainwei Zhang

Case Western Reserve University

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Monorama Tummala

Northern Illinois University

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