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Dive into the research topics where Fatima Banine is active.

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Featured researches published by Fatima Banine.


Nature Medicine | 2005

Hyaluronan accumulates in demyelinated lesions and inhibits oligodendrocyte progenitor maturation

Stephen A. Back; Therese M.F. Tuohy; Hanqin Chen; Nicholas Wallingford; Andrew Craig; Jaime Struve; Ning Ling Luo; Fatima Banine; Ying Liu; Ansi Chang; Bruce D. Trapp; Bruce F. Bebo; Mahendra S. Rao; Larry S. Sherman

Demyelination is the hallmark of numerous neurodegenerative conditions, including multiple sclerosis. Oligodendrocyte progenitors (OPCs), which normally mature into myelin-forming oligodendrocytes, are typically present around demyelinated lesions but do not remyelinate affected axons. Here, we find that the glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan accumulates in demyelinated lesions from individuals with multiple sclerosis and in mice with experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis. A high molecular weight (HMW) form of hyaluronan synthesized by astrocytes accumulates in chronic demyelinated lesions. This form of hyaluronan inhibits remyelination after lysolecithin-induced white matter demyelination. OPCs accrue and do not mature into myelin-forming cells in demyelinating lesions where HMW hyaluronan is present. Furthermore, the addition of HMW hyaluronan to OPC cultures reversibly inhibits progenitor-cell maturation, whereas degrading hyaluronan in astrocyte-OPC cocultures promotes oligodendrocyte maturation. HMW hyaluronan may therefore contribute substantially to remyelination failure by preventing the maturation of OPCs that are recruited to demyelinating lesions.


Annals of Neurology | 2013

Digestion products of the PH20 hyaluronidase inhibit remyelination

Marnie Preston; Xi Gong; Weiping Su; Steven G. Matsumoto; Fatima Banine; Clayton W. Winkler; Scott Foster; Rubing Xing; Jaime Struve; Justin Dean; Bruce Baggenstoss; Paul H. Weigel; Thomas J. Montine; Stephen A. Back; Larry S. Sherman

Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs) recruited to demyelinating lesions often fail to mature into oligodendrocytes (OLs) that remyelinate spared axons. The glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA) accumulates in demyelinating lesions and has been implicated in the failure of OPC maturation and remyelination. We tested the hypothesis that OPCs in demyelinating lesions express a specific hyaluronidase, and that digestion products of this enzyme inhibit OPC maturation.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2012

Astrocytes in aged nonhuman primate brain gray matter synthesize excess hyaluronan

Robert Cargill; Steven G. Kohama; Jaime Struve; Weiping Su; Fatima Banine; Ellen Witkowski; Stephen A. Back; Larry S. Sherman

The glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA) accumulates in central nervous system lesions where it limits astrogliosis but also inhibits oligodendrocyte progenitor cell (OPC) maturation. The role of hyaluronan in normative brain aging has not been previously investigated. Here, we tested the hypothesis that HA accumulates in the aging nonhuman primate brain. We found that HA levels significantly increase with age in the gray matter of rhesus macaques. HA accumulation was linked to age-related increases in the transcription of HA synthase-1 (HAS1) expressed by reactive astrocytes but not changes in the expression of other HAS genes or hyaluronidases. HA accumulation was accompanied by increased expression of CD44, a transmembrane HA receptor. Areas of gray matter with elevated HA in older animals demonstrated increased numbers of olig2(+) OPCs, consistent with the notion that HA may influence OPC expansion or maturation. Collectively, these data indicate that HAS1 and CD44 are transcriptionally upregulated in astrocytes during normative aging and are linked to HA accumulation in gray matter.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Hyaluronan Anchored to Activated CD44 on Central Nervous System Vascular Endothelial Cells Promotes Lymphocyte Extravasation in Experimental Autoimmune Encephalomyelitis

Clayton W. Winkler; Scott Foster; Steven G. Matsumoto; Marnie Preston; Rubing Xing; Bruce F. Bebo; Fatima Banine; Michelle A. Berny-Lang; Asako Itakura; Owen J. T. McCarty; Larry S. Sherman

Background: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a demyelinating disease involving lymphocyte infiltration into the central nervous system (CNS). Results: The glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA), anchored to brain blood vessels via the CD44 receptor, facilitates lymphocyte binding to vessels and CNS infiltration. Conclusion: HA-CD44 interactions on brain endothelial cells facilitate the initiation of inflammatory demyelinating disease. Significance: Findings elucidate mechanisms promoting lymphocyte rolling in inflammatory CNS diseases. The extravasation of lymphocytes across central nervous system (CNS) vascular endothelium is a key step in inflammatory demyelinating diseases including multiple sclerosis (MS) and experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). The glycosaminoglycan hyaluronan (HA) and its receptor, CD44, have been implicated in this process but their precise roles are unclear. We find that CD44−/− mice have a delayed onset of EAE compared with wild type animals. Using an in vitro lymphocyte rolling assay, we find that fewer slow rolling (<1 μm/s) wild type (WT) activated lymphocytes interact with CD44−/− brain vascular endothelial cells (ECs) than with WT ECs. We also find that CD44−/− ECs fail to anchor HA to their surfaces, and that slow rolling lymphocyte interactions with WT ECs are inhibited when the ECs are treated with a pegylated form of the PH20 hyaluronidase (PEG-PH20). Subcutaneous injection of PEG-PH20 delays the onset of EAE symptoms by ∼1 day and transiently ameliorates symptoms for 2 days following disease onset. These improved symptoms correspond histologically to degradation of HA in the lumen of CNS blood vessels, decreased demyelination, and impaired CD4+ T-cell extravasation. Collectively these data suggest that HA tethered to CD44 on CNS ECs is critical for the extravasation of activated T cells into the CNS providing new insight into the mechanisms promoting inflammatory demyelinating disease.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2011

Brain region-specific expression of Fxyd1, an Mecp2 target gene, is regulated by epigenetic mechanisms.

Fatima Banine; Valerie Matagne; Larry S. Sherman; Sergio R. Ojeda

Fxyd1 encodes a trans‐membrane protein that modulates Na+,K+‐ATPase activity and is a substrate for multiple protein kinases. Fxyd1 expression is repressed by methyl CpG‐binding protein 2 (Mecp2) in the frontal cortex (FC) but not in the cerebellum (CB) of the mouse brain. Consistently with these observations, FXYD1 mRNA abundance is increased in the FC of Rett syndrome (RTT) patients with MECP2 mutations. Because Fxyd1 is implicated in the regulation of neuronal excitability, understanding how Fxyd1 expression is controlled is important. Here we report that basal expression of Fxyd1a and Fxyd1b, the two main alternatively spliced forms of Fxyd1 mRNA, is lower in the FC than in the CB. This difference is accompanied by increased Mecp2 recruitment to the promoter region of these two Fxyd1 mRNA forms. DNA methylation of both promoters is more frequent in the FC than in the CB, and in both cases the most frequently methylated CpG dinucleotides are adjacent to [A/T]4 sequences required for high‐affinity Mecp2 binding. Consistently with these features of epigenetic silencing, histone 3 acetylated at lysines 9 and 14 (H3K9/14ac) and histone 3 methylated at lysine 4 (H3K4me3), both activating histone marks, were associated with the Fxyd1 promoter to a lesser degree in the FC than in the CB. These results indicate that differential Fxyd1 expression in these two brain regions is, at least in part, regulated by an epigenetic mechanism involving increased DNA methylation of the two alternative Fxyd1 promoters, enhanced Mecp2 recruitment, and reduced association of activating histones.


Developmental Biology | 2016

Brg1 directly regulates Olig2 transcription and is required for oligodendrocyte progenitor cell specification

Steven G. Matsumoto; Fatima Banine; Kerstin Feistel; Scott Foster; Rubing Xing; Jaime Struve; Larry S. Sherman

The Olig2 basic-helix-loop-helix transcription factor promotes oligodendrocyte specification in early neural progenitor cells (NPCs), including radial glial cells, in part by recruiting SWI/SNF chromatin remodeling complexes to the enhancers of genes involved in oligodendrocyte differentiation. How Olig2 expression is regulated during oligodendrogliogenesis is not clear. Here, we find that the Brg1 subunit of SWI/SNF complexes interacts with a proximal Olig2 promoter and represses Olig2 transcription in the mouse cortex at E14, when oligodendrocyte progenitors (OPCs) are not yet found in this location. Brg1 does not interact with the Olig2 promoter in the E14 ganglionic eminence, where NPCs differentiate into Olig2-positive OPCs. Consistent with these findings, Brg1-null NPCs demonstrate precocious expression of Olig2 in the cortex. However, these cells fail to differentiate into OPCs. We further find that Brg1 is necessary for neuroepithelial-to-radial glial cell transition, but not neuronal differentiation despite a reduction in expression of the pro-neural transcription factor Pax6. Collectively, these and earlier findings support a model whereby Brg1 promotes neurogenic radial glial progenitor cell specification but is dispensable for neuronal differentiation. Concurrently, Brg1 represses Olig2 expression and the specification of OPCs, but is required for OPC differentiation and oligodendrocyte maturation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2018

A TLR/AKT/FoxO3 immune tolerance–like pathway disrupts the repair capacity of oligodendrocyte progenitors

Taasin Srivastava; Parham Diba; Justin Dean; Fatima Banine; Daniel Shaver; Matthew Hagen; Xi Gong; Weiping Su; Ben Emery; Daniel L. Marks; Edward N. Harris; Bruce Baggenstoss; Paul H. Weigel; Larry S. Sherman; Stephen A. Back

Cerebral white matter injury (WMI) persistently disrupts myelin regeneration by oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs). We identified a specific bioactive hyaluronan fragment (bHAf) that downregulates myelin gene expression and chronically blocks OPC maturation and myelination via a tolerance-like mechanism that dysregulates pro-myelination signaling via AKT. Desensitization of AKT occurs via TLR4 but not TLR2 or CD44. OPC differentiation was selectively blocked by bHAf in a maturation-dependent fashion at the late OPC (preOL) stage by a noncanonical TLR4/TRIF pathway that induced persistent activation of the FoxO3 transcription factor downstream of AKT. Activated FoxO3 selectively localized to oligodendrocyte lineage cells in white matter lesions from human preterm neonates and adults with multiple sclerosis. FoxO3 constraint of OPC maturation was bHAf dependent, and involved interactions at the FoxO3 and MBP promoters with the chromatin remodeling factor Brg1 and the transcription factor Olig2, which regulate OPC differentiation. WMI has adapted an immune tolerance–like mechanism whereby persistent engagement of TLR4 by bHAf promotes an OPC niche at the expense of myelination by engaging a FoxO3 signaling pathway that chronically constrains OPC differentiation.


International Journal of Cancer | 2013

Establishment and characterization of MRT cell lines from genetically engineered mouse models and the influence of genetic background on their development

Yasumichi Kuwahara; E. Lorena Mora-Blanco; Fatima Banine; Arlin B. Rogers; Christopher D. M. Fletcher; Larry S. Sherman; Charles W. M. Roberts; Bernard E. Weissman

Malignant rhabdoid tumors (MRTs) are rare, aggressive cancers occuring in young children primarily through inactivation of the SNF5(INI1, SMARCB1) tumor suppressor gene. We and others have demonstrated that mice heterozygous for a Snf5 null allele develop MRTs with partial penetrance. We have also shown that Snf5+/− mice that lack expression of the pRb family, due to TgT121 transgene expression, develop MRTs with increased penetrance and decreased latency. Here, we report that altering the genetic background has substantial effects upon MRT development in Snf5+/−‐ and TgT121;Snf5+/− mice, with a mixed F1 background resulting in increased latency and the appearance of brain tumors. We also report the establishment of the first mouse MRT cell lines that recapitulate many features of their human counterparts. Our studies provide further insight into the genetic influences on MRT development as well as provide valuable new cell culture and genetically engineered mouse models for the study of CNS‐MRT etiology.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2007

FXYD1 is an MeCP2 target gene overexpressed in the brains of Rett syndrome patients and Mecp2-null mice.

Vivianne Deng; Valerie Matagne; Fatima Banine; Matthew Frerking; Patricia Ohliger; Sarojini Budden; Jonathan Pevsner; Gregory A. Dissen; Larry S. Sherman; Sergio R. Ojeda


Developmental Biology | 2006

Brg1 is required for murine neural stem cell maintenance and gliogenesis

Steven G. Matsumoto; Fatima Banine; Jaime Struve; Rubing Xing; Chris Adams; Ying Liu; Daniel Metzger; Pierre Chambon; Mahendra S. Rao; Larry S. Sherman

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Larry S. Sherman

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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Jaime Struve

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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Weiping Su

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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Bernard E. Weissman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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