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Dive into the research topics where Gene I. Higashi is active.

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Featured researches published by Gene I. Higashi.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1989

Onchocerca volvulus heat shock protein 70 is a major immunogen in amicrofilaremic individuals from a filariasis-endemic area

Neil Rothstein; Gene I. Higashi; John Yates; Thiruchandurai V. Rajan

Infestation with organisms causing lymphatic filariasis (i.e. Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia malayi) results in a variety of clinical presentations. It is possible that some of the variation is due to differences in host response to parasite. To determine whether individuals who live in an endemic area but differ in their clinical manifestations respond to different filarial antigens, we screened Onchocerca volvulus expression libraries with sera from a number of individuals belonging to different clinical groups. The results of the study demonstrate that there are indeed differences in the recognition of three cloned filarial antigens and that this differential recognition is related to clinical symptomatology. The most striking finding is that an Onchocerca volvulus protein homologous to the 70 kDa Xenopus laevis heat shock protein is primarily recognized by individuals who are amicrofilaremic. Further analysis is required to determine whether these antigens play any role in the pathogenesis of filarial infection or have any potential value in protective immunity.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1984

Role of Lipoxygenase Products in Murine Pulmonary Granuloma Formation

Steven L. Kunkel; Stephen W. Chensue; C. Mouton; Gene I. Higashi

Various arachidonic acid (AA) metabolites are known to regulate immune cell function(s) and dictate the progression of both acute and chronic inflammatory reactions. Using a model of Schistosoma mansoni egg-induced hypersensitivity granulomas, we have delineated the in vivo effects of inhibitors of cyclooxygenase (CO) and lipoxygenase (LO) pathways on granuloma development and granuloma macrophage I-region-associated (Ia) antigen expression. In addition, by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) we have profiled the metabolism of AA by macrophages that are isolated from granulomatous foci, and have biochemically characterized the in vitro specificity and activity of selected CO and LO inhibitors. The development of hypersensitivity-type pulmonary granulomas in mice was dramatically suppressed by inhibitors with anti-LO activity (nordihydroguairetic acid (NDGA), nafazatrom, and BW755c) in a dose-dependent manner, while indomethacin, which is primarily CO-selective, had no significant effect. Furthermore, NDGA and nafazatrom profoundly arrested the normal progression of preformed granulomatous lesions. The inhibitors of the LO pathway also suppressed the in vivo kinetics of Ia antigen expression by granuloma macrophages. In contrast, indomethacin augmented Ia-antigen expression. The major AA metabolites that were synthesized by the granuloma macrophages were shown to be leukotriene C4 and mono-hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids. HPLC analysis of AA metabolites from granuloma macrophages that were treated with the various inhibitors confirmed that indomethacin was most CO-selective and NDGA most LO-selective. Nafazatrom and BW755c inhibited AA metabolism by both pathways. Notably, high concentrations of the compounds (5 X 10(-5) M) tended to suppress all products. Our results suggest that LO products may be important in the generation and maintenance of immune granulomatous inflammatory responses.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1989

Differential recognition of two cloned Brugia malayi antigens by antibody class

Craig Werner; Gene I. Higashi; Jon A. Yates; Thiruchandurai V. Rajan

The humoral and cellular immune response to filarial parasites is complex. Numerous studies have shown that antibodies to a large number of protein and non-protein antigens may be produced over the course of infection and that immune recognition of any given antigen may vary by disease manifestation and by immunoglobulin class. We have used the techniques of molecular cloning to attempt to dissect this complex interaction, and describe here two clones, isolated from an expression library constructed from Brugia malayi genomic DNA, whose products are recognized by distinct immunoglobulin classes. A lambda gt11 fusion protein containing part of the B. malayi myosin tail region is recognized by antibodies of the IgG class from a high percentage of bancroftian filariasis patients. A fusion protein containing a collagen-like sequence is less frequently and weakly recognized under the same experimental conditions, but is almost universally recognized when the developing reagent is specific for IgE. We thus identify specific filarial proteins against which the infected human host responds preferentially with antibodies of a specific immunoglobulin class.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1984

Role of oxygen reactive species in Schistosoma mansoni egg-induced granulomatous inflammation

Stephen W. Chensue; L. Quinlan; Gene I. Higashi; Steven L. Kunkel

The role of oxygen reactive species in granulomatous hypersensitivity was explored using a model of pulmonary granulomas induced by intravenous injection of eggs from the parasite Schistosoma mansoni. Macrophages from sychronously developing lesions spontaneously released significant quantities of superoxide anion (26 nmoles/10(6)/2h) by 8 days of development. In contrast, the non-T cell foreign body (Sephadex bead) granuloma macrophages produced only (2 nmoles/10(6)/2h) small quantities. Daily administration of the oxygen scavenger, alpha-tocopherol, by either oral or parenteral routes caused up to 60% suppression of granuloma size. Moreover, parenteral administration of specific inactivators of 0-2 and H2O2, superoxide dismutase and catalase respectively, resulted in a 30 to 40% reduction in granuloma size. These data suggest that oxygen reactive species take part in the generation of hypersensitivity granulomas.


Cellular Immunology | 1986

Species-dependent regulation of monocyte/macrophage Ia antigen expression and antigen presentation by prostaglandin E

Steven L. Kunkel; Darrell A. Campbell; Stephen W. Chensue; Gene I. Higashi

The expression of Ia antigen by various murine and human macrophage populations and the ability of prostaglandins of the E series to regulate Ia antigen expression were explored. Monocytes and macrophages from human and murine populations demonstrated a dichotomy in the expression of Ia antigen. Both human monocytes and macrophages expressed elevated levels of Ia antigen compared to their murine counterpart. Murine macrophages appear to express elevated levels of Ia antigen only when actively interacting with T lymphocytes in vivo or with lymphokines in vitro. Prostaglandins of the E series can suppress murine macrophage Ia antigen expression, but have little effect on the expression of Ia antigen by human monocytes and macrophages. Also, prostaglandins of the E series do not modulate the ability of human monocytes to present antigen to autologous lymphocytes when studied over a broad concentration range. These data suggest that prostaglandin E compounds do not profoundly affect human monocyte/macrophage Ia antigen expression or human monocyte antigen presenting activity.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 1985

Dynamics of arachidonic acid metabolism in macrophages from delayed-type hypersensitivity (Schistosoma mansoni egg) and foreign-body-type granulomas.

Stephen W. Chensue; Denise A. Ellul; Mary Spengler; Gene I. Higashi; Steven L. Kunkel

The present study examines the kinetics of arachidonic acid (AA) metabolism by murine macrophages isolated from sites of experimentally induced pulmonary granulomatous inflammation. Macrophages of T‐cell‐mediated hypersensitivity lesions induced by Schistosoma mansoni eggs (SE‐GM) and non‐T‐cell‐mediated foreign‐body‐type lesions (FB‐GM) induced by Sephadex beads were examined. Overall, macrophages from both types of lesions produced mainly lipoxygenase pathway metabolites, leukotrienes, and monohydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids (mono‐HETEs). Early after induction (4 days [4D]), SE‐GM showed an augmented zymosan‐stimulated AA release and metabolism compared to resident peritoneal macrophages. Macrophages from mature lesions (8–32D) showed constitutive synthesis of metabolites and were refractory to zymosan stimulation. Both SE‐GM and FB‐GM showed augmented AA uptake incorporating a large proportion into neutral lipids. A direct comparison of SE‐GM and FB‐GM revealed that the T‐cell‐mediated lesion produced lesser amounts of prostaglandins and leukotrienes and showed reduced incorporation of AA into phosphatidylcholine. These data suggest that AA metabolism by granuloma macrophages is sequentially modified during recruitment and activation at sites of chronic inflammation.


Experimental Parasitology | 1992

Schistosoma mansoni: Silver ion (Ag+) stimulates and reversibly inhibits lipid-induced cercarial penetration

Christopher L. King; Gene I. Higashi

Certain long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids (FA) found on mammalian skin trigger cercariae to penetrate and transform into schistosomules; however, the mechanism by which FAs stimulate cercariae is unknown. In order to determine whether argentophilic papillae concentrated at the apical region of the cercariae are the chemoreceptors that may mediate cercarial response to FAs, an assay assessed the proportion of cercariae that penetrated a 0.25% agar matrix in the presence (61%) and the absence (2.3%) of linolenic acid at 0.22 mM. Silver nitrate (Ag+) which selectively binds to cercarial papillae (Short and Cartrett, J. Parasitol. 59, 1041, 1973) is nontoxic (at 0.09 mM used in this study) as demonstrated by the ability of Ag+ treated cercariae to mature successfully into adult worms (8.8% maturation compared to 10.2% of untreated controls, n = 5) after subcutaneous injection. When Ag+ was added to cercarial suspensions, penetration into linolenic-impregnated agar was significantly inhibited (80.8%). Washing cercariae free of Ag+ reversed this inhibition. These data, as well as observations that both argentophilic papillae and cercarial response to FAs disappeared within 3 to 4 hr after mechanical conversion to schistosomules, implicate argentophilic papillae on cercariae as chemoreceptors for lipid stimulation.


American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | 1985

Brugia Malayi: Vaccination of Jirds with 60Cobalt-Attenuated Infective Stage Larvae Protects against Homologous Challenge

Jon A. Yates; Gene I. Higashi


Infection and Immunity | 1983

Production of superoxide anion, prostaglandins, and hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acids by macrophages from hypersensitivity-type (Schistosoma mansoni egg) and foreign body-type granulomas

Stephen W. Chensue; Steven L. Kunkel; Gene I. Higashi; Peter A. Ward; D L Boros


American Journal of Pathology | 1984

Macrophage function in the Schistosoma mansoni egg-induced pulmonary granuloma. Role of arachidonic acid metabolites in macrophage Ia antigen expression.

Steven L. Kunkel; Stephen W. Chensue; M. Plewa; Gene I. Higashi

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Stephen W. Chensue

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Jon A. Yates

University of Rochester

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C. Mouton

University of Michigan

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L. Quinlan

University of Michigan

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Thiruchandurai V. Rajan

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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