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Dive into the research topics where Glen Humphrey is active.

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Featured researches published by Glen Humphrey.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2010

Fluorescent-labeled antibodies: Balancing functionality and degree of labeling.

Shaleen Vira; Elena Mekhedov; Glen Humphrey; Paul S. Blank

A critical assumption in using labeled antibodies is that the conjugation reaction has no deleterious effects on antibody avidity. This study demonstrates that this assumption need not hold true and presents a methodology to quantitatively determine the degree of inactivation and/or changes in antibody-antigen binding that can occur with conjugation. Fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) was conjugated to a mouse monoclonal antibody, Fc125, against hemagglutinin (HA) using varying fluorophore/protein (F:P) labeling ratios. Antibody binding, as a function of the F:P labeling ratio, was evaluated using a kinetic enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and analyzed using global fitting. A two-parameter adjustment of the antibody concentration and the maximum rate was sufficient to describe the rate changes. The concentration parameter dominated the rate changes, consistent with the hypothesis that the coupling reaction inactivated an increasing fraction of the antibody population with a smaller change ( approximately 15% at the highest F:P ratio) in antibody-antigen binding. An optimal F:P ratio that minimized both inactivation and unlabeled antibody was calculated. This procedure can be used to prepare functional, labeled antibody reagents with defined activity and can aid in quantitative applications where the stoichiometry and functionality of the labeled antibody are critical.


Current Biology | 2010

New Stages in the Program of Malaria Parasite Egress Imaged in Normal and Sickle Erythrocytes

Svetlana Glushakova; Glen Humphrey; Evgenia Leikina; Amanda Balaban; Jeffrey L. Miller; Joshua Zimmerberg

The apicomplexan parasite Plasmodium falciparum causes malignant malaria. The mechanism of parasite egress from infected erythrocytes that disseminate parasites in the host at the end of each asexual cycle is unknown. Two new stages of the egress program are revealed: (1) swelling of the parasitophorous vacuole accompanied by shrinkage of the erythrocyte compartment, and (2) poration of the host cell membrane seconds before erythrocyte rupture because of egress. Egress was inhibited in dehydrated cells from patients with sickle cell disease in accord with experimental dehydration of normal cells, suggesting that vacuole swelling involves intake of water from the erythrocyte compartment. Erythrocyte membrane poration occurs in relaxed cells, thus excluding involvement of osmotic pressure in this process. Poration does not depend on cysteine protease activity, because protease inhibition blocks egress but not poration, and poration is required for the parasite cycle because the membrane sealant P1107 interferes with egress. We suggest the following egress program: parasites initiate water influx into the vacuole from the erythrocyte cytosol to expand the vacuole for parasite separation and vacuole rupture upon its critical swelling. Separated parasites leave the erythrocyte by breaching its membrane, weakened by putative digestion of erythrocyte cytoskeleton and membrane poration.


Malaria Journal | 2013

Cytoplasmic free Ca2+ is essential for multiple steps in malaria parasite egress from infected erythrocytes

Svetlana Glushakova; Vladimir A. Lizunov; Paul S. Blank; Kamran Melikov; Glen Humphrey; Joshua Zimmerberg

BackgroundEgress of Plasmodium falciparum, from erythrocytes at the end of its asexual cycle and subsequent parasite invasion into new host cells, is responsible for parasite dissemination in the human body. The egress pathway is emerging as a coordinated multistep programme that extends in time for tens of minutes, ending with rapid parasite extrusion from erythrocytes. While the Ca2+ regulation of the invasion of P. falciparum in erythrocytes is well established, the role of Ca2+ in parasite egress is poorly understood. This study analysed the involvement of cytoplasmic free Ca2+ in infected erythrocytes during the multistep egress programme of malaria parasites.MethodsLive-cell fluorescence microscopy was used to image parasite egress from infected erythrocytes, assessing the effect of drugs modulating Ca2+ homeostasis on the egress programme.ResultsA steady increase in cytoplasmic free Ca2+ is found to precede parasite egress. This increase is independent of extracellular Ca2+ for at least the last two hours of the cycle, but is dependent upon Ca2+ release from internal stores. Intracellular BAPTA chelation of Ca2+ within the last 45 minutes of the cycle inhibits egress prior to parasitophorous vacuole swelling and erythrocyte membrane poration, two characteristic morphological transformations preceding parasite egress. Inhibitors of the parasite endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca2+-ATPase accelerate parasite egress, indicating that Ca2+ stores within the ER are sufficient in supporting egress. Markedly accelerated egress of apparently viable parasites was achieved in mature schizonts using Ca2+ ionophore A23187. Ionophore treatment overcomes the BAPTA-induced block of parasite egress, confirming that free Ca2+ is essential in egress initiation. Ionophore treatment of immature schizonts had an adverse effect inducing parasitophorous vacuole swelling and killing the parasites within the host cell.ConclusionsThe parasite egress programme requires intracellular free Ca2+ for egress initiation, vacuole swelling, and host cell cytoskeleton digestion. The evidence that parasitophorous vacuole swelling, a stage of unaffected egress, is dependent upon a rise in intracellular Ca2+ suggests a mechanism for ionophore-inducible egress and a new target for Ca2+ in the programme liberating parasites from the host cell. A regulatory pathway for egress that depends upon increases in intracellular free Ca2+ is proposed.


Experimental Cell Research | 2012

GREG cells, a dysferlin-deficient myogenic mouse cell line

Glen Humphrey; Elena Mekhedov; Paul S. Blank; Antoine de Morrée; Gulcin Pekkurnaz; Kanneboyina Nagaraju; Joshua Zimmerberg

The dysferlinopathies (e.g. LGMD2b, Myoshi myopathy) are progressive, adult-onset muscle wasting syndromes caused by mutations in the gene coding for dysferlin. Dysferlin is a large (~200kDa) membrane-anchored protein, required for maintenance of plasmalemmal integrity in muscle fibers. To facilitate analysis of dysferlin function in muscle cells, we have established a dysferlin-deficient myogenic cell line (GREG cells) from the A/J mouse, a genetic model for dysferlinopathy. GREG cells have no detectable dysferlin expression, but proliferate normally in growth medium and fuse into functional myotubes in differentiation medium. GREG myotubes exhibit deficiencies in plasma membrane repair, as measured by laser wounding in the presence of FM1-43 dye. Under the wounding conditions used, the majority (~66%) of GREG myotubes lack membrane repair capacity, while no membrane repair deficiency was observed in dysferlin-normal C2C12 myotubes, assayed under the same conditions. We discuss the possibility that the observed heterogeneity in membrane resealing represents genetic compensation for dysferlin deficiency.


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Free Ca2+ Initiates and Regulates Malaria Parasite Egress Program in Infected Erythrocytes

Svetlana Glushkova; Vladimir A. Lizunov; Paul S. Blank; Glen Humphrey; Joshua Zimmerberg

Malaria parasite egress from infected erythrocytes finalizes the asexual cycle of this organism and leading to parasite dissemination and disease progression. The egress mechanism is not fully understood, but several tightly coordinated steps and pathways were described recently. Mature parasites breach two sets of membranes to escape an infected host cell. We investigated the role of free calcium in the initiation and control of individual steps in the egress program of Plasmodium falciparum. The entire egress pathway (tens of minutes before release) is independent of extracellular free calcium, using rather intracellular calcium accumulated within the parasite during the trophozoite-schizont stages of parasite development. Based on experiments with calcium chelators and ionophore, inhibitors of the parasite endoplasmic reticulum, fluorescence microscopy and morphological analysis of mature parasites we propose that the schizont endoplasmic reticulum is the calcium source for egress initiation and that several post-initiation steps in the egress program are affected by increased intracellular Ca2+. We also reveal a new calcium-dependent step in the parasite egress mechanism: swelling of the parasitophorous vacuole (PV). This major event in parasite egress leads to the rupture of critically swelled vacuoles and mature parasite extrusion from the host cell. We found that this vacuolar swelling is exaggeratedly slow in dehydrated sickle cells, leading to a severe defect in parasite egress, probably due to low levels of ions conducting osmotic driven water translocation from erythrocyte cytoplasm to PV. Parasite egress can be accelerated in mature schizonts by pharmacological intervention; the mechanism of this phenomenon involves PV swelling. However, the same treatment of immature schizonts leads to immediate parasite death within the host cell due to erythrocyte hemolysis of a critically expanded PV. Exploring this stage-dependent parasite killing may be useful for development of anti-malarials.


Developmental Biology | 2006

A genomic view of the sea urchin nervous system

Robert D. Burke; Lynne M. Angerer; Maurice R. Elphick; Glen Humphrey; Shunsuke Yaguchi; Takae Kiyama; Shuguang Liang; Xiuqian Mu; C Agca; William H. Klein; Bruce P. Brandhorst; Matthew L. Rowe; Kh Wilson; Allison M. Churcher; John S. Taylor; Nansheng Chen; G Murray; Diana Wang; Dan O Mellott; Robert Piotr Olinski; Finn Hallböök; Michael C. Thorndyke


Biophysical Journal | 2018

Quantification of Sarcomeric Discontinuities in Mouse Ear Muscle using Deep Learning

Brad Busse; John Heuser; Glen Humphrey; Joshua Zimmerberg


Biophysical Journal | 2015

Ion-Mobility Mass Spectrometry Assay for Incorporation of Phytanic Acid into Muscle Phospholipids

Glen Humphrey; Peter S. Backlund; Paul S. Blank; Joshua Zimmerberg


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Multiple Antibody Colocalization Imaging of Skeletal Muscle

Mariam Ghochani; Glen Humphrey; Jane Farrington; Katsuya Miyake; Kristina D. Micheva; Brad Busse; Paul S. Blank; Stephen D. Smith; Joshua Zimmerberg


Biophysical Journal | 2013

Evaluating Cellular Repair Potential - Lessons from Skeletal Muscle

Glen Humphrey; Paul S. Blank; Elena Mekhedov; Joshua Zimmerberg

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Joshua Zimmerberg

National Institutes of Health

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Paul S. Blank

National Institutes of Health

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Elena Mekhedov

National Institutes of Health

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Brad Busse

National Institutes of Health

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Svetlana Glushakova

National Institutes of Health

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Vladimir A. Lizunov

National Institutes of Health

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Diana Wang

University of Victoria

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