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Dive into the research topics where H. David Shine is active.

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Featured researches published by H. David Shine.


Cell | 1987

Myelin deficient mice: Expression of myelin basic protein and generation of mice with varying levels of myelin

Brian Popko; Carmie Puckett; Eric Lai; H. David Shine; Carol Readhead; Naoki Takahashi; Stephen W. Hunt; Richard L. Sidman; Leroy Hood

Mice homozygous for the mutation myelin deficient (mld), an allele of shiverer, exhibit decreased CNS myelination, tremors, and convulsions of progressively increasing severity leading to an early death. In this report we demonstrate in mld mice that the gene encoding myelin basic protein (MBP) is expressed at decreased levels and on an abnormal temporal schedule relative to the wild-type gene. Southern blot analyses, field-inversion gel electrophoresis studies, and analyses of mld MBP cosmid clones indicate that there are multiple linked copies of the MBP gene in mld mice. We have introduced an MBP transgene into mld mice and found that myelination increases and tremors and convulsions decrease. Mld and shiverer mice with zero, one, or two copies of the MBP transgene express distinct levels of MBP mRNA and myelin. The availability of a range of mice expressing graded levels of myelin should facilitate quantitative analysis of the roles of MBP in the myelination process and of myelin in nerve function.


Cancer Research | 2007

Regression of Experimental Medulloblastoma following Transfer of HER2-Specific T Cells

Nabil Ahmed; Maheshika Ratnayake; Barbara Savoldo; Laszlo Perlaky; Gianpietro Dotti; Winfried S. Wels; Meenakshi B. Bhattacharjee; Richard J. Gilbertson; H. David Shine; Heidi L. Weiss; Cliona M. Rooney; Helen E. Heslop; Stephen Gottschalk

Medulloblastoma is a common malignant brain tumor of childhood. Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) is expressed by 40% of medulloblastomas and is a risk factor for poor outcome with current aggressive multimodal therapy. In contrast to breast cancer, HER2 is expressed only at low levels in medulloblastomas, rendering monoclonal antibodies ineffective. We determined if T cells grafted with a HER2-specific chimeric antigen receptor (CAR; HER2-specific T cells) recognized and killed HER2-positive medulloblastomas. Ex vivo, stimulation of HER2-specific T cells with HER2-positive medulloblastomas resulted in T-cell proliferation and secretion of IFN-gamma and interleukin 2 (IL-2) in a HER2-dependent manner. HER2-specific T cells killed autologous HER2-positive primary medulloblastoma cells and medulloblastoma cell lines in cytotoxicity assays, whereas HER2-negative tumor cells were not killed. No functional difference was observed between HER2-specific T cells generated from medulloblastoma patients and healthy donors. In vivo, the adoptive transfer of HER2-specific T cells resulted in sustained regression of established medulloblastomas in an orthotopic, xenogenic severe combined immunodeficiency model. In contrast, delivery of nontransduced T cells did not change the tumor growth pattern. Adoptive transfer of HER2-specific T cells may represent a promising immunotherapeutic approach for medulloblastoma.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 1992

Morphometric Analysis of Normal, Mutant, and Transgenic CNS: Correlation of Myelin Basic Protein Expression to Myelinogenesis

H. David Shine; Carol Readhead; Brian Popko; Leroy Hood; Richard L. Sidman

Abstract: The neurological mutant mice shiverer (shi) and myelin deficient (shimld) lack a functional gene for the myelin basic proteins (MBP), have virtually no myelin in their CNS, shiver, seize, and die early. Mutant mice homozygous for an MBP transgene have MBP mRNA and MBP in net amounts approximately 25% of normal, have compact myelin, do not shiver or seize, and live normal life spans. We bred mice with various combinations of the normal, transgenic, shi, and shimld genes to produce mice that expressed MBP mRNA at levels of 0, 5, 12.5, 17.5, 50, 62.5, and 100% of normal. The CNS of these mice were analyzed for MBP content, tissue localization of MBP, degree of myelination, axon size, and myelin thickness. MBP protein content correlated with predicted MBP gene expression. Immunocytochemical staining localized MBP to white matter in normal and transgenic shi mice with an intensity of staining comparable to the degree of MBP gene expression. An increase in the percentage of myelinated axons and the thickness of myelin correlated with increased gene expression up to 50% of normal. The percentage of myelinated axons and myelin thickness remained constant at expression levels greater than 50%. The presence of axons loosely wrapped with oligodendrocytic membrane in mice expressing lower amounts of MBP mRNA and protein suggested that the oligodendroglia produced sufficient MBP to elicit axon wrapping but not enough to form compact myelin. Mean axon circumference of myelinated axons was greater than axon circumference of unmyelinated axons at each level of gene expression, further evidence that oligodendroglial cells preferentially myelinate axons of larger caliber. These data suggest that oligodendroglial function is governed in part by the degree of MBP expression.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2003

Neurotrophic factors expressed in both cortex and spinal cord induce axonal plasticity after spinal cord injury.

Lijun Zhou; H. David Shine

We reported recently that overexpression of neurotrophin‐3 (NT‐3) by motoneurons in the spinal cord of rats will induce sprouting of corticospinal tract (CST) axons (Zhou et al. [2003] J. Neurosci. 23:1424–1431). We now report that overexpression of brain‐derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) or glial cell‐derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) in the rat sensorimotor cortex near the CST neuronal cell bodies together with overexpression of NT‐3 in the lumbar spinal cord significantly increases axonal sprouting compared to that induced by NT‐3 alone. Two weeks after unilaterally lesioning the CST at the level of the pyramids, we injected rats with saline or adenoviral vectors (Adv) carrying genes coding for BDNF (Adv.BDNF), GDNF (Adv.GDNF) or enhanced green fluorescent protein (Adv.EGFP) at six sites in the sensorimotor cortex, while delivering Adv.NT3 to motoneurons in each of these four groups on the lesioned side of the spinal cord by retrograde transport from the sciatic nerve. Four days later, biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) was injected into the sensorimotor cortex on the unlesioned side to mark CST axons in the spinal cord. Morphometric analysis of axonal sprouting 3 weeks after BDA injection showed that the number of CST axons crossing the midline in rats treated with Adv.BDNF or Adv.GDNF were 46% and 52% greater, respectively, than in rats treated with Adv.EGFP or PBS (P < 0.05). These data demonstrate that sustained local expression of neurotrophic factors in the sensorimotor cortex and spinal cord will promote increased axonal sprouting after spinal cord injury, providing a basis for continued development of neurotrophic factor therapy for central nervous system damage.


Experimental Neurology | 1998

Neuroprotection of spinal motoneurons following targeted transduction with an adenoviral vector carrying the gene for glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor

Brian J. Baumgartner; H. David Shine

Application of neurotrophic factors (NFs) to the cut stump of peripheral nerves confers transient (1- to 2-week) neuroprotection of motoneurons from axotomy-induced death in neonates. We tested whether lumbar spinal motoneurons would be protected from axotomy-induced death when they were genetically modified to produce NFs in situ. Adenoviral (Adv) vectors carrying neurotrophic factor genes under control of the Rous sarcoma virus long terminal repeat promoter (Adv.RSV-nf) or a control vector containing the beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) gene (Adv.RSV-betagal) was injected into the hindlimb muscles of neonatal rats. The Adv were taken up by peripheral nerves and transported to lumbar spinal cord motoneurons where the transgenes were expressed. A fraction (18%) of the motoneurons that projected through the sciatic nerve were transduced with Adv.RSV-betagal. Expression of Adv.RSV-betagal was detected in motoneurons after 7 days and 3 weeks, with no evidence of vector- or beta-gal-induced toxicity or inflammation. PCR, immunocytochemistry, and RT-PCR demonstrated transport of the Adv.RSV-nf vectors to motoneurons and their expression. After retrograde transport of an Adv.RSV-nf vector carrying the gene for glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor, a substantial proportion of the sciatic nerve motoneurons were resistant to axotomy-induced death 7 days and 3 weeks after sciatic nerve transection (56 and 44%, respectively), compared to Adv.RSV-betagal controls (2.5 and 0%, respectively).


In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Plant | 1985

Cross-linked collagen surface for cell culture that is stable, uniform, and optically superior to conventional surfaces.

Jeffrey D. Macklis; Richard L. Sidman; H. David Shine

SummaryA new type of collagen surface for use with cultures of peripheral nervous system cells is described. Collagen is derivatized to plastic culture dishes by a cross-linking reagent, 1-cyclohexyl-3-(2-morpholinoethyl)-carbodiimide-metho-p-toluenesulfonate (carbodiimide), to form a uniform and durable surface for cell attachment and growth that allows dry storage, long-term culture, and improved microscopy. Surfaces of collagen derivatized to plastic were compared to surfaces of adsorbed or ammonia-polymerized collagen in terms of collagen binding and detachment, growth by dorsal root ganglion cells, and electron microscopy appearances. Derivatized collagen surfaces retained more collagen and showed much less evidence of degradation and cellular damage over periods of many weeks than did conventional adsorbed surfaces. Long-term survival of cells on derivatized collagen was far superior to that on the other surfaces, with almost 90% of cultures still viable after 10 wk. Transmission electron microscopy showed an organized layer of single fibrils that supported cell growth well, and scanning electron microscopy demonstrated an increased uniformity of derivatized collagen surfaces compared to ammoniated collagen surfaces. Applications for this improved substrate surface are discussed.


Experimental Neurology | 1993

Temporal and spatial expression of ciliary neurotrophic factor after peripheral nerve injury.

George M. Smith; Eric D. Rabinovsky; James L. McManaman; H. David Shine

Schwann cells in the intact sciatic nerve express high amounts of ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF), but 7 days after injury to the nerve expression dramatically decreases. To determine whether this change occurs only in the region of the injury or throughout the whole nerve we examined the spatial and temporal expression of CNTF after a crush injury. One day after injury the amount of CNTF mRNA and protein decreased within the first 4 mm distal to the crush site. This decrease progressed in a centrifugal manner distally until mRNA and protein were scarcely detectable by 7 days. In nerve proximal to the crush site CNTF expression decreased slightly and was still detectable at all sample times. During regeneration CNTF expression remained very low up to 14 days after injury. By 30 days mRNA and protein were detectable and by 60 days CNTF protein was present at normal amounts. Immunohistochemical analysis of normal nerve revealed CNTF localized in outer portion of the cytoplasm of myelin-forming Schwann cells. Three days after injury CNTF coalesced with pockets of cytoplasm in the Schwann cell and by 5 days was barely detectable. Positive staining remained in proximal segments where little or no degeneration occurred. These results demonstrate that CNTF expression in Schwann cells is synchronized with their functional state. CNTF expression decreases with demyelination during Wallerian degeneration and returns to normal following remyelination during regeneration. These findings also suggest that CNTF expression requires intact axon-Schwann cell interactions.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2006

Semi-automated quantification of axonal densities in labeled CNS tissue

Michael H. Grider; Qin Chen; H. David Shine

Current techniques used to quantify axons often rely upon manual quantification or potentially expensive commercially available programs for automated quantification. We describe a computerized method for the detection and quantification of axons in the rat CNS using readily available free software. Feature J, a java-based plug-in to the imaging software NIH Image J, faithfully detects linear structures such as axons in confocal or bright-field images using a Hessian-based algorithm. We validated the method by comparing values obtained by manual and automated analyses of axons induced to grow in response to neurotrophin over-expression in the rat spinal cord. We also demonstrated that the program can be used to quantify neurotrophin-induced growth of lesioned serotonergic axons in the rat cortex, where manual measurement would be impractical due to dense axonal growth. The use of this software suite provided faster and less biased quantification of labeled axons in comparison to manual measurements at no cost.


Experimental Neurology | 2008

Immune activation is required for NT-3-induced axonal plasticity in chronic spinal cord injury.

Qin Chen; George M. Smith; H. David Shine

After an unilateral lesion of the corticospinal tract (CST) at the level of the medulla over-expression of Neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) in lumbar spinal cord motoneurons induced axonal sprouting of the intact CST in the acutely injured but not uninjured or chronically injured spinal cord in rats. This suggested that processes associated with immune-mediated wound healing may act with NT-3 to induce neuroplasticity. To test whether immune processes were involved we measured NT-3-induced axonal sprouting in immunosuppressed compared to immunocompetent rats. Rats were immunosuppressed with anti-leukocyte antibodies 1 day before receiving a CST lesion and then 2 weeks later NT-3 was over-expressed in the lumbar spinal motoneurons with an adenoviral vector carrying the NT-3 gene targeted to the motoneurons by retrograde transport. At 35 days post-lesion no axonal sprouting was measured in immunosuppressed rats whereas axonal sprouting was measured in the immunocompetent rats. We then tested whether re-evoking an immune response in chronically lesioned rats would induce neuroplasticity. Rats received CST lesions and then 4 months later were treated with systemic injections of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) 7 days before NT-3 was over-expressed in the lumbar spinal motoneurons. Axonal sprouting was observed in the LPS treated rats but not in control animals that were not treated with LPS. Further studies showed that lesioning the CST activated and LPS reactivated microglia and CD4(+) T-cells in the acutely lesioned and chronically lesioned rats, respectively. However, immunosuppression only decreased the number of activated CD4(+) T-cells suggesting they were responsible for the support of axonal growth. These observations demonstrate that processes associated with immune-mediated wound healing play a role in NT-3-induced neuroplasticity after injury.


International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience | 1992

Immunofluorescent labeling of tight junctions in the rat brain and spinal cord

George Smith; H. David Shine

Tight junctions may play an important role in maintaining the integrity of the blood‐brain barrier. These junctions can be individually visualized using electron microscopy but no current technique is able to provide a more global picture of the presence and density of tight junctions in central nervous system tissue. We used an antibody that recognizes a high molecular weight protein (ZO‐1) associated with tight junctions, to identify these specialized junctions within the rat brain and spinal cord. Immunofluorescent labeling showed a network of tight junctions between cells in the brain vasculature, leptomeninges and choroid plexus, and between tanycytes lining the floor of the third ventricle and the central canal of the spinal cord. Anti‐ZO‐1 labeled the majority of cells associated with the blood‐brain barrier and may prove a useful marker, possibly in conjunction with functional dye studies, in evaluating the anatomical and functional integrity of the blood‐brain barrier.

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Qin Chen

Center for Cell and Gene Therapy

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Carol Readhead

California Institute of Technology

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Leroy Hood

University of Washington

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J. Clay Goodman

Baylor College of Medicine

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Lijun Zhou

Center for Cell and Gene Therapy

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Savio L. C. Woo

Baylor College of Medicine

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