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Featured researches published by Heather C. Alexander.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

PTPN22 Genetic Variation: Evidence for Multiple Variants Associated with Rheumatoid Arthritis

Victoria E.H. Carlton; Xiaolan Hu; Anand P. Chokkalingam; Steven J. Schrodi; Rhonda Brandon; Heather C. Alexander; Monica Chang; Joseph J. Catanese; Diane U. Leong; Kristin Ardlie; Daniel L. Kastner; Michael F. Seldin; Lindsey A. Criswell; Peter K. Gregersen; Ellen M. Beasley; Glenys Thomson; Christopher I. Amos; Ann B. Begovich

The minor allele of the R620W missense single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) (rs2476601) in the hematopoietic-specific protein tyrosine phosphatase gene, PTPN22, has been associated with multiple autoimmune diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis (RA). These genetic data, combined with biochemical evidence that this SNP affects PTPN22 function, suggest that this phosphatase is a key regulator of autoimmunity. To determine whether other genetic variants in PTPN22 contribute to the development of RA, we sequenced the coding regions of this gene in 48 white North American patients with RA and identified 15 previously unreported SNPs, including 2 coding SNPs in the catalytic domain. We then genotyped 37 SNPs in or near PTPN22 in 475 patients with RA and 475 individually matched controls (sample set 1) and selected a subset of markers for replication in an additional 661 patients with RA and 1,322 individually matched controls (sample set 2). Analyses of these results predict 10 common (frequency >1%) PTPN22 haplotypes in white North Americans. The sole haplotype found to carry the previously identified W620 risk allele was strongly associated with disease in both sample sets, whereas another haplotype, identical at all other SNPs but carrying the R620 allele, showed no association. R620W, however, does not fully explain the association between PTPN22 and RA, since significant differences between cases and controls persisted in both sample sets after the haplotype data were stratified by R620W. Additional analyses identified two SNPs on a single common haplotype that are associated with RA independent of R620W, suggesting that R620W and at least one additional variant in the PTPN22 gene region influence RA susceptibility.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

The R620W Polymorphism of the Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase PTPN22 Is Not Associated with Multiple Sclerosis

Ann B. Begovich; Stacy J. Caillier; Heather C. Alexander; Joanne M. Penko; Stephen L. Hauser; Lisa F. Barcellos; Jorge R. Oksenberg

We are grateful to the patients with MS and their families, for participating in this study. We also thank V. Carlton, S. Schrodi, and T. White, for helpful comments. This work was funded by National Multiple Sclerosis Society grant RG2901 and National Institutes of Health grant NS46297.


Clinical Immunology | 2012

Alternative activation in systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis monocytes

Claudia Macaubas; Khoa D. Nguyen; Ariana Peck; Julia Buckingham; Chetan Deshpande; Elizabeth Wong; Heather C. Alexander; Sheng Yung Chang; Ann B. Begovich; Yue Sun; Jane L. Park; Kuang Hung Pan; Richard Lin; Chih Jian Lih; Erin M. Augustine; Carolyn Phillips; Andreas V. Hadjinicolaou; Tzielan Lee; Elizabeth D. Mellins

Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA) is a chronic autoinflammatory condition. The association with macrophage activation syndrome, and the therapeutic efficacy of inhibiting monocyte-derived cytokines, has implicated these cells in SJIA pathogenesis. To characterize the activation state (classical/M1 vs. alternative/M2) of SJIA monocytes, we immunophenotyped monocytes using several approaches. Monocyte transcripts were analyzed by microarray and quantitative PCR. Surface proteins were measured at the single cell level using flow cytometry. Cytokine production was evaluated by intracellular staining and ELISA. CD14(++)CD16(-) and CD14(+)CD16(+) monocyte subsets are activated in SJIA. A mixed M1/M2 activation phenotype is apparent at the single cell level, especially during flare. Consistent with an M2 phenotype, SJIA monocytes produce IL-1β after LPS exposure, but do not secrete it. Despite the inflammatory nature of active SJIA, circulating monocytes demonstrate significant anti-inflammatory features. The persistence of some of these phenotypes during clinically inactive disease argues that this state reflects compensated inflammation.


Clinical Immunology | 2010

Monocytes are resistant to apoptosis in systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Shivani Srivastava; Claudia Macaubas; Chetan Deshpande; Heather C. Alexander; Sheng Yung Chang; Yue Sun; Jane L. Park; Tzielan Lee; Ann B. Begovich; Elizabeth D. Mellins

We investigated whether circulating monocytes from patients with systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA) are resistant to apoptosis and which apoptotic pathway(s) may mediate this resistance. A microarray analysis of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) of SJIA samples and RT-PCR analysis of isolated monocytes showed that monocytes from active SJIA patients express transcripts that imply resistance to apoptosis. SJIA monocytes incubated in low serum show reduced annexin binding and diminished FasL up-regulation compared to controls. SJIA monocytes are less susceptible to anti-Fas-induced apoptosis and, upon activation of the mitochondrial pathway with staurosporine, show diminished Bid cleavage and Bcl-w down-regulation compared to controls. Exposure to SJIA plasma reduces responses to apoptotic triggers in normal monocytes. Thus, SJIA monocytes are resistant to apoptosis due to alterations in both the extrinsic and intrinsic apoptosis pathways, and circulating factors associated with active SJIA may confer this phenotype.


BMC Medicine | 2012

Correlation analyses of clinical and molecular findings identify candidate biological pathways in systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Xuefeng B. Ling; Claudia Macaubas; Heather C. Alexander; Qiaojun Wen; Edward Chen; Sihua Peng; Yue Sun; Chetan Deshpande; Kuang Hung Pan; Richard Lin; Chih Jian Lih; Sheng Yung P Chang; Tzielan Lee; Christy Sandborg; Ann B. Begovich; Stanley N. Cohen; Elizabeth D. Mellins

BackgroundClinicians have long appreciated the distinct phenotype of systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SJIA) compared to polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (POLY). We hypothesized that gene expression profiles of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from children with each disease would reveal distinct biological pathways when analyzed for significant associations with elevations in two markers of JIA activity, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and number of affected joints (joint count, JC).MethodsPBMC RNA from SJIA and POLY patients was profiled by kinetic PCR to analyze expression of 181 genes, selected for relevance to immune response pathways. Pearson correlation and Students t-test analyses were performed to identify transcripts significantly associated with clinical parameters (ESR and JC) in SJIA or POLY samples. These transcripts were used to find related biological pathways.ResultsCombining Pearson and t-test analyses, we found 91 ESR-related and 92 JC-related genes in SJIA. For POLY, 20 ESR-related and 0 JC-related genes were found. Using Ingenuity Systems Pathways Analysis, we identified SJIA ESR-related and JC-related pathways. The two sets of pathways are strongly correlated. In contrast, there is a weaker correlation between SJIA and POLY ESR-related pathways. Notably, distinct biological processes were found to correlate with JC in samples from the earlier systemic plus arthritic phase (SAF) of SJIA compared to samples from the later arthritis-predominant phase (AF). Within the SJIA SAF group, IL-10 expression was related to JC, whereas lack of IL-4 appeared to characterize the chronic arthritis (AF) subgroup.ConclusionsThe strong correlation between pathways implicated in elevations of both ESR and JC in SJIA argues that the systemic and arthritic components of the disease are related mechanistically. Inflammatory pathways in SJIA are distinct from those in POLY course JIA, consistent with differences in clinically appreciated target organs. The limited number of ESR-related SJIA genes that also are associated with elevations of ESR in POLY implies that the SJIA associations are specific for SJIA, at least to some degree. The distinct pathways associated with arthritis in early and late SJIA raise the possibility that different immunobiology underlies arthritis over the course of SJIA.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004

A missense single-nucleotide polymorphism in a gene encoding a protein tyrosine phosphatase (PTPN22) is associated with rheumatoid arthritis

Ann B. Begovich; Victoria E.H. Carlton; Lee Honigberg; Steven J. Schrodi; Anand P. Chokkalingam; Heather C. Alexander; Kristin Ardlie; Qiqing Huang; Ashley Smith; Jill M. Spoerke; Marion Conn; Monica Chang; Sheng Yung P Chang; Randall K. Saiki; Joseph J. Catanese; Diane U. Leong; Veronica Garcia; Linda B. McAllister; Douglas A. Jeffery; Annette Lee; Franak Batliwalla; Elaine F. Remmers; Lindsey A. Criswell; Michael F. Seldin; Daniel L. Kastner; Christopher I. Amos; John J. Sninsky; Peter K. Gregersen


Archive | 2004

Genetic polymorphisms associated with rheumatoid arthritis, methods of detection and uses thereof

Michele Cargill; Ann B. Begovich; Victoria E.H. Carlton; Steven J. Schrodi; Heather C. Alexander


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2003

Increased expression of alpha(1,3)-fucosyltransferase-VII and P-selectin binding of synovial fluid T cells in juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Fabrizio De Benedetti; Patrizia Pignatti; Mauro Biffi; Elisa Bono; Smaira Wahid; Francesca Ingegnoli; Sheng Yung P Chang; Heather C. Alexander; Margherita Massa; Angela Pistorio; Alberto Martini; Costantino Pitzalis; Francesco Sinigaglia; Lars Rogge


Journal of Immunology | 2011

Monocyte phenotypes in systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis

Claudia Macaubas; Khoa D. Nguyen; Ariana Peck; Elizabeth Wong; Julia C. Buckingham; Yael Goertz; Chetan Deshpande; Heather C. Alexander; Sheng-Yung Chang; Yue Sun; Jane Park; Tzielan Lee; Ann B. Begovich; Elizabeth D. Mellins


Clinical Immunology | 2006

F.50. Gene Expression Profiling of Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells (PBMC) from SJIA Patients

Chetan Deshpande; Yue Sun; Claudia Macaubas; Heather C. Alexander; Kuang-Hung Pan; Tzielan Lee; Sheng-Yung Chang; Chih-Jian Lih; Richard Lin; Christy Sandborg; Robert Tibshirani; Ann B. Begovich; Stanley N. Cohen; Elizabeth D. Mellins

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