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Dive into the research topics where James B. Johnston is active.

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Featured researches published by James B. Johnston.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Poxvirus Immunomodulatory Strategies: Current Perspectives

James B. Johnston; Grant McFadden

Successful transmission by viruses in the face of vigorous innate and acquired host immunity requires the ability to evade, obstruct, or subvert critical elements that mediate host antiviral responses. To that end, viruses with larger genomes, such as poxviruses, encode multiple classes of immunomodulatory proteins that have evolved specifically to inhibit such diverse processes as apoptosis, the production of interferons, chemokines, and inflammatory cytokines, and the activity of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), natural killer (NK) cells, complement, and antibodies. Often, the evolutionary origins of these virus-encoded immunomodulatory proteins are difficult to trace. The obvious sequence similarity between some immunomodulatory poxvirus genes and the cDNA versions of related cellular counterparts suggests that they were once captured by ancestral retrotranscription and/or recombination events and then reassorted into individual virus isolates during coevolution with vertebrate hosts. However, other poxviral immunomodulators have no known cellular counterpart or have putative functions that cannot be predicted based on similarity to known cellular proteins. The origins of these orphan regulators may be obscure, but their potential for immune subversion can be profound.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Myxoma Virus M-T5 Protects Infected Cells from the Stress of Cell Cycle Arrest through Its Interaction with Host Cell Cullin-1

James B. Johnston; Gen Wang; John W. Barrett; Steven H. Nazarian; K. Colwill; Michael F. Moran; Grant McFadden

ABSTRACT The myxoma virus (MV) M-T5 gene encodes an ankyrin repeat protein that is important for virus replication in cells from several species. Insight was gained into the molecular mechanisms underlying the role of M-T5 as a host range determinant when the cell cycle regulatory protein cullin-1 (cul-1) was identified as a cellular binding partner of M-T5 and found to colocalize with the protein in both nuclear and cytosolic compartments. Consistent with this interaction, infection with wild-type MV (vMyxlac) or a deletion mutant lacking M-T5 (vMyxT5KO) differentially altered cell cycle progression in a panel of permissive and nonpermissive cells. Cells infected with vMyxlac transitioned rapidly out of the G0/G1 phase and preferentially accumulated at the G2/M checkpoint, whereas infection with vMyxT5KO impeded progression through the cell cycle, resulting in a greater percentage of cells retained at G0/G1. Levels of the cul-1 substrate, p27/Kip-1, were selectively increased in cells infected with vMyxT5KO compared to vMyxlac, concurrent with decreased phosphorylation of p27/Kip-1 at Thr187 and decreased ubiquitination. Compared to cells infected with vMyxlac, cell death was increased in vMyxT5KO-infected cells following treatment with diverse stimuli known to induce cell cycle arrest, including infection itself, serum deprivation, and exposure to proteasome inhibitors or double-stranded RNA. Moreover, infection with vMyxlac, but not vMyxT5KO, was sufficient to overcome the G0/G1 arrest induced by these stimuli. These findings suggest that M-T5 regulates cell cycle progression at the G0/G1 checkpoint, thereby protecting infected cells from diverse innate host antiviral responses normally triggered by G0/G1 cell cycle arrest.


Journal of Virology | 2003

Role of the Serine-Threonine Kinase PAK-1 in Myxoma Virus Replication

James B. Johnston; John W. Barrett; Wen Chang; Che-Sheng Chung; Wei Zeng; Jennefer Masters; Melissa Mann; Fuan Wang; Jingxin Cao; Grant McFadden

ABSTRACT Subversion or appropriation of cellular signal transduction pathways is a common strategy employed by viruses to promote an environment within infected cells that supports the viral replicative cycle. Using subsets of 3T3 murine fibroblasts previously shown to differ in their ability to support myxoma virus (MV) replication, we investigated the role of host serine-threonine kinases (STKs) as potential mediators of the permissive phenotype. Both permissive and nonpermissive 3T3 cells supported equivalent levels of virion binding, entry, and early virus gene expression, indicating that MV tropism in 3T3 cells was not determined by receptor-mediated entry. In contrast, late virus gene expression and viral DNA replication were selectively compromised in restrictive 3T3 cells. Addition of specific protein kinase inhibitors, many of which shared the ability to influence the activity of the STKs p21-activated kinase 1 (PAK-1) and Raf-1 attenuated MV replication in permissive 3T3 cells. Western blot detection of the phosphorylated forms of PAK-1 (Thr423) and Raf-1 (Ser338) confirmed activation of these kinases in permissive cells after MV infection or gamma interferon treatment, but the activated forms of both kinases were greatly reduced or absent in restrictive 3T3 cells. The biological significance of these activations was demonstrated by using the autoinhibitory domain of PAK-1 (amino acids 83 to 149), expression of which reduced the efficiency of MV infection in permissive 3T3 cells concurrent with a decrease in PAK-1 activation. In comparison, overexpression of a constitutively active PAK-1 (T423E) mutant increased MV replication in restrictive 3T3 cells. These observations suggest that induced signaling via cellular STKs may play important roles in determining the permissiveness of host cells to poxvirus infection.


Seminars in Immunopathology | 2007

Strategies that modulate inflammasomes: insights from host-pathogen interactions.

James B. Johnston; Masmudur M. Rahman; Grant McFadden

The innate immune system is a dynamic and complex network for recognizing and responding to cellular insult or tissue damage after infection or injury. The primary effector mechanism of innate immunity is the generation of acute and chronic inflammatory responses through regulation of the processing and activation of proinflammatory caspases, particularly caspase 1, and cytokines, most notably IL-1β and IL-18. Inflammasomes, cytosolic multi-protein complexes that function as molecular scaffolds for caspase activation, have recently emerged as the pivotal mechanism by which host innate immune and inflammatory responses are regulated. In this review, we investigate the mechanisms by which inflammasomes are modulated, both by endogenous host systems and by microbial pathogens.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Biologically Active Polymers from Spontaneous Carotenoid Oxidation: A New Frontier in Carotenoid Activity

James B. Johnston; James G. Nickerson; Janusz Daroszewski; Trevor J. Mogg; Graham W. Burton

In animals carotenoids show biological activity unrelated to vitamin A that has been considered to arise directly from the behavior of the parent compound, particularly as an antioxidant. However, the very property that confers antioxidant activity on some carotenoids in plants also confers susceptibility to oxidative transformation. As an alternative, it has been suggested that carotenoid oxidative breakdown or metabolic products could be the actual agents of activity in animals. However, an important and neglected aspect of the behavior of the highly unsaturated carotenoids is their potential to undergo addition of oxygen to form copolymers. Recently we reported that spontaneous oxidation of ß-carotene transforms it into a product dominated by ß-carotene-oxygen copolymers. We now report that the polymeric product is biologically active. Results suggest an overall ability to prime innate immune function to more rapidly respond to subsequent microbial challenges. An underlying structural resemblance to sporopollenin, found in the outer shell of spores and pollen, may allow the polymer to modulate innate immune responses through interactions with the pattern recognition receptor system. Oxygen copolymer formation appears common to all carotenoids, is anticipated to be widespread, and the products may contribute to the health benefits of carotenoid-rich fruits and vegetables.


Annual Review of Immunology | 2003

Poxviruses and Immune Evasion

Bruce T. Seet; James B. Johnston; Craig R. Brunetti; John W. Barrett; Helen Everett; Cheryl M. Cameron; Joanna Sypula; Steven H. Nazarian; Alexandra Lucas; Grant McFadden


Immunity | 2005

A Poxvirus-Encoded Pyrin Domain Protein Interacts with ASC-1 to Inhibit Host Inflammatory and Apoptotic Responses to Infection

James B. Johnston; John W. Barrett; Steven H. Nazarian; Megan Goodwin; Gen Wang; Grant McFadden


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Infection of human cancer cells with myxoma virus requires Akt activation via interaction with a viral ankyrin-repeat host range factor

Gen Wang; John W. Barrett; Marianne Stanford; Steven J. Werden; James B. Johnston; Xiujuan Gao; Mei Sun; Jin Q. Cheng; Grant McFadden


Virology | 2005

Myxoma virus infection of primary human fibroblasts varies with cellular age and is regulated by host interferon responses

James B. Johnston; Steven H. Nazarian; Renato Natale; Grant McFadden


Canadian Journal of Chemistry | 2014

-Carotene autoxidation: oxygen copolymerization, non-vitamin A products, and immunological activity

Graham W. Burton; Janusz Daroszewski; James G. Nickerson; James B. Johnston; Trevor J. Mogg; Grigory B. Nikiforov

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John W. Barrett

University of Western Ontario

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Steven H. Nazarian

University of Western Ontario

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Gen Wang

Robarts Research Institute

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Bozena Korczak

National Research Council

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Bruce T. Seet

University of Western Ontario

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