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Dive into the research topics where Jami McLaughlin is active.

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Featured researches published by Jami McLaughlin.


Cell | 1995

Alternative signals to RAS for hematopoietic transformation by the BCR-ABL oncogene.

Andrei Goga; Jami McLaughlin; Daniel E. H. Afar; Douglas C. Saffran; Owen N. Witte

Biological function of the BCR-ABL oncogene is dependent on its activated tyrosine kinase. Mutations that inactivate the SRC homology 2 (SH2) domain, the GRB2-binding site in BCR, or the major autophosphorylation site of the kinase domain selectively disrupt downstream signaling but not tyrosine kinase activity. Despite a loss of fibroblast transformation activity, all three mutants retain the ability to render hematopoietic cell lines growth factor independent and transform primary bone marrow cells in vitro. In vivo tests of malignant potential reveal a most critical role for signals dependent on the BCR-ABL SH2 domain. The efficiency of both fibroblast and hematopoietic transformation by BCR-ABL is strongly affected by increased dosage of the SHC adapter protein, which can connect tyrosine kinase signals to RAS. The BCR-ABL oncogene activates multiple alternative pathways to RAS for hematopoietic transformation.


Cell | 1994

The nuclear tyrosine kinase c-Abl negatively regulates cell growth.

Charles L. Sawyers; Jami McLaughlin; Andrel Goga; Marle Havlik; Owen N. Witte

c-Abl is a tyrosine kinase localized primarily in the nucleus. Previous assays for abl function rely on cellular transformation by abl mutants, which are cytoplasmic. Using a conditional overexpression strategy, we have developed a functional assay for c-abl. Overexpression of c-abl inhibits growth by causing cell cycle arrest. Growth suppression requires tyrosine kinase activity, nuclear localization, and an intact SH2 domain. Overexpression of dominant negative c-abl disrupts cell cycle control and enhances transformation by tyrosine kinases, G proteins, and transcription factor oncogenes. These findings suggest that c-abl acts as a negative regulator of cell growth. This growth suppressive activity is functionally similar to that of tumor suppressor genes such as p53 and Rb.


Immunity | 1997

Regulation of the Oncogenic Activity of BCR-ABL by a Tightly Bound Substrate Protein RIN1

Daniel E. H. Afar; Limin Han; Jami McLaughlin; Stephane Wong; Ajay Dhaka; Kalindi Parmar; Naomi Rosenberg; Owen N. Witte; John Colicelli

RIN1 was originally identified by its ability to physically bind to and interfere with activated Ras in yeast. Paradoxically, RIN1 potentiates the oncogenic activity of the BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase in hematopoietic cells and dramatically accelerates BCR-ABL-induced leukemias in mice. RIN1 rescues BCR-ABL mutants for transformation in a manner distinguishable from the cell cycle regulators c-Myc and cyclin D1 and the Ras connector Shc. These biological effects require tyrosine phosphorylation of RIN1 and binding of RIN1 to the Abl-SH2 and SH3 domains. RIN1 is tyrosine phosphorylated and is associated with BCR-ABL in human and murine leukemic cells. RIN1 exemplifies a new class of effector molecules dependent on the concerted action of the SH3, SH2, and catalytic domains of a cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2007

Vascular Abnormalities in Mice Deficient for the G Protein-Coupled Receptor GPR4 That Functions as a pH Sensor

Li V. Yang; Caius G. Radu; Meenakshi Roy; Sunyoung Lee; Jami McLaughlin; Michael A. Teitell; M. Luisa Iruela-Arispe; Owen N. Witte

ABSTRACT GPR4 is a G protein-coupled receptor expressed in the vasculature, lung, kidney, and other tissues. In vitro ectopic overexpression studies implicated GPR4 in sensing extracellular pH changes leading to cyclic AMP (cAMP) production. To investigate its biological roles in vivo, we generated GPR4-deficient mice by homologous recombination. Whereas GPR4-null adult mice appeared phenotypically normal, neonates showed a higher frequency of perinatal mortality. The average litter size from GPR4−/− intercrosses was ∼30% smaller than that from GPR4+/+ intercrosses on N3 and N5 C57BL/6 genetic backgrounds. A fraction of knockout embryos and neonates had spontaneous hemorrhages, dilated and tortuous subcutaneous blood vessels, and defective vascular smooth muscle cell coverage. Mesangial cells in kidney glomeruli were also significantly reduced in GPR4-null neonates. Some neonates exhibited respiratory distress with airway lining cell metaplasia. To examine whether GPR4 is functionally involved in vascular pH sensing, an ex vivo aortic ring assay was used under defined pH conditions. Compared to wild-type aortas, microvessel outgrowth from GPR4-null aortas was less inhibited by acidic extracellular pH. Treatment with an analog of cAMP, a downstream effector of GPR4, abolished microvessel outgrowth bypassing the GPR4-knockout phenotype. These results suggest that GPR4 deficiency leads to partially penetrant vascular abnormalities during development and that this receptor functions in blood vessel pH sensing.


Nature Immunology | 2013

Selective regulation of lymphopoiesis and leukemogenesis by individual zinc fingers of Ikaros

Hilde Schjerven; Jami McLaughlin; Teresita L. Arenzana; Seth Frietze; Donghui Cheng; Sarah E Wadsworth; Gregory W. Lawson; Steven J. Bensinger; Peggy J. Farnham; Owen N. Witte; Stephen T. Smale

C2H2 zinc fingers are found in several key transcriptional regulators in the immune system. However, these proteins usually contain more fingers than are needed for sequence-specific DNA binding, which suggests that different fingers regulate different genes and functions. Here we found that mice lacking finger 1 or finger 4 of Ikaros exhibited distinct subsets of the hematological defects of Ikaros-null mice. Most notably, the two fingers controlled different stages of lymphopoiesis, and finger 4 was selectively required for tumor suppression. The distinct defects support the hypothesis that only a small number of genes that are targets of Ikaros are critical for each of its biological functions. The subcategorization of functions and target genes by mutagenesis of individual zinc fingers will facilitate efforts to understand how zinc-finger transcription factors regulate development, immunity and disease.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2006

Normal immune development and glucocorticoid-induced thymocyte apoptosis in mice deficient for the T-cell death-associated gene 8 receptor.

Caius G. Radu; Donghui Cheng; Amar Nijagal; Mireille Riedinger; Jami McLaughlin; Li V. Yang; James Johnson; Owen N. Witte

ABSTRACT T-cell death-associated gene 8 (TDAG8) is a G-protein-coupled receptor transcriptionally upregulated by glucocorticoids (GCs) and implicated by overexpression studies in psychosine-mediated inhibition of cytokinesis and in GC-induced apoptosis. To examine the physiological function of TDAG8, we generated knockout (KO) mice by homologous recombination. An enhanced green fluorescent protein reporter was knocked into the disrupted tdag8 locus to allow the analysis of TDAG8 expression in living cells. Interestingly, we found that during thymocyte development, TDAG8 expression resembled the dynamic regulation described for known modulators of GC-induced apoptosis, including Bcl-2, Notch1, and GC receptor. TDAG8 was expressed in double-negative cells, was downregulated at the double-positive transition, and was upregulated in single-positive thymocytes. However, despite this striking expression pattern, maturation and selection of thymocytes, as well as major immune functions, were not affected in TDAG8 KO mice. In contrast to previous overexpression results, TDAG8 was dispensable for psychosine-induced formation of multinucleated cells. Furthermore, TDAG8 KO thymocytes showed normal apoptosis following in vivo and in vitro GC treatment. These results, while establishing a useful reporter strain to study T-lymphocyte maturation, argue against a critical role for TDAG8 in immune development, psychosine-mediated inhibition of cytokinesis, and GC-induced cell death.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Sustained suppression of Bcr-Abl-driven lymphoid leukemia by microRNA mimics

Jami McLaughlin; Donghui Cheng; Oded Singer; Rita U. Lukacs; Caius G. Radu; Inder M. Verma; Owen N. Witte

Many cancers and leukemias are associated with strong dominant oncogenic mutations that activate tyrosine kinases and other classes of molecules, including transcription factors and antiapoptotic mechanisms. Some of these events can be targeted with small molecules or antibody-based therapeutics, but many remain intractable. In addition, cancer-related enzyme targets can often mutate, and drug-resistant variants are selected. Therapies directed at the mRNA encoding dominant oncogenes could provide a more global set of technologies for cancer treatment. To test this concept, we have used the model of transformation of hematopoietic cells by the chimeric Bcr-Abl oncogene, a highly activated tyrosine kinase. Our results show that tandem arrays of miRNA mimics, but not single miRNA mimics, directed against the Abl portion of the mRNA and introduced by lentiviral vectors can effectively alter the leukemogenic potency when the degree of suppression of expression of Bcr-Abl is reduced >200-fold from control levels. Only methods capable of such dramatic sustained reduction in the level of expression of highly activated kinase oncogenes are likely to be effective in controlling malignant cell populations.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

Oncogenic activation of c-ABL by mutation within its last exon.

Andrei Goga; Jami McLaughlin; Ann Marie Pendergast; Kalindi Parmar; A J Muller; N Rosenberg; Owen N. Witte

The c-ABL proto-oncogene is a predominantly nuclear localized tyrosine kinase. A random mutagenesis scheme was used to isolate c-ABL mutants whose expression produced a transformed phenotype in rodent fibroblast cells. An in-frame deletion within the central region of the last exon was identified in one ABL mutant. The mechanism of c-ABL oncogenic activation by mutation within the last exon differs both functionally and structurally from those of v-ABL and BCR/ABL. This class of ABL mutants shows increased tyrosine phosphorylation of cellular proteins in vivo but low levels of autophosphorylation. Last-exon ABL mutants are distinguished from v-ABL or BCR/ABL by their inability to transform primary bone marrow cells or support the growth of transformed pre-B cells. These findings define a new mechanism of oncogenic activation for the ABL kinase through mutations in the last exon which do not require amino-terminal deletions or mutations within the src homology regions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Long-term in vivo monitoring of mouse and human hematopoietic stem cell engraftment with a human positron emission tomography reporter gene

Melissa N. McCracken; Eric Gschweng; Evan Nair-Gill; Jami McLaughlin; Aaron R. Cooper; Mireille Riedinger; Donghui Cheng; Christopher Nosala; Donald B. Kohn; Owen N. Witte

Positron emission tomography (PET) reporter genes allow noninvasive whole-body imaging of transplanted cells by detection with radiolabeled probes. We used a human deoxycytidine kinase containing three amino acid substitutions within the active site (hdCK3mut) as a reporter gene in combination with the PET probe [18F]-L-FMAU (1-(2-deoxy-2-18fluoro-β-L-arabinofuranosyl)-5-methyluracil) to monitor models of mouse and human hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation. These mutations in hdCK3mut expanded the substrate capacity allowing for reporter-specific detection with a thymidine analog probe. Measurements of long-term engrafted cells (up to 32 wk) demonstrated that hdCK3mut expression is maintained in vivo with no counter selection against reporter-labeled cells. Reporter cells retained equivalent engraftment and differentiation capacity being detected in all major hematopoietic lineages and tissues. This reporter gene and probe should be applicable to noninvasively monitor therapeutic cell transplants in multiple tissues.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

IL-3 receptor signaling is dispensable for BCR-ABL-induced myeloproliferative disease

Stephane Wong; Jami McLaughlin; Donghui Cheng; Kevin Shannon; Lorraine Robb; Owen N. Witte

BCR-ABL expression led to a dramatic up-regulation of the IL-3, IL-5, and granulocyte–macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor β common (IL-3Rβc) and IL-3 receptor β (IL-3Rβ) chains in murine embryonic stem cell-derived hematopoietic cells coincident with an expansion of multipotent progenitors and myeloid elements. This up-regulation required BCR-ABL tyrosine kinase activity and led to IL-3Rβc/β chain tyrosine phosphorylation in the absence of detectable IL-3 production. These results suggested that cytokine-independent IL-3 receptor activation could be a dominant signaling component in BCR-ABL-induced leukemogenesis. To unambiguously define the significance of IL-3 receptor-dependent signaling in BCR-ABL-induced leukemogenesis, BCR-ABL-transduced bone marrow cells deficient in either IL-3Rβc chain or both IL-3Rβc/β chain expression were examined for their ability in generating myeloproliferative disease (MPD). These BCR-ABL-expressing knockout cells were capable of generating MPD similar to control cells, demonstrating that IL-3 receptor activation is not essential for BCR-ABL-induced MPD. However, the IL-3Rβc/β chain could act as a cofactor in BCR-ABL-induced leukemogenesis by activation of its many known oncogenic signaling pathways.

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Owen N. Witte

University of California

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Donghui Cheng

University of California

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Andrei Goga

University of California

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Caius G. Radu

University of California

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Stephane Wong

University of California

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Charles L. Sawyers

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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David Baltimore

California Institute of Technology

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