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Dive into the research topics where Jayne S. Danska is active.

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Featured researches published by Jayne S. Danska.


Science | 2013

Sex Differences in the Gut Microbiome Drive Hormone-Dependent Regulation of Autoimmunity

Janet Markle; Daniel N. Frank; Steven M. Mortin-Toth; Charles E. Robertson; Leah M. Feazel; Ulrike Rolle-Kampczyk; Martin von Bergen; Kathy D. McCoy; Andrew J. Macpherson; Jayne S. Danska

Mighty Male Microbes Both genetic and environmental factors contribute to an individuals susceptibility to autoimmune disease, but the specific environmental influences are not well characterized. Markle et al. (p. 1084, published online 17 January; see the Perspective by Flak et al.) explored how microbial factors, in particular the gut microbiota, influence susceptibility to type 1 diabetes in mice. In the non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse model of type 1 diabetes, female mice are significantly more susceptible to disease than males; however, this difference was not apparent under germ-free conditions. Transfer of cecal contents from male NOD mice to female NOD mice prior to disease onset protected against pancreatic islet inflammation, autoantibody production, and the development of diabetes and was associated with increased testosterone in female mice. Blocking androgen receptor activity abrogated protection. Thus, the microbiota may be able to regulate sex hormones and influence an individuals susceptibility to autoimmunity. In mice, the gut microbiota influences levels of sex hormones and the development of autoimmune disease. [Also see Perspective by Flak et al.] Microbial exposures and sex hormones exert potent effects on autoimmune diseases, many of which are more prevalent in women. We demonstrate that early-life microbial exposures determine sex hormone levels and modify progression to autoimmunity in the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse model of type 1 diabetes (T1D). Colonization by commensal microbes elevated serum testosterone and protected NOD males from T1D. Transfer of gut microbiota from adult males to immature females altered the recipients microbiota, resulting in elevated testosterone and metabolomic changes, reduced islet inflammation and autoantibody production, and robust T1D protection. These effects were dependent on androgen receptor activity. Thus, the commensal microbial community alters sex hormone levels and regulates autoimmune disease fate in individuals with high genetic risk.


Nature Medicine | 2011

Stem cell gene expression programs influence clinical outcome in human leukemia

Kolja Eppert; Katsuto Takenaka; Eric R. Lechman; Levi Waldron; Björn Nilsson; Klaus H. Metzeler; Armando Poeppl; Vicki Ling; Joseph Beyene; Angelo J. Canty; Jayne S. Danska; Stefan K. Bohlander; Christian Buske; Mark D. Minden; Todd R. Golub; Igor Jurisica; Benjamin L. Ebert; John E. Dick

Xenograft studies indicate that some solid tumors and leukemias are organized as cellular hierarchies sustained by cancer stem cells (CSCs). Despite the promise of the CSC model, its relevance in humans remains uncertain. Here we show that acute myeloid leukemia (AML) follows a CSC model on the basis of sorting multiple populations from each of 16 primary human AML samples and identifying which contain leukemia stem cells (LSCs) using a sensitive xenograft assay. Analysis of gene expression from all functionally validated populations yielded an LSC-specific signature. Similarly, a hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene signature was established. Bioinformatic analysis identified a core transcriptional program shared by LSCs and HSCs, revealing the molecular machinery underlying stemness properties. Both stem cell programs were highly significant independent predictors of patient survival and were found in existing prognostic signatures. Thus, determinants of stemness influence the clinical outcome of AML, establishing that LSCs are clinically relevant and not artifacts of xenotransplantation.


Nature Immunology | 2007

Polymorphism in Sirpa modulates engraftment of human hematopoietic stem cells

Katsuto Takenaka; Tatiana K. Prasolava; Jean C.Y. Wang; Steven M. Mortin-Toth; Sam Khalouei; Olga I. Gan; John E. Dick; Jayne S. Danska

Graft failure in the transplantation of hematopoietic stem cells occurs despite donor-host genetic identity of human leukocyte antigens, suggesting that additional factors modulate engraftment. With the nobese diabetic (NOD)–severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) xenotransplantation model, we found that the NOD background allowed better hematopoietic engraftment than did other strains with equivalent immunodeficiency-related mutations. We used positional genetics to characterize the molecular basis for this strain specificity and found that the NOD Sirpa allele conferred support for human hematopoiesis. NOD SIRP-α showed enhanced binding to the human CD47 ligand, and its expression on mouse macrophages was required for support of human hematopoiesis. Thus, we have identified Sirpa polymorphism as a potent genetic determinant of the engraftment of human hematopoietic stem cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1996

Biochemical and genetic defects in the DNA-dependent protein kinase in murine scid lymphocytes.

Jayne S. Danska; Dianne Holland; Sanjeev Mariathasan; Kelly M. Williams; Cynthia J. Guidos

The scid gene product has been identified as the 460-kDa catalytic subunit of the DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs p460), a member of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase family. DNA-PK activity is undetectable in scid cells, but the molecular basis for this defect has not been identified. Here we report that expression of p460 in scid lymphocyte precursors is detectable but is reduced at least 10-fold relative to that in wild-type lymphocytes. In addition, we show that the scid mutation disturbs p460 nuclear association, presumably affecting its role in DNA repair pathways. To examine the molecular basis for our observations, we used a degenerate PCR strategy to clone the C-terminal p460 kinase domain from wild-type and scid thymocytes. Northern (RNA) analysis with these probes revealed normal steady-state p460 mRNA levels in scid cells, suggesting that the reduced abundance of p460 protein is due to a posttranscriptional defect. Sequence comparisons identified a single-base-pair alteration in the scid C-terminal p460 kinase domain, resulting in a premature stop codon. This mutation is predicted to truncate p460 by approximately 8 kDa, but it preserves the conserved motifs required for kinase activity in members of the phosphoinositidyl 3-kinase family. Despite a computed molecular weight alteration of less than 2%, we were able to visualize this difference by Western blot (immunoblot) analysis of wild-type and scid p460. These data demonstrate that the scid DNA-PKes mutation is not a null allele and suggest a molecular rationale for the well-described leakiness of the scid phenotype.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Opinion: Sex inclusion in basic research drives discovery

Sabra L. Klein; Londa Schiebinger; Marcia L. Stefanick; Larry Cahill; Jayne S. Danska; Geert J. De Vries; Melina R. Kibbe; Margaret M. McCarthy; Jeffrey S. Mogil; Teresa K. Woodruff; Irving Zucker

Much of our understanding of disease processes and treatments begins with preclinical studies that use nonhuman animals and cell cultures. Such studies are integral to biomedical research and the development pipeline for drugs, devices, and biologics. Most preclinical biomedical research, however, has been conducted with inadequate consideration of sex (1⇓–3).


Cancer Cell | 2003

The RAG-1/2 endonuclease causes genomic instability and controls CNS complications of lymphoblastic leukemia in p53/Prkdc-deficient mice

Rebecca A. Gladdy; Michael D. Taylor; Christine J. Williams; Ildiko Grandal; Jana Karaskova; Jeremy A. Squire; James T. Rutka; Cynthia J. Guidos; Jayne S. Danska

Double-strand DNA breaks (DSB) induce chromosomal translocations and gene amplification in cell culture, but mechanisms by which DSB cause genomic instability in vivo are poorly understood. We show that RAG-1/2-induced DSB cause IgH/c-Myc translocations in leukemic pro-B cells from p53/Prkdc-deficient mice. Strikingly, these translocations were complex, clonally heterogeneous and amplified. We observed reiterated IgH/c-Myc fusions on dicentric chromosomes, suggesting that amplification occurred by repeated cycles of bridge, breakage and fusion. Leukemogenesis was not mitigated in RAG-2/p53/Prkdc-deficient mice, but leukemic pro-B cells lacked IgH/c-Myc translocations. Thus, global genomic instability conferred by p53/Prkdc disruption efficiently transforms pro-B cells lacking RAG-1/2-induced DSB. Unexpectedly, RAG-2/p53/Prkdc-deficient mice also developed leptomeningeal leukemia, providing a novel spontaneous model for this frequent complication of human lymphoblastic malignancies.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2012

Disruption of SIRPα signaling in macrophages eliminates human acute myeloid leukemia stem cells in xenografts

Alexandre P.A. Theocharides; Liqing Jin; Po-Yan Cheng; Tatiana K. Prasolava; Andrei V. Malko; Jenny M.-Y. Ho; Armando Poeppl; Nico van Rooijen; Mark D. Minden; Jayne S. Danska; John E. Dick; Jean C.Y. Wang

Inhibition of macrophage SIRPα–CD47 interactions mediates phagocytosis and clearance of acute myeloid leukemia stem cells.


Immunological Reviews | 2006

ATM-dependent DNA damage surveillance in T-cell development and leukemogenesis: the DSB connection

Irina R. Matei; Cynthia J. Guidos; Jayne S. Danska

Summary:u2002 The immune system is capable of recognizing and eliminating an enormous array of pathogens due to the extremely diverse antigen receptor repertoire of T and B lymphocytes. However, the development of lymphocytes bearing receptors with unique specificities requires the generation of programmed double strand breaks (DSBs) coupled with bursts of proliferation, rendering lymphocytes susceptible to mutations contributing to oncogenic transformation. Consequently, mechanisms responsible for monitoring global genomic integrity must be activated during lymphocyte development to limit the oncogenic potential of antigen receptor locus recombination. Mutations in ATM (ataxia‐telangiectasia mutated), a kinase that coordinates DSB monitoring and the response to DNA damage, result in impaired T‐cell development and predispose to T‐cell leukemia. Here, we review recent evidence providing insight into the mechanisms by which ATM promotes normal lymphocyte development and protects from neoplastic transformation.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000

Two Genetic Loci Regulate T Cell–Dependent Islet Inflammation and Drive Autoimmune Diabetes Pathogenesis

Casey J. Fox; Andrew D. Paterson; Steven M. Mortin-Toth; Jayne S. Danska

Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is a polygenic disease caused by progressive autoimmune infiltration (insulitis) of the pancreatic islets of Langerhan, culminating in the destruction of insulin-producing beta cells. Genome scans of families with diabetes suggest that multiple loci make incremental contributions to disease susceptibility. However, only the IDDM1 locus is well characterized, at a molecular and functional level, as alleleic variants of the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class II HLA-DQB1, DRB1, and DPB1 genes that mediate antigen presentation to T cells. In the nonobese diabetic (NOD) mouse model, the Idd1 locus was shown to be the orthologous MHC gene I-Ab. Inheritance of susceptibility alleles at IDDM1/Idd1 is insufficient for disease development in humans and NOD mice. However, the identities and functions of the remaining diabetes loci (Idd2-Idd19 in NOD mice) are largely undefined. A crucial limitation in previous genetic linkage studies of this disease has been reliance on a single complex phenotype-diabetes that displays low penetrance and is of limited utility for high-resolution genetic mapping. Using the NOD model, we have identified an early step in diabetes pathogenesis that behaves as a highly penetrant trait. We report that NOD-derived alleles at both the Idd5 and Idd13 loci regulate a T lymphocyte-dependent progression from a benign to a destructive stage of insulitis. Human chromosomal regions orthologous to the Idd5 and -13 intervals are also linked to diabetes risk, suggesting that conserved genes encoded at these loci are central regulators of disease pathogenesis. These data are the first to reveal a role for individual non-MHC Idd loci in a specific, critical step in diabetes pathogenesis-T cell recruitment to islet lesions driving destructive inflammation. Importantly, identification of intermediate phenotypes in complex disease pathogenesis provides the tools required to progress toward gene identification at these loci.


American Journal of Physiology-lung Cellular and Molecular Physiology | 2010

Lunatic Fringe-mediated Notch signaling is required for lung alveogenesis

Keli Xu; Erica Nieuwenhuis; Brenda Cohen; Wei Wang; Angelo J. Canty; Jayne S. Danska; Leigh Coultas; Janet Rossant; Megan Y.J. Wu; Tino D. Piscione; Andras Nagy; Achim Gossler; Geoff Hicks; Chi-chung Hui; R. Mark Henkelman; Lisa X. Yu; John G. Sled; Thomas Gridley; Sean E. Egan

Distal lung development occurs through coordinated induction of myofibroblasts, epithelial cells, and capillaries. Lunatic Fringe (Lfng) is a beta(1-3) N-acetylglucosamine transferase that modifies Notch receptors to facilitate their activation by Delta-like (Dll1/4) ligands. Lfng is expressed in the distal lung during saccular development, and deletion of this gene impairs myofibroblast differentiation and alveogenesis in this context. A similar defect was observed in Notch2(beta-geo/+)Notch3(beta-geo/beta-geo) compound mutant mice but not in Notch2(beta-geo/+) or Notch3(beta-geo/beta-geo) single mutants. Finally, to directly test for the role of Notch signaling in myofibroblast differentiation in vivo, we used ROSA26-rtTA(/+);tetO-CRE(/+);RBPJkappa(flox/flox) inducible mutant mice to show that disruption of canonical Notch signaling during late embryonic development prevents induction of smooth muscle actin in mesenchymal cells of the distal lung. In sum, these results demonstrate that Lfng functions to enhance Notch signaling in myofibroblast precursor cells and thereby to coordinate differentiation and mobilization of myofibroblasts required for alveolar septation.

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John E. Dick

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Mark D. Minden

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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Olga I. Gan

Princess Margaret Cancer Centre

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