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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey L. Kurkewich is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey L. Kurkewich.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2014

Plasma Signature of Neurological Disease in the Monogenetic Disorder Niemann-Pick Type C

Md. Suhail Alam; Michelle Getz; Sue Yi; Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Innocent Safeukui; Kasturi Haldar

Background: Neurodegenerative diseases are associated with inflammation in the brain and other organs. Results: In murine Niemann-Pick Type C, cathepsin S was elevated and a plasma marker of liver inflammation. Lysozyme was an inflammatory plasma marker derived from both liver and brain. Conclusion: Their dual analysis suggested four distinct severity states of neurodegeneration. Significance: Cerebral inflammatory disease may be detectable in plasma. Early diagnosis of neurological disorders would greatly improve their management and treatment. A major hurdle is that inflammatory products of cerebral disease are not easily detected in blood. Inflammation in multiple organs and heterogeneity in disease present additional challenges in distinguishing the extent to which a blood-based marker reflects disease in brain or other afflicted organs. Murine models of the monogenetic disorder Niemann-Pick Type C present aggressive forms of cerebral and liver inflammatory disease. Microarray analyses previously revealed age-dependent changes in innate immunity transcripts in the mouse brain. We have now validated four putative secretory inflammatory markers that are also elevated in mouse liver. We include limited, first time analysis of human Niemann-Pick Type C liver and cerebellum. Furthermore, we utilized 2-hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin (HPβCD, an emerging therapeutic) administered intraperitoneally in mice, which abrogates inflammatory pathology in the liver but has limited effect on the brain. By analyzing the corresponding effects on inflammatory plasma proteins, we identified cathepsin S as a lead indicator of liver disease. In contrast, lysozyme was a marker of both brain and liver disease. 2-Hydroxypropyl-β-cyclodextrin had no effect on transcripts of neuron-specific 24-hydroxylase, and its product 24(S)-hydroxycholesterol was not a useful indicator in mouse plasma. Our data suggest that dual analysis of levels of the inflammatory markers lysozyme and cathepsin S may enable detection of multiple distinct states of neurodegeneration in plasma.


PLOS ONE | 2015

ARID3B Directly Regulates Ovarian Cancer Promoting Genes.

Alexander Bobbs; Katrina Gellerman; William Morgan Hallas; Stancy Joseph; Chao Yang; Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Karen D. Cowden Dahl

The DNA-binding protein AT-Rich Interactive Domain 3B (ARID3B) is elevated in ovarian cancer and increases tumor growth in a xenograft model of ovarian cancer. However, relatively little is known about ARID3Bs function. In this study we perform the first genome wide screen for ARID3B direct target genes and ARID3B regulated pathways. We identified and confirmed numerous ARID3B target genes by chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) followed by microarray and quantitative RT-PCR. Using motif-finding algorithms, we characterized a binding site for ARID3B, which is similar to the previously known site for the ARID3B paralogue ARID3A. Functionality of this predicted site was demonstrated by ChIP analysis. We next demonstrated that ARID3B induces expression of its targets in ovarian cancer cell lines. We validated that ARID3B binds to an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) enhancer and increases mRNA expression. ARID3B also binds to the promoter of Wnt5A and its receptor FZD5. FZD5 is highly expressed in ovarian cancer cell lines, and is upregulated by exogenous ARID3B. Both ARID3B and FZD5 expression increase adhesion to extracellular matrix (ECM) components including collagen IV, fibronectin and vitronectin. ARID3B-increased adhesion to collagens II and IV require FZD5. This study directly demonstrates that ARID3B binds target genes in a sequence-specific manner, resulting in increased gene expression. Furthermore, our data indicate that ARID3B regulation of direct target genes in the Wnt pathway promotes adhesion of ovarian cancer cells.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2016

The mirn23a microRNA cluster antagonizes B cell development

Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Emmanuel Bikorimana; Tan Nguyen; Nathan Klopfenstein; Helen Zhang; William Morgan Hallas; Gwen Stayback; Mary Ann McDowell; Richard Dahl

Ablation of microRNA synthesis by deletion of the microRNA‐processing enzyme Dicer has demonstrated that microRNAs are necessary for normal hematopoietic differentiation and function. However, it is still unclear which specific microRNAs are required for hematopoiesis and at what developmental stages they are necessary. This is especially true for immune cell development. We previously observed that overexpression of the products of the mirn23a gene (microRNA‐23a, ‐24‐2, and 27a) in hematopoietic progenitors increased myelopoiesis with a reciprocal decrease in B lymphopoiesis, both in vivo and in vitro. In this study, we generated a microRNA‐23a, ‐24‐2, and 27a germline knockout mouse to determine whether microRNA‐23a, ‐24‐2, and 27a expression was essential for immune cell development. Characterization of hematopoiesis in microRNA‐23a, ‐24‐2, and 27a−/− mice revealed a significant increase in B lymphocytes in both the bone marrow and the spleen, with a concomitant decrease in myeloid cells (monocytes/granulocytes). Analysis of the bone marrow progenitor populations revealed a significant increase in common lymphoid progenitors and a significant decrease in both bone marrow common myeloid progenitors and granulocyte monocyte progenitors. Gene‐expression analysis of primary hematopoietic progenitors and multipotent erythroid myeloid lymphoid cells showed that microRNA‐23a, ‐24‐2, and 27a regulates essential B cell gene‐expression networks. Overexpression of microRNA‐24‐2 target Tribbles homolog 3 can recapitulate the microRNA‐23a, ‐24‐2, and 27a−/− phenotype in vitro, suggesting that increased B cell development in microRNA‐23a, ‐24‐2, and 27a null mice can be partially explained by a Tribbles homolog 3‐dependent mechanism. Data from microRNA‐23a, ‐24‐2, and 27a−/− mice support a critical role for this microRNA cluster in regulating immune cell populations through repression of B lymphopoiesis.


PLOS Genetics | 2017

The miR-23a~27a~24-2 microRNA cluster buffers transcription and signaling pathways during hematopoiesis

Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Justin Hansen; Nathan Klopfenstein; Helen Zhang; Christian Wood; Austin Boucher; Joseph Hickman; David E. Muench; H. Leighton Grimes; Richard Dahl

MicroRNA cluster mirn23a has previously been shown to promote myeloid development at the expense of lymphoid development in overexpression and knockout mouse models. This polarization is observed early in hematopoietic development, with an increase in common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs) and a decrease in all myeloid progenitor subsets in adult bone marrow. The pool size of multipotential progenitors (MPPs) is unchanged; however, in this report we observe by flow cytometry that polarized subsets of MPPs are changed in the absence of mirn23a. Additionally, in vitro culture of MPPs and sorted MPP transplants showed that these cells have decreased myeloid and increased lymphoid potential in vitro and in vivo. We investigated the mechanism by which mirn23a regulates hematopoietic differentiation and observed that mirn23a promotes myeloid development of hematopoietic progenitors through regulation of hematopoietic transcription factors and signaling pathways. Early transcription factors that direct the commitment of MPPs to CLPs (Ikzf1, Runx1, Satb1, Bach1 and Bach2) are increased in the absence of mirn23a miRNAs as well as factors that commit the CLP to the B cell lineage (FoxO1, Ebf1, and Pax5). Mirn23a appears to buffer transcription factor levels so that they do not stochastically reach a threshold level to direct differentiation. Intriguingly, mirn23a also inversely regulates the PI3 kinase (PI3K)/Akt and BMP/Smad signaling pathways. Pharmacological inhibitor studies, coupled with dominant active/dominant negative biochemical experiments, show that both signaling pathways are critical to mirn23a’s regulation of hematopoietic differentiation. Lastly, consistent with mirn23a being a physiological inhibitor of B cell development, we observed that the essential B cell transcription factor EBF1 represses expression of mirn23a. In summary, our data demonstrates that mirn23a regulates a complex array of transcription and signaling pathways to modulate adult hematopoiesis.


Cancer Growth and Metastasis | 2018

CD133 Promotes Adhesion to the Ovarian Cancer Metastatic Niche

Lynn Roy; Alexander Bobbs; Rachel A. Sattler; Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Paige B Dausinas; Prakash D. Nallathamby; Karen D. Cowden Dahl

Cancer stem cells (CSCs) are an attractive therapeutic target due to their predicted role in both metastasis and chemoresistance. One of the most commonly agreed on markers for ovarian CSCs is the cell surface protein CD133. CD133+ ovarian CSCs have increased tumorigenicity, resistance to chemotherapy, and increased metastasis. Therefore, we were interested in defining how CD133 is regulated and whether it has a role in tumor metastasis. Previously we found that overexpression of the transcription factor, ARID3B, increased the expression of PROM1 (CD133 gene) in ovarian cancer cells in vitro and in xenograft tumors. We report that ARID3B directly regulates PROM1 expression. Importantly, in a xenograft mouse model of ovarian cancer, knockdown of PROM1 in cells expressing exogenous ARID3B resulted in increased survival time compared with cells expressing ARID3B and a control short hairpin RNA. This indicated that ARID3B regulation of PROM1 is critical for tumor growth. Moreover, we hypothesized that CD133 may affect metastatic spread. Given that the peritoneal mesothelium is a major site of ovarian cancer metastasis, we explored the role of PROM1 in mesothelial attachment. PROM1 expression increased adhesion to mesothelium in vitro and ex vivo. Collectively, our work demonstrates that ARID3B regulates PROM1 adhesion to the ovarian cancer metastatic niche.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Arid3b Is Critical for B Lymphocyte Development.

Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Nathan Klopfenstein; William M. Hallas; Christian Wood; Rachel A. Sattler; Chhaya Das; Haley Tucker; Richard Dahl; Karen D. Cowden Dahl

Arid3a and Arid3b belong to a subfamily of ARID (AT-rich interaction domain) transcription factors. The Arid family is involved in regulating chromatin accessibility, proliferation, and differentiation. Arid3a and Arid3b are closely related and share a unique REKLES domain that mediates their homo- and hetero-multimerization. Arid3a was originally isolated as a B cell transcription factor binding to the AT rich matrix attachment regions (MARS) of the immunoglobulin heavy chain intronic enhancer. Deletion of Arid3a results in a highly penetrant embryonic lethality with severe defects in erythropoiesis and hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). The few surviving Arid3a-/- (<1%) animals have decreased HSCs and early progenitors in the bone marrow, but all mature lineages are normally represented in the bone marrow and periphery except for B cells. Arid3b-/- animals die around E7.5 precluding examination of hematopoietic development. So it is unclear whether the phenotype of Arid3a loss on hematopoiesis is dependent or independent of Arid3b. In this study we circumvented this limitation by also examining hematopoiesis in mice with a conditional allele of Arid3b. Bone marrow lacking Arid3b shows decreased common lymphoid progenitors (CLPs) and downstream B cell populations while the T cell and myeloid lineages are unchanged, reminiscent of the adult hematopoietic defect in Arid3a mice. Unlike Arid3a-/- mice, HSC populations are unperturbed in Arid3b-/- mice. This study demonstrates that HSC development is independent of Arid3b, whereas B cell development requires both Arid3a and Arid3b transcription factors.


Experimental Hematology | 2017

The mirn23a and mirn23b MicroRNA clusters are necessary for proper hematopoietic progenitor cell production and differentiation

Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Austin Boucher; Nathan Klopfenstein; Ramdas Baskar; Reuben Kapur; Richard Dahl

Mice deficient for microRNA (miRNA) cluster mirn23a exhibit increased B lymphopoiesis at the expense of myelopoiesis, whereas hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell (HSPC) populations are unchanged. Mammals possess a paralogous mirn23b gene that can give rise to three mature miRNAs (miR-23b, miR-24-1, and miR-27b) that have identical seed/mRNA-targeting sequences to their mirn23a counterparts. To assess whether compound deletion of mirn23a and mirn23b exacerbates the hematopoietic phenotype observed in mirn23a-/- mice, we generated a compound mirn23a-/-mirn23bfl/fl:Mx1-Cre conditional knockout mouse and assayed hematopoietic development after excision of mirn23b. Loss of both genes in adult bone marrow further skewed HSPC differentiation toward B cells at the expense of myeloid cells, demonstrating a dosage-dependent effect on regulating cell differentiation. Strikingly, double-knockout (DKO) mice had decreased bone marrow cellularity with significantly decreased hematopoietic stem cell and HSPC populations, a phenotype not observed in mice deficient for mirn23a alone. Competitive transplantation assays showed decreased contribution of mirn23a-/-mirn23b-/- HSPCs to hematopoietic lineages at 6 and 12 weeks after transplantation. Defects in the proliferation of mirn23a-/-b-/- HSPCs was not observed; however, DKO cells were more apoptotic compared with both wild-type and mirn23a-/- cells. Together, our data show that complete loss of mirn23a/mirn23b miRNAs results in decreased blood production and affects lineage output in a concentration-dependent manner.


BioMed Research International | 2016

E2A Antagonizes PU.1 Activity through Inhibition of DNA Binding

Jason H. Rogers; Kristin S. Owens; Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Nathan Klopfenstein; Sangeeta R. Iyer; M. Celeste Simon; Richard Dahl

Antagonistic interactions between transcription factors contribute to cell fate decisions made by multipotent hematopoietic progenitor cells. Concentration of the transcription factor PU.1 affects myeloid/lymphoid development with high levels of PU.1 directing myeloid cell fate acquisition at the expense of B cell differentiation. High levels of PU.1 may be required for myelopoiesis in order to overcome inhibition of its activity by transcription factors that promote B cell development. The B cell transcription factors, E2A and EBF, are necessary for commitment of multipotential progenitors and lymphoid primed multipotential progenitors to lymphocytes. In this report we hypothesized that factors required for early B cell commitment would bind to PU.1 and antagonize its ability to induce myeloid differentiation. We investigated whether E2A and/or EBF associate with PU.1. We observed that the E2A component, E47, but not EBF, directly binds to PU.1. Additionally E47 represses PU.1-dependent transactivation of the MCSFR promoter through antagonizing PU.1s ability to bind to DNA. Exogenous E47 expression in hematopoietic cells inhibits myeloid differentiation. Our data suggest that E2A antagonism of PU.1 activity contributes to its ability to commit multipotential hematopoietic progenitors to the lymphoid lineages.


Author | 2018

The mirn23a and mirn23b microrna clusters are necessary for proper hematopoietic progenitor cell production and differentiation

Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Austin Boucher; Nathan Klopfenstein; Ramdas Baskar; Reuben Kapur; Richard Dahl


PMC | 2016

Arid3b Is Critical for B Lymphocyte Development

Jeffrey L. Kurkewich; Nathan Klopfenstein; William Morgan Hallas; Christian Wood; Rachel A. Sattler; Chhaya Das; Haley Tucker; Richard Dahl; Karen D. Cowden Dahl

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Richard Dahl

University of Notre Dame

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Austin Boucher

University of Notre Dame

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Christian Wood

University of Notre Dame

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Helen Zhang

University of Notre Dame

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Justin Hansen

University of Notre Dame

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