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Dive into the research topics where Jena M. Giltnane is active.

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Featured researches published by Jena M. Giltnane.


Immunity | 2002

Blimp-1 Orchestrates Plasma Cell Differentiation by Extinguishing the Mature B Cell Gene Expression Program

Arthur L. Shaffer; Kuo-I Lin; Tracy C. Kuo; Xin Yu; Elaine M. Hurt; Andreas Rosenwald; Jena M. Giltnane; Liming Yang; Hong Zhao; Kathryn Calame; Louis M. Staudt

Blimp-1, a transcriptional repressor, drives the terminal differentiation of B cells to plasma cells. Using DNA microarrays, we found that introduction of Blimp-1 into B cells blocked expression of a remarkably large set of genes, while a much smaller number was induced. Blimp-1 initiated this cascade of gene expression changes by directly repressing genes encoding several transcription factors, including Spi-B and Id3, that regulate signaling by the B cell receptor. Blimp-1 also inhibited immunoglobulin class switching by blocking expression of AID, Ku70, Ku86, DNA-PKcs, and STAT6. These findings suggest that Blimp-1 promotes plasmacytic differentiation by extinguishing gene expression important for B cell receptor signaling, germinal center B cell function, and proliferation while allowing expression of important plasma cell genes such as XBP-1.


Nature Immunology | 2001

Gene regulation mediated by calcium signals in T lymphocytes.

Stefan Feske; Jena M. Giltnane; Ricardo E. Dolmetsch; Louis M. Staudt; Anjana Rao

Modulation of many signaling pathways in antigen-stimulated T and B cells results in global changes in gene expression. Here we investigate the contribution of calcium signaling to gene expression in T cells using cell lines from two severe-combined immunodeficiency patients with several cytokine deficiencies and diminished activation of the transcription factor NFAT nuclear factor of activated T cells. These T cells show a strong defect in transmembrane calcium influx that is also apparent in their B cells and fibroblasts. DNA microarray analysis of calcium entry–deficient and control T cells shows that Ca2+ signals both activate and repress gene expression and are largely transduced through the phosphatase calcineurin. We demonstrate an elaborate network of signaling pathways downstream of the T cell receptor, explaining the complexity of changes in gene expression during T cell activation.


Genome Biology | 2001

Genomic-scale measurement of mRNA turnover and the mechanisms of action of the anti-cancer drug flavopiridol

Lloyd T. Lam; Oxana K. Pickeral; Amy C Peng; Andreas Rosenwald; Elaine M. Hurt; Jena M. Giltnane; Lauren Averett; Hong Zhao; R. Eric Davis; Mohan Sathyamoorthy; Larry M. Wahl; Eric D Harris; Judy A Mikovits; Anne Monks; Melinda G. Hollingshead; Edward A. Sausville; Louis M. Staudt

BackgroundFlavopiridol, a flavonoid currently in cancer clinical trials, inhibits cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) by competitively blocking their ATP-binding pocket. However, the mechanism of action of flavopiridol as an anti-cancer agent has not been fully elucidated.ResultsUsing DNA microarrays, we found that flavopiridol inhibited gene expression broadly, in contrast to two other CDK inhibitors, roscovitine and 9-nitropaullone. The gene expression profile of flavopiridol closely resembled the profiles of two transcription inhibitors, actinomycin D and 5,6-dichloro-1-β-D-ribofuranosyl-benzimidazole (DRB), suggesting that flavopiridol inhibits transcription globally. We were therefore able to use flavopiridol to measure mRNA turnover rates comprehensively and we found that different functional classes of genes had distinct distributions of mRNA turnover rates. In particular, genes encoding apoptosis regulators frequently had very short half-lives, as did several genes encoding key cell-cycle regulators. Strikingly, genes that were transcriptionally inducible were disproportionately represented in the class of genes with rapid mRNA turnover.ConclusionsThe present genomic-scale measurement of mRNA turnover uncovered a regulatory logic that links gene function with mRNA half-life. The observation that transcriptionally inducible genes often have short mRNA half-lives demonstrates that cells have a coordinated strategy to rapidly modulate the mRNA levels of these genes. In addition, the present results suggest that flavopiridol may be more effective against types of cancer that are highly dependent on genes with unstable mRNAs.


Immunity | 2001

Signatures of the immune response.

Arthur L. Shaffer; Andreas Rosenwald; Elaine M. Hurt; Jena M. Giltnane; Lloyd T. Lam; Oxana K. Pickeral; Louis M. Staudt

A compendium of global gene expression measurements from DNA microarray analysis of immune cells identifies gene expression signatures defining various lineages, differentiation stages, and signaling pathways. Germinal center (GC) B cells represent a discrete stage of differentiation with a unique gene expression signature. This includes genes involved in proliferation, as evidenced by high expression of G2/M phase regulators and low expression of ribosomal and metabolic genes that are transcriptional targets of c-myc. GC B cells also lack expression of the NF-kappaB signature genes, which may favor apoptosis. Finally, the transcriptional repression signature of BCL-6 reveals how this factor can prevent terminal differentiation of B cells and cause B cell lymphomas.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Role of NF-κB in Cell Survival and Transcription of Latent Membrane Protein 1-Expressing or Epstein-Barr Virus Latency III-Infected Cells

Ellen Cahir-McFarland; Kara Carter; Andreas Rosenwald; Jena M. Giltnane; Sarah E. Henrickson; Louis M. Staudt; Elliott Kieff

ABSTRACT Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) latency III infection converts B lymphocytes into lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCLs) by expressing EBV nuclear and membrane proteins, EBNAs, and latent membrane proteins (LMPs), which regulate transcription through Notch and tumor necrosis factor receptor pathways. The role of NF-κB in LMP1 and overall EBV latency III transcriptional effects was investigated by treating LCLs with BAY11-7082 (BAY11). BAY11 rapidly and irreversibly inhibited NF-κB, decreased mitochondrial membrane potential, induced apoptosis, and altered LCL gene expression. BAY11 effects were similar to those of an NF-κB inhibitor, ΔN-IκBα, in effecting decreased JNK1 expression and in microarray analyses. More than 80% of array elements that decreased with ΔN-IκBα expression decreased with BAY11 treatment. Newly identified NF-κB-induced, LMP1-induced, and EBV-induced genes included pleckstrin, Jun-B, c-FLIP, CIP4, and IκBε. Of 776 significantly changed array elements, 134 were fourfold upregulated in EBV latency III, and 74 were fourfold upregulated with LMP1 expression alone, whereas only 28 were more than fourfold downregulated by EBV latency III. EBV latency III-regulated gene products mediate cell migration (EBI2, CCR7, RGS1, RANTES, MIP1α, MIP1β, CXCR5, and RGS13), antigen presentation (major histocompatibility complex proteins and JAW1), mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway (DUSP5 and p62Dok), and interferon (IFN) signaling (IFN-γRα, IRF-4, and STAT1). Comparison of EBV latency III LCL gene expression to immunoglobulin M (IgM)-stimulated B cells, germinal-center B cells, and germinal-center-derived lymphomas clustered LCLs with IgM-stimulated B cells separately from germinal-center cells or germinal-center lymphoma cells. Expression of IRF-2, AIM1, ASK1, SNF2L2, and components of IFN signaling pathways further distinguished EBV latency III-infected B cells from IgM-stimulated or germinal-center B cells.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003

Growth Suppression by Acute Promyelocytic Leukemia-Associated Protein PLZF Is Mediated by Repression of c-myc Expression

Melanie J. McConnell; Nathalie Chevallier; Windy Berkofsky-Fessler; Jena M. Giltnane; Rupal B. Malani; Louis M. Staudt; Jonathan D. Licht

ABSTRACT The transcriptional repressor PLZF was identified by its translocation with retinoic acid receptor alpha in t(11;17) acute promyelocytic leukemia (APL). Ectopic expression of PLZF leads to cell cycle arrest and growth suppression, while disruption of normal PLZF function is implicated in the development of APL. To clarify the function of PLZF in cell growth and survival, we used an inducible PLZF cell line in a microarray analysis to identify the target genes repressed by PLZF. One prominent gene identified was c-myc. The array analysis demonstrated that repression of c-myc by PLZF led to a reduction in c-myc-activated transcripts and an increase in c-myc-repressed transcripts. Regulation of c-myc by PLZF was shown to be both direct and reversible. An interaction between PLZF and the c-myc promoter could be detected both in vitro and in vivo. PLZF repressed the wild-type c-myc promoter in a reporter assay, dependent on the integrity of the binding site identified in vitro. PLZF binding in vivo was coincident with a decrease in RNA polymerase occupation of the c-myc promoter, indicating that repression occurred via a reduction in the initiation of transcription. Finally, expression of c-myc reversed the cell cycle arrest induced by PLZF. These data suggest that PLZF expression maintains a cell in a quiescent state by repressing c-myc expression and preventing cell cycle progression. Loss of this repression through the translocation that occurs in t(11;17) would have serious consequences for cell growth control.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Analysis of γc-Family Cytokine Target Genes IDENTIFICATION OF DUAL-SPECIFICITY PHOSPHATASE 5 (DUSP5) AS A REGULATOR OF MITOGEN-ACTIVATED PROTEIN KINASE ACTIVITY IN INTERLEUKIN-2 SIGNALING

Panu E. Kovanen; Andreas Rosenwald; Jacqueline Fu; Elaine M. Hurt; Lloyd T. Lam; Jena M. Giltnane; George E. Wright; Louis M. Staudt; Warren J. Leonard

Interleukin (IL)-2, IL-4, IL-7, IL-9, IL-15, and IL-21 form a family of cytokines based on their sharing the common cytokine receptor γ chain, γc, which is mutated in X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). As a step toward further elucidating the mechanism of action of these cytokines in T-cell biology, we compared the gene expression profiles of IL-2, IL-4, IL-7, and IL-15 in T cells using cDNA microarrays. IL-2, IL-7, and IL-15 each induced a highly similar set of genes, whereas IL-4 induced distinct genes correlating with differential STAT protein activation by this cytokine. One gene induced by IL-2, IL-7, and IL-15 but not IL-4 was dual-specificity phosphatase 5 (DUSP5). In IL-2-dependent CTLL-2 cells, we show that IL-2-induced ERK-1/2 activity was inhibited by wild type DUSP5 but markedly increased by an inactive form of DUSP5, suggesting a negative feedback role for DUSP5 in IL-2 signaling. Our findings provide insights into the shared versus distinctive actions by different members of the γc family of cytokines. Moreover, we have identified a DUSP5-dependent negative regulatory pathway for MAPK activity in T cells.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2002

The Use of Molecular Profiling to Predict Survival after Chemotherapy for Diffuse Large-B-Cell Lymphoma

Andreas Rosenwald; George E. Wright; Wing C. Chan; Joseph M. Connors; Elias Campo; Richard I. Fisher; Randy D. Gascoyne; H. Konrad Muller-Hermelink; Erlend B. Smeland; Jena M. Giltnane; Elaine M. Hurt; Hong Zhao; Lauren Averett; Liming Yang; Wyndham H. Wilson; Elaine S. Jaffe; Richard Simon; Richard D. Klausner; John Powell; Patricia L. Duffey; Dan L. Longo; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Warren G. Sanger; Bhavana J. Dave; James C. Lynch; Julie M. Vose; James O. Armitage; Emilio Montserrat; Armando López-Guillermo


Cancer Cell | 2003

The proliferation gene expression signature is a quantitative integrator of oncogenic events that predicts survival in mantle cell lymphoma

Andreas Rosenwald; George E. Wright; Adrian Wiestner; Wing C. Chan; Joseph M. Connors; Elias Campo; Randy D. Gascoyne; Thomas M. Grogan; H. Konrad Muller-Hermelink; Erlend B. Smeland; Michael Chiorazzi; Jena M. Giltnane; Elaine M. Hurt; Hong Zhao; Lauren Averett; Sarah E. Henrickson; Liming Yang; John Powell; Wyndham H. Wilson; Elaine S. Jaffe; Richard Simon; Richard D. Klausner; Emilio Montserrat; Francesc Bosch; Timothy C. Greiner; Dennis D. Weisenburger; Warren G. Sanger; Bhavana J. Dave; James C. Lynch; Julie M. Vose


Nature Immunology | 2008

Corrigendum: Gene regulation mediated by calcium signals in T lymphocytes

Stefan Feske; Jena M. Giltnane; Ricardo E. Dolmetsch; Louis M. Staudt; Anjana Rao

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Louis M. Staudt

National Institutes of Health

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Andreas Rosenwald

National Institutes of Health

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Hong Zhao

National Institutes of Health

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Lloyd T. Lam

National Institutes of Health

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George E. Wright

National Institutes of Health

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Lauren Averett

National Institutes of Health

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Liming Yang

National Institutes of Health

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Arthur L. Shaffer

National Institutes of Health

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