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Dive into the research topics where Jennifer K. Taylor is active.

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Featured researches published by Jennifer K. Taylor.


Nature Biotechnology | 1999

Induction of endogenous Bcl-xS through the control of Bcl-x pre-mRNA splicing by antisense oligonucleotides.

Jennifer K. Taylor; Qing Qing Zhang; Jacqueline R. Wyatt; Nicholas M. Dean

Resistance to apoptosis, which plays an important role in tumors that are refractory to chemotherapy, is regulated by the ratio of antiapoptotic to proapoptotic proteins. By manipulating levels of these proteins, cells can become sensitized to undergo apoptosis in response to chemotherapeutic agents. Alternative splicing of the bcl-x gene gives rise to two proteins with antagonistic functions: Bcl-xL, a well-characterized antiapoptotic protein, and Bcl-xS, a proapoptotic protein. We show here that altering the ratio of Bcl-xL to Bcl-xS in the cell using an antisense oligonucleotide permitted cells to be sensitized to undergo apoptosis in response to ultraviolet B radiation and chemotherapeutic drug treatment. These results demonstrate the ability of a chemically modified oligonucleotide to alter splice site selection in an endogenous gene and illustrate a powerful tool to regulate cell survival.


Oncogene | 1999

Inhibition of Bcl-xL expression sensitizes normal human keratinocytes and epithelial cells to apoptotic stimuli.

Jennifer K. Taylor; Qing Qing Zhang; Brett P. Monia; Eric G. Marcusson; Nicholas M. Dean

The epidermis is continually exposed to harmful mutagens that have the potential to cause DNA damage. To protect the skin from accumulating mutated cells, keratinocytes have developed a highly regulated mechanism of eliminating damaged cells through apoptosis. Bcl-xL is a well-described cell survival protein that when overexpressed in skin can protect keratinocytes from UV radiation-induced apoptosis. To begin to unravel the complex mechanisms that keratinocytes use to survive, we wanted to characterize the role of endogenous Bcl-xL in protecting cells from death. In this study, we describe the development and characterization of an antisense inhibitor to Bcl-xL. We show that this inhibitor reduces Bcl-xL RNA and protein in a concentration-dependent, sequence-specific manner. Furthermore, treatment of keratinocytes and epithelial cells with this inhibitor sensitizes these cells to UV-B radiation and cisplatinum treatment-induced apoptosis. Thus, these results offer direct evidence that Bcl-xL is critical in the protection of skin and epithelial cells from apoptosis and provide a basis for the role of Bcl-xL in keratinocyte and epithelial cell survival.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 1999

Pharmacology of Antisense Oligonucleotide Inhibitors of Protein Expression

Scott Cooper; Jennifer K. Taylor; Loren Miraglia; Nicholas M. Dean

The dramatic increase in recent years of both the amount and rate of accumulation of novel genomic sequence information has generated enormous opportunities for the development of new classes of drugs. For these opportunities to be fully capitalized upon, investigators must choose molecular targets for drug development that are likely to yield attractive therapeutic profiles. This will require rapid and effective determination of gene functions in multiple cellular settings. The development of antisense oligonucleotides as specific inhibitors of gene expression should allow such determination of gene function. In addition, the antisense oligonucleotides themselves will likely prove useful as drugs. In this review, we discuss some of the issues surrounding the use of antisense oligonucleotides as research tools to help elucidate gene function, and highlight some of the approaches that can be taken to generate and use effective antisense reagents.


Methods in molecular medicine | 2001

Antisense Oligonucleotides as Research Tools

Jennifer K. Taylor; Scott Cooper; Nicholas M. Dean

The use of antisense oligonucleotides as both research tools and therapeutic molecules has emerged as a powerful alternative to small molecule inhibitors. Antisense oligonucleotides are short pieces of chemically modified DNA designed to hybridize to specific mRNA sequences present in the target gene. The oligonucleotide interaction with the targeted mRNA can lead to inhibition in the translation of the protein encoded by the targeted transcript through a variety of reasonably well-characterized mechanisms (1-3).


Blood | 2002

Antisense strategy shows that Mcl-1 rather than Bcl-2 or Bcl-x(L) is an essential survival protein of human myeloma cells.

Sophie Derenne; Brett P. Monia; Nicholas M. Dean; Jennifer K. Taylor; Marie-Josée Rapp; Jean-Luc Harousseau; Régis Bataille; Martine Amiot


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2003

Antisense Oligonucleotide Inhibition of Bcl-xL and Bid Expression in Liver Regulates Responses in a Mouse Model of Fas-Induced Fulminant Hepatitis

Hong Zhang; Jennifer K. Taylor; Doreen Luther; Joe Johnston; Susan F. Murray; Jacqueline R. Wyatt; Andrew T. Watt; Seongjoon Koo; Cathie York-DeFalco; Kimberly Stecker; Nicholas M. Dean


Archive | 1999

Antisense inhibition of fra-1 expression

Jennifer K. Taylor; Lex M. Cowsert


Archive | 1999

Antisense inhibition of bcl-6 expression

Jennifer K. Taylor; Lex M. Cowsert


Blood | 2004

The IMPDH Inhibitor VX-944 Demonstrates In Vivo Efficacy in an Aggressive Leukemia Model.

Jugnu Jain; Jianguo Ma; Brinley Furey; Christian Recher; Cécile Demur; Srinivasu Poondru; Jianbo Zhang; Shaolan Li; Brant Firestone; Karen Olson; Maura Murphy; Jennifer K. Taylor; Greg Henkel; Edward D. Ball; Yung-Mae Yao; Susan J. Almquist; Russell R. Hoover


Archive | 2000

Modulation antisens de l'expression de bcl-6

Jennifer K. Taylor; Lex M. Cowsert

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Edward D. Ball

University of California

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