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Dive into the research topics where Jerry A. Molitor is active.

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Featured researches published by Jerry A. Molitor.


Cell | 1990

The v-rel oncogene encodes a κB enhancer binding protein that inhibits NF-κB function

Dean W. Ballard; William H. Walker; Stefan Doerre; Prakash Sista; Jerry A. Molitor; Eric P. Dixon; Nancy J. Peffer; Mark Hannink; Warner C. Greene

Abstract Studies of NF-κB suggest that this enhancer binding activity corresponds to a family of at least four proteins (p50, p55, p75, and p85) differentially induced with biphasic kinetics during T cell activation. While p55 and p50 are closely related to the 50 kd DNA binding subunit of NF-κB, p75 and p85 exhibit DNA binding properties that distinguish them from this 50 kd poly-peptide and its regulatory subunits IκB and p65. All four members of this κB-specific protein family are structurally related to the v-Rel oncoprotein and one, p85, appears identical to human c-Rel. v-Rel, but not nontransforming v-Rel mutants, binds to the κB enhancer and inhibits NF-κB-activated transcription from the IL-2 receptor α promoter and HIV-1 LTR. These findings suggest a Rel-related family of κB enhancer binding proteins and raise the possibility that the transforming activity of v-Rel is Iinked to its inhibitory action on cellular genes under NF-κB control.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Capillary Regeneration in Scleroderma: Stem Cell Therapy Reverses Phenotype?

Jo Nadine Fleming; Richard A. Nash; D. O. McLeod; David Fiorentino; Howard M. Shulman; M. Kari Connolly; Jerry A. Molitor; Gretchen Henstorf; Robert Lafyatis; David K. Pritchard; Lawrence D. Adams; Daniel E. Furst; Stephen M. Schwartz

Background Scleroderma is an autoimmune disease with a characteristic vascular pathology. The vasculopathy associated with scleroderma is one of the major contributors to the clinical manifestations of the disease. Methodology/Principal Findings We used immunohistochemical and mRNA in situ hybridization techniques to characterize this vasculopathy and showed with morphometry that scleroderma has true capillary rarefaction. We compared skin biopsies from 23 scleroderma patients and 24 normal controls and 7 scleroderma patients who had undergone high dose immunosuppressive therapy followed by autologous hematopoietic cell transplant. Along with the loss of capillaries there was a dramatic change in endothelial phenotype in the residual vessels. The molecules defining this phenotype are: vascular endothelial cadherin, a supposedly universal endothelial marker required for tube formation (lost in the scleroderma tissue), antiangiogenic interferon α (overexpressed in the scleroderma dermis) and RGS5, a signaling molecule whose expression coincides with the end of branching morphogenesis during development and tumor angiogenesis (also overexpressed in scleroderma skin. Following high dose immunosuppressive therapy, patients experienced clinical improvement and 5 of the 7 patients with scleroderma had increased capillary counts. It was also observed in the same 5 patients, that the interferon α and vascular endothelial cadherin had returned to normal as other clinical signs in the skin regressed, and in all 7 patients, RGS5 had returned to normal. Conclusion/Significance These data provide the first objective evidence for loss of vessels in scleroderma and show that this phenomenon is reversible. Coordinate changes in expression of three molecules already implicated in angiogenesis or anti-angiogenesis suggest that control of expression of these three molecules may be the underlying mechanism for at least the vascular component of this disease. Since rarefaction has been little studied, these data may have implications for other diseases characterized by loss of capillaries including hypertension, congestive heart failure and scar formation.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2008

Induction of interferon‐α by scleroderma sera containing autoantibodies to topoisomerase I: Association of higher interferon‐α activity with lung fibrosis

Daniel Kim; Anders Peck; Deanna M. Santer; Prashant Patole; Stephen M. Schwartz; Jerry A. Molitor; Frank C. Arnett; Keith B. Elkon

OBJECTIVE Peripheral blood cells (PBMCs) from some patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc) express an interferon-alpha (IFNalpha) signature. The aim of this study was to determine whether SSc patient sera could induce IFNalpha and whether IFNalpha induction was associated with specific autoantibodies and/or clinical features of the disease. METHODS SSc sera containing autoantibodies against either topoisomerase I (anti-topo I; n = 12), nucleolar protein (ANoA; n = 12), or centromeric protein (ACA; n = 13) were cultured with a HeLa nuclear extract and normal PBMCs. In some experiments, different cell extracts or inhibitors of plasmacytoid dendritic cell (DC) activation, Fcgamma receptor II (FcgammaRII), endocytosis, or nucleases were used. IFNalpha was measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. RESULTS Topo I-containing sera induced significantly higher levels of IFNalpha as compared with all other groups. IFNalpha induction was inhibited by anti-blood dendritic cell antigen 2 (90%), anti-CD32 (76%), bafilomycin (99%), and RNase (82%). In contrast, ACAs induced low levels of IFNalpha even when necrotic, apoptotic, or demethylated extracts were used, despite the fact that CENP-B-binding oligonucleotide containing 2 CpG motifs effectively stimulated IFNalpha. IFNalpha production was significantly higher in patients with diffuse SSc (mean +/- SEM 641 +/- 174 pg/ml) than in those with limited SSc (215 +/- 66 pg/ml) as well as in patients with lung fibrosis than in those without. CONCLUSION Autoantibody subsets in SSc sera differentially induce IFNalpha and may explain the IFNalpha signature observed in SSc. IFNalpha is induced by plasmacytoid DCs and required uptake of immune complexes through FcgammaRII, endosomal transport, and the presence of RNA, presumably for interaction with Toll-like receptor 7. The higher IFNalpha induction in sera from patients with diffuse SSc than in those with limited SSc as well as in sera from patients with lung fibrosis suggests that IFNalpha may contribute to tissue injury.


The Lancet Respiratory Medicine | 2016

Mycophenolate mofetil versus oral cyclophosphamide in scleroderma-related interstitial lung disease (SLS II): a randomised controlled, double-blind, parallel group trial

Donald P. Tashkin; Michael D. Roth; Philip J. Clements; Daniel E. Furst; Dinesh Khanna; Eric C. Kleerup; Jonathan G. Goldin; Edgar Arriola; Elizabeth R. Volkmann; Suzanne Kafaja; Richard M. Silver; Virginia D. Steen; Charlie Strange; Robert A. Wise; Fredrick M. Wigley; Maureen D. Mayes; David J. Riley; Sabiha Hussain; Shervin Assassi; Vivien M. Hsu; Bela Patel; Kristine Phillips; Fernando J. Martinez; Jeffrey A. Golden; M. Kari Connolly; John Varga; Jane Dematte; Monique Hinchcliff; Aryeh Fischer; Jeffrey J. Swigris

Summary BACKGROUND Twelve months of oral cyclophosphamide (CYC) has been shown to alter the progression of scleroderma-related interstitial lung disease (SSc-ILD) when compared to placebo. However, toxicity was a concern and without continued treatment the efficacy disappeared by 24 months. We hypothesized that a two-year course of mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) would be safer, better tolerated and produce longer lasting improvements than CYC. METHODS Patients with SSc-ILD meeting defined dyspnea, pulmonary function and high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) criteria were randomized in a double-blind, two-arm trial at 14 medical centers. MMF (target dose 1500 mg twice daily) was administered for 24 months in one arm and oral CYC (target dose 2·0 mg/kg/day) administered for 12 months followed by placebo for 12 months in the other arm. The primary endpoint, change in forced vital capacity as a percent of the predicted normal value (FVC %) over the course of 24 months, was assessed in a modified intention-to-treat analysis using an inferential joint model combining a mixed effects model for longitudinal outcomes and a survival model to handle non-ignorable missing data. The study was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00883129, and is closed. RESULTS Between November, 2009, and January, 2013, 142 patients were randomized. 126 patients (63 MMF; 63 CYC) with acceptable baseline HRCT studies and at least one outcome measure were included in the analysis. The adjusted FVC % (primary endpoint) improved from baseline to 24 months by 2.17 in the MMF arm (95% CI, 0.53–3.84) and 2·86 in the CYC arm (95% confidence interval 1·19–4·58) with no significant between-treatment difference (p=0·24), indicating that the trial was negative for the primary endpoint. However, in a post-hoc analysis of the primary endpoint, within-treatment improvements from baseline to 24 months were noted in both the CYC and MMF arms. A greater number of patients on CYC than on MMF prematurely withdrew from study drug (32 vs 20) and failed treatment (2 vs 0), and the time to stopping treatment was significantly shorter in the CYC arm (p=0·019). Sixteen deaths occurred (11 CYC; 5 MMF) with most due to progressive ILD. Leukopenia (30 vs 4 patients) and thrombocytopenia (4 vs 0 patients) occurred more often in patients treated with CYC. In post-hoc analyses, within- (but not between-) treatment improvements were also noted in defined secondary outcomes including skin score, dyspnea and whole-lung HRCT scores. INTERPRETATION Treatment of SSc-ILD with MMF for two years or CYC for one year both resulted in significant improvements in pre-specified measures of lung function, dyspnea, lung imaging, and skin disease over the 2-year course of the study. While MMF was better tolerated and associated with less toxicity, the hypothesis that it would have greater efficacy at 24 months than CYC was not confirmed. These findings support the potential clinical impact of both CYC and MMF for progressive SSc-ILD, as well as the current preference for MMF due to its better tolerability and toxicity profile. FUNDING National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute/National Institutes of Health with drug supply provided by Hoffmann-La Roche/Genentech.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2009

Epitope-specific immunotherapy of rheumatoid arthritis: clinical responsiveness occurs with immune deviation and relies on the expression of a cluster of molecules associated with T cell tolerance in a double-blind, placebo-controlled, pilot phase II trial.

Eva Koffeman; Mark C. Genovese; Diane Amox; Elissa Keogh; Ernesto Santana; Eric L. Matteson; Arthur Kavanaugh; Jerry A. Molitor; Michael Schiff; James Posever; Joan M. Bathon; Alan Kivitz; Rodrigo Samodal; Francis Belardi; Carolyn Dennehey; Theo van den Broek; Femke van Wijk; Xiao Zhang; Peter Zieseniss; Tho Le; B Prakken; Gary C. Cutter; Salvatore Albani

OBJECTIVE Induction of immune tolerance to maintain clinical control with a minimal drug regimen is a current research focus in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Accordingly, we are developing a tolerization approach to dnaJP1, a peptide part of a pathogenic mechanism that contributes to autoimmune inflammation in RA. We undertook this study to test 2 hypotheses: 1) that mucosal induction of immune tolerance to dnaJP1 would lead to a qualitative change from a proinflammatory phenotype to a more tolerogenic functional phenotype, and 2) that immune deviation of responses to an inflammatory epitope might translate into clinical improvement. METHODS One hundred sixty patients with active RA and with immunologic reactivity to dnaJP1 were enrolled in a pilot phase II trial. They received oral doses of 25 mg of dnaJP1 or placebo daily for 6 months. RESULTS The dnaJP1 peptide was safe and well-tolerated. In response to treatment with dnaJP1, there was a significant reduction in the percentage of T cells producing tumor necrosis factor alpha and a corresponding trend toward an increased percentage of T cells producing interleukin-10. Coexpression of a cluster of molecules (programmed death 1 and its ligands) associated with T cell regulation was also found to be a prerequisite for successful tolerization in clinical responders. Analysis of the primary efficacy end point (meeting the American College of Rheumatology 20% improvement criteria at least once on day 112, 140, or 168) showed a difference between treatment groups that became significant in post hoc analysis using generalized estimating equations. Differences in clinical responses were also found between treatment groups on day 140 and at followup. Post hoc analysis showed that the combination of dnaJP1 and hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) was superior to the combination of HCQ and placebo. CONCLUSION Tolerization to dnaJP1 leads to immune deviation and a trend toward clinical efficacy. Susceptibility to treatment relies on the coexpression of molecules that can down-regulate adaptive immunity.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2008

Combined analysis of monocyte and lymphocyte messenger RNA expression with serum protein profiles in patients with scleroderma

Hangjun Duan; Jo Nadine Fleming; David K. Pritchard; Lynn M. Amon; Jun Xue; Heather A. Arnett; Guang Chen; Patricia Breen; Jane H. Buckner; Jerry A. Molitor; Keith B. Elkon; Stephen M. Schwartz

OBJECTIVE We attempted to elucidate possible pathogenetic mechanisms in scleroderma by analysis of gene expression patterns of purified monocytes and lymphocytes, as well as protein profiles of cytokines and growth factors. METHODS Expression analysis was performed on messenger RNA (mRNA) from cells that had been purified with magnetic beads. Plasma samples from the same patients were used for multiplex cytokine analysis. Potential sources of proteins were also examined by in situ hybridization of skin specimens. RESULTS A total of 1,800 genes from monocytes and 863 genes from CD4+ T cells were differentially expressed in scleroderma patients. As observed by other investigators using unfractionated peripheral blood cells from patients with autoimmune connective tissue diseases, the cell type-specific analyses of our scleroderma samples showed expression of genes suggesting the presence of interferon-alpha (IFNalpha), despite the apparent absence of this cytokine in plasma. IFNalpha RNA was, however, expressed at enhanced levels in vascular and perivascular cells in scleroderma skin samples. While levels of interleukin-1alpha (IL-1alpha) and IL-16 were among 10 proteins found to be significantly elevated in scleroderma patients, none of the large panel of plasma cytokines we analyzed correlated with the expression levels of putative IFN response genes. CONCLUSION The pattern of up-regulation of mRNA in both the monocytes and CD4 lymphocytes of scleroderma patients, together with the detection of IFNalpha RNA in the microvasculature, suggests that leukocytes respond to this cytokine locally in the vessels. Detection of high levels of IL-1alpha and IL-16 in plasma and the independence of these protein levels from the IFN signature, implicates an independent contribution of other cytokines to immune activation and/or inflammation in scleroderma.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2014

Immunochip Analysis Identifies Multiple Susceptibility Loci for Systemic Sclerosis

Maureen D. Mayes; Lara Bossini-Castillo; Olga Y. Gorlova; José Martín; Xiaodong Zhou; Wei Chen; Shervin Assassi; Jun Ying; Filemon K. Tan; Frank C. Arnett; John D. Reveille; Sandra G. Guerra; María Teruel; F. Carmona; Peter K. Gregersen; Annette Lee; Elena López-Isac; Eguzkine Ochoa; Patricia Carreira; Carmen P. Simeon; I. Castellví; Miguel A. González-Gay; Alexandra Zhernakova; Leonid Padyukov; Marta E. Alarcón-Riquelme; Cisca Wijmenga; Matthew A. Brown; Lorenzo Beretta; Gabriela Riemekasten; Torsten Witte

In this study, 1,833 systemic sclerosis (SSc) cases and 3,466 controls were genotyped with the Immunochip array. Classical alleles, amino acid residues, and SNPs across the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region were imputed and tested. These analyses resulted in a model composed of six polymorphic amino acid positions and seven SNPs that explained the observed significant associations in the region. In addition, a replication step comprising 4,017 SSc cases and 5,935 controls was carried out for several selected non-HLA variants, reaching a total of 5,850 cases and 9,401 controls of European ancestry. Following this strategy, we identified and validated three SSc risk loci, including DNASE1L3 at 3p14, the SCHIP1-IL12A locus at 3q25, and ATG5 at 6q21, as well as a suggested association of the TREH-DDX6 locus at 11q23. The associations of several previously reported SSc risk loci were validated and further refined, and the observed peak of association in PXK was related to DNASE1L3. Our study has increased the number of known genetic associations with SSc, provided further insight into the pleiotropic effects of shared autoimmune risk factors, and highlighted the power of dense mapping for detecting previously overlooked susceptibility loci.


Journal of Clinical Periodontology | 2011

Periodontal disease, tooth loss and incident rheumatoid arthritis: results from the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey and its epidemiological follow-up study.

Ryan T. Demmer; Jerry A. Molitor; David R. Jacobs; Bryan S. Michalowicz

AIMS Infection may be a rheumatoid arthritis (RA) risk factor. We examined whether signs of periodontal infection were associated with RA development in the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey and its epidemiological follow-up study. MATERIAL AND METHODS In 1971-1974, 9702 men and women aged 25-74 were enrolled and surveyed longitudinally (1982, 1986, 1987, 1992). Periodontal infection was defined by baseline tooth loss or clinical evidence of periodontal disease. Baseline (n = 138) and incident (n = 433) RA cases were defined via self-report physician diagnosis, joint pain/swelling, ICD-9 codes (714.0-714.9), death certificates and/or RA hospitalization. RESULTS Adjusted odds ratios (ORs) (95% CI) for prevalent RA in gingivitis and periodontitis (versus healthy) were 1.09 (0.57, 2.10) and 1.85 (0.95, 3.63); incident RA ORs were 1.32 (0.85, 2.06) and 1.00 (0.68, 1.48). The ORs for prevalent RA among participants missing 5-8, 9-14, 15-31 or 32 teeth (versus 0-4 teeth) were 1.74 (1.03, 2.95), 1.82 (0.81, 4.10), 1.45 (0.62, 3.41) and 1.30 (0.48, 3.53); ORs for incident RA were 1.12 (0.77, 1.64), 1.67 (1.12, 2.48), 1.40 (0.85, 2.33) and 1.22 (0.75, 2.00). Dose-responsiveness was enhanced among never smokers. The rate of death or loss-to-follow-up after 1982 was two- to fourfold higher among participants with periodontitis or missing ≥9 teeth (versus healthy participants). CONCLUSIONS Although participants with periodontal disease or ≥5 missing teeth experienced higher odds of prevalent/incident RA, most ORs were non-statistically significant and lacked dose-responsiveness. Differential RA ascertainment bias complicated the interpretation of these data.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 2008

A multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of oral type I collagen treatment in patients with diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis: I. oral type I collagen does not improve skin in all patients, but may improve skin in late-phase disease.

Arnold E. Postlethwaite; Kee Wong Weng; Philip J. Clements; Soumya Chatterjee; Barri J. Fessler; Andrew H. Kang; Joseph H. Korn; Maureen D. Mayes; Peter A. Merkel; Jerry A. Molitor; Larry W. Moreland; Naomi F. Rothfield; Robert Simms; Edwin A. Smith; Robert Spiera; Virginia D. Steen; Kenneth J. Warrington; Barbara White; Frederick M. Wigley; Daniel E. Furst

OBJECTIVE To investigate the safety and efficacy of oral bovine type I collagen (CI) treatment in patients who have had diffuse cutaneous systemic sclerosis (dcSSc; scleroderma) for <or=10 years. METHODS One hundred sixty-eight patients with dcSSc were enrolled in a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of oral CI (500 microg/day) or placebo administered over 12 months, with a followup visit at month 15. The primary outcome was the modified Rodnan skin thickness score (MRSS). Other clinical and immune system parameters were also assessed. RESULTS Intent-to-treat and modified intent-to-treat analyses showed that for the total population of patients with dcSSc, there were no significant differences in the mean change in MRSS or other key clinical parameters between the CI and placebo treatment groups at 12 months or at 15 months. However, in a subanalysis of the available data at month 15, the CI-treated group of patients with late-phase dcSSc experienced a significant reduction in the MRSS compared with that in the placebo-treated patients with late-phase dcSSc (change in MRSS at month 15 -7.9 versus -2.9; P = 0.0063). CONCLUSION Although the results from this trial did not meet the primary outcome goals, the findings from exploratory analyses indicated that CI treatment may benefit patients with late-phase dcSSc. This new treatment strategy and preliminary clinical observations in patients with dcSSc need to be corroborated.


Arthritis Care and Research | 2014

Survival and predictors of mortality in systemic sclerosis-associated pulmonary arterial hypertension: outcomes from the pulmonary hypertension assessment and recognition of outcomes in scleroderma registry.

Lorinda Chung; Robyn T. Domsic; Bharathi Lingala; Firas Alkassab; Marcy B. Bolster; Mary Ellen Csuka; Chris T. Derk; Aryeh Fischer; Tracy M. Frech; Daniel E. Furst; Mardi Gomberg-Maitland; Monique Hinchcliff; Vivien M. Hsu; Laura K. Hummers; Dinesh Khanna; Thomas A. Medsger; Jerry A. Molitor; Ioana R. Preston; Elena Schiopu; Lee Shapiro; Richard M. Silver; Robert Simms; John Varga; Jessica K. Gordon; Virginia D. Steen

To assess cumulative survival rates and identify independent predictors of mortality in patients with incident systemic sclerosis (SSc)–associated pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) who had undergone routine screening for PAH at SSc centers in the US.

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Dinesh Khanna

University of California

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Richard M. Silver

Medical University of South Carolina

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Maureen D. Mayes

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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John Varga

Northwestern University

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