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Featured researches published by Jim J. Aloor.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2010

The structure of the dust mite allergen Der p 7 reveals similarities to innate immune proteins.

Geoffrey A. Mueller; Lori L. Edwards; Jim J. Aloor; Michael B. Fessler; Jill Glesner; Anna Pomés; Martin D. Chapman; Robert E. London; Lars C. Pedersen

BACKGROUND Sensitization to house dust mite allergens is strongly correlated with asthma. Der p 7 elicits strong IgE antibody and T-cell responses in patients with mite allergy. However, the structure and biological function of this important allergen are unknown. Allergen function might contribute to allergenicity, as shown for the protease activity of group 1 mite allergens and the interaction with the innate immune system by group 2 mite allergens. OBJECTIVE We sought to determine the crystal structure of Der p 7 and to investigate its biological function. METHODS X-ray crystallography was used to determine the Der p 7 structure. Nuclear magnetic resonance analysis and biochemical assays were used to examine the binding of Der p 7 to predicted ligands. RESULTS Der p 7 has an elongated structure, with two 4-stranded antiparallel beta-sheets that wrap around a long C-terminal helix. The fold of Der p 7 is similar to that of LPS-binding protein (LBP), which interacts with Toll-like receptors after binding LPS and other bacterially derived lipid ligands. Nuclear magnetic resonance and biochemical assays indicate that Der p 7 does not bind LPS but binds with weak affinity to the bacterial lipopeptide polymyxin B in the predicted binding site of Der p 7. CONCLUSIONS Der p 7 binds a bacterially derived lipid product, a common feature of some allergens. The finding that the group 7, as well as the group 2, mite allergens are structurally similar to different proteins in the Toll-like receptor pathway further strengthens the connections between dust mites, innate immunity, and allergy.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2011

Proteomic Profiling of S-acylated Macrophage Proteins Identifies a Role for Palmitoylation in Mitochondrial Targeting of Phospholipid Scramblase 3

B. Alex Merrick; Suraj Dhungana; Jason G. Williams; Jim J. Aloor; Shyamal Peddada; Kenneth B. Tomer; Michael B. Fessler

S-Palmitoylation, the reversible post-translational acylation of specific cysteine residues with the fatty acid palmitate, promotes the membrane tethering and subcellular localization of proteins in several biological pathways. Although inhibiting palmitoylation holds promise as a means for manipulating protein targeting, advances in the field have been hampered by limited understanding of palmitoylation enzymology and consensus motifs. In order to define the complement of S-acylated proteins in the macrophage, we treated RAW 264.7 macrophage membranes with hydroxylamine to cleave acyl thioesters, followed by biotinylation of newly exposed sulfhydryls and streptavidin-agarose affinity chromatography. Among proteins identified by LC-MS/MS, S-acylation status was established by spectral counting to assess enrichment under hydroxylamine versus mock treatment conditions. Of 1183 proteins identified in four independent experiments, 80 proteins were significant for S-acylation at false discovery rate = 0.05, and 101 significant at false discovery rate = 0.10. Candidate S-acylproteins were identified from several functional categories, including membrane trafficking, signaling, transporters, and receptors. Among these were 29 proteins previously biochemically confirmed as palmitoylated, 45 previously reported as putative S-acylproteins in proteomic screens, 24 not previously associated with palmitoylation, and three presumed false-positives. Nearly half of the candidates were previously identified by us in macrophage detergent-resistant membranes, suggesting that palmitoylation promotes lipid raft-localization of proteins in the macrophage. Among the candidate novel S-acylproteins was phospholipid scramblase 3 (Plscr3), a protein that regulates apoptosis through remodeling the mitochondrial membrane. Palmitoylation of Plscr3 was confirmed through 3H-palmitate labeling. Moreover, site-directed mutagenesis of a cluster of five cysteines (Cys159–161-163–164-166) abolished palmitoylation, caused Plscr3 mislocalization from mitochondrion to nucleus, and reduced macrophage apoptosis in response to etoposide, together suggesting a role for palmitoylation at this site for mitochondrial targeting and pro-apoptotic function of Plscr3. Taken together, we propose that manipulation of protein palmitoylation carries great potential for intervention in macrophage biology via reprogramming of protein localization.


Cell Metabolism | 2010

Myeloid Differentiation Primary Response Protein 88 Couples Reverse Cholesterol Transport to Inflammation

Kathleen Smoak; Jim J. Aloor; Jennifer H. Madenspacher; B. Alex Merrick; Jennifer B. Collins; Xuewei Zhu; Giorgio Cavigiolio; Michael N. Oda; John S. Parks; Michael B. Fessler

Crosstalk exists in mammalian cells between cholesterol trafficking and innate immune signaling. Apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I), a serum apolipoprotein that induces antiatherogenic efflux of macrophage cholesterol, is widely described as anti-inflammatory because it neutralizes bacterial lipopolysaccharide. Conversely, lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation is proatherogenic. However, whether innate immunity plays an endogenous, physiological role in host cholesterol homeostasis in the absence of infection is undetermined. We report that apoA-I signals in the macrophage through Toll-like receptor (TLR)2, TLR4, and CD14, utilizing myeloid differentiation primary response protein 88 (MyD88)-dependent and -independent pathways, to activate nuclear factor-kappaB and induce cytokines. MyD88 plays a critical role in reverse cholesterol transport in vitro and in vivo, in part through promoting ATP-binding cassette A1 transporter upregulation. Taken together, this work identifies apoA-I as an endogenous stimulus of innate immunity that couples cholesterol trafficking to inflammation through MyD88 and identifies innate immunity as a physiologic signal in cholesterol homeostasis.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2013

p53 Integrates host defense and cell fate during bacterial pneumonia.

Jennifer H. Madenspacher; Kathleen M. Azzam; Kymberly M. Gowdy; Kenneth C. Malcolm; Jerry A. Nick; Darlene Dixon; Jim J. Aloor; David W. Draper; John Guardiola; Maria Shatz; Daniel Menendez; Julie Lowe; Jun Lu; Pierre R. Bushel; Leping Li; B. Alex Merrick; Michael A. Resnick; Michael B. Fessler

p53 deletion augments neutrophil-mediated bacterial clearance in the lung at the expense of tissue homeostasis, leading to increased mortality.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

p53 integrates host defense and cell fate during bacterial pneumonia

Jennifer H. Madenspacher; Kathleen M. Azzam; Kymberly M. Gowdy; Kenneth C. Malcolm; Jerry A. Nick; Darlene Dixon; Jim J. Aloor; David W. Draper; John Guardiola; Maria Shatz; Daniel Menendez; Julie Lowe; Jun Lu; Pierre R. Bushel; Leping Li; B. Alex Merrick; Michael A. Resnick; Michael B. Fessler

Cancer and infection are predominant causes of human mortality and derive, respectively, from inadequate genomic and host defenses against environmental agents. The transcription factor p53 plays a central role in human tumor suppression. Despite its expression in immune cells and broad responsiveness to stressors, it is virtually unknown whether p53 regulates host defense against infection. We report that the lungs of naive p53 / mice display genome-wide induction of NF-B response element–enriched proinflammatory genes, suggestive of type 1 immune priming. p53-null and p53 inhibitor–treated mice clear Gram-negative and -positive bacteria more effectively than controls after intrapulmonary infection. This is caused, at least in part, by cytokines produced by an expanded population of apoptosis-resistant, TLR-hyperresponsive alveolar macrophages that enhance airway neutrophilia. p53 / neutrophils, in turn, display heightened phagocytosis, Nox-dependent


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2015

Proteomic Analysis of ABCA1-Null Macrophages Reveals a Role for Stomatin-Like Protein-2 in Raft Composition and Toll-Like Receptor Signaling

Saiful M. Chowdhury; Xuewei Zhu; Jim J. Aloor; Kathleen M. Azzam; Kristin A. Gabor; William Ge; Kezia A. Addo; Kenneth B. Tomer; John S. Parks; Michael B. Fessler

Lipid raft membrane microdomains organize signaling by many prototypical receptors, including the Toll-like receptors (TLRs) of the innate immune system. Raft-localization of proteins is widely thought to be regulated by raft cholesterol levels, but this is largely on the basis of studies that have manipulated cell cholesterol using crude and poorly specific chemical tools, such as β-cyclodextrins. To date, there has been no proteome-scale investigation of whether endogenous regulators of intracellular cholesterol trafficking, such as the ATP binding cassette (ABC)A1 lipid efflux transporter, regulate targeting of proteins to rafts. Abca1−/− macrophages have cholesterol-laden rafts that have been reported to contain increased levels of select proteins, including TLR4, the lipopolysaccharide receptor. Here, using quantitative proteomic profiling, we identified 383 proteins in raft isolates from Abca1+/+ and Abca1−/− macrophages. ABCA1 deletion induced wide-ranging changes to the raft proteome. Remarkably, many of these changes were similar to those seen in Abca1+/+ macrophages after lipopolysaccharide exposure. Stomatin-like protein (SLP)-2, a member of the stomatin-prohibitin-flotillin-HflK/C family of membrane scaffolding proteins, was robustly and specifically increased in Abca1−/− rafts. Pursuing SLP-2 function, we found that rafts of SLP-2-silenced macrophages had markedly abnormal composition. SLP-2 silencing did not compromise ABCA1-dependent cholesterol efflux but reduced macrophage responsiveness to multiple TLR ligands. This was associated with reduced raft levels of the TLR co-receptor, CD14, and defective lipopolysaccharide-induced recruitment of the common TLR adaptor, MyD88, to rafts. Taken together, we show that the lipid transporter ABCA1 regulates the protein repertoire of rafts and identify SLP-2 as an ABCA1-dependent regulator of raft composition and of the innate immune response.


Mucosal Immunology | 2015

Key role for scavenger receptor B-I in the integrative physiology of host defense during bacterial pneumonia

Kymberly M. Gowdy; Jennifer H. Madenspacher; Kathleen M. Azzam; Kristin A. Gabor; Kyathanahalli S. Janardhan; Jim J. Aloor; Michael B. Fessler

Scavenger receptor B-I (SR-BI) is a multirecognition receptor that regulates cholesterol trafficking and cardiovascular inflammation. Although it is expressed by neutrophils (PMNs) and lung-resident cells, no role for SR-BI has been defined in pulmonary immunity. Herein, we report that, compared with SR-BI+/+ counterparts, SR-BI−/− mice suffer markedly increased mortality during bacterial pneumonia associated with higher bacterial burden in the lung and blood, deficient induction of the stress glucocorticoid corticosterone, higher serum cytokines, and increased organ injury. SR-BI−/− mice had significantly increased PMN recruitment and cytokine production in the infected airspace. This was associated with defective hematopoietic cell-dependent clearance of lipopolysaccharide from the airspace and increased cytokine production by SR-BI−/− macrophages. Corticosterone replacement normalized alveolar neutrophilia but not alveolar cytokines, bacterial burden, or mortality, suggesting that adrenal insufficiency derepresses PMN trafficking to the SR-BI−/− airway in a cytokine-independent manner. Despite enhanced alveolar neutrophilia, SR-BI−/− mice displayed impaired phagocytic killing. Bone marrow chimeras revealed this defect to be independent of the dyslipidemia and adrenal insufficiency of SR-BI−/− mice. During infection, SR-BI−/− PMNs displayed deficient oxidant production and CD11b externalization, and increased surface L-selectin, suggesting defective activation. Taken together, SR-BI coordinates several steps in the integrated neutrophilic host defense response to pneumonia.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014

APOε4 is associated with enhanced in vivo innate immune responses in human subjects

Stephen C. Gale; Li Gao; Carmen Mikacenic; Susette M. Coyle; Nicholas Rafaels; Tanda Murray Dudenkov; Jennifer H. Madenspacher; David W. Draper; William Ge; Jim J. Aloor; Kathleen M. Azzam; Lihua Lai; Perry J. Blackshear; Steven E. Calvano; Kathleen C. Barnes; Stephen F. Lowry; Siobhan A. Corbett; Mark M. Wurfel; Michael B. Fessler


american thoracic society international conference | 2012

Novel Role For Scavenger Receptor B-I In Pulmonary Innate Immunity

Kymberly M. Gowdy; Jennifer H. Madenspacher; Kathleen M. Azzam; Jim J. Aloor; Michael B. Fessler


Archive | 2012

MODULATION OF LRCH4 ACTIVITY AND THERAPEUTIC APPLICATION THEREOF

Michael B. Fessler; Jim J. Aloor

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Michael B. Fessler

National Institutes of Health

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Kymberly M. Gowdy

National Institutes of Health

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B. Alex Merrick

National Institutes of Health

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David W. Draper

North Carolina State University

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Kenneth B. Tomer

National Institutes of Health

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Daniel Menendez

National Institutes of Health

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Darlene Dixon

National Institutes of Health

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Jerry A. Nick

University of Colorado Denver

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