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Dive into the research topics where Joel Rosenbloom is active.

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Featured researches published by Joel Rosenbloom.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1984

Selective inhibition of human diploid fibroblast collagen synthesis by interferons.

Sergio A. Jimenez; B Freundlich; Joel Rosenbloom

The effects of alpha- and gamma-interferons (IFNs) on collagen production by confluent human diploid fibroblasts in culture were examined. It was found that partially purified alpha-IFNs and affinity purified gamma-IFNs caused greater than 50% inhibition of collagen synthesis by these cells independently of their effect on cell proliferation. Recombinant alpha-IFNs showed a similar effect (38.8% inhibition), indicating that collagen synthesis inhibition was a constitutive property of IFNs. Collagen synthesis inhibition by IFNs was concentration dependent. Gel filtration chromatography of the newly synthesized proteins from the media of fibroblasts incubated with partially purified alpha-IFNs demonstrated a selective depression of molecules eluting in the region of procollagen. No detectable increase in collagen degradation products or underhydroxylation of procollagen was observed. Short-term kinetic studies further demonstrated that the major effect of IFNs was due to a net decrease in fibroblast collagen production rather than to impairment of secretion or increased extracellular degradation of the newly synthesized molecules. These results indicate that alpha- and gamma-IFNs are potent inhibitors of human fibroblast collagen production and suggest that they may play an important role in the regulation of normal and pathologic fibrogenesis.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1997

RTX Toxins Recognize a β2 Integrin on the Surface of Human Target Cells

Irene R. Kieba; Atsushi Sato; Cecelia L. Green; Joel Rosenbloom; Jon Korostoff; Jian Fei Wang; Bruce J. Shenker; Susan Ortlepp; Martyn K. Robinson; Paul C. Billings

Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans leukotoxin and Escherichia coliα-hemolysin are RTX toxins that kill human immune cells. We have obtained a monoclonal antibody (295) to a cell surface molecule present on toxin-sensitive HL60 cells that can inhibit cytolysis by both RTX toxins. Utilization of this monoclonal antibody for immunoaffinity purification of detergent-solubilized target cell membranes yielded two polypeptide chains of approximate molecular masses of 100 and 170 kDa. Microsequencing of tryptic peptides from the two proteins showed complete homology with CD11a and CD18, the two subunits of the β2 integrin, lymphocyte function-associated antigen 1 (LFA-1). Anti-CD11a and CD18 monoclonal antibodies also inhibited RTX toxin-mediated cytolysis. Direct binding experiments demonstrated the ability of an immobilized RTX to bind LFA-1 heterodimers present in a detergent lysate of human HL60 target cells. Transfection of CD11a and CD18 integrin genes into a cell line (K562) that is not sensitive to either RTX toxin resulted in LFA-1 expressing cells, KL/4, that were sensitive to both toxins. These experiments identify LFA-1 as a cell surface receptor that mediates toxicity of members of this family of pore-forming toxins.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1973

Hydroxyproline content determines the denaturation temperature of chick tendon collagen

Joel Rosenbloom; Margaret Harsch; Sergio A. Jimenez

Abstract A series of nine procollagen samples in which the hydroxyproline content varied from


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1973

Hydroxyproline stabilizes the triple helix of chick tendon collagen

Sergio A. Jimenez; Margaret Harsch; Joel Rosenbloom

Abstract The thermal stability of unhydroxylated procollagen relative to hydroxylated procollagen was investigated using pepsin digestion at various temperatures in the interval 15° to 35° as an enzymatic probe of conformation. The results demonstrate that the unhydroxylated molecules thermally denature between 20° and 25°, while the hydroxylated molecules are stable at least to 35°. This finding suggests that the presence of hydroxyproline in the molecule contributes significantly to the thermal stability of collagen. The results also suggest that triple strand formation may be required for normal secretion.


Annals of Internal Medicine | 2010

Narrative Review: Fibrotic Diseases: Cellular and Molecular Mechanisms and Novel Therapies

Joel Rosenbloom; Susan V. Castro; Sergio A. Jimenez

Abnormal and exaggerated deposition of extracellular matrix is the hallmark of many fibrotic diseases, including systemic sclerosis and pulmonary, liver, and kidney fibrosis. The spectrum of affected organs, the usually progressive nature of the fibrotic process, the large number of affected persons, and the absence of effective treatment pose an enormous challenge when treating fibrotic diseases. Delineation of the central role of transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-beta) and identification of the specific cellular receptors, kinases, and other mediators involved in the fibrotic process have provided a sound basis for development of effective therapies. The inhibition of signaling pathways activated by TGF-beta represents a novel therapeutic approach for the fibrotic disorders. One of these TGF-beta pathways results in the activation of the nonreceptor tyrosine kinase cellular Abelson (c-Abl), and c-Abl inhibitors, including imatinib mesylate, diminishing the fibrogenic effects of TGF-beta. Thus, recently acquired basic knowledge about the pathogenesis of the fibrotic process has enabled the development of novel therapeutic agents capable of modifying the deleterious effects of the fibrotic diseases.


Cell | 1979

Fibronectin alters the phenotypic properties of cultured chick embryo chondroblasts.

Joel Rosenbloom; Christopher M. West; Robert P. Lanza; Mark E. Lowe; Howard Holtzer; Nebojsa Avdalovic

The state of chick embryo chondroblasts in culture was found to be sensitive to both fibronectin and another substance(s) (activity A) which could be extracted from chick embryo fibroblasts with 1 M urea or from conditioned medium. In the presence of either of these activities at concentrations of 25-150 micrograms/ml, chondroblasts, which normally grow as mixed cultures of floating and adherent cells, all immediately became attached to the tissue culture dish and spread. After several days, the morphology of these typically epithelioid cells became fibroblastic. This did not involve a selection process, since the effect was reversible. The synthetic program of these cells was also dramatically modified: the cultures no longer synthesized the chondroblast-unique type IV sulfated proteoglycan and began synthesizing alpha 2 collagen chains typical of fibroblastic or early limb bud cells. Fibronectin was resolved from activity A by gelatin affinity chromatography or gel filtration. Both activities were trypsin-sensitive. The two activities differed, however, on the basis of how the protein fractions in which they were found migrated in SDS-polyacrylamide gels, their specific activities and their effects on cell morphology and cell growth.


Collagen and related research | 1987

Sequence Variation of Bovine Elastin mRNA Due to Alternative Splicing

Helena Yeh; Norma Ornstein-Goldstein; Zena K. Indik; Paul Sheppard; Noel Anderson; J. Rosenbloom; George T. Cicila; Kyonggeun Yoon; Joel Rosenbloom

Poly A+ RNA, isolated from a single 210 day fetal bovine nuchal ligament, was used to synthesize cDNA by the RNase H method, using AMV reverse transcriptase for first strand synthesis and DNA polymerase I for the second strand. The cDNA was inserted into lambda gt10 using EcoRI linkers, and recombinant phage containing elastin sequences were identified by hybridization with a 1.3 kb sheep elastin cDNA clone, pcSELI (Yoon, K. et al., Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 118: 261-265, 1984). Three clones containing the largest inserts of 2.9, 2.8, and 2.6 kb were selected for further study. The complete sequence analysis of the 3 clones was correlated with the sequence of 10.2 kb of the bovine elastin gene. The analyses: (i) showed that the cDNA encompassed the great majority of the translated sequence, (ii) ordered the tryptic peptides of porcine tropoelastin, (iii) determined new amino acid sequences not previously found in the porcine peptides and (iv) demonstrated that alternative splicing of the primary transcript leads to significant variation in the sequence of the translated portion of the mRNA.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1984

Transcriptional control of human diploid fibroblast collagen synthesis by γ-interferon

Joel Rosenbloom; George J. Feldman; Bruce Freundlich; Sergio A. Jimenez

Abstract Recombinant γ-interferon (rec γ-IFN) caused potent inhibition of collagen synthesis by cultured confluent human diploid fibroblasts in a dose-dependent manner. Gel electrophoresis of the newly synthesized proteins from the culture media of rec γ-IFN-treated fibroblasts demonstrated a selective depression of procollagen without a significant change in non-collagenous proteins. Dot blot hybridization to a Type I procollagen cDNA probe showed that the inhibition of collagen production was accompanied by a decrease in the levels of collagen mRNA. These results indicate that rec γ-IFN is capable of exerting transcriptional modulation of collagen biosynthesis and suggest that it may play an important role in regulation of normal and pathologic fibrogenesis.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 1991

Identification of the leucine-rich amelogenin peptide (LRAP) as the translation product of an alternatively spliced transcript

Carolyn W. Gibson; Ellis E. Golub; Wendi Ding; Hitoyata Shimokawa; Marian Young; John D. Termine; Joel Rosenbloom

The polymerase chain reaction was used to amplify bovine tooth amelogenin cDNA, resulting in several products which were separated by agarose gel electrophoresis. Sequence determination of one of the products revealed that it encoded an amino acid sequence identical to that of a small leucine-rich amelogenin polypeptide (LRAP) previously characterized by protein sequencing. Comparison of the nucleotide sequence of this cDNA with that determined for the cloned bovine amelogenine gene strongly suggested that the LRAP transcript resulted from alternative splicing of the primary transcript of this gene, thus explaining the origin of the puzzling LRAP sequence. Analysis of the structure of LRAP suggests that the polypeptide might exhibit interesting properties relative to hydroxy apatite crystal formation.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1990

Production of recombinant human tropoelastin characterization and demonstration of immunologic and chemotactic activity

Zena K. Indik; William R. Abrams; Umberto Kucich; Carolyn W. Gibson; Robert P. Mecham; Joel Rosenbloom

Tropoelastin cannot readily be prepared in quantity from natural sources and this has limited research in several important areas including structure/function relationships and fiber assembly. In order to eliminate this limitation, human tropoelastin has been expressed in a recombinant bacterial system and the protein has been highly purified. The size, amino acid composition, and sequence of the amino terminus of the recombinant tropoelastin (rTE) all agree with values predicted by the nucleotide sequence of the cDNA used in the expression vector. The rTE exhibits cross-reactivity with antibodies directed against a mixture of peptides derived from human elastin as well as antibody against a defined peptide located at the carboxy terminus of the protein. In addition, the rTE is chemotactic for fetal calf ligament fibroblasts. These results suggest that rTE could be a useful reagent for many types of studies.

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William R. Abrams

University of Pennsylvania

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Sergio A. Jimenez

University of Pennsylvania

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Umberto Kucich

University of Pennsylvania

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Edward J. Macarak

University of Pennsylvania

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Jouni Uitto

Thomas Jefferson University

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Carolyn W. Gibson

University of Pennsylvania

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J. Rosenbloom

University of Pennsylvania

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George Weinbaum

Albert Einstein Medical Center

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Paul Christner

University of Pennsylvania

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