John C. Cheronis
Johns Hopkins University
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Featured researches published by John C. Cheronis.
The American Journal of Medicine | 1991
Andrea B. Schneebaum; James D. Singleton; Sterling G. West; James K. Blodgett; Lisa G. Allen; John C. Cheronis; Brian L. Kotzin
PURPOSEnThe goal of this study was to determine whether elevated serum levels of antibodies to ribosomal P proteins (anti-P antibodies) are associated with neuropsychiatric manifestations in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Additional experiments examined characteristics of these antibodies that might be associated with pathogenicity.nnnPATIENTS AND METHODSnA large number of serum samples were collected from patients with SLE, control subjects with other rheumatic diseases, and normal individuals. At the time serum samples were obtained, patients with SLE were categorized according to the presence of psychosis, depression, and other manifestations of central nervous system (CNS) involvement. Serum anti-P antibody activity was quantitated by an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay utilizing a synthetic peptide corresponding to the major P protein epitope.nnnRESULTSnIn a group of 79 normal individuals, mean (+/- SE) IgG anti-P activity was 0.01 +/- 0.003 and no individuals had values greater than 3 SD above the mean. Similar results were obtained measuring IgM anti-P activity. Normal levels were found in all sera from 21 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Of 119 patients demonstrating various patterns of antinuclear and anticytoplasmic antibody activity, elevated anti-P levels were found only in patients with SLE. Overall, 19% of 269 patients with SLE demonstrated elevated levels of IgG or IgM anti-P antibodies, including 14% of 187 patients without and 29% of 82 patients with neuropsychiatric manifestations. The frequency of positive test results varied greatly depending on the nature of the CNS involvement. The frequency in patients with severe depression (n = 8) and psychosis (n = 29) was 88% and 45%, respectively, compared with only 9% in patients with nonpsychiatric neurologic disease (n = 45). For the entire SLE group, the odds ratio for the association of anti-P antibodies and severe psychiatric manifestations was 7.63 with a 95% confidence interval of 3.61 to 16.14. In a review of 187 patients with SLE originally classified as not having severe psychiatric disease, seven of 10 patients being treated with antidepressant medications had elevated levels of anti-P antibodies. In serial studies, the serum level of anti-P antibodies appeared to correlate with the activity of psychiatric disease and did not correlate with the activity of other manifestations of SLE. Anti-P antibodies in nearly all patients were IgG and directed primarily to the C-terminal 11 amino acids of the P protein. No difference in these characteristics was observed when patients with and without psychiatric manifestations were compared. Paired serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples were also obtained from eight patients with active neuropsychiatric disease. Even when expressed as a fraction of the total IgG present, anti-P activity was markedly lower in CSF than in serum.nnnCONCLUSIONSnElevated levels of autoantibodies to the C-terminal region of ribosomal P proteins appear to be a specific marker for SLE, and are associated with both severe depression and psychosis in this disease. This assay is easily reproducible and may help distinguish SLE-induced psychiatric disease from that caused by other processes.
Frontiers in Immunology | 2012
Carl K. Edwards; Julie S. Green; H.-D. Volk; Michael Schiff; Brian L. Kotzin; Hiroaki Mitsuya; Tatsuya Kawaguchi; Ken Mei Sakata; John C. Cheronis; David B. Trollinger; Danute Bankaitis-Davis; Charles A. Dinarello; David A. Norris; Michael P. Bevilacqua; Mayumi Fujita; Gerd R. Burmester
Periodic assessment of gene expression for diagnosis and monitoring in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) may provide a readily available and useful method to detect subclinical disease progression and follow responses to therapy with disease modifying anti-rheumatic agents (DMARDs) or anti-TNF-α therapy. We used quantitative real-time PCR to compare peripheral blood gene expression profiles in active (“unstable”) RA patients on DMARDs, stable RA patients on DMARDs, and stable RA patients treated with a combination of a disease-modifying anti-rheumatoid drug (DMARD) and an anti-TNF-α agent (infliximab or etanercept) to healthy human controls. The expression of 48 inflammatory genes were compared between healthy controls (N = 122), unstable DMARD patients (N = 18), stable DMARD patients (N = 26), and stable patients on combination therapy (N = 20). Expression of 13 genes was very low or undetectable in all study groups. Compared to healthy controls, patients with unstable RA on DMARDs exhibited increased expression of 25 genes, stable DMARD patients exhibited increased expression of 14 genes and decreased expression of five genes, and combined therapy patients exhibited increased expression of six genes and decreased expression of 10 genes. These findings demonstrate that active RA is associated with increased expression of circulating inflammatory markers whereas increases in inflammatory gene expression are diminished in patients with stable disease on either DMARD or anti-TNF-α therapy. Furthermore, combination DMARD and anti-TNF-α therapy is associated with greater reductions in circulating inflammatory gene expression compared to DMARD therapy alone. These results suggest that assessment of peripheral blood gene expression may prove useful to monitor disease progression and response to therapy.
Bioorganic Chemistry | 1992
Raymond T. Cunningham; Suzanne E. Mangold; Lyle W. Spruce; Qi-Long Ying; Sanford R. Simon; Maciej Wieczorek; Sherman Ross; John C. Cheronis; Gary P. Kirschenheuter
The synthesis and evaluation of 4-(methylsulfinyl)phenyl 2-(1-methyl-2-pyrrolyl)butyrate (CE-0266) and the related sulfide and sulfone derivatives, CE-0265 and CE-0267, respectively, are described. The potency of the inhibitors toward human neutrophil elastase increases across the series CE-0265, CE-0266, CE-0267. CE-0266, with a k3Ki∗k2 value of 36 nm, exhibited high selectivity for elastase and was chosen for additional in vivo studies.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1999
Claire Coeshott; Christie Ohnemus; Anna Pilyavskaya; Sherman Ross; Maciej Wieczorek; Heather Kroona; Axel H. Leimer; John C. Cheronis
Archive | 2004
Michael P. Bevilacqua; Danute Bankaitis-Davis; John C. Cheronis; Victor Tryon
Archive | 2002
Michael P. Bevilacqua; John C. Cheronis; Victor Tryon; Danute Bankaitis-Davis
Archive | 1994
John C. Cheronis; Claire Coeshott
Archive | 1991
Howard M. Dintzis; Renee Z. Dintzis; James K. Blodgett; John C. Cheronis; Gary P. Kirschenheuter
Archive | 2007
Kathleen Storm; Danute Bankaitis-Davis; Lisa Siconolfi; John C. Cheronis
Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1999
Maciej Wieczorek; Albert Gyorkos; Lyle W. Spruce; Anna Ettinger; Sherman Ross; Heather Kroona; Carmen E. Burgos-Lepley; Larry D. Bratton; Tyler S. Drennan; Douglas L. Garnert; Gregory Von Burg; Carolyn G. Pilkington; John C. Cheronis