John E. Mickle
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
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Featured researches published by John E. Mickle.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1999
Bryan D. Moyer; Jerod S. Denton; Katherine H. Karlson; Donna Reynolds; Shusheng Wang; John E. Mickle; Michal Milewski; Garry R. Cutting; William B. Guggino; Min Li; Bruce A. Stanton
Polarization of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), a cAMP-activated chloride channel, to the apical plasma membrane of epithelial cells is critical for vectorial transport of chloride in a variety of epithelia, including the airway, pancreas, intestine, and kidney. However, the motifs that localize CFTR to the apical membrane are unknown. We report that the last 3 amino acids in the COOH-terminus of CFTR (T-R-L) comprise a PDZ-interacting domain that is required for the polarization of CFTR to the apical plasma membrane in human airway and kidney epithelial cells. In addition, the CFTR mutant, S1455X, which lacks the 26 COOH-terminal amino acids, including the PDZ-interacting domain, is mispolarized to the lateral membrane. We also demonstrate that CFTR binds to ezrin-radixin-moesin-binding phosphoprotein 50 (EBP50), an apical membrane PDZ domain-containing protein. We propose that COOH-terminal deletions of CFTR, which represent about 10% of CFTR mutations, result in defective vectorial chloride transport, partly by altering the polarized distribution of CFTR in epithelial cells. Moreover, our data demonstrate that PDZ-interacting domains and PDZ domain-containing proteins play a key role in the apical polarization of ion channels in epithelial cells.
Medical Clinics of North America | 2000
John E. Mickle; Garry R. Cutting
The genotype-phenotype relationship in CF is complex despite its being a monogenic disorder. Factors that contribute to variability among individuals with the same genotype are an area of intense study. Nevertheless, certain conclusions can be derived from these studies. First, mutations in both CFTR alleles cause the CF phenotype. Homozygosity for delta F508 or compound heterozygosity for delta F508 and another severe mutation (e.g., G551D, W1282X) cause classic CF: obstructive pulmonary disease, exocrine pancreatic deficiency, male infertility, and elevated sweat chloride concentrations. Clinical variability is observed among patients with the classic form of CF, especially with regards to the severity of lung disease. Although understanding of the role of other genes and environment in the development of lung disease is incomplete, evidence that other factors are important raises the possibility that therapeutic intervention may be possible at several levels. Second, genotype correlates more closely with certain features of the CF phenotype than others. Mutations that allow partial function of CFTR are often associated with pancreatic sufficiency, occasionally identified with normal sweat gland function, and sporadically correlated with mild lung disease. Partially functioning mutants rarely prevent maldevelopment of the male reproductive tract; an exception is 3849 + 10 Kb C-->T. These observations suggest that certain tissues require different levels of CFTR function to avoid the pathologic manifestations typical of CF. The genetic cause of several disorders that clinically overlap CF can be attributed, in part, to mutations in CFTR. Finally, molecular analysis of disease-associated mutations identified through genotype-phenotype studies provides a mechanistic framework for genotype-based therapeutic approaches and pharmaceutical interventions.
Clinics in Chest Medicine | 1998
John E. Mickle; Garry R. Cutting
Cystic fibrosis (CF) phenotypes are determined by mutations in the CF gene, genetic background, and environment. The nature of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) mutation determines the extent of protein function. CFTR mutations that abolish protein function are associated with severe CF phenotypes. Mutants that retain partial function of CFTR are associated with mild phenotypes. The effect of CFTR dysfunction is variable in different tissues. Atypical phenotypes caused by mutations in the CF gene may be revealed by CFTR mutation analysis and family studies. These phenotypes help to define the spectrum of clinical manifestations caused by CFTR mutations.
American Journal of Human Genetics | 2000
John E. Mickle; Michal Milewski; Milan Macek; Garry R. Cutting
The protein defective in cystic fibrosis (CF), the CF transmembrane-conductance regulator (CFTR), functions as an epithelial chloride channel and as a regulator of separate ion channels. Although the consequences that disease-causing mutations have on the chloride-channel function have been studied extensively, little is known about the effects that mutations have on the regulatory function. To address this issue, we transiently expressed CFTR-bearing mutations associated with CF or its milder phenotype, congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens, and determined whether mutant CFTR could regulate outwardly rectifying chloride channels (ORCCs). CFTR bearing a CF-associated mutation in the first nucleotide-binding domain (NBD1), DeltaF508, functioned as a chloride channel but did not regulate ORCCs. However, CFTR bearing disease-associated mutations in other domains retained both functions, regardless of the associated phenotype. Thus, a relationship between loss of CFTR regulatory function and disease severity is evident for NBD1, a region of CFTR that appears important for regulation of separate channels.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Jie Cheng; Bryan D. Moyer; Michal Milewski; Johannes Loffing; Masahiro Ikeda; John E. Mickle; Garry R. Cutting; Min Li; Bruce A. Stanton; William B. Guggino
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000
Bryan D. Moyer; Marc Duhaime; Collin Shaw; Jerod S. Denton; Donna Reynolds; Katherine H. Karlson; Jason R. Pfeiffer; Shusheng Wang; John E. Mickle; Michal Milewski; Garry R. Cutting; William B. Guggino; Min Li; Bruce A. Stanton
Journal of Cell Science | 2001
Michal Milewski; John E. Mickle; John K. Forrest; Diane Stafford; Bryan D. Moyer; Jie Cheng; William B. Guggino; Bruce A. Stanton; Garry R. Cutting
Human Molecular Genetics | 1998
John E. Mickle; Milan Macek; Stephanie B. Fulmer-Smentek; Michelle M. Egan; Erik M. Schwiebert; William B. Guggino; Richard B. Moss; Garry R. Cutting
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Michal Milewski; John E. Mickle; John K. Forrest; Bruce A. Stanton; Garry R. Cutting
Pediatric Pulmonology | 2000
Jie Cheng; Shusheng Wang; Bryan D. Moyer; Michal Milewski; John E. Mickle; Garry R. Cutting; Bruce A. Stanton; Min Li; William B. Guggino