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Dive into the research topics where John E. Wilkinson is active.

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Featured researches published by John E. Wilkinson.


Aging Cell | 2012

Rapamycin slows aging in mice

John E. Wilkinson; Lisa Burmeister; Susan V. Brooks; Chi-Chao Chan; Sabrina Friedline; David E. Harrison; J. F. Hejtmancik; Nancy L. Nadon; Randy Strong; Lauren K. Wood; Maria A. Woodward; Richard A. Miller

Rapamycin increases lifespan in mice, but whether this represents merely inhibition of lethal neoplastic diseases, or an overall slowing in multiple aspects of aging is currently unclear. We report here that many forms of age‐dependent change, including alterations in heart, liver, adrenal glands, endometrium, and tendon, as well as age‐dependent decline in spontaneous activity, occur more slowly in rapamycin‐treated mice, suggesting strongly that rapamycin retards multiple aspects of aging in mice, in addition to any beneficial effects it may have on neoplastic disease. We also note, however, that mice treated with rapamycin starting at 9 months of age have significantly higher incidence of testicular degeneration and cataracts; harmful effects of this kind will guide further studies on timing, dosage, and tissue‐specific actions of rapamycin relevant to the development of clinically useful inhibitors of TOR action.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998

Epidermal growth factor receptor activity mediates renal cyst formation in polycystic kidney disease.

William G. Richards; William E. Sweeney; Bradley K. Yoder; John E. Wilkinson; Richard P. Woychik; Ellis D. Avner

A consistent phenotype observed in both human patients and several different mouse models of autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (ARPKD) is an increased activity of the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) in the affected kidneys. To determine whether this increased activity of the EGFR is a functional event that is directly part of the disease pathway of renal cyst formation, we used a genetic approach to introduce a mutant EGFR with decreased tyrosine kinase activity into a murine model of ARPKD. We found that the modified form of the EGFR could block the increase in EGFR-specific tyrosine kinase activity that normally accompanies the development of renal cysts, and this correlated with an improvement in kidney function and a substantial decrease in cyst formation in the collecting ducts. These results suggest that changes in the expression of the EGFR contribute to the formation of cysts in the collecting ducts, and that drugs that target the tyrosine kinase activity of the EGFR may potentially be therapeutic in ARPKD.


Mbio | 2013

A Mouse Model for Human Norovirus

Stefan Taube; Abimbola O. Kolawole; Marina Höhne; John E. Wilkinson; Scott A. Handley; Jeffrey W. Perry; Larissa B. Thackray; Ramesh Akkina; Christiane E. Wobus

ABSTRACT Human noroviruses (HuNoVs) cause significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. However, despite substantial efforts, a small-animal model for HuNoV has not been described to date. Since “humanized” mice have been successfully used to study human-tropic pathogens in the past, we challenged BALB/c mice deficient in recombination activation gene (Rag) 1 or 2 and common gamma chain (γc) (Rag-γc) engrafted with human CD34+ hematopoietic stem cells, nonengrafted siblings, and immunocompetent wild-type controls with pooled stool isolates from patients positive for HuNoV. Surprisingly, both humanized and nonhumanized BALB/c Rag-γc-deficient mice supported replication of a GII.4 strain of HuNoV, as indicated by increased viral loads over input. In contrast, immunocompetent wild-type BALB/c mice were not infected. An intraperitoneal route of infection and the BALB/c genetic background were important for facilitating a subclinical HuNoV infection of Rag-γc-deficient mice. Expression of structural and nonstructural proteins was detected in cells with macrophage-like morphology in the spleens and livers of BALB/c Rag-γc-deficient mice, confirming the ability of HuNoV to replicate in a mouse model. In summary, HuNoV replication in BALB/c Rag-γc-deficient mice is dependent on the immune-deficient status of the host but not on the presence of human immune cells and provides the first genetically manipulable small-animal model for studying HuNoV infection. IMPORTANCE Human noroviruses are a significant cause of viral gastroenteritis worldwide, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality. Antivirals and vaccines are currently not available, in part due to the inability to study these viruses in a genetically manipulable, small-animal model. Herein, we report the first mouse model for human noroviruses. This model will accelerate our understanding of human norovirus biology and provide a useful resource for evaluating antiviral therapies. Human noroviruses are a significant cause of viral gastroenteritis worldwide, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality. Antivirals and vaccines are currently not available, in part due to the inability to study these viruses in a genetically manipulable, small-animal model. Herein, we report the first mouse model for human noroviruses. This model will accelerate our understanding of human norovirus biology and provide a useful resource for evaluating antiviral therapies.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Transcription Factors OVOL1 and OVOL2 Induce the Mesenchymal to Epithelial Transition in Human Cancer

Hernan Roca; James Hernandez; Savannah Weidner; Richard C. McEachin; David Fuller; Sudha Sud; Taibriana Schumann; John E. Wilkinson; Alexander Zaslavsky; Hangwen Li; Christopher A. Maher; Stephanie Daignault-Newton; Patrick Healy; Kenneth J. Pienta

Cell plasticity regulated by the balance between the mesenchymal to epithelial transition (MET) and the opposite program, EMT, is critical in the metastatic cascade. Several transcription factors (TFs) are known to regulate EMT, though the mechanisms of MET remain unclear. We demonstrate a novel function of two TFs, OVOL1 and OVOL2, as critical inducers of MET in human cancers. Our findings indicate that the OVOL-TFs control MET through a regulatory feedback loop with EMT-inducing TF ZEB1, and the regulation of mRNA splicing by inducing Epithelial Splicing Regulatory Protein 1 (ESRP1). Using mouse prostate tumor models we show that expression of OVOL-TFs in mesenchymal prostate cancer cells attenuates their metastatic potential. The role of OVOL-TFs as inducers of MET is further supported by expression analyses in 917 cancer cell lines, suggesting their role as crucial regulators of epithelial-mesenchymal cell plasticity in cancer.


Circulation | 2002

Lethal Perinatal Thrombosis in Mice Resulting From the Interaction of Tissue Factor Pathway Inhibitor Deficiency and Factor V Leiden

Daniel T. Eitzman; Randal J. Westrick; Xiaoming Bi; Sara L. Manning; John E. Wilkinson; George J. Broze; David Ginsburg

Background—Factor V Leiden (FVL) is a common genetic risk factor for thrombosis in humans. The incomplete penetrance of FVL suggests important contributions from other genetic or environmental modifying factors. Variation in the expression of tissue factor pathway inhibitor (TFPI) has also been proposed as a risk factor for venous thrombosis and has been shown to enhance the prothrombotic effect of FVL in vitro. Methods and Results—To examine the potential in vivo interaction between Tfpi and FvL, we analyzed crosses between mice carrying FvL and a deficiency of TFPI. The FvQ/Q, Tfpi+/− genotype was nearly completely fatal in the early perinatal period. Increased fibrin deposition was observed in multiple organs from the FvQ/Q, Tfpi+/− fetuses, suggesting disseminated thrombosis. Conclusions—These observations demonstrate the prothrombotic effect of modest variations in the level of TFPI expression and suggest that TFPI could be an important genetic modifier for the thrombosis associated with FVL in humans.


Cell Reports | 2014

Inducible In Vivo Silencing of Brd4 Identifies Potential Toxicities of Sustained BET Protein Inhibition

Jessica E. Bolden; Nilgun Tasdemir; Lukas E. Dow; Johan H. van Es; John E. Wilkinson; Zhen Zhao; Hans Clevers; Scott W. Lowe

SUMMARY BET family proteins are novel therapeutic targets for cancer and inflammation and represent the first chromatin readers against which small-molecule inhibitors have been developed. First-generation BET inhibitors have shown therapeutic efficacy in preclinical models, but the consequences of sustained BET protein inhibition in normal tissues remain poorly characterized. Using an inducible and reversible transgenic RNAi mouse model, we show that strong suppression of the BET protein Brd4 in adult animals has dramatic effects in multiple tissues. Brd4-depleted mice display reversible epidermal hyperplasia, alopecia, and decreased cellular diversity and stem cell depletion in the small intestine. Furthermore, Brd4-suppressed intestines are sensitive to organ stress and show impaired regeneration following irradiation, suggesting that concurrent Brd4 suppression and certain cytotoxic therapies may induce undesirable synergistic effects. These findings provide important insight into Brd4 function in normal tissues and, importantly, predict several potential outcomes associated with potent and sustained BET protein inhibition.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

RASA1 maintains the lymphatic vasculature in a quiescent functional state in mice

Philip E. Lapinski; Sunkuk Kwon; Beth A. Lubeck; John E. Wilkinson; R. Sathish Srinivasan; Eva M. Sevick-Muraca; Philip D. King

RASA1 (also known as p120 RasGAP) is a Ras GTPase-activating protein that functions as a regulator of blood vessel growth in adult mice and humans. In humans, RASA1 mutations cause capillary malformation-arteriovenous malformation (CM-AVM); whether it also functions as a regulator of the lymphatic vasculature is unknown. We investigated this issue using mice in which Rasa1 could be inducibly deleted by administration of tamoxifen. Systemic loss of RASA1 resulted in a lymphatic vessel disorder characterized by extensive lymphatic vessel hyperplasia and leakage and early lethality caused by chylothorax (lymphatic fluid accumulation in the pleural cavity). Lymphatic vessel hyperplasia was a consequence of increased proliferation of lymphatic endothelial cells (LECs) and was also observed in mice in which induced deletion of Rasa1 was restricted to LECs. RASA1-deficient LECs showed evidence of constitutive activation of Ras in situ. Furthermore, in isolated RASA1-deficient LECs, activation of the Ras signaling pathway was prolonged and cellular proliferation was enhanced after ligand binding to different growth factor receptors, including VEGFR-3. Blockade of VEGFR-3 was sufficient to inhibit the development of lymphatic vessel hyperplasia after loss of RASA1 in vivo. These findings reveal a role for RASA1 as a physiological negative regulator of LEC growth that maintains the lymphatic vasculature in a quiescent functional state through its ability to inhibit Ras signal transduction initiated through LEC-expressed growth factor receptors such as VEGFR-3.


Journal of Immunology | 2014

Resident Alveolar Macrophages Suppress, whereas Recruited Monocytes Promote, Allergic Lung Inflammation in Murine Models of Asthma

Zbigniew Zasłona; Sally Przybranowski; Carol A. Wilke; Nico van Rooijen; Seagal Teitz-Tennenbaum; John J. Osterholzer; John E. Wilkinson; Bethany B. Moore; Marc Peters-Golden

The role and origin of alveolar macrophages (AMs) in asthma are incompletely defined. We sought to clarify these issues in the context of acute allergic lung inflammation using house dust mite and OVA murine models. Use of liposomal clodronate to deplete resident AMs (rAMs) resulted in increased levels of inflammatory cytokines and eosinophil numbers in lavage fluid and augmented the histopathologic evidence of lung inflammation, suggesting a suppressive role for rAMs. Lung digests of asthmatic mice revealed an increased percentage of Ly6Chigh/CD11bpos inflammatory monocytes. Clodronate depletion of circulating monocytes, by contrast, resulted in an attenuation of allergic inflammation. A CD45.1/CD45.2 chimera model demonstrated that recruitment at least partially contributes to the AM pool in irradiated nonasthmatic mice, but its contribution was no greater in asthma. Ki-67 staining of AMs supported a role for local proliferation, which was increased in asthma. Our data demonstrate that rAMs dampen, whereas circulating monocytes promote, early events in allergic lung inflammation. Moreover, maintenance of the AM pool in the early stages of asthmatic inflammation depends on local proliferation, but not recruitment.


European Journal of Immunology | 2001

The murine mutation scurfy (sf) results in an antigen-dependent lymphoproliferative disease with altered T cell sensitivity

Joanne Zahorsky-Reeves; John E. Wilkinson

The scurfy (sf) murine mutation results in a rapidly fatal lymphoproliferative disease, causing death by 26 days. Mature CD4+ T cells which tested hyperresponsive to T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation are involved. When sf was bred onto a transgenic line (DO11.10) in which 75 – 95 % of the T cells express TCR for ovalbumin (OVA) 323 – 339, sf / Y OVA mice had prolonged lifespans and less severe clinical symptoms compared to controls. However, sf / Y OVA mice eventually developed disease and died with manifestations similar to those of the original sf strain. The Rag1 knockout (KO) mouse, which cannot produce mature T (or B) cells without the addition of functional transgenes, was chosen for further breeding. The combination of Rag1 KO, the OVA transgene, and sf produced mice with 100 % of their mature DO11.10 α β T cells reactive strictly to OVA peptide. None of these Rag1 − / − sf / Y OVA mice developed the scurfy disease. They retained central deletion capability in vivo, but demonstrated an altered in vitro response to OVA peptide. These results indicate that mice without TCR for endogenous antigens do not develop scurfy symptoms, and are consistent with the hypothesis that the sf mutation requires antigen stimulation to manifest disease, perhaps via altered TCR sensitivity.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2014

Splicing factor SRSF6 promotes hyperplasia of sensitized skin

Mads A. Jensen; John E. Wilkinson; Adrian R. Krainer

Many biological processes involve gene-expression regulation by alternative splicing. Here, we identify the splicing factor SRSF6 as a regulator of wound healing and tissue homeostasis in skin. We show that SRSF6 is a proto-oncogene frequently overexpressed in human skin cancer. Overexpressing it in transgenic mice induces hyperplasia of sensitized skin and promotes aberrant alternative splicing. We identify 139 SRSF6-target genes in skin and show that this SR-rich protein binds to alternative exons in the pre-mRNA of the extracellular-matrix protein tenascin C, thus promoting the expression of isoforms characteristic of invasive and metastatic cancer independently of cell type. SRSF6 overexpression additionally results in depletion of LGR6+ stem cells and excessive keratinocyte proliferation and response to injury. Furthermore, the effects of SRSF6 in wound healing assayed in vitro depend on the tenascin-C isoforms. Thus, abnormal SR-protein expression can perturb tissue homeostasis.

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Richard P. Woychik

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Scott W. Lowe

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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Mikala Egeblad

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Bradley K. Yoder

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Virginia L. Godfrey

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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William G. Richards

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Carlos Cordon-Cardo

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Ellis D. Avner

Medical College of Wisconsin

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Lloyd C. Trotman

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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