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Dive into the research topics where John N. Calley is active.

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Featured researches published by John N. Calley.


Obesity | 2008

Assessment of Diet-induced Obese Rats as an Obesity Model by Comparative Functional Genomics

Shuyu Li; Hong-Yan Zhang; Charlie C. Hu; Frank Lawrence; Kelly E. Gallagher; Anupama Surapaneni; Shawn T. Estrem; John N. Calley; Gabor Varga; Ernst R. Dow; Yanyun Chen

Objective: We applied a comparative functional genomics approach to evaluate whether diet‐induced obese (DIO) rats serve as an effective obesity model.


Developmental Dynamics | 2003

Identification of genes expressed during Xenopus laevis limb regeneration by using subtractive hybridization

Michael W. King; Trent Nguyen; John N. Calley; Mark W. Harty; Michael C. Muzinich; Anthony L. Mescher; Chris Chalfant; Mathias N'Cho; Kevin D. McLeaster; Jacquelyn Kaye Mcentire; David L. Stocum; Rosamund C. Smith; Anton W. Neff

Suppression polymerase chain reaction–based subtractive hybridization was used to identify genes that are expressed during Xenopus laevis hindlimb regeneration. Subtractions were done by using RNAs extracted from the regeneration‐competent stage (stage 53) and regeneration‐incompetent stage (stage 59) of limb development. Forward and reverse subtractions were done between stage 53 7‐day blastema and stage 53 contralateral limb (competent stage), stage 59 7‐day pseudoblastema and stage 59 contralateral limb (incompetent stage), and stage 53 7‐day blastema and stage 59 7‐day pseudoblastema. Several thousand clones were analyzed from the various subtracted libraries, either by random selection and sequencing (1,920) or by screening subtracted cDNA clones (6,150), arrayed on nylon membranes, with tissue‐specific probes. Several hundred clones were identified from the array screens whose expression levels were at least twofold higher in experimental tissue vs. control tissue (e.g., blastema vs. limb) and selected for sequencing. In addition, primers were designed to assay several of the randomly selected clones and used to assess the level of expression of these genes during regeneration and normal limb development. Approximately half of the selected clones were differentially expressed, as expected, including several that demonstrate blastema‐specific enhancement of expression. Three distinct categories of expression were identified in our screens: (1) clones that are expressed in both regeneration‐competent blastemas and ‐incompetent pseudoblastemas, (2) clones that are expressed at highest levels in regeneration‐competent blastemas, and (3) clones that are expressed at highest levels in regeneration‐incompetent pseudoblastemas. Characterizing the role of each of these three categories of genes will be important in furthering our understanding of the process of tissue regeneration. Developmental Dynamics 226:398–409, 2003.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

An unbiased approach to identifying tau kinases that phosphorylate tau at sites associated with Alzheimer disease.

Annalisa Cavallini; Suzanne C. Brewerton; Amanda Bell; Samantha Sargent; Sarah Glover; Clare Hardy; Roger Moore; John N. Calley; Michael Poidinger; Eric Karran; Peter Davies; Michael Hutton; Philip Szekeres; Suchira Bose

Background: Abnormally hyperphosphorylated tau is present in neurofibrillary tangles in Alzheimer disease. Results: Key kinases that phosphorylate tau at Alzheimer disease-specific epitopes have been identified in a cell-based screen of kinases. Conclusion: GSK3α, GSK3β, and MAPK13 were the most active tau kinases. Significance: Findings identify novel tau kinases and novel pathways that may be relevant for Alzheimer disease and other tauopathies. Neurofibrillary tangles, one of the hallmarks of Alzheimer disease (AD), are composed of paired helical filaments of abnormally hyperphosphorylated tau. The accumulation of these proteinaceous aggregates in AD correlates with synaptic loss and severity of dementia. Identifying the kinases involved in the pathological phosphorylation of tau may identify novel targets for AD. We used an unbiased approach to study the effect of 352 human kinases on their ability to phosphorylate tau at epitopes associated with AD. The kinases were overexpressed together with the longest form of human tau in human neuroblastoma cells. Levels of total and phosphorylated tau (epitopes Ser(P)-202, Thr(P)-231, Ser(P)-235, and Ser(P)-396/404) were measured in cell lysates using AlphaScreen assays. GSK3α, GSK3β, and MAPK13 were found to be the most active tau kinases, phosphorylating tau at all four epitopes. We further dissected the effects of GSK3α and GSK3β using pharmacological and genetic tools in hTau primary cortical neurons. Pathway analysis of the kinases identified in the screen suggested mechanisms for regulation of total tau levels and tau phosphorylation; for example, kinases that affect total tau levels do so by inhibition or activation of translation. A network fishing approach with the kinase hits identified other key molecules putatively involved in tau phosphorylation pathways, including the G-protein signaling through the Ras family of GTPases (MAPK family) pathway. The findings identify novel tau kinases and novel pathways that may be relevant for AD and other tauopathies.


Developmental Dynamics | 2005

Expression of Xenopus XlSALL4 during limb development and regeneration

Anton W. Neff; Michael W. King; Mark W. Harty; Trent Nguyen; John N. Calley; Rosamund C. Smith; Anthony L. Mescher

The multi‐C2H2 zinc‐finger domain containing transcriptional regulators of the spalt (SAL) family plays important developmental regulatory roles. In a competitive subtractive hybridization screen of genes expressed in Xenopus laevis hindlimb regeneration blastemas, we identified a SAL family member that, by phylogenetic analysis, falls in the same clade as human SALL4 and have designated it as XlSALL4. Mutations of human SALL4 have been linked to Okihiro syndrome, which includes preaxial (anterior) limb defects. The expression pattern of XlSALL4 transcripts during normal forelimb and hindlimb development and during hindlimb regeneration at the regeneration‐competent and regeneration‐incompetent stages is temporally and regionally dynamic. We show for the first time that a SAL family member (XlSALL4) is expressed at the right place and time to play a role regulating both digit identity along the anterior/posterior axis and epimorphic limb regeneration. Developmental Dynamics 233:356–367, 2005.


Neuron | 2015

BrainSeq: Neurogenomics to Drive Novel Target Discovery for Neuropsychiatric Disorders

Christian R. Schubert; Patricio O’Donnell; Jie Quan; Jens R. Wendland; Hualin S. Xi; Ashley R. Winslow; Enrico Domenici; Laurent Essioux; Tony Kam-Thong; David C. Airey; John N. Calley; David A. Collier; Hong Wang; Brian J. Eastwood; Philip J. Ebert; Yushi Liu; Laura Nisenbaum; Cara Ruble; James Scherschel; Ryan M. Smith; Hui-Rong Qian; Kalpana M. Merchant; Michael Didriksen; Mitsuyuki Matsumoto; Takeshi Saito; Nicholas J. Brandon; Alan J. Cross; Qi Wang; Husseini K. Manji; Hartmuth C. Kolb

We outline an ambitious project to characterize the genetic and epigenetic regulation of multiple facets of transcription in distinct brain regions across the human lifespan in samples of major neuropsychiatric disorders and controls. Initially focused on schizophrenia and mood disorders, the goal of this consortium is to elucidate the underlying molecular mechanisms of genetic associations with the goal of identifying novel therapeutic targets. The consortium currently consists of seven pharmaceutical companies and a not-for-profit medical research institution working as a precompetitive team to generate and analyze publicly available archival brain genomic data related to neuropsychiatric illness.


Lipids | 2011

The acyl coenzymeA:monoacylglycerol acyltransferase 3 (MGAT3) gene is a pseudogene in mice but encodes a functional enzyme in rats.

Yong Gang Yue; Yan Qun Chen; Youyan Zhang; He Wang; Yue-Wei Qian; Jeffrey S. Arnold; John N. Calley; Shuyu D. Li; William L. Perry; Hong Y. Zhang; Robert J. Konrad; Guoqing Cao

Triglyceride (TAG) absorption involves its initial hydrolysis to fatty acids and monoacylglycerol (MAG), which are resynthesized back to diacylglycerol (DAG) and TAG within enterocytes. The resynthesis of DAG is facilitated by fatty acyl-CoA dependent monoacylglycerol acyltransferases (MGATs). Three MGAT enzymes have been isolated in humans and the expression of MGAT2 and MGAT3 in the intestines suggests their functional role in the TAG absorption. In this paper, we report that the Mogat3 gene appears to be a pseudogene in mice while it is a functional gene in rats. Examination of the mouse genomic Mogat3 sequence revealed multiple changes that would result in a translational stop codon or frameshifts. The rat Mogat3 gene, however, is predicted to encode a functional enzyme of 362 amino acids. Expression of rat MGAT3 in human embryonic kidney 293 (HEK293) cells led to the formation of a 36-kDa protein that displayed significant MGAT but not DGAT activity. Tissue expression analysis of rat MGAT3 by real-time PCR analysis indicated that rat MGAT3 has a high level of expression in intestines and pancreas. Our results thus provide the molecular basis to understand the relative functional role of MGAT2 and MGAT3 and also for future exploration of MGAT3 function in animal models.


BMC Genomics | 2016

The Rat microRNA body atlas; Evaluation of the microRNA content of rat organs through deep sequencing and characterization of pancreas enriched miRNAs as biomarkers of pancreatic toxicity in the rat and dog

Aaron P. Smith; John N. Calley; Sachin Mathur; Hui-Rong Qian; Han Wu; Mark W. Farmen; Florian Caiment; Pierre R. Bushel; Jianying Li; Craig Fisher; Patrick Kirby; Erik Koenig; David Greg Hall; David E. Watson

BackgroundMicroRNAs (miRNA) are ~19–25 nucleotide long RNA molecules that fine tune gene expression through the inhibition of translation or degradation of the mRNA through incorporation into the RNA induced silencing complex (RISC). MicroRNAs are stable in the serum and plasma, are detectable in a wide variety of body fluids, are conserved across veterinary species and humans and are expressed in a tissue specific manner. They can be detected at low concentrations in circulation in animals and humans, generating interest in the utilization of miRNAs as serum and/or plasma based biomarkers of tissue injury. MicroRNA tissue profiling in rodents has been published, but sample an insufficient number of organs of toxicologic interest using microarray or qPCR technologies for miRNA detection. Here we impart an improved rat microRNA body atlas consisting of 21 and 23 tissues of toxicologic interest from male and female Sprague Dawley rats respectively, using Illumina miRNA sequencing. Several of the authors created a dog miRNA body atlas and we collaborated to test miRNAs conserved in rat and dog pancreas in caerulein toxicity studies utilizing both species.ResultsA rich data set is presented that more robustly defines the tissue specificity and enrichment profiles of previously published and undiscovered rat miRNAs. We generated 1,927 sequences that mapped to mature miRNAs in rat, mouse and human from miRBase and discovered an additional 1,162 rat miRNAs as compared to the current number of rat miRNAs in miRBase version 21. Tissue specific and enriched miRNAs were identified and a subset of these miRNAs were validated by qPCR for tissue specificity or enrichment. As an example of the power of this approach, we have conducted rat and dog pancreas toxicity studies and examined the levels of some tissue specific and enriched miRNAs conserved between rat and dog in the serum of each species. The studies demonstrate that conserved tissue specific/enriched miRs-216a-5p, 375-3p, 148a-3p, 216b-5p and 141-3p are candidate biomarkers of pancreatic injury in the rat and dog.ConclusionsA microRNA body atlas for rat and dog was useful in identifying new candidate miRNA biomarkers of organ toxicity in 2 toxicologically relevant species.


International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology | 2014

Paenibacillus lentus sp. nov., a β-mannanolytic bacterium isolated from mixed soil samples in a selective enrichment using guar gum as the sole carbon source.

Yong-Fu Li; John N. Calley; Philip J. Ebert; Emily Bulian Helmes

A novel bacterial strain, CMG1240(T), was isolated in 1988 from mixed soil samples collected from the United States and South America in a selective enrichment medium with guar gum as the sole carbon source. This microbial isolate showed β-mannanolytic activity to hydrolyse the galactomannans present in guar gum. Strain CMG1240(T) was aerobic, Gram-stain-variable, non-motile, rod-shaped and endospore-forming. It was further examined based on a combination of phenotypic, physiological and genetic characterization. On the basis of 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity, cellular lipid profile and fatty acid composition, strain CMG1240(T) was shown to belong unequivocally to the genus Paenibacillus. Quinone analysis showed that MK-7 was the only menaquinone detected. The main cell-wall sugar was xylose with trace amounts of mannose and glucose. The major polar lipids were diphosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylethanolamine, and unknown glycolipids, phospholipids, phosphoglycolipids and other lipids. The peptidoglycan structure was A1γ (meso-diaminopimelic acid-direct). The major fatty acids were anteiso-C15 : 0 and C16 : 0. The DNA G+C content was 46 mol% as determined experimentally and by analysis of the genomic sequence. The 16S rRNA gene sequence of strain CMG1240(T) shared highest similarity with that of Paenibacillus fonticola ZL(T) (97.6 %) while all other tested Paenibacillus strains showed lower sequence similarities (≤95.3 %). The results of DNA-DNA hybridization and chemotaxonomic tests enabled the genotypic and phenotypic differentiation of strain CMG1240(T) from P. fonticola. Based on these results, strain CMG1240(T) ( = ATCC BAA-2594(T) = DSM 25539(T)) should be designated the type strain of a novel species within the genus Paenibacillus, for which the name Paenibacillus lentus sp. nov. is proposed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Genome-wide screen for modulation of hepatic Apolipoprotein A-I (ApoA-I) secretion

Rebecca R. Miles; William L. Perry; Joseph Haas; Marian Mosior; Mathias N'Cho; Jian W. J. Wang; Peng Yu; John N. Calley; Yong Yue; Quincy L. Carter; Bomie Han; Patricia S. Foxworthy; Mark C. Kowala; Timothy P. Ryan; Patricia J. Solenberg; Laura F. Michael

Background: Increasing HDL-c through ApoA-I expression is hypothesized to reduce cardiovascular deaths significantly. Results: Genes that regulate hepatocyte ApoA-I secretion were identified using 21,789 siRNAs. Conclusion: Forty genes of interest were confirmed as regulators of ApoA-I production by hepatocytes. Significance: This study provides functional genomics-based data for exploring new mechanisms by which ApoA-I levels may be regulated. Control of plasma cholesterol levels is a major therapeutic strategy for management of coronary artery disease (CAD). Although reducing LDL cholesterol (LDL-c) levels decreases morbidity and mortality, this therapeutic intervention only translates into a 25–40% reduction in cardiovascular events. Epidemiological studies have shown that a high LDL-c level is not the only risk factor for CAD; low HDL cholesterol (HDL-c) is an independent risk factor for CAD. Apolipoprotein A-I (ApoA-I) is the major protein component of HDL-c that mediates reverse cholesterol transport from tissues to the liver for excretion. Therefore, increasing ApoA-I levels is an attractive strategy for HDL-c elevation. Using genome-wide siRNA screening, targets that regulate hepatocyte ApoA-I secretion were identified through transfection of 21,789 siRNAs into hepatocytes whereby cell supernatants were assayed for ApoA-I. Approximately 800 genes were identified and triaged using a convergence of information, including genetic associations with HDL-c levels, tissue-specific gene expression, druggability assessments, and pathway analysis. Fifty-nine genes were selected for reconfirmation; 40 genes were confirmed. Here we describe the siRNA screening strategy, assay implementation and validation, data triaging, and example genes of interest. The genes of interest include known and novel genes encoding secreted enzymes, proteases, G-protein-coupled receptors, metabolic enzymes, ion transporters, and proteins of unknown function. Repression of farnesyltransferase (FNTA) by siRNA and the enzyme inhibitor manumycin A caused elevation of ApoA-I secretion from hepatocytes and from transgenic mice expressing hApoA-I and cholesterol ester transfer protein transgenes. In total, this work underscores the power of functional genetic assessment to identify new therapeutic targets.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2017

Investigating the neuroimmunogenic architecture of schizophrenia

Rebecca Birnbaum; A E Jaffe; Qiang Chen; J H Shin; Christian R. Schubert; Patricio O'Donnell; Jie Quan; Jens R. Wendland; Hualin S. Xi; Ashley R. Winslow; Enrico Domenici; Laurent Essioux; Tony Kam-Thong; David C. Airey; John N. Calley; David A. Collier; Hong Wang; Brian J. Eastwood; Philip J. Ebert; Yushi Liu; Laura Nisenbaum; Cara Ruble; James Scherschel; Ryan M. Smith; Hui-Rong Qian; Kalpana M. Merchant; Michael Didriksen; Mitsuyuki Matsumoto; Takeshi Saito; Nicholas J. Brandon

The role of the immune system in schizophrenia remains controversial despite numerous studies to date. Most studies have profiled expression of select genes or proteins in peripheral blood, but none have focused on the expression of canonical pathways that mediate overall immune response. The current study used a systematic genetic approach to investigate the role of the immune system in a large sample of post-mortem brain of patients with schizophrenia: RNA sequencing was performed to assess the differential expression of 561 immune genes and 20 immune pathways in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) (144 schizophrenia and 196 control subjects) and hippocampus (83 schizophrenia and 187 control subjects). The effect of RNA quality on gene expression was found to be highly correlated with the effect of diagnosis even after adjustment for observable RNA quality parameters (i.e. RNA integrity), thus this confounding relationship was statistically controlled using principal components derived from the gene expression matrix. In DLPFC, 23 immune genes were found to be differentially expressed (false discovery rate <0.05), of which seven genes replicated in both directionality and at nominal significance (P<0.05) in an independent post-mortem DLPFC data set (182 schizophrenia and 212 control subjects), although notably at least five of these genes have prominent roles in pathways other than immune function and overall the effect sizes were minimal (fold change <1.1). In the hippocampus, no individual immune genes were identified to be differentially expressed, and in both DLPFC and hippocampus none of the individual immune pathways were relatively differentially expressed. Further, genomic schizophrenia risk profiles scores were not correlated with the expression of individual immune pathways or differentially expressed genes. Overall, past reports claiming a primary pathogenic role of the immune system intrinsic to the brain in schizophrenia could not be confirmed.

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Philip J. Ebert

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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