Kamran Salim
Merck & Co.
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Featured researches published by Kamran Salim.
Proteomics | 2002
Heather A. Skynner; Thomas W. Rosahl; Michael R. Knowles; Kamran Salim; Lee Reid; Rosa Cothliff; George McAllister; Paul C. Guest
Transgenic, knockout and knockin mice are useful tools for linking specific genes with behaviour and other complex biological processes. However, complications arising due to compensatory changes, genetic background differences and other factors could lead to difficulty in interpreting the resulting changes in phenotype. We have used fluorescence two‐dimensional differential in‐gel electrophoresis in combination with matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization‐time of flight mass fingerprinting to investigate the possibility that distinct genetic alterations can lead to common protein expression changes in genetically modified mice. Brain proteomes were compared from two transgenic mouse strains (Tg2576 × TgPS1 and Tg2576), two knockout mouse strains (5‐HT7R –/– and GABAARα5 –/–) and one knockin mouse strain (GABAARα1‐H101R). Both of the transgenic models showed an isoform change in the heat shock 70 related protein, mortalin. The knockout and knockin models showed similar changes in mortalin expression along with an alteration of the anti‐oxidant protein 2. The observed proteomic alterations indicate that stress‐responsive protein pathways may be altered artefactually in all of the mouse models used in this study and highlights an area where caution is needed in interpreting proteomic changes in genetically modified mice.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006
Margaret S. Beer; Kamran Salim; Michael Rigby; Robert P. Heavens; David W Smith; George McAllister
Abstract: EDG receptors are a family of closely related G‐protein‐coupled receptors, so‐called since the first family member to be cloned is encoded by an endothelial differentiation gene. Of the six family members identified, five use lysophospholipids as their endogenous ligands. The sixth receptor, EDG‐6, remains an orphan. These receptors activate multiple secondary‐messenger pathways involving coupling to Gi, Gq/11, and G12/13 trimeric guanine nucleotide‐binding proteins and are thought to play an important role in cell growth, development and maintenance, and cytoskeletal‐dependent changes.
Brain Research | 2004
Paul C. Guest; Michael R. Knowles; Sylvain Molon-Noblot; Kamran Salim; David W Smith; Fraser Murray; Philippe Laroque; Stephen P. Hunt; Carmen De Felipe; N.M.J. Rupniak; George McAllister
Antidepressants are widely prescribed in the treatment of depression, although the mechanism of how they exert their therapeutic effects is poorly understood. To shed further light on their mode of action, we have attempted to identify a common proteomic signature in guinea pig brains after chronic treatment with two different antidepressants. Both fluoxetine and the substance P receptor (NK(1)R) antagonist (SPA) L-000760735 altered cortical expression of multiple heat shock protein 60 forms along with neurofilaments and related proteins that are critical determinants of synaptic structure and function. Analysis of NK(1)R-/- mice showed similar alterations of neurofilaments confirming the specificity of the effects observed with chronic NK(1)R antagonist treatment. To determine if these changes were associated with structural modification of synapses, we carried out electron microscopic analysis of cerebral cortices from fluoxetine-treated guinea pigs. This showed an increase in the percentage of synapses with split postsynaptic densities (PSDs), a phenomenon that is characteristic of activity-dependent synaptic rearrangement. These findings suggest that cortical alterations of the neurofilament pathway and increased synaptic remodeling are associated with the mechanism of these two antidepressant drug treatments and may contribute to their psychotherapeutic actions.
Brain Research | 2006
Heather A. Skynner; Doran P. Amos; Fraser Murray; Kamran Salim; Michael R. Knowles; Ignacio Munoz-Sanjuan; Luis M. Camargo; Timothy P. Bonnert; Paul C. Guest
Some patients with Major Depression and other neurological afflictions display hyperactivity of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. HPA hyperactivity may be due to impaired feedback inhibition and manifested as increased levels of circulating cortisol. Subcutaneous implants of corticosterone pellets were used to mimic this situation in mice to gain insight into any effects on brain function by comparative proteomic analysis using two-dimensional Differential In-Gel Electrophoresis. A total of 150 different protein spots were altered by corticosterone treatment in the hypothalamus, hippocampus and cerebral cortex. Of these, 117 spots were identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass fingerprinting equating to 51 different proteins. Association of these corticosterone-modulated proteins with biological functions using the Ingenuity Pathways Analysis tool showed that cell morphology was significantly altered in the hippocampus and cerebral cortex, whereas the hypothalamus showed significant changes in cell death. Ingenuity Pathways Analysis of the canonical signaling pathways showed that glycolysis and gluconeogenesis were altered in the hypothalamus and the hippocampus and all three brain regions showed changes in phenylalanine, glutamate and nitrogen metabolism. Further elucidation of these pathways could lead to identification of biomarkers for the development of pharmacological therapies targeted at neuropsychiatric disorders.
Brain Research | 2000
Paul C. Guest; Kamran Salim; Heather A. Skynner; Samantha E. George; Janine N. Bresnick; George McAllister
We have identified an alternatively spliced 5-hydroxytryptamine 2A receptor (5-HT(2A)-R) transcript by PCR of human brain cDNA using degenerate oligonucleotide primers to transmembrane (TM) domains 3 and 7 of the 5-HT(2)-R subfamily. The variant contains a 118-bp insertion at the exon II/III boundary of the 5-HT(2A)-R, which produces a frame shift in the coding sequence and a premature stop codon. PCR analysis showed that the truncated receptor (5-HT(2A-tr)) and native 5-HT(2A)-R were co-expressed in most brain tissues, with the highest levels being found in hippocampus, corpus collosum, amygdala and caudate nucleus. Western blot analysis of HEK-293 cells transfected transiently with a 5-HT(2A-tr) construct showed that a 30-kDa protein was expressed on cell membranes. Co-transfection studies showed no effect of the 5-HT(2A-tr) variant on 3H-ketanserin binding to the native 5-HT(2A)-R or on functional coupling of the 5-HT(2A)-R to 5-HT-stimulated Ca(2+) mobilization. The functional significance of the 5-HT(2A-tr) variant and other truncated receptors remains to be established.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002
Kamran Salim; Tim Fenton; Jamil I. Bacha; Hector Urien-Rodriguez; Tim Bonnert; Heather A. Skynner; Emma Watts; Julie Kerby; Anne Heald; Margaret S. Beer; George McAllister; Paul C. Guest
Proteomics | 2003
Michael R. Knowles; Sandra Cervino; Heather A. Skynner; Stephen P. Hunt; Carmen De Felipe; Kamran Salim; Georgina Meneses-Lorente; George McAllister; Paul C. Guest
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2004
Georgina Meneses-Lorente; Paul C. Guest; Jeffrey Lawrence; Nagaraja Muniappa; Michael R. Knowles; Heather A. Skynner; Kamran Salim; Ileana M. Cristea; Russell J. Mortishire-Smith; Simon J. Gaskell; Alan P. Watt
Chemical Research in Toxicology | 2006
Georgina Meneses-Lorente; Alan P. Watt; Kamran Salim; Simon J. Gaskell; Nagaraja Muniappa; Jeffrey Lawrence; Paul C. Guest
Stem Cells and Development | 2006
Kamran Salim; Laura Kehoe; Marjorie S. Minkoff; James G. Bilsland; Ignacio Munoz-Sanjuan; Paul C. Guest