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Dive into the research topics where Kevin Miyashiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin Miyashiro.


Neuron | 2003

RNA cargoes associating with FMRP reveal deficits in cellular functioning in Fmr1 null mice

Kevin Miyashiro; Andrea Beckel-Mitchener; T.Patrick Purk; Kevin G. Becker; Tanya Barret; Lei Liu; Salvatore Carbonetto; Ivan Jeanne Weiler; William T. Greenough; James Eberwine

The Fragile X mental retardation-1 (Fmr1) gene encodes a multifunctional protein, FMRP, with intrinsic RNA binding activity. We have developed an approach, antibody-positioned RNA amplification (APRA), to identify the RNA cargoes associated with the in vivo configured FMRP messenger ribonucleoprotein (mRNP) complex. Using APRA as a primary screen, putative FMRP RNA cargoes were assayed for their ability to bind directly to FMRP using traditional methods of assessing RNA-protein interactions, including UV-crosslinking and filter binding assays. Approximately 60% of the APRA-defined mRNAs directly associate with FMRP. By examining a subset of these mRNAs and their encoded proteins in brain tissue from Fmr1 knockout mice, we have observed that some of these cargoes as well as the proteins they encode show discrete changes in abundance and/or differential subcellular distribution. These data are consistent with spatially selective regulation of multiple biological pathways by FMRP.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Local translation of classes of mRNAs that are targeted to neuronal dendrites

James Eberwine; Kevin Miyashiro; Janet Estee Kacharmina; Christy Job

The functioning of the neuronal dendrite results from a variety of biological processes including mRNA transport to and protein translation in the dendrite. The complexity of the mRNA population in dendrites suggests that specific biological processes are modulated through the regulation of dendritic biology. There are various classes of mRNAs in dendrites whose translation modulates the ability of the dendrite to receive and integrate presynaptic information. Among these mRNAs are those encoding selective transcription factors that function in the neuronal soma and ionotropic glutamate receptors that function on the neuronal membrane. Conclusive evidence that these mRNAs can be translated is reviewed, and identification of the endogenous sites of translation in living dendrites is presented. These data, as well as those described in the other articles resulting from this colloquium, highlight the complexity of dendritic molecular biology and the exquisitely selective and sensitive modulatory role played by the dendrite in facilitating intracellular and intercellular communication.


Neurochemical Research | 2002

Analysis of subcellularly localized mRNAs using in situ hybridization, mRNA amplification, and expression profiling.

James Eberwine; Brian Belt; Janet Estee Kacharmina; Kevin Miyashiro

Targeting of mRNAs to distinct subcellular regions occurs in all polarized cells. The mechanisms by which RNA transport occurs are poorly understood. With the advent of RNA amplification methodologies and expression profiling it is now possible to catalogue the RNAs that are targeted to particular subcellular regions. In particular, neurons are polarized cells in which dendrites receive signals from presynaptic neurons. Upon stimulation (information receipt) the dendrite processes the information such that an immediate dendritic response is generated as well as a longer-term somatic response. The integrated cellular response results in a signal that can be propagated through the axon to the next post-synaptic neuron. Much previous work has shown that mRNAs can be localized in dendrites and that local translation in dendrites can occur. In this chapter the methods for analysis of RNAs that are localized to dendrites are reviewed and a partial list of dendritically localized RNAs is presented. This information may be useful in identifying RNA regulatory regions that are responsible for specifying rate of RNA transport and the dendritic sites at which targeted RNAs dock so that they can be translated.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Protein quantification from complex protein mixtures using a proteomics methodology with single-cell resolution

Hongtao Zhang; Janet Estee Kacharmina; Kevin Miyashiro; Mark I. Greene; James Eberwine

We have developed an extremely sensitive technique, termed immuno-detection amplified by T7 RNA polymerase (IDAT) that is capable of monitoring proteins, lipids, and metabolites and their modifications at the single-cell level. A double-stranded oligonucleotide containing the T7 promoter is conjugated to an antibody (Ab), and then T7 RNA polymerase is used to amplify RNA from the double-stranded oligonucleotides coupled to the Ab in the Ab-antigen complex. By using this technique, we are able to detect the p185her2/neu receptor from the crude lysate of T6–17 cells at 10−13 dilution, which is 109-fold more sensitive than the conventional ELISA method. Single-chain Fv fragments or complementarity determining region peptides of the Ab also can be substituted for the Ab in IDAT. In a modified protocol, the oligonucleotide has been coupled to an Ab against a common epitope to create a universal detector species. With the linear amplification ability of T7 RNA polymerase, IDAT represents a significant improvement over immuno-PCR in terms of sensitivity and has the potential to provide a robotic platform for proteomics.


Neuron | 2011

Cytoplasmic Intron Sequence-Retaining Transcripts Can Be Dendritically Targeted via ID Element Retrotransposons

Peter T. Buckley; Miler T. Lee; Jai-Yoon Sul; Kevin Miyashiro; Thomas J. Bell; Stephen A. Fisher; Junhyong Kim; James Eberwine

RNA precursors give rise to mRNA after splicing of intronic sequences traditionally thought to occur in the nucleus. Here, we show that intron sequences are retained in a number of dendritically-targeted mRNAs, by using microarray and Illumina sequencing of isolated dendritic mRNA as well as in situ hybridization. Many of the retained introns contain ID elements, a class of SINE retrotransposon. A portion of these SINEs confers dendritic targeting to exogenous and endogenous transcripts showing the necessity of ID-mediated mechanisms for the targeting of different transcripts to dendrites. ID elements are capable of selectively altering the distribution of endogenous proteins, providing a link between intronic SINEs and protein function. As such, the ID element represents a common dendritic targeting element found across multiple RNAs. Retention of intronic sequence is a more general phenomenon than previously thought and plays a functional role in the biology of the neuron, partly mediated by co-opted repetitive sequences.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Cytoplasmic BKCa channel intron-containing mRNAs contribute to the intrinsic excitability of hippocampal neurons

Thomas J. Bell; Kevin Miyashiro; Jai-Yoon Sul; Ronald McCullough; Peter T. Buckley; Jeanine Jochems; David F. Meaney; Phil Haydon; Charles R. Cantor; Thomas D. Parsons; James Eberwine

High single-channel conductance K+ channels, which respond jointly to membrane depolarization and micromolar concentrations of intracellular Ca2+ ions, arise from extensive cell-specific alternative splicing of pore-forming α-subunit mRNAs. Here, we report the discovery of an endogenous BKCa channel α-subunit intron-containing mRNA in the cytoplasm of hippocampal neurons. This partially processed mRNA, which comprises ≈10% of the total BKCa channel α-subunit mRNAs, is distributed in a gradient throughout the somatodendritic space. We selectively reduced endogenous cytoplasmic levels of this intron-containing transcript by RNA interference without altering levels of the mature splice forms of the BKCa channel mRNAs. In doing so, we could demonstrate that changes in a unique BKCa channel α-subunit intron-containing splice variant mRNA can greatly impact the distribution of the BKCa channel protein to dendritic spines and intrinsic firing properties of hippocampal neurons. These data suggest a new regulatory mechanism for modulating the membrane properties and ion channel gradients of hippocampal neurons.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

In vivo identification of ribonucleoprotein-RNA interactions.

Jennifer Zielinski; Kalle Kilk; Tiina Peritz; Theresa J Kannanayakal; Kevin Miyashiro; Emelía Eiríksdóttir; Jeanine Jochems; Ülo Langel; James Eberwine

To understand the role of RNA-binding proteins (RBPs) in the regulation of gene expression, methods are needed for the in vivo identification of RNA-protein interactions. We have developed the peptide nucleic acid (PNA)-assisted identification of RBP technology to enable the identification of proteins that complex with a target RNA in vivo. Specific regions of the 3′ and 5′ UTRs of ankylosis mRNA were targeted by antisense PNAs transported into cortical neurons by the cell-penetrating peptide transportan 10. An array of proteins was isolated in complex with or near the targeted regions of the ankylosis mRNA through UV-induced crosslinking of the annealed PNA-RNA-RBP complex. The first evidence for pharmacological modulation of these specific protein-RNA associations was observed. These data show that the PNA-assisted identification of the RBP technique is a reliable method to rapidly identify proteins interacting in vivo with the target RNA.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Intron retention facilitates splice variant diversity in calcium-activated big potassium channel populations

Thomas J. Bell; Kevin Miyashiro; Jai-Yoon Sul; Peter T. Buckley; Miler T. Lee; Ron McCullough; Jeanine Jochems; Junhyong Kim; Charles R. Cantor; Thomas D. Parsons; James Eberwine

We report that the stress axis–regulated exon (STREX)-containing calcium-activated big potassium (BKCa) channel splice variant expression and physiology are regulated in part by cytoplasmic splicing and intron retention. NextGen sequencing of the mRNA complement of pooled hippocampal dendrite samples found intron 17a (i17a), the intron immediately preceding STREX, in the BKCa mRNA. Further molecular analyses of i17a revealed that the majority of i17a-containing BKCa channel mRNAs associate with STREX. i17a siRNA treatment followed by STREX protein immunocytochemistry demonstrated both reduced levels and altered subcellular distribution of STREX-containing BKCa channel protein. Selective reduction of i17a-BKCa or STREX-BKCa mRNAs induced similar changes in the burst firing properties of hippocampal neurons. Collectively, these data show that STREX splice variant regulation via cytoplasmic splicing and intron retention helps generate STREX-dependent BKCa current diversity in hippocampal neurons.


Methods in Enzymology | 1992

Complementary DNA synthesis in situ : methods and applications

James Eberwine; Corinne Spencer; Kevin Miyashiro; Scott A. Mackler; Richard H. Finnell

In situ transcription is the synthesis of cDNA within cells. This chapter has illustrated some of the application of IST to the study of gene expression in complex cell environments. While the importance of transcription in modulating cellular activity has been long appreciated, the role of translational control mechanisms in regulating central nervous system functioning is just beginning to be recognized. Previous limitations in the availability of tissue have made it difficult to construct cDNA libraries from defined cell populations, to examine translational control, and to quantitate differences in the amount of mRNA for many distinct mRNAs in the same sample. In situ transcription facilitates all of these procedures, making it possible to characterize aspects of gene regulation that were previously difficult. Indeed, taken to its furthest extreme it is now possible to characterize gene expression in single live cells. This level of analysis allows basic questions, such as How different morphologically identical cells are at the level of gene expression, and How synaptic connectivity and glial interactions influence gene expression in single cells, to be experimentally approached. The ability to characterize gene expression in small amounts of tissue and single cells is critical to gaining an understanding of the contribution of specific cell types to the physiology of the central nervous system.


Journal of the Royal Society Interface | 2012

Quantitative biology of single neurons

James Eberwine; Ditte Lovatt; Peter A. Buckley; Hannah Dueck; Chantal Francis; Tae Kyung Kim; Jaehee Lee; Miler T. Lee; Kevin Miyashiro; Jacqueline Morris; Tiina Peritz; Terri Schochet; Jennifer M. Spaethling; Jai-Yoon Sul; Junhyong Kim

The building blocks of complex biological systems are single cells. Fundamental insights gained from single-cell analysis promise to provide the framework for understanding normal biological systems development as well as the limits on systems/cellular ability to respond to disease. The interplay of cells to create functional systems is not well understood. Until recently, the study of single cells has concentrated primarily on morphological and physiological characterization. With the application of new highly sensitive molecular and genomic technologies, the quantitative biochemistry of single cells is now accessible.

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James Eberwine

University of Pennsylvania

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Jai-Yoon Sul

University of Pennsylvania

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Marc A. Dichter

University of Pennsylvania

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Thomas J. Bell

University of Pennsylvania

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Jason Glanzer

University of Pennsylvania

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Jeanine Jochems

University of Pennsylvania

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Junhyong Kim

University of Pennsylvania

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Miler T. Lee

University of Pennsylvania

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