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Dive into the research topics where Kirby D. Smith is active.

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Featured researches published by Kirby D. Smith.


Genomics | 1987

Origin of the human L1 elements: proposed progenitor genes deduced from a consensus DNA sequence.

Alan F. Scott; Barbara J. Schmeckpeper; Mona Abdelrazik; Catherine Theisen Comey; Bruce F. O'Hara; Judith Pratt Rossiter; Tim Cooley; Peter Heath; Kirby D. Smith; Louise Margolet

Abstract A consensus sequence for the human long interspersed repeated DNA element, L1H8 (LINE or KpnI sequence), is presented. The sequence contains two open reading frames (ORFs) which are homologous to ORFs in corresponding regions of L1 elements in other species. The L1H8 ORFs are separated by a small evolutionarily nonconserved region. The 5′ end of the consensus contains frequent terminators in all three reading frames and has a relatively high GC content with numerous stretches of weak homology with AluI repeats. The 5′ ORF extends for a minimum of 723 bp (241 codons). The 3′ ORF is 3843 bp (1281 codons) and predicts a protein of 149 kD which has regions of weak homology to the polymerase domain of various reverse transcriptases. The 3′ end of the consensus has a 208-bp nonconserved region followed by an adenine-rich end. The organization of the L1H8 consensus sequence resembles the structure of eukaryotic mRNAs except for the noncoding region between ORFs. However, due to base substitutions or truncation most elements appear incapable of producing mRNA that can be translated. Our observation that individual elements cluster into subfamilies on the basis of the presence or absence of blocks of sequence, or by the linkage of alternative bases at multiple positions, suggests that most L1 sequences were derived from a small number of structural genes. An estimate of the mammalian L1 substitution rate was derived and used to predict the age of individual human elements. From this it follows that the majority of human L1 sequences have been generated within the last 30 million years. The human elements studied here differ from each other, yet overall the L1H8 sequences demonstrate a pattern of species-specificity when compared to the L1 families of other mammals. Possible mechanisms that may account for the origin and evolution of the L1 family are discussed. These include pseudogene formation (retroposition), transposition, gene conversion, and RNA recombination.


Annals of Neurology | 2001

Adrenoleukodystrophy: Incidence, new mutation rate, and results of extended family screening

Lena Bezman; Ann B. Moser; Gerald V. Raymond; Piero Rinaldo; Paul A. Watkins; Kirby D. Smith; Nancy E. Kass; Hugo W. Moser

Utilizing the plasma very long chain fatty acid assay, supplemented by mutation analysis and immunofluorescence assay, we determined the number of X‐linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X‐ALD) hemizygotes from the United States identified each year in the two laboratories that perform most of the assays in this country: the Kennedy Krieger Institute between 1981 and 1998 and the Mayo Clinic Rochester from 1996 to 1998. The minimum frequency of hemizygotes identified in the United States is estimated to be 1:42,000 and that of hemizygotes plus heterozygotes 1:16,800. Our studies involved 616 pedigrees with a total of 12,787 identified at‐risk members. Diagnostic assays were performed in 4,169 at‐risk persons (33%) and included members of the extended family. Only 5% of male probands and 1.7% of X‐ALD hemizygotes were found to have new mutations. The extended family testing led to the identification of 594 hemizygotes and 1,270 heterozygotes. Two hundred fifty of the newly identified hemizygotes were asymptomatic and represent the group in which therapy has the greatest chance of success. Identification of heterozygotes provides the opportunity for disease prevention through genetic counseling. Diagnostic tests should be offered to all at‐risk relatives of X‐ALD patients and should include members of the extended family. Ann Neurol 2001;49:512–517


Nature Medicine | 1998

Gene redundancy and pharmacological gene therapy: Implications for X- linked adrenoleukodystrophy

Stephan Kemp; He Ming Wei; Jyh Feng Lu; Lelita T. Braiterman; Martina C. McGuinness; Ann B. Moser; Paul A. Watkins; Kirby D. Smith

As more functional redundancy in mammalian cells is discovered, enhanced expression of genes involved in alternative pathways may become an effective form of gene therapy. X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) is a peroxisomal disorder with impaired very-long-chain fatty acid metabolism. The X-ALD gene encodes a peroxisomal membrane protein (ALDP) that is part of a small family of related peroxisomal membrane proteins. We show that 4-phenylbutyrate treatment of cells from both X-ALD patients and X-ALD knockout mice results in decreased levels of and increased β-oxidation of very-long-chain fatty acids; increased expression of the peroxisomal protein ALDRP; and induction of peroxisome proliferation. We also demonstrate that ALDP and ALDRP are functionally related, by ALDRP cDNA complementation of X-ALD fibroblasts. Finally, we demonstrate the in vivo efficacy of dietary 4-phenylbutyrate treatment through its production of a substantial reduction of very-long-chain fatty acid levels in the brain and adrenal glands of X-ALD mice.


Neurochemical Research | 1999

X-Linked Adrenoleukodystrophy: Genes, Mutations, and Phenotypes

Kirby D. Smith; Stephan Kemp; Lelita T. Braiterman; Jyh Feng Lu; He Ming Wei; Michael T. Geraghty; Gail Stetten; James S. Bergin; Jonathan Pevsner; Paul A. Watkins

X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) is a complex and perplexing neurodegenerative disorder. The metabolic abnormality, elevated levels of very long-chain fatty acids in tissues and plasma, and the biochemical defect, reduced peroxisomal very long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase (VLCS) activity, are ubiquitous features of the disease. However, clinical manifestations are highly variable with regard to time of onset, site of initial pathology and rate of progression. In addition, the abnormal gene in X-ALD is not the gene for VLCS. Rather, it encodes a peroxisomal membrane protein with homology to the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transmembrane transporter superfamily of proteins. The X-ALD protein (ALDP) is closely related to three other peroxisomal membrane ABC proteins. In this report we summarize all known X-ALD mutations and establish the lack of an X-ALD genotype/phenotype correlation. We compare the evolutionary relationships among peroxisomal ABC proteins, demonstrate that ALDP forms homodimers with itself and heterodimers with other peroxisomal ABC proteins and present cDNA complementation studies suggesting that the peroxisomal ABC proteins have overlapping functions. We also establish that there are at least two peroxisomal VLCS activities, one that is ALDP dependent and one that is ALDP independent. Finally, we discuss variable expression of the peroxisomal ABC proteins and ALDP independent VLCS in relation to the variable clinical presentations of X-ALD.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Disruption of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae FAT1 gene decreases very long-chain fatty acyl-CoA synthetase activity and elevates intracellular very long-chain fatty acid concentrations.

Paul A. Watkins; Jyh Feng Lu; Steven J. Steinberg; Stephen J. Gould; Kirby D. Smith; Lelita T. Braiterman

Activation of fatty acids to their coenzyme A derivatives is necessary for subsequent metabolism. Very long-chain fatty acids, which accumulate in tissues of patients with X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy, are activated by very long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase (VLCS) normally found in peroxisomes and microsomes. We identified a candidate yeast VLCS gene (FAT1), previously identified as encoding afatty acid transport protein, by its homology to rat liver peroxisomal VLCS. Disruption of this gene decreased, but did not abolish, cellular VLCS activity. Fractionation studies showed that VLCS activity, but not long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase activity, was reduced to about 40% of wild-type level in both 27,000 × g supernatant and pellet fractions. Separation of organelles in the pellet fraction by density gradient centrifugation revealed that VLCS activity was associated with peroxisomes and microsomes but not mitochondria. FAT1deletion strains exhibited decreased growth on medium containing dextrose, oleic acid, and cerulenin, an inhibitor of fatty acid synthesis. FAT1 deletion strains grown on either dextrose or oleic acid medium accumulated very long-chain fatty acids. Compared with wild-type yeast, C22:0, C24:0, and C26:0 levels were increased approximately 20-, 18-, and 3-fold in deletion strains grown on dextrose, and 2-, 7-, and 5-fold in deletion strains grown on oleate. Long-chain fatty acid levels in wild-type and deletion strains were not significantly different. All biochemical defects in FAT1deletion strains were restored to normal after functional complementation with the FAT1 gene. The level of VLCS activity measured in both wild-type and deletion yeast strains transformed with FAT1 cDNA paralleled the level of expression of the transgene. The extent of both the decrease in peroxisomal VLCS activity and the very long-chain fatty acid accumulation in the yeast FAT1 deletion model resembles that observed in cells from X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy patients. These studies suggest that the FAT1 gene product has VLCS activity that is essential for normal cellular very long-chain fatty acid homeostasis.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

PEX11α is required for peroxisome proliferation in response to 4-phenylbutyrate but is dispensable for peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha-mediated peroxisome proliferation

Xiaoling Li; Eveline Baumgart; Gao Xiang Dong; James C. Morrell; Gerardo Jimenez-Sanchez; David Valle; Kirby D. Smith; Stephen Jay Gould

ABSTRACT The PEX11 peroxisomal membrane proteins promote peroxisome division in multiple eukaryotes. As part of our effort to understand the molecular and physiological functions of PEX11 proteins, we disrupted the mouse PEX11α gene. Overexpression of PEX11α is sufficient to promote peroxisome division, and a class of chemicals known as peroxisome proliferating agents (PPAs) induce the expression of PEX11α and promote peroxisome division. These observations led to the hypothesis that PPAs induce peroxisome abundance by enhancing PEX11α expression. The phenotypes of PEX11α−/− mice indicate that this hypothesis remains valid for a novel class of PPAs that act independently of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα) but is not valid for the classical PPAs that act as activators of PPARα. Furthermore, we find that PEX11α−/− mice have normal peroxisome abundance and that cells lacking both PEX11α and PEX11β, a second mammalian PEX11 gene, have no greater defect in peroxisome abundance than do cells lacking only PEX11β. Finally, we report the identification of a third mammalian PEX11 gene, PEX11γ, and show that it too encodes a peroxisomal protein.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Sulforaphane treatment of autism spectrum disorder (ASD)

Kanwaljit Singh; Susan L. Connors; Eric A. Macklin; Kirby D. Smith; Jed W. Fahey; Paul Talalay; Andrew W. Zimmerman

Significance Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), encompassing impaired communication and social interaction, and repetitive stereotypic behavior and language, affects 1–2% of predominantly male individuals and is an enormous medical and economic problem for which there is no documented, mechanism-based treatment. In a placebo-controlled, randomized, double-blind clinical trial, daily oral administration for 18 wk of the phytochemical sulforaphane (derived from broccoli sprouts) to 29 young men with ASD substantially (and reversibly) improved behavior compared with 15 placebo recipients. Behavior was quantified by both parents/caregivers and physicians by three widely accepted measures. Sulforaphane, which showed negligible toxicity, was selected because it upregulates genes that protect aerobic cells against oxidative stress, inflammation, and DNA-damage, all of which are prominent and possibly mechanistic characteristics of ASD. Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), characterized by both impaired communication and social interaction, and by stereotypic behavior, affects about 1 in 68, predominantly males. The medico-economic burdens of ASD are enormous, and no recognized treatment targets the core features of ASD. In a placebo-controlled, double-blind, randomized trial, young men (aged 13–27) with moderate to severe ASD received the phytochemical sulforaphane (n = 29)—derived from broccoli sprout extracts—or indistinguishable placebo (n = 15). The effects on behavior of daily oral doses of sulforaphane (50–150 µmol) for 18 wk, followed by 4 wk without treatment, were quantified by three widely accepted behavioral measures completed by parents/caregivers and physicians: the Aberrant Behavior Checklist (ABC), Social Responsiveness Scale (SRS), and Clinical Global Impression Improvement Scale (CGI-I). Initial scores for ABC and SRS were closely matched for participants assigned to placebo and sulforaphane. After 18 wk, participants receiving placebo experienced minimal change (<3.3%), whereas those receiving sulforaphane showed substantial declines (improvement of behavior): 34% for ABC (P < 0.001, comparing treatments) and 17% for SRS scores (P = 0.017). On CGI-I, a significantly greater number of participants receiving sulforaphane had improvement in social interaction, abnormal behavior, and verbal communication (P = 0.015–0.007). Upon discontinuation of sulforaphane, total scores on all scales rose toward pretreatment levels. Dietary sulforaphane, of recognized low toxicity, was selected for its capacity to reverse abnormalities that have been associated with ASD, including oxidative stress and lower antioxidant capacity, depressed glutathione synthesis, reduced mitochondrial function and oxidative phosphorylation, increased lipid peroxidation, and neuroinflammmation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003

Role of ALDP (ABCD1) and Mitochondria in X-Linked Adrenoleukodystrophy

Martina C. McGuinness; Jyh Feng Lu; Hong Zhang; G.-X. Dong; Ann K. Heinzer; Paul A. Watkins; James M. Powers; Kirby D. Smith

ABSTRACT Peroxisomal disorders have been associated with malfunction of peroxisomal metabolic pathways, but the pathogenesis of these disorders is largely unknown. X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy (X-ALD) is associated with elevated levels of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFA; C>22:0) that have been attributed to reduced peroxisomal VLCFA β-oxidation activity. Previously, our laboratory and others have reported elevated VLCFA levels and reduced peroxisomal VLCFA β-oxidation in human and mouse X-ALD fibroblasts. In this study, we found normal levels of peroxisomal VLCFA β-oxidation in tissues from ALD mice with elevated VLCFA levels. Treatment of ALD mice with pharmacological agents resulted in decreased VLCFA levels without a change in VLCFA β-oxidation activity. These data indicate that ALDP does not determine the rate of VLCFA β-oxidation and that VLCFA levels are not determined by the rate of VLCFA β-oxidation. The rate of peroxisomal VLCFA β-oxidation in human and mouse fibroblasts in vitro is affected by the rate of mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid β-oxidation. We hypothesize that ALDP facilitates the interaction between peroxisomes and mitochondria, resulting, when ALDP is deficient in X-ALD, in increased VLCFA accumulation despite normal peroxisomal VLCFA β-oxidation in ALD mouse tissues. In support of this hypothesis, mitochondrial structural abnormalities were observed in adrenal cortical cells of ALD mice.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2005

Adreno-leukodystrophy: oxidative stress of mice and men.

James M. Powers; Zhengtong Pei; Ann K. Heinzer; Rebecca Deering; Ann B. Moser; Hugo W. Moser; Paul A. Watkins; Kirby D. Smith

X-linked adreno-leukodystrophy is a progressive, systemic peroxisomal disorder that affects primarily nervous system myelin and axons as well as the adrenal cortex. Several divergent clinical phenotypes can occur in the same family; thus, there is no correlation between the clinical phenotype and the mutation in the ABCD1 gene in this disease. The most urgent and unresolved clinical issue is the fulminant inflammatory (immune) demyelination of the central nervous system in which a variety of cellular participants, cytokines, and chemokines are noted. A knockout mouse model exhibits mitochondrial deficits and axonal degeneration, but not inflammatory demyelination. To determine whether oxidative stress and damage might play a pathogenic role, we assessed standard biochemical and immunohistochemical markers of such activity both in our knockout mouse model and patients. We find that oxidative stress, as judged by increased immunoreactivity for the mitochondrial manganese-superoxide dismutase, is present in the knockout mouse liver, adrenal cortex, and renal cortex, tissues that normally express high levels of ABCD1 but no evidence of oxidative damage. The brain does not exhibit either oxidative stress or damage. On the other hand, both the human adrenal cortex and brain show evidence of oxidative stress (e.g. hemoxygenase-1 and manganese-superoxide dismutase) and oxidative damage, particularly from lipid peroxidation (4-hydroxynonenal and malondialdehyde). The presence of nitrotyrosylated proteins is strong circumstantial evidence for the participation of the highly toxic peroxynitrite molecule, whereas the demonstration of interferon gamma and interleukin-12 is indicative of a TH1 response in the inflammatory demyelinative lesions of the cerebral phenotype. These differences between the adreno-leukodystrophy mouse and human patients are intriguing and may provide a clue to the phenotypic divergence in this disease.


Human Genetics | 1992

The role of the sex-determining region of the Y chromosome (SRY) in the etiology of 46,XX true hermaphroditism

Gary D. Berkovitz; Patricia Y. Fechner; Sandra M. Marcantonio; Gail N. Bland; Gail Stetten; Peter N. Goodfellow; Kirby D. Smith; Claude J. Migeon

SummaryThe syndrome of 46,XX true hermaphroditism is a clinical condition in which both ovarian and testicular tissue are found in one individual. Both Mullerian and Wolffian structures are usually present, and external genitalia are often ambiguous. Two alternative mechanisms have been proposed to explain the development of testicular tissue in these subjects: (1) translocation of chromosomal material encoding the testicular determination factor (TDF) from the Y to the X chromosome or to an autosome, or (2) an autosomal dominant mutation that permits testicular determination in the absence of TDF. We have investigated five subjects with 46,XX true hermaphroditism. Four individuals had a normal 46,XX karyotype; one subject (307) had an apparent terminal deletion of the short arm of one X chromosome. Genomic DNA was isolated from these individuals and subjected to Southern blot analysis. Only subject 307 had Y chromosomal sequences that included the pseudoautosomal boundary, SRY (sex-determining region of Y), ZFY (Y gene encoding a zinc finger protein), and DXYS5 (an anonymous locus on the distal short arm of Y) but lacked sequences for DYZ5 (proximal short arm of Y) and for the long arm probes DYZ1 and DYZ2. The genomic DNA of the other four subjects lacked detectable Y chromosomal sequences when assayed either by Southern blotting or after polymerase chain reaction amplification. Our data demonstrate that 46,XX true hermaphroditism is a genetically heterogeneous condition, some subjects having TDF sequences but most not. The 46,XX subjects without SRY may have a mutation of an autosomal gene that permits testicular determination in the absence of TDF.

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Paul A. Watkins

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Ann B. Moser

Kennedy Krieger Institute

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Hugo W. Moser

Kennedy Krieger Institute

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James M. Powers

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Samuel H. Boyer

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Steven J. Steinberg

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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