Leonard B. Hearne
University of Missouri
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Featured researches published by Leonard B. Hearne.
Stem Cells and Development | 2008
Suzanne D. Westfall; Shrikesh Sachdev; Padmalaya Das; Leonard B. Hearne; Mark Hannink; R. Michael Roberts; Toshihiko Ezashi
To realize the full potential of human embryonic stem cells (hESCs), it is important to develop culture conditions that maintain hESCs in a pluripotent, undifferentiated state. A low O(2) atmosphere (approximately 4% O(2)), for example, prevents spontaneous differentiation and supports self-renewal of hESCs. To identify genes whose expression is sensitive to O(2) conditions, microarray analysis was performed on RNA from hESCs that had been maintained under either 4% or 20% O(2). Of 149 genes differentially expressed, 42 were up-regulated and 107 down-regulated under 20% O(2). Several of the down-regulated genes are most likely under the control of hypoxia-inducing factors and include genes encoding enzymes involved in carbohydrate catabolism and cellular redox state. Although genes associated with pluripotency, including OCT4, SOX2, and NANOG were generally unaffected, some genes controlled by these transcription factors, including LEFTY2, showed lowered expression under 20% O(2), while a few genes implicated in lineage specification were up-regulated. Although the differences between O(2) conditions were generally subtle, they were observed in two different hESC lines and at different passage numbers. The data are consistent with the hypothesis that 4% O(2) favors the molecular mechanisms required for the maintenance of pluripotency.
Plant Physiology | 2010
Martin Hajduch; Leonard B. Hearne; Jan A. Miernyk; Jill E. Casteel; Trupti Joshi; Ganesh Kumar Agrawal; Zhao Song; Mingyi Zhou; Dong Xu; Jay J. Thelen
Previous systems analyses in plants have focused on a single developmental stage or time point, although it is often important to additionally consider time-index changes. During seed development a cascade of events occurs within a relatively brief time scale. We have collected protein and transcript expression data from five sequential stages of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) seed development encompassing the period of reserve polymer accumulation. Protein expression profiling employed two-dimensional gel electrophoresis coupled with tandem mass spectrometry, while transcript profiling used oligonucleotide microarrays. Analyses in biological triplicate yielded robust expression information for 523 proteins and 22,746 genes across the five developmental stages, and established 319 protein/transcript pairs for subsequent pattern analysis. General linear modeling was used to evaluate the protein/transcript expression patterns. Overall, application of this statistical assessment technique showed concurrence for a slight majority (56%) of expression pairs. Many specific examples of discordant protein/transcript expression patterns were detected, suggesting that this approach will be useful in revealing examples of posttranscriptional regulation.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Kelli L. Barr; Leonard B. Hearne; Sandra Briesacher; Thomas L. Clark; Georgia E. Davis
Diabrotica virgifera virgifera larvae are root-feeding insects and significant pests to maize in North America and Europe. Little is known regarding how plants respond to insect attack of roots, thus complicating the selection for plant defense targets. Diabrotica virgifera virgifera is the most successful species in its genus and is the only Diabrotica beetle harboring an almost species-wide Wolbachia infection. Diabrotica virgifera virgifera are infected with Wolbachia and the typical gut flora found in soil-living, phytophagous insects. Diabrotica virgifera virgifera larvae cannot be reared aseptically and thus, it is not possible to observe the response of maize to effects of insect gut flora or other transient microbes. Because Wolbachia are heritable, it is possible to investigate whether Wolbachia infection affects the regulation of maize defenses. To answer if the success of Diabrotica virgifera virgifera is the result of microbial infection, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera were treated with antibiotics to eliminate Wolbachia and a microarray experiment was performed. Direct comparisons made between the response of maize root tissue to the feeding of antibiotic treated and untreated Diabrotica virgifera virgifera show down-regulation of plant defenses in the untreated insects compared to the antibiotic treated and control treatments. Results were confirmed via QRT-PCR. Biological and behavioral assays indicate that microbes have integrated into Diabrotica virgifera virgifera physiology without inducing negative effects and that antibiotic treatment did not affect the behavior or biology of the insect. The expression data and suggest that the pressure of microbes, which are most likely Wolbachia, mediate the down-regulation of many maize defenses via their insect hosts. This is the first report of a potential link between a microbial symbiont of an insect and a silencing effect in the insect host plant. This is also the first expression profile for a plant attacked by a root-feeding insect.
Reproduction | 2007
Yizhen Chen; Eric Antoniou; Zhilin Liu; Leonard B. Hearne; R. Michael Roberts
Interferon-tau (IFNT) is released by preimplantation conceptuses of ruminant species and prepares the mother for pregnancy. Although one important function is to protect the corpus luteum from the luteolytic activity of prostaglandin-F 2alpha, IFNT most likely regulates a range of other physiological processes in endometrium. Here, an immortalized cell line from ovine uterine luminal epithelial cells was treated with IFNT for either 8 or 24 h. RNA was subjected to cDNA microarray analysis, with RNA from untreated cells as the reference standard. Of 15 634 genes, 1274 (8%) were IFNT responsive at P<0.01 and 585 at P<0.001 to at least one treatment. Of the latter, 356 were up-regulated and 229 down-regulated. Increasing IFNT concentrations from 10 ng/ml to 10 microg/ml had minor effects, and most genes up- or down-regulated at 8 h were regulated similarly at 24 h. Although IFNT influences many genes implicated in antiviral activity and apoptosis, its action also likely regulates prostaglandin metabolism, growth factors and their receptors, apoptosis and the nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB cascade, extracellular matrix accretion, angiogenesis, blood coagulation, and inflammation. In particular, it increased mRNA concentrations of genes related to the vascular endothelial growth factor R2 pathway of angiogenesis and down-regulated ones associated with hypoxia. Two genes implicated in the antiluteolytic actions of IFNT (encoding cyclooxygenase-2 and the oxytocin receptor respectively) were down-regulated in response to all treatments. IFNT targets a complex range of physiological processes during the establishment of pregnancy.
Theriogenology | 2009
K.M. Cammack; Eric Antoniou; Leonard B. Hearne; W. R. Lamberson
Fertility losses in male mice occur approximately 18-28 d after heat stress. The objective of this study was to identify gene expression differences in males highly versus lowly fertile after heat stress. Mature male mice were exposed to heat stress (35+/-1 degrees C; n=50) or thermoneutral (21+/-1 degrees C; n=10) conditions for 24 h (Day 0) and hemicastrated (Day 1) to collect tissue for gene expression analyses. Males were subjected to a mating test from Days 18 to 26 when variation in fertility was anticipated. A fertility index was used to rank heat-stressed males and identify those males resistant and susceptible to heat stress, respectively. Microarray analyses were conducted on testis tissues from control (n=5), heat stress resistant (n=5), and heat stress susceptible (n=5) males, and 225 genes were observed to be differentially expressed (P<0.05), including genes involved in chaperone (Canx, Hspcb1, and Tcp1) and catalytic (Fkpb6, Psma7, and Idh1) activity. Expression patterns of these genes were confirmed using real-time RT-PCR. Male progeny from selected sires were similarly divergent in fertility after heat stress. Testicular expression levels of Canx, Hspcb, and Tcp1 genes were determined in these progeny. Hspcb expression was moderately heritable (0.31+/-0.25); however, expression patterns of Canx and Tcp1 were not heritable.
BMC Genomics | 2010
Michael M. Kariuki; Leonard B. Hearne; Brenda T. Beerntsen
BackgroundBrugia malayi and B. pahangi are two closely related nematodes that cause filariasis in humans and animals. However, B. pahangi microfilariae are able to develop in and be transmitted by the mosquito, Armigeres subalbatus, whereas most B. malayi are rapidly melanized and destroyed within the mosquito hemocoel. A cross-species microarray analysis employing the B. malayi V2 array was carried out to determine the transcriptional differences between B. malayi and B. pahangi microfilariae with similar age distribution.ResultsFollowing microarray data analysis, a list of preferentially expressed genes in both microfilariae species was generated with a false discovery rate estimate of 5% and a signal intensity ratio of 2 or higher in either species. A total of 308 probes were preferentially expressed in both species with 149 probes, representing 123 genes, in B. pahangi microfilariae and 159 probes, representing 107 genes, in B. malayi microfilariae. In B. pahangi, there were 76 (62%) up-regulated transcripts that coded for known proteins that mapped into the KEGG pathway compared to 61 (57%) transcripts in B. malayi microfilariae. The remaining 47 (38%) transcripts in B. pahangi and 46 (43%) transcripts in B. malayi microfilariae were comprised almost entirely of hypothetical genes of unknown function. Twenty-seven of the transcripts in B. pahangi microfilariae coded for proteins that associate with the secretory pathway compared to thirty-nine in B. malayi microfilariae. The data obtained from real-time PCR analysis of ten genes selected from the microarray list of preferentially expressed genes showed good concordance with the microarray data, indicating that the microarray data were reproducible.ConclusionIn this study, we identified gene transcripts that were preferentially expressed in the microfilariae of B. pahangi and B. malayi, some of which coded for known immunomodulatory proteins. These comparative transcriptome data will be of interest to researchers keen on understanding the inherent differences, at the molecular level, between B. malayi and B. pahangi microfilariae especially because these microfilariae are capable of surviving in the same vertebrate host but elicit different immune response outcomes in the mosquito, Ar. subalbatus.
Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic and Clinical | 2009
Xiaofei Fan; Leonard B. Hearne; Bo Lei; Judith H. Miles; Nicole Takahashi; Gang Yao
We investigated the gender effects on transient pupillary light reflex (PLR) in healthy young adults between 18 and 22 years old. Both dark-adapted and light-adapted PLRs were measured using green and red stimuli of different intensities. The results indicate that females had significantly larger relative constriction amplitudes than males in a dark-adapted condition. This gender effect depends on the stimulus intensities. The relative constriction amplitude in female subjects increased faster than it did in the males with the stimulus intensity. We did not observe any significant gender differences in the other PLR parameters, including latency, constriction speed, and recovery speed.
Plant Cell and Environment | 2017
Candace M. Seeve; In-Jeong Cho; Leonard B. Hearne; Gyan Srivastava; Trupti Joshi; Dante O. Smith; Robert E. Sharp; Melvin J. Oliver
Plants tolerate water deficits by regulating gene networks controlling cellular and physiological traits to modify growth and development. Transcription factor (TF)-directed regulation of transcription within these gene networks is key to eliciting appropriate responses. In this study, reverse transcription quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) was used to examine the abundance of 618 transcripts from 536 TF genes in individual root and shoot tissues of maize seedlings grown in vermiculite under well-watered (water potential of -0.02 MPa) and water-deficit conditions (water potentials of -0.3 and -1.6 MPa). A linear mixed model identified 433 TF transcripts representing 392 genes that differed significantly in abundance in at least one treatment, including TFs that intersect growth and development and environmental stress responses. TFs were extensively differentially regulated across stressed maize seedling tissues. Hierarchical clustering revealed TFs with stress-induced increased abundance in primary root tips that likely regulate root growth responses to water deficits, possibly as part of abscisic acid and/or auxin-dependent signaling pathways. Ten of these TFs were selected for validation in nodal root tips of drought-stressed field-grown plants (late V1 to early V2 stage). Changes in abundance of these TF transcripts under a field drought were similar to those observed in the seedling system.
information technology interfaces | 2012
Leonard B. Hearne
Given a set of n linearly independent points in a Euclidean space Ed, P = {p1, ... , pn} with n >; d, a Delaunay tessellation with at lease one d-dimensional simplex can be constructed. This tessellation is unique up to degenerate linearity conditions. The cardinality of the set of unique k-dimensional simplexes, k ≤ d, in the tessellation is bounded and the bound can be computed, given the dimension of the space, d, and the number of points in the tessellation generating set, n. These bounds can be refined if the number of points on the convex hull of P, m, is known. The bounds on cardinality are developed using constructive geometric arguments presented in the sequence necessary to construct the tessellation. The cardinality of simplexes in the Voronoi diagram is then related to the Delaunay tessellation by geometric duality. An example is given.
information technology interfaces | 2013
Leonard B. Hearne; Derek Kelly; Avimanyou Vatsa; Wade Mayham; Toni Kazic
Many experimental sciences collect different kinds of high-dimensional data on the same experimental units. When comparing relationships among homogeneous regions in one high dimensional domain with regions in another high dimensional domain, the number of possible comparisons may be extremely large and their set complexity unknown. We outline procedures for identifying possible relationships among regions in two different high-dimensional domains. If the data are dense enough, then statistical measures of association can be estimated. These procedures can identify and measure the probability of inter-domain associations of mixed complexity.