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Dive into the research topics where Lesley Everett is active.

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Featured researches published by Lesley Everett.


Blood | 2014

Murine coagulation factor VIII is synthesized in endothelial cells

Lesley Everett; Audrey C. A. Cleuren; Rami Khoriaty; David Ginsburg

The primary cellular source of factor VIII (FVIII) biosynthesis is controversial, with contradictory evidence supporting an endothelial or hepatocyte origin. LMAN1 is a cargo receptor in the early secretory pathway that is responsible for the efficient secretion of factor V (FV) and FVIII to the plasma. Lman1 mutations result in combined deficiency of FV and FVIII, with levels of both factors reduced to ~10% to 15% of normal in human patients. We generated Lman1 conditional knockout mice to characterize the FVIII secretion profiles of endothelial cells and hepatocytes. We demonstrate that endothelial cells are the primary biosynthetic source of murine FVIII and that hepatocytes make no significant contribution to the plasma FVIII pool. Utilizing RiboTag mice and polyribosome immunoprecipitation, we performed endothelial cell-specific messenger RNA isolation and quantitative polymerase chain reaction analyses to confirm that endothelial cells highly express F8 and to explore the heterogeneity of F8 expression in different vascular beds. We demonstrate that endothelial cells from multiple, but not all, tissues contribute to the plasma FVIII pool in the mouse.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2014

Absence of a Red Blood Cell Phenotype in Mice with Hematopoietic Deficiency of SEC23B

Rami Khoriaty; Matthew P. Vasievich; Morgan Jones; Lesley Everett; Jennifer Chase; Jiayi Tao; David Siemieniak; Bin Zhang; Ivan Maillard; David Ginsburg

ABSTRACT Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II (CDAII) is an autosomal recessive disease of ineffective erythropoiesis characterized by increased bi/multinucleated erythroid precursors in the bone marrow. CDAII results from mutations in SEC23B. The SEC23 protein is a core component of coat protein complex II-coated vesicles, which transport secretory proteins from the endoplasmic reticulum to the Golgi apparatus. Though the genetic defect underlying CDAII has been identified, the pathophysiology of this disease remains unknown. We previously reported that SEC23B-deficient mice die perinatally, exhibiting massive pancreatic degeneration, with this early mortality limiting evaluation of the adult hematopoietic compartment. We now report that mice with SEC23B deficiency restricted to the hematopoietic compartment survive normally and do not exhibit anemia or other CDAII characteristics. We also demonstrate that SEC23B-deficient hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) do not exhibit a disadvantage at reconstituting hematopoiesis when compared directly to wild-type HSC in a competitive repopulation assay. Secondary bone marrow transplants demonstrated continued equivalence of SEC23B-deficient and WT HSC in their hematopoietic reconstitution potential. The surprising discordance in phenotypes between SEC23B-deficient mice and humans may reflect an evolutionary shift in SEC23 paralog function and/or expression, or a change in a specific COPII cargo critical for erythropoiesis.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2011

Attitudes of Ghanaian women toward genetic testing for sickle cell trait.

Paula T. Ross; Monica L. Lypson; Daniel C. Ursu; Lesley Everett; Onike Rodrigues; Andrew D. Campbell

To explore the attitudes of Ghanaian women toward genetic testing for the sickle cell trait and to investigate key factors that promote or impede the decision to pursue knowledge of the carrier status.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Pancreatic SEC23B deficiency is sufficient to explain the perinatal lethality of germline SEC23B deficiency in mice.

Rami Khoriaty; Lesley Everett; Jennifer Chase; Guojing Zhu; Mark J. Hoenerhoff; Brooke N. McKnight; Matthew P. Vasievich; Bin Zhang; Kärt Tomberg; John W. Williams; Ivan Maillard; David Ginsburg

In humans, loss of function mutations in SEC23B result in Congenital Dyserythropoietic Anemia type II (CDAII), a disease limited to defective erythroid development. Patients with two nonsense SEC23B mutations have not been reported, suggesting that complete SEC23B deficiency might be lethal. We previously reported that SEC23B-deficient mice die perinatally, exhibiting massive pancreatic degeneration and that mice with hematopoietic SEC23B deficiency do not exhibit CDAII. We now show that SEC23B deficiency restricted to the pancreas is sufficient to explain the lethality observed in mice with global SEC23B-deficiency. Immunohistochemical stains demonstrate an acinar cell defect but normal islet cells. Mammalian genomes contain two Sec23 paralogs, Sec23A and Sec23B. The encoded proteins share ~85% amino acid sequence identity. We generate mice with pancreatic SEC23A deficiency and demonstrate that these mice survive normally, exhibiting normal pancreatic weights and histology. Taken together, these data demonstrate that SEC23B but not SEC23A is essential for murine pancreatic development. We also demonstrate that two BAC transgenes spanning Sec23b rescue the lethality of mice homozygous for a Sec23b gene trap allele, excluding a passenger gene mutation as the cause of the pancreatic lethality, and indicating that the regulatory elements critical for Sec23b pancreatic function reside within the BAC transgenes.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Functions of the COPII gene paralogs SEC23A and SEC23B are interchangeable in vivo

Rami Khoriaty; Geoffrey G. Hesketh; Amélie Bernard; Angela C. Weyand; Dattatreya Mellacheruvu; Guojing Zhu; Mark J. Hoenerhoff; Beth McGee; Lesley Everett; Elizabeth J. Adams; Bin Zhang; Thomas L. Saunders; Alexey I. Nesvizhskii; Daniel J. Klionsky; Jordan A. Shavit; Anne-Claude Gingras; David Ginsburg

Significance In humans, SEC23B deficiency results in congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II, a disease of abnormal red blood cell development, while SEC23A deficiency results in cranio-lenticulo-sutural-dysplasia, a disease characterized by bone abnormalities due to defective collagen secretion (but no red blood cell defect). In this study, we show that SEC23A and SEC23B overlap in function, and that the disparate phenotypes of SEC23A/SEC23B deficiency within and across species are likely due to evolutionary shifts in gene-expression programs, rather than distinct functions of the SEC23 paralogs. Our studies provide a rationale for increased SEC23A or SEC23B expression as a therapeutic strategy for congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II or cranio-lenticulo-sutural-dysplasia, respectively. Approximately one-third of the mammalian proteome is transported from the endoplasmic reticulum-to-Golgi via COPII-coated vesicles. SEC23, a core component of coat protein-complex II (COPII), is encoded by two paralogous genes in vertebrates (Sec23a and Sec23b). In humans, SEC23B deficiency results in congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type-II (CDAII), while SEC23A deficiency results in a skeletal phenotype (with normal red blood cells). These distinct clinical disorders, together with previous biochemical studies, suggest unique functions for SEC23A and SEC23B. Here we show indistinguishable intracellular protein interactomes for human SEC23A and SEC23B, complementation of yeast Sec23 by both human and murine SEC23A/B, and rescue of the lethality of sec23b deficiency in zebrafish by a sec23a-expressing transgene. We next demonstrate that a Sec23a coding sequence inserted into the murine Sec23b locus completely rescues the lethal SEC23B-deficient pancreatic phenotype. We show that SEC23B is the predominantly expressed paralog in human bone marrow, but not in the mouse, with the reciprocal pattern observed in the pancreas. Taken together, these data demonstrate an equivalent function for SEC23A/B, with evolutionary shifts in the transcription program likely accounting for the distinct phenotypes of SEC23A/B deficiency within and across species, a paradigm potentially applicable to other sets of paralogous genes. These findings also suggest that enhanced erythroid expression of the normal SEC23A gene could offer an effective therapeutic approach for CDAII patients.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2017

SEC23B is required for pancreatic acinar cell function in adult mice

Rami Khoriaty; Nancy L. Vogel; Mark J. Hoenerhoff; M. Dolors Sans; Guojing Zhu; Lesley Everett; Bradley Nelson; Haritha Durairaj; Brooke N. McKnight; Bin Zhang; Stephen A. Ernst; David Ginsburg; John A. Williams

Inactivation of Sec23b exclusively in the pancreatic acinar cells of adult mice results in loss of pancreatic mass, with evidence of cell loss, degeneration of exocrine cells (with smaller-than-normal zymogen granules and ER dilation), ER stress, and increased pancreatic cell apoptosis.


Blood Advances | 2018

Analysis of MCFD2- and LMAN1-deficient mice demonstrates distinct functions in vivo

Min Zhu; Chunlei Zheng; Wei Wei; Lesley Everett; David Ginsburg; Bin Zhang

The LMAN1-MCFD2 complex serves as a cargo receptor for efficient transport of factor V (FV) and FVIII from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) to the Golgi. Genetic deficiency of LMAN1 or MCFD2 in humans results in the moderate bleeding disorder combined FV and FVIII deficiency, with a similar phenotype previously observed in LMAN1-deficient mice. We now report that MCFD2-deficient mice generated by gene targeting also demonstrate reduced plasma FV and FVIII, with levels lower than those in LMAN1-deficient mice, similar to previous observations in LMAN1- and MCDF2-deficient humans. Surprisingly, FV and FVIII levels in doubly deficient mice match the higher levels observed in LMAN1-deficient mice. In contrast to the strain-specific partial lethality previously observed in LMAN1-null mice, MCFD2-null mice demonstrate normal survival in different genetic backgrounds, although doubly deficient mice exhibit partial embryonic lethality comparable to LMAN1-deficient mice. These results suggest that an alternative pathway is responsible for FV/FVIII secretion in doubly deficient mice and distinct cargo-specific functions for LMAN1 and MCFD2 within the ER-to-Golgi secretory pathway. We also observed decreased plasma levels of α1-antitrypsin (AAT) in male mice for all 3 groups of deficient mice. Comparable accumulation of AAT was observed in hepatocyte ER of singly and doubly deficient mice, demonstrating a role for LMAN1 and MCFD2 in efficient ER exit of AAT.


Blood | 2014

Analysis of Additional Targeted Lman1 Alleles in the Mouse Suggests a Dose Dependence for FV/FVIII Secretion and Novel Role for an LMAN1-Dependent Cargo in Thrombopoiesis

Lesley Everett; Rami Khoriaty; David Ginsburg


Blood | 2014

SEC23B Deficiency Results in Different Phenotypes in Humans and Mice

Rami Khoriaty; Matthew Vasievich; Morgan Jones; Jennifer Chase; Lesley Everett; Bin Zhang; Ivan Maillard; David Ginsburg


Blood | 2013

Disparate Phenotypes Of SEC23B Deficiency In Humans and Mice

Matthew Vasievich; Morgan Jones; Bin Zhang; Lesley Everett; Jiayi Tao; Ivan Maillard; David Ginsburg

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Guojing Zhu

University of Michigan

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