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Dive into the research topics where Leslie W. Chinn is active.

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Featured researches published by Leslie W. Chinn.


Pharmacogenetics and Genomics | 2011

Very important pharmacogene summary: ABCB1 (MDR1, P-glycoprotein).

Laura M. Hodges; Svetlana Markova; Leslie W. Chinn; Jason M. Gow; Deanna L. Kroetz; Teri E. Klein; Russ B. Altman

ABCB1 descriptionABCB1 (MDR1) is one of many ubiquitous adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-binding cassette (ABC) genes present in all kingdoms of life that is responsible for cellular homeostasis [1–3]. ABC genes encode transporter and channel proteins possessing multiple membrane-spanning domains that f


Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2007

ABCB1 Pharmacogenetics: Progress, Pitfalls, and Promise

Leslie W. Chinn; Deanna L. Kroetz

In 1976, Juliano and Ling 1 reported expression of a 170 kDa protein in colchicine‐resistant Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells that was absent in drug‐sensitive cells. Because this protein altered cellular permeability to colchicine, the authors named it P‐glycoprotein (P‐gp). 1 P‐gp overexpression was described in tumor samples and leukemic cells. 2 High homology with bacterial transporters suggested that P‐gp was an efflux transporter, modulating intracellular xenobiotic concentrations. 3 In 1986, the gene encoding P‐gp was discovered and designated MDR1 (HUGO name ABCB1). 4 Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated P‐gp expression in tissues with secretory or excretory functions (liver, kidney, and gastrointestinal tract) and at blood‐tissue barrier sites, such as the blood‐brain barrier. 5 This pattern of expression indicated that P‐gp may influence xenobiotic response and toxicity, either through pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic effects. 6


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Evolutionary Conservation of Vertebrate Blood–Brain Barrier Chemoprotective Mechanisms in Drosophila

Fahima Mayer; Nasima Mayer; Leslie W. Chinn; Robert L. Pinsonneault; Deanna L. Kroetz; Roland J. Bainton

Pharmacologic remedy of many brain diseases is difficult because of the powerful drug exclusion properties of the blood–brain barrier (BBB). Chemical isolation of the vertebrate brain is achieved through the highly integrated, anatomically compact and functionally overlapping chemical isolation processes of the BBB. These include functions that need to be coordinated between tight diffusion junctions and unidirectionally acting xenobiotic transporters. Understanding of many of these processes has been hampered, because they are not well mimicked by ex vivo models of the BBB and have been experimentally difficult and expensive to disentangle in intact rodent models. Here we show that the Drosophila melanogaster (Dm) humoral/CNS barrier conserves the xenobiotic exclusion properties found in the vertebrate vascular endothelium. We characterize a fly ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter, Mdr65, that functions similarly to mammalian xenobiotic BBB transporters and show that varying its levels solely in the Dm BBB changes the inherent sensitivity of the barrier to cytotoxic pharmaceuticals. Furthermore, we demonstrate orthologous function between Mdr65 and vertebrate ABC transporters by rescuing chemical protection of the Dm brain with human MDR1/Pgp. These data indicate that the ancient origins of CNS chemoprotection extend to both conserved molecular means and functionally analogous anatomic spaces that together promote CNS selective drug partition. Thus, Dm presents an experimentally tractable system for analyzing physiological properties of the BBB in an intact organism.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2008

The Human Multidrug Resistance Protein 4 (MRP4, ABCC4) : Functional Analysis of a Highly Polymorphic Gene

Nada Abla; Leslie W. Chinn; Tsutomu Nakamura; Li Liu; Conrad C. Huang; Susan J. Johns; Michiko Kawamoto; Doug Stryke; Travis R. Taylor; Thomas E. Ferrin; Kathleen M. Giacomini; Deanna L. Kroetz

ABCC4 encodes multidrug resistance protein 4 (MRP4), a member of the ATP-binding cassette family of membrane transporters involved in the efflux of endogenous and xenobiotic molecules. The aims of this study were to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms of ABCC4 and to functionally characterize selected nonsynonymous variants. Resequencing was performed in a large ethnically diverse population. Ten nonsynonymous variants were selected for analysis of transport function based on allele frequencies and evolutionary conservation. The reference and variant MRP4 cDNAs were constructed by site-directed mutagenesis and transiently transfected into human embryonic kidney cells (HEK 293T). The function of MRP4 variants was compared by measuring the intracellular accumulation of two antiviral agents, azidothymidine (AZT) and adefovir (PMEA). A total of 98 variants were identified in the coding and flanking intronic regions of ABCC4. Of these, 43 variants are in the coding region, and 22 are nonsynonymous. In a functional screen of ten variants, there was no evidence for a complete loss of function allele. However, two variants (G187W and G487E) showed a significantly reduced function compared to reference with both substrates, as evidenced by higher intracellular accumulation of AZT and PMEA compared to the reference MRP4 (43 and 69% increase in accumulation for G187W compared with the reference MRP4, with AZT and PMEA, respectively). The G187W variant also showed decreased expression following transient transfection of HEK 293T cells. Further studies are required to assess the clinical significance of this altered function and expression and to evaluate substrate specificity of this functional change.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Genome-Wide Association Study Implicates PARD3B-Based AIDS Restriction

Jennifer L. Troyer; George W. Nelson; James A. Lautenberger; Leslie W. Chinn; Carl McIntosh; Randall C. Johnson; Efe Sezgin; Bailey Kessing; Michael Malasky; Sher L. Hendrickson; Guan Li; Joan Pontius; Minzhong Tang; Ping An; Cheryl A. Winkler; Sophie Limou; Sigrid Le Clerc; Olivier Delaneau; Jean F. Zagury; Hanneke Schuitemaker; Daniëlle van Manen; Jay H. Bream; Edward D. Gomperts; Susan Buchbinder; James J. Goedert; Gregory D. Kirk; Stephen J. O'Brien

BACKGROUND Host genetic variation influences human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection and progression to AIDS. Here we used clinically well-characterized subjects from 5 pretreatment HIV/AIDS cohorts for a genome-wide association study to identify gene associations with rate of AIDS progression. METHODS European American HIV seroconverters (n = 755) were interrogated for single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) (n = 700,022) associated with progression to AIDS 1987 (Cox proportional hazards regression analysis, co-dominant model). RESULTS Association with slower progression was observed for SNPs in the gene PARD3B. One of these, rs11884476, reached genome-wide significance (relative hazard = 0.3; P =3. 370 × 10(-9)) after statistical correction for 700,022 SNPs and contributes 4.52% of the overall variance in AIDS progression in this study. Nine of the top-ranked SNPs define a PARD3B haplotype that also displays significant association with progression to AIDS (hazard ratio, 0.3; P = 3.220 × 10(-8)). One of these SNPs, rs10185378, is a predicted exonic splicing enhancer; significant alteration in the expression profile of PARD3B splicing transcripts was observed in B cell lines with alternate rs10185378 genotypes. This SNP was typed in European cohorts of rapid progressors and was found to be protective for AIDS 1993 definition (odds ratio, 0.43, P = .025). CONCLUSIONS These observations suggest a potential unsuspected pathway of host genetic influence on the dynamics of AIDS progression.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2008

Substrate-Dependent Effects of Human ABCB1 Coding Polymorphisms

Jason M. Gow; Laura M. Hodges; Leslie W. Chinn; Deanna L. Kroetz

One of the many obstacles to effective drug treatment is the efflux transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp), which can restrict the plasma and intracellular concentrations of numerous xenobiotics. Variable drug response to P-gp substrates suggests that genetic differences in ABCB1 may affect P-gp transport. The current study examined how ABCB1 variants alter the P-gp-mediated transport of probe substrates in vitro. Nonsynonymous ABCB1 variants and haplotypes with an allele frequency ≥2% were transiently expressed in HEK293T cells, and the transport of calcein acetoxymethyl ester and 4,4-difluoro-4-bora-3a,4a-diaza-s-indacene (BODIPY-FL)-paclitaxel was measured in the absence or presence of the P-gp inhibitor cyclosporin A. The A893S, A893T, and V1251I variants and the N21D/1236C>T/A893S/3435C>T haplotype altered intracellular accumulation compared with reference P-gp in a substrate-dependent manner. It is interesting that certain variants showed altered sensitivity to cyclosporin A inhibition that was also substrate-specific. These functional data demonstrate that nonsynonymous polymorphisms in ABCB1 may selectively alter P-gp transport and drug-drug interactions in a substrate- and inhibitor-dependent manner.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Genetic Variants in Nuclear-Encoded Mitochondrial Genes Influence AIDS Progression

Sher L. Hendrickson; James A. Lautenberger; Leslie W. Chinn; Michael Malasky; Efe Sezgin; Lawrence A. Kingsley; James J. Goedert; Gregory D. Kirk; Edward D. Gomperts; Susan Buchbinder; Jennifer L. Troyer; Stephen J. O'Brien

Background The human mitochondrial genome includes only 13 coding genes while nuclear-encoded genes account for 99% of proteins responsible for mitochondrial morphology, redox regulation, and energetics. Mitochondrial pathogenesis occurs in HIV patients and genetically, mitochondrial DNA haplogroups with presumed functional differences have been associated with differential AIDS progression. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we explore whether single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within 904 of the estimated 1,500 genes that specify nuclear-encoded mitochondrial proteins (NEMPs) influence AIDS progression among HIV-1 infected patients. We examined NEMPs for association with the rate of AIDS progression using genotypes generated by an Affymetrix 6.0 genotyping array of 1,455 European American patients from five US AIDS cohorts. Successfully genotyped SNPs gave 50% or better haplotype coverage for 679 of known NEMP genes. With a Bonferroni adjustment for the number of genes and tests examined, multiple SNPs within two NEMP genes showed significant association with AIDS progression: acyl-CoA synthetase medium-chain family member 4 (ACSM4) on chromosome 12 and peroxisomal D3,D2-enoyl-CoA isomerase (PECI) on chromosome 6. Conclusions Our previous studies on mitochondrial DNA showed that European haplogroups with presumed functional differences were associated with AIDS progression and HAART mediated adverse events. The modest influences of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes found in the current study add support to the idea that mitochondrial function plays a role in AIDS pathogenesis.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2010

Genetic Associations of Variants in Genes Encoding HIV-Dependency Factors Required for HIV-1 Infection

Leslie W. Chinn; Minzhong Tang; Bailey Kessing; James A. Lautenberger; Jennifer L. Troyer; Michael Malasky; Carl McIntosh; Gregory D. Kirk; Steven M. Wolinsky; Susan Buchbinder; Edward D. Gomperts; James J. Goedert; Stephen J. O'Brien

BACKGROUND High-throughput genome-wide techniques have facilitated the identification of previously unknown host proteins involved in cellular human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Recently, 3 independent studies have used small interfering RNA technology to silence each gene in the human genome to determine the importance of each in HIV infection. Genes conferring a significant effect were termed HIV-dependency factors (HDFs). METHODS We assembled high-density panels of 6380 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 278 HDF genes and tested for genotype associations with HIV infection and AIDS progression in 1633 individuals from clinical AIDS cohorts. RESULTS After statistical correction for multiple tests, significant associations with HIV acquisition were found for SNPs in 2 genes, NCOR2 and IDH1. Weaker associations with AIDS progression were revealed for SNPs within the TM9SF2 and EGFR genes. CONCLUSIONS This study independently verifies the influence of NCOR2 and IDH1 on HIV transmission, and its findings suggest that variation in these genes affects susceptibility to HIV infection in exposed individuals.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2007

The Effects of ABCB1 3′-Untranslated Region Variants on mRNA Stability

Jason M. Gow; Leslie W. Chinn; Deanna L. Kroetz

Genetic variation in ABCB1, encoding P-glycoprotein (P-gp), is a potential cause of interindividual variation in drug response. Numerous studies have focused on the effects of coding region variants on P-gp expression and function, whereas few noncoding region variants have been investigated. The 3′-untranslated region (UTR) regulates mRNA levels or stability via RNA-protein interactions with mRNA degradation machinery. mRNA stability is a key regulatory step controlling ABCB1 mRNA expression that ultimately affects P-gp levels and function. We hypothesized that ABCB1 3′-UTR polymorphisms alter mRNA stability by disrupting RNA-protein interactions. An ethnically diverse panel of DNA samples was sequenced to identify 3′-UTR polymorphisms and determine allele frequencies. The three most common variants, along with reference ABCB1, were stably expressed in cells in order to measure mRNA half-life. The calculated half-life for ABCB1 reference in HEK293 cells was 9.4 ± 1.3 h and was similar to that estimated for the 3′-UTR variants. Endogenous ABCB1 mRNA decay was similar in lymphoblastoid cell lines carrying 3′-UTR variant and reference alleles. Although the examined ABCB1 3′-UTR variants have no effect on ABCB1 mRNA stability, these data represent one of the first attempts to determine the influence of genetic variation in UTRs on ABCB1 mRNA levels.


Protein Science | 2010

Functional hot spots in human ATP-binding cassette transporter nucleotide binding domains

Libusha Kelly; Hisayo Fukushima; Rachel Karchin; Jason M. Gow; Leslie W. Chinn; Ursula Pieper; Mark R. Segal; Deanna L. Kroetz; Andrej Sali

The human ATP‐binding cassette (ABC) transporter superfamily consists of 48 integral membrane proteins that couple the action of ATP binding and hydrolysis to the transport of diverse substrates across cellular membranes. Defects in 18 transporters have been implicated in human disease. In hundreds of cases, disease phenotypes and defects in function can be traced to nonsynonymous single nucleotide polymorphisms (nsSNPs). The functional impact of the majority of ABC transporter nsSNPs has yet to be experimentally characterized. Here, we combine experimental mutational studies with sequence and structural analysis to describe the impact of nsSNPs in human ABC transporters. First, the disease associations of 39 nsSNPs in 10 transporters were rationalized by identifying two conserved loops and a small α‐helical region that may be involved in interdomain communication necessary for transport of substrates. Second, an approach to discriminate between disease‐associated and neutral nsSNPs was developed and tailored to this superfamily. Finally, the functional impact of 40 unannotated nsSNPs in seven ABC transporters identified in 247 ethnically diverse individuals studied by the Pharmacogenetics of Membrane Transporters consortium was predicted. Three predictions were experimentally tested using human embryonic kidney epithelial (HEK) 293 cells stably transfected with the reference multidrug resistance transporter 4 and its variants to examine functional differences in transport of the antiviral drug, tenofovir. The experimental results confirmed two predictions. Our analysis provides a structural and evolutionary framework for rationalizing and predicting the functional effects of nsSNPs in this clinically important membrane transporter superfamily.

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Jason M. Gow

University of California

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Andrej Sali

University of California

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Libusha Kelly

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Edward D. Gomperts

Children's Hospital Los Angeles

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James A. Lautenberger

National Institutes of Health

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James J. Goedert

National Institutes of Health

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Jennifer L. Troyer

Science Applications International Corporation

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