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Dive into the research topics where Marcia R. Terluk is active.

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Featured researches published by Marcia R. Terluk.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Investigating mitochondria as a target for treating age-related macular degeneration

Marcia R. Terluk; Rebecca J. Kapphahn; Lauren M. Soukup; Hwee Gong; Christopher Gallardo; Sandra R. Montezuma; Deborah A. Ferrington

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of blindness among older adults in the developed world. Although the pathological mechanisms have not been definitively elucidated, evidence suggests a key role for mitochondrial (mt) dysfunction. The current study used our unique collection of human retinal samples graded for the donors stage of AMD to address fundamental questions about mtDNA damage in the retina. To evaluate the distribution of mtDNA damage in the diseased retina, damage in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and neural retina from individual donors were compared. To directly test a long-held belief that the macula is selectively damaged with AMD, RPE mtDNA damage was measured in the macula and peripheral sections from individual donors. Small segments of the entire mt genome were examined to determine whether specific regions are preferentially damaged. Our results show that mtDNA damage is limited to the RPE, equivalent mtDNA damage is found in the macular and peripheral RPE, and sites of damage are localized to regions of the mt genome that may impact mt function. These results provide a scientific basis for targeting the RPE mitochondria with therapies that protect and enhance mt function as a strategy for combating AMD.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Immunoproteasome Deficiency Modifies the Alternative Pathway of NFκB Signaling

Marcela Maldonado; Rebecca J. Kapphahn; Marcia R. Terluk; Neal D. Heuss; Ching Yuan; Dale S. Gregerson; Deborah A. Ferrington

Immunoproteasome is a protease abundant in immune cells and also present, albeit at lower concentrations, in cells outside the immune system. Recent evidence supports a novel role for the immunoproteasome in the cellular stress response potentially through regulation of NFκB signaling, which is the primary response to multiple stressors. The current study tests whether the Classical or Alternative Pathways are regulated by immunoproteasome following chronic TNFα exposure in cultured retinal pigment epithelial cells isolated from wild-type mice and mice deficient in one (LMP2, L2) or two (LMP7 and MECL-1, L7M1) immunoproteasome subunits. Assays were performed to assess the expression of NFκB responsive genes, the content and activity of NFκB transcription factors (p65, p50, p52, cRel, RelB), and expression and content of regulatory proteins (IκBα, A20, RPS3). Major findings include distinct differences in expression of NFκB responsive genes in both KO cells. The mechanism responsible for the altered gene expression could not be established for L7M1 since no major differences in NFκB transcription factor content or activation were observed. However, L2 cells exhibited substantially higher content and diminished activation of NFκB transcription factors associated with the Alternative Pathway and delayed termination of the Classical Pathway. These results provide strong experimental evidence supporting a role for immunoproteasome in modulating NFκB signaling.


Experimental Eye Research | 2016

Increased retinal mtDNA damage in the CFH variant associated with age-related macular degeneration

Deborah A. Ferrington; Rebecca J. Kapphahn; Michaela M. Leary; Shari R. Atilano; Marcia R. Terluk; P. P. Karunadharma; George Kuei Jie Chen; Rinki Ratnapriya; Anand Swaroop; Sandra R. Montezuma; M. Cristina Kenney

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is a major cause of blindness among the elderly in the developed world. Genetic analysis of AMD has identified 34 high-risk loci associated with AMD. The genes at these high risk loci belong to diverse biological pathways, suggesting different mechanisms leading to AMD pathogenesis. Thus, therapies targeting a single pathway for all AMD patients will likely not be universally effective. Recent evidence suggests defects in mitochondria (mt) of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) may constitute a key pathogenic event in some AMD patients. The purpose of this study is to determine if individuals with a specific genetic background have a greater propensity for mtDNA damage. We used human eyebank tissues from 76 donors with AMD and 42 age-matched controls to determine the extent of mtDNA damage in the RPE that was harvested from the macula using a long extension polymerase chain reaction assay. Genotype analyses were performed for ten common AMD-associated nuclear risk alleles (ARMS2, TNFRSF10A, CFH, C2, C3, APOE, CETP, LIPC, VEGF and COL10A1) and mtDNA haplogroups. Sufficient samples were available for genotype association with mtDNA damage for TNFRSF10A, CFH, CETP, VEGFA, and COL10A1. Our results show that AMD donors carrying the high risk allele for CFH (C) had significantly more mtDNA damage compared with donors having the wild-type genetic profile. The data from an additional 39 donors (12 controls and 27 AMD) genotyped for CFH alleles further supported these findings. Taken together, these studies provide the rationale for a more personalized approach for treating AMD by uncovering a significant correlation between the CFH high risk allele and accelerated mtDNA damage. Patients harboring this genetic risk factor may benefit from therapies that stabilize and protect the mt in the RPE.


Redox biology | 2017

Altered bioenergetics and enhanced resistance to oxidative stress in human retinal pigment epithelial cells from donors with age-related macular degeneration

Deborah A. Ferrington; Mara C. Ebeling; Rebecca J. Kapphahn; Marcia R. Terluk; Cody R. Fisher; Jorge R. Polanco; Heidi Roehrich; Michaela M. Leary; Zhaohui Geng; James R. Dutton; Sandra R. Montezuma

Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the leading cause of blindness among older adults. It has been suggested that mitochondrial defects in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) underlies AMD pathology. To test this idea, we developed primary cultures of RPE to ask whether RPE from donors with AMD differ in their metabolic profile compared with healthy age-matched donors. Analysis of gene expression, protein content, and RPE function showed that these cultured cells replicated many of the cardinal features of RPE in vivo. Using the Seahorse Extracellular Flux Analyzer to measure bioenergetics, we observed RPE from donors with AMD exhibited reduced mitochondrial and glycolytic function compared with healthy donors. RPE from AMD donors were also more resistant to oxidative inactivation of these two energy-producing pathways and were less susceptible to oxidation-induced cell death compared with cells from healthy donors. Investigation of the potential mechanism responsible for differences in bioenergetics and resistance to oxidative stress showed RPE from AMD donors had increased PGC1α protein as well as differential expression of multiple genes in response to an oxidative challenge. Based on our data, we propose that cultured RPE from donors phenotyped for the presence or absence of AMD provides an excellent model system for studying “AMD in a dish”. Our results are consistent with the ideas that (i) a bioenergetics crisis in the RPE contributes to AMD pathology, and (ii) the diseased environment in vivo causes changes in the cellular profile that are retained in vitro.


Current Eye Research | 2016

Lactoferrin Expression in Human and Murine Ocular Tissue

Abrar A. Rageh; Deborah A. Ferrington; Heidi Roehrich; Ching Yuan; Marcia R. Terluk; Elizabeth F. Nelson; Sandra R. Montezuma

ABSTRACT Purpose: Lactoferrin (LF) is a multifunctional protein known to provide innate defense due to its antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory properties. In the eye, LF has been identified in the tears and vitreous humor. Its presence in other ocular tissues has not been determined. Our aim is to assess the presence of LF in the cornea, iris, retina and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) of humans and mice. Methods: To test for the endogenous production of LF, reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction was performed in cultured human cells from the cornea and RPE and in murine tissues. To confirm LF localization in specific ocular tissue, immunohistochemistry was performed on flat mounts of cornea, retina and RPE in human donor eyes. The presence of LF was assessed by western blotting in human and mouse ocular tissue and human culture cells (cornea and RPE). To verify antibody specificity, purified human LF and transferrin (TF) were used on 1D and 2D western blots. Results: LF gene expression was confirmed in the cornea and RPE cell cultures from humans, suggesting that LF is an endogenously produced protein. PCR results from mouse ocular tissue showed LF expression in cornea, iris, RPE, but not in retina. These results were also consistent with immunohistochemical localization of LF in human donor tissue. Antibody reaction for human LF was specific and western blotting showed its presence in the cornea, iris and RPE tissues. A faint reaction for the retina was observed but was likely due to contamination from other ocular tissues. Multiple commercially available antibodies for murine LF cross-reacted with TF, so no reliable results were obtained for murine western blot. Conclusion: LF is expressed in multiple eye tissues of humans and mice. This widespread expression and multifunctional activity of LF suggests that it may play an important role in protecting eye tissues from inflammation-associated diseases.


Pilot and Feasibility Studies | 2018

Effects of yoga on oxidative stress, motor function, and non-motor symptoms in Parkinson’s disease: a pilot randomized controlled trial

Corjena Cheung; Rozina Bhimani; Jean F. Wyman; Jürgen Konczak; Lei Zhang; Usha Mishra; Marcia R. Terluk; Reena V. Kartha; Paul Tuite


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2018

Blood and brain biomarkers of oxidative stress and inflammation in type 1 Gaucher disease: Effect of antioxidant therapy

Reena V. Kartha; James M. Joers; Marcia R. Terluk; Paul Tuite; Usha Mishra; Kyle Rudser; Gülin Öz; Jeanine Jarnes Utz; James C. Cloyd


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017

Inflammasome Activation in Primary RPE Cultures from Human Donors with and without Age-related Macular Degeneration

Mara Supik; Marcia R. Terluk; Sandra Monetzuma; Deborah A. Ferrington


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2015

Mitochondrial DNA lesions and age-related macular degeneration (AMD) after cataract surgery in human donor eyes

Karen R. Armbrust; Sandra R. Montezuma; P. P. Karunadharma; Marcia R. Terluk; Deborah A. Ferrington


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Determining the Influence of AMD Phenotype/Genotype on the RPE Stress Response

Marcia R. Terluk; Mara C. Ebeling; Heidi Roehrich; Rebecca J. Kapphahn; Katarzyna Goode; Cristina M Kenney; Shari R. Atilano; Sandra R. Montezuma; Deborah A. Ferrington

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Ching Yuan

University of Minnesota

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Mara C. Ebeling

University of South Dakota

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