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Dive into the research topics where Mark J. Rosenthal is active.

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Featured researches published by Mark J. Rosenthal.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Innate immunity and transcription of MGAT-III and Toll-like receptors in Alzheimer's disease patients are improved by bisdemethoxycurcumin.

Milan Fiala; Philip T. Liu; Araceli Espinosa-Jeffrey; Mark J. Rosenthal; George W. Bernard; John M. Ringman; James Sayre; Laura Zhang; Justin Zaghi; Sheila Dejbakhsh; Ben Chiang; James Hui; Michelle Mahanian; Anita Baghaee; Pamela Hong; John R. Cashman

We have tested a hypothesis that the natural product curcuminoids, which has epidemiologic and experimental rationale for use in AD, may improve the innate immune system and increase amyloid-β (Aβ) clearance from the brain of patients with sporadic Alzheimers disease (AD). Macrophages of a majority of AD patients do not transport Aβ into endosomes and lysosomes, and AD monocytes do not efficiently clear Aβ from the sections of AD brain, although they phagocytize bacteria. In contrast, macrophages of normal subjects transport Aβ to endosomes and lysosomes, and monocytes of these subjects clear Aβ in AD brain sections. Upon Aβ stimulation, mononuclear cells of normal subjects up-regulate the transcription of β-1,4-mannosyl-glycoprotein 4-β-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase (MGAT3) (P < 0.001) and other genes, including Toll like receptors (TLRs), whereas mononuclear cells of AD patients generally down-regulate these genes. Defective phagocytosis of Aβ may be related to down-regulation of MGAT3, as suggested by inhibition of phagocytosis by using MGAT3 siRNA and correlation analysis. Transcription of TLR3, bditTLR4, TLR5, bditTLR7, TLR8, TLR9, and TLR10 upon Aβ stimulation is severely depressed in mononuclear cells of AD patients in comparison to those of control subjects. In mononuclear cells of some AD patients, the curcuminoid compound bisdemethoxycurcumin may enhance defective phagocytosis of Aβ, the transcription of MGAT3 and TLRs, and the translation of TLR2–4. Thus, bisdemethoxycurcumin may correct immune defects of AD patients and provide a previously uncharacterized approach to AD immunotherapy.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2006

Curcuminoids enhance amyloid-β uptake by macrophages of Alzheimer's disease patients

Laura Zhang; Milan Fiala; John R. Cashman; James Sayre; Araceli Espinosa; Michelle Mahanian; Justin Zaghi; Vladimir Badmaev; Michael C. Graves; George W. Bernard; Mark J. Rosenthal

Treatment of Alzheimers disease (AD) is difficult due to ignorance of its pathogenesis. AD patients have defects in phagocytosis of amyloid-beta (1-42) (Abeta) in vitro by the innate immune cells, monocyte/macrophages and in clearance of Abeta plaques [5]. The natural product curcuminoids enhanced brain clearance of Abeta in animal models. We, therefore, treated macrophages of six AD patients and 3 controls by curcuminoids in vitro and measured Abeta uptake using fluorescence and confocal microscopy. At baseline, the intensity of Abeta uptake by AD macrophages was significantly lower in comparison to control macrophages and involved surface binding but no intracellular uptake. After treatment of macrophages with curcuminoids, Abeta uptake by macrophages of three of the six AD patients was significantly (P<0.001 to 0.081) increased. Confocal microscopy of AD macrophages responsive to curcuminoids showed surface binding in untreated macrophages but co-localization with phalloidin in an intracellular compartment after treatment. Immunomodulation of the innate immune system by curcuminoids might be a safe approach to immune clearance of amyloidosis in AD brain.


Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2010

IL-17A is increased in the serum and in spinal cord CD8 and mast cells of ALS patients

Milan Fiala; Madhuri Chattopadhay; Antonio La Cava; Eric Tse; Guanghao Liu; Elaine V. Lourenço; Ascia Eskin; Philip T. Liu; Larry Magpantay; Stephen Tse; Michelle Mahanian; Rachel Weitzman; Jason Tong; Caroline Nguyen; Tiffany Cho; Patrick Koo; James Sayre; Otoniel Martínez-Maza; Mark J. Rosenthal; Martina Wiedau-Pazos

The contribution of inflammation to neurodegenerative diseases is increasingly recognized, but the role of inflammation in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (sALS) is not well understood and no animal model is available. We used enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs) to measure the cytokine interleukin-17A (IL-17A) in the serum of ALS patients (n = 32; 28 sporadic ALS (sALS) and 4 familial ALS (fALS)) and control subjects (n = 14; 10 healthy subjects and 4 with autoimmune disorders). IL-17A serum concentrations were 5767 ± 2700 pg/ml (mean ± SEM) in sALS patients and 937 ± 927 pg/ml in fALS patients in comparison to 7 ± 2 pg/ml in control subjects without autoimmune disorders (p = 0.008 ALS patients vs. control subjects by Mann-Whitney test). Sixty-four percent of patients and no control subjects had IL-17A serum concentrations > 50 pg/ml (p = 0.003 ALS patients vs. healthy subjects by Fishers exact test). The spinal cords of sALS (n = 8), but not control subjects (n = 4), were infiltrated by interleukin-1β- (IL-1β-), and tumor necrosis factor-α-positive macrophages (co-localizing with neurons), IL-17A-positive CD8 cells, and IL-17A-positive mast cells. Mononuclear cells treated with aggregated forms of wild type superoxide dismutase-1 (SOD-1) showed induction of the cytokines IL-1β, interleukin-6 (IL-6), and interleukin-23 (IL-23) that may be responsible for induction of IL-17A. In a microarray analysis of 28,869 genes, stimulation of peripheral blood mononuclear cells by mutant superoxide dismutase-1 induced four-fold higher transcripts of interleukin-1α (IL-1α), IL-6, CCL20, matrix metallopeptidase 1, and tissue factor pathway inhibitor 2 in mononuclear cells of patients as compared to controls, whereas the anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-10 (IL-10) was increased in mononuclear cells of control subjects. Aggregated wild type SOD-1 in sALS neurons could induce in mononuclear cells the cytokines inducing chronic inflammation in sALS spinal cord, in particular IL-6 and IL-17A, damaging neurons. Immune modulation of chronic inflammation may be a new approach to sALS.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2007

Phagocytosis of Amyloid-β and Inflammation: Two Faces of Innate Immunity in Alzheimer's Disease

Milan Fiala; David H. Cribbs; Mark J. Rosenthal; George W. Bernard

Abstract Innate immunity provides the first line of defense by recognizing pathogen-associated microbial patterns and inducing key co-stimulatory molecules and cytokines, which activate the mechanisms of the adaptive immune response. Innate immune cells perform phagocytosis, which can clear pathogens and tissue waste products but may also contribute to tissue injury due to harmful side effects of inflammation. Genetic studies of APOE4, cytokine polymorphisms and overexpression of inflammatory genes suggest that chronic inflammation may have adverse effects in patients with sporadic Alzheimers disease. However, a vaccine against amyloid-beta induced beneficial clearance of amyloid-beta deposits, possibly through Fc receptor-mediated stimulation of microglial and macrophage uptake. A reconciliation of these two pathogenetic mechanisms is crucial to future progress in immune diagnosis and effective therapy. This may be possible by extending our recent observations suggesting that phagocytosis of amyloid-beta by macrophages is excellent in normal subjects but is deficient in most AD patients. Thus increased proinflammatory cytokine levels and activated microglia and macrophages in patients may be compensatory for defective clearance of amyloid-beta. Consequently, therapeutic interventions that increase phagocytosis of amyloid-beta might decrease brain inflammation as well as reduce inflammation-induced neurodegeneration. Finally, peripheral blood leukocytes are a superior model system for investigation of innate immune dysfunction in Alzheimers disease.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2009

Alzheimer disease macrophages shuttle amyloid-beta from neurons to vessels, contributing to amyloid angiopathy

Justin Zaghi; Ben Goldenson; Mohammed Inayathullah; A. S. Lossinsky; Ava Masoumi; Hripsime Avagyan; Michelle Mahanian; Michael Bernas; Martin E. Weinand; Mark J. Rosenthal; Araceli Espinosa-Jeffrey; Jean de Vellis; David B. Teplow; Milan Fiala

Neuronal accumulation of oligomeric amyloid-β (Αβ) is considered the proximal cause of neuronal demise in Alzheimer disease (AD) patients. Blood-borne macrophages might reduce Aβ stress to neurons by immigration into the brain and phagocytosis of Αβ. We tested migration and export across a blood-brain barrier model, and phagocytosis and clearance of Αβ by AD and normal subjects’ macrophages. Both AD and normal macrophages were inhibited in Αβ export across the blood-brain barrier due to adherence of Aβ-engorged macrophages to the endothelial layer. In comparison to normal subjects’ macrophages, AD macrophages ingested and cleared less Αβ, and underwent apoptosis upon exposure to soluble, protofibrillar, or fibrillar Αβ. Confocal microscopy of stained AD brain sections revealed oligomeric Aβ in neurons and apoptotic macrophages, which surrounded and infiltrated congophilic microvessels, and fibrillar Aβ in plaques and microvessel walls. After incubation with AD brain sections, normal subjects’ monocytes intruded into neurons and uploaded oligomeric Aβ. In conclusion, in patients with AD, macrophages appear to shuttle Aβ from neurons to vessels where their apoptosis may release fibrillar Aβ, contributing to cerebral amyloid angiopathy.


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 1996

A wheelchair cushion designed to redistribute sites of sitting pressure.

Mark J. Rosenthal; Robert M. Felton; Dale L. Hileman; Martin Lee; Mark Friedman; Joseph H. Navach

OBJECTIVES Despite the diversity of wheelchair cushions currently in clinical use, pressure on bony prominences continues to be a major problem for wheelchair-bound patients, and the incidence of pressure ulcers remains high. No static surface has been reported to reduce resting pressure under the ischial tuberosities to below that of capillary pressure, which may well be the threshold for inducing tissue damage. An entirely new form of seating was designed to decrease absolute pressure using a prosthetic fitting technique analogous to a below-the-knee prosthesis. DESIGN A repeated measures randomized design was used to test differences between the experimental (TCS) and three other standard cushions. SETTING A Veterans Medical Center outpatient service. PATIENTS Wheelchair-bound volunteer subjects, n = 47, were selected who weighed more than 60kg. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Pressures were measured by a standard air pressure pad and also by a computer-linked array of pressure transducers. The grid was standardized and used to generate topographic maps for each site over time. These data were used to measure the seating interface pressures. RESULTS There was a significant main effect of cushion over site, F = 131 for left ischial tuberosity. Pressure were lowest while patients sat on the experimental seat and differences were significant at all time points. Using 1psi as presumed capillary pressure, frequency of success at achieving this pressure threshold was greatest for the experimental seat, p < .001. This difference persisted throughout the 30 minutes of testing. CONCLUSIONS A computerized pressure grid was developed that allowed evaluation of anatomically localized pressures. The prosthetically designed TCS displays lower seating pressures than any other cushion tested. Consistent and sustained pressures were below the postulated threshold for tissue damage.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 1998

Effects of bovine prostate powder on zinc, glucose, and insulin metabolism in old patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus

Moon K. Song; Mark J. Rosenthal; B.D. Naliboff; L. Phanumas; K.W. Kang

Since rabbit prostate extract strongly stimulated intestinal zinc absorption and improved the diabetic condition of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats, we examined the effects of 200 mg bovine prostate powder supplemented with 20 mg zinc (Pro-Z) on the clinical manifestations of older male patients with type II diabetes. Twenty-two male patients who received Pro-Z capsules two to four times per day for 3 months showed reduced mean fasting blood glucose levels from 202 to 169 mg/dL, hemoglobin A1C-(HbA1C) concentrations from 12.2% to 9.5%, and mean values for the 3-hour area response above the fasting glucose concentration (TAFGC) from 141 to 102 mg glucose/dL/h. In eighteen patients who received placebo, mean values for fasting blood glucose decreased from 167 to 165 mg/dL and HbA1C from 10.4% to 10.2%, and for TAFGC increased from 121 to 126 mg glucose/dL/h. No detrimental changes occurred in the liver and kidney function of patients receiving either Pro-Z or placebo. However, blood cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein in patients receiving Pro-Z decreased slightly, whereas values in the placebo group tended to increase. The mean fasting plasma insulin decreased 15.5 to 13.8 microU/mL in subjects given Pro-Z, while the zinc concentration increased from 1.21 to 1.39 microg/mL. In contrast, the mean value for plasma insulin in the placebo group changed from 14.4 to 15.4 microU/mL (worsened), and for zinc, from 1.24 to 1.30 microg/ml. Interestingly, fasting urinary glucose concentrations in subjects given Pro-Z decreased from 1,249 to 378 mg/dL, whereas in those given placebo the values changed from 877 to 778 mg/dL. Since plasma zinc concentrations in both the placebo and the Pro-Z group were normal, these results suggest that biochemical constituents in the prostate including zinc may be involved in controlling glucose metabolism in patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2009

Body weight reduction in rats by oral treatment with zinc plus cyclo-(His-Pro).

Moon K. Song; Mark J. Rosenthal; Albert M. Song; K Uyemura; Hong Yang; Me Ament; Dean T. Yamaguchi; Em Cornford

Background and purpose:  We have previously shown that treatment with zinc plus cyclo‐(His‐Pro) (CHP) significantly stimulated synthesis of the insulin degrading enzyme and lowered plasma insulin and blood glucose levels, alongside improving oral glucose tolerance in genetically type 2 diabetic Goto‐Kakizaki (G‐K) rats and in aged obese Sprague‐Dawley (S‐D) rats. Thus, we postulated that zinc plus CHP (ZC) treatment might also improve body weight control in these rats. We therefore determined the effects of ZC treatment on body weights in both genetically diabetic, mature G‐K rats and non‐diabetic, obese S‐D rats.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2013

1α,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D3 and Resolvin D1 Retune the Balance between Amyloid-β Phagocytosis and Inflammation in Alzheimer's Disease Patients

Mathew T. Mizwicki; Guanghao Liu; Milan Fiala; Larry Magpantay; James Sayre; Avi Siani; Michelle Mahanian; Rachel Weitzman; Eric Y. Hayden; Mark J. Rosenthal; Ilka Nemere; John M. Ringman; David B. Teplow

As immune defects in amyloid-β (Aβ) phagocytosis and degradation underlie Aβ deposition and inflammation in Alzheimers disease (AD) brain, better understanding of the relation between Aβ phagocytosis and inflammation could lead to promising preventive strategies. We tested two immune modulators in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of AD patients and controls: 1α,25(OH)2-vitamin D3 (1,25D3) and resolvin D1 (RvD1). Both 1,25D3 and RvD1 improved phagocytosis of FAM-Aβ by AD macrophages and inhibited fibrillar Aβ-induced apoptosis. The action of 1,25D3 depended on the nuclear vitamin D and the protein disulfide isomerase A3 receptors, whereas RvD1 required the chemokine receptor, GPR32. The activities of 1,25D3 and RvD1 commonly required intracellular calcium, MEK1/2, PKA, and PI3K signaling; however, the effect of RvD1 was more sensitive to pertussis toxin. In this case study, the AD patients: a) showed significant transcriptional up regulation of IL1RN, ITGB2, and NFκB; and b) revealed two distinct groups when compared to controls: group 1 decreased and group 2 increased transcription of TLRs, IL-1, IL1R1 and chemokines. In the PBMCs/macrophages of both groups, soluble Aβ (sAβ) increased the transcription/secretion of cytokines (e.g., IL1 and IL6) and chemokines (e.g., CCLs and CXCLs) and 1,25D3/RvD1 reversed most of the sAβ effects. However, they both further increased the expression of IL1 in the group 1, sβ-treated cells. We conclude that in vitro, 1,25D3 and RvD1 rebalance inflammation to promote Aβ phagocytosis, and suggest that low vitamin D3 and docosahexaenoic acid intake and/or poor anabolic production of 1,25D3/RvD1 in PBMCs could contribute to AD onset/pathology.


Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2003

Healing of advanced pressure ulcers by a generic total contact seat: 2 randomized comparisons with low air loss bed treatments

Mark J. Rosenthal; Robert M. Felton; Anne Nastasi; Bruce D. Naliboff; Judith Harker; Joseph H. Navach

DESIGN Randomized prospective cohort study. SETTING Long-term care facilities. PARTICIPANTS Two hundred seven subjects with stage III or IV pressure ulcers. INTERVENTION Two separate randomized control studies of advanced pressure ulcers that compared wound healing on 3 different support surfaces. Subjects were allocated to low air loss bed, upgraded bed overlay (only in study 1), or 4h/d sitting on an experimental generic total contact seat. The seat was designed using prosthetics principles aimed at distributing pressure off bony prominences onto less pressure-sensitive areas. Subjects were followed for 6 months or until they were totally healed. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Number of subjects who totally healed, time to total healing, and pressure ulcer status score after 4 weeks of treatment. Interface pressures and functional capacity were also measured at 4 weeks. RESULTS In study 1, 3 subjects worsened on the bed overlay condition and were withdrawn from the study. None worsened on low air loss or generic total contact seat. At 4 weeks in both studies, pressure ulcer status score was lowest for the generic total contact seat (P<.0001), compared with the other surfaces. Subject populations were similar, so to analyze total healing, results from both studies were combined. Total healing of pressure ulcers occurred as early as 4 weeks in some subjects using the generic total contact seat. Even at 8 weeks, total healing was primarily seen with use of that seat, on which interface pressures, function, and seating tolerance were best. CONCLUSIONS Faster healing and better function indicate that treatment using the generic total contact seat is superior to low air loss bed therapy, which is standard care for advanced pressure ulcers.

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Milan Fiala

University of California

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James Sayre

University of California

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Justin Zaghi

University of California

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Philip T. Liu

University of California

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Eric Tse

University of California

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Laura Zhang

University of California

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Moon K. Song

University of California

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