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Featured researches published by Mary E. Kaiser.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

A mammalian homolog of unc-53 is regulated by all-trans retinoic acid in neuroblastoma cells and embryos

Ronald A. Merrill; Lori A. Plum; Mary E. Kaiser; Margaret Clagett-Dame

The vitamin A metabolite, all-trans retinoic acid (atRA), plays an important role in neuronal development, including neurite outgrowth. However, the genes that lie downstream of atRA and its receptors in neuronal cells are largely unknown. By using the human neuroblastoma cell line, SH-SY5Y, we have identified an atRA-responsive gene (RAINB1: retinoic acid inducible in neuroblastoma cells) that is induced within 4 h after exposure of SH-SY5Y cells to atRA. RAINB1 mRNA is highly expressed in the nervous system (10.5- to 11-kb transcript) in both developing embryos and adults. Its expression is perturbed in developing rat embryos exposed to excess or insufficient atRA. RAINB1 is present on chromosome 11 and is spread over 38 exons, resulting in a putative ORF of 2,429 amino acids. The RAINB1 protein shows high similarity to a gene in Caenorhabditis elegans, unc-53, that is required for axonal elongation of mechanosensory neurons, suggesting that these proteins are orthologs. Thus, RAINB1 may represent a critical downstream gene in atRA-mediated neurite outgrowth.


Developmental Biology | 2008

A nutritional model of late embryonic vitamin A deficiency produces defects in organogenesis at a high penetrance and reveals new roles for the vitamin in skeletal development

Angela Wai-Man See; Mary E. Kaiser; Jeffrey C. White; Margaret Clagett-Dame

Vitamin A plays an essential role in vertebrate embryogenesis. In the present study, pregnant vitamin A-deficient (VAD) rats were maintained during early pregnancy on the short half-life vitamin A metabolite, all-trans retinoic acid (atRA), in an amount sufficient to support normal development to E10.5, with a higher level of atRA (250 microg atRA/g diet) provided from embryonic day (E) 8.5-10.5 to prevent mid-gestational resorption. When limiting amounts of atRA (1.5 or 12 microg/g diet) were provided after E10.5, a highly reproducible and penetrant state of late fetal vitamin A deficiency (late VAD) was induced in the organs of developing fetuses. In addition, late VAD fetuses displayed both anteriorization of cervical regions and novel posteriorization events at the thoracic and sacral levels of the skeleton, and showed sternal and pelvic malformations not previously observed in early VAD or genetic models. The expression of several Hox genes (Hoxd3 and Hoxb4) was altered in late VAD embryos, with a reduction in Hoxd3 noted as early as 1 day after instituting deficiency. All late VAD-induced malformations were prevented by the addition of retinol starting at E10.5, whereas provision of a high level of atRA throughout pregnancy improved but could not completely rescue the development of all organ systems. This work defines a nutritional model in which vitamin A deficiency can be induced during fetal development, and reveals new functions for the vitamin in the development of the axial and appendicular skeleton.


Biological Chemistry | 2004

All-trans retinoic acid-responsive genes identified in the human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cell line and their regulated expression in the nervous system of early embryos

Ronald A. Merrill; Jamie M. Ahrens; Mary E. Kaiser; Katherine S. Federhart; Vivian Y. Poon; Margaret Clagett-Dame

Abstract The vitamin A metabolite, all-trans retinoic acid (atRA), is required for embryonic development. atRA binds to the nuclear retinoic acid receptors and regulates the transcription of specific target genes. In order to identify atRA-induced genes that play a role in neural development, a subtractive library was created from SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells, a human cell line that exhibits changes in cell adhesion and neurite outgrowth after exposure to the vitamin A acid. We report here the identification of 14 genes that are rapidly induced by atRA (retinoic acid induced in neurobIlastoma or RAINB), eight of which were previously not known to be atRA responsive (BTBD11, calmin, cyclin M2, ephrin B2, HOXD10, NEDD9, RAINB6 and tenascin R). mRNA regulation by atRA was confirmed in SHSY5Y cells by Northern blotting, and gene regulation was studied in additional human cell lines using the quantitative polymerase chain reaction. The majority of the atRA-responsive clones revealed in this screen are highly expressed in the nervous system of developing rat embryos. Further, the expression of several of these genes is perturbed in developing rat embryos exposed to excess atRA or conversely, deprived of sufficient retinoid during early development. We propose that a subset of these genes lie downstream of atRA and its receptors in the regulation of neurite outgrowth and cell adhesion in both neural and nonneural tissues within the developing embryo.


Developmental Biology | 2003

Vitamin A deficiency in the late gastrula stage rat embryo results in a one to two vertebral anteriorization that extends throughout the axial skeleton

Mary E. Kaiser; Ronald A. Merrill; Adam C. Stein; Edith E. Breburda; Margaret Clagett-Dame

Vitamin A and its metabolites are known to be involved in patterning the vertebrate embryo. Study of the effect of vitamin A on axial skeletal patterning has been hindered by the fact that deficient embryos do not survive past midgestation. In this study, pregnant vitamin A-deficient rats were maintained on a purified diet containing limiting amounts of all-trans retinoic acid (12 microg atRA/g diet) and given a daily oral bolus dose of retinol starting at embryonic day 0.5, 8.25, 8.5, 8.75, 9.25, 9.5, 9.75, or 10.5. Embryos were recovered at E21.5 for analysis of the skeleton and at earlier times for analysis of select mRNAs. Normal axial skeletal development and patterning were observed in embryos from pregnant animals receiving retinol starting on or before E8.75. Delay of retinol supplementation to E9.5 or later resulted in a marked increase in both occurrence and severity of skeletal malformations, extending from the craniocervical to sacral regions. Embryos from the groups receiving retinol starting at E9.5 and E9.75 had one-vertebral anterior transformations of the cervical, thoracic, lumbar, and sacral vertebrae. Few embryos survived in the E10.5 group, but these embryos yielded the most severe and extensive anteriorization events. The skeletal alterations seen in vitamin A deficiency are associated with posterior shifts in the mesodermal expression of Hoxa-4, Hoxb-3, Hoxd-3, Hoxd-4, and Hoxa-9 mRNAs, whereas the anterior domains of Hoxb-4 and Cdx2 expression are unaltered. This work defines a critical window of development in the late gastrula-stage embryo when vitamin A is essential for normal axial skeletal patterning and shows that vitamin A deficiency causes anterior homeotic transformations extending from the cervical to lumbosacral regions.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 1994

Apolipoprotein B and a second major gene locus contribute to phenotypic variation of spontaneous hypercholesterolemia in pigs.

Robert J. Aiello; David N. Nevin; David L. Ebert; Patricia J. Uelmen; Mary E. Kaiser; Jean W. MacCluer; John Blangero; Thomas D. Dyer; Alan D. Attie

The Lpb5 apolipoprotein B (apoB) allele occurs in pigs with spontaneous hypercholesterolemia. Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) from these pigs binds to the LDL receptor with a lower affinity and is cleared from the circulation more slowly than control pig LDL. However, the severity of hypercholesterolemia in pigs with the mutant apoB allele is highly variable. This study aimed to determine the metabolic basis for the phenotypic heterogeneity among Lpb5 pigs. Lpb5 pigs were divided into two groups: those with plasma cholesterol greater than 180 mg/dL (Lpb5.1) and those with plasma cholesterol less than 180 mg/dL (Lpb5.2). LDL from both Lpb5.1 and Lpb5.2 pigs was catabolized in vivo and in vitro at a similarly reduced rate. The difference in plasma cholesterol between the two phenotypic groups was in part due to a higher buoyant LDL production rate in Lpb5.1 pigs than in Lpb5.2 pigs. The in vivo LDL receptor status was evaluated by measuring the catabolism of LDL chemically modified to abrogate LDL receptor binding. Approximately 50% of LDL clearance in normal and Lpb5.2 pigs was via the LDL receptor; in Lpb5.1 pigs, 100% of LDL clearance was LDL receptor independent. Quantitative pedigree analysis of the segregation of the plasma cholesterol phenotype suggested that two major gene loci (the apoB locus and a second apparently unlinked locus) contribute to the determination of plasma cholesterol levels in this pig population.


Developmental Biology | 2000

Vitamin A deficiency results in the dose-dependent acquisition of anterior character and shortening of the caudal hindbrain of the rat embryo.

Jeffrey C. White; Margaret A. Highland; Mary E. Kaiser; Margaret Clagett-Dame


Journal of Lipid Research | 1999

Identification of a novel Arg→Cys mutation in the LDL receptor that contributes to spontaneous hypercholesterolemia in pigs

Kurt A. A. Grunwald; Kathryn L. Schueler; Patricia J. Uelmen; Beth A. Lipton; Mary E. Kaiser; Kimberly Buhman; Alan D. Attie


Journal of Lipid Research | 1993

Nucleotide sequence encoding the carboxyl-terminal half of apolipoprotein B from spontaneously hypercholesterolemic pigs.

Charles Purtell; Nobuyo Maeda; David L. Ebert; Mary E. Kaiser; Sissel Lund-Katz; Stephen L. Sturley; Voula Kodoyianni; Kurt A. A. Grunwald; David N. Nevin; Robert J. Aiello; Alan D. Attie


Archive | 2007

Compounds, compostions, kits and methods of use to orally and topically treat acne and other skin conditions by adminstering a 19-nor containing vitamin d analog with or without a reyinoid

Margaret Clagett-Dame; Hector F Deluca; Nirca J. Nieves; Lori A. Plum; Mary E. Kaiser


Protein Expression and Purification | 1997

One-Step Immunoaffinity Purification of Recombinant Human Retinoic Acid Receptor γ

Joyce J. Repa; Jessica A. Berg; Mary E. Kaiser; Kristine K. Hanson; Stephen A. Strugnell; Margaret Clagett-Dame

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Margaret Clagett-Dame

Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation

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Lori A. Plum

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Alan D. Attie

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Hector F Deluca

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Nirca J. Nieves

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Rafal Barycki

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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David N. Nevin

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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David L. Ebert

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Kurt A. A. Grunwald

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Patricia J. Uelmen

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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