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Dive into the research topics where Michael M. Hayes is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael M. Hayes.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999

A novel surfactant nanoemulsion with broad-spectrum sporicidal activity against Bacillus species

Tarek Hamouda; Michael M. Hayes; Zhengyi Cao; Richard Tonda; Kent J. Johnson; D. Craig Wright; Joan Brisker; James R. Baker

Two nontoxic, antimicrobial nanoemulsions, BCTP and BCTP 401, have been developed. These emulsions are composed of detergents and oils in 80% water. BCTP diluted up to 1:1000 inactivated>90% of Bacillus anthracis spores in 4 h and was also sporicidal against three other Bacillus species. This sporicidal activity is due to disruption of the spore coat after initiation of germination without complete outgrowth. BCTP 401 diluted 1:1000 had greater activity than BCTP against Bacillus spores and had an onset of action of <30 min. Mixing BCTP or BCTP 401 with Bacillus cereus prior to subcutaneous injection in mice reduced the resulting skin lesion by 99%. Wound irrigation with BCTP 1 h after spore inoculation yielded a 98% reduction in skin lesion size, and mortality was reduced 3-fold. These nanoemulsion formulas are stable, easily dispersed, nonirritant, and nontoxic compared with other available sporicidal agents.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ agonists inhibit HIV-1 replication in macrophages by transcriptional and post-transcriptional effects

Michael M. Hayes; Brian R. Lane; Steven R. King; David M. Markovitz; Michael J. Coffey

Previous studies have demonstrated that cyclopentenone prostaglandins (cyPG) inhibit human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) replication in various cell types. We investigated the role of PG in the replication of HIV-1 in primary macrophages. The cyPG, PGA1 and PGA2, inhibited HIV-1 replication in acutely infected human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM). Because PGA1 and PGA2 have previously been shown to be peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) agonists, we examined the effect of synthetic PPARγ agonists on HIV replication. The PPARγ agonist ciglitazone inhibited HIV-1 replication in a dose-dependent manner in acutely infected human MDM. In addition, cyPG and ciglitazone reduced HIV replication in latently infected and viral entry-independent U1 cells, suggesting an effect at the level of HIV gene expression. Ciglitazone also suppressed HIV-1 mRNA levels as measured by reverse transcriptase PCR, in parallel with the decrease in reverse transcriptase activity. Co-transfection of PPARγ wild type vectors and treatment with PPARγ agonists inhibited HIV-1 promoter activity in U937 cells. Activation of PPARγ also decreased HIV-1 mRNA stability following actinomycin D treatment. In summary, our experimental findings implicate PPARγ as an important factor in the suppression of HIV-1 gene expression in MDM by cyPG. Thus natural and synthetic PPARγ agonists may play a role in controlling HIV-1 infection in macrophages.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Gli1 Deletion Prevents Helicobacter-Induced Gastric Metaplasia and Expansion of Myeloid Cell Subsets

Mohamad El-Zaatari; John Y. Kao; Art Tessier; Longchuan Bai; Michael M. Hayes; Clinton Fontaine; Kathryn A. Eaton; Juanita L. Merchant

Chronic inflammation in the stomach induces metaplasia, the pre-cancerous lesion that precedes inflammation-driven neoplastic transformation. While Hedgehog signaling contributes to the initiation of some cancers, its role in gastric transformation remains poorly defined. We found that Helicobacter-infected C57BL/6 mice develop extensive mucous cell metaplasia at 6 month but not at 2 months post-infection. Gastric metaplasia coincided with the appearance of CD45+MHCII+CD11b+CD11c+ myeloid cells that were normally not present in the chronic gastritis at 2 months. The myeloid regulatory gene Schlafen-4 was identified in a microarray analysis comparing infected WT versus Gli1 null mice and was expressed in the CD11b+CD11c+ myeloid population. Moreover this same population expressed IL-1β and TNFα pro-inflammatory cytokines. By 6 months, the mucous neck cell metaplasia (SPEM) expressed IL-6, phosphorylated STAT3 and the proliferative marker Ki67. Expression was not observed in Gli1 mutant mice consistent with the requirement of Gli1 to induce this pre-neoplastic phenotype. Ectopic Shh ligand expression alone was not sufficient to induce SPEM, but with Helicobacter infection synergistically increased the histologic severity observed with the inflammation. Therefore Hedgehog signaling is required, but is not sufficient to generate pre-neoplastic changes during chronic gastritis. Gli1-dependent myeloid cell differentiation plays a pivotal role in the appearance of myeloid cell subtypes ostensibly required for SPEM development. Moreover, it suggests that therapies capable of targeting this phenotypic switch might prevent progression to metaplasia, the pre-neoplastic change that develops prior to dysplasia and gastric cancer, which also occurs in other epithelial-derived neoplasias initiated by chronic inflammation.


Cellular Immunology | 2002

Prostaglandin E2 inhibits replication of HIV-1 in macrophages through activation of protein kinase A

Michael M. Hayes; Brian R. Lane; Steven R. King; David M. Markovitz; Michael J. Coffey

Since macrophages are a source of increased PGE(2) in AIDS, we investigated the role of PGE(2) in the replication of HIV-1 in these cells. PGE(2) inhibited HIV-1 replication measured by reverse transcriptase in human monocyte-derived macrophage (MDM). Treatment of MDM with the PGE(1) analog misoprostol, the adenylate cyclase activator forskolin, and the cyclic AMP analog dibutyryl-cyclic AMP (db-cAMP) suppressed HIV replication. The protein kinase A (PKA) activator 8-bromo-cyclic AMP also inhibited HIV-1 replication. Similar results were observed with the entry-independent, latently HIV-infected U1 cells. There was a parallel decrease in HIV-1 mRNA levels following PGE(2) treatment. Co-transfection of the HIV-1 promoter LTR.luciferase, with the vector CMV.Calpha, which expresses the PKA catalytic unit increasing PKA activity, reduced HIV-1 promoter activity. Inhibition of PKA activity with the pMT.RAB vector, a mutant regulatory unit of PKA, augmented HIV-1 promoter activity. In summary, PGE(2) inhibits HIV-1 gene expression in MDM through a PKA-dependent mechanism.


Gastroenterology | 2013

ZBP-89 regulates expression of tryptophan hydroxylase i and mucosal defense against salmonella typhimurium in mice

Bryan E. Essien; Helmut Grasberger; Rachael D. Romain; David J. Law; Natalia A. Veniaminova; Milena Saqui–Salces; Mohamad El–Zaatari; Arthur Tessier; Michael M. Hayes; Alexander Yang; Juanita L. Merchant

BACKGROUND & AIMS ZBP-89 (also ZNF148 or Zfp148) is a butyrate-inducible zinc finger transcription factor that binds to GC-rich DNA elements. Deletion of the N-terminal domain is sufficient to increase mucosal susceptibility to chemical injury and inflammation. We investigated whether conditional deletion of ZBP-89 from the intestinal and colonic epithelium of mice increases their susceptibility to pathogens such as Salmonella typhimurium. METHODS We generated mice with a conditional null allele of Zfp148 (ZBP-89(FL/FL)) using homologous recombination to flank Zfp148 with LoxP sites (ZBP-89(FL/FL)), and then bred the resulting mice with those that express VillinCre. We used microarray analysis to compare gene expression patterns in colonic mucosa between ZBP-89(ΔInt) and C57BL/6 wild-type mice (controls). Mice were gavaged with 2 isogenic strains of S. typhimurium after administration of streptomycin. RESULTS Microarray analysis revealed that the colonic mucosa of ZBP-89(ΔInt) mice had reduced levels of tryptophan hydroxylase 1 (Tph1) messenger RNA, encoding the rate-limiting enzyme in enterochromaffin cell serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine [5HT]) biosynthesis. DNA affinity precipitation demonstrated direct binding of ZBP-89 to the mouse Tph1 promoter, which was required for its basal and butyrate-inducible expression. ZBP-89(ΔInt) mice did not increase mucosal levels of 5HT in response to S. typhimurium infection, and succumbed to the infection 2 days before control mice. The ΔhilA isogenic mutant of S. typhimurium lacks this butyrate-regulated locus and stimulated, rather than suppressed, expression of Tph1 approximately 50-fold in control, but not ZBP-89(ΔInt), mice, correlating with fecal levels of butyrate. CONCLUSIONS ZBP-89 is required for butyrate-induced expression of the Tph1 gene and subsequent production of 5HT in response to bacterial infection in mice. Reductions in epithelial ZBP-89 increase susceptibility to colitis and sepsis after infection with S. typhimurium, partly because of reduced induction of 5HT production in response to butyrate and decreased secretion of antimicrobial peptides.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2012

Conditional deletion of menin results in antral G cell hyperplasia and hypergastrinemia

Natalia A. Veniaminova; Michael M. Hayes; Jessica M. Varney; Juanita L. Merchant

Antral gastrin is the hormone known to stimulate acid secretion and proliferation of the gastric corpus epithelium. Patients with mutations in the multiple endocrine neoplasia type 1 (MEN1) locus, which encodes the protein menin, develop pituitary hyperplasia, insulinomas, and gastrinomas in the duodenum. We previously hypothesized that loss of menin leads to derepression of the gastrin gene and hypergastrinemia. Indeed, we show that menin represses JunD induction of gastrin in vitro. Therefore, we examined whether conditional deletion of Men1 (Villin-Cre and Lgr5-EGFP-IRES-CreERT2), with subsequent loss of menin from the gastrointestinal epithelium, increases gastrin expression. We found that epithelium-specific deletion of Men1 using Villin-Cre increased plasma gastrin, antral G cell numbers, and gastrin expression in the antrum, but not the duodenum. Moreover, the mice were hypochlorhydric by 12 mo of age, and gastric somatostatin mRNA levels were reduced. However, duodenal mRNA levels of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27(Kip1) were decreased, and cell proliferation determined by Ki67 staining was increased. About 11% of the menin-deficient mice developed antral tumors that were negative for gastrin; however, gastrinomas were not observed, even at 12 mo of age. No gastrinomas were observed with conditional deletion of Men1 in the Lgr5 stem cells 5 mo after Cre induction. In summary, epithelium-specific deletion of the Men1 locus resulted in hypergastrinemia due to antral G cell hyperplasia and a hyperproliferative epithelium, but no gastrinomas. This result suggests that additional mutations in gene targets other than the Men1 locus are required to produce gastrin-secreting tumors.


Gut | 2017

Deletion of Men1 and somatostatin induces hypergastrinemia and gastric carcinoids

Sinju Sundaresan; Anthony J. Kang; Michael M. Hayes; Eun Young Karen Choi; Juanita L. Merchant

Background Gastric carcinoids are slow growing neuroendocrine tumours arising from enterochromaffin-like (ECL) cells in the corpus of stomach. Although most of these tumours arise in the setting of gastric atrophy and hypergastrinemia, it is not understood what genetic background predisposes development of these ECL derived tumours. Moreover, diffuse microcarcinoids in the mucosa can lead to a field effect and limit successful endoscopic removal. Objective To define the genetic background that creates a permissive environment for gastric carcinoids using transgenic mouse lines. Design The multiple endocrine neoplasia 1 gene locus (Men1) was deleted using Cre recombinase expressed from the Villin promoter (Villin-Cre) and was placed on a somatostatin null genetic background. These transgenic mice received omeprazole-laced chow for 6 months. The direct effect of gastrin and the gastrin receptor antagonist YM022 on expression and phosphorylation of the cyclin inhibitor p27Kip1 was tested on the human human gastric adenocarcinoma cell line stably expressing CCKBR (AGSE) and mouse small intestinal neuroendocrine carcinoma (STC)-1 cell lines. Results The combination of conditional Men1 deletion in the absence of somatostatin led to the development of gastric carcinoids within 2 years. Suppression of acid secretion by omeprazole accelerated the timeline of carcinoid development to 6 months in the absence of significant parietal cell atrophy. Carcinoids were associated with hypergastrinemia, and correlated with increased Cckbr expression and nuclear export of p27Kip1 both in vivo and in gastrin-treated cell lines. Loss of p27Kip1 was also observed in human gastric carcinoids arising in the setting of atrophic gastritis. Conclusions Gastric carcinoids require threshold levels of hypergastrinemia, which modulates p27Kip1 cellular location and stability.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

Schlafen 4–expressing myeloid-derived suppressor cells are induced during murine gastric metaplasia

Lin Ding; Michael M. Hayes; Amanda Photenhauer; Kathryn A. Eaton; Qian Li; Ramon Ocadiz-Ruiz; Juanita L. Merchant

Chronic Helicobacter pylori infection triggers neoplastic transformation of the gastric mucosa in a small subset of patients, but the risk factors that induce progression to gastric metaplasia have not been identified. Prior to cancer development, the oxyntic gastric glands atrophy and are replaced by metaplastic cells in response to chronic gastritis. Previously, we identified schlafen 4 (Slfn4) as a GLI1 target gene and myeloid differentiation factor that correlates with spasmolytic polypeptide-expressing metaplasia (SPEM) in mice. Here, we tested the hypothesis that migration of SLFN4-expressing cells from the bone marrow to peripheral organs predicts preneoplastic changes in the gastric microenvironment. Lineage tracing in Helicobacter-infected Slfn4 reporter mice revealed that SLFN4+ cells migrated to the stomach, where they exhibited myeloid-derived suppressor cell (MDSC) markers and acquired the ability to inhibit T cell proliferation. SLFN4+ MDSCs were not observed in infected GLI1-deficient mice. Overexpression of sonic hedgehog ligand (SHH) in infected WT mice accelerated the appearance of SLFN4+ MDSCs in the gastric corpus. Similarly, in the stomachs of H. pylori-infected patients, the human SLFN4 ortholog SLFN12L colocalized to cells that expressed MDSC surface markers CD15+CD33+HLA-DRlo. Together, these results indicate that SLFN4 marks a GLI1-dependent population of MDSCs that predict a shift in the gastric mucosa to a metaplastic phenotype.


Cancer Research | 2016

Transcription factor ZBP-89 drives a feedforward loop of β-catenin expression in colorectal cancer

Bryan E. Essien; Sinju Sundaresan; Ramon Ocadiz-Ruiz; Aaron R. Chavis; Amy C. Tsao; Arthur Tessier; Michael M. Hayes; Amanda Photenhauer; Milena Saqui-Salces; Anthony J. Kang; Yatrik M. Shah; Balazs Gyorffy; Juanita L. Merchant

In colorectal cancer, APC-mediated induction of unregulated cell growth involves posttranslational mechanisms that prevent proteasomal degradation of proto-oncogene β-catenin (CTNNB1) and its eventual translocation to the nucleus. However, about 10% of colorectal tumors also exhibit increased CTNNB1 mRNA. Here, we show in colorectal cancer that increased expression of ZNF148, the gene coding for transcription factor ZBP-89, correlated with reduced patient survival. Tissue arrays showed that ZBP-89 protein was overexpressed in the early stages of colorectal cancer. Conditional deletion of Zfp148 in a mouse model of Apc-mediated intestinal polyps demonstrated that ZBP-89 was required for polyp formation due to induction of Ctnnb1 gene expression. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) and EMSA identified a ZBP-89-binding site in the proximal promoter of CTNNB1 Reciprocally, siRNA-mediated reduction of CTNNB1 expression also decreased ZBP-89 protein. ChIP identified TCF DNA binding sites in the ZNF148 promoter through which Wnt signaling regulates ZNF148 gene expression. Suppression of either ZNF148 or CTNNB1 reduced colony formation in WNT-dependent, but not WNT-independent cell lines. Therefore, the increase in intracellular β-catenin protein initiated by APC mutations is sustained by ZBP-89-mediated feedforward induction of CTNNB1 mRNA. Cancer Res; 76(23); 6877-87. ©2016 AACR.


Oncotarget | 2017

ZBP-89 function in colonic stem cells and during butyrate-induced senescence

Ramon Ocadiz-Ruiz; Amanda Photenhauer; Michael M. Hayes; Lin Ding; Eric R. Fearon; Juanita L. Merchant

ZBP-89 (Zfp148, ZNF148) is a Kruppel-type zinc-finger family transcription factor that binds to GC-rich DNA elements. Earlier studies in cell lines demonstrated that ZBP-89 cooperates with Wnt β-catenin signaling by inducing β-catenin gene expression. Since β-catenin levels are normally highest at the crypt base, we examined whether ZBP-89 is required for stem cell maintenance. Lineage-tracing using a Zfp148CreERT2 transgenic line demonstrated expression in both intestine and colonic stem cells. Deleting the Zfp148 locus in the colon using the Cdx2NLSCreERT2 transgene, reduced the size and number of polyps formed in the Apc-deleted mice. Since colon polyps form in the presence of butyrate, a short chain fatty acid that suppresses cell growth, we examined the direct effect of butyrate on colon organoid survival. Butyrate induced senescence of colon organoids carrying the Apc deletion, only when Zfp148 was deleted. Using quantitative PCR and chromatin immunoprecipitation, we determined that butyrate treatment of colon cell lines suppressed ZNF148 gene expression, inducing CDKN2a (p16Ink4a) gene expression. Collectively, Zfp148 mRNA is expressed in CBCs, and is required for stem cell maintenance and colonic transformation. Butyrate induces colonic cell senescence in part through suppression of ZBP-89 gene expression and its subsequent occupancy of the CDKN2A promoter.

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Sinju Sundaresan

Washington University in St. Louis

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Lin Ding

University of Michigan

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James R. Baker

Walter Reed Army Institute of Research

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