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Dive into the research topics where Michaelia P. Cockshell is active.

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Featured researches published by Michaelia P. Cockshell.


The FASEB Journal | 2015

Sphingosine 1-phosphate is a ligand for peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ that regulates neoangiogenesis

Kate A. Parham; Julia R. Zebol; Katie Tooley; Wai Y. Sun; Lachlan M. Moldenhauer; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Briony L. Gliddon; Paul A.B. Moretti; Gabor Tigyi; Stuart M. Pitson; Claudine S. Bonder

Sphingosine 1‐phosphate (S1P) is a bio‐active lipid that can function both extracellularly and intracellularly to mediate a variety of cellular processes. Using lipid affinity matrices and a radiolabeled lipid binding assay, we reveal that S1P directly interacts with the transcription factor peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor (PPAR) γ. Herein, we show that S1P treatment of human endothelial cells (ECs) activated a luciferase‐tagged PPAR‐γ‐specific gene reporter by ~12‐fold, independent of the S1P receptors. More specifically, in silico docking, gene reporter, and binding assays revealed that His323 of the PPAR‐γ ligand binding domain is important for binding to S1P. PPAR‐γ functions when associated with coregulatory proteins, and herein we identify that peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor‐γ coactivator 1 (PGC1)β binds to PPAR‐γ in ECs and their progenitors (nonadherent endothelial forming cells) and that the formation of this PPAR‐γ:PGC1β complex is increased in response to S1P. ECs treated with S1P selectively regulated known PPAR‐γ target genes with PGC1β and plasminogen‐activated inhibitor‐1 being increased, no change to adipocyte fatty acid binding protein 2 and suppression of CD36. S1P‐induced in vitro tube formation was significantly attenuated in the presence of the PPAR‐γ antagonist GW9662, and in vivo application of GW9662 also reduced vascular development in Matrigel plugs. Interestingly, activation of PPAR‐γ by the synthetic ligand troglitazone also reduced tube formation in vitro and in vivo. To support this, Sphk1‐/‐ Sphk2+/‐ mice, with low circulating S1P levels, demonstrated a similar reduction in vascular development. Taken together, our data reveal that the transcription factor, PPAR‐γ, is a bona fide intracellular target for S1P and thus suggest that the SlP:PPAR‐γ:PGC1β complex may be a useful target to manipulate neovascularization.—Parham, K. A., Zebol, J. R., Tooley, K. L., Sun, W. Y., Moldenhauer, L. M., Cockshell, M. P., Gliddon, B. L., Moretti, P. A., Tigyi, G., Pitson, S. M., Bonder, C. S. Sphingosine 1‐phosphate is a ligand for peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor‐γ that regulates neoangiogenesis. FASEB J. 29, 3638‐3653 (2015). www.fasebj.org


PLOS ONE | 2012

Characterization of a Distinct Population of Circulating Human Non-Adherent Endothelial Forming Cells and Their Recruitment via Intercellular Adhesion Molecule-3

Sarah L. Appleby; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Jyotsna B. Pippal; Emma J. Thompson; Jeffrey M. Barrett; Katie Tooley; Shaundeep Sen; Wai Yan Sun; Randall Grose; Ian C. Nicholson; Vitalina Levina; Ira R. Cooke; Gert H. Talbo; Angel F. Lopez; Claudine S. Bonder

Circulating vascular progenitor cells contribute to the pathological vasculogenesis of cancer whilst on the other hand offer much promise in therapeutic revascularization in post-occlusion intervention in cardiovascular disease. However, their characterization has been hampered by the many variables to produce them as well as their described phenotypic and functional heterogeneity. Herein we have isolated, enriched for and then characterized a human umbilical cord blood derived CD133+ population of non-adherent endothelial forming cells (naEFCs) which expressed the hematopoietic progenitor cell markers (CD133, CD34, CD117, CD90 and CD38) together with mature endothelial cell markers (VEGFR2, CD144 and CD31). These cells also expressed low levels of CD45 but did not express the lymphoid markers (CD3, CD4, CD8) or myeloid markers (CD11b and CD14) which distinguishes them from ‘early’ endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs). Functional studies demonstrated that these naEFCs (i) bound Ulex europaeus lectin, (ii) demonstrated acetylated-low density lipoprotein uptake, (iii) increased vascular cell adhesion molecule (VCAM-1) surface expression in response to tumor necrosis factor and (iv) in co-culture with mature endothelial cells increased the number of tubes, tubule branching and loops in a 3-dimensional in vitro matrix. More importantly, naEFCs placed in vivo generated new lumen containing vasculature lined by CD144 expressing human endothelial cells (ECs). Extensive genomic and proteomic analyses of the naEFCs showed that intercellular adhesion molecule (ICAM)-3 is expressed on their cell surface but not on mature endothelial cells. Furthermore, functional analysis demonstrated that ICAM-3 mediated the rolling and adhesive events of the naEFCs under shear stress. We suggest that the distinct population of naEFCs identified and characterized here represents a new valuable therapeutic target to control aberrant vasculogenesis.


Journal of Interferon and Cytokine Research | 2015

Dengue Virus Infection of Primary Endothelial Cells Induces Innate Immune Responses, Changes in Endothelial Cells Function and Is Restricted by Interferon-Stimulated Responses

Julie K. Calvert; Karla J. Helbig; David P. Dimasi; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Michael R. Beard; Stuart M. Pitson; Claudine S. Bonder; Jillian M. Carr

Although endothelial cell (EC) infection is not widespread during dengue virus (DENV) infection in vivo, the endothelium is the site of the pathogenic effects seen in severe DENV disease. In this study, we investigated DENV infection of primary EC and defined factors that influence infection in this cell type. Consistent with in vivo findings where EC infection is infrequent, only 3%-15% of EC became productively DENV-2-infected in vitro. This low level infection could not be attributed to inhibition by heparin, EC donor variation, heterogeneity, or biological source. DENV-infection of EC was associated with induction of innate immune responses, including increased STAT1 protein, STAT1- phosphorylation, interferon (IFN)-β, OAS-1, IFIT-1/ISG56, and viperin mRNA. Antibody blocking of IFN-β inhibited the induction of OAS1, IFIT1/ISG56, and viperin while shRNA knockdown of viperin enhanced DENV-infection in EC. DENV-infection of EC resulted in increased activity of sphingosine kinase 1, a factor important in maintaining vascular integrity, and altered basal and stimulated changes in barrier integrity of DENV-infected EC monolayers. Thus, DENV productively infects only a small percentage of primary EC but this has a major influence on induction of IFN-β driven innate immune responses that can restrict infection while the EC themselves are functionally altered. These changes may have important consequences for the endothelium and are reflective of pathogenic changes associated with vascular leakage, as seen in DENV disease.


Stem Cell Research | 2015

Interleukin-3 greatly expands non-adherent endothelial forming cells with pro-angiogenic properties

Lachlan M. Moldenhauer; Michaelia P. Cockshell; L. Frost; Kate A. Parham; Denis Tvorogov; Lih Y. Tan; Lisa M. Ebert; Katie Tooley; Stephen G. Worthley; Angel F. Lopez; Claudine S. Bonder

Circulating endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) provide revascularisation for cardiovascular disease and the expansion of these cells opens up the possibility of their use as a cell therapy. Herein we show that interleukin-3 (IL3) strongly expands a population of human non-adherent endothelial forming cells (EXnaEFCs) with low immunogenicity as well as pro-angiogenic capabilities in vivo, making their therapeutic utilisation a realistic option. Non-adherent CD133(+) EFCs isolated from human umbilical cord blood and cultured under different conditions were maximally expanded by day 12 in the presence of IL3 at which time a 350-fold increase in cell number was obtained. Cell surface marker phenotyping confirmed expression of the hematopoietic progenitor cell markers CD133, CD117 and CD34, vascular cell markers VEGFR2 and CD31, dim expression of CD45 and absence of myeloid markers CD14 and CD11b. Functional experiments revealed that EXnaEFCs exhibited classical properties of endothelial cells (ECs), namely binding of Ulex europaeus lectin, up-take of acetylated-low density lipoprotein and contribution to EC tube formation in vitro. These EXnaEFCs demonstrated a pro-angiogenic phenotype within two independent in vivo rodent models. Firstly, a Matrigel plug assay showed increased vascularisation in mice. Secondly, a rat model of acute myocardial infarction demonstrated reduced heart damage as determined by lower levels of serum creatinine and a modest increase in heart functionality. Taken together, these studies show IL3 as a potent growth factor for human CD133(+) cell expansion with clear pro-angiogenic properties (in vitro and in vivo) and thus may provide clinical utility for humans in the future.


Microcirculation | 2011

Over-Expression of Sphingosine Kinase-1 Enhances a Progenitor Phenotype in Human Endothelial Cells

Jeffrey M. Barrett; Kate A. Parham; Jyotsna B. Pippal; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Paul A.B. Moretti; Sarah L. Brice; Stuart M. Pitson; Claudine S. Bonder

Please cite this paper as: Barrett, Parham, Pippal, Cockshell, Moretti, Brice, Pitson, and Bonder (2011). Over‐Expression of Sphingosine Kinase‐1 Enhances a Progenitor Phenotype in Human Endothelial Cells. Microcirculation 18(7), 583–597.


Angiogenesis | 2016

A non-canonical role for desmoglein-2 in endothelial cells: implications for neoangiogenesis

Lisa M. Ebert; Lih Y. Tan; M. Zahied Johan; Kay Khine Myo Min; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Kate A. Parham; Kelly L. Betterman; Paceman Szeto; Samantha E. Boyle; Lokugan S. Silva; Angela Peng; YouFang F. Zhang; Andrew Ruszkiewicz; Andrew C.W. Zannettino; Stan Gronthos; Simon A. Koblar; Natasha L. Harvey; Angel F. Lopez; Mark Shackleton; Claudine S. Bonder

Desmogleins (DSG) are a family of cadherin adhesion proteins that were first identified in desmosomes and provide cardiomyocytes and epithelial cells with the junctional stability to tolerate mechanical stress. However, one member of this family, DSG2, is emerging as a protein with additional biological functions on a broader range of cells. Here we reveal that DSG2 is expressed by non-desmosome-forming human endothelial progenitor cells as well as their mature counterparts [endothelial cells (ECs)] in human tissue from healthy individuals and cancer patients. Analysis of normal blood and bone marrow showed that DSG2 is also expressed by CD34+CD45dim hematopoietic progenitor cells. An inability to detect other desmosomal components, i.e., DSG1, DSG3 and desmocollin (DSC)2/3, on these cells supports a solitary role for DSG2 outside of desmosomes. Functionally, we show that CD34+CD45dimDSG2+ progenitor cells are multi-potent and pro-angiogenic in vitro. Using a ‘knockout-first’ approach, we generated a Dsg2 loss-of-function strain of mice (Dsg2lo/lo) and observed that, in response to reduced levels of Dsg2: (i) CD31+ ECs in the pancreas are hypertrophic and exhibit altered morphology, (ii) bone marrow-derived endothelial colony formation is impaired, (iii) ex vivo vascular sprouting from aortic rings is reduced, and (iv) vessel formation in vitro and in vivo is attenuated. Finally, knockdown of DSG2 in a human bone marrow EC line reveals a reduction in an in vitro angiogenesis assay as well as relocalisation of actin and VE-cadherin away from the cell junctions, reduced cell–cell adhesion and increased invasive properties by these cells. In summary, we have identified DSG2 expression in distinct progenitor cell subpopulations and show that, independent from its classical function as a component of desmosomes, this cadherin also plays a critical role in the vasculature.


Biomacromolecules | 2017

Affinity Binding of EMR2 Expressing Cells by Surface-Grafted Chondroitin Sulfate B

Anouck L. S. Burzava; Marek Jasieniak; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Claudine S. Bonder; Frances J. Harding; Hans J. Griesser; Nicolas H. Voelcker

The propensity of glycosaminoglycans to mediate cell-cell and cell-matrix interactions opens the door to capture cells, including circulating blood cells, onto biomaterial substrates. Chondroitin sulfate (CS)-B is of particular interest, since it interacts with the receptor (EGF)-like module-containing mucin-like hormone receptor-like 2 precursor (EMR2) displayed on the surface of leukocytes and endothelial progenitor cells. Herein, CS-B and its isomer CS-A were covalently immobilized onto heptylamine plasma polymer films via three different binding chemistries to develop platform technology for the capture of EMR2 expressing cells onto solid carriers. Surface characterization verified the successful immobilization of both glycosaminoglycans. The EMR2 expressing human myeloid cell line U937 preferentially bound onto CS-B-modified substrates, and U937 cells preincubated with CS-B in solution exhibited reduced affinity for the substrate. The direct capture of hematopoietic and blood-circulating endothelial cell types via a glycosaminoglycan-binding surface receptor opens an unexplored route for the development of biomaterials targeted at these cell types.


Biomacromolecules | 2016

Porous silicon based cell microarrays: optimizing human endothelial cell-material surface interactions and bioactive release

Adel Dalilottojari; Frances J. Harding; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Claudine S. Bonder; Nicolas H. Voelcker


World academy of science, engineering and technology | 2017

Biomolecules Based Microarray for Screening Human Endothelial Cells Behavior

Adel Dalilottojari; Frances J. Harding; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Claudine S. Bonder; Nicolas H. Voelcker


European Respiratory Journal | 2017

Characteristics and utility of exosomes obtained from peripheral blood derived endothelial progenitor cells of PAH patients

R. Harper; Michaelia P. Cockshell; Claudine S. Bonder; Paul N. Reynolds

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Frances J. Harding

University of South Australia

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Kate A. Parham

University of South Australia

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Katie Tooley

University of South Australia

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Adel Dalilottojari

University of South Australia

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Lih Y. Tan

University of South Australia

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Lisa M. Ebert

University of South Australia

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Stuart M. Pitson

University of South Australia

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