Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Michele R. Stone is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Michele R. Stone.


Journal of Cell Science | 2007

Absence of keratin 19 in mice causes skeletal myopathy with mitochondrial and sarcolemmal reorganization

Michele R. Stone; Andrea O'Neill; Richard M. Lovering; John Strong; Wendy G. Resneck; Patrick W. Reed; Diana M. Toivola; Jeanine A. Ursitti; M. Bishr Omary; Robert J. Bloch

Intermediate filaments, composed of desmin and of keratins, play important roles in linking contractile elements to each other and to the sarcolemma in striated muscle. We examined the contractile properties and morphology of fast-twitch skeletal muscle from mice lacking keratin 19. Tibialis anterior muscles of keratin-19-null mice showed a small but significant decrease in mean fiber diameter and in the specific force of tetanic contraction, as well as increased plasma creatine kinase levels. Costameres at the sarcolemma of keratin-19-null muscle, visualized with antibodies against spectrin or dystrophin, were disrupted and the sarcolemma was separated from adjacent myofibrils by a large gap in which mitochondria accumulated. The costameric dystrophin-dystroglycan complex, which co-purified with γ-actin, keratin 8 and keratin 19 from striated muscles of wild-type mice, co-purified with γ-actin but not keratin 8 in the mutant. Our results suggest that keratin 19 in fast-twitch skeletal muscle helps organize costameres and links them to the contractile apparatus, and that the absence of keratin 19 disrupts these structures, resulting in loss of contractile force, altered distribution of mitochondria and mild myopathy. This is the first demonstration of a mammalian phenotype associated with a genetic perturbation of keratin 19.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Ca2+ Pool Emptying Stimulates Ca2+ Entry Activated by S-Nitrosylation

Cécile J. Favre; Carmen A. Ufret-Vincenty; Michele R. Stone; Hong-Tao Ma; Donald L. Gill

The entry of Ca2+ following Ca2+ pool release is a major component of Ca2+ signals; yet despite intense study, how “store-operated” entry channels are activated is unresolved. Because S-nitrosylation has become recognized as an important regulatory modification of several key channel proteins, its role in Ca2+ entry was investigated. A novel class of lipophilic NO donors activated Ca2+ entry independent of the well defined NO target, guanylate cyclase. Strikingly similar entry of Ca2+ induced by cell permeant alkylators indicated that this Ca2+ entry process was activated through thiol modification. Significantly, Ca2+ entry activated by either NO donors or alkylators was highly stimulated by Ca2+ pool depletion, which increased both the rate of Ca2+ release and the sensitivity to thiol modifiers. The results indicate thatS-nitrosylation underlies activation of an important store-operated Ca2+ entry mechanism.


Molecular Membrane Biology | 2005

Association of small ankyrin 1 with the sarcoplasmic reticulum

Neil C. Porter; Wendy G. Resneck; Andrea O'Neill; Damian B. van Rossum; Michele R. Stone; Robert J. Bloch

Small ankyrin 1, or sAnk1, is a small, alternatively spliced product of the erythroid ankyrin gene, ANK1, that is expressed in striated muscle and concentrated in the network sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) surrounding the Z disks and M lines. We have characterized sAnk1 in muscle homogenates and SR vesicles, and have identified the region that targets it to the network SR. Selective extractions and partitioning into Triton X-114 show that sAnk1 behaves like the SR Ca-ATPase and so is an integral protein of the SR membrane. Mild proteolytic treatment of isolated SR vesicles indicates that sAnk1 is oriented with its hydrophilic, C-terminal sequence exposed to the solution, which is equivalent to the cytoplasmic face of the SR membrane in situ. SDS-PAGE in non-reducing gels suggests that sAnk1 is present as dimers and larger oligomers in the native SR. These results suggest that sAnk1 is oligomeric and oriented with its C-terminus exposed to the cytoplasm, where it may interact with proteins of the contractile apparatus. The N-terminal 29 amino acid hydrophobic sequence of sAnk1, which is predicted to span the SR membrane, is sufficient to target proteins to and anchor them in internal membranes of HEK 293 cells. It also targets reporter proteins to the network SR of skeletal myofibers and is thus the first example of a sequence that targets proteins to a particular compartment of the SR.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

Ca2+ Entry Activated byS-Nitrosylation RELATIONSHIP TO STORE-OPERATED Ca2+ ENTRY

Hong Tao Ma; Cécile J. Favre; Randen L. Patterson; Michele R. Stone; Donald L. Gill

The coupling between Ca2+ pools and store-operated Ca2+ entry channels (SOCs) remains an unresolved question. Recently, we revealed that Ca2+ entry could be activated in response to S-nitrosylation and that this process was stimulated by Ca2+ pool emptying (Favre, C. J., Ufret-Vincenty, C. A., Stone, M. R., Ma, H-T., and Gill, D. L. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 30855–30858). In DDT1MF-2 smooth muscle cells and DC-3F fibroblasts, Ca2+ entry activated by the lipophilic NO donor, GEA3162 (5-amino-3-(3,4-dichlorophenyl)1,2,3,4-oxatriazolium), or the alkylator, N-ethylmaleimide, was observed to be strongly activated by transient external Ca2+ removal, closely resembling activation of SOC activity in the same cells. The nonadditivity of SOC and NO donor-activated Ca2+ entry suggested a single entry mechanism. Calyculin A-induced reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton prevented SOC but had no effect on GEA3162-induced Ca2+ entry. However, a single entry mechanism could account for both SOC and NO donor-activated entry if the latter reflected direct modification of the entry channel byS-nitrosylation, bypassing the normal coupling process between channels and pools. Small differences between SOC and GEA3162-activated Ba2+ entry and sensitivity to blockade by La3+ were observed, and in HEK293 cells SOC activity was observed without a response to thiol modification. It is concluded that in some cells, S-nitrosylation modifies an entry mechanism closely related to SOC and/or part of the regulatory machinery for SOC-mediated Ca2+ entry.


PLOS ONE | 2011

The actin binding domain of βI-spectrin regulates the morphological and functional dynamics of dendritic spines.

Michael W. Nestor; Xiang Cai; Michele R. Stone; Robert J. Bloch; Scott M. Thompson

Actin microfilaments regulate the size, shape and mobility of dendritic spines and are in turn regulated by actin binding proteins and small GTPases. The βI isoform of spectrin, a protein that links the actin cytoskeleton to membrane proteins, is present in spines. To understand its function, we expressed its actin-binding domain (ABD) in CA1 pyramidal neurons in hippocampal slice cultures. The ABD of βI-spectrin bundled actin in principal dendrites and was concentrated in dendritic spines, where it significantly increased the size of the spine head. These effects were not observed after expression of homologous ABDs of utrophin, dystrophin, and α-actinin. Treatment of slice cultures with latrunculin-B significantly decreased spine head size and decreased actin-GFP fluorescence in cells expressing the ABD of α-actinin, but not the ABD of βI-spectrin, suggesting that its presence inhibits actin depolymerization. We also observed an increase in the area of GFP-tagged PSD-95 in the spine head and an increase in the amplitude of mEPSCs at spines expressing the ABD of βI-spectrin. The effects of the βI-spectrin ABD on spine size and mEPSC amplitude were mimicked by expressing wild-type Rac3, a small GTPase that co-immunoprecipitates specifically with βI-spectrin in extracts of cultured cortical neurons. Spine size was normal in cells co-expressing a dominant negative Rac3 construct with the βI-spectrin ABD. We suggest that βI-spectrin is a synaptic protein that can modulate both the morphological and functional dynamics of dendritic spines, perhaps via interaction with actin and Rac3.


Nature Medicine | 2018

Prevention of tuberculosis in rhesus macaques by a cytomegalovirus-based vaccine

Scott G. Hansen; Guangwu Xu; Julia C. Ford; Emily Marshall; Daniel Malouli; Roxanne M. Gilbride; Colette M. Hughes; Abigail B. Ventura; Emily Ainslie; Kurt T Randall; Andrea N. Selseth; Parker Rundstrom; Lauren Herlache; Matthew S. Lewis; Haesun Park; Shannon L. Planer; John M. Turner; Miranda Fischer; Christina Armstrong; Robert C Zweig; Joseph Valvo; Jackie Braun; Smitha Shankar; Lenette L. Lu; Andrew W. Sylwester; Alfred W. Legasse; Martin Messerle; Michael A. Jarvis; Lynn M. Amon; Alan Aderem

Despite widespread use of the bacille Calmette–Guérin (BCG) vaccine, tuberculosis (TB) remains a leading cause of global mortality from a single infectious agent (Mycobacterium tuberculosis or Mtb). Here, over two independent Mtb challenge studies, we demonstrate that subcutaneous vaccination of rhesus macaques (RMs) with rhesus cytomegalovirus vectors encoding Mtb antigen inserts (hereafter referred to as RhCMV/TB)—which elicit and maintain highly effector-differentiated, circulating and tissue-resident Mtb-specific CD4+ and CD8+ memory T cell responses—can reduce the overall (pulmonary and extrapulmonary) extent of Mtb infection and disease by 68%, as compared to that in unvaccinated controls, after intrabronchial challenge with the Erdman strain of Mtb at ∼1 year after the first vaccination. Fourteen of 34 RhCMV/TB-vaccinated RMs (41%) across both studies showed no TB disease by computed tomography scans or at necropsy after challenge (as compared to 0 of 17 unvaccinated controls), and ten of these RMs were Mtb-culture-negative for all tissues, an exceptional long-term vaccine effect in the RM challenge model with the Erdman strain of Mtb. These results suggest that complete vaccine-mediated immune control of highly pathogenic Mtb is possible if immune effector responses can intercept Mtb infection at its earliest stages.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2005

Specific Interaction of the Actin-binding Domain of Dystrophin with Intermediate Filaments Containing Keratin 19

Michele R. Stone; Andrea O'Neill; Dawn H. Catino; Robert J. Bloch


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Cloning and Characterization of Cytokeratins 8 and 19 in Adult Rat Striated Muscle INTERACTION WITH THE DYSTROPHIN GLYCOPROTEIN COMPLEX

Jeanine A. Ursitti; Pervis C. Lee; Wendy G. Resneck; Minda M. McNally; Amber L. Bowman; Andrea O'Neill; Michele R. Stone; Robert J. Bloch


Archive | 2004

Cloning and Characterization of Cytokeratins 8 and 19 in Adult Rat Striated Muscle

Jeanine A. Ursitti; Pervis C. Lee; Wendy G. Resneck; Minda M. McNally; Amber L. Bowman; Michele R. Stone; Robert J. Bloch


Archive | 2014

TUBERCULOSIS COMPOSITIONS AND METHODS OF USING THE SAME

Ravi P. Anantha; Nathalie Cadieux; Thomas G. Evans; Michele R. Stone; Barry Walker

Collaboration


Dive into the Michele R. Stone's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hong-Tao Ma

University of Maryland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge