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Dive into the research topics where Michelle E. LeBlanc is active.

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Featured researches published by Michelle E. LeBlanc.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Hepatoma-Derived Growth Factor-Related Protein-3 Is a Novel Angiogenic Factor

Michelle E. LeBlanc; Weiwen Wang; Nora B. Caberoy; Xiuping Chen; Feiye Guo; Gabriela Alvarado; Chen Shen; Feng Wang; Hui Wang; Rui Chen; Zhao Jun Liu; Keith A. Webster; Wei Li

Hepatoma-derived growth factor-related protein-3 (Hdgfrp3 or HRP-3) was recently reported as a neurotrophic factor and is upregulated in hepatocellular carcinoma to promote cancer cell survival. Here we identified HRP-3 as a new endothelial ligand and characterized its in vitro and in vivo functional roles and molecular signaling. We combined open reading frame phage display with multi-round in vivo binding selection to enrich retinal endothelial ligands, which were systematically identified by next generation DNA sequencing. One of the identified endothelial ligands was HRP-3. HRP-3 expression in the retina and brain was characterized by Western blot and immunohistochemistry. Cell proliferation assay showed that HRP-3 stimulated the growth of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). HRP-3 induced tube formation of HUVECs in culture. Wound healing assay indicated that HRP-3 promoted endothelial cell migration. HRP-3 was further confirmed for its in vitro angiogenic activity by spheroid sprouting assay. HRP-3 extrinsically activated the extracellular-signal-regulated kinase ½ (ERK1/2) pathway in endothelial cells. The angiogenic activity of HRP-3 was independently verified by mouse cornea pocket assay. Furthermore, in vivo Matrigel plug assay corroborated HRP-3 activity to promote new blood vessel formation. These results demonstrated that HRP-3 is a novel angiogenic factor.


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 2010

Maternal separation alters social odor preference development in infant mice (Mus musculus).

Nathaniel R. Thomas; Laura K. Fonken; Michelle E. LeBlanc; Catherine A. Cornwell

This study examined whether daily periods of maternal separation during the first two weeks of life would decrease attraction to familiar nest odors in CD-1 mice 10 and 14 days old. We also investigated whether placing a group of mice (Mus musculus) in nest shavings during the 180-min separation period would mitigate possible separation-induced deficits. The maternal separation procedure has been widely used as a rodent model for the effects of inconsistent or inadequate early caretaking on human development. From postnatal day (PND) 1 to 14, litters were separated from the dam, but not littermates for either 15 or 180 min, or were facility-reared controls. Control, facility-reared mice preferred home-cage nest to clean familiar shaving odors on PND 10, but not PND 14. In contrast, home-cage nest odors attracted maternally separated mice on both test days. Our results suggest that maternal separation maintains the olfactory tether to the nest in a period when the attraction normally begins to weaken.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2017

Secretogranin III as a disease-associated ligand for antiangiogenic therapy of diabetic retinopathy

Michelle E. LeBlanc; Weiwen Wang; Xiuping Chen; Nora B. Caberoy; Feiye Guo; Chen Shen; Yanli Ji; Hong Tian; Hui Wang; Rui Chen; Wei Li

Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a leading cause of vision loss with retinal vascular leakage and/or neovascularization. Current antiangiogenic therapy against vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has limited efficacy. In this study, we applied a new technology of comparative ligandomics to diabetic and control mice for the differential mapping of disease-related endothelial ligands. Secretogranin III (Scg3) was discovered as a novel disease-associated ligand with selective binding and angiogenic activity in diabetic but not healthy vessels. In contrast, VEGF bound to and induced angiogenesis in both diabetic and normal vasculature. Scg3 and VEGF signal through distinct receptor pathways. Importantly, Scg3-neutralizing antibodies alleviated retinal vascular leakage in diabetic mice with high efficacy. Furthermore, anti-Scg3 prevented retinal neovascularization in oxygen-induced retinopathy mice, a surrogate model for retinopathy of prematurity (ROP). ROP is the most common cause of vision impairment in children, with no approved drug therapy. These results suggest that Scg3 is a promising target for novel antiangiogenic therapy of DR and ROP.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Reticulocalbin-1 Facilitates Microglial Phagocytosis

Ying Ding; Nora B. Caberoy; Feiye Guo; Michelle E. LeBlanc; Chenming Zhang; Weiwen Wang; Feng Wang; Rui Chen; Wei Li

Phagocytosis is critical to the clearance of apoptotic cells, cellular debris and deleterious metabolic products for tissue homeostasis. Phagocytosis ligands directly recognizing deleterious cargos are the key to defining the functional roles of phagocytes, but are traditionally identified on a case-by-case basis with technical challenges. As a result, extrinsic regulation of phagocytosis is poorly defined. Here we demonstrate that microglial phagocytosis ligands can be systematically identified by a new approach of functional screening. One of the identified ligands is reticulocalbin-1 (Rcn1), which was originally reported as a Ca2+-binding protein with a strict expression in the endoplasmic reticulum. Our results showed that Rcn1 can be secreted from healthy cells and that secreted Rcn1 selectively bound to the surface of apoptotic neurons, but not healthy neurons. Independent characterization revealed that Rcn1 stimulated microglial phagocytosis of apoptotic but not healthy neurons. Ingested apoptotic cells were targeted to phagosomes and co-localized with phagosome marker Rab7. These data suggest that Rcn1 is a genuine phagocytosis ligand. The new approach described in this study will enable systematic identification of microglial phagocytosis ligands with broad applicability to many other phagocytes.


Angiogenesis | 2017

Pathogenic role and therapeutic potential of pleiotrophin in mouse models of ocular vascular disease

Weiwen Wang; Michelle E. LeBlanc; Xiuping Chen; Ping Chen; Yanli Ji; Megan Brewer; Hong Tian; Samantha R. Spring; Keith A. Webster; Wei Li

Angiogenic factors play an important role in the pathogenesis of diabetic retinopathy (DR), neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) and retinopathy of prematurity (ROP). Pleiotrophin, a well-known angiogenic factor, was recently reported to be upregulated in the vitreous fluid of patients with proliferative DR (PDR). However, its pathogenic role and therapeutic potential in ocular vascular diseases have not been defined in vivo. Here using corneal pocket assays, we demonstrated that pleiotrophin induced angiogenesis in vivo. To investigate the pathological role of pleiotrophin we used neutralizing antibody to block its function in multiple in vivo models of ocular vascular diseases. In a mouse model of DR, intravitreal injection of pleiotrophin-neutralizing antibody alleviated diabetic retinal vascular leakage. In a mouse model of oxygen-induced retinopathy (OIR), which is a surrogate model of ROP and PDR, we demonstrated that intravitreal injection of anti-pleiotrophin antibody prevented OIR-induced pathological retinal neovascularization and aberrant vessel tufts. Finally, pleiotrophin-neutralizing antibody ameliorated laser-induced choroidal neovascularization, a mouse model of nAMD, suggesting that pleiotrophin is involved in choroidal vascular disease. These findings suggest that pleiotrophin plays an important role in the pathogenesis of DR with retinal vascular leakage, ROP with retinal neovascularization and nAMD with choroidal neovascularization. The results also support pleiotrophin as a promising target for anti-angiogenic therapy.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2018

Secretogranin III: a diabetic retinopathy-selective angiogenic factor

Wei Li; Keith A. Webster; Michelle E. LeBlanc; Hong Tian

Secretogranin III (Scg3) is a member of the granin protein family that regulates the biogenesis of secretory granules. Scg3 was recently discovered as an angiogenic factor, expanding its functional role to extrinsic regulation. Unlike many other known angiogenic factors, the pro-angiogenic actions of Scg3 are restricted to pathological conditions. Among thousands of quantified endothelial ligands, Scg3 has the highest binding activity ratio to diabetic vs. healthy mouse retinas and lowest background binding to normal vessels. In contrast, vascular endothelial growth factor binds to and stimulates angiogenesis of both diabetic and control vasculature. Consistent with its role in pathological angiogenesis, Scg3-neutralizing antibodies alleviate retinal vascular leakage in mouse models of diabetic retinopathy and retinal neovascularization in oxygen-induced retinopathy mice. This review summarizes our current knowledge of Scg3 as a regulatory protein of secretory granules, highlights its new role as a highly disease-selective angiogenic factor, and envisions Scg3 inhibitors as “selective angiogenesis blockers” for targeted therapy.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2015

Lyar Is a New Ligand for Retinal Pigment Epithelial Phagocytosis.

Feiye Guo; Ying Ding; Nora B. Caberoy; Gabriela Alvarado; Robert Liu; Chen Shen; Jisu Yu; Yixiong Zhou; Enrique Salero; Michelle E. LeBlanc; Weiwen Wang; Wei Li

Phagocytosis is critical to tissue homeostasis, as highlighted by phagocytosis defect of retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells with debris accumulation, photoreceptor degeneration and blindness. Phagocytosis ligands are the key to delineating molecular mechanisms and functional roles of phagocytes, but are traditionally identified in individual cases with technical challenges. We recently developed open reading frame phage display (OPD) for phagocytosis‐based functional cloning (PFC) to identify unknown ligands. One of the identified ligands was Ly‐1 antibody reactive clone (Lyar) with functions poorly defined. Herein, we characterized Lyar as a new ligand to stimulate RPE phagocytosis. In contrast to its reported nucleolar expression, immunohistochemistry showed that Lyar was highly expressed in photoreceptor outer segments (POSs) of the retina. Cytoplasmic Lyar was released from apoptotic cells, and selectively bound to shed POSs and apoptotic cells, but not healthy cells. POS vesicles engulfed through Lyar‐dependent pathway were targeted to phagosomes and colocalized with phagosome marker Rab7. These results suggest that Lyar is a genuine RPE phagocytosis ligand, which in turn supports the validity of OPD/PFC as the only available approach for unbiased identification of phagocytosis ligands with broad applicability to various phagocytes. J. Cell. Biochem. 116: 2177–2187, 2015.


Molecular Vision | 2016

The regulatory role of hepatoma-derived growth factor as an angiogenic factor in the eye

Michelle E. LeBlanc; Weiwen Wang; Xiuping Chen; Yanli Ji; Akhalesh Shakya; Chen Shen; Chenming Zhang; Vivianne Gonzalez; Megan Brewer; Jian Xing Ma; Rong Wen; Fangliang Zhang; Wei Li


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

Pleiotrophin as a Novel Target for Anti-Angiogenic Therapy of Diabetic Retinopathy

Weiwen Wang; Michelle E. LeBlanc; Xiuping Chen; Yanli Ji; Megan Brewer; Vivianne Gonzalez; Wei Li


Cell Biology and Toxicology | 2016

Mesd extrinsically promotes phagocytosis by retinal pigment epithelial cells

Xiuping Chen; Feiye Guo; Michelle E. LeBlanc; Ying Ding; Chenming Zhang; Akhalesh Shakya; Wei Li

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Wei Li

University of Miami

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Rui Chen

Baylor College of Medicine

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Feng Wang

Baylor College of Medicine

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