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Dive into the research topics where Mohan E. Tulapurkar is active.

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Featured researches published by Mohan E. Tulapurkar.


Biochemical Journal | 2008

Hetero-oligomerization of the P2Y11 receptor with the P2Y1 receptor controls the internalization and ligand selectivity of the P2Y11 receptor.

Denise Ecke; Theodor Hanck; Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Rainer Schäfer; Matthias Kassack; Rolf Stricker; Georg Reiser

Nucleotides signal through purinergic receptors such as the P2 receptors, which are subdivided into the ionotropic P2X receptors and the metabotropic P2Y receptors. The diversity of functions within the purinergic receptor family is required for the tissue-specificity of nucleotide signalling. In the present study, hetero-oligomerization between two metabotropic P2Y receptor subtypes is established. These receptors, P2Y1 and P2Y11, were found to associate together when co-expressed in HEK293 cells. This association was detected by co-pull-down, immunoprecipitation and FRET (fluorescence resonance energy transfer) experiments. We found a striking functional consequence of the interaction between the P2Y11 receptor and the P2Y1 receptor where this interaction promotes agonist-induced internalization of the P2Y11 receptor. This is remarkable because the P2Y11 receptor by itself is not able to undergo endocytosis. Co-internalization of these receptors was also seen in 1321N1 astrocytoma cells co-expressing both P2Y11 and P2Y1 receptors, upon stimulation with ATP or the P2Y1 receptor-specific agonist 2-MeS-ADP. 1321N1 astrocytoma cells do not express endogenous P2Y receptors. Moreover, in HEK293 cells, the P2Y11 receptor was found to functionally associate with endogenous P2Y1 receptors. Treatment of HEK293 cells with siRNA (small interfering RNA) directed against the P2Y1 receptor diminished the agonist-induced endocytosis of the heterologously expressed GFP-P2Y11 receptor. Pharmacological characteristics of the P2Y11 receptor expressed in HEK293 cells were determined by recording Ca2+ responses after nucleotide stimulation. This analysis revealed a ligand specificity which was different from the agonist profile established in cells expressing the P2Y11 receptor as the only metabotropic nucleotide receptor. Thus the hetero-oligomerization of the P2Y1 and P2Y11 receptors allows novel functions of the P2Y11 receptor in response to extracellular nucleotides.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Plasticity of Neuron-Glial Interactions Mediated by Astrocytic EphARs

Michael W. Nestor; Lee-Peng Mok; Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Scott M. Thompson

Ephrin (Eph) signaling via Eph receptors affects neuronal structure and function. We report here that exogenous ephrinAs (EphAs) induce outgrowth of filopodial processes from astrocytes within minutes in rat hippocampal slice cultures. Identical effects were induced by release of endogenous ephrinAs by cleavage of their glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. Reverse transcription-PCR and immunocytochemistry revealed the expression of multiple EphA receptors (EphARs) in astrocytes. Exogenous and endogenous ephrins did not induce process outgrowth from astrocytes transfected with a kinase-dead EphAR construct, indicating that the critical EphARs were located on glia. Concomitant with these morphological changes, ephrinA reduced the frequency of (S)-3,5-dihydroxyphenylglycine-evoked NMDA receptor-mediated inward currents in CA1 pyramidal cells, elicited by release of glutamate from glial cells. The sensitivity of CA1 cell synaptic or extrasynaptic NMDA receptors was unaffected by ephrinA, indicating that this effect was mediated by inhibition of glutamate release from glial cells. Finally, ephrinA application decreased the frequency and increased the duration of spontaneous oscillations of the intracellular [Ca2+] in astrocytes. We conclude that ephrinA–EphA signaling is a pluripotent regulator of neuron–astrocyte interactions mediating rapid structural and functional plasticity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Toll-like Receptor Agonists and Febrile Range Hyperthermia Synergize to Induce Heat Shock Protein 70 Expression and Extracellular Release

Aditi Gupta; Zachary A. Cooper; Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Ratnakar Potla; Tapan Maity; Jeffrey D. Hasday; Ishwar S. Singh

Background: Inflammation and fever are coincident during various disease states including sepsis. Results: Co-exposure to inflammatory agonists during fever augments Hsp70 synthesis and extracellular release. Conclusion: Coincident activation of TLR signaling and heat shock response could be detrimental. Significance: The work examines the critical and complex interaction between inflammatory and heat shock response pathways in the context of sepsis and shock. Heat shock protein (Hsp) 70 expression can be stimulated by febrile range temperature (FRT). Hsp70 has been shown to be elevated in serum of patients with sepsis, and when released from cells, extracellular Hsp70 exerts endotoxin-like effects through Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) receptors. Circulating TLR agonists and fever both persist for the first several days of sepsis, and each can activate Hsp70 expression; however, the effect of combined exposure to FRT and TLR agonists on Hsp70 expression is unknown. We found that concurrent exposure to FRT (39.5 °C) and agonists for TLR4 (LPS), TLR2 (Pam3Cys), or TLR3 (poly(IC)) synergized to increase Hsp70 expression and extracellular release in RAW264.7 macrophages. The increase in Hsp70 expression was associated with activation of p38 and ERK MAP kinases, phosphorylation of histone H3, and increased recruitment of HSF1 to the Hsp70 promoter. Pretreatment with the p38 MAPK inhibitor SB283580 but not the ERK pathway inhibitor UO126 significantly reduced Hsp70 gene modification and Hsp70 expression in RAW cells co-exposed to LPS and FRT. In mice challenged with intratracheal LPS and then exposed to febrile range hyperthermia (core temperature, ∼39.5 °C), Hsp70 levels in lung tissue and in cell-free lung lavage were increased compared with mice exposed to either hyperthermia or LPS alone. We propose a model of how enhanced Hsp70 expression and extracellular release in patients concurrently exposed to fever and TLR agonists may contribute to the pathogenesis of sepsis.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Sustained Protection in Mice Immunized with Fractional Doses of Salmonella Enteritidis Core and O Polysaccharide-Flagellin Glycoconjugates

Raphael Simon; Jin Y. Wang; Mary Adetinuke Boyd; Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Sharon M. Tennant; Marcela F. Pasetti; James E. Galen; Myron M. Levine

Non-typhoidal Salmonella (NTS) serovars S. Enteritidis and S. Typhimurium are a major cause of invasive bacterial disease (e.g., bacteremia, meningitis) in infants and young children in sub-Saharan Africa and also occasionally cause invasive disease in highly susceptible hosts (young infants, the elderly, and immunocompromised subjects) in industrialized countries. No licensed vaccines exist against human NTS infections. NTS core and O polysaccharide (COPS) and FliC (Phase 1 flagellin subunits) each constitute protective antigens in murine models. S. Enteritidis COPS conjugated to FliC represents a promising vaccine approach that elicits binding and opsonophagocytic antibodies and protects mice against lethal challenge with virulent S. Enteritidis. We examined the protective efficacy of fractional dosages of S. Enteritidis COPS:FliC conjugate vaccines in mice, and also established that protection can be passively transferred to naïve mice by administering sera from mice immunized with conjugate. Mice were immunized with three doses of either 10 µg, 2.5 µg (full dose), 0.25 µg, or 0.025 µg S. Enteritidis COPS:FliC conjugate at 28 day intervals. Antibody titers to COPS and FliC measured by ELISA fell consonant with progressively smaller vaccine dosage levels; anti-FliC IgG responses remained robust at fractional dosages for which anti-COPS serum IgG titers were decreased. Nevertheless, >90% protection against intraperitoneal challenge was observed in mice immunized with fractional dosages of conjugate that elicited diminished titers to both FliC and COPS. Passive transfer of immune sera from mice immunized with the highest dose of COPS:FliC to naïve mice was also protective, demonstrating the role of antibodies in mediating protection. These results provide important insights regarding the potency of Salmonella glycoconjugate vaccines that use flagellin as a carrier protein.


Circulation Research | 2017

A Deep Proteome Analysis Identifies the Complete Secretome as the Functional Unit of Human Cardiac Progenitor Cells.

Sudhish Sharma; Rachana Mishra; Grace Bigham; Brody Wehman; Mohd M. Khan; Huichun Xu; Progyaparamita Saha; Young Ah Goo; Srinivasa Raju Datla; Ling Chen; Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Bradley S. Taylor; Peixin Yang; Sotirios K. Karathanasis; David R. Goodlett; Sunjay Kaushal

Rationale: Cardiac progenitor cells are an attractive cell type for tissue regeneration, but their mechanism for myocardial remodeling is still unclear. Objective: This investigation determines how chronological age influences the phenotypic characteristics and the secretome of human cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs), and their potential to recover injured myocardium. Methods and Results: Adult (aCPCs) and neonatal (nCPCs) cells were derived from patients aged >40 years or <1 month, respectively, and their functional potential was determined in a rodent myocardial infarction model. A more robust in vitro proliferative capacity of nCPCs, compared with aCPCs, correlated with significantly greater myocardial recovery mediated by nCPCs in vivo. Strikingly, a single injection of nCPC-derived total conditioned media was significantly more effective than nCPCs, aCPC-derived TCM, or nCPC-derived exosomes in recovering cardiac function, stimulating neovascularization, and promoting myocardial remodeling. High-resolution accurate mass spectrometry with reverse phase liquid chromatography fractionation and mass spectrometry was used to identify proteins in the secretome of aCPCs and nCPCs, and the literature-based networking software identified specific pathways affected by the secretome of CPCs in the setting of myocardial infarction. Examining the TCM, we quantified changes in the expression pattern of 804 proteins in nCPC-derived TCM and 513 proteins in aCPC-derived TCM. The literature-based proteomic network analysis identified that 46 and 6 canonical signaling pathways were significantly targeted by nCPC-derived TCM and aCPC-derived TCM, respectively. One leading candidate pathway is heat-shock factor-1, potentially affecting 8 identified pathways for nCPC-derived TCM but none for aCPC-derived TCM. To validate this prediction, we demonstrated that the modulation of heat-shock factor-1 by knockdown in nCPCs or overexpression in aCPCs significantly altered the quality of their secretome. Conclusions: A deep proteomic analysis revealed both detailed and global mechanisms underlying the chronological age-based differences in the ability of CPCs to promote myocardial recovery via the components of their secretome.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2006

Internalization and desensitization of a green fluorescent protein- tagged P2Y1 nucleotide receptor are differently controlled by inhibition of calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II

Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Gregor Zündorf; Georg Reiser

De‐ and re‐sensitization and trafficking of P2Y nucleotide receptors modulate physiological responses of these receptors. Here, we used the rat brain P2Y1 receptor tagged with green fluorescent protein (P2Y1‐GFP receptor) expressed in HEK293 human embryonic kidney cells. Ca2+ release was used as a functional test to investigate ATP‐induced receptor de‐ and re‐sensitization. By confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM), endocytosis of P2Y1‐GFP receptor was visualized in live cells. Stimulation of the cells with ATP induced complete receptor endocytosis within 30 min and appearance of the P2Y1 receptor in small vesicles. Removal of the agonist resulted in reappearance of the receptor after 60 min on the plasma membrane. Exposure of the cells to KN‐62 and KN‐93, inhibitors of the calmodulin dependent protein kinase II (CaMKII), prevented receptor internalization upon stimulation with ATP. However, the receptor which was still present on the plasma membrane was desensitized, seen by decreased Ca2+ response. The decreased Ca2+ response after 30‐min exposure to ATP can be attributed to desensitization and is not as a result of depletion of internal stores, as the cells exposed to ATP for 30 min exhibited a normal Ca2+ response upon stimulation with thrombin. However, okadaic acid, an inhibitor of protein phosphatase 2A (PP2A), did not affect ATP‐induced P2Y1 receptor endocytosis, but delayed the reappearance of the P2Y1 receptor on the plasma membrane after ATP withdrawal. Consistently, in okadaic acid‐treated cells the ATP‐induced Ca2+ response observed after the 30‐min exposure to ATP recovered only partially. Thus, CaMKII seems to be involved in P2Y1 receptor internalization, but not desensitization, whereas protein phosphatase 2A might play a role in recycling of the receptor back to the plasma membrane.


PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases | 2015

Invasive Salmonella Typhimurium ST313 with Naturally Attenuated Flagellin Elicits Reduced Inflammation and Replicates within Macrophages

Darren J. Perkins; Patrick Schmidlein; Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Sharon M. Tennant

Invasive non-typhoidal Salmonella (iNTS) are an important cause of septicemia in children under the age of five years in sub-Saharan Africa. A novel genotype of Salmonella enterica subsp. enterica serovar Typhimurium (multi-locus sequence type [ST] 313) circulating in this geographic region is genetically different to from S. Typhimurium ST19 strains that are common throughout the rest of the world. S. Typhimurium ST313 strains have acquired pseudogenes and genetic deletions and appear to be evolving to become more like the typhoidal serovars S. Typhi and S. Paratyphi A. Epidemiological and clinical data show that S. Typhimurium ST313 strains are clinically associated with invasive systemic disease (bacteremia, septicemia, meningitis) rather than with gastroenteritis. The current work summarizes investigations of the broad hypothesis that S. Typhimurium ST313 isolates from Mali, West Africa, will behave differently from ST19 isolates in various in vitro assays. Here, we show that strains of the ST313 genotype are phagocytosed more efficiently and are highly resistant to killing by macrophage cell lines and primary mouse and human macrophages compared to ST19 strains. S. Typhimurium ST313 strains survived and replicated within different macrophages. Infection of macrophages with S. Typhimurium ST19 strains resulted in increased apoptosis and higher production of proinflammatory cytokines, as measured by gene expression and protein production, compared to S. Typhimurium ST313 strains. This difference in proinflammatory cytokine production and cell death between S. Typhimurium ST19 and ST313 strains could be explained, in part, by an increased production of flagellin by ST19 strains. These observations provide further evidence that S. Typhimurium ST313 strains are phenotypically different to ST19 strains and instead share similar pathogenic characteristics with typhoidal Salmonella serovars.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2004

Subtype specific internalization of P2Y1 and P2Y2 receptors induced by novel adenosine 5′‐O‐(1‐boranotriphosphate) derivatives

Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Werner Laubinger; Victoria Nahum; Bilha Fischer; Georg Reiser

P2Y‐nucleotide receptors represent important targets for drug development. The lack of stable and receptor specific agonists, however, has prevented successful therapeutic applications. A novel series of P‐boronated ATP derivatives (ATP‐α‐B) were synthesized by substitution of a nonbridging O at P with a BH3 group. This introduces a chiral center, thus resulting in diastereoisomers. In addition, at C2 of the adenine ring a further substitution was made (Cl‐ or methylthio‐). The pairs of diastereoisomers were denoted here as A and B isomers. Here, we tested the receptor subtype specificity of these analogs on HEK 293 cells stably expressing rat P2Y1 and rat P2Y2 receptors, respectively, both attached to the fluorescent marker protein GFP (rP2Y1‐GFP, rP2Y2‐GFP). We investigated agonist‐induced receptor endocytosis, [Ca2+]i rise and arachidonic acid (AA) release. Agonist‐induced endocytosis of rP2Y1‐GFP was more pronounced for the A isomers than the corresponding B counterparts for all ATP‐α‐B analogs. Both 2‐MeS‐substituted diastereoisomers induced a greater degree of agonist‐induced receptor endocytosis as compared to the 2‐Cl‐substituted derivatives. Endocytosis results are in accordance with the potency to induce Ca2+ release by these compounds in HEK 293 cells stably transfected with rP2Y1. In case of rP2Y2‐GFP, the borano‐nucleotides were very weak agonists in comparison to UTP and ATP in terms of Ca2+ release, AA release and in inducing receptor endocytosis. The different ATP‐α‐B derivatives and also the diastereoisomers were equally ineffective. Thus, the new agonists may be considered as potent and highly specific agonist drug candidates for P2Y1 receptors. The difference in activity of the ATP analogs at P2Y receptors could be used as a tool to investigate structural differences between P2Y receptor subtypes.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2006

Opposite diastereoselective activation of P2Y1 and P2Y11 nucleotide receptors by adenosine 5′-O-(α-boranotriphosphate) analogues

Denise Ecke; Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Victoria Nahum; Bilha Fischer; Georg Reiser

We explored the stereoselective activation of the P2Y11 receptor, stably expressed and tagged with GFP, in 1321N1 cells, in comparison to its closest homologue, the P2Y1 receptor.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2005

Endocytosis mechanism of P2Y2 nucleotide receptor tagged with green fluorescent protein: clathrin and actin cytoskeleton dependence

Mohan E. Tulapurkar; Rainer Schäfer; Theodor Hanck; R. V. Flores; Gary A. Weisman; F. A. González; Georg Reiser

Abstract.Extracellular nucleotides exert a large number of physiological effects through activation of P2Y receptors. We expressed rat P2Y2 (rP2Y2) receptor, tagged with green fluorescent protein (GFP) in HEK-293 cells and visualized receptor translocation in live cells by confocal microscopy. Functional receptor expression was confirmed by determining [Ca2+]i responses. Agonist stimulation caused a time-dependent translocation of the receptor from the plasma membrane to the cytoplasm. Rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton was observed during agonist-mediated rP2Y2-GFP receptor internalization. Colocalization of the internalized receptor with early endosomes, clathrin and lysosomes was detected by confocal microscopy. The inhibition of receptor endocytosis by either high-density medium or chlorpromazine in the presence of UTP indicates that the receptor was internalized by the clathrin-mediated pathway. The caveolin- mediated pathway was not involved. Targeting of the receptor from endosomes to lysosomes seems to involve the proteasome pathway, because proteasomal inhibition increased receptor recycling back to the plasma membrane.

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Georg Reiser

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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