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Dive into the research topics where Murray Blackmore is active.

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Featured researches published by Murray Blackmore.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2010

High Content Screening of Cortical Neurons Identifies Novel Regulators of Axon Growth

Murray Blackmore; Darcie L. Moore; Robin P. Smith; Jeffrey L. Goldberg; John L. Bixby; Vance Lemmon

Neurons in the central nervous system lose their intrinsic capacity for axon regeneration as they mature, and it is widely hypothesized that changes in gene expression are responsible. Testing this hypothesis and identifying the relevant genes has been challenging because hundreds to thousands of genes are developmentally regulated in CNS neurons, but only a small subset are likely relevant to axon growth. Here we used automated high content analysis (HCA) methods to functionally test 743 plasmids encoding developmentally regulated genes in neurite outgrowth assays using postnatal cortical neurons. We identified both growth inhibitors (Ephexin, Aldolase A, Solute Carrier 2A3, and Chimerin), and growth enhancers (Doublecortin, Doublecortin-like, Kruppel-like Factor 6, and CaM-Kinase II gamma), some of which regulate established growth mechanisms like microtubule dynamics and small GTPase signaling. Interestingly, with only one exception the growth-suppressing genes were developmentally upregulated, and the growth-enhancing genes downregulated. These data provide important support for the hypothesis that developmental changes in gene expression control neurite outgrowth, and identify potential new gene targets to promote neurite outgrowth.


Experimental Neurology | 2013

Paxillin phosphorylation counteracts proteoglycan-mediated inhibition of axon regeneration

Tomoharu Kuboyama; Xueting Luo; Kevin K. Park; Murray Blackmore; Takuro Tojima; Chihiro Tohda; John L Bixby; Vance Lemmon; Hiroyuki Kamiguchi

In the adult central nervous system, the tips of axons severed by injury are commonly transformed into dystrophic endballs and cease migration upon encountering a rising concentration gradient of inhibitory proteoglycans. However, intracellular signaling networks mediating endball migration failure remain largely unknown. Here we show that manipulation of protein kinase A (PKA) or its downstream adhesion component paxillin can reactivate the locomotive machinery of endballs in vitro and facilitate axon growth after injury in vivo. In dissociated cultures of adult rat dorsal root ganglion neurons, PKA is activated in endballs formed on gradients of the inhibitory proteoglycan aggrecan, and pharmacological inhibition of PKA promotes axon growth on aggrecan gradients most likely through phosphorylation of paxillin at serine 301. Remarkably, pre-formed endballs on aggrecan gradients resume forward migration in response to PKA inhibition. This resumption of endball migration is associated with increased turnover of adhesive point contacts dependent upon paxillin phosphorylation. Furthermore, expression of phosphomimetic paxillin overcomes aggrecan-mediated growth arrest of endballs, and facilitates axon growth after optic nerve crush in vivo. These results point to the importance of adhesion dynamics in restoring endball migration and suggest a potential therapeutic target for axon tract repair.


Archive | 2015

α HIF-1to hypoxia or expressing a hybrid form of Gene expression profiles in human cardiac cells

Ralph A. Kelly; Mark A. Goldberg; Adam J. Belanger; Seng H. Cheng; Karen A. Vincent; LaShauna C. Evans; Hongshan Liu; Loren P. Thompson; B. Shields; Jae K. Lee; Jeffrey L. Goldberg; Vance P. Lemmon; John L Bixby; Murray Blackmore; Zimei Wang; Jessica K. Lerch; Dario Motti; Yi Ping Zhang


Archive | 2014

Figure 10: [Schematic of compound dilution plate].

Hassan Al-Ali; Murray Blackmore; John L Bixby; Vance P. Lemmon


Archive | 2014

Figure 9: [Plating schematic].

Hassan Al-Ali; Murray Blackmore; John L Bixby; Vance P. Lemmon


Archive | 2014

Figure 12: [Diagram of rat cortex (outlined in red) in rat brain section.].

Hassan Al-Ali; Murray Blackmore; John L Bixby; Vance P. Lemmon


Archive | 2014

Figure 3: [A, B,& C, 9 field...].

Hassan Al-Ali; Murray Blackmore; John L Bixby; Vance P. Lemmon


Archive | 2014

Figure 5: [Bar plot representing binned values...].

Hassan Al-Ali; Murray Blackmore; John L Bixby; Vance P. Lemmon


Archive | 2014

Figure 6: [Small and bright nuclei are...].

Hassan Al-Ali; Murray Blackmore; John L Bixby; Vance P. Lemmon


Archive | 2014

Figure 7: [Effect of DMSO concentration on...].

Hassan Al-Ali; Murray Blackmore; John L Bixby; Vance P. Lemmon

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John L Bixby

Miami Project to Cure Paralysis

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Hiroyuki Kamiguchi

RIKEN Brain Science Institute

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Takuro Tojima

RIKEN Brain Science Institute

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