Nicolas Prevost
University of Pennsylvania
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Featured researches published by Nicolas Prevost.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Nicolas Prevost; Donna S. Woulfe; Takako Tanaka; Lawrence F. Brass
Eph kinases are receptor tyrosine kinases whose ligands, the ephrins, are also expressed on the surface of cells. Interactions between Eph kinases and ephrins on adjacent cells play a central role in neuronal patterning and vasculogenesis. Here we examine the expression of ephrins and Eph kinases on human blood platelets and explore their role in the formation of the hemostatic plug. The results show that human platelets express EphA4 and EphB1, and the ligand, ephrinB1. Forced clustering of EphA4 or ephrinB1 led to cytoskeletal reorganization, adhesion to fibrinogen, and α-granule secretion. Clustering of ephrinB1 also caused activation of the Ras family member, Rap1B. In platelets that had been activated by ADP and allowed to aggregate, EphA4 formed complexes with two tyrosine kinases, Fyn and Lyn, and the cell adhesion molecule, L1. Blockade of Eph/ephrin interactions prevented the formation of these complexes and caused platelet aggregation at low ADP concentrations to become more readily reversible. We propose that when sustained contacts between platelets have occurred in response to agonists such as collagen, ADP, and thrombin, the binding of ephrins to Eph kinases on adjacent platelets provides a mechanism to perpetuate signaling and promote stable platelet aggregation.
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2000
Marina Molino; Marilyn J. Woolkalis; Nicolas Prevost; Domenico Praticò; Elliot S. Barnathan; Giulia Taraboletti; Beth Haggarty; Joseph Hesselgesser; Richard Horuk; James A. Hoxie; Lawrence F. Brass
It has been shown that deletion of the chemokine receptor, CXCR4, causes disordered angiogenesis in mouse models. In the present studies, we examined the distribution and trafficking of CXCR4 in human endothelial cells, tested their responses to the CXCR4 ligand, SDF-1, and asked whether endothelial cell CXCR4 can serve as a cell surface receptor for the binding of viruses. The results show that CXCR4 is present on endothelial cells from coronary arteries, iliac arteries and umbilical veins (HUVEC), but expression was heterogeneous, with some cells expressing CXCR4 on their surface, while others did not. Addition of SDF-1 caused a rapid decrease in CXCR4 surface expression. It also caused CXCR4-mediated activation of MAPK, release of PGI(2), endothelial migration, and the formation of capillary-like structures by endothelial cells in culture. Co-culture of HUVEC with lymphoid cells that were chronically infected with a CD4-independent/CXCR4-tropic variant of HIV-2 resulted in the formation of multinucleated syncytia. Formation of the syncytia was inhibited by each of several different CXCR4 antibodies. Thus, our findings indicate: (1) that CXCR4 is widely expressed on human endothelial cells; (2) the CXCR4 ligand, SDF-1, can evoke a wide variety of responses from human endothelial cells; and (3) CXCR4 on endothelial cells can serve as a receptor for isolates of HIV that can utilize chemokine receptors in the absence of CD4.
Journal of Thrombosis and Haemostasis | 2003
Nicolas Prevost; Donna S. Woulfe; Massimiliano Tognolini; Lawrence F. Brass
Summary. Signaling events downstream from collagen receptors and G protein‐coupled receptors are responsible for the initiation and extension of platelet plug formation. This creates the platelet plug and hopefully results in the cessation of bleeding. It is not, however, all that is required for hemostasis, and growing evidence is emerging that the perpetuation of a stable hemostatic plug requires additional intracellular signaling. At least part of this process is made possible by the persistent close contacts between platelets that can only occur after the onset of aggregation. This review discusses several examples of such signaling mechanisms that help to perpetuate the platelet plug in a contact‐dependent manner, including outside‐in signaling through integrins, signaling though Eph kinases and ephrins, and the role of CD40L.
Blood | 2008
Nicolas Prevost; John V. Mitsios; Hisashi Kato; John E. Burke; Edward A. Dennis; Takao Shimizu; Sanford J. Shattil
Group IVA cytosolic phospholipase A(2) (cPLA(2)alpha) catalyzes release of arachidonic acid from glycerophospholipids, leading to thromboxane A(2) (TxA(2)) production. Some platelet agonists stimulate cPLA(2)alpha, but others require fibrinogen binding to alphaIIbbeta3 to elicit TxA(2). Therefore, relationships between cPLA(2)alpha and alphaIIbbeta3 were examined. cPLA(2)alpha and a cPLA(2)alpha binding partner, vimentin, coimmunoprecipitated with alphaIIbbeta3 from platelets, independent of fibrinogen binding. Studies with purified proteins and with recombinant proteins expressed in CHO cells determined that the interaction between cPLA(2)alpha and alphaIIbbeta3 was indirect and was dependent on the alphaIIb and beta3 cytoplasmic tails. Fibrinogen binding to alphaIIbbeta3 caused an increase in integrin-associated cPLA(2)alpha activity in normal platelets, but not in cPLA(2)alpha-deficient mouse platelets or in human platelets treated with pyrrophenone, a cPLA(2)alpha inhibitor. cPLA(2)alpha activation downstream of alphaIIbbeta3 had functional consequences for platelets in that it was required for fibrinogen-dependent recruitment of activated protein kinase Cbeta to the alphaIIbbeta3 complex and for platelet spreading. Thus, cPLA(2)alpha and alphaIIbbeta3 interact to reinforce each others functions during alphaIIbbeta3 signaling. This provides a plausible explanation for the role of alphaIIbbeta3 in TxA(2) formation and in the defective hemostatic function of mouse or human platelets deficient in cPLA(2)alpha.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2000
Peter J. O'Brien; Nicolas Prevost; Marina Molino; M. Katherine Hollinger; Marilyn J. Woolkalis; Donna S. Woulfe; Lawrence F. Brass
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2000
Jing Yang; Jie Wu; M. Anna Kowalska; Ashutosh Dalvi; Nicolas Prevost; Peter J. O'Brien; David R. Manning; Mortimer Poncz; Irwin Lucki; Julie A. Blendy; Lawrence F. Brass
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005
Nicolas Prevost; Donna S. Woulfe; Hong Jiang; Timothy J. Stalker; Patrizia Marchese; Zaverio M. Ruggeri; Lawrence F. Brass
Blood | 2003
Nicolas Prevost; Donna S. Woulfe; Massimiliano Tognolini; Takako Tanaka; Wenying Jian; Ryan R. Fortna; Hong Jiang; Lawrence F. Brass
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2004
Donna S. Woulfe; Jing Yang; Nicolas Prevost; Peter J. O’Brien; Ryan R. Fortna; Massimiliano Tognolini; Hong Jiang; Jie Wu; Lawrence F. Brass
Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis | 2004
Lawrence F. Brass; Timothy J. Stalker; Li Zhu; Boxun Lu; Donna S. Woulfe; Nicolas Prevost