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Dive into the research topics where Patricia Webb is active.

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Featured researches published by Patricia Webb.


BMC Cell Biology | 2013

Claudins play a role in normal and tumor cell motility

Patricia Webb; Monique A. Spillman; Heidi K Baumgartner

BackgroundClaudins are key integral proteins of the tight junction. Although they play an essential role in controlling paracellular diffusion in epithelia, increasing evidence supports a role for these proteins in non-barrier forming activities. To elucidate a potential function for claudins outside of their traditional role in tight junctions, subcellular localization of claudin-4 was determined in normal mammary epithelial cells as well as breast and ovarian cancer cell lines and the effects of a claudin mimic peptide on cell motility were determined.ResultsImmunofluorescence revealed that claudin-4 was localized along cellular projections. Using a fluorescent peptide that mimics a conserved sequence in the second extracellular loop of a set of claudin subtypes, that includes claudin-4, exposure of this loop to the extracellular environment was confirmed in non-polarized cells. This peptide inhibited cell motility when normal mammary epithelial cells as well as breast and ovarian tumor cells were subjected to a wound healing assay. Knockdown of claudin-4 also inhibited cell motility and the mimic peptide had no effect on motility in the claudin-4 knockdown cells. This effect on motility was seen when cells were grown on collagen, but not when cells were grown on non-physiological cell adhesive or fibronectin.ConclusionThe second extracellular loop of claudins is able to interact with the extracellular environment to promote normal and tumor cell motility when it is not associated with tight junction structures.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2011

Prolactin-mediated regulation of lipid biosynthesis genes in vivo in the lactating mammary epithelial cell

Michael C. Rudolph; Tanya D. Russell; Patricia Webb; Margaret C. Neville; Steven M. Anderson

Prolactin (PRL) is known to play an essential role in mammary alveolar proliferation in the pregnant mouse, but its role in lactation has been more difficult to define. Genetic manipulations that alter expression of the PRL receptor and its downstream signaling molecules resulted in developmental defects that may directly or indirectly impact secretory activation and lactation. To examine the in vivo role of PRL specifically in lactation, bromocriptine (BrCr) was administered every 8 h to lactating mice on the second day postpartum, resulting in an ~95% decrease in serum PRL levels. Although morphological changes in secretory alveoli were slight, by 8 h of BrCr, pup growth was inhibited significantly. Phosphorylated STAT5 fell to undetectable levels within 4 h. Decreased milk protein gene expression, β-casein, and α-lactalbumin, was observed after 8 h of treatment. To assess mammary-specific effects on lipid synthesis genes, we isolated mammary epithelial cells (MECs) depleted of mammary adipocytes. Expression of genes involved in glucose uptake, glycolysis, pentose phosphate shunt, de novo synthesis of fatty acids, and biosynthesis of triacylglycerides was decreased up to 19-fold in MECs by just 8 h of BrCr treatment. Glands from BrCr-treated mice showed a twofold reduction in intracellular cytoplasmic lipid droplets and a reduction in cytosolic β-casein. These data demonstrate that PRL signaling regulates MEC-specific lipogenic gene expression and that PRL signals coordinate the milk synthesis and mammary epithelial cell survival during lactation in the mouse.


BMC Cell Biology | 2009

Disruption of occludin function in polarized epithelial cells activates the extrinsic pathway of apoptosis leading to cell extrusion without loss of transepithelial resistance

Neal Beeman; Heidi K. Baumgartner; Patricia Webb; Jerome Schaack; Margaret C. Neville

BackgroundOccludin is a tetraspanin protein normally localized to tight junctions. The protein interacts with a variety of pathogens including viruses and bacteria, an interaction that sometimes leads to its extrajunctional localization.ResultsHere we report that treatment of mammary epithelial monolayers with a circularized peptide containing a four amino acid sequence found in the second extracellular loop of occludin, LHYH, leads to the appearance of extrajunctional occludin and activation of the extrinsic apoptotic pathway. At early times after peptide treatment endogenous occludin and the LYHY peptide were co-localized in extrajunctional patches, which were also shown to contain components of the death inducing signaling complex (DISC), caspases 8 and 3, the death receptor FAS and the adaptor molecule FADD. After this treatment occludin could be immunoprecipitated with FADD, confirming its interaction with the DISC. Extrusion after LYHY treatment was accomplished with no loss of epithelial resistance.ConclusionThese observations provide strong evidence that, following disruption, occludin forms a complex with the extrinsic death receptor leading to extrusion of apoptotic cells from the epithelial monolayer. They suggest that occludin has a protective as well as a barrier forming role in epithelia; pathogenic agents which utilize this protein as an entry point into the cell might set off an apoptotic reaction allowing extrusion of the infected cell before the pathogen can gain entry to the interstitial space.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2013

The insulin receptor plays an important role in secretory differentiation in the mammary gland

Margaret C. Neville; Patricia Webb; Palaniappan Ramanathan; Meridee P. Mannino; Chiara Pecorini; Jenifer Monks; Steven M. Anderson; Paul S. MacLean

Insulin is known to be an important regulator of milk secretion in the lactating mammary gland. Here we examine the role of insulin signaling in mammary development in pregnancy using a mouse with a floxed insulin receptor (IR) crossed with a mouse expressing Cre specifically in the mammary gland. In the mammary glands of these IR(fl/fl) Cre(+) mice, expression of IR is significantly diminished throughout development. Glands from these mice had 50% fewer alveoli at midpregnancy; casein and lipid droplets were diminished by 60 and 75%, respectively, indicating a role for IR both in alveolar development and differentiation. In an acinar preparation from mammary epithelial cells (MEC) isolated from pregnant mice, insulin stimulated lumen formation, mammary cell size, acinar size, acinar casein content, and the formation of lipid droplets with a Km of ∼1.7 nM. IGF-I and IGF-II had no effect at concentrations below 50 nM, and a function blocking antibody to the IGF type 1 receptor did not alter the response to insulin. We conclude that insulin interacting with IR is essential for mammary differentiation during murine pregnancy. Using array analysis, we then examined the expression of genes up- or downregulated >1.5-fold in the IR(fl/fl) Cre(+) MECs, finding significant downregulation of differentiation specific genes and upregulation of cell cycle and extracellular matrix genes. We conclude that insulin fosters differentiation and may inhibit cell proliferation in the mammary gland of the midpregnant mouse.


Development | 2016

Constitutive expression of microRNA-150 in mammary epithelium suppresses secretory activation and impairs de novo lipogenesis

Richard Heinz; Michael C. Rudolph; Palani Ramanathan; Nicole S. Spoelstra; Kiel T. Butterfield; Patricia Webb; Beatrice Babbs; Hongwei Gao; Shang Chen; Michael A. Gordon; Steve Anderson; Margaret C. Neville; Haihua Gu; Jennifer K. Richer

Profiling of RNA from mouse mammary epithelial cells (MECs) isolated on pregnancy day (P)14 and lactation day (L)2 revealed that the majority of differentially expressed microRNA declined precipitously between late pregnancy and lactation. The decline in miR-150, which exhibited the greatest fold-decrease, was verified quantitatively and qualitatively. To test the hypothesis that the decline in miR-150 is crucial for lactation, MEC-specific constitutive miR-150 was achieved by crossing ROSA26-lox-STOP-lox-miR-150 mice with WAP-driven Cre recombinase mice. Both biological and foster pups nursed by bitransgenic dams exhibited a dramatic decrease in survival compared with offspring nursed by littermate control dams. Protein products of predicted miR-150 targets Fasn, Olah, Acaca, and Stat5B were significantly suppressed in MECs of bitransgenic mice with constitutive miR-150 expression as compared with control mice at L2. Lipid profiling revealed a significant reduction in fatty acids synthesized by the de novo pathway in L2 MECs of bitransgenic versus control mice. Collectively, these data support the hypothesis that a synchronized decrease in miRNAs, such as miR-150, at late pregnancy serves to allow translation of targets crucial for lactation. Summary: A decline in miR-150 is critical for lactation, as pups nursed by dams in which this decline is prevented exhibit a dramatic decrease in survival compared with littermate controls.


Somatic Cell and Molecular Genetics | 1998

Genome Exposure and Regulation in Mammalian Cells

Theodore T. Puck; Patricia Webb; Robert Johnson

A method of measurement of exposed DNA (i.e. hypersensitive to DNase I hydrolysis) as opposed to sequestered (hydrolysis resistant) DNA in isolated nuclei of mammalian cells is described. While cell cultures exhibit some differences in behavior from day to day, the general pattern of exposed and sequestered DNA is satisfactorily reproducible and agrees with results previously obtained by other methods. The general pattern of DNA hydrolysis exhibited by all cells tested consists of a curve which at first rises sharply with increasing DNase I, and then becomes almost horizontal, indicating that roughly about half of the nuclear DNA is highly sequestered. In 4 cases where transformed cells (Raszip6, CHO, HL60 and PC12) were compared, each with its more normal homolog (3T3, and the reverse transformed versions of CHO, HL60 and PC12, achieved by dibutyryl cyclic AMP [DBcAMP], retinoic acid, and nerve growth factor [NGF] respectively), the transformed form displayed less genome exposure than the nontransformed form at every DNase I dose tested. When Ca++was excluded from the hydrolysis medium in both the Raszip6–3T3 and the CHO-DBcAMP systems, the normal cell forms lost their increased exposure reverting to that of the transformed forms. Therefore Ca++appears necessary for maintenance of the DNA in the more highly exposed state characteristic of the nontransformed phenotype. LiCl increases the DNA exposure of all transformed cells tested. Dextran sulfate and heparin each can increase the DNA exposure of several different cancers. Colcemid prevents the increase of exposure of CHO by DBcAMP but it must be administered before or simultaneously with the latter compound. Measurements on mouse biopsies reveal large differences in exposure in different normal tissues. Thus, the exposure from adult liver cells was greater than that of adult brain, but both fetal liver and fetal brain had significantly greater exposure than their adult counterparts. Exposure in normal human fibroblasts as revealed by in situ nick translation reveals a nuclear distribution pattern around the periphery, around the nucleoli and in punctate positions in the nuclear interior in parts of both S and G1 phases of the cell cycle. The same exposure pattern is duplicated by the pattern of DNA synthesis in S cells. It would appear that these nuclear regions represent positions of special activity. The previously proposed theory of genome regulation in mammalian cells is supported by these findings. The theory proposes that: a) gene activity requires exposure of the given locus followed by action of transcription factors on the exposed genes; b) the fiber system of the cell (cytoskeleton, nuclear fibers, and extracellular fibers) are required for normal exposure; c) active sites for gene expression and replication consist of the nuclear periphery where differentiation genes particularly are exposed; the nucleoli where at least some housekeeping genes are exposed; and possibly also punctate regions in the interior; d) noncoding sequences play a critical role in genome regulation, possibly including the transport of loci to be activated to appropriate exposure transcriptional and replicating locations. Cancer cells have lost specific differentiation gene activities, at least sometimes because of mutation of appropriate exposure genes; at least some protooncogenes and tumor suppressor genes are responsible for exposure and transport of specific differentiation gene loci to their appropriate exposure sites in the nucleus and for inducing exposure.


Diabetes | 2017

Low Neonatal Plasma N-6/N-3 Pufa Ratios Regulate Offspring Adipogenic Potential and Condition Adult Obesity Resistance

Michael C. Rudolph; Matthew R. Jackman; David M. Presby; Julie A. Houck; Patricia Webb; Ginger C. Johnson; Taylor K. Soderborg; Becky A. de la Houssaye; Ivana V. Yang; Jacob E. Friedman; Paul S. MacLean

Adipose tissue expansion progresses rapidly during postnatal life, influenced by both prenatal maternal factors and postnatal developmental cues. The ratio of omega-6 (n-6) relative to n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) is believed to regulate perinatal adipogenesis, but the cellular mechanisms and long-term effects are not well understood. We lowered the fetal and postnatal n-6/n-3 PUFA ratio exposure in wild-type offspring under standard maternal dietary fat amounts to test the effects of low n-6/n-3 ratios on offspring adipogenesis and adipogenic potential. Relative to wild-type pups receiving high perinatal n-6/n-3 ratios, subcutaneous adipose tissue in 14-day-old wild-type pups receiving low n-6/n-3 ratios had more adipocytes that were smaller in size; decreased Pparγ2, Fabp4, and Plin1; several lipid metabolism mRNAs; coincident hypermethylation of the PPARγ2 proximal promoter; and elevated circulating adiponectin. As adults, offspring that received low perinatal n-6/n-3 ratios were diet-induced obesity (DIO) resistant and had a lower positive energy balance and energy intake, greater lipid fuel preference and non–resting energy expenditure, one-half the body fat, and better glucose clearance. Together, the findings support a model in which low early-life n-6/n-3 ratios remodel adipose morphology to increase circulating adiponectin, resulting in a persistent adult phenotype with improved metabolic flexibility that prevents DIO.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Mutagenesis and repair by low doses of α radiation in mammalian cells

Theodore T. Puck; Robert E. Johnson; Patricia Webb; Helen Cui; Joseph G. Valdez; Harry A. Crissman

Low doses of α radiation in basements have been causally implicated in lung cancer. Previous studies have concentrated on high dose effects, for which no significant repair was found. In the present study, the methodology for measuring mutation by quantitating mitotic breaks and gaps was found to be applicable to G2-phase Chinese hamster ovary cells irradiated with 10–50 cGy of α radiation. The mutation yield in such cells closely resembles that of γ irradiation. Caffeine, which inhibits repair, produces the same straight line increase of α and γ mutation yields plotted against the dose. In the absence of caffeine, the repair of α radiation lesions is almost twice as great as for γ radiation. Mitotic index changes substantiate these interpretations. It is proposed that the higher ion density associated with α radiation may result in fewer lesions being missed by the repair processes. The quantitation of chromosomal lesions for G2 cells exposed to low doses of α radiation, γ radiation, or chemical mutagens in the presence and absence of caffeine is a rapid and reproducible methodology. Protection from mutational disease in a fashion similar to the use of sanitation for infectious disease appears practical.


Journal of Mammary Gland Biology and Neoplasia | 2017

Developmental Expression of Claudins in the Mammary Gland.

Heidi K. Baumgartner; Michael C. Rudolph; Palaniappian Ramanathan; Valerie Burns; Patricia Webb; Benjamin G. Bitler; Torsten Stein; Ken Kobayashi; Margaret C. Neville

Claudins are a large family of membrane proteins whose classic function is to regulate the permeability of tight junctions in epithelia. They are tetraspanins, with four alpha-helices crossing the membrane, two extracellular loops, a short cytoplasmic N-terminus and a longer and more variable C-terminus. The extracellular ends of the helices are known to undergo side-to-side (cis) interactions that allow the formation of claudin polymers in the plane of the membrane. The extracellular loops also engage in head-to-head (trans) interactions thought to mediate the formation of tight junctions. However, claudins are also present in intracellular structures, thought to be vesicles, with less well-characterized functions. Here, we briefly review our current understanding of claudin structure and function followed by an examination of changes in claudin mRNA and protein expression and localization through mammary gland development. Claudins-1, 3, 4, 7, and 8 are the five most prominent members of the claudin family in the mouse mammary gland, with varied abundance and intracellular localization during the different stages of post-pubertal development. Claudin-1 is clearly localized to tight junctions in mammary ducts in non-pregnant non-lactating animals. Cytoplasmic puncta that stain for claudin-7 are present throughout development. During pregnancy claudin-3 is localized both to the tight junction and basolaterally while claudin-4 is found only in sparse puncta. In the lactating mouse both claudin-3 and claudin-8 are localized at the tight junction where they may be important in forming the paracellular barrier. At involution and under challenge by lipopolysaccharide claudins −1, −3, and −4 are significantly upregulated. Claudin-3 is still colocalized with tight junction molecules but is also distributed through the cytoplasm as is claudin-4. These largely descriptive data provide the essential framework for future mechanistic studies of the function and regulation of mammary epithelial cell claudins.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2017

Abstract MIP-045: CLAUDIN–4 PROMOTES ATTACHMENT OF OVARIAN TUMOR CELLS TO THE EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX AND FACILITATES SURVIVAL AND MIGRATION

Douglas A. Hicks; Carly E. Galimanis; Patricia Webb; Kian Behbakht; Heidi K. Baumgartner

Dissemination of chemoresistant tumor cells throughout the peritoneal cavity is a major contributing factor to poor patient outcomes in ovarian cancer. Although it is known that attachment of tumor cells to the peritoneal mesothelium is a key step in the metastatic process of ovarian cancer, the underlying molecular mechanisms driving this important stage of tumor progression are not well understood. The objective of this study was to investigate the potential role for the transmembrane protein claudin–4 in ovarian tumor cell attachment, cell survival and migration. Adhesion, apoptosis (cleaved caspase–3) and scratch assays were performed with ovarian tumor cells (OVCAR3, PEO4) cultured on MeT5A mesothelial cell monolayers, different proteins found in the extracellular matrix of the peritoneal mesothelium (type I collagen, type IV collagen, fibronectin, and laminin) or a non–physiological cell adhesive (Cell–Tak). Number of cells attached within one hour, percent cells positive for apoptosis at 24 hours post treatment with apoptotic stimuli, and percent closure of the wound created by a scratch at 8 hours was measured in response to claudin–4 disruption (DFYNP mimic peptide) or loss of claudin–4 expression (shRNA–mediated gene silencing). Immunofluorescence of phosphorylated focal adhesion kinase (pFAK) was also performed to examine formation of focal adhesions in response to claudin–4 disruption or loss of expression. Results from these studies showed that ovarian tumor cells preferentially attach to type I collagen and that disruption of claudin–4 inhibited this attachment. Attachment to type I collagen made tumor cells more resistant to apoptosis and disruption of claudin–4 rescued apoptotic response. Additionally, movement of tumor cells on type I collagen–coated slides was inhibited with treatment of the cells with the claudin–4 disrupting peptide or with loss of claudin–4 expression. This inhibition was not seen with other matrix proteins tested. The size of pFAK–containing focal adhesions was significantly smaller and fewer adhesions were present in ovarian tumor cells, cultured on type I collagen, treated with the claudin–4 disrupting peptide or with loss of claudin–4 expression compared to cells that express high levels of claudin–4. In conclusion, we have demonstrated a novel role for claudin–4 in ovarian tumor cell attachment to the extracellular matrix through interactions with type I collagen and formation of focal adhesions for tumor cell survival and migration. These observations have important therapeutic implications for inhibiting the survival and deadly spread of ovarian tumors through blocking the biological activity of claudin–4. Citation Format: Douglas A. Hicks, Carly E. Galimanis, Patricia G. Webb, Kian Behbakht, Heidi. K. Baumgartner. CLAUDIN–4 PROMOTES ATTACHMENT OF OVARIAN TUMOR CELLS TO THE EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX AND FACILITATES SURVIVAL AND MIGRATION [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the 11th Biennial Ovarian Cancer Research Symposium; Sep 12-13, 2016; Seattle, WA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Clin Cancer Res 2017;23(11 Suppl):Abstract nr MIP-045.

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Margaret C. Neville

University of Colorado Boulder

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Heidi K. Baumgartner

University of Colorado Denver

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Michael C. Rudolph

University of Colorado Boulder

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Douglas A. Hicks

University of Colorado Denver

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Kian Behbakht

University of Colorado Boulder

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Steven M. Anderson

University of Colorado Denver

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Carly E. Galimanis

University of Colorado Denver

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Monique A. Spillman

University of Colorado Denver

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Paul S. MacLean

University of Colorado Denver

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