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Dive into the research topics where Paul Carmillo is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul Carmillo.


Nature Medicine | 2003

Multiple actions of systemic artemin in experimental neuropathy

Luis R. Gardell; Ruizhong Wang; Chris Ehrenfels; Michael H. Ossipov; Anthony Rossomando; Stephan Miller; Carolyn Buckley; Amber K Cai; Albert Tse; BangJian Gong; Lee Walus; Paul Carmillo; Dane S. Worley; Carol Huang; Thomas Engber; Blake Pepinsky; Richard L. Cate; Todd W. Vanderah; Josephine Lai; Dinah W. Y. Sah; Frank Porreca

The clinical management of neuropathic pain is particularly challenging. Current therapies for neuropathic pain modulate nerve impulse propagation or synaptic transmission; these therapies are of limited benefit and have undesirable side effects. Injuries to peripheral nerves result in a host of pathophysiological changes associated with the sustained expression of abnormal pain. Here we show that systemic, intermittent administration of artemin produces dose- and time-related reversal of nerve injury–induced pain behavior, together with partial to complete normalization of multiple morphological and neurochemical features of the injury state. These effects of artemin were sustained for at least 28 days. Higher doses of artemin than those completely reversing experimental neuropathic pain did not elicit sensory or motor abnormalities. Our results indicate that the behavioral symptoms of neuropathic pain states can be treated successfully, and that partial to complete reversal of associated morphological and neurochemical changes is achievable with artemin.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (PML) Development Is Associated With Mutations in JC Virus Capsid Protein VP1 That Change Its Receptor Specificity

Leonid Gorelik; Carl Reid; Manuela Testa; Margot Brickelmaier; Simona Bossolasco; Annamaria Pazzi; Arabella Bestetti; Paul Carmillo; Ewa Wilson; Michele McAuliffe; Christopher J. Tonkin; John P. Carulli; Alexey Lugovskoy; Adriano Lazzarin; Shamil R. Sunyaev; Kenneth J. Simon; Paola Cinque

Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), a fatal demyelinating disease caused by JC virus (JCV) infection of oligodendrocytes, may develop in patients with immune disorders following reactivation of chronic benign infection. Mutations of JCV capsid viral protein 1 (VP1), the capsid protein involved in binding to sialic acid cell receptors, might favor PML onset. Cerebrospinal fluid sequences from 37/40 PML patients contained one of several JCV VP1 amino acid mutations, which were also present in paired plasma but not urine sequences despite the same viral genetic background. VP1-derived virus-like particles (VLPs) carrying these mutations lost hemagglutination ability, showed different ganglioside specificity, and abolished binding to different peripheral cell types compared with wild-type VLPs. However, mutants still bound brain-derived cells, and binding was not affected by sialic acid removal by neuraminidase. JCV VP1 substitutions are acquired intrapatient and might favor JCV brain invasion through abrogation of sialic acid binding with peripheral cells, while maintaining sialic acid-independent binding with brain cells.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2011

Sequencing and Analysis of JC Virus DNA From Natalizumab-Treated PML Patients

Carl Reid; Huo Li; Gargi Sur; Paul Carmillo; Steven E Bushnell; Rich Tizard; Michele McAuliffe; Christopher J. Tonkin; Kenneth J. Simon; Susan Goelz; Paola Cinque; Leonid Gorelik; John P. Carulli

Background. Progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) in natalizumab-treated MS patients is linked to JC virus (JCV) infection. JCV sequence variation and rearrangements influence viral pathogenicity and tropism. To better understand PML development, we analyzed viral DNA sequences in blood, CSF and/or urine of natalizumab-treated PML patients. Methods. Using biofluid samples from 17 natalizumab-treated PML patients, we sequenced multiple isolates of the JCV noncoding control region (NCCR), VP1 capsid coding region, and the entire 5 kb viral genome. Results. Analysis of JCV from multiple biofluids revealed that individuals were infected with a single genotype. Across our patient cohort, multiple PML-associated NCCR rearrangements and VP1 mutations were present in CSF and blood, but absent from urine-derived virus. NCCR rearrangements occurred in CSF of 100% of our cohort. VP1 mutations were observed in blood or CSF in 81% of patients. Sequencing of complete JCV genomes demonstrated that NCCR rearrangements could occur without VP1 mutations, but VP1 mutations were not observed without NCCR rearrangement. Conclusions. These data confirm that JCV in natalizumab-PML patients is similar to that observed in other PML patient groups, multiple genotypes are associated with PML, individual patients appear to be infected with a single genotype, and PML-associated mutations arise in patients during PML development.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2010

Processing of Anti-Müllerian Hormone Regulates Receptor Activation by a Mechanism Distinct from TGF-β

Nathalie di Clemente; Soazik P. Jamin; Alexey Lugovskoy; Paul Carmillo; Christian W. Ehrenfels; Jean-Yves Picard; Adrian Whitty; Nathalie Josso; R. Blake Pepinsky; Richard L. Cate

TGF-β family ligands are translated as prepropeptide precursors and are processed into mature C-terminal dimers that signal by assembling a serine/threonine kinase receptor complex containing type I and II components. Many TGF-β ligands are secreted in a latent form that cannot bind their receptor, due to the pro-region remaining associated with the mature ligand in a noncovalent complex after proteolytic cleavage. Here we show that anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), a TGF-β family ligand involved in reproductive development, must be cleaved to bind its type II receptor (AMHRII), but dissociation of the pro-region from the mature C-terminal dimer is not required for this initial interaction. We provide direct evidence for this interaction by showing that the noncovalent complex binds to a soluble form of AMHRII in an ELISA format and to AMHRII immobilized on Sepharose. Binding of the noncovalent complex to Sepharose-coupled AMHRII induces dissociation of the pro-region from the mature C-terminal dimer, whereas no dissociation occurs after binding to immobilized AMH antibodies. The pro-region cannot be detected after binding of the AMH noncovalent complex to AMHRII expressed on COS cells, indicating that pro-region dissociation may occur as a natural consequence of receptor engagement on cells. Moreover, the mature C-terminal dimer is more active than the noncovalent complex in stimulating Sma- and Mad-related protein activation, suggesting that pro-region dissociation contributes to the assembly of the active receptor complex. AMH thus exemplifies a new mechanism for receptor engagement in which interaction with the type II receptor promotes pro-region dissociation to generate mature ligand.


Brain Research | 2006

A glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF):tetanus toxin fragment C protein conjugate improves delivery of GDNF to spinal cord motor neurons in mice

Kristin E. Larsen; Susanna C. Benn; Ilknur Ay; Ru-Ju Chian; Samuel A. Celia; Mary P. Remington; Michelle Bejarano; Meiqin Liu; Joshua Ross; Paul Carmillo; Dinah W. Y. Sah; Kester Phillips; David Sulzer; R. Blake Pepinsky; Paul S. Fishman; Robert H. Brown; Jonathan W. Francis

Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) has shown robust neuroprotective and neuroreparative activities in various animal models of Parkinsons Disease or amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The successful use of GDNF as a therapeutic in humans, however, appears to have been hindered by its poor bioavailability to target neurons in the central nervous system (CNS). To improve delivery of exogenous GDNF protein to CNS motor neurons, we employed chemical conjugation techniques to link recombinant human GDNF to the neuronal binding fragment of tetanus toxin (tetanus toxin fragment C, or TTC). The predominant species present in the purified conjugate sample, GDNF:TTC, had a molecular weight of approximately 80 kDa as determined by non-reducing SDS-PAGE. Like GDNF, addition of GDNF:TTC to culture media of neuroblastoma cells expressing GFRalpha-1/c-RET produced a dose-dependent increase in cellular phospho-c-RET levels. Treatment of cultured midbrain dopaminergic neurons with either GDNF or the conjugate similarly promoted both DA neuron survival and neurite outgrowth. However, in contrast to mice treated with GDNF by intramuscular injection, mice receiving GDNF:TTC revealed intense GDNF immunostaining associated with spinal cord motor neurons in fixed tissue sections. That GDNF:TTC provided neuroprotection of axotomized motor neurons in neonatal rats further revealed that the conjugate retained its GDNF activity in vivo. These results indicate that TTC can serve as a non-viral vehicle to substantially improve the delivery of functionally active growth factors to motor neurons in the mammalian CNS.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Natural Mutations of the anti-Müllerian Hormone type II Receptor Found in Persistent Müllerian Duct Syndrome affect Ligand Binding, Signal Transduction and Cellular Transport

Corinne Belville; Jean-Didier Maréchal; Sophie Pennetier; Paul Carmillo; Laura Masgrau; Liza Messika-Zeitoun; Julie Galey; Gabrielle Machado; Dominique Treton; Jacques Gonzales; Jean-Yves Picard; Nathalie Josso; Richard L. Cate; Nathalie di Clemente

The anti-Müllerian hormone type II (AMHRII) receptor is the primary receptor for anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), a protein produced by Sertoli cells and responsible for the regression of the Müllerian duct in males. AMHRII is a membrane protein containing an N-terminal extracellular domain (ECD) that binds AMH, a transmembrane domain, and an intracellular domain with serine/threonine kinase activity. Mutations in the AMHRII gene lead to persistent Müllerian duct syndrome in human males. In this paper, we have investigated the effects of 10 AMHRII mutations, namely 4 mutations in the ECD and 6 in the intracellular domain. Molecular models of the extra- and intracellular domains are presented and provide insight into how the structure and function of eight of the mutant receptors, which are still expressed at the cell surface, are affected by their mutations. Interestingly, two soluble receptors truncated upstream of the transmembrane domain are not secreted, unless the transforming growth factor beta type II receptor signal sequence is substituted for the endogenous one. This shows that the AMHRII signal sequence is defective and suggests that AMHRII uses its transmembrane domain instead of its signal sequence to translocate to the endoplasmic reticulum, a characteristic of type III membrane proteins.


Developmental Genetics | 1999

Perturbation of RET signaling in the embryonic kidney.

Christian W. Ehrenfels; Paul Carmillo; Olivia Orozco; Richard L. Cate; Michele Sanicola

We have used a RET-Ig fusion protein to disrupt signaling in the rat embryonic kidney development pathway. Treatment of embryonic kidney organ cultures with RET-Ig results in a decrease in branching of the ureteric bud and a down regulation in expression of the Wnt-11, Wnt-4, and ld genes. These data suggest that Wnt-11, Wnt-4, and ld function downstream of RET signaling in normal development. Expression of BMP-7, shh, and ptc were uneffected by RET-Ig treatment, implying that these genes are regulated independently of ret. We have also performed immunohistochemistry with a GFR alpha-1 specific polyclonal antisera to localize GFR alpha-1 protein expression in the developing kidney.


FEBS Letters | 1998

Bovine type I interferon receptor protein BoIFNAR-1 has high-affinity and broad specificity for human type I interferons

Jerome A. Langer; Jianliang Yang; Paul Carmillo; Leona E. Ling

The type I interferon receptor (IFNAR 1 ) is composed of two transmembrane polypeptides, IFNAR‐1 and IFNAR‐2. Human IFNAR‐1 has low intrinsic affinity for IFNs, but enhances the affinity for IFNs of the complex over that of HuIFNAR‐2 alone, and modulates the ligand specificity. Bovine cells respond to human alpha interferons. The bovine homologue of HuIFNAR‐1, BoIFNAR‐1, when expressed in heterologous cells, confers high‐affinity binding and broad specificity for human type I IFNs. A soluble fusion protein of the ectodomain of BoIFNAR‐1 and an immunoglobulin Fc domain was produced. In contrast to HuIFNAR‐1, this protein competes strongly with human cells for IFN binding, and directly binds a wide spectrum of human type I IFNs, including diverse IFN‐αs, IFN‐β and IFN‐ω, with moderate to high affinity. This accounts for much of the specificity for human IFNs possessed by bovine cells, with several exceptions. The BoIFNAR‐1 ectodomain, in contrast to HuIFNAR‐1, may be useful for studies of binary and ternary complexes with IFNs and IFNAR‐2, and for purification, assay and biological neutralization protocols.


PLOS ONE | 2016

JC Polyomavirus Abundance and Distribution in Progressive Multifocal Leukoencephalopathy (PML) Brain Tissue Implicates Myelin Sheath in Intracerebral Dissemination of Infection

Keith A. Wharton; Catherine Quigley; Marian Themeles; Robert Dunstan; Kathryn Doyle; Ellen Cahir-McFarland; Jing Wei; Alex Buko; Carl Reid; Chao Sun; Paul Carmillo; Gargi Sur; John P. Carulli; Keith G. Mansfield; Susan V. Westmoreland; Susan M. Staugaitis; Robert J. Fox; Werner Meier; Susan Goelz

Over half of adults are seropositive for JC polyomavirus (JCV), but rare individuals develop progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), a demyelinating JCV infection of the central nervous system. Previously, PML was primarily seen in immunosuppressed patients with AIDS or certain cancers, but it has recently emerged as a drug safety issue through its association with diverse immunomodulatory therapies. To better understand the relationship between the JCV life cycle and PML pathology, we studied autopsy brain tissue from a 70-year-old psoriasis patient on the integrin alpha-L inhibitor efalizumab following a ~2 month clinical course of PML. Sequence analysis of lesional brain tissue identified PML-associated viral mutations in regulatory (non-coding control region) DNA, capsid protein VP1, and the regulatory agnoprotein, as well as 9 novel mutations in capsid protein VP2, indicating rampant viral evolution. Nine samples, including three gross PML lesions and normal-appearing adjacent tissues, were characterized by histopathology and subject to quantitative genomic, proteomic, and molecular localization analyses. We observed a striking correlation between the spatial extent of demyelination, axonal destruction, and dispersion of JCV along white matter myelin sheath. Our observations in this case, as well as in a case of PML-like disease in an immunocompromised rhesus macaque, suggest that long-range spread of polyomavirus and axonal destruction in PML might involve extracellular association between virus and the white matter myelin sheath.


Biochemistry | 2005

Glial Cell Line-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (GDNF) Receptor α-1 (GFRα1) Is Highly Selective for GDNF versus Artemin†

Paul Carmillo; Lone Dagø; Eric S. Day; Dane S. Worley; Anthony Rossomando; Lee Walus; Olivia Orozco; Carolyn Buckley; Stephan Miller; Albert Tse; Richard L. Cate; Carl Rosenblad; Dinah W. Y. Sah; Mette Grønborg; Adrian Whitty

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Richard L. Cate

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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