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Featured researches published by Raana P Naidu.


Journal of Immunology | 2000

Atopic Dermatitis Is Associated with a Functional Mutation in the Promoter of the C-C Chemokine RANTES

Renate Nickel; Vincenzo Casolaro; Ulrich Wahn; Kirsten Beyer; Kathleen C. Barnes; Beverly Plunkett; Linda R. Freidhoff; Claudia Sengler; James R. Plitt; Robert P. Schleimer; Luis Caraballo; Raana P Naidu; Paul N. Levett; Terri H. Beaty; Shau Ku Huang

Up-regulation of C-C chemokine expression characterizes allergic inflammation and atopic diseases. A functional mutation in the proximal promoter of the RANTES gene has been identified, which results in a new consensus binding site for the GATA transcription factor family. A higher frequency of this allele was observed in individuals of African descent compared with Caucasian subjects (p < 0.00001). The mutant allele was associated with atopic dermatitis in children of the German Multicenter Allergy Study (MAS-90; p < 0.037), but not with asthma. Transient transfections of the human mast cell line HMC-1 and the T cell line Jurkat with reporter vectors driven by either the mutant or wild-type RANTES promoter showed an up to 8-fold higher constitutive transcriptional activity of the mutant promoter. This is the first report to our knowledge of a functional mutation in a chemokine gene promoter. Our findings suggest that the mutation contributes to the development of atopic dermatitis. Its potential role in other inflammatory and infectious disorders, particularly among individuals of African ancestry, remains to be determined.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 1999

Dense mapping of chromosome 12q13.12-q23.3 and linkage to asthma and atopy

Kathleen C. Barnes; Linda R. Freidhoff; Renate Nickel; Yen Feng Chiu; Suh Hang Juo; Nobuyuki Hizawa; Raana P Naidu; Eva Ehrlich; David L. Duffy; Carsten Schou; Paul N. Levett; David G. Marsh; Terri H. Beaty

BACKGROUND Asthma is a complex disease characterized by a high prevalence of allergic diathesis and the almost ubiquitous presence of upper airway disease (eg, rhinitis). Previously, we observed linkage of asthma among Afro-Caribbean families to markers in chromosome 12q, which contains a number of genes encoding for products closely related to allergic airway inflammation and disease. OBJECTIVE To identify susceptibility loci in chromosome 12q contributing to the genetics of upper and lower airway diseases and to expand the region to include genes encoding IFN-gamma (IFNG ) and one of the signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT6 ), we conducted further linkage studies among 33 multiplex families. METHODS We characterized 528 subjects from Barbados for asthma; 82% were characterized for allergic rhinitis. Two-point and multipoint linkage analysis of 22 microsatellite markers (spanning approximately 79 centimorgan) was performed. RESULTS Affected sib-pair analysis revealed significant evidence for linkage to asthma over approximately 30 cM (P <.05 to.002), with the best evidence for linkage at a CA repeat polymorphism in the first intron of IFNG in 12q21.1 (P =.002). Evidence of linkage to allergic rhinitis was observed in the same region (D12S313, P = 0.006, and IFNGCA, P =.01, respectively). Multipoint linkage analysis also provided evidence for linkage to asthma, with the best nonparametric linkage analysis score at D12S326 (nonparametric linkage score = 3.8, P =.0008). Modest evidence for linkage to allergic rhinitis was observed next to D12S326 at D12S1052 (P =.036). CONCLUSIONS Our findings suggest that (1) one or more loci in the chromosome 12q13. 12-q23.3 region are contributing to the expression of the clinical phenotype asthma and the strongest evidence for linkage is in a region near the gene encoding IFNG and (2) a susceptibility locus for both asthma and allergic rhinitis maps to this region.


International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2003

Correlates of Sensitization to Blomia tropicalis and Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus in Asthma in Barbados

Teri A. Manolio; Kathleen C. Barnes; Raana P Naidu; Paul N. Levett; Terri H. Beaty; Alexander F. Wilson

Background: Sensitivity to the mite Blomia tropicalis is related to asthma in tropical climates, but correlates of sensitivity to B. tropicalis and its relationship to Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus sensitivity have not been widely examined in families with asthma. The main objective of this study was to determine prevalence and correlates of sensitivity to these mites in families with asthma and characteristics of persons sensitized to both. Methods: Antibodies to major antigens (Blo t 5 and Der p 1) of these mites were measured by immunochemiluminescent assay in 481 members of 29 families from Barbados ascertained through two asthmatic siblings. Results: Blo t 5 sensitivity was present in 261 subjects (46%) and was associated with younger age, higher total serum IgE level, and more than a three-fold increased prevalence of asthma (42 vs. 13%). Der p 1 sensitivity was less common (27%) and showed similar associations with age, IgE, and asthma. Of the 261 subjects sensitized to Blo t 5, 116 were also sensitized to Der p 1; they were younger, had higher total and Blo t 5 specific IgE levels, and had more than twice the asthma prevalence as those sensitized to Blo t 5 alone (59 vs. 29%). Der p 1 sensitivity without Blo t 5 sensitivity was uncommon; 90% of those sensitized to Der p 1 were also sensitized to Blo t 5. Geometric mean total IgE levels were lowest in the 207 participants without any mite sensitization (102 U/ml), intermediate in 158 sensitized to either Blo t 5 or Der p 1 (609 U/ml), and highest in 116 sensitized to both (1,869 U/ml). Conclusions: Blo t 5 is the predominant sensitizing mite allergen in these Barbadian families with correlates similar to Der p 1. Concomitant sensitization to Der p 1 appears to identify a more reactive subgroup of individuals at a higher risk of asthma.


Aerobiologia | 2005

Interhemispheric Transport of Viable Fungi and Bacteria from Africa to the Caribbean with Soil Dust

Joseph M. Prospero; Edmund Blades; George E. Mathison; Raana P Naidu


Genomics | 1996

Linkage of Asthma and Total Serum IgE Concentration to Markers on Chromosome 12q: Evidence from Afro-Caribbean and Caucasian Populations

Kathleen C. Barnes; John D. Neely; David L. Duffy; Linda R. Freidhoff; Daniel R. Breazeale; Carsten Schou; Raana P Naidu; Paul N. Levett; Beatrice Renault; Raju Kucherlapati; Sebastiano Iozzino; Eva Ehrlich; Terri H. Beaty; David G. Marsh


International Journal of Biometeorology | 2008

Relationship between African dust carried in the Atlantic trade winds and surges in pediatric asthma attendances in the Caribbean

Joseph M. Prospero; Edmund Blades; Raana P Naidu; George E. Mathison; Haresh Thani; Marc C. Lavoie


Human Immunology | 1999

Determination of Duffy genotypes in three populations of African descent using PCR and sequence-specific oligonucleotides.

Renate Nickel; Stephanie Willadsen; Linda R. Freidhoff; Shau Ku Huang; Luis Caraballo; Raana P Naidu; Paul N. Levett; Malcolm N. Blumenthal; Susan Banks-Schlegel; Eugene R. Bleecker; Terri H. Beaty; Carole Ober; Kathleen C. Barnes


Human Genetics | 2003

Sex differences in heritability of sensitization to Blomia tropicalis in asthma using regression of offspring on midparent (ROMP) methods

Teri A. Manolio; Kathleen C. Barnes; Terri H. Beaty; Paul N. Levett; Raana P Naidu; Alexander F. Wilson


Genomics | 2001

Testing for gene-gene interaction controlling total IgE in families from Barbados: evidence of sensitivity regarding linkage heterogeneity among families.

Kathleen C. Barnes; Rasika A. Mathias; Renate Nickel; Linda R. Freidhoff; Maria L. Stockton; Xielun Xue; Raana P Naidu; Paul N. Levett; Vincenzo Casolaro; Terri H. Beaty


West Indian Medical Journal | 1998

The prevalence of asthma and wheezing illnesses in Barbadian school-children: the Barbados National Asthma and Allergy Study

Malcolm E Howitt; Timothy C Roach; Raana P Naidu

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Terri H. Beaty

Johns Hopkins University

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Paul N. Levett

University of the West Indies

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David G. Marsh

Johns Hopkins University

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Eva Ehrlich

Johns Hopkins University

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