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Dive into the research topics where Ramkumarie Baliram is active.

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Featured researches published by Ramkumarie Baliram.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Intermittent recombinant TSH injections prevent ovariectomy-induced bone loss

Li Sun; Slobodan Vukicevic; Ramkumarie Baliram; Guozhe Yang; Rebecca Sendak; John M. McPherson; Ling-Ling Zhu; Jameel Iqbal; Rauf Latif; Arjun Natrajan; Ario Arabi; Kosj Yamoah; Baljit S. Moonga; Yankel Gabet; Terry F. Davies; Itai Bab; Etsuko Abe; Kuber T. Sampath; Mone Zaidi

We recently described the direct effects of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) on bone and suggested that the bone loss in hyperthyroidism, hitherto attributed solely to elevated thyroid hormone levels, could at least in part arise from accompanying decrements in serum TSH. Recent studies on both mice and human subjects provide compelling evidence that thyroid hormones and TSH have the opposite effects on the skeleton. Here, we show that TSH, when injected intermittently into rodents, even at intervals of 2 weeks, displays a powerful antiresorptive action in vivo. By virtue of this action, together with the possible anabolic effects shown earlier, TSH both prevents bone loss and restores the lost bone after ovariectomy. Importantly, the osteoclast inhibitory action of TSH persists ex vivo even after therapy is stopped for 4 weeks. This profound and lasting antiresorptive action of TSH is mimicked in cells that genetically overexpress the constitutively active ligand-independent TSH receptor (TSHR). In contrast, loss of function of a mutant TSHR (Pro → Leu at 556) in congenital hypothyroid mice activates osteoclast differentiation, confirming once again our premise that TSHRs have a critical role in regulating bone remodeling.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

Hyperthyroid-associated osteoporosis is exacerbated by the loss of TSH signaling.

Ramkumarie Baliram; Li Sun; Jay Cao; Jianhua Li; Rauf Latif; Amanda K. Huber; Tony Yuen; Harry C. Blair; Mone Zaidi; Terry F. Davies

The osteoporosis associated with human hyperthyroidism has traditionally been attributed to elevated thyroid hormone levels. There is evidence, however, that thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), which is low in most hyperthyroid states, directly affects the skeleton. Importantly, Tshr-knockout mice are osteopenic. In order to determine whether low TSH levels contribute to bone loss in hyperthyroidism, we compared the skeletal phenotypes of wild-type and Tshr-knockout mice that were rendered hyperthyroid. We found that hyperthyroid mice lacking TSHR had greater bone loss and resorption than hyperthyroid wild-type mice, thereby demonstrating that the absence of TSH signaling contributes to bone loss. Further, we identified a TSH-like factor that may confer osteoprotection. These studies suggest that therapeutic suppression of TSH to very low levels may contribute to bone loss in people.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Thyroid-stimulating hormone induces a Wnt-dependent, feed-forward loop for osteoblastogenesis in embryonic stem cell cultures.

Ramkumarie Baliram; Rauf Latif; Joshua Berkowitz; Simon Frid; Graziana Colaianni; Li Sun; Mone Zaidi; Terry F. Davies

We have shown that the anterior pituitary hormone, thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), can bypass the thyroid to exert a direct protective effect on the skeleton. Thus, we have suggested that a low TSH level may contribute to the bone loss of hyperthyroidism that has been attributed traditionally to high thyroid hormone levels. Earlier mouse genetic, cell-based, and clinical studies together have established that TSH inhibits osteoclastic bone resorption. However, the direct influence of TSH on the osteoblast has remained unclear. Here, we have used a model system developed from murine ES cells, induced to form mature mineralizing osteoblasts, and show that TSH stimulates osteoblast differentiation primarily through the activation of protein kinase Cδ and the up-regulation of the noncanonical Wnt components frizzled and Wnt5a. We predict that a TSH-induced, fast-forward short loop in bone marrow permits Wnt5a production, which, in addition to enhancing osteoblast differentiation, also stimulates osteoprotegerin secretion to attenuate bone resorption by neighboring osteoclasts. We surmise that this loop should uncouple bone formation from bone resorption with a net increase in bone mass, which is what has been observed upon injecting TSH.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2007

Bone loss in thyroid disease: role of low TSH and high thyroid hormone.

Etsuko Abe; Li Sun; Jeffrey I. Mechanick; Jameel Iqbal; Kosj Yamoah; Ramkumarie Baliram; Ario Arabi; Baljit S. Moonga; Terry F. Davies; Mone Zaidi

Abstract:  More than 10% of postmenopausal women in the United States receive thyroid hormone replacement therapy and up to 20% of these women are over‐replaced inducing subclinical hyperthyroidism. Because hyperthyroidism and post menopausal osteoporosis overlap in women of advancing age, it is urgent to understand the effect of thyroid hormone excess on bone. We can now provide results that not thyroid hormones but also TSH itself has an equally important role to play in bone remodeling.


Endocrinology | 2013

Thyroid and Bone: Macrophage-Derived TSH-β Splice Variant Increases Murine Osteoblastogenesis

Ramkumarie Baliram; Andrew Chow; Amanda K. Huber; L. Collier; M. R. Ali; Syed A. Morshed; Rauf Latif; Avelino Teixeira; Miriam Merad; L. Liu; Li Sun; Harry C. Blair; Mone Zaidi; Terry F. Davies

It is now firmly established that TSH may influence the physiology and patho-physiology of bone by activating osteoblasts and inhibiting osteoclast activity resulting in relative osteoprotection. Whether this influence is directly exerted by pituitary-derived TSH in vivo is less certain, because we have previously reported that the suppression of pituitary TSH does not remove such protection. Here, we have characterized the functional relevance of a novel form of the TSH-β subunit, designated TSH-βv, known to be produced by murine bone marrow cells. We found that fresh bone marrow-derived macrophages (MØs) preferentially produced TSH-βv and, when cocultured with CHO cells engineered to overexpress the full-length TSH receptor, were able to generate the production of intracellular cAMP; a phenomenon not seen in control CHO cells, such results confirmed the bioactivity of the TSH variant. Furthermore, cocultures of MØs and osteoblasts were shown to enhance osteoblastogenesis, and this phenomenon was markedly reduced by antibody to TSH-β, suggesting direct interaction between MØs and osteoblasts as observed under the electron microscope. These data suggest a new paradigm of local modulation of bone biology by a MØ-derived TSH-like molecule and raise the question of the relative contribution of local vs pituitary-derived TSH in osteoprotection.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Genetic confirmation for a central role for TNFα in the direct action of thyroid stimulating hormone on the skeleton

Li Sun; Ling-Ling Zhu; Ping Lu; Tony Yuen; Jianhua Li; Risheng Ma; Ramkumarie Baliram; Surinder S. Moonga; Peng Liu; Alberta Zallone; Maria I. New; Terry F. Davies; Mone Zaidi

Clinical data showing correlations between low thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) levels and high bone turnover markers, low bone mineral density, and an increased risk of osteoporosis-related fractures are buttressed by mouse genetic and pharmacological studies identifying a direct action of TSH on the skeleton. Here we show that the skeletal actions of TSH deficiency are mediated, in part, through TNFα. Compound mouse mutants generated by genetically deleting the Tnfα gene on a Tshr−/− (homozygote) or Tshr+/− (heterozygote) background resulted in full rescue of the osteoporosis, low bone formation, and hyperresorption that accompany TSH deficiency. Studies using ex vivo bone marrow cell cultures showed that TSH inhibits and stimulates TNFα production from macrophages and osteoblasts, respectively. TNFα, in turn, stimulates osteoclastogenesis but also enhances the production in bone marrow of a variant TSHβ. This locally produced TSH suppresses osteoclast formation in a negative feedback loop. We speculate that TNFα elevations due to low TSH signaling in human hyperthyroidism contribute to the bone loss that has traditionally been attributed solely to high thyroid hormone levels.


Endocrinology | 2016

T3 Regulates a Human Macrophage-Derived TSH-β Splice Variant: Implications for Human Bone Biology

Ramkumarie Baliram; Rauf Latif; Syed A. Morshed; Mone Zaidi; Terry F. Davies

TSH and thyroid hormones (T3 and T4) are intimately involved in bone biology. We have previously reported the presence of a murine TSH-β splice variant (TSH-βv) expressed specifically in bone marrow-derived macrophages and that exerted an osteoprotective effect by inducing osteoblastogenesis. To extend this observation and its relevance to human bone biology, we set out to identify and characterize a TSH-β variant in human macrophages. Real-time PCR analyses using human TSH-β-specific primers identified a 364-bp product in macrophages, bone marrow, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells that was sequence verified and was homologous to a human TSH-βv previously reported. We then examined TSH-βv regulation using the THP-1 human monocyte cell line matured into macrophages. After 4 days, 46.1% of the THP-1 cells expressed the macrophage markers CD-14 and macrophage colony-stimulating factor and exhibited typical morphological characteristics of macrophages. Real-time PCR analyses of these cells treated in a dose-dependent manner with T3 showed a 14-fold induction of human TSH-βv mRNA and variant protein. Furthermore, these human TSH-βv-positive cells, induced by T3 exposure, had categorized into both M1 and M2 macrophage phenotypes as evidenced by the expression of macrophage colony-stimulating factor for M1 and CCL-22 for M2. These data indicate that in hyperthyroidism, bone marrow resident macrophages have the potential to exert enhanced osteoprotective effects by oversecreting human TSH-βv, which may exert its local osteoprotective role via osteoblast and osteoclast TSH receptors.


Frontiers in Endocrinology | 2017

Expanding the Role of Thyroid-Stimulating Hormone in Skeletal Physiology

Ramkumarie Baliram; Rauf Latif; Mone Zaidi; Terry F. Davies

The dogma that thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) solely regulates the production of thyroid hormone from the thyroid gland has hampered research on its wider physiological roles. The action of pituitary TSH on the skeleton has now been well described; in particular, its action on osteoblasts and osteoclasts. It has also been recently discovered that the bone marrow microenvironment acts as an endocrine circuit with bone marrow-resident macrophages capable of producing a novel TSH-β subunit variant (TSH-βv), which may modulate skeletal physiology. Interestingly, the production of this TSH-βv is positively regulated by T3 accentuating such modulation in the presence of thyroid overactivity. Furthermore, a number of small molecule ligands acting as TSH agonists, which allosterically modulate the TSH receptor have been identified and may have similar modulatory influences on bone cells suggesting therapeutic potential. This review summarizes our current understanding of the role of TSH, TSH-β, TSH-βv, and small molecule agonists in bone physiology.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Antibody Protection Reveals Extended Epitopes on the Human TSH Receptor

Rauf Latif; Avelino Teixeira; Krzysztof Michalek; M. Rejwan Ali; Max Schlesinger; Ramkumarie Baliram; Syed A. Morshed; Terry F. Davies

Stimulating, and some blocking, antibodies to the TSH receptor (TSHR) have conformation-dependent epitopes reported to involve primarily the leucine rich repeat region of the ectodomain (LRD). However, successful crystallization of TSHR residues 22–260 has omitted important extracellular non-LRD residues including the hinge region which connects the TSHR ectodomain to the transmembrane domain and which is involved in ligand induced signal transduction. The aim of the present study, therefore, was to determine if TSHR antibodies (TSHR-Abs) have non-LRD binding sites outside the LRD. To obtain this information we employed the method of epitope protection in which we first protected TSHR residues 1–412 with intact TSHR antibodies and then enzymatically digested the unprotected residues. Those peptides remaining were subsequently delineated by mass spectrometry. Fourteen out of 23 of the reported stimulating monoclonal TSHR-Ab crystal contact residues were protected by this technique which may reflect the higher binding energies of certain residues detected in this approach. Comparing the protected epitopes of two stimulating TSHR-Abs we found both similarities and differences but both antibodies also contacted the hinge region and the amino terminus of the TSHR following the signal peptide and encompassing cysteine box 1 which has previously been shown to be important for TSH binding and activation. A monoclonal blocking TSHR antibody revealed a similar pattern of binding regions but the residues that it contacted on the LRD were again distinct. These data demonstrated that conformationally dependent TSHR-Abs had epitopes not confined to the LRDs but also incorporated epitopes not revealed in the available crystal structure. Furthermore, the data also indicated that in addition to overlapping contact regions within the LRD, there are unique epitope patterns for each of the antibodies which may contribute to their functional heterogeneity.


Molecular Endocrinology | 2008

High-Mobility Group Box Proteins Modulate Tumor Necrosis Factor-α Expression in Osteoclastogenesis via a Novel Deoxyribonucleic Acid Sequence

Kosj Yamoah; Alina Brebene; Ramkumarie Baliram; Kenji Inagaki; Georgia Dolios; Ario Arabi; Rinosha Majeed; Hitoshi Amano; Rong Wang; Robert Yanagisawa; Etsuko Abe

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Terry F. Davies

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Rauf Latif

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Li Sun

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Mone Zaidi

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Ario Arabi

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Etsuko Abe

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Harry C. Blair

University of Pittsburgh

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Kosj Yamoah

Thomas Jefferson University

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Syed A. Morshed

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Tony Yuen

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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