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Dive into the research topics where Robert Hyman is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert Hyman.


Advances in Immunology | 1993

CD44 and Its Interaction with Extracellular Matrix

Jayne Lesley; Robert Hyman; Paul W. Kincade

It is now generally accepted that CD44 is a cell adhesion receptor and that hyaluronan is one of its ligands. Like many cell adhesion receptors, CD44 is broadly distributed, and its ligand, hyaluronan, is a common component of extracellular matrices and extracellular fluids. Yet a great variety of responses has been reported to result from CD44 ligation. These include cell adhesion, cell migration, induction (or at least support) of hematopoietic differentiation, effects on other cell adhesion mechanisms, and interaction with cell activation signals. This diversity of responses indicates that downstream events following ligand binding by CD44 may vary depending on the cell type expressing CD44 and on the environment of that cell. CD44 is expressed on cells in the early stages of hematopoiesis and has been shown to participate in at least some aspects of the hematopoietic process. In mature lymphocytes, CD44 is upregulated in response to antigenic stimuli and may participate in the effector stage of immunological responses. Along with other adhesion receptors that show alterations in expression after activation, CD44 probably contributes to differences in the recirculation patterns of different lymphocyte subpopulations. CD44 ligand-binding function on lymphocytes is strictly regulated, such that most CD44-expressing cells do not constitutively bind ligand. Ligand-binding function may be activated as a result of differentiation, inside-out signaling, and/or extracellular stimuli. This regulation, which in some situations can be rapid and transient, potentially provides exquisite specificity to what would otherwise be a common interaction. CD44 is not a single molecule, but a diverse family of molecules generated by alternate splicing of multiple exons of a single gene and by different posttranslational modifications in different cell types. It is not yet clear how these modifications influence ligand-binding function. The significance of the multiple isoforms of CD44 is not understood, but association of some isoforms with malignancies has been observed. And in at least some experimental systems, a contribution of CD44 isoforms to metastatic behavior has been demonstrated.


Immunogenetics | 1982

Biochemical characterization and cellular distribution of a polymorphic, murine cell-surface glycoprotein expressed on lymphoid tissues

Ian S. Trowbridge; Jayne Lesley; Roberta Schulte; Robert Hyman; Joseph Trotter

A murine leukocyte surface glycoprotein (Mr = 95 000) has been defined by means of xenogeneic monoclonal antibodies. In normal hematopoietic tissues, the glycoprotein is found in highest amounts in the bone marrow. Flow cytometric analysis shows that essentially all bone-marrow cells express the glycoprotein and that it is a major component of a subpopulation of cells containing predominantly granulocytic precursors. In contrast, only about 5 percent of thymocytes express sufficient glycoprotein to be detected by flow cytometric analysis, although under stringent conditions up to 20 percent of thymocytes are susceptible to complement-mediated cytotoxicity using a monoclonal antibody against the glycoprotein. Functional assays showed that both prothymocytes and colony forming unit-spleen express the glycoprotein which is broadly distributed on murine hematopoietic tumor cell lines. However, although some Thy-I+ (T) cell lymphomas express large amounts of the glycoprotein, others do not express detectable quantities of the molecule. The glycoprotein is not restricted to hematopoietic cells and can be detected on lung, kidney, brain, and liver as well as cultured fibroblasts. Monoclonal antibodies against the glycoprotein cross-react with an antigen present on human cells. As described in the accompanying paper, the glycoprotein exists in two antithetical allelic forms and we show that it is identical to a polymorphic surface molecule independently characterized by Colombatti and co-workers.


Nature Genetics | 2000

Kit/stem cell factor receptor-induced activation of phosphatidylinositol 3′-kinase is essential for male fertility

Peter Blume-Jensen; Guoqiang Jiang; Robert Hyman; Kuo-Fen Lee; Stephen O'Gorman; Tony Hunter

The c-kit-encoded transmembrane tyrosine kinase receptor for stem cell factor (Kit/SCF-R) is required for normal haematopoiesis, melanogenesis and gametogenesis. However, the roles of individual Kit/SCF-R-induced signalling pathways in the control of developmental processes in the intact animal are completely unknown. To examine the function of SCF-induced phosphatidylinositol (PI) 3′-kinase activation in vivo, we employed the Cre-loxP system to mutate the codon for Tyr719, the PI 3′-kinase binding site in Kit/SCF-R, to Phe in the genome of mice by homologous recombination. Homozygous (Y719F/Y719F) mutant mice are viable. The mutation completely disrupted PI 3′-kinase binding to Kit/SCF-R and reduced SCF-induced PI 3′-kinase-dependent activation of Akt by 90%. The mutation induced a gender- and tissue-specific defect. Although there are no haematopoietic or pigmentation defects in homozygous mutant mice, males are sterile due to a block in spermatogenesis, with initially decreased proliferation and subsequent extensive apoptosis occurring at the spermatogonial stem-cell level. In contrast, female homozygotes are fully fertile. This is the first report so far demonstrating the role of an individual signalling pathway downstream of Kit/SCF-R in the intact animal. It provides the first in vivo model for male sterility caused by a discrete signalling pathway defect affecting early germ cells.


Experimental Cell Research | 1990

Binding of hyaluronic acid to lymphoid cell lines is inhibited by monoclonal antibodies against Pgp-1☆

Jayne Lesley; Roberta Schulte; Robert Hyman

Recent biochemical and sequence data suggest a possible relationship between Pgp-1 (identical to CD44/Hermes 1/p85) and a hyaluronic acid-binding function. Here, we have studied the hyaluronic acid-binding activity of a series of murine hematopoietic cell lines using several assays: cell aggregation by hyaluronic acid, binding of fluorescein-conjugated hyaluronic acid, and cell adhesion to hyaluronic acid-coated dishes. Certain Pgp-1-positive T and B cell lines show hyaluronic acid binding that is highly specific and is not competed for by other glycosaminoglycans. Monoclonal antibodies against Pgp-1, but not antibodies against other major cell surface glycoproteins, inhibited hyaluronic acid-induced cell aggregation and cell adhesion to hyaluronic acid-coated dishes. Additionally, some anti-Pgp-1 antibodies inhibited binding of fluorescein-hyaluronic acid to hyaluronic acid-binding lines. We found no Pgp-1-negative lines that bound, but many Pgp-1-positive cell lines did not bind hyaluronic acid. Two Pgp-1-positive thymomas that did not bind hyaluronic acid were induced by phorbol ester to bind hyaluronic acid with the same specificity as other hyaluronic acid-binding lines. Normal hematopoietic cells, including those which express high levels of Pgp-1, such as bone marrow myeloid cells and splenic lymphocytes, showed no detectable hyaluronic acid-binding activity. We discuss several models that might account for these observations: (1) the hyaluronic acid receptor is Pgp-1, but it normally exists in an inactive state; (2) hyaluronic acid receptors are a subset of a family of molecules recognized by anti-Pgp-1 antibodies; (3) the hyaluronic acid receptor is not Pgp-1, but is closely associated with Pgp-1 on the surface of cells which express hyaluronic acid-binding activity.


Glycoconjugate Journal | 1997

CD44 in inflammation and metastasis.

Jayne Lesley; Robert Hyman; Nicole English; Jonathan B. Catterall; G.A. Turner

CD44 is a major cell surface receptor for the glycosaminoglycan, hyaluronan (HA). CD44 binds HA specifically, although certain chondroitin-sulfate containing proteoglycans may also be recognized. CD44 binding of HA is regulated by the cells in which it is expressed. Thus, CD44 expression alone does not correlate with HA binding activity. CD44 is subject to a wide array of post-translational carbohydrate modifications, including N-linked, O-linked and glycosaminoglycan side chain additions. These modifications, which differ in different cell types and cell activation states, can have profound effects on HA binding function and are the main mechanism of regulating CD44 function that has been described to date. Some glycosaminoglycan modifications also affect ligand binding specificity, allowing CD44 to interact with proteins of the extracellular matrix, such as fibronectin and collagen, and to sequester heparin binding growth factors. It is not yet established whether the HA binding function of CD44 is responsible for its proposed involvement in inflammation. It has been shown, however, that CD44/HA interactions can mediate leukocyte rolling on endothelial and tissue substrates and that CD44-mediated recognition of HA can contribute to leukocyte activation. Changes in CD44 expression (mainly up-regulation, occasionally down-regulation, and frequently alteration in the pattern of isoforms expressed) are associated with a wide variety of cancers and the degree to which they spread; however, in other cancers, the CD44 pattern remains unchanged. Increased expression of CD44 is associated with increased binding to HA and increased metastatic potential in some experimental tumor systems; however, in other systems increased HA binding and metastatic potential are not correlated. CD44 may contribute to malignancy through changes in the regulation of HA recognition, the recognition of new ligands and/or other new biological functions of CD44 that remain to be discovered. Abbreviations:aa, amino acid(s); CS, chondroitin sulfate; CSPG, chondroitin sulfate containing proteoglycan; CD44H, ‘hematopoietic’, also called ‘standard’, isoform of CD44 which contains none of the alternatively spliced variant exons; CD44-Rg, CD44 receptor globulin, a secreted chimaeric protein composed of the external domain of the adhesion receptor CD44 and the hinge, CH2 and CH3 regions of human immunoglobulin-G heavy chain; ECM, extracellular matrix; GAG, glycosaminoglycan; HA, hyaluronan; HS, heparan sulfate; KS, keratan sulfate; PB, peripheral blood; PBL, peripheral blood lymphocytes


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1993

Differential effects of expression of the CD45 tyrosine protein phosphatase on the tyrosine phosphorylation of the lck, fyn, and c-src tyrosine protein kinases.

T R Hurley; Robert Hyman; Bartholomew M. Sefton

Expression of the CD45 tyrosine protein phosphatase is required for the response of functional lymphocytes to stimulation through the antigen receptor. One or more of its substrates may therefore be essential for signal transduction during lymphocyte activation. We have studied the phosphorylation of the closely related lck, fyn, and c-src tyrosine protein kinases in leukemic murine T-cell lines that have lost the expression of CD45. The phosphorylation of the lck kinase at an inhibitory site of tyrosine phosphorylation, Tyr-505, was increased by two-, six-, and eightfold in three different cell lines. Phosphorylation of the fyn kinase at the homologous site, Tyr-531, was unaltered in one of these cell lines, but increased by 2.5-fold in the two others. The phosphorylation of p60c-src at the homologous tyrosine was essentially unchanged in the one CD45-negative cell line in which it was examined. The expression of CD45 therefore regulates the phosphorylation and potentially the activity of the lck and fyn tyrosine protein kinases, but the effect on the lck kinase is much greater than on the fyn kinase. This finding and the observation that CD45 had no effect on the phosphorylation of p60c-src suggest that CD45 exhibits polypeptide substrate specificity in vivo. Additionally, these findings are consistent with the hypothesis that the unresponsiveness of CD45-negative lymphoid cells to antigenic stimulation is due largely to hyperphosphorylation of the lck kinase.


Cell | 1978

The synthesis and properties of T25 glycoprotein in thy-1-negative mutant lymphoma cells

Ian S. Trowbridge; Robert Hyman; Catherine Mazauskas

The synthesis and properties of T25 glycoprotein which bears the serological specificity Thy-1 have been studied in mutants of cultured mouse lymphoma cells that do not express Thy-1 on their surface. Five complementation classes of mutant cells were previously characterized by somatic genetic analysis. Synthesis of abnormal T25 glycoproteins was detected in four classes of mutants. Each of these aberrant products was degraded move rapidly than T25 glycoprotein of wild-type cells. Defects in the oligosaccharide units of T25 glycoprotein were demonstrated in three classes of mutants. In one of these mutant classes, evidence for a general defect in glycosylation of cell surface glycoproteins was obtained. These data indicate that normal glycosylation of T25 glycoprotein is probably essential for the molecule to be incorporated into the plasma membrane and expressed on the cell surface.


Immunogenetics | 1976

Characterization of a TL−variant of a homozygous TL+ mouse lymphoma

Robert Hyman; Valerie Stallings

A homozygous antigen-loss variant for the TL antigen was isolated by immunoselectionin vitro. The variant expressed <0.01 the parental amount of TL antigen on its surface as measured by quantitative absorption. Neither theK nor theD end H-2k antigens were detectable on the surface of the variant, although parental amounts of Thy 1.2 and GCSA were expressed. Karyotypic analysis showed that the variant had one less chromosome than the parental line.


Cellular Immunology | 1984

Expression of Transferrin Receptor on Murine Hematopoietic Progenitors

Jayne Lesley; Robert Hyman; Roberta Schulte; Joseph Trotter

We have used a monoclonal antibody against the murine transferrin receptor to study the expression of the transferrin receptor on the hematopoietic progenitor cells (BFU-E, CFU-E, and CFU-C) present in mouse bone marrow. Elutriation and cell-sorting data are consistent with the hypothesis that most CFU-E are transferrin receptor positive while most BFU-E express much less transferrin receptor. CFU-C comprise both transferrin-receptor-positive and -negative cells.


Cellular Immunology | 1980

Effects of cytotoxic monoclonal antibody specific for T200 glycoprotein on functional lymphoid cell populations

Gunther Dennert; Robert Hyman; Jayne Lesley; Ian S. Trowbridge

Abstract A monoclonal antibody against T200 glycoprotein is selectively cytotoxic for thymocytes and mature thymus-dependent (T) lymphocytes. All T-cell functions assayed, cell-mediated cytotoxicity, helper cell activity, and proliferation in response to T-cell mitogens or allogeneic cells were abolished by prior treatment of spleen cells with anti-T200 antibodies and complement. In contrast, thymus-independent (B) cell responses to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and other B-cell mitogens were unaffected. Although treatment of spleen cells with anti-T200 antibodies and complement markedly reduced their capacity to mount an in vitro antibody response to sheep red blood cells (SRBC), responsiveness could be restored by the addition of SRBC-primed T-helper cells. Treatment of bone marrow cells with anti-T200 antibodies and complement did not eliminate either in vivo colony-forming units-spleen (CFU-S) or prothymocytes. It is concluded that T lymphocytes become sensitive to complement-mediated lysis by anti-T200 antibodies as a consequence of cell-surface modifications occurring shortly before or just after their entry into the thymus. In contrast to Thy-1 antigen, the selective killing by antibody against T200 glycoprotein cannot be readily accounted for by quantitative differences in the expression of T200 glycoprotein on the cell surface. Fluorescence-activated cell analysis showed that T200 glycoprotein was expressed in similar amount on the majority of all thymocytes, spleen, and bone marrow cells.

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Jayne Lesley

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Ian S. Trowbridge

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Roberta Schulte

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Joseph Trotter

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Valerie Stallings

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Kristie Cunningham

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Gunther Dennert

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Paul W. Kincade

Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation

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Bartholomew M. Sefton

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Catherine Mazauskas

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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