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Dive into the research topics where Robert L. Price is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert L. Price.


Developmental Dynamics | 2004

Organization of fibroblasts in the heart.

Edie C. Goldsmith; Adam Hoffman; Mary O. Morales; Jay D. Potts; Robert L. Price; Alex McFadden; Michael Rice; Thomas K. Borg

Cardiac fibroblasts are organized into a three‐dimensional network in the heart. This organization follows the endomysial weave network that surrounds groups of myocytes. Reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction, Western blots, and immunohistochemistry were used to show that discoidin domain receptor 2 (DDR2) was specific for cardiac fibroblasts and not expressed on endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, or cardiac myocytes. DDR2 is expressed early in development and in the adult heart. High voltage electron microscopy (HVEM), scanning electron microscopy, and laser scanning confocal microscopy document the three‐dimensional organization of fibroblasts in the heart. Antibodies against connexin 43 and 45 showed different patterns but confirmed, along with HVEM, that fibroblasts are connected to each other as well as cardiac myocytes. The implications of this arrangement of fibroblasts can be important to cardiac function. The signaling of DDR2 and the expression of matrix metalloproteinase 2 in relation to collagen turnover and remodeling is discussed. Developmental Dynamics 230:787–794, 2004.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2000

Altered focal adhesion regulation correlates with cardiomyopathy in mice expressing constitutively active rac1

Mark A. Sussman; Sara Welch; Angela Walker; Raisa Klevitsky; Timothy E. Hewett; Robert L. Price; Erik Schaefer; Karen Yager

The ras family of small GTP-binding proteins exerts powerful effects upon cell structure and function. One member of this family, rac, induces actin cytoskeletal reorganization in nonmuscle cells and hypertrophic changes in cultured cardiomyocytes. To examine the effect of rac1 activation upon cardiac structure and function, transgenic mice were created that express constitutively activated rac1 specifically in the myocardium. Transgenic rac1 protein was expressed at levels comparable to endogenous rac levels, with activation of the rac1 signaling pathway resulting in two distinct cardiomyopathic phenotypes: a lethal dilated phenotype associated with neonatal activation of the transgene and a transient cardiac hypertrophy seen among juvenile mice that resolved with age. Neither phenotype showed myofibril disarray and hypertrophic hearts were hypercontractilein working heart analyses. The rac1 target p21-activated kinase translocated from a cytosolic to a cytoskeletal distribution, suggesting that rac1 activation was inducing focal adhesion reorganization. Corroborating results showed altered localizations of src in dilated cardiomyopathy and paxillin in both cardiomyopathic phenotypes. This study, the first examination of rac1-mediated cardiac effects in vivo, demonstrates that dilation and hypertrophy can share a common molecular origin and presents evidence that both timing and concurrent signaling from multiple pathways can influence cardiac remodeling.


Circulation Research | 1999

Pressure Overload Induces Severe Hypertrophy in Mice Treated With Cyclosporine, an Inhibitor of Calcineurin

Bo Ding; Robert L. Price; Thomas K. Borg; Ellen O. Weinberg; Philip F. Halloran; Beverly H. Lorell

Cardiac hypertrophy is the fundamental adaptation of the adult heart to mechanical load. Recent work has shown that inhibition of calcineurin activity with cyclosporine suppresses the development of hypertrophy in calcineurin transgenic mice and in in vitro systems of neonatal rat cardiocytes stimulated with peptide growth factors. To test the hypothesis that the calcineurin signaling pathway is critical for load-induced hypertrophy in vivo, we examined the effects of cyclosporine treatment on left ventricular hypertrophy induced by experimental ascending aortic stenosis for 4 weeks in mice. Left ventricular systolic pressure was elevated to a similar level in aortic stenosis mice that were treated with cyclosporine versus no drug. Left ventricular mass and myocyte size were similar in treated and untreated aortic stenosis animals and significantly greater than control animals, showing that cyclosporine treatment does not suppress hypertrophic growth. Both treated and untreated animals showed increased left ventricular expression of the load-sensitive gene atrial natriuretic factor. Calcineurin activity was measured in the left ventricle and the spleen from control mice and aortic stenosis mice treated with cyclosporine versus no drug. Levels of calcineurin activity were similar in the spleens of control and untreated aortic stenosis mice. However, calcineurin activity was severely depressed in left ventricular tissue of untreated aortic stenosis mice compared with control mice and was further reduced by cyclosporine treatment. Thus, pathological hypertrophy and cardiac-restricted gene expression induced by pressure overload in vivo are not suppressed by treatment with cyclosporine and do not appear to depend on the elevation of left ventricular calcineurin activity.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1998

Myofibril degeneration caused by tropomodulin overexpression leads to dilated cardiomyopathy in juvenile mice.

Mark A. Sussman; Sara Welch; Natalie Cambon; Raisa Klevitsky; Timothy E. Hewett; Robert L. Price; Sandra A. Witt; Thomas R. Kimball

Loss of myofibril organization is a common feature of chronic dilated and progressive cardiomyopathy. To study how the heart compensates for myofibril degeneration, transgenic mice were created that undergo progressive loss of myofibrils after birth. Myofibril degeneration was induced by overexpression of tropomodulin, a component of the thin filament complex which determines and maintains sarcomeric actin filament length. The tropomodulin cDNA was placed under control of the alpha-myosin heavy chain gene promoter to overexpress tropomodulin specifically in the myocardium. Offspring with the most severe phenotype showed cardiomyopathic changes between 2 and 4 wk after birth. Hearts from these mice present characteristics consistent with dilated cardiomyopathy and a failed hypertrophic response. Histological analysis showed widespread loss of myofibril organization. Confocal microscopy of isolated cardiomyocytes revealed intense tropomodulin immunoreactivity in transgenic mice together with abnormal coincidence of tropomodulin and alpha-actinin reactivity at Z discs. Contractile function was compromised severely as determined by echocardiographic analyses and isolated Langendorff heart preparations. This novel experimentally induced cardiomyopathy will be useful for understanding dilated cardiomyopathy and the effect of thin filament-based myofibril degeneration upon cardiac structure and function.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Activation of Aryl Hydrocarbon Receptor (AhR) Leads to Reciprocal Epigenetic Regulation of FoxP3 and IL-17 Expression and Amelioration of Experimental Colitis

Narendra P. Singh; Udai P. Singh; Balwan Singh; Robert L. Price; Mitzi Nagarkatti; Prakash S. Nagarkatti

Background Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR), a transcription factor of the bHLH/PAS family, is well characterized to regulate the biochemical and toxic effects of environmental chemicals. More recently, AhR activation has been shown to regulate the differentiation of Foxp3+ Tregs as well as Th17 cells. However, the precise mechanisms are unclear. In the current study, we investigated the effect of 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD), a potent AhR ligand, on epigenetic regulation leading to altered Treg/Th17 differentiation, and consequent suppression of colitis. Methodology/Principal Findings Dextran sodium sulphate (DSS) administration induced acute colitis in C57BL/6 mice, as shown by significant weight loss, shortening of colon, mucosal ulceration, and increased presence of CXCR3+ T cells as well as inflammatory cytokines. Interestingly, a single dose of TCDD (25 µg/kg body weight) was able to attenuate all of the clinical and inflammatory markers of colitis. Analysis of T cells in the lamina propria (LP) and mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN), during colitis, revealed decreased presence of Tregs and increased induction of Th17 cells, which was reversed following TCDD treatment. Activation of T cells from AhR+/+ but not AhR -/- mice, in the presence of TCDD, promoted increased differentiation of Tregs while inhibiting Th17 cells. Analysis of MLN or LP cells during colitis revealed increased methylation of CpG islands of Foxp3 and demethylation of IL-17 promoters, which was reversed following TCDD treatment. Conclusions/Significance These studies demonstrate for the first time that AhR activation promotes epigenetic regulation thereby influencing reciprocal differentiation of Tregs and Th17 cells, and amelioration of inflammation.


Circulation | 2000

Left Ventricular Hypertrophy in Ascending Aortic Stenosis Mice Anoikis and the Progression to Early Failure

Bo Ding; Robert L. Price; Edie C. Goldsmith; Thomas K. Borg; Xinhua Yan; Pamela S. Douglas; Ellen O. Weinberg; Jozef Bartunek; Thomas E. Thielen; Vladimir V. Didenko; Beverly H. Lorell

BACKGROUND To determine potential mechanisms of the transition from hypertrophy to very early failure, we examined apoptosis in a model of ascending aortic stenosis (AS) in male FVB/n mice. METHODS AND RESULTS Compared with age-matched controls, 4-week and 7-week AS animals (n=12 to 16 per group) had increased ratios of left ventricular weight to body weight (4.7+/-0.7 versus 3.1+/-0.2 and 5. 7+/-0.4 versus 2.7+/-0.1 mg/g, respectively, P<0.05) with similar body weights. Myocyte width was also increased in 4-week and 7-week AS mice compared with controls (19.0+/-0.8 and 25.2+/-1.8 versus 14. 1+/-0.5 microm, respectively, P<0.01). By 7 weeks, AS myocytes displayed branching with distinct differences in intercalated disk size and staining for beta(1)-integrin on both cell surface and adjacent extracellular matrix. In vivo left ventricular systolic developed pressure per gram as well as endocardial fractional shortening were similar in 4-week AS and controls but depressed in 7-week AS mice. Myocyte apoptosis estimated by in situ nick end-labeling (TUNEL) was extremely rare in 4-week AS and control mice; however, a low prevalence of TUNEL-positive myocytes and DNA laddering were detected in 7-week AS mice. The specificity of TUNEL labeling was confirmed by in situ ligation of hairpin oligonucleotides. CONCLUSIONS Our findings indicate that myocyte apoptosis develops during the transition from hypertrophy to early failure in mice with chronic biomechanical stress and support the hypothesis that the disruption of normal myocyte anchorage to adjacent extracellular matrix and cells, a process called anoikis, may signal apoptosis.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2010

Resveratrol (Trans-3,5,4′-trihydroxystilbene) Induces Silent Mating Type Information Regulation-1 and Down-Regulates Nuclear Transcription Factor-κB Activation to Abrogate Dextran Sulfate Sodium-Induced Colitis

Udai P. Singh; Narendra P. Singh; Balwan Singh; Lorne J. Hofseth; Robert L. Price; Mitzi Nagarkatti; Prakash S. Nagarkatti

Inflammatory bowel disease is a chronic, relapsing, and tissue-destructive disease. Resveratrol (3,4,5-trihydroxy-trans-stilbene), a naturally occurring polyphenol that exhibits beneficial pleiotropic health effects, is recognized as one of the most promising natural molecules in the prevention and treatment of chronic inflammatory disease and autoimmune disorders. In the present study, we investigated the effect of resveratrol on dextran sodium sulfate (DSS)-induced colitis in mice and found that it effectively attenuated overall clinical scores as well as various pathological markers of colitis. Resveratrol reversed the colitis-associated decrease in body weight and increased levels of serum amyloid A, tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin (IL-6), and IL-1β. After resveratrol treatment, the percentage of CD4+ T cells in mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN) of colitis mice was restored to normal levels, and there was a decrease in these cells in the colon lamina propria (LP). Likewise, the percentages of macrophages in MLN and the LP of mice with colitis were decreased after resveratrol treatment. Resveratrol also suppressed cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2) expression induced in DSS-exposed mice. Colitis was associated with a decrease in silent mating type information regulation-1 (SIRT1) gene expression and an increase in p-inhibitory κB expression and nuclear transcription factor-κB (NF-κB) activation. Resveratrol treatment of mice with colitis significantly reversed these changes. This study demonstrates for the first time that SIRT1 is involved in colitis, functioning as an inverse regulator of NF-κB activation and inflammation. Furthermore, our results indicate that resveratrol may protect against colitis through up-regulation of SIRT1 in immune cells in the colon.


Skeletal Muscle | 2012

IL-6 regulation on skeletal muscle mitochondrial remodeling during cancer cachexia in the ApcMin/+ mouse

James P. White; Melissa J. Puppa; Shuichi Sato; Song Gao; Robert L. Price; John W. Baynes; Matthew C. Kostek; Lydia E. Matesic; James A. Carson

BackgroundMuscle protein turnover regulation during cancer cachexia is being rapidly defined, and skeletal muscle mitochondria function appears coupled to processes regulating muscle wasting. Skeletal muscle oxidative capacity and the expression of proteins regulating mitochondrial biogenesis and dynamics are disrupted in severely cachectic ApcMin/+ mice. It has not been determined if these changes occur at the onset of cachexia and are necessary for the progression of muscle wasting. Exercise and anti-cytokine therapies have proven effective in preventing cachexia development in tumor bearing mice, while their effect on mitochondrial content, biogenesis and dynamics is not well understood. The purposes of this study were to 1) determine IL-6 regulation on mitochondrial remodeling/dysfunction during the progression of cancer cachexia and 2) to determine if exercise training can attenuate mitochondrial dysfunction and the induction of proteolytic pathways during IL-6 induced cancer cachexia.MethodsApcMin/+ mice were examined during the progression of cachexia, after systemic interleukin (IL)-6r antibody treatment, or after IL-6 over-expression with or without exercise. Direct effects of IL-6 on mitochondrial remodeling were examined in cultured C2C12 myoblasts.ResultsMitochondrial content was not reduced during the initial development of cachexia, while muscle PGC-1α and fusion (Mfn1, Mfn2) protein expression was repressed. With progressive weight loss mitochondrial content decreased, PGC-1α and fusion proteins were further suppressed, and fission protein (FIS1) was induced. IL-6 receptor antibody administration after the onset of cachexia improved mitochondrial content, PGC-1α, Mfn1/Mfn2 and FIS1 protein expression. IL-6 over-expression in pre-cachectic mice accelerated body weight loss and muscle wasting, without reducing mitochondrial content, while PGC-1α and Mfn1/Mfn2 protein expression was suppressed and FIS1 protein expression induced. Exercise normalized these IL-6 induced effects. C2C12 myotubes administered IL-6 had increased FIS1 protein expression, increased oxidative stress, and reduced PGC-1α gene expression without altered mitochondrial protein expression.ConclusionsAltered expression of proteins regulating mitochondrial biogenesis and fusion are early events in the initiation of cachexia regulated by IL-6, which precede the loss of muscle mitochondrial content. Furthermore, IL-6 induced mitochondrial remodeling and proteolysis can be rescued with moderate exercise training even in the presence of high circulating IL-6 levels.


Tissue Engineering | 2004

A Novel Tubular Scaffold for Cardiovascular Tissue Engineering

Michael J. Yost; Catalin F. Baicu; Charles E. Stonerock; Richard L. Goodwin; Robert L. Price; Jeffrey M. Davis; Heather J. Evans; Phillip D. Watson; C. Michael Gore; Janea Sweet; Laura Creech; Michael R. Zile; Louis Terracio

We have developed a counter rotating cone extrusion device to produce the next generation of three-dimensional collagen scaffold for tissue engineering. The device can produce a continuously varying fibril angle from the lumen to the outside of a 5-mm-diameter collagen tube, similar to the pattern of heart muscle cells in the intact heart. Our scaffold is a novel, oriented, type I collagen, tubular scaffold. We selected collagen because we believe there are important signals from the collagen both geometrically and biochemically that elicit the in vivo -like phenotypic response from the cardiomyocytes. We have shown that cardiomyocytes can be cultured in these tubes and resemble an in vivo phenotype. This new model system will provide important information leading to the design and construction of a functional, biologically based assist device.


Cardiovascular Research | 2000

Specialization at the Z line of cardiac myocytes

Thomas K. Borg; Edie C. Goldsmith; Robert L. Price; Wayne Carver; Louis Terracio; Allen M. Samarel

Time for primary review 28 days. The organization of any differentiated cell is not random but is the result of a dynamic integration of extracellular and intracellular signals. During the development of the heart, cardiac myocytes are round shaped cells that differentiate into a rod-shaped phenotype. During the different stages of commitment and morphogenesis, the myocyte organizes its internal structure by undergoing myofibrillogenesis. This process results in the precise arrangement of contractile elements, supporting cytoskeleton, and endoplasmic reticulum. Within the sarcolemma, specialized regions are defined for attachment to components of the extracellular matrix (ECM). This specialized site of the sarcolemma consists of the ECM—Receptor—Cytoskeleton complex (Fig. 1). These sites will integrate attachment to the ECM and the series of proteins necessary for the chemical and mechanical transmission of information. In this review, we will describe the evidence that indicates there is a specialization of the sarcolemma at the Z line for the clustering of various receptors for the ECM as well as the cytoskeleton. Fig. 1 A diagrammatic representation of the specialized regions of the sarcolemma. For cell—cell attachment, the extracellular regions of cadherin molecules exhibit homotypic binding while the cytoplasmic domains connect to catenins and actin. A variety of receptors including integrins and growth factors are found in a specialized region on the lateral margin of the myocyte at or near the Z band. Both complexes have direct associations with various signal transduction and cytoskeletal components. It appears that the lateral complexes are not associated with actin like the cadherin—catenin complex. During development of the embryonic heart, two specialized regions of the sarcolemma develop: (1) intercalated disks for cell—cell interaction and (2) ECM—integrin—cytoskeletal connections for cell—ECM contacts. The formation of these regions appears to be a coordinated expression of ECM components, cell surface receptors, and signaling proteins [1–5]. The localization … * Corresponding author. Tel.: +1-803-733-3115; fax: +1-803-733-1533 borg{at}med.sc.edu

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Thomas K. Borg

Medical University of South Carolina

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Mitzi Nagarkatti

University of South Carolina

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Udai P. Singh

University of South Carolina

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Narendra P. Singh

Indian Institute of Pulses Research

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Michael J. Yost

Medical University of South Carolina

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David G. Simpson

University of South Carolina

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Dennis D. Taub

National Institutes of Health

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Jay D. Potts

University of South Carolina

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