Robert S. Griffin
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Robert S. Griffin.
BMC Neuroscience | 2002
Michael Costigan; Katia Befort; Laurie A. Karchewski; Robert S. Griffin; Donatella D'urso; Andrew Allchorne; Joanne Sitarski; James W Mannion; Richard E. Pratt; Clifford J. Woolf
BackgroundRat oligonucleotide microarrays were used to detect changes in gene expression in the dorsal root ganglion (DRG) 3 days following sciatic nerve transection (axotomy). Two comparisons were made using two sets of triplicate microarrays, naïve versus naïve and naïve versus axotomy.ResultsMicroarray variability was assessed using the naïve versus naïve comparison. These results support use of a P < 0.05 significance threshold for detecting regulated genes, despite the large number of hypothesis tests required. For the naïve versus axotomy comparison, a 2-fold cut off alone led to an estimated error rate of 16%; combining a >1.5-fold expression change and P < 0.05 significance reduced the estimated error to 5%. The 2-fold cut off identified 178 genes while the combined >1.5-fold and P < 0.05 criteria generated 240 putatively regulated genes, which we have listed. Many of these have not been described as regulated in the DRG by axotomy. Northern blot, quantitative slot blots and in situ hybridization verified the expression of 24 transcripts. These data showed an 83% concordance rate with the arrays; most mismatches represent genes with low expression levels reflecting limits of array sensitivity. A significant correlation was found between actual mRNA differences and relative changes between microarrays (r2 = 0.8567). Temporal patterns of individual genes regulation varied.ConclusionsWe identify parameters for microarray analysis which reduce error while identifying many putatively regulated genes. Functional classification of these genes suggest reorganization of cell structural components, activation of genes expressed by immune and inflammatory cells and down-regulation of genes involved in neurotransmission.
Nature Medicine | 2006
Irmgard Tegeder; Michael Costigan; Robert S. Griffin; Andrea Abele; Inna Belfer; Helmut Schmidt; Corina Ehnert; Jemiel Nejim; Claudiu Marian; Joachim Scholz; Tianxia Wu; Andrew Allchorne; Luda Diatchenko; Alexander M. Binshtok; David Goldman; Jan Adolph; Swetha Sama; Steven J. Atlas; William A. Carlezon; Aram Parsegian; Jörn Lötsch; Roger B. Fillingim; William Maixner; Gerd Geisslinger; Mitchell B. Max; Clifford J. Woolf
We report that GTP cyclohydrolase (GCH1), the rate-limiting enzyme for tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4) synthesis, is a key modulator of peripheral neuropathic and inflammatory pain. BH4 is an essential cofactor for catecholamine, serotonin and nitric oxide production. After axonal injury, concentrations of BH4 rose in primary sensory neurons, owing to upregulation of GCH1. After peripheral inflammation, BH4 also increased in dorsal root ganglia (DRGs), owing to enhanced GCH1 enzyme activity. Inhibiting this de novo BH4 synthesis in rats attenuated neuropathic and inflammatory pain and prevented nerve injury–evoked excess nitric oxide production in the DRG, whereas administering BH4 intrathecally exacerbated pain. In humans, a haplotype of the GCH1 gene (population frequency 15.4%) was significantly associated with less pain following diskectomy for persistent radicular low back pain. Healthy individuals homozygous for this haplotype exhibited reduced experimental pain sensitivity, and forskolin-stimulated immortalized leukocytes from haplotype carriers upregulated GCH1 less than did controls. BH4 is therefore an intrinsic regulator of pain sensitivity and chronicity, and the GTP cyclohydrolase haplotype is a marker for these traits.
PLOS Medicine | 2009
Joachim Scholz; Richard J. Mannion; Daniela E. Hord; Robert S. Griffin; Bhupendra Rawal; Hui Zheng; Daniel Scoffings; Amanda Phillips; Jianli Guo; Rodney J. Laing; Salahadin Abdi; Isabelle Decosterd; Clifford J. Woolf
Joachim Scholz and colleagues develop and validate an assessment tool that distinguishes between radicular and axial low back pain.
Cell | 2010
G. Gregory Neely; Andreas Hess; Michael Costigan; Alex C. Keene; Spyros Goulas; Michiel Langeslag; Robert S. Griffin; Inna Belfer; Feng Dai; Shad B. Smith; Luda Diatchenko; Vaijayanti Gupta; Cui ping Xia; Sabina Amann; Silke Kreitz; Cornelia Heindl-Erdmann; Susanne Wolz; Cindy V. Ly; Suchir Arora; Rinku Sarangi; Debasis Dan; Maria Novatchkova; Mark R. Rosenzweig; Dustin G. Gibson; Darwin Truong; Daniel Schramek; Tamara Zoranovic; Shane J. Cronin; Belinda Angjeli; Kay Brune
Worldwide, acute, and chronic pain affects 20% of the adult population and represents an enormous financial and emotional burden. Using genome-wide neuronal-specific RNAi knockdown in Drosophila, we report a global screen for an innate behavior and identify hundreds of genes implicated in heat nociception, including the α2δ family calcium channel subunit straightjacket (stj). Mice mutant for the stj ortholog CACNA2D3 (α2δ3) also exhibit impaired behavioral heat pain sensitivity. In addition, in humans, α2δ3 SNP variants associate with reduced sensitivity to acute noxious heat and chronic back pain. Functional imaging in α2δ3 mutant mice revealed impaired transmission of thermal pain-evoked signals from the thalamus to higher-order pain centers. Intriguingly, in α2δ3 mutant mice, thermal pain and tactile stimulation triggered strong cross-activation, or synesthesia, of brain regions involved in vision, olfaction, and hearing.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Robert S. Griffin; Michael Costigan; Gary J. Brenner; Chi Him Eddie Ma; Joachim Scholz; Andrew Moss; Andrew Allchorne; Gregory L. Stahl; Clifford J. Woolf
Microarray expression profiles reveal substantial changes in gene expression in the ipsilateral dorsal horn of the spinal cord in response to three peripheral nerve injury models of neuropathic pain. However, only 54 of the 612 regulated genes are commonly expressed across all the neuropathic pain models. Many of the commonly regulated transcripts are immune related and include the complement components C1q, C3, and C4, which we find are expressed only by microglia. C1q and C4 are, moreover, the most strongly regulated of all 612 regulated genes. In addition, we find that the terminal complement component C5 and the C5a receptor (C5aR) are upregulated in spinal microglia after peripheral nerve injury. Mice null for C5 had reduced neuropathic pain sensitivity, excluding C3a as a pain effector. C6-deficient rats, which cannot form the membrane attack complex, have a normal neuropathic pain phenotype. However, C5a applied intrathecally produces a dose-dependent, slow-onset cold pain in naive animals. Furthermore, a C5aR peptide antagonist reduces cold allodynia in neuropathic pain models. We conclude that induction of the complement cascade in spinal cord microglia after peripheral nerve injury contributes to neuropathic pain through the release and action of the C5a anaphylatoxin peptide.
Infection and Immunity | 2000
Yvette M. Murley; Jaideep Behari; Robert S. Griffin; Stephen B. Calderwood
ABSTRACT Two protein pairs in Vibrio cholerae, ToxRS and TcpPH, are necessary for transcription from the toxT promoter and subsequent expression of cholera virulence genes. We have previously shown that transcription of tcpPH in classical strains ofV. cholerae is activated at mid-log-phase growth in ToxR-inducing conditions, while transcription of tcpPH in El Tor strains is not. In this study, we showed that while transcription of tcpPH differs at mid-log-phase growth in ToxR-inducing conditions between the biotypes, transcription is equivalently high during growth in AKI conditions. We usedtcpPH::gusA transcriptional fusions to quantitate expression of tcpPH in each biotype throughout growth in ToxR-inducing conditions and showed that although transcription of tcpPH is reduced at mid-log-phase growth in an El Tor strain, transcription is turned on later in growth to levels in excess of those in the classical strain (although cholera toxin is not produced). This suggests that the difference in expression of cholera virulence factors in response to ToxR-inducing conditions between the El Tor and classical biotypes of V. choleraemay be related to the timing of transcription of tcpPHrather than the absolute levels of transcription.
BMC Microbiology | 2012
Indira T. Kudva; Robert S. Griffin; Bryan Krastins; David Sarracino; Stephen B. Calderwood; Manohar John
BackgroundIn this study, we present evidence that proteins encoded by the Locus of Enterocyte Effacement (LEE), considered critical for Escherichia coli O157 (O157) adherence to follicle-associated epithelial (FAE) cells at the bovine recto-anal junction (RAJ), do not appear to contribute to O157 adherence to squamous epithelial (RSE) cells also constituting this primary site of O157 colonization in cattle.ResultsAntisera targeting intimin-γ, the primary O157 adhesin, and other essential LEE proteins failed to block O157 adherence to RSE cells, when this pathogen was grown in DMEM, a culture medium that enhances expression of LEE proteins. In addition, RSE adherence of a DMEM-grown-O157 mutant lacking the intimin protein was comparable to that seen with its wild-type parent O157 strain grown in the same media. These adherence patterns were in complete contrast to that observed with HEp-2 cells (the adherence to which is mediated by intimin-γ), assayed under same conditions. This suggested that proteins other than intimin-γ that contribute to adherence to RSE cells are expressed by this pathogen during growth in DMEM. To identify such proteins, we defined the proteome of DMEM-grown-O157 (DMEM-proteome). GeLC-MS/MS revealed that the O157 DMEM-proteome comprised 684 proteins including several components of the cattle and human O157 immunome, orthologs of adhesins, hypothetical secreted and outer membrane proteins, in addition to the known virulence and LEE proteins. Bioinformatics-based analysis of the components of the O157 DMEM proteome revealed several new O157-specific proteins with adhesin potential.ConclusionProteins other than LEE and intimin-γ proteins are involved in O157 adherence to RSE cells at the bovine RAJ. Such proteins, with adhesin potential, are expressed by this human pathogen during growth in DMEM. Ongoing experiments to evaluate their role in RSE adherence should provide both valuable insights into the O157-RSE interactions and new targets for more efficacious anti-adhesion O157 vaccines.
Genome Biology | 2003
Robert S. Griffin; Charles D. Mills; Michael Costigan; Clifford J. Woolf
Microarrays have been used in a wide variety of experimental systems, but realizing their full potential is contingent on sophisticated and rigorous experimental design and data analysis. This article highlights what is needed to get the most out of microarrays in terms of accurately and effectively revealing differential gene expression and regulation in the nervous system.
PLOS Genetics | 2012
G. Gregory Neely; Shuan Rao; Michael Costigan; Norbert Mair; Ildiko Racz; Giedre Milinkeviciute; Arabella Meixner; Swetha Nayanala; Robert S. Griffin; Inna Belfer; Feng Dai; Shad B. Smith; Luda Diatchenko; Stefano Marengo; Bernhard J. Haubner; Maria Novatchkova; Dustin G. Gibson; William Maixner; J. Andrew Pospisilik; Emilio Hirsch; Ian Q. Whishaw; Andreas Zimmer; Vaijayanti Gupta; Junko Sasaki; Yasunori Kanaho; Takehiko Sasaki; Michaela Kress; Clifford J. Woolf; Josef M. Penninger
The ability to perceive noxious stimuli is critical for an animals survival in the face of environmental danger, and thus pain perception is likely to be under stringent evolutionary pressure. Using a neuronal-specific RNAi knock-down strategy in adult Drosophila, we recently completed a genome-wide functional annotation of heat nociception that allowed us to identify α2δ3 as a novel pain gene. Here we report construction of an evolutionary-conserved, system-level, global molecular pain network map. Our systems map is markedly enriched for multiple genes associated with human pain and predicts a plethora of novel candidate pain pathways. One central node of this pain network is phospholipid signaling, which has been implicated before in pain processing. To further investigate the role of phospholipid signaling in mammalian heat pain perception, we analysed the phenotype of PIP5Kα and PI3Kγ mutant mice. Intriguingly, both of these mice exhibit pronounced hypersensitivity to noxious heat and capsaicin-induced pain, which directly mapped through PI3Kγ kinase-dead knock-in mice to PI3Kγ lipid kinase activity. Using single primary sensory neuron recording, PI3Kγ function was mechanistically linked to a negative regulation of TRPV1 channel transduction. Our data provide a systems map for heat nociception and reinforces the extraordinary conservation of molecular mechanisms of nociception across different species.
Nature Medicine | 2018
Marc L. Hyer; Michael Milhollen; Jeff Ciavarri; Paul Fleming; Tary Traore; Darshan S. Sappal; Jessica Huck; Judy Shi; James M. Gavin; Jim Brownell; Yu Yang; Bradley Stringer; Robert S. Griffin; Frank J. Bruzzese; Teresa A. Soucy; Jennifer Duffy; Claudia Rabino; Jessica Riceberg; Kara M. Hoar; Anya Lublinsky; Saurabh Menon; Michael D. Sintchak; Nancy J. Bump; Sai M Pulukuri; Steve Langston; Stephen Tirrell; Mike Kuranda; Petter Veiby; John Newcomb; Ping Li
The ubiquitin–proteasome system (UPS) comprises a network of enzymes that is responsible for maintaining cellular protein homeostasis. The therapeutic potential of this pathway has been validated by the clinical successes of a number of UPS modulators, including proteasome inhibitors and immunomodulatory imide drugs (IMiDs). Here we identified TAK-243 (formerly known as MLN7243) as a potent, mechanism-based small-molecule inhibitor of the ubiquitin activating enzyme (UAE), the primary mammalian E1 enzyme that regulates the ubiquitin conjugation cascade. TAK-243 treatment caused depletion of cellular ubiquitin conjugates, resulting in disruption of signaling events, induction of proteotoxic stress, and impairment of cell cycle progression and DNA damage repair pathways. TAK-243 treatment caused death of cancer cells and, in primary human xenograft studies, demonstrated antitumor activity at tolerated doses. Due to its specificity and potency, TAK-243 allows for interrogation of ubiquitin biology and for assessment of UAE inhibition as a new approach for cancer treatment.