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Dive into the research topics where Rose Goldstein is active.

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Featured researches published by Rose Goldstein.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1999

PARP alleles within the linked chromosomal region are associated with systemic lupus erythematosus

Betty P. Tsao; Rita M. Cantor; Jennifer M. Grossman; Nan Shen; Nickolay T. Teophilov; Daniel J. Wallace; Frank C. Arnett; Klaus Hartung; Rose Goldstein; Kenneth C. Kalunian; Bevra H. Hahn; Jerome I. Rotter

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) is an autoimmune disease characterized by various autoantibodies that recognize autoantigens displayed on the surface of cells undergoing apoptosis. The genetic contribution to SLE susceptibility has been widely recognized. We previously reported evidence for linkage to SLE of the human chromosome 1q41-q42 region and have now narrowed it from 15 to 5 cM in an extended sample using multipoint linkage analysis. Candidate genes within this region include (a) PARP, poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, encoding a zinc-finger DNA-binding protein that is involved in DNA repair and apoptosis; (b) TGFB2, encoding a transforming growth factor that regulates cellular interactions and responses; and (c) HLX1, encoding a homeobox protein that may regulate T-cell development. Using a multiallelic, transmission-disequilibrium test (TDT), we found overall skewing of transmission of PARP alleles to affected offspring in 124 families (P = 0.00008), preferential transmission of a PARP allele to affected offspring (P = 0.0003), and lack of transmission to unaffected offspring (P = 0.004). Similar TDT analyses of TGFB2 and HLX1 polymorphisms yielded no evidence for association with SLE. These results suggest that PARP may be (or is close to) the susceptibility gene within the chromosome 1q41-q42 region linked to SLE.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1992

Association of amino acid sequences in the HLA-DQB1 first domain with antitopoisomerase I autoantibody response in scleroderma (progressive systemic sclerosis).

John D. Reveille; Egon Durban; Miriam J. MacLeod-St Clair; Rose Goldstein; Ramon Moreda; Roy D. Altman; Frank C. Arnett

Previous studies in Caucasians with progressive systemic sclerosis (PSS) have suggested associations of antitopoisomerase I (antitopo I) autoantibodies with either serologically defined HLA-DR2 or DR5. To better define class II HLA associations with the antitopo I response, 161 PSS patients (132 Caucasians and 29 American blacks) were studied for antitopo I autoantibodies by immunodiffusion and immunoblotting, and their HLA-DRB1, DRB3, DQA1, and DQB1 alleles were determined by restriction fragment length polymorphic analysis and DNA oligotyping. Among Caucasians with antitopo I, HLA-DR5(DRB1*1101-*1104), DRB3*0202 and DQw3 (DQw7,8,9) were significantly increased in frequency. In American blacks, however, only HLA-DQB1*0301(DQw7) was significantly increased. The presence of HLA-DQB1*0301(DQw7) and other HLA-DQB1 alleles bearing the uncharged polar amino acid residue tyrosine at position 30 of the outermost domain was found in all antitopo I-positive Caucasian PSS patients compared with 66% of antitopo I-negative PSS patients (pc = 0.007) and 70% of normal controls (pc = 0.008), as well as all antitopo I-positive black patients. The association with HLA-DQB1 was independent of HLA-DR5(DRB1*1101-*1104) or any other HLA-DRB1, DRB3, or DQA1 alleles. Alternative or additional candidate epitopes for this autoimmune response include alanine at position 38 and threonine at position 77 of these same DQB1 alleles. These data suggest that genetic predisposition to the antitopo I response in PSS is associated most closely with the HLA-DQB1 locus.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

Cutting Edge: MHC Class II-Restricted Peptides Containing the Inflammation-Associated Marker 3-Nitrotyrosine Evade Central Tolerance and Elicit a Robust Cell-Mediated Immune Response

H. Chaim Birnboim; Anne-Marie Lemay; Debbie Ka Yee Lam; Rose Goldstein; John R. Webb

Nitrotyrosine is widely recognized as a surrogate marker of up-regulated inducible NO synthase expression at sites of inflammation. However, the potential immunogenicity of autologous proteins containing nitrotyrosine has not previously been investigated. Herein, we used the I-EK-restricted T cell epitope of pigeon/moth cytochrome c (PCC/MCC88–103) to assess the ability of T cells to recognize ligands containing nitrotyrosine. Substitution of the single tyrosine (Y97) in PCC/MCC88–103 with nitrotyrosine abrogates recognition by the MCC88–103-specific T cell hybridoma 2B4. CBA (H2K) mice immunized with MCC88–103 or nitrated MCC88–103 peptides produce T cell responses that are mutually exclusive. Transgenic mice that constitutively express PCC under the control of an MHC class I promoter are tolerant toward immunization with MCC88–103, but exhibited a robust immune response against nitrated MCC88–103. Analysis of T cell hybridomas specific for nitrated-MCC88–103 indicated that subtle differences in TCR VDJ gene usage are sufficient to allow nitrotyrosine-specific T cells to escape the processes of central tolerance.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1992

Association of polar amino acids at position 26 of the HLA-DQB1 first domain with the anticentromere autoantibody response in systemic sclerosis (scleroderma).

John D. Reveille; David Owerbach; Rose Goldstein; Ramon Moreda; Reuben A. Isern; Frank C. Arnett

HLA class II alleles (detected by DNA typing) were determined in 116 Caucasians with systemic sclerosis positive and negative for anticentromere autoantibodies (ACA). Significantly increased frequencies of HLA-DR5(DRw11) (P = 0.009) and the Dw13(DRB1*0403, *0407) subtypes of DR4 (probability corrected, Pc = 0.005) were seen in ACA positive patients, and HLA-DR1 and DRw8 were also increased. These findings appeared to reflect linkage disequilibrium of DR5(DRw11) and many DR4(Dw13) haplotypes with HLA-DQw7 and DR1 with DQw5. In fact, the presence of a DQB1 allele having a polar glycine or tyrosine at position 26 of the DQB1 first domain versus a hydrophobic leucine accounted for 100% of ACA positive Caucasian systemic sclerosis patients compared to 69% of the ACA negative SS patients (P = 0.0008) and 71% of Caucasian controls (P = 0.0003) as well as all 7 ACA patients of non-Caucasian background. Furthermore, the genotype frequency of DQB1 alleles lacking leucine at position 26 was 73% in ACA positive SS patients, compared to 42% of ACA negative patients (P = 1.2 x 10(-5)) and 38% of controls (P = 5.8 x 10(-7)). These data, then, suggest that the second hypervariable region of the HLA-DQB1 chain may form the candidate epitope associated with the ACA response.


Gastroenterology | 1993

Early-onset autoimmune hepatitis is associated with a C4A gene deletion

Linda Scully; Cynthia Toze; Dharmendra P.S. Sengar; Rose Goldstein

BACKGROUND Autoimmune hepatitis is an immunologically mediated disorder with some similarities to systemic lupus erythematosus, including an association with HLA-A1, B8, DR3. This haplotype includes a C4A, 21-OHA gene deletion. Low serum levels of complement and C4 null alleles have been reported in autoimmune hepatitis, but studies have been at the protein level only. METHODS Twenty-four white patients with autoimmune hepatitis were studied by Southern blots using a C4A gene complementary DNA probe. HLA A, B, and C typing was determined using standard microcytotoxicity assays, and DR and DQ specificities were determined by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. RESULTS Thirteen of 24 patients had the C4A gene deletion compared with 12 of 90 controls. HLA-A1 and B8 were increased in patients with autoimmune hepatitis, as were HLA-DR3 (DR17), Dw24, DQ2. Patients with a C4A gene deletion presented at a younger age than those without the deletion and had significantly lower serum C3 and C4 levels. The C4A gene deletion was associated with HLA-A1, B8, DR3 in all but 1 patient who was HLA-DR3 negative. CONCLUSIONS A C4A gene deletion is found in patients with autoimmune hepatitis, especially those presenting at a young age. This complement gene deletion may be an important factor in the development of this disease.


Immunogenetics | 1989

C4A gene deletion and HLA associations in black Americans with systemic lupus erythematosus

Mary L. Olsen; Rose Goldstein; Frank C. Arnett; Madeleine Duvic; Marilyn S. Pollack; John D. Reveille

In North America and European Caucasoids with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) there is an increased frequency of aC4A, CYP21A gene deletion, largely associated with theHLA-B8,DR3,C4A*QO extended haplotype. There have been no consistent HLA associations reported for SLE in blacks, although an increased frequency of serologically determinedC4A null alleles has been reported in two studies. We studied 79 black American SLE patients and 68 black controls by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis to dermine if aC4A gene deletion was a genetic risk factor for SLE. Moreover, the nature of the deletion and any HLA phenotypic associations were sought. Nineteen of 79 (24%) patients compared to 5 of 68 (7.4%) controls had a phenotypicC4A,CYP21A gene deletion (P=.005; RR=4). A homozygous deletion in four patients gave a genotypic frequency of 23/158 (14.5%) SLE patients vs 5/136 (3.7%) controls (P=.001; RR=4.5). The deletion was associated with HLA-DR2 (P=.03) and HLA-DR3 (P=.03). Moreover, all subjects with the deletion had HLA-DR2 or DR3 (P=7.7×10−6). HLA-B44 was also associated with the deletion (P=.02), and eight of the nine HLA-B44 positives also carried HLA-DR2. HLA-B8 approached significance (P=.08) and was always accompanied by HLA-DR3. Finally, this black population demonstrated a uniqueC4B gene size polymorphism with 80% C4B “short” as compared to the 40% C4B “short” frequency reported in whites. We conclude that a largeC4A,CYP21A gene deletion, particularly associated with theHLA-B44,-DR2, and-DR3 alleles, is the strongest genetic risk factor thus far identified for SLE susceptibility in black Americans. Furthermore, the unique preponderance of theC4B “short” gene form may be a factor in the actual formation of the deletion.


Arthritis & Rheumatism | 1998

HPRT− mutant T cells in the peripheral blood and synovial tissue of patients with rheumatoid arthritis

Jennifer Leigh Cannons; Jacob Karsh; H. Chaim Birnboim; Rose Goldstein

OBJECTIVE To investigate the frequency and characteristics of hprt- mutant T lymphocytes in the peripheral blood and synovium of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients compared with controls, and to correlate these findings with disease parameters. METHODS An hprt- T cell assay was performed on blood and synovial samples from 93 RA patients, 8 osteoarthritis (OA) patients, and 19 control subjects. T cell clones were studied by flow cytometry and evaluated for fibronectin adhesion. RESULTS RA patients showed a 5-fold increase in the frequency of mutant T cells in the peripheral blood compared with that in control peripheral blood, and a further 10-fold increase in the mutant T cell frequency in synovial tissue. In OA patients, the synovium also had a significantly higher frequency of hprt- mutant T cells compared with the peripheral blood, but at a lower level than in the rheumatoid synovium. RA peripheral blood mutant T cell clones displayed elevated fibronectin adhesion and beta1 integrin expression, similar to that observed in the RA synovial T cell lines. CONCLUSION The origin of the mutated T cells in the peripheral blood of these patients appears to be the inflamed synovium of RA, and to a lesser extent, of OA, where the cells are exposed to a mitogenic and genotoxic environment.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 1999

A measure of limited joint motion and deformity correlates with HLA-DRB1 and DQB1 alleles in patients with rheumatoid arthritis

Ann Cranney; Rose Goldstein; Ba’ Pham; Marianna M Newkirk; Jacob Karsh

OBJECTIVE To assess factors associated with a poor outcome in rheumatoid arthritis (RA), a measure was developed of limited joint motion and deformity, a deformity index (DI), and correlated biochemical and genetic variables with the magnitude of the DI. METHODS Forty patients were evaluated in a cross sectional study. Clinical measures included the DI and Health Assessment Questionnaire, and disease variables included the erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C reactive protein, rheumatoid factor, and HLA-DRB1 and DQB1 alleles. RESULTS Significant correlations were noted between increasing DI and duration of RA and concentration of C reactive protein. Patients with a DQB1*301 allele or DR4 allele had a higher DI than those without, and a positive trend was noted between increasing DI and dose of DRB1 RA susceptibility alleles. The trend was lost when a non-linear regression technique was used to remove the effect attributable to C reactive protein, suggesting an interrelation between persistent inflammation and genetics in determining total joint damage. CONCLUSIONS The DI may be useful to study interactions between genetic and inflammatory processes in rheumatoid disease progression.


Medicine | 2014

An Autoimmune Myositis-Overlap Syndrome Associated With Autoantibodies to Nuclear Pore Complexes: Description and Long-Term Follow-up of the Anti-Nup Syndrome

Jean-Luc Senécal; Catherine Isabelle; Marvin J. Fritzler; Ira N. Targoff; Rose Goldstein; Michel Gagné; Jean-Pierre Raynauld; Yves Troyanov; Marie-Christine Dabauvalle

AbstractAutoimmune myositis encompasses various myositis-overlap syndromes, each being identified by the presence of serum marker autoantibodies. We describe a novel myositis-overlap syndrome in 4 patients characterized by the presence of a unique immunologic marker, autoantibodies to nuclear pore complexes. The clinical phenotype was characterized by prominent myositis in association with erosive, anti-CCP, and rheumatoid factor-positive arthritis, trigeminal neuralgia, mild interstitial lung disease, Raynaud phenomenon, and weight loss. The myositis was typically chronic, relapsing, and refractory to corticosteroids alone, but remitted with the addition of a second immunomodulating drug. There was no clinical or laboratory evidence for liver disease. The prognosis was good with 100% long-term survival (mean follow-up 19.5 yr).By indirect immunofluorescence on HEp-2 cells, sera from all 4 patients displayed a high titer of antinuclear autoantibodies (ANA) with a distinct punctate peripheral (rim) fluorescent pattern of the nuclear envelope characteristic of nuclear pore complexes. Reactivity with nuclear pore complexes was confirmed by immunoelectron microscopy. In a cohort of 100 French Canadian patients with autoimmune myositis, the nuclear pore complex fluorescent ANA pattern was restricted to these 4 patients (4%). It was not observed in sera from 393 adult patients with systemic sclerosis (n = 112), mixed connective tissue disease (n = 35), systemic lupus (n = 94), rheumatoid arthritis (n = 45), or other rheumatic diseases (n = 107), nor was it observed in 62 normal adults.Autoantibodies to nuclear pore complexes were predominantly of IgG isotype. No other IgG autoantibody markers for defined connective tissue diseases or overlap syndromes were present, indicating a selective and highly focused immune response. In 3 patients, anti-nuclear pore complex autoantibody titers varied in parallel with myositis activity, suggesting a pathogenic link to pathophysiology. The nuclear pore complex proteins, that is, nucleoporins (nup), recognized by these sera were heterogeneous and included Nup358/RanBP2 (n = 2 patients), Nup90 (n = 1), Nup62 (n = 1), and gp210 (n = 1). Taken together the data suggest that nup autoantigens themselves drive the anti-nup autoimmune response. Immunogenetically, the 4 patients shared the DQA1*0501 allele associated with an increased risk for autoimmune myositis.In conclusion, we report an apparent novel subset of autoimmune myositis in our population of French Canadian patients with connective tissue diseases. This syndrome is recognized by the presence of a unique immunologic marker, autoantibodies to nuclear pore complexes that react with nups, consistent with an “anti-nup syndrome.”


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2008

Ro/SSA inhibits the autologous mixed lymphocyte reaction

Karsh J; John B. Harley; Rose Goldstein; Lazarovits Ai

To test the hypothesis that the Ro/SSA autoantigen can be recognized as antigenic by the human immune system, lymphocytes obtained from normal volunteers were used in in vitro assays evaluating the ability of Ro/SSA (mol. wt 60 kD) to induce B and/or T cell responses. Bovine Ro/SSA strongly inhibited the autologous mixed lymphocyte reaction in a dose‐dependent manner without similar effects on concurrently performed allogeneic mixed lymphocyte reactions or T cell proliferation induced by phytohaemagglutinin. Using three colour FACS analysis, Ro/SSA was found to decrease the percentage of CD4+CD45+RA+ T cells in the proliferative, S+(G2+ M), phase of the cell cycle. Associated with the decrease in the percentage of suppressor‐inducer cells, was the finding that Ro/ SSA was able to augment RF production in pokeweed mitogen stimulated cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes.

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Frank C. Arnett

University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

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John D. Reveille

University of Texas at Austin

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Betty P. Tsao

Medical University of South Carolina

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Bevra H. Hahn

University of California

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Daniel J. Wallace

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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