Rosemary Jagus
University of Maryland, Baltimore
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Featured researches published by Rosemary Jagus.
The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 1999
Rosemary Jagus; Bhavesh Joshi; Glen N. Barber
The double-stranded (ds) RNA-regulated serine/threonine protein kinase, PKR, is an interferon-inducible enzyme of widespread occurrence in mammalian cells. PKR is activated by dsRNA via a mechanism involving autophosphorylation. Once activated, the enzyme phosphorylates the alpha-subunit of protein synthesis initiation factor eIF2, thereby inhibiting translation. Accumulating data suggest that PKR has additional substrates, and that the kinase may also regulate gene transcription and signal transduction pathways. Although PKR plays an important role in mediating the antiviral effects of interferons, PKR is also implicated in regulating cell proliferation in uninfected cells and may have a tumor suppressor function under normal conditions. Studies of human malignancies and tumor cell lines suggest that, in general, patients bearing tumors with a higher PKR content have a more favorable prognosis. However, in human breast carcinoma cells, dysregulation of PKR may be associated with the establishment or maintenance of the transformed state.
Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1998
Edward R. Hofman; Madanamohan Boyanapalli; Daniel J. Lindner; Xiao Weihua; Bret A. Hassel; Rosemary Jagus; Peter L. Gutierrez; Dhananjaya V. Kalvakolanu
ABSTRACT Interferons (IFNs) and retinoids are potent biological response modifiers. By using JAK-STAT pathways, IFNs regulate the expression of genes involved in antiviral, antitumor, and immunomodulatory actions. Retinoids exert their cell growth-regulatory effects via nuclear receptors, which also function as transcription factors. Although these ligands act through distinct mechanisms, several studies have shown that the combination of IFNs and retinoids synergistically inhibits cell growth. We have previously reported that IFN-β–all-trans-retinoic acid (RA) combination is a more potent growth suppressor of human tumor xenografts in vivo than either agent alone. Furthermore, the IFN-RA combination causes cell death in several tumor cell lines in vitro. However, the molecular basis for these growth-suppressive actions is unknown. It has been suggested that certain gene products, which mediate the antiviral actions of IFNs, are also responsible for the antitumor actions of the IFN-RA combination. However, we did not find a correlation between their activities and cell death. Therefore, we have used an antisense knockout approach to directly identify the gene products that mediate cell death and have isolated several genes associated with retinoid-IFN-induced mortality (GRIM). In this investigation, we characterized one of the GRIM cDNAs, GRIM-12. Sequence analysis suggests that the GRIM-12 product is identical to human thioredoxin reductase (TR). TR is posttranscriptionally induced by the IFN-RA combination in human breast carcinoma cells. Overexpression of GRIM-12 causes a small amount of cell death and further enhances the susceptibility of cells to IFN-RA-induced death. Dominant negative inhibitors directed against TR inhibit its cell death-inducing functions. Interference with TR enzymatic activity led to growth promotion in the presence of the IFN-RA combination. Thus, these studies identify a novel function for TR in cell growth regulation.
Biochimie | 1994
Rosemary Jagus; M.M. Gray
The in vitro activities of recombinant gene products of the vaccinia virus E3L and K3L genes have been compared. These proteins are both potent inhibitors of the dsRNA activated protein kinase (PKR) as assayed in cell-free translation systems or with purified PKR. The two gene products function at similar molar concentrations. Both proteins are expressed early in vaccinia virus infection suggesting that vaccinia virus maintains redundant mechanisms for the down regulation of PKR. The K3L gene product can be shown to be associated with PKR in vaccinia virus infected cells. The activities of the vaccinia virus PKR inhibitors are compared with other viral protein inhibitors of PKR. A variety of cellular proteins have also been identified by their ability to inhibit PKR activity or to prevent PKR activation. These cellular PKR interacting proteins have been uncovered from the studies of viral strategies to prevent PKR activation, as well as from studies looking at the effects of growth control, growth factors or oncogene expression on PKR activity. A picture emerges of PKR fulfilling a complex regulatory role in cell function with the regulation of its activity as part of a complex cascade interfacing with the signal transduction/cell cycle control machinery.
The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 1999
Olga Savinova; Bhavesh Joshi; Rosemary Jagus
The interferon induced, dsRNA-activated, protein kinase, PKR, is a key regulator of translational initiation, playing an important role in the regulation of cell proliferation, apoptosis and transformation. PKR levels correlate inversely with proliferative activity in several human tumor systems. This inverse relationship breaks down in human invasive ductal breast carcinomas which exhibit high levels of PKR (Haines et al., Tumor Biol. 17 (1996) 5-12). Consistent with the data from human tumors, the levels of PKR in several breast carcinoma cell lines, MCF7, T47D, BT20, MDAMB231 and MDAMB468, are paradoxically high compared to those found in the normal breast cell lines MCF10A and Hs578Bst. The activity of affinity- or immuno-purified PKR from MCF7, T47D, and BT20 cells appears to be severely attenuated, as judged by its ability to autophosphorylate, or phosphorylate eIF2 alpha. Furthermore, the activity of the kinase from breast carcinoma cells is refractory to stimulation by dsRNA or heparin. However, PKR from breast carcinoma cells remains functional with respect to its ability to bind dsRNA. The activity of PKR from MCF10A cells is reduced by prior incubation with extracts from MCF7 cells, suggesting that MCF7 extracts contain a transdominant inhibitor of PKR. Deregulation of PKR may therefore provide a mechanism for the development or maintenance of a transformed phenotype of human breast carcinomas, mimicking the effects of manipulation of PKR or eIF2 activity observed in experimental systems. Thus, breast carcinomas may provide the first indication of a role for PKR in the pathogenesis of a naturally occurring human cancer.
Analytical Biochemistry | 1989
Patricia A. Maurides; Giridhar R. Akkaraju; Rosemary Jagus
Conditions have been established for one-dimensional isoelectric focusing using vertical slab gel electrophoresis, followed by immunoblotting, for the measurement of the phosphorylation state of proteins. The method provides a less time-consuming alternative to two-dimensional gel electrophoresis combined with radiolabeling or immunoblotting. The main advantage of the method is that many samples can be analyzed simultaneously. The technique is applied here to the study of a mammalian initiation factor for protein synthesis, eukaryotic initiation factor 2 (eIF-2). The method allows good separation and quantitation of the different phosphorylated forms of the alpha subunit of eIF-2, when used to analyze either purified eIF-2 or eIF-2 contained in complex mixtures. The method is shown to be well adapted to the measurement of rapid phosphorylation/dephosphorylation kinetics in cell extracts, as well as the measurement of the phosphorylation state of eIF-2 in cultured cells. In addition, the method is shown to confirm the existence of a second phosphorylation site on eIF-2. Although eIF-2 has been used for this demonstration of the efficacy of the method, the technique is applicable to a study of the regulation of covalent modification of any polypeptide for which antibodies are available.
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2010
Holly A. Bowers; Gretchen A. Messick; Ammar Hanif; Rosemary Jagus; Lee Carrion; Oded Zmora; Eric J. Schott
Mortality among blue crab Callinectes sapidus in soft shell production facilities is typically 25% or greater. The harvest, handling, and husbandry practices of soft shell crab production have the potential to spread or exacerbate infectious crab diseases. To investigate the possible role of viruses in soft shell crab mortalities, we took advantage of the physicochemical properties of double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) to isolate a putative virus genome. Further characterization confirmed the presence of a reo-like virus that possesses 12 dsRNA genome segments. The virus was present in >50% of dead or dying soft shell crabs, but fewer than 5% of healthy hard crabs. Injection of the virus caused mortality and resulted in the appearance of viral RNA and virus inclusions in hemocytes. The genome of the virus was partially sequenced and the information used to develop a reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay that is able to detect the virus genome in as little as 7.5 pg of total RNA. The molecular tools developed during this study will allow us to quantify prevalence of the blue crab reo-like virus in captive (soft shell facilities, aquaculture operations) and wild populations and facilitate understanding of the role this virus has in blue crab life history.
Diseases of Aquatic Organisms | 2009
L. Nagle; A. R. Place; Eric J. Schott; Rosemary Jagus; Gretchen A. Messick; Joseph S Pitula
Hematodinium sp. is a parasitic dinoflagellate infecting the blue crab Callinectes sapidus and other crustaceans. PCR-based assays are currently being used to identify infections in crabs that would have been undetectable by traditional microscopic examination. We therefore sought to define the limits of quantitative PCR (qPCR) detection within the context of field collection protocols. We present a qPCR assay based on the Hematodinium sp. 18S rRNA gene that can detect 10 copies of the gene per reaction. Analysis of a cell dilution series vs. defined numbers of a cloned Hematodinium sp. 18S rRNA gene suggests a copy number of 10,000 per parasite and predicts a sensitivity of 0.001 cell equivalents. In practice, the assays are based on analysis of 1% of the DNA extracted from 200 microl of serum, yielding a theoretical detection limit of 5 cells ml(-1) hemolymph, assuming that 1 cell is present per sample. When applied to a limited field survey of blue crabs collected in Maryland coastal bays from May to August 2005, 24 of 128 crabs (18.8%) were identified as positive for Hematodinium sp. infection using qPCR. In comparison, only 6 of 128 crabs (4.7%) were identified as positive using traditional hemolymph microscopic examination. The qPCR method also detected the parasite in gill, muscle, heart and hepatopancreas tissues, with 17.2% of the crabs showing infection in at least one of these tissues. Importantly, it is now possible to enumerate parasites within defined quantities of crab tissue, which permits collection of more detailed information on the epizootiology of the pathogen.
Comparative and Functional Genomics | 2012
Rosemary Jagus; Tsvetan R. Bachvaroff; Bhavesh Joshi; Allen R. Place
The greatest diversity of eukaryotic species is within the microbial eukaryotes, the protists, with plants and fungi/metazoa representing just two of the estimated seventy five lineages of eukaryotes. Protists are a diverse group characterized by unusual genome features and a wide range of genome sizes from 8.2 Mb in the apicomplexan parasite Babesia bovis to 112,000-220,050 Mb in the dinoflagellate Prorocentrum micans. Protists possess numerous cellular, molecular and biochemical traits not observed in “text-book” model organisms. These features challenge some of the concepts and assumptions about the regulation of gene expression in eukaryotes. Like multicellular eukaryotes, many protists encode multiple eIF4Es, but few functional studies have been undertaken except in parasitic species. An earlier phylogenetic analysis of protist eIF4Es indicated that they cannot be grouped within the three classes that describe eIF4E family members from multicellular organisms. Many more protist sequences are now available from which three clades can be recognized that are distinct from the plant/fungi/metazoan classes. Understanding of the protist eIF4Es will be facilitated as more sequences become available particularly for the under-represented opisthokonts and amoebozoa. Similarly, a better understanding of eIF4Es within each clade will develop as more functional studies of protist eIF4Es are completed.
Methods in Enzymology | 1987
Rosemary Jagus
This chapter describes the characterization of in vitro translation products by the most commonly used techniques. The methods include SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), combined with immunoprecipitation and/or fluorography of (/sup 35/S)methionine-labeled translation products. The other frequently used characterization tool, translation of hybrid-selected mRNA or hybrid-arrested translation, is treated separately in this volume. Methods are also given for the recognition of mRNAs coding for secreted or membrane proteins.
Aquatic Biosystems | 2013
Ammar Hanif; Whitney D Dyson; Holly A. Bowers; Joseph S Pitula; Gretchen A. Messick; Rosemary Jagus; Eric J. Schott
BackgroundHematodinium perezi, a parasitic dinoflagellate, infects and kills blue crabs, Callinectes sapidus, along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts of the United States. The parasite proliferates within host hemolymph and tissues, and also produces free-swimming biflagellated dinospores that emerge from infected crabs. Infections in C. sapidus recur annually, and it is not known if biotic or environmental reservoirs contribute to reinfection and outbreaks. To address this data gap, a quantitative PCR assay based on the internal transcribed spacer 2 (ITS2) region of H. perezi rRNA genes was developed to asses the temporal and spatial incidence of the parasite in Delaware and Maryland coastal bays.ResultsA previously-used PCR assay for H. perezi, based on the small subunit rRNA gene sequence, was found to lack adequate species specificity to discriminate non-Hematodinium sp. dinoflagellate species in environmental samples. A new ITS2-targeted assay was developed and validated to detect H. perezi DNA in sediment and water samples using E. coli carrying the H. perezi rDNA genes. Application of the method to environmental samples identified potential hotspots in sediment in Indian River Inlet, DE and Chincoteague Bay, MD and VA. H. perezi DNA was not detected in co-occurring shrimp or snails, even during an outbreak of the parasite in C. sapidus.ConclusionsH. perezi is present in water and sediment samples in Maryland and Delaware coastal bays from April through November with a wide spatial and temporal variability in incidence. Sampling sites with high levels of H. perezi DNA in both bays share characteristics of silty, organic sediments and low tidal currents. The environmental detection of H. perezi in spring, ahead of peak prevalence in crabs, points to gaps in our understanding of the parasite’s life history prior to infection in crabs as well as the mode of environmental transmission. To better understand the H. perezi life cycle will require further monitoring of the parasite in habitats as well as hosts. Improved understanding of potential environmental transmission to crabs will facilitate the development of disease forecasting.