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Dive into the research topics where Sarah M. Knox is active.

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Featured researches published by Sarah M. Knox.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Not all perlecans are created equal: interactions with fibroblast growth factor (FGF) 2 and FGF receptors

Sarah M. Knox; Catherine L R Merry; Sally E Stringer; James Melrose; John M. Whitelock

Human basement membrane heparan sulfate proteoglycan (HSPG) perlecan binds and activates fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-2 through its heparan sulfate (HS) chains. Here we show that perlecans immunopurified from three cellular sources possess different HS structures and subsequently different FGF-2 binding and activating capabilities. Perlecan isolated from human umbilical arterial endothelial cells (HUAEC) and a continuous endothelial cell line (C11 STH) bound similar amounts of FGF-2 either alone or complexed with FGFRα1-IIIc or FGFR3α-IIIc. Both perlecans stimulated the growth of BaF3 cell lines expressing FGFR1b/c; however, only HUAEC perlecan stimulated those cells expressing FGFR3c, suggesting that the source of perlecan confers FGF and FGFR binding specificity. Despite these differences in FGF-2 activation, the level of 2-O-and 6-O-sulfation was similar for both perlecans. Interestingly, perlecan isolated from a colon carcinoma cell line that was capable of binding FGF-2 was incapable of activating any BaF3 cell line unless the HS was removed from the protein core. The HS chains also exhibited greater bioactivity after digestion with heparinase III. Collectively, these data clearly demonstrate that the bioactivity of HS decorating a single PG is dependent on its cell source and that subtle changes in structure including secondary interactions have a profound effect on biological activity.


Development | 2007

Heparanase cleavage of perlecan heparan sulfate modulates FGF10 activity during ex vivo submandibular gland branching morphogenesis.

Vaishali N. Patel; Sarah M. Knox; Karen M. Likar; Colin A. Lathrop; Rydhwana Hossain; Siavash Eftekhari; John M. Whitelock; Michael Elkin; Israel Vlodavsky; Matthew P. Hoffman

Heparan sulfate proteoglycans are essential for biological processes regulated by fibroblast growth factors (FGFs). Heparan sulfate (HS) regulates the activity of FGFs by acting as a coreceptor at the cell surface, enhancing FGF-FGFR affinity, and being a storage reservoir for FGFs in the extracellular matrix (ECM). Here we demonstrate a critical role for heparanase during mouse submandibular gland (SMG) branching morphogenesis. Heparanase, an endoglycosidase, colocalized with perlecan in the basement membrane and in epithelial clefts of SMGs. Inhibition of heparanase activity in organ culture decreased branching morphogenesis, and this inhibition was rescued specifically by FGF10 and not by other FGFs. By contrast, exogenous heparanase increased SMG branching and MAPK signaling and, surprisingly, when isolated epithelia were cultured in a three-dimensional ECM with FGF10, it increased the number of lateral branches and end buds. In a solid-phase binding assay, an FGF10-FGFR2b complex was released from the ECM by heparanase. In addition, surface plasmon resonance (SPR) analysis showed that FGF10 and the FGF10-FGFR2b complex bound to purified perlecan HS and could be released by heparanase. We used the FGF10-FGFR2b complex as a probe for HS in SMGs, and it colocalized with perlecan in the basement membrane and partly colocalized with syndecan 1 in the epithelium, and binding was reduced by treatment with heparanase. In summary, our results show heparanase releases FGF10 from perlecan HS in the basement membrane, increasing MAPK signaling, epithelial clefting, and lateral branch formation, which results in increased branching morphogenesis.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2006

Perlecan: how does one molecule do so many things?

Sarah M. Knox; John M. Whitelock

Abstract.Perlecan is a large multi-domain extracellular matrix proteoglycan that plays a crucial role in tissue development and organogenesis. In vertebrates, perlecan functions in a diverse range of developmental and biological processes, from the establishment of cartilage to the regulation of wound healing. How can a single molecule modulate such a wide variety of processes? We suggest that perlecan employs the same basic mechanism, based on interactions with growth factors, morphogens and matrix proteins, to regulate each of these processes and that the local extracellular environment determines the function of perlecan and consequently its downstream effects on the structure and function of the organ. We discuss this hypothesis in relation to its role in three major vertebrate developmental processes: angiogenesis, chondrogenesis and endochondral ossification.


Nature Communications | 2013

Parasympathetic stimulation improves epithelial organ regeneration

Sarah M. Knox; Isabelle M.A. Lombaert; Candace L. Haddox; Shaun R. Abrams; Ana P. Cotrim; Adrian J. Wilson; Matthew P. Hoffman

Parasympathetic nerves are a vital component of the progenitor cell niche during development, maintaining a pool of progenitors for organogenesis. Injured adult organs do not regenerate after parasympathectomy, and there are few treatments to improve organ regeneration, particularly after damage by therapeutic irradiation. Here we show that restoring parasympathetic function with the neurotrophic factor neurturin increases epithelial organ regeneration after damage. We use mouse salivary gland explant culture containing fluorescently-labeled progenitors, and injure the tissue with irradiation. The progenitors survive, parasympathetic function is diminished, and epithelial apoptosis reduces expression of neurturin, which increases neuronal apoptosis. Treatment with neurturin reduces neuronal apoptosis, restores parasympathetic function, and increases epithelial regeneration. Furthermore adult human salivary glands damaged by irradiation also have reduced parasympathetic innervation. We propose that neurturin will protect the parasympathetic nerves from damage and improve organ regeneration. This concept may be applicable for other organs where parasympathetic innervation influences their function.


Biochemistry | 2010

Heparan Sulfate-Dependent Signaling of Fibroblast Growth Factor 18 by Chondrocyte-Derived Perlecan

Christine Y. Chuang; Megan S. Lord; James Melrose; Martin D. Rees; Sarah M. Knox; Craig Freeman; Renato V. Iozzo; John M. Whitelock

Perlecan is a large multidomain proteoglycan that is essential for normal cartilage development. In this study, perlecan was localized in the pericellular matrix of hypertrophic chondrocytes in developing human cartilage rudiments. Perlecan immunopurified from medium conditioned by cultured human fetal chondrocytes was found to be substituted with heparan sulfate (HS), chondroitin sulfate (CS), and keratan sulfate (KS). Ligand and carbohydrate engagement (LACE) assays demonstrated that immunopurified chondrocyte-derived perlecan formed HS-dependent ternary complexes with fibroblast growth factor (FGF) 2 and either FGF receptors (FGFRs) 1 or 3; however, these complexes were not biologically active in the BaF32 cell system. Chondrocyte-derived perlecan also formed HS-dependent ternary complexes with FGF18 and FGFR3. The proliferation of BaF32 cells expressing FGFR3 was promoted by chondrocyte-derived perlecan in the presence of FGF18, and this activity was reduced by digestion of the HS with either heparinase III or mammalian heparanase. These data suggest that FGF2 and -18 bind to discrete structures on the HS chains attached to chondrocyte-derived perlecan which modulate the growth factor activities. The presence and activity of mammalian heparanase may be important in the turnover of HS and subsequent signaling required for the establishment and maintenance of functional osteo-chondral junctions in long bone growth.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Promyogenic members of the Ig and cadherin families associate to positively regulate differentiation

Jong-Sun Kang; Jessica L. Feinleib; Sarah M. Knox; Michael A. Ketteringham; Robert S. Krauss

Determination and differentiation of cells in the skeletal muscle lineage is positively regulated by cell–cell contact. Cell-surface proteins proposed to mediate this effect include both classical cadherins and Ig superfamily members; potential interactions between the promyogenic activities of these classes of protein, however, are unknown. We show here that CDO and BOC, two promyogenic Ig superfamily members that bind to each other in a cis fashion, form complexes with N- and M-cadherin. These complexes contain β-catenin and are enriched at sites of cell–cell contact between myoblasts. In transient expression assays, the ectodomains and intracellular regions of CDO, BOC, and N-cadherin each interact independently, suggesting that the interactions occur in a cis fashion; consistent with this conclusion, cadherin-mediated cell adhesion is not required for them to occur. Stable expression in myoblasts of a CDO deletion mutant deficient in its ability to associate with N-cadherin interferes with differentiation as assessed by biochemical, morphological, and reporter gene assays, suggesting that this interaction is functionally important in myogenesis. Thus, some of the cell–cell contact-mediated activities that are required for myogenesis seem to be based on interdependent activities of promyogenic classical cadherins and Ig superfamily members.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The Structure, Location, and Function of Perlecan, a Prominent Pericellular Proteoglycan of Fetal, Postnatal, and Mature Hyaline Cartilages

James Melrose; Peter J. Roughley; Sarah M. Knox; Susan M. Smith; Megan S. Lord; John M. Whitelock

The aim of this study was to immunolocalize perlecan in human fetal, postnatal, and mature hyaline cartilages and to determine information on the structure and function of chondrocyte perlecan. Perlecan is a prominent component of human fetal (12-14 week) finger, toe, knee, and elbow cartilages; it was localized diffusely in the interterritorial extracellular matrix, densely in the pericellular matrix around chondrocytes, and to small blood vessels in the joint capsules and perichondrium. Aggrecan had a more intense distribution in the marginal regions of the joint rudiments and in para-articular structures. Perlecan also had a strong pericellular localization pattern in postnatal (2-7 month) and mature (55-64 year) femoral cartilages, whereas aggrecan had a prominent extracellular matrix distribution in these tissues. Western blotting identified multiple perlecan core protein species in extracts of the postnatal and mature cartilages, some of which were substituted with heparan sulfate and/or chondroitin sulfate and some were devoid of glycosaminoglycan substitution. Some perlecan core proteins were smaller than intact perlecan, suggesting that proteolytic processing or alternative splicing had occurred. Surface plasmon resonance and quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation experiments demonstrated that chondrocyte perlecan bound fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-1 and -9 less efficiently than endothelial cell perlecan. The latter perlecan supported the proliferation of Baf-32 cells transfected with FGFR3c equally well with FGF-1 and -9, whereas chondrocyte perlecan only supported Baf-32 cell proliferation with FGF-9. The function of perlecan therefore may not be universal but may vary with its cellular origin and presumably its structure.


Oral Diseases | 2011

Salivary gland progenitor cell biology provides a rationale for therapeutic salivary gland regeneration

Isabelle M.A. Lombaert; Sarah M. Knox; Matthew P. Hoffman

An irreversible loss of salivary gland function often occurs in humans after removal of salivary tumors, after therapeutic radiation of head and neck tumors, as a result of Sjögrens syndrome and in genetic syndromes affecting gland development. The permanent loss of gland function impairs the oral health of these patients and broadly affects their quality of life. The regeneration of functional salivary gland tissue is thus an important therapeutic goal for the field of regenerative medicine and will likely involve stem/progenitor cell biology and/or tissue engineering approaches. Recent reports demonstrate how both innervation of the salivary gland epithelium and certain growth factors influence progenitor cell growth during mouse salivary gland development. These advances in our understanding suggest that developmental mechanisms of mouse salivary gland development may provide a paradigm for postnatal regeneration of both mice and human salivary glands. Herein, we will discuss the developmental mechanisms that influence progenitor cell biology and the implications for salivary gland regeneration.


Developmental Cell | 2014

Parasympathetic innervation regulates tubulogenesis in the developing salivary gland.

Pavel I. Nedvetsky; Elaine Emmerson; Jennifer K. Finley; Andreas Ettinger; Noel Cruz-Pacheco; Jan Prochazka; Candace L. Haddox; Emily Northrup; Craig A. Hodges; Keith E. Mostov; Matthew P. Hoffman; Sarah M. Knox

A fundamental question in development is how cells assemble to form a tubular network during organ formation. In glandular organs, tubulogenesis is a multistep process requiring coordinated proliferation, polarization and reorganization of epithelial cells to form a lumen, and lumen expansion. Although it is clear that epithelial cells possess an intrinsic ability to organize into polarized structures, the mechanisms coordinating morphogenetic processes during tubulogenesis are poorly understood. Here, we demonstrate that parasympathetic nerves regulate tubulogenesis in the developing salivary gland. We show that vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) secreted by the innervating ganglia promotes ductal growth, leads to the formation of a contiguous lumen, and facilitates lumen expansion through a cyclic AMP/protein kinase A (cAMP/PKA)-dependent pathway. Furthermore, we provide evidence that lumen expansion is independent of apoptosis and involves the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), a cAMP-regulated Cl(-) channel. Thus, parasympathetic innervation coordinates multiple steps in tubulogenesis during organogenesis.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Mechanisms of TSC-mediated Control of Synapse Assembly and Axon Guidance

Sarah M. Knox; Hong Ge; Brian Dimitroff; Yi Ren; Katie Howe; Andrew M. Arsham; Mathew C. Easterday; Thomas P. Neufeld; Michael B. O'Connor; Scott B. Selleck

Tuberous sclerosis complex is a dominant genetic disorder produced by mutations in either of two tumor suppressor genes, TSC1 and TSC2; it is characterized by hamartomatous tumors, and is associated with severe neurological and behavioral disturbances. Mutations in TSC1 or TSC2 deregulate a conserved growth control pathway that includes Ras homolog enriched in brain (Rheb) and Target of Rapamycin (TOR). To understand the function of this pathway in neural development, we have examined the contributions of multiple components of this pathway in both neuromuscular junction assembly and photoreceptor axon guidance in Drosophila. Expression of Rheb in the motoneuron, but not the muscle of the larval neuromuscular junction produced synaptic overgrowth and enhanced synaptic function, while reductions in Rheb function compromised synapse development. Synapse growth produced by Rheb is insensitive to rapamycin, an inhibitor of Tor complex 1, and requires wishful thinking, a bone morphogenetic protein receptor critical for functional synapse expansion. In the visual system, loss of Tsc1 in the developing retina disrupted axon guidance independently of cellular growth. Inhibiting Tor complex 1 with rapamycin or eliminating the Tor complex 1 effector, S6 kinase (S6k), did not rescue axon guidance abnormalities of Tsc1 mosaics, while reductions in Tor function suppressed those phenotypes. These findings show that Tsc-mediated control of axon guidance and synapse assembly occurs via growth-independent signaling mechanisms, and suggest that Tor complex 2, a regulator of actin organization, is critical in these aspects of neuronal development.

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John M. Whitelock

University of New South Wales

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Matthew P. Hoffman

National Institutes of Health

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James Melrose

University of New South Wales

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Sara Nathan

University of California

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Aaron D. Tward

University of California

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Alison J May

University of California

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