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Dive into the research topics where Sheila Scully is active.

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Featured researches published by Sheila Scully.


Cell | 1998

Osteoprotegerin Ligand Is a Cytokine that Regulates Osteoclast Differentiation and Activation

David L. Lacey; E Timms; Hong-Lin Tan; Michael Kelley; Colin R. Dunstan; Teresa L. Burgess; Robin Elliott; Anne Colombero; Gary Elliott; Sheila Scully; Hailing Hsu; J Sullivan; Nessa Hawkins; E Davy; Casey Capparelli; A Eli; Y.-X Qian; Stephen Kaufman; Ildiko Sarosi; V Shalhoub; Giorgio Senaldi; J Guo; J Delaney; William J. Boyle

The ligand for osteoprotegerin has been identified, and it is a TNF-related cytokine that replaces the requirement for stromal cells, vitamin D3, and glucocorticoids in the coculture model of in vitro osteoclastogenesis. OPG ligand (OPGL) binds to a unique hematopoeitic progenitor cell that is committed to the osteoclast lineage and stimulates the rapid induction of genes that typify osteoclast development. OPGL directly activates isolated mature osteoclasts in vitro, and short-term administration into normal adult mice results in osteoclast activation associated with systemic hypercalcemia. These data suggest that OPGL is an osteoclast differentiation and activation factor. The effects of OPGL are blocked in vitro and in vivo by OPG, suggesting that OPGL and OPG are key extracellular regulators of osteoclast development.


Nature | 1999

T-cell co-stimulation through B7RP-1 and ICOS.

Steven Kiyoshi Yoshinaga; John S. Whoriskey; Sanjay D. Khare; Ulla Sarmiento; Jane Guo; Tom Horan; Grace Shih; Ming Zhang; Marco A. Coccia; Tadahiko Kohno; Anna Tafuri-Bladt; David Brankow; Pauline Campbell; David Chang; Laura Chiu; Tianang Dai; Gordon S. Duncan; Gary Elliott; Ariela Hui; Susan McCabe; Sheila Scully; Arda Shahinian; Christine L. Shaklee; Gwyneth Van; Tak W. Mak; Giorgio Senaldi

T-cell activation requires co-stimulation through receptors such as CD28 (refs 1,2,3) and antigen-specific signalling through the T-cell antigen receptor. Here we describe a new murine co-stimulatory receptor–ligand pair. The receptor, which is related to CD28 and is the homologue of the human protein ICOS, is expressed on activated T cells and resting memory T cells. The ligand, which has homology to B7 molecules and is called B7-related protein-1 (B7RP-1), is expressed on B cells and macrophages. ICOS and B7RP-1 do not interact with proteins in the CD28–B7 pathway, and B7RP-1 co-stimulates T cells in vitro independently of CD28. Transgenic mice expressing a B7RP-1–Fc fusion protein show lymphoid hyperplasia in the spleen, lymph nodes and Peyers patches. Presensitized mice treated with B7RP-1–Fc during antigen challenge show enhanced hypersensitivity. Therefore, B7RP-1 exhibits co-stimulatory activities in vitro and in vivo. ICOS and B7RP-1 define a new and distinct receptor–ligand pair that is structurally related to CD28–B7 and is involved in the adaptive immune response.


Cell | 2000

The Osteoclast Differentiation Factor Osteoprotegerin-Ligand Is Essential for Mammary Gland Development

Jimmie E. Fata; Young-Yun Kong; Ji Li; Takehiko Sasaki; Junko Irie-Sasaki; Roger A. Moorehead; Robin Elliott; Sheila Scully; Evelyn B. Voura; David L. Lacey; William J. Boyle; Rama Khokha; Josef M. Penninger

Osteoprotegerin-ligand (OPGL) is a key osteoclast differentiation/activation factor essential for bone remodeling. We report that mice lacking OPGL or its receptor RANK fail to form lobulo-alveolar mammary structures during pregnancy, resulting in death of newborns. Transplantation and OPGL-rescue experiments in opgl-/- and rank-/- pregnant females showed that OPGL acts directly on RANK-expressing mammary epithelial cells. The effects of OPGL are autonomous to epithelial cells. The mammary gland defect in female opgl-/- mice is characterized by enhanced apoptosis and failures in proliferation and PKB activation in lobulo-alveolar buds that can be reversed by recombinant OPGL treatment. These data provide a novel paradigm in mammary gland development and an evolutionary rationale for hormonal regulation and gender bias of osteoporosis in females.


American Journal of Pathology | 2000

Osteoprotegerin Ligand Modulates Murine Osteoclast Survival in Vitro and in Vivo

David L. Lacey; Hong Lin Tan; John Lu; Steven Kaufman; Gwyneth Van; Wanrang Qiu; Alana Rattan; Sheila Scully; Frederick A. Fletcher; Todd Juan; Michael Kelley; Teresa L. Burgess; William J. Boyle; Anthony Polverino

Osteoprotegerin ligand (OPGL) targets osteoclast precursors and osteoclasts to enhance differentiation and activation, however, little is known about OPGL effects on osteoclast survival. In vitro, the combination of OPGL + colony-stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1) is required for optimal osteoclast survival. Ultrastructurally, apoptotic changes were observed in detached cells and culture lysates exhibited elevated caspase 3 activity, particularly in cultures lacking CSF-1. DEVD-FMK (caspase 3 inhibitor) partially protected cells when combined with OPGL, but not when used alone or in combination with CSF-1. CSF-1 maintained NF-kappaB activation and increased the expression of bcl-2 and bcl-X(L) mRNA, but had no effect on JNK activation. In contrast, OPGL enhanced both NF-kappaB and JNK kinase activation and increased the expression of c-src, but not bcl-2 and bcl-X(L) mRNA. These data suggest that aspects of both OPGLs and CSF-1s signaling/survival pathways are required for optimal osteoclast survival. In mice, a single dose of OPG, the OPGL decoy receptor, led to a >90% loss of osteoclasts because of apoptosis within 48 hours of exposure without impacting osteoclast precursor cells. Therefore, OPGL is essential, but not sufficient, for osteoclast survival and endogenous CSF-1 levels are insufficient to maintain osteoclast viability in the absence of OPGL.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1998

FGF-18, a novel member of the fibroblast growth factor family, stimulates hepatic and intestinal proliferation.

Mickey C.-T. Hu; Wan R. Qiu; You-ping Wang; Dave Hill; Brian D. Ring; Sheila Scully; Brad Bolon; Margaret L. DeRose; Roland Luethy; W. Scott Simonet; Tsutomu Arakawa; Dimitry Michael Danilenko

ABSTRACT The fibroblast growth factors (FGFs) play key roles in controlling tissue growth, morphogenesis, and repair in animals. We have cloned a novel member of the FGF family, designated FGF-18, that is expressed primarily in the lungs and kidneys and at lower levels in the heart, testes, spleen, skeletal muscle, and brain. Sequence comparison indicates that FGF-18 is highly conserved between humans and mice and is most homologous to FGF-8 among the FGF family members. FGF-18 has a typical signal sequence and was glycosylated and secreted when it was transfected into 293-EBNA cells. Recombinant murine FGF-18 protein (rMuFGF-18) stimulated proliferation in the fibroblast cell line NIH 3T3 in vitro in a heparan sulfate-dependent manner. To examine its biological activity in vivo, rMuFGF-18 was injected into normal mice and ectopically overexpressed in transgenic mice by using a liver-specific promoter. Injection of rMuFGF-18 induced proliferation in a wide variety of tissues, including tissues of both epithelial and mesenchymal origin. The two tissues which appeared to be the primary targets of FGF-18 were the liver and small intestine, both of which exhibited histologic evidence of proliferation and showed significant gains in organ weight following 7 (sometimes 3) days of FGF-18 treatment. Transgenic mice that overexpressed FGF-18 in the liver also exhibited an increase in liver weight and hepatocellular proliferation. These results suggest that FGF-18 is a pleiotropic growth factor that stimulates proliferation in a number of tissues, most notably the liver and small intestine.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 1999

Osteoprotegerin and osteoprotegerin ligand effects on osteoclast formation from human peripheral blood mononuclear cell precursors

Victoria Shalhoub; Judy Faust; William J. Boyle; Colin R. Dunstan; Michael Kelley; Steve Kaufman; Sheila Scully; Gwyneth Van; David L. Lacey

Osteoprotegerin (OPG) and its ligand (OPGL) negatively and positively regulate osteoclastogenesis in the mouse. OPG inhibits osteoclastogenesis by sequestering its ligand, OPGL, the osteoclast differentiation and activation factor. This study demonstrates the effects of soluble muOPGL and huOPG on the developing human osteoclast phenotype, on bone slices, using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), cultured for 2 weeks, without stromal cells. OPGL (2–50 ng/ml), in combination with CSF‐1, hydrocortisone (HC), and 1,25(OH)2D3, increases the size of osteoclast‐like cells on bone, as defined by the acquisition of osteoclast markers: vitronectin receptor (VR), tartrate‐resistant acid phosphatase (TRAP), multinuclearity, and bone resorption. By 14 days, with 20 ng/ml OPGL, the largest cells/10× field have achieved an average diameter of 163 ± 38 μm, but only ∼10–20 μm in its absence and the number of osteoclast‐like cells/mm2 bone surface is about 128. By scanning electron microscopy, OPGL‐treated (20‐ng/ml) cultures contain small osteoclast‐like cells on bone with ruffled “apical” surfaces by day 7; by day 15, large osteoclast‐like cells are spread over resorption lacunae. At 15 ng/ml OPGL, about 37% of the bone slice area is covered by resorption lacunae. OPG (5–250 ng/ml) antagonizes the effects of OPGL on the morphology of the osteoclast‐like cells that form, as well as bone erosion. For cells grown on plastic, Cathepsin K mRNA levels, which are barely detectable at plating, are elevated 7‐fold, by 5 days, in the presence, not the absence, of OPGL (20 ng/ml) + CSF‐1 (25 ng/ml). Similar findings are observed in experiments performed in the absence of HC and 1,25(OH)2D3, indicating that HC and 1,25(OH)2D3 are not needed for OPGL‐induced osteoclast differentiation. In conclusion, this study confirms a pivotal role for OPGL and OPG in the modulation of human osteoclast differentiation and function, suggesting a use for OPG for treating osteoclast‐mediated bone disease in humans. J. Cell. Biochem. 72:251–261, 1999.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

CSMD1 Is a Novel Multiple Domain Complement-Regulatory Protein Highly Expressed in the Central Nervous System and Epithelial Tissues

Damian Kraus; Gary Elliott; Hilary T. Chute; Thomas P. Horan; Karl H. Pfenninger; Staci D. Sanford; Stephen Foster; Sheila Scully; Andrew A. Welcher; V. Michael Holers

In this study, we describe the identification and in vitro functional activity of a novel multiple domain complement regulatory protein discovered based on its homology to short consensus repeat (SCR)-containing proteins of the regulators of complement activation (RCA) gene family. The rat cDNA encodes a predicted 388-kDa protein consisting of 14 N-terminal CUB domains that are separated from each other by a SCR followed by 15 tandem SCR domains, a transmembrane domain, and a short cytoplasmic tail. This protein is the homolog of the human protein of unknown function called the CUB and sushi multiple domains 1 (CSMD1) protein. A cloning strategy that incorporates the two C-terminal CUB-SCR domains and 12 of the tandem SCR repeats was used to produce a soluble rat CSMD1 protein. This protein blocked classical complement pathway activation in a comparable fashion with rat Crry but did not block alternative pathway activation. Analysis of CSMD1 mRNA expression by in situ hybridization and immunolabeling of neurons indicates that the primary sites of synthesis are the developing CNS and epithelial tissues. Of particular significance is the enrichment of CSMD1 in the nerve growth cone, the amoeboid-leading edge of the growing neuron. These results suggest that CSMD1 may be an important regulator of complement activation and inflammation in the developing CNS, and that it may also play a role in the context of growth cone function.


Journal of Immunology | 2001

IL-18-Binding Protein Protects Against Lipopolysaccharide- Induced Lethality and Prevents the Development of Fas/Fas Ligand-Mediated Models of Liver Disease in Mice

Raffaella Faggioni; Russell C. Cattley; Jane Guo; Silvia Flores; Heather Brown; Meiying Qi; Songmei Yin; David C. Hill; Sheila Scully; Ching Chen; David Brankow; Jeffrey Lewis; Claudia Baikalov; Harvey Yamane; Tina Meng; Frank Martin; Sylvia Hu; Tom Boone; Giorgio Senaldi

IL-18-binding protein (IL-18BP) is a natural IL-18 inhibitor. Human IL-18BP isoform a was produced as fusion construct with human IgG1 Fc and assessed for binding and neutralizing IL-18. IL-18BP-Fc binds human, mouse, and rat IL-18 with high affinity (KD 0.3–5 nM) in a BIAcore-based assay. In vitro, IL-18BP-Fc blocks IL-18 (100 ng/ml)-induced IFN-γ production by KG1 cells (EC50 = 0.3 μg/ml). In mice challenged with an LD90 of LPS (15 mg/kg), IL-18BP-Fc (5 mg/kg) administered 10 min before LPS blocks IFN-γ production and protects against lethality. IL-18BP-Fc administered 10 min before LPS blocks IFN-γ production induced by LPS (5 mg/kg) with ED50 of 0.005 mg/kg. Furthermore, IL-18BP-Fc (5 mg/kg) abrogates LPS (5 mg/kg)-induced IFN-γ production even when administered 6 days before LPS but shows no effect when administered 9 or 12 days before LPS. Given 10 min before LPS challenge to mice primed 12 days in advance with heat-killed Propionibacterium acnes, IL-18BP-Fc prevents LPS-induced liver damage and IFN-γ and Fas ligand expression. Given at the moment of priming with P. acnes, IL-18BP-Fc decreases P. acnes-induced granuloma formation, macrophage-inflammatory protein-1α and macrophage-inflammatory protein-2 production and prevents sensitization to LPS. IL-18BP-Fc also prevents Con A-induced liver damage and IFN-γ and Fas ligand expression as well as liver damage induced by Pseudomonas aeruginosa exotoxin A or by anti-Fas agonistic Ab. In conclusion, IL-18BP can be engineered and produced in recombinant form to generate an IL-18 inhibitor, IL-18BP-Fc, endowed with remarkable in vitro and in vivo properties of binding and neutralizing IL-18.


British Journal of Haematology | 2000

Characterization of osteoclast precursors in human blood

Victoria Shalhoub; G. Elliott; L. Chiu; R. Manoukian; Michael J. Kelley; Nessa Hawkins; E. Davy; G. Shimamoto; J. Beck; Steve Kaufman; Gwyneth Van; Sheila Scully; M. Qi; Mario Grisanti; Colin R. Dunstan; William J. Boyle; David L. Lacey

Osteoclast precursors (OCPs) circulate in the mononuclear fraction of peripheral blood (PB), but their abundance and surface characteristics are unknown. Previous studies suggest that the receptor activator for NF‐κB (RANK) on cytokine‐treated OCPs in mouse bone marrow interacts with osteoprotegerin ligand (OPGL/TRANCE/RANKL/ODF) to initiate osteoclast differentiation. Hence, we used a fluorescent form of human OPGL (Hu‐OPGL‐F) to identify possible RANK‐expressing OCPs in untreated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) using fluorescence‐activated cell sorting analysis. Monocytes [CD14‐phycoerythrin (PE) antibody (Ab) positive (+) cells, 10–15% of PBMCs] all (98–100%) co‐labelled with Hu‐OPGL‐F (n > 18). T lymphocytes (CD3‐PE Ab+ cells, 66% of PBMCs) did not bind Hu‐OPGL‐F; however, B cells (CD19‐PE Ab+ cells, 9% of PBMCs) were also positive for Hu‐OPGL‐F. All Hu‐OPGL‐F+ monocytes also co‐labelled with CD33, CD61, CD11b, CD38, CD45 and CD54 Abs, but not CD34 or CD56 Abs. Hu‐OPGL‐F binding was dose dependent and competed with excess Hu‐OPGL. When Hu‐OPGL‐F+, CD14‐PE Ab+, CD33‐PE Ab+, Hu‐OPGL‐F+/CD14‐PE Ab+ or Hu‐OPGL‐F+/CD33‐PE Ab+ cells were cultured with OPGL (20 ng/ml) and colony‐stimulating factor (CSF)‐1 (25 ng/ml), OC‐like cells readily developed. Thus, all freshly isolated monocytes demonstrate displaceable Hu‐OPGL‐F binding, suggesting the presence of RANK on OCPs in PB; also, OCPs within a purified PB monocyte population form osteoclast‐like cells in the complete absence of other cell types in OPGL and CSF‐1 containing medium.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 1999

Osteoclast markers accumulate on cells developing from human peripheral blood mononuclear precursors.

Judy Faust; Dave Lacey; Pamela Hunt; Teresa L. Burgess; Sheila Scully; Gwyneth Van; Alana Eli; Yi-xin Qian; Victoria Shalhoub

Recent studies show that human osteoclasts develop in vitro from hematopoietic cells; however, special cultures conditions and/or cytokine mobilized peripheral blood are apparently required. Here, we report that cells expressing osteoclast markers differentiate from precursors present in nonmobilized peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), without the addition of stromal cells, growth factors, cytokines or steroids; and characterize their phenotype. Three days after establishing high‐density PBMC cultures (1.5 × 106 cells/cm2), in serum‐containing medium, small adherent colonies of tartrate resistant acid phosphatase positive (TRAP+) cells emerge, amidst massive monocyte cell death. These adherent cells have an eccentrically placed, round nucleus, and express low levels of TRAP and sodium fluoride‐resistant‐ α‐naphthyl‐acetate‐esterase (NaF‐R‐NSE). Over the next week, this cell population accumulates phenotypic markers of osteoclasts (vitronectin receptor [VR], calcitonin receptor, TRAP, cathepsin K protein, and mRNA) with increased nuclearity, covering the entire surface by 15 days. When cultured on bone, VR+, TRAP+ cells of low multinuclearity appear and cover up to 50% of the surface. Resorption lacunae can be observed by day 22. Although these pits are not nearly as numerous as the cells of preosteoclast phenotype, they do represent the activity of a subset of osteoclast‐like cells that has achieved osteoclastic maturity under these culture conditions. Transcripts for osteoprotegerin ligand (OPGL), an osteoclast differentiation factor (also known as RANKL and TRANCE) are expressed, likely by adherent cells. Thus, an adherent population of cells, with preosteoclast/osteoclast phenotypic properties, arises selectively under simple culture conditions from normal PBMC. Further characterization of these cells should identify factors involved in the growth, terminal differentiation and activation of osteoclasts. J. Cell. Biochem. 72:67–80, 1999.

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