Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sheryl G. Wood is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sheryl G. Wood.


Analytical Biochemistry | 1986

High-performance liquid chromatographic separation and quantitation of tetrapyrroles from biological materials

Herbert L. Bonkovsky; Sheryl G. Wood; Scott K. Howell; Peter R. Sinclair; Beth Lincoln; John F. Healey; Jacqueline F. Sinclair

We describe a rapid, reverse-phase HPLC procedure for separating and quantifying tetrapyrroles of biological interest. This procedure uses a 5-micron C18 column and the mobile phase is ammonium phosphate (pH 3.5) with a methanol gradient that is increased from 61 to 100%. Detection is by absorbance at 405 nm or by fluorescence. Porphyrins, heme, and the heme breakdown products, biliverdin and bilirubin, can be separated from a single injection in 25 min. Injections can be made every 40 min. Limits of detection are about 0.1 pmol for porphyrins, 5 pmol for heme, and 10 pmol for biliverdin and bilirubin. We present examples of the use of the system for separating tetrapyrroles formed by primary cultures of chick embryo hepatocytes and homogenates of rat liver.


Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics | 1991

Ethanol increases cytochromes P450IIE, IIB1/2, and IIIA in cultured rat hepatocytes

Jacqueline F. Sinclair; Jennifer McCaffrey; Peter R. Sinclair; William J. Bement; Linda Lambrecht; Sheryl G. Wood; E.Lucile Smith; John B. Schenkman; Philip S. Guzelian; Sang S. Park; Harry V. Gelboin

In intact rats, ethanol treatment has been associated with increases in hepatic levels of both P450IIB1/2 and P450IIE. When rat hepatocytes were cultured on an extracellular tumor matrix (Matrigel), exposure to ethanol from 48 to 96 h in culture resulted in increases in cytochromes P450IIE, IIB1/2, and IIIA. Cytochrome P450IIE was detected immunologically and enzymatically, using two activities associated with cytochrome P450IIE, p-nitrophenol hydroxylation, and acetaminophen activation to a metabolite that binds to glutathione. The content of cytochrome P450IIE in freshly isolated cells decreased when the cells were placed in culture. Exposure of the cultured hepatocytes to ethanol from 48 to 96 h after inoculation resulted in an increase in cytochrome P450IIE compared to untreated cultured cells. In addition, in culture, the amount of enzymatically active protein after ethanol treatment was equal to that in hepatocytes freshly isolated from intact animals. Ethanol treatment resulted in increases in cytochrome P450IIB1/2 compared to untreated cells, as shown immunologically and by increased benzyloxyresorufin dealkylase activity. However, phenobarbital induced cytochrome P450IIB1/2 to higher levels, compared to ethanol. Ethanol and phenobarbital treatments both increased P450IIIA, as determined immunologically and by the amount of propoxycoumarin depropylase activity that is inhibited by triacetyloleandomycin. However, the amount of P450IIIA increased after ethanol treatment was less than that increased after treatment with dexamethasone in these cells. The ethanol-mediated increases in all four forms of cytochrome P450 in culture suggest that these increases in the intact animal result from direct effects of ethanol on the liver.


Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2011

Lymphotoxin-beta receptor blockade reduces CXCL13 in lacrimal glands and improves corneal integrity in the NOD model of Sjögren's syndrome

Roy A. Fava; Susan M. Kennedy; Sheryl G. Wood; Anne Isine Bolstad; Jadwiga Bienkowska; Adrian Papandile; John A. Kelly; Clio P. Mavragani; Margaret Karimi Gatumu; Kathrine Skarstein; Jeffrey L. Browning

IntroductionIn Sjögrens syndrome, keratoconjunctivitis sicca (dry eye) is associated with infiltration of lacrimal glands by leukocytes and consequent losses of tear-fluid production and the integrity of the ocular surface. We investigated the effect of blockade of the lymphotoxin-beta receptor (LTBR) pathway on lacrimal-gland pathology in the NOD mouse model of Sjögrens syndrome.MethodsMale NOD mice were treated for up to ten weeks with an antagonist, LTBR-Ig, or control mouse antibody MOPC-21. Extra-orbital lacrimal glands were analyzed by immunohistochemistry for high endothelial venules (HEV), by Affymetrix gene-array analysis and real-time PCR for differential gene expression, and by ELISA for CXCL13 protein. Leukocytes from lacrimal glands were analyzed by flow-cytometry. Tear-fluid secretion-rates were measured and the integrity of the ocular surface was scored using slit-lamp microscopy and fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) staining. The chemokine CXCL13 was measured by ELISA in sera from Sjögrens syndrome patients (n = 27) and healthy controls (n = 30). Statistical analysis was by the two-tailed, unpaired T-test, or the Mann-Whitney-test for ocular integrity scores.ResultsLTBR blockade for eight weeks reduced B-cell accumulation (approximately 5-fold), eliminated HEV in lacrimal glands, and reduced the entry rate of lymphocytes into lacrimal glands. Affymetrix-chip analysis revealed numerous changes in mRNA expression due to LTBR blockade, including reduction of homeostatic chemokine expression. The reduction of CXCL13, CCL21, CCL19 mRNA and the HEV-associated gene GLYCAM-1 was confirmed by PCR analysis. CXCL13 protein increased with disease progression in lacrimal-gland homogenates, but after LTBR blockade for 8 weeks, CXCL13 was reduced approximately 6-fold to 8.4 pg/mg (+/- 2.7) from 51 pg/mg (+/-5.3) in lacrimal glands of 16 week old control mice. Mice given LTBR blockade exhibited an approximately two-fold greater tear-fluid secretion than control mice (P = 0.001), and had a significantly improved ocular surface integrity score (P = 0.005). The mean CXCL13 concentration in sera from Sjögrens patients (n = 27) was 170 pg/ml, compared to 92.0 pg/ml for sera from (n = 30) healthy controls (P = 0.01).ConclusionsBlockade of LTBR pathways may have therapeutic potential for treatment of Sjögrens syndrome.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1998

Alcohol-mediated increases in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity: role of CYP2E and CYP3A.

J F Sinclair; Elizabeth H. Jeffery; Steven A. Wrighton; Vsevolod E. Kostrubsky; Juliana G. Szakacs; Sheryl G. Wood; Peter R. Sinclair

This commentary focuses on the roles of CYP3A and CYP2E in alcohol-mediated increases in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity. CYP2E has been considered to be the main form of P450 responsible for such toxicity in animals and humans. However, CYP3A, which is also induced by alcohol, has been shown to have a greater affinity for acetaminophen than CYP2E. Previous experiments implicating CYP2E in alcohol-mediated increases in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity have used inhibitors of this form of P450 that are now proving to be non-specific. Triacetyloleandomycin (TAO) is a potent inhibitor of CYP3A that maintains specificity in vitro over a large concentration range. In rats treated with ethanol or the combination of ethanol and isopentanol, the major higher chain alcohol in alcoholic beverages, TAO protects animals from increases in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity, suggesting a major role of CYP3A. CYP2E may not have a major role due to the rapid loss of induced levels in the absence of continued exposure to ethanol. Knockout mice, which are being used to define the role of particular proteins in biological responses, have been developed for CYP2E1 and CYP1A2 but not CYP3A. Cyp2e1(-/-) and Cyp1a2(-/-) mice are more resistant to acetaminophen hepatotoxicity than wild-type strains, even though the amounts of the other forms of P450s are unaltered in the liver. These findings suggest that the relative amounts of P450s and not just kinetic characteristics determine their role in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity. The clinical implications of the findings that CYP3A can have a major role in acetaminophen-mediated hepatotoxicity are discussed.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2007

Role of CYP3A and CYP2E1 in alcohol-mediated increases in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity : Comparison of wild-type and Cyp2e1(-/-) mice

Kristina K. Wolf; Sheryl G. Wood; Jenna L. Allard; Jane A. Hunt; Nadia Gorman; Brooke W. Walton-Strong; Juliana G. Szakacs; Su X. Duan; Qin Hao; Michael H. Court; Lisa L. von Moltke; David J. Greenblatt; Vsevolod E. Kostrubsky; Elizabeth H. Jeffery; Steven A. Wrighton; Frank J. Gonzalez; Peter R. Sinclair; Jacqueline F. Sinclair

CYP2E1 is widely accepted as the sole form of cytochrome P450 responsible for alcohol-mediated increases in acetaminophen (APAP) hepatotoxicity. However, we previously found that alcohol [ethanol and isopentanol (EIP)] causes increases in APAP hepatotoxicity in Cyp2e1(–/–) mice, indicating that CYP2E1 is not essential. Here, using wild-type and Cyp2e1(–/–) mice, we investigated the relative roles of CYP2E1 and CYP3A in EIP-mediated increases in APAP hepatotoxicity. We found that EIP-mediated increases in APAP hepatotoxicity occurred at lower APAP doses in wild-type mice (300 mg/kg) than in Cyp2e1(–/–) mice (600 mg/kg). Although this result suggests that CYP2E1 has a role in the different susceptibilities of these mouse lines, our findings that EIP-mediated increases in CYP3A activities were greater in wild-type mice compared with Cyp2e1(–/–) mice raises the possibility that differential increases in CYP3A may also contribute to the greater APAP sensitivity in EIP-pretreated wild-type mice. At the time of APAP administration, which followed an 11 h withdrawal from the alcohols, alcohol-induced levels of CYP3A were sustained in both mouse lines, whereas CYP2E1 was decreased to constitutive levels in wild-type mice. The CYP3A inhibitor triacetyloleandomycin (TAO) decreased APAP hepatotoxicity in EIP-pretreated wild-type and Cyp2e1(–/–) mice. TAO treatment in vivo resulted in inhibition of microsomal CYP3A-catalyzed activity, measured in vitro, with no inhibition of CYP1A2 and CYP2E1 activities. In conclusion, these findings suggest that both CYP3A and CYP2E1 contribute to APAP hepatotoxicity in alcohol-treated mice.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2000

Acetaminophen hepatotoxicity precipitated by short-term treatment of rats with ethanol and isopentanol: Protection by triacetyloleandomycin

Jacqueline F. Sinclair; Juliana G. Szakacs; Sheryl G. Wood; Vsevolod E. Kostrubsky; Elizabeth H. Jeffery; Steven A. Wrighton; William J. Bement; Dane Wright; Peter R. Sinclair

Ethanol and isopentanol are the predominant alcohols in alcoholic beverages. We have reported previously that pretreatment of rats with a liquid diet containing 6.3% ethanol plus 0.5% isopentanol for 7 days results in a synergistic increase in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity, compared with rats treated with either alcohol alone. Here, we investigated the role of CYP3A in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity associated with the combined alcohol treatment. Triacetyloleandomycin, a specific inhibitor of CYP3A, protected rats pretreated with ethanol along with isopentanol from acetaminophen hepatotoxicity. At both 0.25 and 0.5 g acetaminophen/kg, triacetyloleandomycin partially prevented elevations in serum levels of alanine aminotransferase. At 0.25 g acetaminophen/kg, triacetyloleandomycin completely protected 6 of 8 rats from histologically observed liver damage, and partially protected the remaining 2 rats. At 0.5 g acetaminophen/kg, triacetyloleandomycin decreased histologically observed liver damage in 7 of 15 rats. In rats pretreated with ethanol plus isopentanol, CYP3A, measured immunohistochemically, was decreased by acetaminophen treatment. This effect was prevented by triacetyloleandomycin. These results suggest that CYP3A has a major role in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity in animals administered the combined alcohol treatment. We also found that exposure to ethanol along with 0.1% isopentanol for only 3 days resulted in maximal increases in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity by the combined alcohol treatment, suggesting that short-term consumption of alcoholic beverages rich in isopentanol may be a risk for developing liver damage from acetaminophen.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1995

Acute hepatotoxicity of acetaminophen in rats treated with ethanol plus isopentanol

Vsevolod E. Kostrubsky; Sheryl G. Wood; Matthew D. Bush; Juliana G. Szakacs; William J. Bement; Peter R. Sinclair; Elizabeth H. Jeffery; Jacqueline F. Sinclair

Acetaminophen (APAP) hepatotoxicity was investigated in rats fed ethanol and isopentanol alone or in combination in a liquid diet for 7 days. Serum levels of aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and histological examination of liver slices were used to assess hepatotoxicity. At 7 hr after intragastric administration of 0.5 or 1.0 g APAP/kg, there was no significant increase in serum levels of AST in rats treated with APAP alone, or in rats pretreated with ethanol or isopentanol alone followed by APAP. There was mild central lobular congestion in the livers of rats pretreated with ethanol alone followed by APAP. In contrast, in rats pretreated with the combination of ethanol and isopentanol, administration of APAP caused a dramatic increase in serum levels of AST, along with marked central lobular necrosis, including steatosis and ischemic changes. Hepatic glutathione levels were decreased to 40-50% of control values in APAP-treated rats that had been pretreated with ethanol either alone or in combination with isopentanol. The serum concentrations of APAP were significantly lower in rats pretreated with the combination of ethanol and isopentanol followed by 1 g APAP/kg than in rats treated with APAP alone, suggesting a greater rate of APAP metabolism. We had reported previously that combined treatment of rats with ethanol and isopentanol resulted in additive to synergistic increases in CYP3A, with no further increases in CYP2E than that caused by ethanol alone. CYP3A may, therefore, be responsible for the increased APAP hepatotoxicity caused by the combined alcohol treatment.


Cardiovascular Research | 2010

Inhibition of arterial lesion progression in CD16-deficient mice: evidence for altered immunity and the role of IL-10

John A. Kelly; Mary E. Griffin; Roy A. Fava; Sheryl G. Wood; Katherine Bessette; Elizabeth R. Miller; Sally A. Huber; Christoph J. Binder; Joseph L. Witztum; Peter M. Morganelli

AIMS Given the importance of IgG Fc receptors in immune regulation, we hypothesized that Fcg receptor type III (FcgRIII, CD16) plays an important role in atherogenesis. We therefore analysed the formation of arterial lesions in LDL receptor-deficient (LDLR(-/-)) and FcgRIII(-/-)xLDLR(-/-) double knockout mice at three different points up to 24 weeks of exposure to a high-fat diet. METHODS AND RESULTS Analysis of Oil Red-O-stained sections revealed no difference in lesion formation between strains after 6 weeks of a high-fat diet, and a modest decrease after 14 weeks in double knockouts relative to LDLR(-/-) controls. After 24 weeks, lesion formation was decreased in the aortic root (30%) and innominate artery (50%) in FcgRIII double knockouts relative to LDLR(-/-) controls. Analysis of peripheral CD4+ T-cells by intracellular flow cytometry from double knockouts after 24 weeks of a high-fat diet revealed statistically significant increases in the percentages of cells producing interferon-gamma, interleukin (IL)-10, and IL-4 relative to controls, differences that were also observed by analyses of whole aortas for cytokine mRNA levels. As determined by flow cytometry, FcgRIII deficiency resulted in an expansion of CD4+ cells and an increase in the CD4 to CD8 ratio. Analysis of plasma anti-oxidized LDL (OxLDL) antibodies by chemiluminescent assay revealed that IgG1 and IgG2c titers to OxLDL were increased in FcgRIII (-/-)xLDLR(-/-) double knockouts relative to LDLR(-/-) controls, while total IgG levels were similar. CONCLUSION These results reveal altered immunity in FcgRIII(-/-)xLDLR(-/-) mice and a reduction in lesion formation associated with increased production of IL-10 by an expansion of CD4+ T-cells. The reduction in lesion formation was manifest well after evidence of an immune response to OxLDL, suggesting that FcgRIII contributes to lesion progression in murine atherosclerosis.


Drug Metabolism and Disposition | 2005

Role of the nuclear receptor pregnane X receptor in acetaminophen hepatotoxicity.

Kristina K. Wolf; Sheryl G. Wood; Jane A. Hunt; Brooke W. Walton-Strong; Kazuto Yasuda; Lubin Lan; Su X. Duan; Qin Hao; Steven A. Wrighton; Elizabeth H. Jeffery; Ronald M. Evans; Juliana G. Szakacs; Lisa L. von Moltke; David J. Greenblatt; Michael H. Court; Erin G. Schuetz; Peter R. Sinclair; Jacqueline F. Sinclair

The pregnane X receptor (PXR) is a transcriptional regulator of xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes, including cytochrome P450 3A (CYP3A), and transporters. Pretreatment of mice and rats with inducers of CYP3A increases acetaminophen (APAP) hepatotoxicity. In untreated mice, the amount of hepatic CYP3A11 mRNA is 4-fold greater in PXR(–/–) mice compared to wild-type mice (Guo et al., 2003), a finding anticipated to increase APAP hepatotoxicity in PXR(–/–) mice. We investigated APAP hepatotoxicity in wild-type and PXR(–/–) mice in a C57BL/6 background, with APAP administered by gavage. Despite a 2.5-fold higher level of total hepatic CYP3A protein and a 3.6-fold higher level of CYP3A activity compared to wild-type mice, PXR(–/–) mice were less sensitive to APAP hepatotoxicity. Hepatic levels of CYP2E1 were identical in the two mouse lines, but hepatic CYP1A2 levels were 3-fold greater in wild-type mice compared to PXR(–/–) mice. Caffeine, an inhibitor of CYP1A2 activity and an enhancer of CYP3A activity, decreased APAP hepatotoxicity in wild-type mice. APAP uptake was 1.5-fold greater in wild-type mice compared to PXR(–/–) mice. No significant differences in the formation of APAP glucuronide and sulfate-conjugated metabolites were observed between wild-type and PXR(–/–) mice. Glutathione levels were similar in the two mouse lines and were transiently decreased to similar amounts after APAP administration. Our finding that APAP hepatotoxicity was decreased in PXR(–/–) mice indicates that PXR is an important modulator of APAP hepatotoxicity, through positive modulation of constitutive CYP1A2 expression and possibly through increased APAP absorption.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 1989

Comparison of the form(s) of cytochrome P-450 induced by ethanol and glutethimide in cultured chick hepatocytes

Jacqueline F. Sinclair; Sheryl G. Wood; E.Lucile Smith; Peter R. Sinclair; Dennis R. Koop

In this study, using a combination of immunological and enzymatic characterizations, we compared the forms of cytochrome P-450 induced by ethanol and glutethimide in primary cultures of chicken embryo hepatocytes. Recently we purified a cytochrome P-450 of 50K molecular weight from chicken embryo liver using glutethimide as a prototypic inducer. Antibodies to both this chicken cytochrome P-450 and to rabbit cytochrome P-450 form 3a from the IIE subfamily detected microsomal proteins of 50K induced by either ethanol or glutethimide in cultured chick embryo hepatocytes, indicating the antigenic homology of these subfamilies of cytochromes P-450 among different animal species. However, the antibody to glutethimide-induced chick cytochrome P-450 of 50K inhibited p-nitrophenol hydroxylase and benzphetamine demethylase activities 85-90% in microsomes from both ethanol- and glutethimide-treated cells, indicating similar epitopes whose integrity is required for catalytic activity. In contrast, antibodies to rabbit cytochrome P-450 form 3a had little to no effect on these same microsomal activities. Both ethanol and glutethimide induced microsomal p-nitrophenol and aniline hydroxylase activities in cultured chick embryo hepatocytes. In microsomes from ethanol-treated cells, the turnover of p-nitrophenol per cytochrome P-450 was 2-fold greater than that induced by glutethimide treatment, suggesting that ethanol is inducing a form of cytochrome P-450 that has greater catalytic activity with this substrate than glutethimide-induced forms. Thus, in cultured chick embryo hepatocytes, ethanol may induce cytochromes P-450 from both the IIB and IIE subfamilies.

Collaboration


Dive into the Sheryl G. Wood's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

William J. Bement

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Frank J. Gonzalez

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge