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Dive into the research topics where Sree R. Ramani is active.

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Featured researches published by Sree R. Ramani.


Science | 2013

Noncanonical Inflammasome Activation by Intracellular LPS Independent of TLR4

Nobuhiko Kayagaki; Michael T. Wong; Irma B. Stowe; Sree R. Ramani; Lino C. Gonzalez; Sachiko Akashi-Takamura; Kensuke Miyake; Juan Zhang; Wyne P. Lee; Artur Muszyński; Lennart S. Forsberg; Russell W. Carlson; Vishva M. Dixit

Move Over, TLR4 The innate immune system senses bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) through Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) (see the Perspective by Kagan). However, Kayagaki et al. (p 1246, published online 25 July) and Hagar et al. (p. 1250) report that the hexa-acyl lipid A component of LPS from Gramnegative bacteria is able to access the cytoplasm and activate caspase-11 to signal immune responses independently of TLR4. Mice that lack caspase-11 are resistant to LPS-induced lethality, even in the presence of TLR4. Cytoplasmic lipopolysaccharide from Gram-negative bacteria can activate the innate immune system directly.[Also see Perspective by Kagan] Gram-negative bacteria including Escherichia coli, Citrobacter rodentium, Salmonella typhimurium, and Shigella flexneri are sensed in an ill-defined manner by an intracellular inflammasome complex that activates caspase-11. We show that macrophages loaded with synthetic lipid A, E. coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS), or S. typhimurium LPS activate caspase-11 independently of the LPS receptor Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). Consistent with lipid A triggering the noncanonical inflammasome, LPS containing a divergent lipid A structure antagonized caspase-11 activation in response to E. coli LPS or Gram-negative bacteria. Moreover, LPS-mutant E. coli failed to activate caspase-11. Tlr4–/– mice primed with TLR3 agonist polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid [poly(I:C)] to induce pro-caspase-11 expression were as susceptible as wild-type mice were to sepsis induced by E. coli LPS. These data unveil a TLR4-independent mechanism for innate immune recognition of LPS.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2012

A secreted protein microarray platform for extracellular protein interaction discovery

Sree R. Ramani; Irene Tom; Nicholas Lewin-Koh; Bernd Wranik; Laura DePalatis; Jianjun Zhang; Dan L. Eaton; Lino C. Gonzalez

Characterization of the extracellular protein interactome has lagged far behind that of intracellular proteins, where mass spectrometry and yeast two-hybrid technologies have excelled. Improved methods for identifying receptor-ligand and extracellular matrix protein interactions will greatly accelerate biological discovery in cell signaling and cellular communication. These technologies must be able to identify low-affinity binding events that are often observed between membrane-bound coreceptor molecules during cell-cell or cell-extracellular matrix contact. Here we demonstrate that functional protein microarrays are particularly well-suited for high-throughput screening of extracellular protein interactions. To evaluate the performance of the platform, we screened a set of 89 immunoglobulin (Ig)-type receptors against a highly diverse extracellular protein microarray with 686 genes represented. To enhance detection of low-affinity interactions, we developed a rapid method to assemble bait Fc fusion proteins into multivalent complexes using protein A microbeads. Based on these screens, we developed a statistical methodology for hit calling and identification of nonspecific interactions on protein microarrays. We found that the Ig receptor interactions identified using our methodology are highly specific and display minimal off-target binding, resulting in a 70% true-positive to false-positive hit ratio. We anticipate that these methods will be useful for a wide variety of functional protein microarray users.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Defining the Ligand Specificity of the Deleted in Colorectal Cancer (DCC) Receptor

Patrick C.G. Haddick; Irene Tom; Elizabeth Luis; Gabriel Quinones; Bernd Wranik; Sree R. Ramani; Jean-Philippe Stephan; Marc Tessier-Lavigne; Lino C. Gonzalez

The growth and guidance of many axons in the developing nervous system require Netrin-mediated activation of Deleted in Colorectal Cancer (DCC) and other still unknown signaling cues. Commissural axon guidance defects are more severe in DCC mutant mice than Netrin-1 mutant mice, suggesting additional DCC activating signals besides Netrin-1 are involved in proper axon growth. Here we report that interaction screens on extracellular protein microarrays representing over 1,000 proteins uniquely identified Cerebellin 4 (CBLN4), a member of the C1q-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family, and Netrin-1 as extracellular DCC-binding partners. Immunofluorescence and radio-ligand binding studies demonstrate that Netrin-1 competes with CBLN4 binding at an overlapping site within the membrane-proximal fibronectin domains (FN) 4–6 of DCC and binds with ∼5-fold higher affinity. CBLN4 also binds to the DCC homolog, Neogenin-1 (NEO1), but with a lower affinity compared to DCC. CBLN4-null mice did not show a defect in commissural axons of the developing spinal cord but did display a transient increase in the number of wandering axons in the brachial plexus, consistent with a role in axon guidance. Overall, the data solidifies CBLN4 as a bona fide DCC ligand and strengthens its implication in axon guidance.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Evolutionarily Conserved Paired Immunoglobulin-like Receptor α (PILRα) Domain Mediates Its Interaction with Diverse Sialylated Ligands

Yonglian Sun; Kate Senger; Tomasz K. Baginski; Anita Mazloom; Yvonne Chinn; Homer Pantua; Kajal Hamidzadeh; Sree R. Ramani; Elizabeth Luis; Irene Tom; Andrew Sebrell; Gabriel Quinones; Yan Ma; Kiran Mukhyala; Tao Sai; Jiabing Ding; Benjamin Haley; Hooman Shadnia; Sharookh B. Kapadia; Lino C. Gonzalez; Philip E. Hass; Ali A. Zarrin

Background: PILRα is an inhibitory receptor predominantly expressed in myeloid cells. Results: NPDC1 and COLEC12 are novel PILRα ligands. PILRα arginine residues 133 (mouse) and 126 (human) are critical contact residues. Conclusion: PILRα/ligand interactions involve a conserved domain in PILRα and a sialylated protein domain in the ligand. Significance: PILRα interacts with various ligands to alter myeloid cell function. Paired immunoglobulin-like receptor (PILR) α is an inhibitory receptor that recognizes several ligands, including mouse CD99, PILR-associating neural protein, and Herpes simplex virus-1 glycoprotein B. The physiological function(s) of interactions between PILRα and its cellular ligands are not well understood, as are the molecular determinants of PILRα/ligand interactions. To address these uncertainties, we sought to identify additional PILRα ligands and further define the molecular basis for PILRα/ligand interactions. Here, we identify two novel PILRα binding partners, neuronal differentiation and proliferation factor-1 (NPDC1), and collectin-12 (COLEC12). We find that sialylated O-glycans on these novel PILRα ligands, and on known PILRα ligands, are compulsory for PILRα binding. Sialylation-dependent ligand recognition is also a property of SIGLEC1, a member of the sialic acid-binding Ig-like lectins. SIGLEC1 Ig domain shares ∼22% sequence identity with PILRα, an identity that includes a conserved arginine localized to position 97 in mouse and human SIGLEC1, position 133 in mouse PILRα and position 126 in human PILRα. We observe that PILRα/ligand interactions require conserved PILRα Arg-133 (mouse) and Arg-126 (human), in correspondence with a previously reported requirement for SIGLEC1 Arg-197 in SIGLEC1/ligand interactions. Homology modeling identifies striking similarities between PILRα and SIGLEC1 ligand binding pockets as well as at least one set of distinctive interactions in the galactoxyl-binding site. Binding studies suggest that PILRα recognizes a complex ligand domain involving both sialic acid and protein motif(s). Thus, PILRα is evolved to engage multiple ligands with common molecular determinants to modulate myeloid cell functions in anatomical settings where PILRα ligands are expressed.


Biochemical Journal | 2013

A requirement for wild-type Ras isoforms in mutant KRas-driven signalling and transformation.

Carolyn Bentley; Stefanie S. Jurinka; Noelyn M. Kljavin; Steffan Vartanian; Sree R. Ramani; Lino C. Gonzalez; Kebing Yu; Zora Modrusan; Pan Du; Richard Bourgon; Richard M. Neve; David Stokoe

The mutant forms of KRas, NRas and HRas drive the initiation and progression of a number of human cancers, but less is known about the role of WT (wild-type) Ras alleles and isoforms in cancer. We used zinc-finger nucleases targeting HRas and NRas to modify both alleles of these genes in the mutant KRas-driven Hec1A endometrial cancer cell line, which normally expresses WT copies of these genes. The disruption of either WT isoform of Ras compromised growth-factor-dependent signalling through the ERK (extracellular-signal-regulated kinase) pathway. In addition, the disruption of HRas hindered the activation of Akt and subsequent downstream signalling. This was associated with decreased proliferation, increased apoptosis and decreased anchorage-independent growth in the HRas-disrupted cells. However, xenograft tumour growth was not significantly affected by the disruption of either NRas or HRas. As expected, deleting the mutant allele of KRas abolished tumour growth, whereas deletion of the remaining WT copy of KRas increased the tumorigenic properties of these cells; deleting a single copy of either HRas or NRas did not mimic this effect. The present study demonstrates that the WT copies of HRas, NRas and KRas play unique roles in the context of mutant KRas-driven tumours.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Murine Insulin Growth Factor-like (IGFL) and Human IGFL1 Proteins Are Induced in Inflammatory Skin Conditions and Bind to a Novel Tumor Necrosis Factor Receptor Family Member, IGFLR1

Adrian A. Lobito; Sree R. Ramani; Irene Tom; J. Fernando Bazan; Elizabeth Luis; Wayne J. Fairbrother; Wenjun Ouyang; Lino C. Gonzalez

Psoriasis is a human skin condition characterized by epidermal hyperproliferation and infiltration of multiple leukocyte populations. In characterizing a novel insulin growth factor (IGF)-like (IGFL) gene in mice (mIGFL), we found transcripts of this gene to be most highly expressed in skin with enhanced expression in models of skin wounding and psoriatic-like inflammation. A possible functional ortholog in humans, IGFL1, was uniquely and significantly induced in psoriatic skin samples. In vitro IGFL1 expression was up-regulated in cultured primary keratinocytes stimulated with tumor necrosis factor α but not by other psoriasis-associated cytokines. Finally, using a secreted and transmembrane protein library, we discovered high affinity interactions between human IGFL1 and mIGFL and the TMEM149 ectodomain. TMEM149 (renamed here as IGFLR1) is an uncharacterized gene with structural similarity to the tumor necrosis factor receptor family. Our studies demonstrate that IGFLR1 is expressed primarily on the surface of mouse T cells. The connection between mIGFL and IGFLR1 receptor suggests mIGFL may influence T cell biology within inflammatory skin conditions.


Nature Communications | 2017

The extracellular interactome of the human adenovirus family reveals diverse strategies for immunomodulation.

Nadia Martinez-Martín; Sree R. Ramani; Jason A. Hackney; Irene Tom; Bernd Wranik; Michelle Chan; Johnny Wu; Maciej Paluch; Kentaro Takeda; Philip E. Hass; Hilary Clark; Lino C. Gonzalez

Viruses encode secreted and cell-surface expressed proteins essential to modulate host immune defenses and establish productive infections. However, to date there has been no systematic study of the extracellular interactome of any human virus. Here we utilize the E3 proteins, diverse and rapidly evolving transmembrane-containing proteins encoded by human adenoviruses, as a model system to survey the extracellular immunomodulatory landscape. From a large-scale protein interaction screen against a microarray of more than 1,500 human proteins, we find and validate 51 previously unidentified virus–host interactions. Our results uncover conserved strategies as well as substantial diversity and multifunctionality in host targeting within and between viral species. Prominent modulation of the leukocyte immunoglobulin-like and signalling lymphocyte activation molecule families and a number of inhibitory receptors were identified as hubs for viral perturbation, suggesting unrecognized immunoregulatory strategies. We describe a virus–host extracellular interaction map of unprecedented scale that provides new insights into viral immunomodulation.


Current protocols in protein science | 2013

Protein Microarrays for Identification of Novel Extracellular Protein‐Protein Interactions

Irene Tom; Nicholas Lewin-Koh; Sree R. Ramani; Lino C. Gonzalez

Functional protein microarrays offer the capability for high‐throughput protein interaction analysis and have long promised to be a powerful tool for understanding protein interactions at the proteome scale. Although popular techniques for protein‐protein interaction mapping like yeast‐two‐hybrid and affinity‐purification mass spectrometry have performed well for identifying intracellular protein‐protein interactions, the study of interactions between extracellular proteins has remained challenging for these methods. Instead, the use of protein microarrays appears to be a robust and efficient method for the identification of interactions among the members of this class of protein. This unit describes methods for extracellular protein microarray production, screening, and analysis. A protocol is described for enhanced detection of low‐affinity interactions by generating multivalent complexes using Fc‐fusion bait proteins and protein A microbeads, along with a statistical method for hit scoring and identification of nonspecific interactions. Curr. Protoc. Protein Sci. 72:27.3.1‐27.3.24.


bioRxiv | 2018

Paired Immunoglobulin-like Type 2 Receptor Alpha G78R variant alters ligand binding and confers protection to Alzheimer's disease

Nisha Rathore; Sree R. Ramani; Homer Pantua; Jian Payandeh; Tushar Bhangale; Arthur Wuster; Manav Kapoor; Yonglian Sun; Sharookh Kapadia; Lino C. Gonzalez; Ali A. Zarrin; Alison Goate; David V. Hansen; Timothy W. Behrens; Robert R. Graham

Paired Immunoglobulin-like Type 2 Receptor Alpha (PILRA) is a cell surface inhibitory receptor that recognizes specific O-glycosylated proteins and is expressed on various innate immune cell types including microglia. We show here that a common missense variant (G78R, rs1859788) of PILRA is the likely causal allele for the confirmed Alzheimer’s disease risk locus at 7q21 (rs1476679). The G78R variant alters the interaction of residues essential for sialic acid engagement, resulting in >50% reduced binding for several PILRA ligands including a novel ligand, complement component 4A, and herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV-1) glycoprotein B. PILRA is an entry receptor for HSV-1 via glycoprotein B, and macrophages derived from R78 homozygous donors showed significantly decreased levels of HSV-1 infection at several multiplicities of infection compared to homozygous G78 macrophages. We propose that PILRA G78R protects individuals from Alzheimer’s disease risk via reduced inhibitory signaling in microglia and reduced microglial infection during HSV-1 recurrence.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2010

Antibodies specific for a segment of human membrane IgE deplete IgE-producing B cells in humanized mice

Hans Brightbill; Surinder Jeet; Zhonghua Lin; Donghong Yan; Meijuan Zhou; Martha Tan; Allen Nguyen; Sherry Yeh; Donnie Delarosa; Steven R. Leong; Terence Wong; Yvonne Chen; Mark Ultsch; Elizabeth Luis; Sree R. Ramani; Janet Jackman; Lino C. Gonzalez; Mark S. Dennis; Anan Chuntharapai; Laura DeForge; Y. Gloria Meng; Min Xu; Charles Eigenbrot; Wyne P. Lee; Canio J. Refino; Mercedesz Balazs; Lawren C. Wu

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Homer Pantua

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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