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Dive into the research topics where Stephen Bellum is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen Bellum.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Copper Induces the Assembly of a Multiprotein Aggregate Implicated in the Release of Fibroblast Growth Factor 1 in Response to Stress

Matteo Landriscina; Cinzia Bagala; Anna Mandinova; Raffaella Soldi; Isabella Micucci; Stephen Bellum; Igor Prudovsky; Thomas Maciag

Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) 1 is known to be released in response to stress conditions as a component of a multiprotein aggregate containing the p40 extravescicular domain of p65 synaptotagmin (Syt) 1 and S100A13. Since FGF1 is a Cu2+-binding protein and Cu2+ is known to induce its dimerization, we evaluated the capacity of recombinant FGF1, p40 Syt1, and S100A13 to interact in a cell-free system and the role of Cu2+ in this interaction. We report that FGF1, p40 Syt1, and S100A13 are able to bind Cu2+ with similar affinity and to interact in the presence of Cu2+ to form a multiprotein aggregate which is resistant to low concentrations of SDS and sensitive to reducing conditions and ultracentrifugation. The formation of this aggregate in the presence of Cu2+ is dependent on the presence of S100A13 and is mediated by cysteine-independent interactions between S100A13 and either FGF1 or p40 Syt1. Interestingly, S100A13 is also able to interact in the presence of Cu2+ with Cys-free FGF1 and this observation may account for the ability of S100A13 to export Cys-free FGF1 in response to stress. Lastly, tetrathiomolybdate, a Cu2+ chelator, significantly represses in a dose-dependent manner the heat shock-induced release of FGF1 and S100A13. These data suggest that S100A13 may be involved in the assembly of the multiprotein aggregate required for the release of FGF1 and that Cu2+ oxidation may be an essential post-translational intracellular modifier of this process.


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

Copper chelation represses the vascular response to injury

Lazar Mandinov; Anna Mandinova; Stanimir Kyurkchiev; Dobroslav Kyurkchiev; Ivan Kehayov; Vihren N. Kolev; Raffaella Soldi; Cinzia Bagala; Ebo D. de Muinck; Volkhard Lindner; Mark J. Post; Michael Simons; Stephen Bellum; Igor Prudovsky; Thomas Maciag

The induction of an acute inflammatory response followed by the release of polypeptide cytokines and growth factors from peripheral blood monocytes has been implicated in mediating the response to vascular injury. Because the Cu2+-binding proteins IL-1α and fibroblast growth factor 1 are exported into the extracellular compartment in a stress-dependent manner by using intracellular Cu2+ to facilitate the formation of S100A13 heterotetrameric complexes and these signal peptideless polypeptides have been implicated as regulators of vascular injury in vivo, we examined the ability of Cu2+ chelation to repress neointimal thickening in response to injury. We observed that the oral administration of the Cu2+ chelator tetrathiomolybdate was able to reduce neointimal thickening after balloon injury in the rat. Interestingly, although immunohistochemical analysis of control neointimal sections exhibited prominent staining for MAC1, IL-1α, S100A13, and the acidic phospholipid phosphatidylserine, similar sections obtained from tetrathiomolybdate-treated animals did not. Further, adenoviral gene transfer of the IL-1 receptor antagonist during vascular injury also significantly reduced the area of neointimal thickening. Our data suggest that intracellular copper may be involved in mediating the response to injury in vivo by its ability to regulate the stress-induced release of IL-1α by using the nonclassical export mechanism employed by human peripheral blood mononuclear cells in vitro.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2002

The intracellular translocation of the components of the fibroblast growth factor 1 release complex precedes their assembly prior to export.

Igor Prudovsky; Cinzia Bagala; Francesca Tarantini; Anna Mandinova; Raffaella Soldi; Stephen Bellum; Thomas Maciag

The release of signal peptideless proteins occurs through nonclassical export pathways and the release of fibroblast growth factor (FGF)1 in response to cellular stress is well documented. Although biochemical evidence suggests that the formation of a multiprotein complex containing S100A13 and Synaptotagmin (Syt)1 is important for the release of FGF1, it is unclear where this intracellular complex is assembled. As a result, we employed real-time analysis using confocal fluorescence microscopy to study the spatio-temporal aspects of this nonclassical export pathway and demonstrate that heat shock stimulates the redistribution of FGF1 from a diffuse cytosolic pattern to a locale near the inner surface of the plasma membrane where it colocalized with S100A13 and Syt1. In addition, coexpression of dominant-negative mutant forms of S100A13 and Syt1, which both repress the release of FGF1, failed to inhibit the stress-induced peripheral redistribution of intracellular FGF1. However, amlexanox, a compound that is known to attenuate actin stress fiber formation and FGF1 release, was able to repress this process. These data suggest that the assembly of the intracellular complex involved in the release of FGF1 occurs near the inner surface of the plasma membrane and is dependent on the F-actin cytoskeleton.


Journal of Cell Science | 2003

S100A13 mediates the copper-dependent stress- induced release of IL-1α from both human U937 and murine NIH 3T3 cells

Anna Mandinova; Raffaella Soldi; Irene Graziani; Cinzia Bagala; Stephen Bellum; Matteo Landriscina; Francesca Tarantini; Igor Prudovsky; Thomas Maciag

Copper is involved in the promotion of angiogenic and inflammatory events in vivo and, although recent clinical data has demonstrated the potential of Cu2+ chelators for the treatment of cancer in man, the mechanism for this activity remains unknown. We have previously demonstrated that the signal peptide-less angiogenic polypeptide, FGF1, uses intracellular Cu2+ to facilitate the formation of a multiprotein aggregate that enables the release of FGF1 in response to stress and that the expression of the precursor form but not the mature form of IL-1α represses the stress-induced export of FGF1 from NIH 3T3 cells. We report here that IL-1α is a Cu2+-binding protein and human U937 cells, like NIH 3T3 cells, release IL-1α in response to temperature stress in a Cu2+-dependent manner. We also report that the stress-induced export of IL-1α involves the intracellular association with the Cu2+-binding protein, S100A13. In addition, the expression of a S100A13 mutant lacking a sequence novel to this gene product functions as a dominant-negative repressor of IL-1α release, whereas the expression of wild-type S100A13 functions to eliminate the requirement for stress-induced transcription. Lastly, we present biophysical evidence that IL-1α may be endowed with molten globule character, which may facilitate its release through the plasma membrane. Because Cu2+ chelation also represses the release of FGF1, the ability of Cu2+ chelators to potentially serve as effective clinical anti-cancer agents may be related to their ability to limit the export of these proinflammatory and angiogenic signal peptide-less polypeptides into the extracellular compartment.


Developmental Dynamics | 2007

A switch in numb isoforms is a critical step in cortical development

Mahmud Bani-Yaghoub; Chris J. Kubu; Rebecca Cowling; Jennifer Rochira; George N. Nikopoulos; Stephen Bellum; Joseph M. Verdi

Loss of numb function suggests that numb maintains progenitors in an undifferentiated state. Herein, we demonstrate that numb1 and numb3 are expressed in undifferentiated cortical progenitors, whereas numb2 and numb4 become prominent throughout differentiation. To further assess the role of different numb isoforms in cortical neural development, we first created a Numb‐null state with antisense morpholino, followed by the re‐expression of specific numb isoforms. The re‐expression of numb1 or numb3 resulted in a significant reduction of neural differentiation, correlating with an expansion of the cortical progenitor pool. In contrast, the expression of numb2 or numb4 resulted in a reduction of proliferating progenitors and a corresponding increase in mammalian achete‐scute homologue (MASH1) expression, concurrent with the appearance of the mitogen‐activated protein‐2–positive neurons. Of interest, the effect of numb isoforms on neural differentiation could not be directly related to Notch, because classic canonical Notch signaling assays failed to uncover any differences in the four isoforms to inhibit the Notch downstream events. This finding suggests that numb may have other signaling properties during neuronal differentiation in addition to augmenting notch signal strength. Developmental Dynamics 236:696–705, 2007.


Growth Factors Journal | 2001

The Comparative Release of FGF1 by Hypoxia and Temperature Stress

Carla Mouta Carreira; Matteo Landriscina; Stephen Bellum; Igor Prudovsky; Thomas Maciag

Abstract The signal peptide-less FGF gene family prototype, FGF1 is released in response to temperature stress in vitro as a latent reducing agent-sensitive homodimer non-covalently complexed with the extravesicular p40 domain of p65 synaptotagmin (Syt)1. Because FGF1 is well recognized as an angiogenesis factor in vivo and angiogenesis is known to be induced by hypoxia, we examined the release of FGF1 and p40 Syt1 under conditions of hypoxia and temperature stress using a chemostatic microcarrier cell culture system. We report that like the pathway used by FGF1 and p40 Syt1 release under temperature stress, hypoxia also induces the release of FGF1 and p40 Syt1 with similar kinetic and pharmacologic properties including the requirement for functional cysteine residues. Lastly, FGF1 and p40 Syt1 release in response to hypoxia and temperature stress is sensitive to lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase inhibitors suggesting that arachidonic acid metabolism may play an important role in the mechanism of FGF1 release in vitro.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

The Precursor but Not the Mature Form of IL1α Blocks the Release of FGF1 in Response to Heat Shock

Francesca Tarantini; Isabella Micucci; Stephen Bellum; Matteo Landriscina; Susan Garfinkel; Igor Prudovsky; Thomas Maciag

Interleukin (IL)1α mediates proinflammatory events through its extracellular interaction with the IL1 type I receptor. However, IL1α does not contain a conventional signal peptide sequence that provides access to the endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi apparatus for secretion. Thus, we have studied the release of the precursor (p) and mature (m) forms of IL1α from NIH 3T3 cells. We have demonstrated that mIL1α but not pIL1α was released in response to heat shock with biochemical and pharmacological properties similar to those reported for the stress-mediated release pathway utilized by fibroblast growth factor (FGF)1. However, unlike the FGF1 release pathway, the IL1α release pathway appears to function independently of synaptotagmin (Syt)1 because the expression of a dominant-negative form of Syt1, which represses the release of FGF1, did not inhibit the release of mIL1α in response to temperature stress. Interestingly, whereas the expression of both mIL1α and FGF1 in NIH 3T3 cells did not impair the stress-induced release of either polypeptide, the expression of both pIL1α and FGF1 repressed the release of FGF1 in response to temperature stress. These data suggest that the release of mIL1α requires proteolytic processing of its precursor form and that mIL1α and FGF1 may utilize similar but distinct mechanisms for export.


Stem Cells | 2007

Soluble Jagged1 Attenuates Lateral Inhibition, Allowing for the Clonal Expansion of Neural Crest Stem Cells

George N. Nikopoulos; Maria F. Duarte; Chris J. Kubu; Stephen Bellum; Robert Friesel; Thomas Maciag; Igor Prudovsky; Joseph M. Verdi

The activation of Notch signaling in neural crest stem cells (NCSCs) results in the rapid loss of neurogenic potential and differentiation into glia. We now show that the attenuation of endogenous Notch signaling within expanding NCSC clones by the Notch ligand soluble Jagged1 (sJ1), maintains NCSCs in a clonal self‐renewing state in vitro without affecting their sensitivity to instructive differentiation signals observed previously during NCSC self‐renewal. sJ1 functions as a competitive inhibitor of Notch signaling to modulate endogenous cell‐cell communication to levels sufficient to inhibit neural differentiation but insufficient to instruct gliogenic differentiation. Attenuated Notch signaling promotes the induction and nonclassic release of fibroblast growth factor 1 (FGF1). The functions of sJ1 and FGF1 signaling are complementary, as abrogation of FGF signaling diminishes the ability of sJ1 to promote NCSC expansion, yet the secondary NCSCs maintain the dosage sensitivity of the founder. These results validate and build upon previous studies on the role of Notch signaling in stem cell self‐renewal and suggest that the differentiation bias or self‐renewal potential of NCSCs is intrinsically linked to the level of endogenous Notch signaling. This should provide a unique opportunity for the expansion of NCSCs ex vivo without altering their differentiation bias for clinical cell replacement or transplant strategies in tissue repair.


Development | 2004

Insulin acts as a myogenic differentiation signal for neural stem cells with multilineage differentiation potential

Mahmud Bani-Yaghoub; Stephen E. Kendall; Daniel P. Moore; Stephen Bellum; Rebecca Cowling; George N. Nikopoulos; Chris J. Kubu; Calvin P.H. Vary; Joseph M. Verdi

Reports of non-neural differentiation of neural stem cells (NSCs) have been challenged by alternative explanations for expanded differentiation potentials. In an attempt to demonstrate the plasticity of NSC, neurospheres were generated from single retrovirally labeled embryonic cortical precursors. In a defined serum-free insulin-containing media, 40% of the neurospheres contained both myogenic and neurogenic differentiated progeny. The number of NSCs displaying multilineage differentiation potential declines through gestation but does exist in the adult animal. In this system, insulin appears to function as a survival and dose-dependent myogenic differentiation signal for multilineage NSCs (MLNSC). MLNSC-derived cardiomyocytes contract synchronously, respond to sympathetic and parasympathetic stimulation, and regenerate injured heart tissues. These studies provide support for the hypothesis that MLNSCs exist throughout the lifetime of the animal, and potentially provide a population of stem cells for cell-based regenerative medicine strategies inside and outside of the nervous system.


Methods in Enzymology | 2000

Fusions to members of fibroblast growth factor gene family to study nuclear translocation and nonclassic exocytosis.

Igor Prudovsky; Matteo Landriscina; Raffaella Soldi; Stephen Bellum; Deena Small; Viktoria Andreeva; Thomas Maciag

Publisher Summary The fibroblast growth factor (FGF) gene family includes at least 19 genes encoding proteins that regulate proliferation, differentiation, motility, and survival of cells of neuroectodermal and mesodermal origin. This chapter describes the fusions to members of FGF gene family to study nuclear translocation and nonclassic exocytosis. The two most abundantly expressed representatives of the family are the prototypes FGF-1 and FGF-2, which are involved in the regulation of a wide variety of developmental, pathological, and regenerative processes in mammalian organisms, including humans. Among these processes are mesodermal induction, limb formation, angiogenesis, skeletal muscle growth and regeneration, the growth and metastasis of certain types of solid tumors, atherosclerosis, and restenosis. The chapter discusses the types of protein chimeras used for the study of fibroblast growth. The protein fusion approach to the study of FGF translocations is not limited to the use of reporter genes. Known nuclear localization signal (NLS) sequences from other proteins have been used for fusion with the FGFs to direct their nuclear translocation. A comparative study of FGF-1 and FGF-2 nuclear localization and release includes the shuffling of homologous regions/domains between these two proteins.

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