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Dive into the research topics where Steve G. Thomas is active.

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Featured researches published by Steve G. Thomas.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Mutations in VIPAR cause an arthrogryposis, renal dysfunction and cholestasis syndrome phenotype with defects in epithelial polarization

Andrew R. Cullinane; Anna Straatman-Iwanowska; Andreas Zaucker; Yoshiyuki Wakabayashi; Christopher K Bruce; Guanmei Luo; Fatimah Rahman; Figen Gürakan; Eda Utine; Tanju Ozkan; Jonas Denecke; Jurica Vukovic; Maja Di Rocco; Hanna Mandel; Hakan Cangul; Randolph P. Matthews; Steve G. Thomas; Joshua Z. Rappoport; Irwin M. Arias; Hartwig Wolburg; A.S. Knisely; Deirdre Kelly; Ferenc Müller; Eamonn R. Maher; Paul Gissen

Arthrogryposis, renal dysfunction and cholestasis syndrome (ARC) is a multisystem disorder associated with abnormalities in polarized liver and kidney cells. Mutations in VPS33B account for most cases of ARC. We identified mutations in VIPAR (also called C14ORF133) in individuals with ARC without VPS33B defects. We show that VIPAR forms a functional complex with VPS33B that interacts with RAB11A. Knockdown of vipar in zebrafish resulted in biliary excretion and E-cadherin defects similar to those in individuals with ARC. Vipar- and Vps33b-deficient mouse inner medullary collecting duct (mIMDC-3) cells expressed membrane proteins abnormally and had structural and functional tight junction defects. Abnormal Ceacam5 expression was due to mis-sorting toward lysosomal degradation, but reduced E-cadherin levels were associated with transcriptional downregulation. The VPS33B-VIPAR complex thus has diverse functions in the pathways regulating apical-basolateral polarity in the liver and kidney.


Blood | 2009

The tyrosine phosphatase CD148 is an essential positive regulator of platelet activation and thrombosis

Yotis A. Senis; Michael G. Tomlinson; Stuart Ellison; Alexandra Mazharian; Jenson Lim; Yan Zhao; Kristin N. Kornerup; Jocelyn M. Auger; Steve G. Thomas; Tarvinder S. Dhanjal; Neena Kalia; Jing W. Zhu; Arthur Weiss; Steve P. Watson

Platelets play a fundamental role in hemostasis and thrombosis. They are also involved in pathologic conditions resulting from blocked blood vessels, including myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke. Platelet adhesion, activation, and aggregation at sites of vascular injury are regulated by a diverse repertoire of tyrosine kinase–linked and G protein–coupled receptors. Src family kinases (SFKs) play a central role in initiating and propagating signaling from several platelet surface receptors; however, the underlying mechanism of how SFK activity is regulated in platelets remains unclear. CD148 is the only receptor-like protein tyrosine phosphatase identified in platelets to date. In the present study, we show that mutant mice lacking CD148 exhibited a bleeding tendency and defective arterial thrombosis. Basal SFK activity was found to be markedly reduced in CD148-deficient platelets, resulting in a global hyporesponsiveness to agonists that signal through SFKs, including collagen and fibrinogen. G protein–coupled receptor responses to thrombin and other agonists were also marginally reduced. These results highlight CD148 as a global regulator of platelet activation and a novel antithrombotic drug target.


Journal of The Air & Waste Management Association | 2007

Dependence of home outdoor particulate mass and number concentrations on residential and traffic features in urban areas

Maria Lianou; Marie-Cecile G. Chalbot; Anastasia Kotronarou; Ilias G. Kavouras; Anna Karakatsani; Klea Katsouyanni; Arto Puustinnen; Kaarle Hämeri; Marko Vallius; Juha Pekkanen; Claire Meddings; Roy M. Harrison; Steve G. Thomas; Jon Ayres; Harry ten Brink; Gerard Kos; Kees Meliefste; Jeroen J. de Hartog; Gerard Hoek

Abstract The associations between residential outdoor and ambient particle mass, fine particle absorbance, particle number (PN) concentrations, and residential and traffic determinants were investigated in four European urban areas (Helsinki, Athens, Amsterdam, and Birmingham). A total of 152 nonsmoking participants with respiratory diseases, not exposed to occupational pollution, were included in the study, which comprised a 7-day intensive exposure monitoring period of both indoor and home outdoor particle mass and number concentrations. The same pollutants were also continuously measured at ambient fixed sites centrally located to the studied areas (fixed ambient sites). Relationships between concentrations measured directly outside the homes (residential outdoor) and at the fixed ambient sites were pollutant-specific, with substantial variations among the urban areas. Differences were more pronounced for coarse particles due to resuspension of road dust and PN, which is strongly related to traffic emissions. Less significant outdoor-to-fixed variation for particle mass was observed for Amsterdam and Birmingham, predominantly due to regional secondary aerosol. On the contrary, a strong spatial variation was observed for Athens and to a lesser extent for Helsinki. This was attributed to the overwhelming and time-varied inputs from traffic and other local sources. The location of the residence and traffic volume and distance to street and traffic light were important determinants of residential outdoor particle concentrations. On average, particle mass levels in suburban areas were less than 30% of those measured for residences located in the city center. Residences located less than 10 m from a street experienced 133% higher PN concentrations than residences located further away. Overall, the findings of this multi-city study, indicated that (1) spatial variation was larger for PN than for fine particulate matter (PM) mass and varied between the cities, (2) vehicular emissions in the residential street and location in the center of the city were significant predictors of spatial variation, and (3) the impact of traffic and location in the city was much larger for PN than for fine particle mass.


Blood | 2010

Critical role of Src-Syk-PLC 2 signaling in megakaryocyte migration and thrombopoiesis

Alexandra Mazharian; Steve G. Thomas; Tarvinder S. Dhanjal; Christopher D. Buckley; Steve P. Watson

Migration of megakaryocytes (MKs) from the proliferative osteoblastic niche to the capillary-rich vascular niche is essential for proplatelet formation and platelet release. In this study, we explore the role of surface glycoprotein receptors and signaling proteins in regulating MK migration and platelet recovery after immune-induced thrombocytopenia. We show that spreading and migration of mouse primary bone marrow-derived MKs on a fibronectin matrix are abolished by the Src family kinases inhibitor PP1, the Syk kinase inhibitor R406 and the integrin alphaIIbbeta3 antagonist lotrafiban. We also demonstrate that these responses are inhibited in primary phospholipase C gamma2 (PLCgamma2)-deficient MKs. Conversely, MK spreading and migration were unaltered in the absence of the collagen receptor, the glycoprotein VI-FcRgamma-chain complex. We previously reported a correlation between a defect in MK migration and platelet recovery in the absence of platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule-1 and the tyrosine phosphatase CD148. This correlation also holds for mice deficient in PLCgamma2. This study identifies a model in which integrin signaling via Src family kinases and Syk kinase to PLCgamma2 is required for MK spreading, migration, and platelet formation.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Prostacyclin reverses platelet stress fibre formation causing platelet aggregate instability

Muhammad Zuhair Yusuf; Zaher Raslan; Lloyd A. Atkinson; Ahmed Aburima; Steve G. Thomas; Khalid M. Naseem; Simon D. J. Calaminus

Prostacyclin (PGI2) modulates platelet activation to regulate haemostasis. Evidence has emerged to suggest that thrombi are dynamic structures with distinct areas of differing platelet activation. It was hypothesised that PGI2 could reverse platelet spreading by actin cytoskeletal modulation, leading to reduced capability of platelet aggregates to withstand a high shear environment. Our data demonstrates that post-flow of PGI2 over activated and spread platelets on fibrinogen, identified a significant reduction in platelet surface area under high shear. Exploration of the molecular mechanisms underpinning this effect revealed that PGI2 reversed stress fibre formation in adherent platelets, reduced platelet spreading, whilst simultaneously promoting actin nodule formation. The effects of PGI2 on stress fibres were mimicked by the adenylyl cyclase activator forskolin and prevented by inhibitors of protein kinase A (PKA). Stress fibre formation is a RhoA dependent process and we found that treatment of adherent platelets with PGI2 caused inhibitory phosphorylation of RhoA, reduced RhoA GTP-loading and reversal of myosin light chain phosphorylation. Phospho-RhoA was localised in actin nodules with PKA type II and a number of other phosphorylated PKA substrates. This study demonstrates that PGI2 can reverse key platelet functions after their initial activation and identifies a novel mechanism for controlling thrombosis.


ChemBioChem | 2015

Accessible Synthetic Probes for Staining Actin inside Platelets and Megakaryocytes by Employing Lifeact Peptide

Lucia Cardo; Steve G. Thomas; Alexandra Mazharian; Zoe Pikramenou; Joshua Z. Rappoport; Michael J. Hannon; Stephen P. Watson

Lifeact is a 17‐residue peptide that can be employed in cell microscopy as a probe for F‐actin when fused to fluorescent proteins, but therefore is not suitable for all cell types. We have conjugated fluorescently labelled Lifeact to three different cell‐penetrating systems (a myristoylated carrier (myr), the pH low insertion peptide (pHLIP) and the cationic peptide TAT) as a strategy to deliver Lifeact into cells and developed new tools for actin staining with improved synthetic accessibility and low toxicity, focusing on their suitability in platelets and megakaryocytes. Using confocal microscopy, we characterised the cell distribution of the new hybrids in fixed cells, and found that both myr– and pHLIP–Lifeact conjugates provide efficient actin staining upon cleavage of Lifeact from the carriers, without affecting cell spreading. This new approach could facilitate the design of new tools for actin visualisation.


Atmospheric Environment | 2008

Indoor–outdoor relationships of particle number and mass in four European cities

Gerard Hoek; Gerard Kos; Roy M. Harrison; Jeroen J. de Hartog; Kees Meliefste; Harry ten Brink; Klea Katsouyanni; Anna Karakatsani; Maria Lianou; Anastasia Kotronarou; Ilias G. Kavouras; Juha Pekkanen; Marko Vallius; Markku Kulmala; Arto Puustinen; Steve G. Thomas; Claire Meddings; Jon Ayres; Joop van Wijnen; Kaarle Hämeri


Atmospheric Environment | 2007

Spatial variation of particle number and mass over four European cities

Arto Puustinen; Kaarle Hämeri; Juha Pekkanen; Markku Kulmala; Jeroen J. de Hartog; Kees Meliefste; Harry ten Brink; Gerard Kos; Klea Katsouyanni; Anna Karakatsani; Anastasia Kotronarou; Ilias G. Kavouras; Claire Meddings; Steve G. Thomas; Roy M. Harrison; Jon Ayres; Saskia C. van der Zee; Gerard Hoek


Archive | 2004

Point of care station

Laird Broadfield; Steve G. Thomas; Rob Sobie; Graham Ross; Christopher D. Buckley; Andrzei Skoskiewicz; Stephen Wahl; Roshi Givechi; Mark Siminoff; Paul Frey; Adrian James


Archive | 2013

thrombopoiesis 2 signaling in megakaryocyte migration and γ Critical role of Src-Syk-PLC

Alexandra Mazharian; Steve G. Thomas; Tarvinder S. Dhanjal; Christopher D. Buckley

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Jon Ayres

University of Birmingham

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Ilias G. Kavouras

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Juha Pekkanen

National Institute for Health and Welfare

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