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Dive into the research topics where Sukhbir Kaur is active.

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Featured researches published by Sukhbir Kaur.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Thrombospondin-1 Inhibits VEGF Receptor-2 Signaling by Disrupting Its Association with CD47

Sukhbir Kaur; Gema Martin-Manso; Michael L. Pendrak; Susan Garfield; Jeffrey S. Isenberg; David D. Roberts

Thrombospondin-1 (TSP1) can inhibit angiogenic responses directly by interacting with VEGF and indirectly by engaging several endothelial cell TSP1 receptors. We now describe a more potent mechanism by which TSP1 inhibits VEGF receptor-2 (VEGFR2) activation through engaging its receptor CD47. CD47 ligation is known to inhibit downstream signaling targets of VEGFR2, including endothelial nitric-oxide synthase and soluble guanylate cyclase, but direct effects on VEGFR2 have not been examined. Based on FRET and co-immunoprecipitation, CD47 constitutively associated with VEGFR2. Ligation of CD47 by TSP1 abolished resonance energy transfer with VEGFR2 and inhibited phosphorylation of VEGFR2 and its downstream target Akt without inhibiting VEGF binding to VEGFR2. The inhibitory activity of TSP1 in large vessel and microvascular endothelial cells was replicated by a recombinant domain of the protein containing its CD47-binding site and by a CD47-binding peptide derived from this domain but not by the CD36-binding domain of TSP1. Inhibition of VEGFR2 phosphorylation was lost when CD47 expression was suppressed in human endothelial cells and in murine CD47-null cells. These results reveal that anti-angiogenic signaling through CD47 is highly redundant and extends beyond inhibition of nitric oxide signaling to global inhibition of VEGFR2 signaling.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Robo4 Signaling in Endothelial Cells Implies Attraction Guidance Mechanisms

Sukhbir Kaur; Maria Domenica Castellone; Victoria M. Bedell; Martha Konar; J. Silvio Gutkind; Ramani Ramchandran

Roundabouts (robo) are cell-surface receptors that mediate repulsive signaling mechanisms at the central nervous system midline. However, robos may also mediate attraction mechanisms in the context of vascular development. Here, we have performed structure-function analysis of roundabout4 (Robo4), the predominant robo expressed in embryonic zebrafish vasculature and found by gain of function approaches in vitro that Robo4 activates Cdc42 and Rac1 Rho GTPases in endothelial cells. Indeed, complementary robo4 gene knockdown approaches in zebrafish embryos show lower amounts of active Cdc42 and Rac1 and angioblasts isolated from these knockdown embryos search actively for directionality and guidance cues. Furthermore, Robo4-expressing endothelial cells show morphology and phenotype, characteristic of Rho GTPase activation. Taken together, this study suggests that Robo4 mediates attraction-signaling mechanisms through Rho GTPases in vertebrate vascular guidance.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Thrombospondin-1 Signaling through CD47 Inhibits Self-renewal by Regulating c-Myc and Other Stem Cell Transcription Factors

Sukhbir Kaur; David R. Soto-Pantoja; Erica V. Stein; Chengyu Liu; Abdel G. Elkahloun; Michael L. Pendrak; Alina Nicolae; Satya P. Singh; Zuqin Nie; David Levens; Jeffrey S. Isenberg; David D. Roberts

Signaling through the thrombospondin-1 receptor CD47 broadly limits cell and tissue survival of stress, but the molecular mechanisms are incompletely understood. We now show that loss of CD47 permits sustained proliferation of primary murine endothelial cells, increases asymmetric division, and enables these cells to spontaneously reprogram to form multipotent embryoid body-like clusters. c-Myc, Klf4, Oct4, and Sox2 expression is elevated in CD47-null endothelial cells, in several tissues of CD47- and thrombospondin-1-null mice, and in a human T cell line lacking CD47. CD47 knockdown acutely increases mRNA levels of c-Myc and other stem cell transcription factors in cells and in vivo, whereas CD47 ligation by thrombospondin-1 suppresses c-Myc expression. The inhibitory effects of increasing CD47 levels can be overcome by maintaining c-Myc expression and are absent in cells with dysregulated c-Myc. Thus, CD47 antagonists enable cell self-renewal and reprogramming by overcoming negative regulation of c-Myc and other stem cell transcription factors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012

Hydrogen Sulfide Is an Endogenous Potentiator of T Cell Activation

Thomas W. Miller; Evelyn A. Wang; Serge Gould; Erica V. Stein; Sukhbir Kaur; Langston Lim; Shoba Amarnath; Daniel H. Fowler; David D. Roberts

Background: T cells encounter H2S in physiological and pathophysiological settings with unknown consequences. Results: Exogenous and endogenous H2S enhances T cell activation. Conclusion: T cell activation depends on H2S signaling. Significance: H2S can act as an autocrine or paracrine T cell activator and suggests a mechanistic link to inflammatory bowel disease progression. H2S is an endogenous signaling molecule that may act via protein sulfhydrylation to regulate various physiological functions. H2S is also a byproduct of dietary sulfate metabolism by gut bacteria. Inflammatory bowel diseases such as ulcerative colitis are associated with an increase in the colonization of the intestine by sulfate reducing bacteria along with an increase in H2S production. Consistent with its increased production, H2S is implicated as a mediator of ulcerative colitis both in its genesis or maintenance. As T cells are well established mediators of inflammatory bowel disease, we investigated the effect of H2S exposure on T cell activation. Using primary mouse T lymphocytes (CD3+), OT-II CD4+ T cells, and the human Jurkat T cell line, we show that physiological levels of H2S potentiate TCR-induced activation. Nanomolar levels of H2S (50–500 nm) enhance T cell activation assessed by CD69 expression, interleukin-2 expression, and CD25 levels. Exposure of T cells to H2S dose-dependently enhances TCR-stimulated proliferation with a maximum at 300 nm (30% increase, p < 0.01). Furthermore, activation increases the capacity of T cells to make H2S via increased expression of cystathionine γ-lyase and cystathionine β-synthase. Disrupting this response by silencing these H2S producing enzymes impairs T cell activation, and proliferation and can be rescued by the addition of 300 nm H2S. Thus, H2S represents a novel autocrine immunomodulatory molecule in T cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) Pyruvate Kinase as a Target for Bis-indole Alkaloids with Antibacterial Activities

Roya Zoraghi; Liam J. Worrall; Raymond H. See; Wendy Strangman; Wendy L. Popplewell; Huansheng Gong; Toufiek Samaai; Richard D. Swayze; Sukhbir Kaur; Marija Vuckovic; B. Brett Finlay; Robert C. Brunham; William R. McMaster; Michael T. Davies-Coleman; Natalie C. J. Strynadka; Raymond J. Andersen; Neil E. Reiner

Background: Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) PK has been recently identified as a potential novel antimicrobial drug target. Results: Screening of a marine extract library led to the identification of several bis-indole alkaloids as novel potent and selective MRSA PK inhibitors. Conclusion: These results help to understand the mechanism of the antibacterial activities of marine bis-indole alkaloids. Significance: This study provides the basis for development of potential novel antimicrobials. Novel classes of antimicrobials are needed to address the emergence of multidrug-resistant bacteria such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). We have recently identified pyruvate kinase (PK) as a potential novel drug target based upon it being an essential hub in the MRSA interactome (Cherkasov, A., Hsing, M., Zoraghi, R., Foster, L. J., See, R. H., Stoynov, N., Jiang, J., Kaur, S., Lian, T., Jackson, L., Gong, H., Swayze, R., Amandoron, E., Hormozdiari, F., Dao, P., Sahinalp, C., Santos-Filho, O., Axerio-Cilies, P., Byler, K., McMaster, W. R., Brunham, R. C., Finlay, B. B., and Reiner, N. E. (2011) J. Proteome Res. 10, 1139–1150; Zoraghi, R., See, R. H., Axerio-Cilies, P., Kumar, N. S., Gong, H., Moreau, A., Hsing, M., Kaur, S., Swayze, R. D., Worrall, L., Amandoron, E., Lian, T., Jackson, L., Jiang, J., Thorson, L., Labriere, C., Foster, L., Brunham, R. C., McMaster, W. R., Finlay, B. B., Strynadka, N. C., Cherkasov, A., Young, R. N., and Reiner, N. E. (2011) Antimicrob. Agents Chemother. 55, 2042–2053). Screening of an extract library of marine invertebrates against MRSA PK resulted in the identification of bis-indole alkaloids of the spongotine (A), topsentin (B, D), and hamacanthin (C) classes isolated from the Topsentia pachastrelloides as novel bacterial PK inhibitors. These compounds potently and selectively inhibited both MRSA PK enzymatic activity and S. aureus growth in vitro. The most active compounds, cis-3,4-dihyrohyrohamacanthin B (C) and bromodeoxytopsentin (D), were identified as highly potent MRSA PK inhibitors (IC50 values of 16–60 nm) with at least 166-fold selectivity over human PK isoforms. These novel anti-PK natural compounds exhibited significant antibacterial activities against S. aureus, including MRSA (minimal inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of 12.5 and 6.25 μg/ml, respectively) with selectivity indices (CC50/MIC) >4. We also report the discrete structural features of the MRSA PK tetramer as determined by x-ray crystallography, which is suitable for selective targeting of the bacterial enzyme. The co-crystal structure of compound C with MRSA PK confirms that the latter is a target for bis-indole alkaloids. It elucidates the essential structural requirements for PK inhibitors in “small” interfaces that provide for tetramer rigidity and efficient catalytic activity. Our results identified a series of natural products as novel MRSA PK inhibitors, providing the basis for further development of potential novel antimicrobials.


Journal of Proteome Research | 2011

Mapping the protein interaction network in methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus.

Artem Cherkasov; Michael Hsing; Roya Zoraghi; Leonard J. Foster; Raymond H. See; Nikolay Stoynov; Jihong Jiang; Sukhbir Kaur; Tian Lian; Linda Jackson; Huansheng Gong; Rick Swayze; Emily Amandoron; Farhad Hormozdiari; Phuong Dao; Cenk Sahinalp; Osvaldo Santos-Filho; Peter Axerio-Cilies; Kendall G. Byler; William R. McMaster; Robert C. Brunham; B. Brett Finlay; Neil E. Reiner

Mortality attributable to infection with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) has now overtaken the death rate for AIDS in the United States, and advances in research are urgently needed to address this challenge. We report the results of the systematic identification of protein-protein interactions for the hospital-acquired strain MRSA-252. Using a high-throughput pull-down strategy combined with quantitative proteomics to distinguish specific from nonspecific interactors, we identified 13,219 interactions involving 608 MRSA proteins. Consecutive analyses revealed that this protein interaction network (PIN) exhibits scale-free organization with the characteristic presence of highly connected hub proteins. When clinical and experimental antimicrobial targets were queried in the network, they were generally found to occupy peripheral positions in the PIN with relatively few interacting partners. In contrast, the hub proteins identified in this MRSA PIN that are essential for network integrity and stability have largely been overlooked as drug targets. Thus, this empirical MRSA-252 PIN provides a rich source for identifying critical proteins essential for network stability, many of which can be considered as prospective antimicrobial drug targets.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Heparan Sulfate Modification of the Transmembrane Receptor CD47 Is Necessary for Inhibition of T Cell Receptor Signaling by Thrombospondin-1

Sukhbir Kaur; Svetlana A. Kuznetsova; Michael L. Pendrak; John M. Sipes; Martin J. Romeo; Zhuqing Li; Lijuan Zhang; David D. Roberts

Cell surface proteoglycans on T cells contribute to retroviral infection, binding of chemokines and other proteins, and are necessary for some T cell responses to the matricellular glycoprotein thrombospondin-1. The major cell surface proteoglycans expressed by primary T cells and Jurkat T cells have an apparent Mr > 200,000 and are modified with chondroitin sulfate and heparan sulfate chains. Thrombospondin-1 bound in a heparin-inhibitable manner to this proteoglycan and to a soluble form released into the medium. Based on mass spectrometry, knockdown, and immunochemical analyses, the proteoglycan contains two major core proteins as follows: amyloid precursor-like protein-2 (APLP2, apparent Mr 230,000) and CD47 (apparent Mr > 250,000). CD47 is a known thrombospondin-1 receptor but was not previously reported to be a proteoglycan. This proteoglycan isoform of CD47 is widely expressed on vascular cells. Mutagenesis identified glycosaminoglycan modification of CD47 at Ser64 and Ser79. Inhibition of T cell receptor signaling by thrombospondin-1 was lost in CD47-deficient T cells that express the proteoglycan isoform of APLP2, indicating that binding to APLP2 is not sufficient. Inhibition of CD69 induction was restored in CD47-deficient cells by re-expressing CD47 or an S79A mutant but not by the S64A mutant. Therefore, inhibition of T cell receptor signaling by thrombospondin-1 is mediated by CD47 and requires its modification at Ser64.


Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy | 2011

Identification of Pyruvate Kinase in Methicillin-Resistant Staphylococcus aureus as a Novel Antimicrobial Drug Target

Roya Zoraghi; Raymond H. See; Peter Axerio-Cilies; Nag S. Kumar; Huansheng Gong; Michael Hsing; Sukhbir Kaur; Richard D. Swayze; Liam J. Worrall; Emily Amandoron; Tian Lian; Linda Jackson; Jihong Jiang; Lisa Thorson; Christophe Labrière; Leonard J. Foster; Robert C. Brunham; William R. McMaster; B. Brett Finlay; Natalie C. J. Strynadka; Artem Cherkasov; Robert N. Young; Neil E. Reiner

ABSTRACT Novel classes of antimicrobials are needed to address the challenge of multidrug-resistant bacteria such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). Using the architecture of the MRSA interactome, we identified pyruvate kinase (PK) as a potential novel drug target based upon it being a highly connected, essential hub in the MRSA interactome. Structural modeling, including X-ray crystallography, revealed discrete features of PK in MRSA, which appeared suitable for the selective targeting of the bacterial enzyme. In silico library screening combined with functional enzymatic assays identified an acyl hydrazone-based compound (IS-130) as a potent MRSA PK inhibitor (50% inhibitory concentration [IC50] of 0.1 μM) with >1,000-fold selectivity over human PK isoforms. Medicinal chemistry around the IS-130 scaffold identified analogs that more potently and selectively inhibited MRSA PK enzymatic activity and S. aureus growth in vitro (MIC of 1 to 5 μg/ml). These novel anti-PK compounds were found to possess antistaphylococcal activity, including both MRSA and multidrug-resistant S. aureus (MDRSA) strains. These compounds also exhibited exceptional antibacterial activities against other Gram-positive genera, including enterococci and streptococci. PK lead compounds were found to be noncompetitive inhibitors and were bactericidal. In addition, mutants with significant increases in MICs were not isolated after 25 bacterial passages in culture, indicating that resistance may be slow to emerge. These findings validate the principles of network science as a powerful approach to identify novel antibacterial drug targets. They also provide a proof of principle, based upon PK in MRSA, for a research platform aimed at discovering and optimizing selective inhibitors of novel bacterial targets where human orthologs exist, as leads for anti-infective drug development.


BMC Cell Biology | 2008

Silencing of directional migration in roundabout4 knockdown endothelial cells

Sukhbir Kaur; Ganesh V. Samant; Kallal Pramanik; Philip W Loscombe; Michael L. Pendrak; David D. Roberts; Ramani Ramchandran

BackgroundRoundabouts are axon guidance molecules that have recently been identified to play a role in vascular guidance as well. In this study, we have investigated gene knockdown analysis of endothelial Robos, in particular roundabout 4 (robo4), the predominant Robo in endothelial cells using small interfering RNA technology in vitro.ResultsRobo1 and Robo4 knockdown cells display distinct activity in endothelial cell migration assay. The knockdown of robo4 abrogated the chemotactic response of endothelial cells to serum but enhanced a chemokinetic response to Slit2, while robo1 knockdown cells do not display chemotactic response to serum or VEGF. Robo4 knockdown endothelial cells unexpectedly show up regulation of Rho GTPases. Zebrafish Robo4 rescues both Rho GTPase homeostasis and serum reduced chemotaxis in robo4 knockdown cells. Robo1 and Robo4 interact and share molecules such as Slit2, Mena and Vilse, a Cdc42-GAP. In addition, this study mechanistically implicates IRSp53 in the signaling nexus between activated Cdc42 and Mena, both of which have previously been shown to be involved with Robo4 signaling in endothelial cells.ConclusionThis study identifies specific components of the Robo signaling apparatus that work together to guide directional migration of endothelial cells.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Long-term, calorie-restricted intake of a high-fat diet in rats reduces impulse control and ventral striatal D2 receptor signalling - two markers of addiction vulnerability.

Wendy K. Adams; Jacob L. Sussman; Sukhbir Kaur; Anna M. D'souza; Timothy J. Kieffer; Catharine A. Winstanley

High impulsivity, mediated through ventral striatal dopamine signalling, represents an established risk factor for substance abuse, and may likewise confer vulnerability to pathological overeating. Mechanistically, the assumption is that trait impulsivity facilitates the initiation of maladaptive eating styles or choices. However, whether consumption of appetitive macronutrients themselves causes deficits in impulse control and striatal signalling, thereby contributing to cognitive changes permissive of overeating behaviour, has yet to be considered. We examined the effects of chronic maintenance on restricted equicaloric, but high‐fat or high‐sugar, diets (48 kcal/day; 60 kcal% fat or sucrose) on rats’ performance in the five‐choice serial reaction time task, indexing impulsivity and attention. Markers of dopamine signalling in the dorsal and ventral striatum, and plasma insulin and leptin levels, were also assessed. Rats maintained on the high‐fat diet (HFD) were more impulsive, whereas the high‐sugar diet (HSD) did not alter task performance. Importantly, body weight and hormone levels were similar between groups when behavioural changes were observed. Maintenance on HFD, but not on HSD, reduced the levels of dopamine D2 receptor (D2R), cAMP response element‐binding protein (CREB) and phosphophorylated CREB (Ser133) proteins in the ventral, but not dorsal, striatum. D2R expression in the ventral striatum also negatively correlated with impulsive responding, independently of diet. These data indicate that chronic exposure to even limited amounts of high‐fat foods may weaken impulse control and alter neural signalling in a manner associated with vulnerability to addictions – findings that have serious implications for the propagation of uncontrolled eating behaviour in obesity and binge‐eating disorder.

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David D. Roberts

National Institutes of Health

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Catharine A. Winstanley

University of British Columbia

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Abdel G. Elkahloun

National Institutes of Health

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Satya P. Singh

National Institutes of Health

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David R. Soto-Pantoja

National Institutes of Health

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Michael L. Pendrak

National Institutes of Health

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Ramani Ramchandran

Medical College of Wisconsin

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B. Brett Finlay

University of British Columbia

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Huansheng Gong

University of British Columbia

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