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Dive into the research topics where Tamas Oravecz is active.

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Featured researches published by Tamas Oravecz.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

Essential Role of MAPK Phosphatase-1 in the Negative Control of Innate Immune Responses

Konstantin V. Salojin; Iris B. Owusu; Karen A. Millerchip; Mark Potter; Ken A. Platt; Tamas Oravecz

TLR-induced innate immunity and inflammation are mediated by signaling cascades leading to activation of the MAPK family of Ser/Thr protein kinases, including p38 MAPK, which controls cytokine release during innate and adoptive immune responses. Failure to terminate such inflammatory reactions may lead to detrimental systemic effects, including septic shock and autoimmunity. In this study, we provide genetic evidence of a critical and nonredundant role of MAPK phosphatase (MKP)-1 in the negative control of MAPK-regulated inflammatory reactions in vivo. MKP-1−/− mice are hyperresponsive to low-dose LPS-induced toxicity and exhibit significantly increased serum TNF-α, IL-6, IL-12, MCP-1, IFN-γ, and IL-10 levels after systemic administration of LPS. Furthermore, absence of MKP-1 increases systemic levels of proinflammatory cytokines and exacerbates disease development in a mouse model of rheumatoid arthritis. When activated through TLR2, TLR3, TLR4, TLR5, and TLR9, bone marrow-derived MKP-1−/− macrophages exhibit increased cytokine production and elevated expression of the differentiation markers B7.2 (CD86) and CD40. MKP-1-deficient macrophages also show enhanced constitutive and TLR-induced activation of p38 MAPK. Based on these findings, we propose that MKP-1 is an essential component of the intracellular homeostasis that controls the threshold and magnitude of p38 MAPK activation in macrophages, and inflammatory conditions accentuate the significance of this regulatory function.


Nature Biotechnology | 2010

A mouse knockout library for secreted and transmembrane proteins

Tracy Tang; Li Li; Jerry Tang; Yun Li; Wei Yu Lin; Flavius Martin; Deanna Grant; Mark Solloway; Leon Parker; Weilan Ye; William F. Forrest; Nico Ghilardi; Tamas Oravecz; Kenneth A. Platt; Dennis S. Rice; Gwenn Hansen; Alejandro Abuin; Derek E. Eberhart; Paul J. Godowski; Kathleen H. Holt; Andrew S. Peterson; Brian Zambrowicz; Frederic J. de Sauvage

Large collections of knockout organisms facilitate the elucidation of gene functions. Here we used retroviral insertion or homologous recombination to disrupt 472 genes encoding secreted and membrane proteins in mice, providing a resource for studying a large fraction of this important class of drug target. The knockout mice were subjected to a systematic phenotypic screen designed to uncover alterations in embryonic development, metabolism, the immune system, the nervous system and the cardiovascular system. The majority of knockout lines exhibited altered phenotypes in at least one of these therapeutic areas. To our knowledge, a comprehensive phenotypic assessment of a large number of mouse mutants generated by a gene-specific approach has not been described previously.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Incomplete Inhibition of Sphingosine 1-Phosphate Lyase Modulates Immune System Function yet Prevents Early Lethality and Non-Lymphoid Lesions

Peter Vogel; Michael S. Donoviel; Robert Read; Gwenn Hansen; Jill Hazlewood; Stephen J. Anderson; Weimei Sun; Jonathan Swaffield; Tamas Oravecz

Background S1PL is an aldehyde-lyase that irreversibly cleaves sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) in the terminal step of sphingolipid catabolism. Because S1P modulates a wide range of physiological processes, its concentration must be tightly regulated within both intracellular and extracellular environments. Methodology In order to better understand the function of S1PL in this regulatory pathway, we assessed the in vivo effects of different levels of S1PL activity using knockout (KO) and humanized mouse models. Principal Findings Our analysis showed that all S1PL-deficient genetic models in this study displayed lymphopenia, with sequestration of mature T cells in the thymus and lymph nodes. In addition to the lymphoid phenotypes, S1PL KO mice (S1PL−/−) also developed myeloid cell hyperplasia and significant lesions in the lung, heart, urinary tract, and bone, and had a markedly reduced life span. The humanized knock-in mice harboring one allele (S1PLH/−) or two alleles (S1PLH/H) of human S1PL expressed less than 10 and 20% of normal S1PL activity, respectively. This partial restoration of S1PL activity was sufficient to fully protect both humanized mouse lines from the lethal non-lymphoid lesions that developed in S1PL−/− mice, but failed to restore normal T-cell development and trafficking. Detailed analysis of T-cell compartments indicated that complete absence of S1PL affected both maturation/development and egress of mature T cells from the thymus, whereas low level S1PL activity affected T-cell egress more than differentiation. Significance These findings demonstrate that lymphocyte trafficking is particularly sensitive to variations in S1PL activity and suggest that there is a window in which partial inhibition of S1PL could produce therapeutic levels of immunosuppression without causing clinically significant S1P-related lesions in non-lymphoid target organs.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Inhibition of Sphingosine 1-Phosphate Lyase for the Treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis: Discovery of (E)-1-(4-((1R,2S,3R)-1,2,3,4-Tetrahydroxybutyl)-1H-imidazol-2-yl)ethanone Oxime (LX2931) and (1R,2S,3R)-1-(2-(Isoxazol-3-yl)-1H-imidazol-4-yl)butane-1,2,3,4-tetraol (LX2932)

Jeffrey Bagdanoff; Michael S. Donoviel; Amr Nouraldeen; Marianne Carlsen; Theodore C. Jessop; James Tarver; Saadat Aleem; Li Dong; Haiming Zhang; Lakmal W. Boteju; Jill Hazelwood; Jack Yan; Mark S. Bednarz; Suman Layek; Iris B. Owusu; Suma Gopinathan; Liam Moran; Zhong Lai; Jeffrey A. Kramer; S. David Kimball; Padmaja Yalamanchili; William Heydorn; Kenny Frazier; Barbara Brooks; Philip Manton Brown; Alan A. Wilson; William K. Sonnenburg; Alan Main; Kenneth G. Carson; Tamas Oravecz

Sphingosine 1-phosphate lyase (S1PL) has been characterized as a novel target for the treatment of autoimmune disorders using genetic and pharmacological methods. Medicinal chemistry efforts targeting S1PL by direct in vivo evaluation of synthetic analogues of 2-acetyl-4(5)-(1(R),2(S),3(R),4-tetrahydroxybutyl)-imidazole (THI, 1) led to the discovery of 2 (LX2931) and 4 (LX2932). The immunological phenotypes observed in S1PL deficient mice were recapitulated by oral administration of 2 or 4. Oral dosing of 2 or 4 yielded a dose-dependent decrease in circulating lymphocyte numbers in multiple species and showed a therapeutic effect in rodent models of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Phase I clinical trials indicated that 2, the first clinically studied inhibitor of S1PL, produced a dose-dependent and reversible reduction of circulating lymphocytes and was well tolerated at dose levels of up to 180 mg daily. Phase II evaluation of 2 in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis is currently underway.


Blood | 2012

Inactivation of ribosomal protein L22 promotes transformation by induction of the stemness factor, Lin28B

Shuyun Rao; Sang-Yun Lee; Alejandro Gutierrez; Jacqueline Perrigoue; Roshan J. Thapa; Zhigang Tu; John R. Jeffers; Michele Rhodes; Stephen J. Anderson; Tamas Oravecz; Stephen P. Hunger; Roman A. Timakhov; Rugang Zhang; Siddharth Balachandran; Gerard P. Zambetti; Joseph R. Testa; A. Thomas Look; David L. Wiest

Ribosomal protein (RP) mutations in diseases such as 5q- syndrome both disrupt hematopoiesis and increase the risk of developing hematologic malignancy. However, the mechanism by which RP mutations increase cancer risk has remained an important unanswered question. We show here that monoallelic, germline inactivation of the ribosomal protein L22 (Rpl22) predisposes T-lineage progenitors to transformation. Indeed, RPL22 was found to be inactivated in ∼ 10% of human T-acute lymphoblastic leukemias. Moreover, monoallelic loss of Rpl22 accelerates development of thymic lymphoma in both a mouse model of T-cell malignancy and in acute transformation assays in vitro. We show that Rpl22 inactivation enhances transformation potential through induction of the stemness factor, Lin28B. Our finding that Rpl22 inactivation promotes transformation by inducing expression of Lin28B provides the first insight into the mechanistic basis by which mutations in Rpl22, and perhaps some other RP genes, increases cancer risk.


Gut | 2014

Pharmacological reduction of mucosal but not neuronal serotonin opposes inflammation in mouse intestine

Kara Gross Margolis; Korey Stevanovic; Zhishan Li; Qi Melissa Yang; Tamas Oravecz; Brian Zambrowicz; Kanchan Jhaver; Alexander Diacou; Michael D. Gershon

Objective Enterochromaffin cell-derived serotonin (5-HT) promotes intestinal inflammation. We tested hypotheses that peripheral tryptophan hydroxylase (TPH) inhibitors, administered orally, block 5-HT biosynthesis and deplete 5-HT from enterochromaffin cells sufficiently to ameliorate intestinal inflammation; moreover, peripheral TPH inhibitors fail to enter the murine enteric nervous system (ENS) or central nervous systems and thus do not affect constitutive gastrointestinal motility. Design Two peripheral TPH inhibitors, LP-920540 and telotristat etiprate (LX1032; LX1606) were given orally to mice. Effects were measured on 5-HT levels in the gut, blood and brain, 5-HT immunoreactivity in the ENS, gastrointestinal motility and severity of trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (TNBS)-induced colitis. Quantitation of clinical scores, histological damage and intestinal expression of inflammation-associated cytokines and chemokines with focused microarrays and real-time reverse transcriptase PCR were employed to evaluate the severity of intestinal inflammation. Results LP-920540 and LX1032 reduced 5-HT significantly in the gut and blood but not in the brain. Neither LP-920540 nor LX1032 decreased 5-HT immunoreactive neurons or fibres in the myenteric plexus and neither altered total gastrointestinal transit time, colonic motility or gastric emptying in mice. In contrast, oral LP-920540 and LX1032 reduced the severity of TNBS-induced colitis; the expression of 24% of 84 genes encoding inflammation-related cytokines and chemokines was lowered at least fourfold and the reduced expression of 17% was statistically significant. Conclusions Observations suggest that that peripheral TPH inhibitors uncouple the positive linkage of enterochromaffin cell-derived 5-HT to intestinal inflammation. Because peripheral TPH inhibitors evidently do not enter the murine ENS, they lack deleterious effects on constitutive intestinal motility in mice.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Inhibition of Sphingosine-1-Phosphate Lyase for the Treatment of Autoimmune Disorders

Jeffrey Bagdanoff; Michael S. Donoviel; Amr Nouraldeen; James Tarver; Qinghong Fu; Marianne Carlsen; Theodore C. Jessop; Haiming Zhang; Jill Hazelwood; Huy H. Nguyen; Simon D.P. Baugh; Michael Gardyan; Kristen M. Terranova; Joseph Barbosa; Jack Yan; Mark S. Bednarz; Suman Layek; Lawrence F. Courtney; Jerry Andrew Taylor; Ann Marie Digeorge-Foushee; Suma Gopinathan; Debra Bruce; Traci Smith; Liam Moran; Emily O’Neill; Jeffrey A. Kramer; Zhong Lai; S. David Kimball; Qingyun Liu; Weimei Sun

During nearly a decade of research dedicated to the study of sphingosine signaling pathways, we identified sphingosine-1-phosphate lyase (S1PL) as a drug target for the treatment of autoimmune disorders. S1PL catalyzes the irreversible decomposition of sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) by a retro-aldol fragmentation that yields hexadecanaldehyde and phosphoethanolamine. Genetic models demonstrated that mice expressing reduced S1PL activity had decreased numbers of circulating lymphocytes due to altered lymphocyte trafficking, which prevented disease development in multiple models of autoimmune disease. Mechanistic studies of lymphoid tissue following oral administration of 2-acetyl-4(5)-(1(R),2(S),3(R),4-tetrahydroxybutyl)-imidazole (THI) 3 showed a clear relationship between reduced lyase activity, elevated S1P levels, and lower levels of circulating lymphocytes. Our internal medicinal chemistry efforts discovered potent analogues of 3 bearing heterocycles as chemical equivalents of the pendant carbonyl present in the parent structure. Reduction of S1PL activity by oral administration of these analogues recapitulated the phenotype of mice with genetically reduced S1PL expression.


Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2007

Regulation of innate immunity by MAPK dual‐specificity phosphatases: knockout models reveal new tricks of old genes

Konstantin V. Salojin; Tamas Oravecz

Throughout evolution, mammals have developed an elaborate network of positive and negative regulatory mechanisms, which provide balance between defensive measures against bacterial and viral pathogens and protective measures against unwarranted destruction of the host by the activated immune system. Kinases and phosphatases encompassing the MAPK pathway are key players in the orderly action of pro‐ and anti‐inflammatory processes, forming numerous promiscuous interactions. Several lines of evidence demonstrate that the phosphorylation and activation status of kinases in the MAPK system has crucial impact on the outcome of downstream events that regulate cytokine production. At least 13 members of the family of dual‐specificity phosphatases (DUSP) display unique substrate specificities for MAPKs. Despite the considerable amount of information obtained about the contribution of the different DUSP to MAPK‐mediated signaling and innate immunity, the interpretation of available data remains problematic. The in vitro and ex vivo findings are often complicated by functional redundancy of signaling molecules and do not always accurately predict the situation in vivo. Until recently, DUSP research has been hampered by the lack of relevant mammalian knockout (KO) models, which is a powerful tool for delineating in vivo function and redundancy in gene families. This situation changed dramatically over the last year, and this review integrates recent insights into the precise biological role of the DUSP family in innate immunity gained from a comprehensive analysis of mammalian KO models.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Regulators of the Proteasome Pathway, Uch37 and Rpn13, Play Distinct Roles in Mouse Development

Amin Al-Shami; Kanchan Jhaver; Peter Vogel; Carrie Wilkins; Juliane Humphries; John J. Davis; Nianhua Xu; David Potter; Brenda Gerhardt; Robert Mullinax; Cynthia R. Shirley; Stephen J. Anderson; Tamas Oravecz

Rpn13 is a novel mammalian proteasomal receptor that has recently been identified as an amplification target in ovarian cancer. It can interact with ubiquitin and activate the deubiquitinating enzyme Uch37 at the 26S proteasome. Since neither Rpn13 nor Uch37 is an integral proteasomal subunit, we explored whether either protein is essential for mammalian development and survival. Deletion of Uch37 resulted in prenatal lethality in mice associated with severe defect in embryonic brain development. In contrast, the majority of Rpn13-deficient mice survived to adulthood, although they were smaller at birth and fewer in number than wild-type littermates. Absence of Rpn13 produced tissue-specific effects on proteasomal function: increased proteasome activity in adrenal gland and lymphoid organs, and decreased activity in testes and brain. Adult Rpn13−/− mice reached normal body weight but had increased body fat content and were infertile due to defective gametogenesis. Additionally, Rpn13−/− mice showed increased T-cell numbers, resembling growth hormone-mediated effects. Indeed, serum growth hormone and follicular stimulating hormone levels were significantly increased in Rpn13−/− mice, while growth hormone receptor expression was reduced in the testes. In conclusion, this is the first report characterizing the physiological roles of Uch37 and Rpn13 in murine development and implicating a non-ATPase proteasomal protein, Rpn13, in the process of gametogenesis.


Molecular Medicine | 2011

S1P is associated with protection in human and experimental cerebral malaria

Constance A.M. Finney; Cheryl A. Hawkes; Dylan C Kain; Aggrey Dhabangi; Charles Musoke; Tamas Oravecz; W. Conrad Liles; Kevin C. Kain

Cerebral malaria (CM) Is associated with excessive Inflammatory responses and endothelial activation. Sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) is a signaling sphingolipid implicated in regulating vascular integrity, inflammation and T-cell migration. We hypothesized that altered S1P signaling during malaria contributes to endothelial activation and inflammation, and show that plasma S1P levels were decreased in Ugandan children with CM compared with children with uncomplicated malaria. Using the Plasmodium berghei ANKA (PbA) model of experimental CM (ECM), we demonstrate that humanized S1P lyase (hS1PL)−/− mice with reduced S1P lyase activity (resulting in increased bio-available S1P) had improved survival compared with wild-type littermates. Prophylactic and therapeutic treatment of infected mice with compounds that modulate the S1P pathway and are in human trials for other conditions (FTY720 or LX2931) significantly improved survival in ECM. FTY720 treatment improved vascular integrity as indicated by reduced levels of soluble intercellular adhesion molecule (sICAM), increased angiopoietin 1 (Ang1) (regulator of endothelial quiescence) levels, and decreased Evans blue dye leakage into brain parenchyma. Furthermore, treatment with FTY720 decreased IFNγ levels in plasma as well as CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell infiltration into the brain. Finally, when administered during infection in combination with artesunate, FTY720 treatment resulted in increased survival to ECM. These findings implicate dysregulation of the S1P pathway in the pathogenesis of human and murine CM and suggest a novel therapeutic strategy to improve clinical outcome in severe malaria.

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Gabor Tigyi

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Peter Vogel

St. Jude Children's Research Hospital

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