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Dive into the research topics where Teresa Gilbert is active.

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Featured researches published by Teresa Gilbert.


Nature Immunology | 2003

IL-28, IL-29 and their class II cytokine receptor IL-28R

Paul O. Sheppard; Wayne R. Kindsvogel; Wenfeng Xu; Katherine E. Henderson; Stacy Schlutsmeyer; Theodore E. Whitmore; Rolf E. Kuestner; Ursula Garrigues; Carl W. Birks; Jenny Roraback; Craig D. Ostrander; Dennis L. Dong; Jinu Shin; Scott R. Presnell; Brian A. Fox; Betty A. Haldeman; Emily Cooper; David W. Taft; Teresa Gilbert; Francis J. Grant; Monica Tackett; William Krivan; Gary L. McKnight; Chris Clegg; Don Foster; Kevin M. Klucher

Cytokines play a critical role in modulating the innate and adaptive immune systems. Here, we have identified from the human genomic sequence a family of three cytokines, designated interleukin 28A (IL-28A), IL-28B and IL-29, that are distantly related to type I interferons (IFNs) and the IL-10 family. We found that like type I IFNs, IL-28 and IL-29 were induced by viral infection and showed antiviral activity. However, IL-28 and IL-29 interacted with a heterodimeric class II cytokine receptor that consisted of IL-10 receptor β (IL-10Rβ) and an orphan class II receptor chain, designated IL-28Rα. This newly described cytokine family may serve as an alternative to type I IFNs in providing immunity to viral infection.


Nature | 2000

Interleukin 21 and its receptor are involved in NK cell expansion and regulation of lymphocyte function.

Julia Parrish-Novak; Stacey R. Dillon; Andrew Nelson; Angie Hammond; Cindy A. Sprecher; Jane A. Gross; Janet V. Johnston; Karen Madden; Wenfeng Xu; James W. West; Sara Schrader; Steve K. Burkhead; Mark D. Heipel; Cameron S. Brandt; Joseph L. Kuijper; Janet M. Kramer; Darrell Conklin; Scott R. Presnell; Jon Berry; Faith Shiota; Susan Bort; Kevin Hambly; Sherri Mudri; Chris Clegg; Margaret D. Moore; Francis J. Grant; Catherine E. Lofton-Day; Teresa Gilbert; Fenella C. Raymond; Andrew Ching

Cytokines are important in the regulation of haematopoiesis and immune responses, and can influence lymphocyte development. Here we have identified a class I cytokine receptor that is selectively expressed in lymphoid tissues and is capable of signal transduction. The full-length receptor was expressed in BaF3 cells, which created a functional assay for ligand detection and cloning. Conditioned media from activated human CD3+ T cells supported proliferation of the assay cell line. We constructed a complementary DNA expression library from activated human CD3+ T cells, and identified a cytokine with a four-helix-bundle structure using functional cloning. This cytokine is most closely related to IL2 and IL15, and has been designated IL21 with the receptor designated IL21R. In vitro assays suggest that IL21 has a role in the proliferation and maturation of natural killer (NK) cell populations from bone marrow, in the proliferation of mature B-cell populations co-stimulated with anti-CD40, and in the proliferation of T cells co-stimulated with anti-CD3.


Neuron | 1993

The ligand-binding domain in metabotropic glutamate receptors is related to bacterial periplasmic binding proteins.

Patrick J. O'Hara; Paul O. Sheppard; Henning Thøgersen; Domenick Venezia; Betty A. Haldeman; Vicki McGrane; Khaled M. Houamed; Christian Thomsen; Teresa Gilbert; Eileen R. Mulvihill

Receptors for the major excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate include metabotropic (G protein-coupled) and ionotropic (glutamate-gated ion channel) types. These receptors have large, presumably extracellular, amino-terminal domains. Sensitive sequence analysis techniques indicate that the metabotropic receptor extracellular domain is similar to bacterial periplasmic amino acid binding proteins. A structural model built using the observed similarity predicts a ligand-binding site, and mutants with conservative amino acid substitutions at this site are shown to have reduced ligand affinity. The metabotropic receptor extracellular domain is a member of a family of structural domains linked to a variety of receptor types, including ionotropic glutamate receptors.


Cell | 1990

A putative GTP binding protein homologous to interferon-inducible Mx proteins performs an essential function in yeast protein sorting

Joel H. Rothman; Christopher K. Raymond; Teresa Gilbert; Patrick J. O'Hara; Tom H. Stevens

Members of the Mx protein family promote interferon-inducible resistance to viral infection in mammals and act by unknown mechanisms. We identified an Mx-like protein in yeast and present genetic evidence for its cellular function. This protein, the VPS1 product, is essential for vacuolar protein sorting, normal organization of intracellular membranes, and growth at high temperature, implying that Mx-like proteins are engaged in fundamental cellular processes in eukaryotes. Vps1p contains a tripartite GTP binding motif, which suggests that binding to GTP is essential to its role in protein sorting. Vps1p-specific antibody labels punctate cytoplasmic structures that condense to larger structures in a Golgi-accumulating sec7 mutant; thus, Vps1p may associate with an intermediate organelle of the secretory pathway.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

A soluble class II cytokine receptor, IL-22RA2, is a naturally occurring IL-22 antagonist.

Wenfeng Xu; Scott R. Presnell; Julia Parrish-Novak; Wayne R. Kindsvogel; Steve Jaspers; Zhi Chen; Stacey R. Dillon; Zeren Gao; Teresa Gilbert; Karen Madden; Stacy Schlutsmeyer; Lena Yao; Theodore E. Whitmore; Yasmin A. Chandrasekher; Francis J. Grant; Mark Maurer; Laura J. Jelinek; Harold Storey; Ty Brender; Angie Hammond; Stavros Topouzis; Christopher H. Clegg; Donald C. Foster

IL-22 is an IL-10 homologue that binds to and signals through the class II cytokine receptor heterodimer IL-22RA1/CRF2–4. IL-22 is produced by T cells and induces the production of acute-phase reactants in vitro and in vivo, suggesting its involvement in inflammation. Here we report the identification of a class II cytokine receptor designated IL-22RA2 (IL-22 receptor-α 2) that appears to be a naturally expressed soluble receptor. IL-22RA2 shares amino acid sequence homology with IL-22RA1 (also known as IL-22R, zcytor11, and CRF2–9) and is physically adjacent to IL-20Rα and IFN-γR1 on chromosome 6q23.3–24.2. We demonstrate that IL-22RA2 binds specifically to IL-22 and neutralizes IL-22-induced proliferation of BaF3 cells expressing IL-22 receptor subunits. IL-22RA2 mRNA is highly expressed in placenta and spleen by Northern blotting. PCR analysis using RNA from various tissues and cell lines showed that IL-22RA2 was expressed in a range of tissues, including those in the digestive, female reproductive, and immune systems. In situ hybridization revealed the dominant cell types expressing IL-22RA2 were mononuclear cells and epithelium. Because IL-22 induces the expression of acute phase reactants, IL-22RA2 may play an important role as an IL-22 antagonist in the regulation of inflammatory responses.


Fems Microbiology Letters | 1992

Molecular cloning and sequence analysis of the gene coding for the 57‐kDa major soluble antigen of the salmonid fish pathogen Renibacterium salmoninarum

Maw-Sheng Chien; Teresa Gilbert; Chienjin Huang; Marsha L. Landolt; Patrick J. O'Hara; James R. Winton

The complete sequence coding for the 57-kDa major soluble antigen of the salmonid fish pathogen, Renibacterium salmoninarum, was determined. The gene contained an opening reading frame of 1671 nucleotides coding for a protein of 557 amino acids with a calculated M(r) value of 57,190. The first 26 amino acids constituted a signal peptide. The deduced sequence for amino acid residues 27-61 was in agreement with the 35 N-terminal amino acid residues determined by microsequencing, suggesting the protein is synthesized as a 557-amino acid precursor and processed to produce a mature protein of M(r) 54,505. Two regions of the protein contained imperfect direct repeats. The first region contained two copies of an 81-residue repeat, the second contained five copies of an unrelated 25-residue repeat. Also, a perfect inverted repeat (including three in-frame UAA stop codons) was observed at the carboxyl-terminus of the gene.


Journal of Neurogenetics | 1992

A mammalian homologue of a transcript from the Drosophila pecanex locus

Teresa Gilbert; Betty A. Haldeman; Eileen R. Mulvihill; Patrick J. O'Hara

The Drosophila pecanex locus contains a maternal-effect neurogenic gene. A homologue of this gene has not yet been described in mammals or other organisms. We report here a partial complementary DNA clone from rat brain mRNA that encodes sequences which are very similar (83% over 189 amino acids) to a portion of sequence encoded by a transcript from the Drosophila pecanex locus [LaBonne, S.G., Sunitha, I and Mahowald, A.P. (1989) Dev. Biology 136: 1-161].


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998

Cloning and characterization of human protease-activated receptor 4

Wenfeng Xu; Henrik Andersen; Theodore E. Whitmore; Scott R. Presnell; David P. Yee; Andrew Ching; Teresa Gilbert; Earl W. Davie; Donald C. Foster


Science | 1991

Cloning, expression, and gene structure of a G protein-coupled glutamate receptor from rat brain

Khaled M. Houamed; Joseph L. Kuijper; Teresa Gilbert; Betty A. Haldeman; Patrick J. O'Hara; Elleen R. Mulvihill; Wolfhard Almers; Frederick S. Hagen


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1994

Complete cDNA encoding human phospholipid transfer protein from human endothelial cells.

Joseph R. Day; John J. Albers; Catherine E. Lofton-Day; Teresa Gilbert; Andrew Ching; Francis J. Grant; Patrick J. O'Hara; Santica M. Marcovina; Janet L. Adolphson

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Scott R. Presnell

Benaroya Research Institute

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