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Dive into the research topics where Timothy J. Jorgensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Timothy J. Jorgensen.


Oncogene | 1997

Recombinant ATM protein complements the cellular A-T phenotype

Yael Ziv; Anat Bar-Shira; Iris Pecker; Pamela J. Russell; Timothy J. Jorgensen; Ilan Tsarfati; Yosef Shiloh

Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by neurodegeneration, immunodeficiency, cancer predisposition, genome instability and radiation sensitivity. The cellular phenotype of A-T points to defects in signal transduction pathways involved in activation of cell cycle checkpoints by free radical damage, and other pathways that mediate the transmission of specific mitogenic stimuli. The product of the responsible gene, ATM, belongs to a family of large proteins that contribute to maintaining genome stability and cell cycle progression in various organisms. A recombinant vector that stably expresses a full-length ATM protein is a valuable tool for its functional analysis. We constructed and cloned a recombinant, full-length open reading frame of ATM using a combination of vectors and hosts that overcame an inherent instability of this sequence. Recombinant ATM was stably expressed in insect cells using a baculovirus vector, albeit at a low level, and in human A-T cells using an episomal expression vector. An amino-terminal FLAG epitope added to the protein allowed highly specific detection of the recombinant molecule by immunoblotting, immunoprecipitation and immunostaining, and its isolation using immunoaffinity. Similar to endogenous ATM, the recombinant protein is located mainly in the nucleus, with low levels in the cytoplasm. Ectopic expression of ATM in A-T cells restored normal sensitivity to ionizing radiation and the radiomimetic drug neocarzinostatin, and a normal pattern of post-irradiation DNA synthesis, which represents an S-phase checkpoint. These observations indicate that the recombinant, epitope-tagged protein is functional. Introduction into this molecule of a known A-T missense mutation, Glu2904Gly, resulted in apparent instability of the protein and inability to complement the A-T phenotype. These findings indicate that the physiological defects characteristic of A-T cells result from the absence of the ATM protein, and that this deficiency can be corrected by ectopic expression of this protein.


Human Gene Therapy | 1999

Local and systemic therapy of human prostate adenocarcinoma with the conditionally replicating herpes simplex virus vector G207

Jonathan Walker; Kevin McGeagh; Periasamy Sundaresan; Timothy J. Jorgensen; Samuel D. Rabkin; Robert L. Martuza

Prostate adenocarcinoma is the most common nonskin malignancy in males and the second most common cause of cancer death in the United States (Landis et al., 1998). Initial treatments of surgery or radiotherapy may cause impotence and/or incontinence from neural damage (Eastham and Scardino, 1998; Porter et al., 1998). When extraprostatic or metastatic disease develops, castration or pharmaceutical androgen ablation is utilized (Catalona, 1994). Androgen-resistant recurrence indicates a poor prognosis and justifies experimental chemotherapy (Oh and Kantoff, 1998). G207 (Mineta et al., 1995; Yazaki et al., 1995) is a multimutated herpes simplex virus 1 (HSV) vector that replicates within cancer cells, causing cellular death; however, replication is limited in normal cells, including those of the nervous system. In vitro, G207 at a low multiplicity of infection (MOI of 0.01) is oncolytic for multiple human prostate cancer cells. In athymic mice, a single intraneoplastic inoculation of G207 completely eradicates >22% of established subcutaneous human prostate cancer tumors irrespective of hormonal responsiveness. Two intraneoplastic inoculations of G207 completely eradicated two of three recurrent previously irradiated tumors and two intravenous administration of G207 induced tumor regression in distant subcutaneous tumors and completely eradicated one-fourth of the tumors.


Mutation Research-dna Repair | 1997

Identification of defective illegitimate recombinational repair of oxidatively-induced DNA double-strand breaks in ataxia-telangiectasia cells

Mubasher E. Dar; Thomas A. Winters; Timothy J. Jorgensen

Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is an autosomal-recessive lethal human disease. Homozygotes suffer from a number of neurological disorders, as well as very high cancer incidence. Heterozygotes may also have a higher than normal risk of cancer, particularly for the breast. The gene responsible for the disease (ATM) has been cloned, but its role in mechanisms of the disease remain unknown. Cellular A-T phenotypes, such as radiosensitivity and genomic instability, suggest that a deficiency in the repair of DNA double-strand breaks (DSBs) may be the primary defect; however, overall levels of DSB rejoining appear normal. We used the shuttle vector, pZ189, containing an oxidatively-induced DSB, to compare the integrity of DSB rejoining in one normal and two A-T fibroblast cells lines. Mutation frequencies were two-fold higher in A-T cells, and the mutational spectrum was different. The majority of the mutations found in all three cell lines were deletions (44-63%). The DNA sequence analysis indicated that 17 of the 17 plasmids with deletion mutations in normal cells occurred between short direct-repeat sequences (removing one of the repeats plus the intervening sequences), implicating illegitimate recombination in DSB rejoining. The combined data from both A-T cell lines showed that 21 of 24 deletions did not involve direct-repeats sequences, implicating a defect in the illegitimate recombination pathway. These findings suggest that the A-T gene product may either directly participate in illegitimate recombination or modulate the pathway. Regardless, this defect is likely to be important to a mechanistic understanding of this lethal disease.


Radiation Research | 1992

Radiation-Induced DNA Single-Strand Breaks in Freshly Isolated Human Leukocytes

John M. Buatti; Luis R. Rivero; Timothy J. Jorgensen

Single-strand breaks are a major form of DNA damage caused by ionizing radiation, and measurement of strand breaks has long been used as an index of overall cellular DNA damage. Most assays for DNA single-strand breaks in cells rely on measuring fractionated DNA samples following alkali denaturation. Quantification is usually achieved by prelabeling cells with radioactive DNA precursors; however, this is not possible in the situation of nondividing cells or freshly isolated tissue. It has previously been demonstrated that the alkali unwinding assay of DNA strand breaks can be quantified by blotting the recovered DNA on nylon membranes and hybridizing with radiolabeled sequence-specific probes. We report here improvements to the technique, which include hot alkali denaturation of DNA samples prior to blotting and the use of carrier DNA that is non-complementary to the radiolabeled probe. Our method allows both single- and double-stranded DNA to be quantified with the same efficiency, thereby improving the sensitivity and reproducibility of the assay, and allows calibration for determination of absolute levels of DNA strand breaks in cells. We also used this method to assay radiation-induced DNA strand breaks in freshly isolated human leukocytes and found them to have a strand break induction rate of 1815 strand breaks/cell/Gy.


Radiation Research | 1995

Radioresistant DNA synthesis in SV40-immortalized ataxia telangiectasia fibroblasts.

Timothy J. Jorgensen; Pamela S. Russell; Donald A. McRae

Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) is an autosomal recessive disease, characterized by both neurological disorders and a high incidence of early-onset cancers. On a cellular level, cellular radiosensitivity and radioresistant DNA synthesis are the hallmarks of AT. While expression of cellular radiosensitivity varies somewhat among affected individuals, radioresistant DNA synthesis is seen consistently and, in fact, is the only end point used for assigning individuals to genetic complementation groups. For this reason, complementation-group-specific correction of radioresistant DNA synthesis in AT cells has long been thought to be an absolute requirement for confirmation of a bona fide clone of an AT gene. Since primary AT cells grow poorly in culture, SV40-immortalized AT fibroblasts are the usual recipients of transfected DNA in these studies. In experiments reported here, we demonstrate that SV40-immortalized AT fibroblasts have significantly reduced radioresistant DNA synthesis compared to primary AT fibroblasts, and their response to radiation is more like normal cells, in that both the radiosensitive and radioresistant components appear to be present. This suggests that there may be an interaction between SV40 proteins and the AT gene product or its downstream elements. This partial complementation of radioresistant DNA synthesis in SV40-immortalized AT cells complicates complementation cloning strategies, and should be considered when terminally screening putative AT gene clones by analysis of radioresistant DNA synthesis.


Radiation Research | 1991

Baseline Sister Chromatid Exchange in Human Cell Lines with Different Levels of Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase

Timothy J. Jorgensen; Jay C. Leonard; Anatoly Dritschilo

Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase is a chromatin enzyme which adds long chains of ADP-ribose to various acceptor proteins in response to DNA strand breaks. Its primary function is unknown; however, a role in DNA repair and radiation resistance has been postulated based largely on experiments with enzyme inhibitors. Recent reports of mutant cell lines, deficient in poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase activity, have supported previous studies with inhibitors, which suggests the involvement of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase in maintaining baseline levels of sister chromatid exchanges. Mutant cells with even slightly depressed enzyme levels show large elevation of baseline sister chromatid exchanges. Since intracellular poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase levels can vary greatly between different nonmutant cell lines, we surveyed levels of baseline sister chromatid exchange in normal and tumor human cell lines and compared them with endogenous levels of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase. Despite 10-fold differences in poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase, the baseline level of sister chromatid exchanges remained relatively constant in the different cell lines (0.13 +/- 0.03 SCE/chromosome), with no indication of a protective effect for cells with high levels of the enzyme.


Archive | 2012

From Family Study to Population Study: A History of Genetic Mapping for Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma (NPC)

Timothy J. Jorgensen; Hai-De Qin; Yin Yao Shugart

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) has a unique global distribution pattern – Southeast Asia and some other localized regions of the eastern hemisphere – that suggests risk is largely driven by a combination of environmental exposures and specific genetic factors. Earlier linkage analysis has implicated loci in the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) gene region, thus suggesting a role for immunological mechanisms in NPC resistance. Nevertheless, the implications of the HLA associations remain enigmatic. More recent association studies have sought to advance our understanding of the genes important to NPC risk. Reviewed here are recent epidemiologic studies that have addressed the genetics of NPC risk, and the implications of their collective findings are discussed. The primary focus is on the latest candidate-gene association studies (CGAS) and genome-wide association studies (GWAS), and attempts are made to harmonize their findings and resolve discrepancies. Taken together, the studies support the importance of the HLA loci, but also implicate non-HLA genes both inside and outside the HLA region, and suggest that the mechanisms of NPC risk go beyond immunology. Finally, recommendations are made to coordinate future CGAS and GWAS to maximize their information content and make best use of the limited number of available NPC study populations.


Human Molecular Genetics | 1996

Predominance of Null Mutations in Ataxia-Telangiectasia

Shlomit Gilad; Rami Khosravi; Dganit Shkedy; Tamar Uziel; Yael Ziv; Kinneret Savitsky; Galit Rotman; Sara Smith; Luciana Chessa; Timothy J. Jorgensen; Reli Harnik; Moshe Frydman; Ozden Sanal; Sima Portnoi; Zipora Goldwicz; Nicolaas G. J. Jaspers; Richard A. Gatti; Gilbert M. Lenoir; Martin F. Lavin; Kouichi Tatsumi; Rolf Wegner; Yosef Shiloh; Anat Bar-Shira


Cancer Research | 1993

bcl-2 protein inhibits etoposide-induced apoptosis through its effects on events subsequent to topoisomerase II-induced DNA strand breaks and their repair.

Saori Kamesaki; Hiroshi Kamesaki; Timothy J. Jorgensen; Akihiko Tanizawa; Yves Pommier; Jeffrey Cossman


Nucleic Acids Research | 1994

Removal of 3′-phosphoglycolate from DNA strand-break damage in an oligonucleotide substrate by recombinant human apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1

Thomas A. Winters; W. David Henner; Pamela S. Russell; Amanda K. McCullough; Timothy J. Jorgensen

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Thomas A. Winters

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Manu Kohli

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Mubasher E. Dar

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Pamela S. Russell

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Anat Bar-Shira

Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center

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