Walter Massefski
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Walter Massefski.
Blood | 2014
Douglas B. Cines; Tatiana Lebedeva; Chandrasekaran Nagaswami; Vincent Hayes; Walter Massefski; Rustem I. Litvinov; Lubica Rauova; Thomas Jay Lowery; John W. Weisel
Contraction of blood clots is necessary for hemostasis and wound healing and to restore flow past obstructive thrombi, but little is known about the structure of contracted clots or the role of erythrocytes in contraction. We found that contracted blood clots develop a remarkable structure, with a meshwork of fibrin and platelet aggregates on the exterior of the clot and a close-packed, tessellated array of compressed polyhedral erythrocytes within. The same results were obtained after initiation of clotting with various activators and also with clots from reconstituted human blood and mouse blood. Such close-packed arrays of polyhedral erythrocytes, or polyhedrocytes, were also observed in human arterial thrombi taken from patients. The mechanical nature of this shape change was confirmed by polyhedrocyte formation from the forces of centrifugation of blood without clotting. Platelets (with their cytoskeletal motility proteins) and fibrin(ogen) (as the substrate bridging platelets for contraction) are required to generate the forces necessary to segregate platelets/fibrin from erythrocytes and to compress erythrocytes into a tightly packed array. These results demonstrate how contracted clots form an impermeable barrier important for hemostasis and wound healing and help explain how fibrinolysis is greatly retarded as clots contract.
Clinical Chemistry | 2014
Lynell R. Skewis; Tatiana Lebedeva; Vyacheslav Papkov; Edward Chris Thayer; Walter Massefski; Adam Cuker; Chandrasekaran Nagaswami; Rustem I. Litvinov; M. Anna Kowalska; Lubica Rauova; Mortimer Poncz; John W. Weisel; Thomas Jay Lowery; Douglas B. Cines
BACKGROUND Existing approaches for measuring hemostasis parameters require multiple platforms, can take hours to provide results, and generally require 1-25 mL of sample. We developed a diagnostic platform that allows comprehensive assessment of hemostatic parameters on a single instrument and provides results within 15 min using 0.04 mL of blood with minimal sample handling. METHODS T2 magnetic resonance (T2MR) was used to directly measure integrated reactions in whole blood samples by resolving multiple water relaxation times from distinct sample microenvironments. Clotting, clot contraction, and fibrinolysis stimulated by thrombin or tissue plasminogen activator, respectively, were measured. T2MR signals of clotting samples were compared with images produced by scanning electron microscopy and with standard reference methods for the following parameters: hematocrit, prothrombin time, clot strength, and platelet activity. RESULTS Application of T2MR methodology revealed conditions under which a unique T2MR signature appeared that corresponded with the formation of polyhedral erythrocytes, the dynamics and morphology of which are dependent on thrombin, fibrinogen, hematocrit, and platelet levels. We also showed that the T2MR platform can be used for precise and accurate measurements of hematocrit (%CV, 4.8%, R(2) = 0.95), clotting time (%CV, 3.5%, R(2) = 0.94), clot strength (R(2) = 0.95), and platelet function (93% agreement with light transmission aggregometry). CONCLUSIONS This proof-of-concept study demonstrates that T2MR has the potential to provide rapid and sensitive identification of patients at risk for thrombosis or bleeding and to identify new biomarkers and therapeutic targets with a single, simple-to-employ analytic approach that may be suitable for routine use in both research and diverse clinical settings.
Nature Chemical Biology | 2017
Jonathan R. Pritz; Franziska Wachter; Susan Lee; James Luccarelli; Thomas E. Wales; Daniel Cohen; Paul Coote; Gregory J. Heffron; John R. Engen; Walter Massefski; Loren D. Walensky
BAX is a critical apoptotic regulator that can be transformed from a cytosolic monomer into a lethal mitochondrial oligomer, yet drug strategies to modulate it are underdeveloped due to longstanding difficulties in conducting screens on this aggregation-prone protein. Here, we overcame prior challenges and performed an NMR-based fragment screen of full-length human BAX. We identified a compound that sensitizes BAX activation by binding to a pocket formed by the junction of the α3/α4 and α5/α6 hairpins. Biochemical and structural analyses revealed that the molecule sensitizes BAX by allosterically mobilizing the α1–α2 loop and BAX BH3 helix, two motifs implicated in the activation and oligomerization of BAX, respectively. By engaging a region of core hydrophobic interactions that otherwise preserve the BAX inactive state, the identified compound informs fundamental mechanisms for conformational regulation of BAX and provides a new opportunity to reduce the apoptotic threshold for potential therapeutic benefit.
Blood | 2017
Teru Hideshima; Francesca Cottini; Yoshihisa Nozawa; Hyuk-Soo Seo; Hiroto Ohguchi; Mehmet Kemal Samur; Diana Cirstea; Naoya Mimura; Yoshikazu Iwasawa; Paul G. Richardson; Nikhil C. Munshi; Dharminder Chauhan; Walter Massefski; Teruhiro Utsugi; Sirano Dhe-Paganon; Kenneth C. Anderson
p53-related protein kinase (TP53RK, also known as PRPK) is an upstream kinase that phosphorylates (serine residue Ser15) and mediates p53 activity. Here we show that TP53RK confers poor prognosis in multiple myeloma (MM) patients, and, conversely, that TP53RK knockdown inhibits p53 phosphorylation and triggers MM cell apoptosis, associated with downregulation of c-Myc and E2F-1-mediated upregulation of pro-apoptotic Bim. We further demonstrate that TP53RK downregulation also triggers growth inhibition in p53-deficient and p53-mutant MM cell lines and identify novel downstream targets of TP53RK including ribonucleotide reductase-1, telomerase reverse transcriptase, and cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2C. Our previous studies showed that immunomodulatory drugs (IMiDs) downregulate p21 and trigger apoptosis in wild-type-p53 MM.1S cells, Importantly, we demonstrate by pull-down, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, differential scanning fluorimetry, and isothermal titration calorimetry that IMiDs bind and inhibit TP53RK, with biologic sequelae similar to TP53RK knockdown. Our studies therefore demonstrate that either genetic or pharmacological inhibition of TP53RK triggers MM cell apoptosis via both p53-Myc axis-dependent and axis-independent pathways, validating TP53RK as a novel therapeutic target in patients with poor-prognosis MM.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2017
Paul Coote; Clemens Anklin; Walter Massefski; Gerhard Wagner; Haribabu Arthanari
We present a numerical method for rapidly solving the Bloch equation for an arbitrary time-varying spin-1/2 Hamiltonian. The method relies on fast, vectorized computations such as summation and quaternion multiplication, rather than slow computations such as matrix exponentiation. A toggling frame is constructed in which the Hamiltonian is time-invariant, and therefore has a simple analytical solution. The key insight is that constructing this frame is faster than solving the system dynamics in the original frame. Rapidly solving the Bloch equations for an arbitrary Hamiltonian is particularly useful in the context of NMR optimal control. Optimal control theory can be used to design pulse shapes for a range of tasks in NMR spectroscopy. However, it requires multiple simulations of the Bloch equations at each stage of the algorithm, and for each relevant set of parameters (e.g. chemical shift frequencies). This is typically time consuming. We demonstrate that by working in an appropriate toggling frame, optimal control pulses can be generated much faster. We present a new alternative to the well-known GRAPE algorithm to continuously update the toggling-frame as the optimal pulse is generated, and demonstrate that this approach is extremely fast. The use and benefit of rapid optimal pulse generation is demonstrated for 19F fragment screening experiments.
American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2016
Adam Cuker; Holleh Husseinzadeh; Tatiana Lebedeva; Joseph Marturano; Walter Massefski; Thomas Jay Lowery; Michele P. Lambert; Charles S. Abrams; John W. Weisel; Douglas B. Cines
Objectives: The clinical diagnosis of qualitative platelet disorders (QPDs) based on light transmission aggregometry (LTA) requires significant blood volume, time, and expertise, all of which can be barriers to utilization in some populations and settings. Our objective was to develop a more rapid assay of platelet function by measuring platelet-mediated clot contraction in small volumes (35 µL) of whole blood using T2 magnetic resonance (T2MR). Methods: We established normal ranges for platelet-mediated clot contraction using T2MR, used these ranges to study patients with known platelet dysfunction, and then evaluated agreement between T2MR and LTA with arachidonic acid, adenosine diphosphate, epinephrine, and thrombin receptor activator peptide. Results: Blood from 21 healthy donors was studied. T2MR showed 100% agreement with LTA with each of the four agonists and their cognate inhibitors tested. T2MR successfully detected abnormalities in each of seven patients with known QPDs, with the exception of one patient with a novel mutation leading to Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome. T2MR appeared to detect platelet function at similar or lower platelet counts than LTA. Conclusions: T2MR may provide a clinically useful approach to diagnose QPDs using small volumes of whole blood, while also providing new insight into platelet biology not evident using plasma-based platelet aggregation tests.
Journal of Magnetic Resonance | 2008
Walter Massefski
Stopped-flow NMR at capillary scale has many advantages over traditional methods of introducing the sample into the probe, particularly when large numbers of samples must be examined. This work describes application of a simple method for direct visualization of a sample inside the flow cell of flow NMR systems to capillary scale analysis. We describe the details of the method and show how it can be used to measure the optimum flow rate for a capillary NMR system and how to determine the optimum sampling efficiency for small samples.
Archive | 2012
Thomas Jay Lowery; Vyacheslav Papkov; Walter Massefski; Rahul Dhanda; Edward Chris Thayer
Archive | 2015
Thomas Jay Lowery; Walter Massefski; Vyacheslav Papkov; Lynell R. Skewis
Nature Communications | 2018
Shingo Kozono; Yu-Min Lin; Hyuk-Soo Seo; Benika Pinch; Xiaolan Lian; Chenxi Qiu; Megan K. Herbert; Chun-Hau Chen; Li Tan; Ziang Jeff Gao; Walter Massefski; Zainab M. Doctor; Brian P. Jackson; Yuanzhong Chen; Sirano Dhe-Paganon; Kun Ping Lu; Xiao Zhen Zhou