Publications by authors named "Joshua Michel"

Influenza infections result in a significant number of severe illnesses annually, many of which are complicated by secondary bacterial super-infection. Primary influenza infection has been shown to increase susceptibility to secondary methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection by altering the host immune response, leading to significant immunopathology. Type III interferons (IFNs), or IFNλs, have gained traction as potential antiviral therapeutics due to their restriction of viral replication without damaging inflammation.

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  • Metabolic changes in pediatric diffuse midline glioma are influenced by the H3K27M histone mutation, which activates oncogenic pathways.
  • The RAS pathway and ERK5 kinase are crucial for tumor growth in these gliomas, with ERK5 playing a key role in cell proliferation and glycolysis.
  • Targeting the ERK5-PFKFB3 signaling axis with multi-targeted drugs could be an effective treatment strategy for patients with this type of cancer.
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  • Mammalian orthoreovirus, linked to celiac disease in humans, infects various mammals and affects mouse brains differently based on serotype.
  • A genome-wide CRISPRa screen identified the paired immunoglobulin-like receptor B (PirB) as a key receptor for reovirus that influences its neuropathogenicity.
  • The study found that PirB is essential for reovirus attachment and replication in the brain, especially for the neurotropic T3 serotype, highlighting its role in the virus's infectivity in neurons.
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Objectives: Very-long-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (VLCADD) is a disorder of fatty acid oxidation. Symptoms are managed by dietary supplementation with medium-chain fatty acids that bypass the metabolic block. However, patients remain vulnerable to hospitalisations because of rhabdomyolysis, suggesting pathologic processes other than energy deficit.

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T cells are considered autoimmune effectors in juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), but the antigenic cause of arthritis remains elusive. Since T cells comprise a significant proportion of joint-infiltrating cells, we examined whether the environment in the joint could be shaped through the inflammatory activation by T cells that is independent of conventional TCR signaling. We focused on the analysis of synovial fluid (SF) collected from children with oligoarticular and rheumatoid factor-negative polyarticular JIA.

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The fundamental challenge of aging and long-term survivorship is maintenance of functional independence and compression of morbidity despite a life history of disease. Inasmuch as immunity is a determinant of individual health and fitness, unraveling novel mechanisms of immune homeostasis in late life is of paramount interest. Comparative studies of young and old persons have documented age-related atrophy of the thymus, the contraction of diversity of the T cell receptor (TCR) repertoire, and the intrinsic inefficiency of classical TCR signaling in aged T cells.

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Objective: To determine associations between circulating markers of immune activation, immune cell senescence, and inflammation with HIV-associated abnormalities of pulmonary function.

Design: HIV infection is an independent risk factor for abnormal pulmonary function. Immune activation, immune senescence, and chronic inflammation are characteristics of chronic HIV infection that have been associated with other HIV-associated comorbidities and may be related to pulmonary disease in this population.

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Objective: CD8+ T cells lacking CD28 were originally reported to be a characteristic feature of juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), but the relevance of these unusual cells to this disease remains to be elucidated. Because of recent evidence that loss of CD28 cells is typical of terminally differentiated lymphocytes, the aim of this study was to examine functional subsets of CD8+ T cells in patients with JIA.

Methods: Blood and/or waste synovial fluid samples were collected from children with a definite diagnosis of JIA (n = 98).

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Studies comparing chronologically "young" versus "old" humans document age-related decline of classical immunological functions. However, older adults aged ≥65 years have very heterogeneous health phenotypes. A significant number of them are functionally independent and are surviving well into their 8(th)-11(th) decade life, observations indicating that aging or old age is not synonymous with immune incompetence.

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Exceptional aging has been defined as maintenance of physical and cognitive function beyond the median lifespan despite a history of diseases and/or concurrent subclinical conditions. Since immunity is vital to individual fitness, we examined immunologic fingerprint(s) of highly functional elders. Therefore, survivors of the Cardiovascular Health Study in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA were recruited (n = 140; mean age = 86 years) and underwent performance testing.

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Defects in cholesterol synthesis result in a wide variety of symptoms, from neonatal lethality to the relatively mild dysmorphic features and developmental delay found in individuals with Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome. We report here the identification of mutations in sterol-C4-methyl oxidase–like gene (SC4MOL) as the cause of an autosomal recessive syndrome in a human patient with psoriasiform dermatitis, arthralgias, congenital cataracts, microcephaly, and developmental delay. This gene encodes a sterol-C4-methyl oxidase (SMO), which catalyzes demethylation of C4-methylsterols in the cholesterol synthesis pathway.

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Pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPPA) is a metalloproteinase that controls the tissue availability of insulin-like growth factor (IGF). Homozygous deletion of PAPPA in mice leads to lifespan extension. Since immune function is an important determinant of individual fitness, we examined the natural immune ecology of PAPPA(-/-) mice and their wild-type littermates reared under specific pathogen-free condition with aging.

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Degeneration of the thymus and severe contraction of the T cell repertoire with aging suggest that immune homeostasis in old age could be mediated by distinct effectors. Therefore, receptors expressed on T cells as they undergo senescence in vitro, as well as those displayed by circulating T cells during normal chronologic aging, were examined. Monitoring of T cells driven to senescence showed de novo induction of CD56, the prototypic receptor of NK cells.

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Objective: T cells deficient in CD28 expression have been implicated in the pathogenesis of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Given that CD28-null T cells are functionally heterogeneous, we undertook this study to screen for novel receptors on these cells.

Methods: Seventy-two patients with RA (ages 35-84 years) and 53 healthy persons (32 young controls ages 19-34 years, 21 older controls ages 39-86 years) were recruited.

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The hyperthermophilic archaeon Pyrococcus furiosus genome encodes three proteasome component proteins: one alpha protein (PF1571) and two beta proteins (beta1-PF1404 and beta2-PF0159), as well as an ATPase (PF0115), referred to as proteasome-activating nucleotidase. Transcriptional analysis of the P. furiosus dynamic heat shock response (shift from 90 to 105 degrees C) showed that the beta1 gene was up-regulated over twofold within 5 minutes, suggesting a specific role during thermal stress.

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Aging in the immune system is characterized by the contraction of the lymphocyte repertoire, exemplified by long-lived oligoclonal T cells that pervade the peripheral circulation. T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire contraction likely explains the decline in immunity with chronological age as evidenced by the increased morbidity and mortality to common and new infections, and the low rates of protective responses to vaccination in the elderly. Interestingly, in vitro senescence models and cross sectional ex vivo studies have consistently demonstrated that senescent (or pre-senescent) T cells and T cells of the aged express unusually high densities of receptors that are normally found on natural killer (NK) cells, the killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (KIR) being the most diverse NK receptors (NKR).

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Proteases are found in every cell, where they recognize and break down unneeded or abnormal polypeptides or peptide-based nutrients within or outside the cell. Genome sequence data can be used to compare proteolytic enzyme inventories of different organisms as they relate to physiological needs for protein modification and hydrolysis. In this review, we exploit genome sequence data to compare hyperthermophilic microorganisms from the euryarchaeotal genus Pyrococcus, the crenarchaeote Sulfolobus solfataricus, and the bacterium Thermotoga maritima.

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