Publications by authors named "Shawn Kalloway"

Thrombomodulin (Thbd) exerts pleiotropic effects on blood coagulation, fibrinolysis, and complement system activity by facilitating the thrombin-mediated activation of protein C and thrombin-activatable fibrinolysis inhibitor and may have additional thrombin- and protein C (pC)-independent functions. In mice, complete Thbd deficiency causes embryonic death due to defective placental development. In this study, we used tissue-selective and temporally controlled Thbd gene ablation to examine the function of Thbd in adult mice.

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The lack of rat embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and approaches for manipulation of their genomes have restricted the ability to create new genetic models and to explore the function of a single gene in complex diseases in the laboratory rat. The recent breakthrough in isolating germline-competent ESCs from rat and subsequent demonstration of gene knockout has propelled the field forward, but such tools do not yet exist for many disease-model rat strains. Here we derive new ESCs from several commonly used rat models including the Dahl Salt Sensitive (SS), the sequenced Brown Norway (BN), and Fischer (F344) rat and establish the first germline-competent ESCs from a hypertension disease model strain, the Fawn Hooded Hypertensive (FHH) rat.

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The toolbox of rat genetics currently lacks the ability to introduce site-directed, heritable mutations into the genome to create knockout animals. By using engineered zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) designed to target an integrated reporter and two endogenous rat genes, Immunoglobulin M (IgM) and Rab38, we demonstrate that a single injection of DNA or messenger RNA encoding ZFNs into the one-cell rat embryo leads to a high frequency of animals carrying 25 to 100% disruption at the target locus. These mutations are faithfully and efficiently transmitted through the germline.

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Humans and rodents exhibit a peculiar type of placentation in which zygote-derived trophoblast cells, rather than endothelial cells, line the terminal maternal vascular space. This peculiar aspect of the placental vasculature raises important questions about the relative contribution of fetal and maternal factors in the local control of hemostasis in the placenta and how these might determine the phenotypic expression of thrombophilia-associated complications of pregnancy. Using genomewide expression analysis, we identify a panel of genes that determine the ability of fetal trophoblast cells to regulate hemostasis at the fetomaternal interface.

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Disruption of the mouse gene encoding the blood coagulation inhibitor thrombomodulin (Thbd) leads to embryonic lethality caused by an unknown defect in the placenta. We show that the abortion of thrombomodulin-deficient embryos is caused by tissue factor-initiated activation of the blood coagulation cascade at the feto-maternal interface. Activated coagulation factors induce cell death and growth inhibition of placental trophoblast cells by two distinct mechanisms.

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