Publications by authors named "Stephen Orr"

Social status-dependent modulation of neural circuits has been investigated extensively in vertebrate and invertebrate systems. However, the effects of social status on neuromodulatory systems that drive motor activity are poorly understood. Zebrafish form a stable social relationship that consists of socially dominant and subordinate animals.

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Regulating the transition of cells such as T lymphocytes from quiescence (G(0)) into an activated, proliferating state involves initiation of cellular programs resulting in entry into the cell cycle (proliferation), the growth cycle (blastogenesis, cell size) and effector (functional) activation. We show the first proteomic analysis of protein interaction networks activated during entry into the first cell cycle from G(0). We also provide proof of principle that blastogenesis and proliferation programs are separable in primary human T cells.

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We investigated functional epigenetic changes that occur in primary human T lymphocytes during entry into the cell cycle and mapped these at the single-nucleosome level by ChIP-chip on tiling arrays for chromosomes 1 and 6. We show that nucleosome loss and flanking active histone marks define active transcriptional start sites (TSSs). Moreover, these signatures are already set at many inducible genes in quiescent cells prior to cell stimulation.

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To investigate the potential functional cooperation between p27Kip1 and p130 in vivo, we generated mice deficient for both p27Kip1 and p130. In p27Kip1-/-; p130-/- mice, the cellularity of the spleens but not the thymi is significantly increased compared with that of their p27Kip1-/- counterparts, affecting the lymphoid, erythroid, and myeloid compartments. In vivo cell proliferation is significantly augmented in the B and T cells, monocytes, macrophages, and erythroid progenitors in the spleens of p27Kip1-/-; p130-/- animals.

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Histone deacetylase inhibitors (HDI) increase gene expression through induction of histone acetylation. However, it remains unclear whether increases in specific gene expression events determine the apoptotic response following HDI administration. Herein, we show that a variety of HDI trigger in hematopoietic cells not only widespread histone acetylation and DNA damage responses but also actual DNA damage, which is significantly increased in leukemic cells compared with normal cells.

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Primary hematopoietic cells are relatively refractory to DNA transfection methodologies. This is particularly so when they are quiescent or terminally differentiated and no longer able to divide. However, whole proteins can be introduced into such cells by protein transduction.

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Initiation of T-lymphocyte-mediated immune responses involves two cellular processes: entry into the cell cycle (G(0)-->G(1)) for clonal proliferation and coordinated changes in surface and secreted molecules that mediate effector functions. However, a point during G(0)-->G(1) beyond which T cells are committed to enter the cell cycle has not been defined. We define here a G(0)-->G(1) commitment point that occurs 3 to 5 h after CD3 and CD28 stimulation of human CD4 or CD8 T cells.

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