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Tina Knutson

Broad Institute

Publishes on Cancer Genomics and Diagnostics, Cancer-related Molecular Pathways, Ferroptosis and cancer prognosis. 45 papers and 36.5k citations.

45Publications
36.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Epigenetic Silencing of the Human <i>NOS2</i> Gene: Rethinking the Role of Nitric Oxide in Human Macrophage Inflammatory Responses
Thomas Groß, Karol Kremens, Linda S. Powers et al.|The Journal of Immunology|2014
Cited by 133Open Access

Macrophages, including alveolar macrophages, are primary phagocytic cells of the innate immune system. Many studies of macrophages and inflammation have been done in mouse models, in which inducible NO synthase (NOS2) and NO are important components of the inflammatory response. Human macrophages, in contrast to mouse macrophages, express little detectable NOS2 and generate little NO in response to potent inflammatory stimuli. The human NOS2 gene is highly methylated around the NOS2 transcription start site. In contrast, mouse macrophages contain unmethylated cytosine-phosphate-guanine (CpG) dinucleotides proximal to the NOS2 transcription start site. Further analysis of chromatin accessibility and histone modifications demonstrated a closed conformation at the human NOS2 locus and an open conformation at the murine NOS2 locus. In examining the potential for CpG demethylation at the NOS2 locus, we found that the human NOS2 gene was resistant to the effects of demethylation agents both in vitro and in vivo. Our data demonstrate that epigenetic modifications in human macrophages are associated with CpG methylation, chromatin compaction, and histone modifications that effectively silence the NOS2 gene. Taken together, our findings suggest there are significant and underappreciated differences in how murine and human macrophages respond to inflammatory stimuli.

Rituximab infusion induces NK activation in lymphoma patients with the high-affinity CD16 polymorphism
Cited by 121Open Access

Natural killer (NK) cell-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity involving FcγRIIIa (CD16) likely contributes to the clinical efficacy of rituximab. To assess the in vivo effects of CD16 polymorphisms on rituximab-induced NK activation, blood was evaluated before and 4 hours after initiation of the initial dose of rituximab in 21 lymphoma subjects. Rituximab induced NK activation and a drop in circulating NK-cell percentage in subjects with the high-affinity [158(VF/VV)] but not the low-affinity [158(FF)] CD16 polymorphism. There was no correlation between NK-cell activation or NK-cell percentage and polymorphisms in CD32A, C1q, or CH50. We conclude that NK activation occurs within 4 hours of rituximab infusion in subjects with the high-affinity CD16 polymorphism but not those with the low-affinity CD16 polymorphism. This finding may help explain the superior clinical outcome seen in the subset of high-affinity CD16 polymorphism lymphoma patients treated with single-agent rituximab.

Feedback connections from area MT of the squirrel monkey to areas V1 and V2
Kathleen S. Rockland, Tina Knutson|The Journal of Comparative Neurology|2000
Cited by 93

Area MT/V5 is reciprocally connected with both V1 and V2; but, despite extensive anatomical and physiological investigations, detailed information on the feedback component of these connections is still not available. The present report uses serial section reconstruction of single axons, labeled by anterograde tracers injected in area MT of squirrel monkeys, to characterize these connections further. As with other feedback systems, MT axons terminating in both areas V1 (n = 9) and V2 (n = 6) are widely divergent. In area V1, MT fields are larger than those from V2 and are about comparable to those from V4 or TEO. Terminations in V1, unlike other feedback connections described so far, terminate in several laminar combinations: only layer 1 (n = 2); only layer 4B (n = 3); layers 1 and 4B (n = 1); and layers 1, 4B, and 6 (n = 3). In V2, they occur mainly in layers 1 and 5 or 6. Terminations have two patterns even within a single axon: strung along collateral segments and grouped within small clusters. There are no apparent differences in the size, shape, or density of terminal specializations in V1 or V2, and, consistently with previous double-labeling experiments (Kennedy and Bullier [1985] J Neurosci 5:2815-2830), some axons can branch to both areas. This result, along with the laminar evidence for subtypes of feedback connections, argues against an exclusively hierarchical organization based on "pairwise" connectivity. For V1 and MT, there may be directly reciprocal loops between feedforward and feedback projecting neurons, but this is less likely to be so for V2 and MT.

Selective Cochlear Degeneration in Mice Lacking the F-Box Protein, Fbx2, a Glycoprotein-Specific Ubiquitin Ligase Subunit
Rick F. Nelson, Kevin A. Glenn, Yuzhou Zhang et al.|Journal of Neuroscience|2007
Cited by 80Open Access

Little is known about the role of protein quality control in the inner ear. We now report selective cochlear degeneration in mice deficient in Fbx2, a ubiquitin ligase F-box protein with specificity for high-mannose glycoproteins (Yoshida et al., 2002). Originally described as a brain-enriched protein (Erhardt et al., 1998), Fbx2 is also highly expressed in the organ of Corti, in which it has been called organ of Corti protein 1 (Thalmann et al., 1997). Mice with targeted deletion of Fbxo2 develop age-related hearing loss beginning at 2 months. Cellular degeneration begins in the epithelial support cells of the organ of Corti and is accompanied by changes in cellular membrane integrity and early increases in connexin 26, a cochlear gap junction protein previously shown to interact with Fbx2 (Henzl et al., 2004). Progressive degeneration includes hair cells and the spiral ganglion, but the brain itself is spared despite widespread CNS expression of Fbx2. Cochlear Fbx2 binds Skp1, the common binding partner for F-box proteins, and is an unusually abundant inner ear protein. Whereas cochlear Skp1 levels fall in parallel with the loss of Fbx2, other components of the canonical SCF (Skp1, Cullin1, F-box, Rbx1) ubiquitin ligase complex remain unchanged and show little if any complex formation with Fbx2/Skp1, suggesting that cochlear Fbx2 and Skp1 form a novel, heterodimeric complex. Our findings demonstrate that components of protein quality control are essential for inner ear homeostasis and implicate Fbx2 and Skp1 as potential genetic modifiers in age-related hearing loss.