Searched for: in-biosketch:true
person:buyonj01
INFLAMMATION AND NEUTROPHIL-ENDOTHELIAL INTERACTIONS - CHEMOATTRACTANTS AND IMMUNE-COMPLEXES DIFFERENTIALLY REGULATE EXPRESSION OF ADHESIVE MOLECULES ON NEUTROPHILS (PMNS) [Meeting Abstract]
MOLAD, Y; ANDERSON, DC; BUYON, JP; CRONSTEIN, BN
ISI:A1992JR15800359
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 51844
DIFFERENTIAL PHOSPHORYLATION OF CD11B/CD18 IN NEUTROPHIL SPECIFIC GRANULE AND PLASMA-MEMBRANES [Meeting Abstract]
BUYON, JP; SLADE, SG; LESZCYNSKAPIZIAK, J; PHILIPS, M; ABRAMSON, SB
ISI:A1992JR15800360
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 51845
Lupus anticoagulant activity of autoimmune antiphospholipid antibodies is dependent upon beta 2-glycoprotein I
Roubey, R A; Pratt, C W; Buyon, J P; Winfield, J B
It has been reported that antiphospholipid autoantibodies do not recognize phospholipid alone, but rather the plasma protein beta 2-glycoprotein I (beta 2GPI), or a beta 2GPI-phospholipid complex. In vitro beta 2GPI binds to anionic phospholipids and inhibits the prothrombinase activity of procoagulant membranes. In light of the fact that lupus anticoagulants, a type of antiphospholipid antibody, have similar anticoagulant properties, the relationship of beta 2GPI to lupus anticoagulant activity was investigated. IgG from patients with autoimmune diseases or syphilis were tested for anticardiolipin reactivity and lupus anticoagulant activity in the presence and absence of beta 2GPI. As expected, anti-cardiolipin reactivity associated with autoimmune disease was beta 2GPI dependent. In contrast, IgG from a patient with syphilis recognized cardiolipin alone and binding was inhibited by beta 2GPI. Autoimmune antiphospholipid antibodies prolonged the dilute Russell viper venom time of normal plasma, but had no effect on beta 2GPI-depleted plasma. Antiphospholipid antibodies associated with syphilis had no anticoagulant effect. RP-1, an anti-beta 2GPI mAb, had anticoagulant effects similar to those of autoimmune antiphospholipid antibodies. These data demonstrate that antiphospholipid autoantibodies exert lupus anticoagulant activity via an interaction with beta 2GPI. These antibodies and RP-1 appear to amplify the anticoagulant effect of beta 2GPI itself
PMCID:329970
PMID: 1522218
ISSN: 0021-9738
CID: 73567
LUPUS ANTICOAGULANT ACTIVITY OF AUTOIMMUNE ANTIPHOSPHOLIPID ANTIBODIES IS DEPENDENT UPON BETA-2-GLYCOPROTEIN-I [Meeting Abstract]
ROUBEY, RAS; PRATT, CW; BUYON, JP; WINFIELD, JB
ISI:A1992HN74100364
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 51977
MESSENGER-RNA AND PROTEIN EXPRESSION OF RO/LA IN HUMAN FETAL AND ADULT ORGANS [Meeting Abstract]
BUYON, JP; SLADE, SG; CHAN, EKL; WINCHESTER, RJ
ISI:A1992HN74100489
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 51982
PENTOXIFYLLINE AND PHOSPHATASE INHIBITORS MODULATE NEUTROPHIL AGGREGATION VIA DIFFERENT PATHWAYS [Meeting Abstract]
MERRILL, J; WINCHESTER, R; BUYON, JP
ISI:A1992HN74100569
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 51985
Anti-Ro/SS-A antibodies in the pathophysiology of congenital heart block in neonatal lupus syndrome, an experimental model. In vitro electrophysiologic and immunocytochemical studies
Alexander, E; Buyon, J P; Provost, T T; Guarnieri, T
OBJECTIVE. To determine whether anti-Ro/SS-A antibodies selectively bind to neonatal cardiac cells and alter membrane repolarization. METHODS. An in vitro electrophysiologic and immunocytochemical experimental model contrasting neonatal and rabbit cardiac tissue was employed. RESULTS. Sera and IgG-enriched fractions from anti-Ro/SS-A antibody-positive mothers of infants with neonatal lupus erythematosus and congenital heart block bind to neonatal, rather than adult, rabbit cardiac tissue and alter the transmembrane action potential (i.e., inhibit repolarization). The additional presence of anti-La/SS-B antibodies was not additive or synergistic for these immunocytochemical and electrophysiologic features. Sera containing other antibody specificities (i.e., anti-native DNA, cardiolipin, Sm, and nuclear RNP) failed to stain the neonatal cardiac tissue or produced alterations in membrane repolarization. CONCLUSION. Anti-Ro/SS-A antibodies may play a pathophysiologic role in the development of congenital heart block in neonatal lupus
PMID: 1734907
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 73568
Activation of the alternative complement pathway accompanies disease flares in systemic lupus erythematosus during pregnancy
Buyon JP; Tamerius J; Ordorica S; Young B; Abramson SB
OBJECTIVE. To assess the activity of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) during pregnancy and to distinguish it from preeclampsia. METHODS. We prospectively measured the complement activation products Ba, Bb, SC5b-9, and C4d, as well as the conventional complement determinants C3, C4, and CH50, during pregnancy in 14 patients with SLE and 10 women with preeclampsia. RESULTS. Four of the 14 SLE patients were considered to have disease flares, 3 occurring in the second trimester and 1 postpartum. In these patients, significant abnormalities of Ba, Bb, SC5b-9, and CH50 were noted. In contrast, measures of C4d did not distinguish between pregnant patients who had flares and those whose SLE remained stable. Although decreased values of C3 were rarely seen in the patients with stable disease, normal values of C3 during lupus pregnancy were not reliably associated with stable disease. Three of 10 non-SLE patients with preeclampsia had elevated levels of Ba; however, in each case, the CH50 level was close to or within the normal range. This was in sharp contrast to the findings observed in the 4 patients with active SLE, in whom high levels of plasma Ba were always associated with low CH50 values. Moreover, the ratio of CH50 to Ba was significantly lower in the patients with lupus flares than in the non-SLE patients with preeclampsia. CONCLUSION. While a decline in the CH50 level alone could otherwise be attributed to decreased synthesis of complement components, these data demonstrate that ongoing activation of the alternative complement pathway can accompany disease flares in pregnant women with SLE
PMID: 1731815
ISSN: 0004-3591
CID: 9752
Staurosporine inhibits neutrophil phagocytosis but not iC3b binding mediated by CR3 (CD11b/CD18)
Roubey, R A; Ross, G D; Merrill, J T; Walton, F; Reed, W; Winchester, R J; Buyon, J P
C receptor CR3 (iC3b-receptor, CD11b/CD18) plays an essential role in several phagocytic and adhesive neutrophil functions. Recent evidence suggests that stimulus-induced phosphorylation of the CR3 beta-chain, CD18, may mediate certain neutrophil functions by transiently converting the molecule to an activated state. Staurosporine, a protein kinase C inhibitor that blocks PMA-induced CD18 phosphorylation, was used to study the functional relevance of this event. Neutrophils adhered to glass were assayed for binding and phagocytosis of iC3b-opsonized sheep E (EC3bi) in the presence or absence of PMA and/or staurosporine. Binding of EC3bi was markedly increased, not only by PMA, but also by staurosporine and by a combination of both agents (three- to sevenfold). The enhancement of rosetting by staurosporine was likely caused by increased surface expression of CR3 via exocytosis of specific granular contents. In contrast, staurosporine alone did not stimulate phagocytosis of EC3bi and markedly inhibited PMA-induced phagocytosis. Staurosporine also inhibited phagocytosis of yeast beta glucan particles, a CR3 ligand that, in contrast to EC3bi, is bound and ingested without additional prior treatment with PMA. beta glucan phagocytosis was associated with a low level of CD18 phosphorylation. Staurosporine did not block phagocytosis in general, because this agent had relatively little effect on FcR-mediated phagocytosis. These data demonstrate that phagocytosis mediated by CR3 requires activation of CR3 via a staurosporine-sensitive pathway. Increased binding of EC3bi, a function of increased surface expression of CR3, does not require activation of CR3 by such a pathway, confirming previous evidence for the independence of these two phenomena. A direct role for CD18 phosphorylation in the activation of CR3 for phagocytosis is consistent with these data
PMID: 1673986
ISSN: 0022-1767
CID: 73569
BETA-CHAIN PHOSPHORYLATION OF EACH NEUTROPHIL BETA-2 INTEGRIN IS INFLUENCED BY ITS ALPHA-CHAIN - OKADAIC ACID INDUCES INTEGRIN PHOSPHORYLATION BUT NOT LEUKOCYTE AGGREGATION [Meeting Abstract]
MERRILL, J; WINCHESTER, R; BUYON, JP
ISI:A1991FH32300079
ISSN: 0009-9279
CID: 51603