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Cell and Molecular Biology Graduate Group


Jordan S. Orange

Jordan S. Orange
Assistant Professor, Dept of Physiology, Children's Hospital of Pennsylvania

Cell Biology and Physiology Program


Mailing Address

Abramson Research Center - 1016H (office)
Abramson Research Center - 1014 (lab)
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
3615 Civic Center Blvd
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6085

Office tel.: 267-426-5622
Lab tel.: 215-590-6195
Fax: 267-426-5727
E-mail: Orange@mail.med.upenn.edu

Link(s)

Orange Laboratory

EDUCATION

Brown University: AB (Biology), 1990.

Brown University: PhD (Pathobiology), 1996.

Brown University: MD (Medicine), 1997.

Harvard University: Post-doctoral fellow (Molecular and Cell Biology), 2003.

RESEARCH INTERESTS

  • Directed secretion at the cytolytic immunological synapse
    Role of NF-kB activation in cytolytic function

Key words: Natural killer cells, immunological synapse, cytotoxicity, secretory lysosomes.

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DESCRIPTION OF RESEARCH

Natural killer (NK) cells are lymphocytes critical to host defense that play important roles in surveillance of tumor cells as well as in control of viral infections. They do not undergo genetic recombination to attain specificity and therefore are part of the innate immune system. NK cells mediate cytotoxicity by extruding secretory lysosomes in a directed manner after a favorable balance between the ligation of activating and inhibiting receptors has been achieved. The foundations of NK cell activities and regulation therefore lie at the interface between NK cells and cells with which they are interacting. Molecules accumulate in this region and result in a dynamic structure called the NK cell immunologic synapse (NKIS).

My laboratory is investigating the formation, function and regulation of the NKIS. We have focused upon the cytoskeleton as a critical juncture for these processes due to an interest in a human disease that impairs cytoskeletal function called the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. Using cells from patients with this disorder, as well as various cytoskeletal inhibitors, we have shown that the activating NKIS is actin-dependent. This is in contrast to the inhibitory NKIS, which is actin-independent. We have also identified sequential steps required for creation of the activating NKIS and have demonstrated that actin reorganization precedes and is required for microtubular function at the synapse. The microtubules are then needed to translocate lytic granules to the center of the NKIS called the central supramolecular activation cluster (cSMAC). Most recently our work has focused upon cytoskeletal events critical in forming the activating NKIS and we have been evaluating actin complex-associated proteins for their role in granule localization to the cSMAC. We are additionally studying how molecular rearrangement at the NKIS results in activation-induced transcriptional regulation and how this ultimately affects cytotoxic function. NK cells are a most useful model for these studies because they have an easily defined function and a more gradual activation process attributed to the interplay of activating and inhibitory receptors.

RECENT PUBLICATIONS

Orange, J.S., Harris, K.E., Andzelm, M.M., Valter, M.M., Geha, R.S., and Strominger, J.L. The activating natural killer cell immunologic synapse is formed in distinct stages. (2003) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 100:14151-14156.

Krezwski, K, Chen, X. Orange, J.S., and Strominger, J.L. Formation of a WIP, WASp, actin and myosin IIA-containing multiprotein complex in activated NK cells and its alteration by KIR inhibitory signaling. (2006) J. Cell Biology 173:121-132

Hakonarson, H., Grant, S.F.A., Bradfield, J.P., Marchand, L., Kim, C.E., Glessner, J.T., Grabs, R. Casalunovo, T., Taback, S.P., Frakelton, E.C., Lawson, M.L., Robinson, L.J., Skraban, R., Lu, Y., Chiavacci, R.M., Stanley, C.A., Kirsch, S.E., Rappaport, E.F., Orange, J.S., Monos, D.S., Devoto, Qu, H.-Q., Polychronakos, C. A genome-wide association study identifies KIAA0350 as a novel type 1 diabetes gene. (2007) Nature In Press

Chang, J.T., Palanivel, V.R., Kinjyo, I., Schambach, F., Intlekofer, A.M., Banerjee, A., Longworth, S.A., Vinup, K.E., Mrass, P., Oliaro, J., Killeen, N., Orange, J.S., Russell, S.M., Weninger, W., Reiner, S.L. Asymmetric T lymphocyte division initiating adaptive immunity. (2007) Science 315:1687-1691.

Banerjee, P.B., Pandey, R. Zheng, R, Suhoski, M., Monaco-Shawver, L., Orange, J.S. Cdc42-interacting protein-4 functionally links actin and microtubule networks at the cytolytic NK cell immunological synapse. (2007) J. Exp. Med. In Press

Lab

ROTATION PROJECTS

  1. Mechanism by which NF-kB essential modulator function and NF-kB activation enable cytolytic function
  2. Biochemical and spatial evaluation of functional linkages between the actin cytoskeleton and the microtubular network in formation of the cytolytic immunological synapse.
  3. Requirements for and behavior of secretory lysosome traffic to the cytolytic immunological synapse
PERSONNEL:
Linda Monaco Shawver - Research Technician Level III
Christine Destephan - Research Technician Level I
Pinaki P. Banerjee - Postdoctoral Fellow
Rahul Pandey - Postdoctoral Fellow
Eric Hanson - Postdoctoral Fellow
Sumita Roy-Ghanta - Postdoctoral Fellow
Ashley Mentlik - CBP Graduate Student
 
last updated 7/2007
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