👤 David P Fairlie

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4
Articles
2
Name variants
Also published as: Walter D Fairlie
articles
Juliani Juliani, Walter D Fairlie, Erinna F Lee · 2025 · Autophagy reports · Taylor & Francis · added 2026-04-24
Epithelial and endothelial barriers are essential for tissue homeostasis, protecting the body from environmental insults while regulating selective transport. The integrity of these barriers relies on Show more
Epithelial and endothelial barriers are essential for tissue homeostasis, protecting the body from environmental insults while regulating selective transport. The integrity of these barriers relies on dynamic intercellular junctions whose composition and organization are constantly remodeled in response to stress and physiological cues. Autophagy and endocytic trafficking are key intracellular pathways that maintain junctional stability and barrier resilience. BECLIN-1 (BECN1), a central regulator of both pathways, coordinates localized membrane dynamics through its interaction with the class III phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PtdIns3K) PIK3C3/VPS34. Recent advances reveal that BECN1's dual role in autophagy and endocytic trafficking is crucial for maintaining barriers in diverse tissues, including the gut, skin, and blood-brain barrier. Conversely, BECN1 dysfunction can compromise junctional integrity, driving inflammatory and degenerative diseases. This review summarizes the emerging evidence linking BECN1 to membrane trafficking, stress adaptation, and immune regulation across barrier tissues, highlighting its potential as a therapeutic target for barrier-associated diseases. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1080/27694127.2025.2566129
PIK3C3
Daniel M Hohenhaus, Kolja Schaale, Kim-Anh Le Cao +4 more · 2013 · Immunobiology · Elsevier · added 2026-04-24
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are among the most important targets in drug discovery. In this study, we used TaqMan Low Density Arrays to profile the full GPCR repertoire of primary human macrop Show more
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are among the most important targets in drug discovery. In this study, we used TaqMan Low Density Arrays to profile the full GPCR repertoire of primary human macrophages differentiated from monocytes using either colony stimulating factor-1 (CSF-1/M-CSF) (CSF-1 Mϕ) or granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) (GM-CSF Mϕ). The overall trend was a downregulation of GPCRs during monocyte to macrophage differentiation, but a core set of 10 genes (e.g. LGR4, MRGPRF and GPR143) encoding seven transmembrane proteins were upregulated, irrespective of the differentiating agent used. Several of these upregulated GPCRs have not previously been studied in the context of macrophage biology and/or inflammation. As expected, CSF-1 Mϕ and GM-CSF Mϕ exhibited differential inflammatory cytokine profiles in response to the Toll-like Receptor (TLR)4 agonist lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Moreover, 15 GPCRs were differentially expressed between these cell populations in the basal state. For example, EDG1 was expressed at elevated levels in CSF-1 Mϕ versus GM-CSF Mϕ, whereas the reverse was true for EDG6. 101 GPCRs showed differential regulation over an LPS time course, with 65 of these profiles being impacted by the basal differentiation state (e.g. GPRC5A, GPRC5B). Only 14 LPS-regulated GPCRs showed asynchronous behavior (divergent LPS regulation) with respect to differentiation status. Thus, the differentiation state primarily affects the magnitude of LPS-regulated expression, rather than causing major reprogramming of GPCR gene expression profiles. Several GPCRs showing differential profiles between CSF-1 Mϕ and GM-CSF Mϕ (e.g. P2RY8, GPR92, EMR3) have not been widely investigated in macrophage biology and inflammation. Strikingly, several closely related GPCRs displayed completely opposing patterns of regulation during differentiation and/or activation (e.g. EDG1 versus EDG6, LGR4 versus LGR7, GPRC5A versus GPRC5B). We propose that selective regulation of GPCR5A and GPCR5B in CSF-1 Mϕ contributes to skewing toward the M2 macrophage phenotype. Our analysis of the GPCR repertoire expressed during primary human monocyte to macrophage differentiation and TLR4-mediated activation provides a valuable new platform for conducting future functional analyses of individual GPCRs in human macrophage inflammatory pathways. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1016/j.imbio.2013.07.001
GPRC5B
Jacky Y Suen, Brooke Gardiner, Sean Grimmond +1 more · 2010 · PloS one · PLOS · added 2026-04-24
Protease-Activated Receptor-2 (PAR2) has been implicated through genetic knockout mice with cytokine regulation and arthritis development. Many studies have associated PAR2 with inflammatory condition Show more
Protease-Activated Receptor-2 (PAR2) has been implicated through genetic knockout mice with cytokine regulation and arthritis development. Many studies have associated PAR2 with inflammatory conditions (arthritis, airways inflammation, IBD) and key events in tumor progression (angiogenesis, metastasis), but they have relied heavily on the use of single agonists to identify physiological roles for PAR2. However such probes are now known not to be highly selective for PAR2, and thus precisely what PAR2 does and what mechanisms of downstream regulation are truly affected remain obscure. Effects of PAR2 activation on gene expression in Human Embryonic Kidney cells (HEK293), a commonly studied cell line in PAR2 research, were investigated here by comparing 19,000 human genes for intersecting up- or down-regulation by both trypsin (an endogenous protease that activates PAR2) and a PAR2 activating hexapeptide (2f-LIGRLO-NH(2)). Among 2,500 human genes regulated similarly by both agonists, there were clear associations between PAR2 activation and cellular metabolism (1,000 genes), the cell cycle, the MAPK pathway, HDAC and sirtuin enzymes, inflammatory cytokines, and anti-complement function. PAR-2 activation up-regulated four genes more than 5 fold (DUSP6, WWOX, AREG, SERPINB2) and down-regulated another six genes more than 3 fold (TXNIP, RARG, ITGB4, CTSD, MSC and TM4SF15). Both PAR2 and PAR1 activation resulted in up-regulated expression of several genes (CD44, FOSL1, TNFRSF12A, RAB3A, COPEB, CORO1C, THBS1, SDC4) known to be important in cancer. This is the first widespread profiling of specific activation of PAR2 and provides a valuable platform for better understanding key mechanistic roles of PAR2 in human physiology. Results clearly support the development of both antagonists and agonists of human PAR2 as potential disease modifying therapeutic agents. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013809
DUSP6
Paul V Bernhardt, Peter Comba, David P Fairlie +3 more · 2002 · Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
The synthesis, characterization and copper(II) coordination chemistry of three new cyclic peptide ligands, PatJ(1) (cyclo-(Ile-Thr-(Gly)Thz-Ile-Thr-(Gly)Thz)), PatJ(2) (cyclo-(Ile-Thr-(Gly)Thz-(D)-Ile Show more
The synthesis, characterization and copper(II) coordination chemistry of three new cyclic peptide ligands, PatJ(1) (cyclo-(Ile-Thr-(Gly)Thz-Ile-Thr-(Gly)Thz)), PatJ(2) (cyclo-(Ile-Thr-(Gly)Thz-(D)-Ile-Thr-(Gly)Thz)), and PatL (cyclo-(Ile-Ser-(Gly)Thz-Ile-Ser-(Gly)Thz)) are reported. All of these cyclic peptides and PatN (cyclo-(Ile-Ser-(Gly)Thz-Ile-Thr-(Gly)Thz)) are derivatives of patellamide A and have a [24]azacrown-8 macrocyclic structure. All four synthetic cyclic peptides have two thiazole rings but, in contrast to patellamide A, no oxazoline rings. The molecular structure of PatJ(1), determined by X-ray crystallography, has a saddle conformation with two close-to-coparallel thiazole rings, very similar to the geometry of patellamide D. The two coordination sites of PatJ(1) with thiazole-N and amide-N donors are each well preorganized for transition metal ion binding. The coordination of copper(II) was monitored by UV/Vis spectroscopy, and this reveals various (meta)stable mono- and dinuclear copper(II) complexes whose stoichiometry was confirmed by mass spectra. Two types of dinuclear copper(II) complexes, [Cu(2)(H(4)L)(OH(2))(n)](2+) (n=6, 8) and [Cu(2)(H(2)L)(OH(2))(n)] (n=4, 6; L=PatN, PatL, PatJ(1), PatJ(2)) have been identified and analyzed structurally by EPR spectroscopy and a combination of spectra simulations and molecular mechanics calculations (MM-EPR). The four structures are similar to each other and have a saddle conformation, that is, derived from the crystal structure of PatJ(1) by a twist of the two thiozole rings. The small but significant structural differences are characterized by the EPR simulations. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/1521-3765(20020402)8:7<1527::aid-chem1527>3.0.co;2-f
PATJ