Publications (3)22.31 Total impact
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Article: Contrasting effects of cerebrospinal fluid from motor neuron disease patients on the survival of primary motor neurons cultured with or without glia.
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ABSTRACT: Motor neuronal (MN) degeneration in motor neuron disease (MND) often starts focally before spreading to neighbouring MN populations, suggesting soluble factors may contribute to disease propagation. Whether cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) from MND patients contains such factors has been difficult to prove. We aimed to determine the effect of glia on the response of MNs to CSF from MND patients. Primary rat spinal MNs grown in mono-culture or cocultured with glia were exposed to CSF from patients (MND-CSF) or controls (Con-CSF) and survival measured by cell counting. In mono-culture both MND-CSF and Con-CSF reduced MN survival with MND-CSF reducing MN survival by less than Con-CSF. In coculture MN survival was unchanged by exposure to MND-CSF while exposure to Con-CSF improved MN survival. In separate experiments, murine MNs grown in mono-culture and stressed by growth factor withdrawal were partially rescued by the application of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), a trophic factor previously found to be elevated in MND-CSF. Our results suggest that MND-CSF may contain factors harmful to MNs as well as factors protective of MNs, the interplay of which is altered by the presence of glial cells. These preliminary results further emphasize the importance of MN environment to MN health.Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis 03/2011; 12(4):257-63. · 3.40 Impact Factor -
Article: Impairment of mitochondrial anti-oxidant defence in SOD1-related motor neuron injury and amelioration by ebselen.
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ABSTRACT: There is now compelling evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction in motor neuron disease (MND), but the molecular basis of these abnormalities is unknown. It is also unclear whether the observed mitochondrial dysfunction plays a central role in disease pathogenesis, and if so, whether its amelioration might present therapeutic opportunities. We adopted a candidate generation approach using proteomics to screen for changes in mitochondrial protein expression in a well-validated cell-culture model of superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1) related familial MND (fMND). Changed proteins were identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectroscopy. Protein candidates included apoptotic regulators, anti-oxidants and components of the electron transport chain. Confirmatory Western blotting was performed, and validated protein expression changes were further investigated. Peroxiredoxin 3 (Prx3), a mitochondrial thioredoxin-dependent hydroperoxidase, is downregulated in the presence of mutant SOD1 in both our cell-culture model and in the spinal cord mitochondria of mutant SOD1 transgenic mice. We confirm the expression of Prx3 within the mitochondria of spinal motor neurons in mouse and humans by immunohistochemistry. Using quantitative real-time PCR (Q-PCR), we show that Prx3 is also downregulated in spinal motor neurons from patients with both sporadic (sMND) and SOD1-related fMND. In a disease characterized by oxidative stress, this represents a potentially important deficit in mitochondrial anti-oxidant defence. Recent evidence suggests that oxidative stress from aberrant copper chemistry may not play a major part in the pathogenesis of SOD1-related fMND. From the results of this study we propose disruption of mitochondrial anti-oxidant defence as an alternative mechanism whereby mutant SOD1 may generate oxidative stress within motor neurons. We further demonstrate that ebselen, an anti-oxidant drug already safely used in human studies and that acts as a Prx mimic, is able to ameliorate the toxicity of mutant SOD1 in our cell-culture model. We conclude by showing that ebselen is capable of inducing transcription of the anti-oxidant response element (ARE) and postulate that ebselen may act both by the transcriptional upregulation of anti-oxidant proteins, and directly as an anti-oxidant in its own right.Brain 08/2006; 129(Pt 7):1693-709. · 9.46 Impact Factor -
Article: Mutant SOD1 alters the motor neuronal transcriptome: implications for familial ALS.
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ABSTRACT: Familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) is caused, in 20% of cases, by mutations in the Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase gene (SOD1). Although motor neuron injury occurs through a toxic gain of function, the precise mechanism(s) remains unclear. Using an established NSC34 cellular model for SOD1-associated FALS, we investigated the effects of mutant SOD1 specifically in cells modelling the vulnerable cell population, the motor neurons, without contamination from non-neuronal cells present in CNS. Using gene expression profiling, 268 transcripts were differentially expressed in the presence of mutant human G93A SOD1. Of these, 197 were decreased, demonstrating that the presence of mutant SOD1 leads to a marked degree of transcriptional repression. Amongst these were a group of antioxidant response element (ARE) genes encoding phase II detoxifying enzymes and antioxidant response proteins (so-called 'programmed cell life' genes), the expression of which is regulated by the transcription factor NRF2. We provide evidence that dysregulation of Nrf2 and the ARE, coupled with reduced pentose phosphate pathway activity and decreased generation of NADPH, represent significant and hitherto unrecognized components of the toxic gain of function of mutant SOD1. Other genes of interest significantly altered in the presence of mutant SOD1 include several previously implicated in neurodegeneration, as well as genes involved in protein degradation, the immune response, cell death/survival and the heat shock response. Preliminary studies on isolated motor neurons from SOD1-associated motor neuron disease cases suggest key genes are also differently expressed in the human disease.Brain 08/2005; 128(Pt 7):1686-706. · 9.46 Impact Factor
Top Journals
- Brain (2)
- Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (1)
Institutions
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2005–2011
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The University of Sheffield
- Department of Biomedical Science
Sheffield, ENG, United Kingdom
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