133 research outputs found
Transcriptional profiles for distinct aggregation states of mutant Huntingtin exon 1 protein unmask new Huntington's disease pathways
Huntington's disease is caused by polyglutamine (polyQ)-expansion mutations in the CAG tandem repeat of the Huntingtin gene. The central feature of Huntington's disease pathology is the aggregation of mutant Huntingtin (Htt) protein into micrometer-sized inclusion bodies. Soluble mutant Htt states are most proteotoxic and trigger an enhanced risk of death whereas inclusions confer different changes to cellular health, and may even provide adaptive responses to stress. Yet the molecular mechanisms underpinning these changes remain unclear. Using the flow cytometry method of pulse-shape analysis (PulSA) to sort neuroblastoma (Neuro2a) cells enriched with mutant or wild-type Htt into different aggregation states, we clarified which transcriptional signatures were specifically attributable to cells before versus after inclusion assembly. Dampened CREB signalling was the most striking change overall and invoked specifically by soluble mutant Httex1 states. Toxicity could be rescued by stimulation of CREB signalling. Other biological processes mapped to different changes before and after aggregation included NF-kB signalling, autophagy, SUMOylation, transcription regulation by histone deacetylases and BRD4, NAD+ biosynthesis, ribosome biogenesis and altered HIF-1 signalling. These findings open the path for therapeutic strategies targeting key molecular changes invoked prior to, and subsequently to, Httex1 aggregation.This work was supported by grants to DMH from the Australian Research Council (grant number FT120100039); grants/fellowships from the National Health and Medical Research Council Project to DMH (grant numbers APP1049458, APP1049459 and APP1102059), and a grant from the Hereditary Disease Foundation (USA). AJH is an NHMRC
Principal Research Fellow
Filicide in Austria and Finland - A register-based study on all filicide cases in Austria and Finland 1995-2005
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Filicide is the tragic crime of murdering one's own child. Previous research has found that the offending parents are commonly depressed and that suicide is often associated as an actual act or an intention. Yet, filicide is an underreported crime and previous studies have been strained with methodological problems. No comprehensive international studies on filicide have been presented in the literature until now.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>This was a descriptive, comprehensive, register-based study of all filicides in Austria and Finland during 1995-2005. Filicide-suicide cases were also included.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Most of the perpetrators were the biological mothers; in Austria 72%, in Finland 52%. Suicide followed filicide either as an attempt or a fulfilled act in 32% and 54% of the cases in Austria and Finland, respectively. Psychotic mood disorders were diagnosed for 10% of the living perpetrators in Austria, and 12% in Finland. Non-psychotic depression was diagnosed in 9% of surviving perpetrators in Austria, 35% in Finland.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The data from the two countries demonstrated that filicide is such a multifaceted and rare phenomenon that national data from individual countries seldom offer sufficient scope for its thorough study. Further analyses are needed to produce a complete picture of filicide.</p
Dimensionality of Carbon Nanomaterials Determines the Binding and Dynamics of Amyloidogenic Peptides: Multiscale Theoretical Simulations
Experimental studies have demonstrated that nanoparticles can affect the rate of protein self-assembly, possibly interfering with the development of protein misfolding diseases such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and prion disease caused by aggregation and fibril formation of amyloid-prone proteins. We employ classical molecular dynamics simulations and large-scale density functional theory calculations to investigate the effects of nanomaterials on the structure, dynamics and binding of an amyloidogenic peptide apoC-II(60-70). We show that the binding affinity of this peptide to carbonaceous nanomaterials such as C60, nanotubes and graphene decreases with increasing nanoparticle curvature. Strong binding is facilitated by the large contact area available for π-stacking between the aromatic residues of the peptide and the extended surfaces of graphene and the nanotube. The highly curved fullerene surface exhibits reduced efficiency for π-stacking but promotes increased peptide dynamics. We postulate that the increase in conformational dynamics of the amyloid peptide can be unfavorable for the formation of fibril competent structures. In contrast, extended fibril forming peptide conformations are promoted by the nanotube and graphene surfaces which can provide a template for fibril-growth
Three-Dimensional Stochastic Off-Lattice Model of Binding Chemistry in Crowded Environments
Molecular crowding is one of the characteristic features of the intracellular environment, defined by a dense mixture of varying kinds of proteins and other molecules. Interaction with these molecules significantly alters the rates and equilibria of chemical reactions in the crowded environment. Numerous fundamental activities of a living cell are strongly influenced by the crowding effect, such as protein folding, protein assembly and disassembly, enzyme activity, and signal transduction. Quantitatively predicting how crowding will affect any particular process is, however, a very challenging problem because many physical and chemical parameters act synergistically in ways that defy easy analysis. To build a more realistic model for this problem, we extend a prior stochastic off-lattice model from two-dimensional (2D) to three-dimensional (3D) space and examine how the 3D results compare to those found in 2D. We show that both models exhibit qualitatively similar crowding effects and similar parameter dependence, particularly with respect to a set of parameters previously shown to act linearly on total reaction equilibrium. There are quantitative differences between 2D and 3D models, although with a generally gradual nonlinear interpolation as a system is extended from 2D to 3D. However, the additional freedom of movement allowed to particles as thickness of the simulation box increases can produce significant quantitative change as a system moves from 2D to 3D. Simulation results over broader parameter ranges further show that the impact of molecular crowding is highly dependent on the specific reaction system examined
Unified regression model of binding equilibria in crowded environments
Molecular crowding is a critical feature distinguishing intracellular environments
from idealized solution-based environments and is essential to understanding
numerous biochemical reactions, from protein folding to signal transduction. Many
biochemical reactions are dramatically altered by crowding, yet it is extremely
difficult to predict how crowding will quantitatively affect any particular reaction
systems. We previously developed a novel stochastic off-lattice model to efficiently
simulate binding reactions across wide parameter ranges in various crowded
conditions. We now show that a polynomial regression model can incorporate several
interrelated parameters influencing chemistry under crowded conditions. The unified
model of binding equilibria accurately reproduces the results of particle
simulations over a broad range of variation of six physical parameters that
collectively yield a complicated, non-linear crowding effect. The work represents an
important step toward the long-term goal of computationally tractable predictive
models of reaction chemistry in the cellular environment
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A randomized trial and novel SPR technique identifies altered lipoprotein-LDL receptor binding as a mechanism underlying elevated LDL-cholesterol in APOE4s
At a population level APOE4 carriers (~25% Caucasians) are at higher risk of cardiovascular diseases. The penetrance of genotype is however variable and influenced by dietary fat composition, with the APOE4 allele associated with greater LDL-cholesterol elevation in response to saturated fatty acids (SFA). The etiology of this greater responsiveness is unknown. Here a novel surface plasmon resonance technique (SPR) is developed and used, along with hepatocyte (with the liver being the main organ modulating lipoprotein metabolism and plasma lipid levels) uptake studies to establish the impact of dietary fatty acid composition on, lipoprotein-LDL receptor (LDLR) binding, and hepatocyte uptake, according to APOE genotype status. In men prospectively recruited according to APOE genotype (APOE3/3 common genotype, or APOE3/E4), triglyceride-rich lipoproteins (TRLs) were isolated at fasting and 4-6 h following test meals rich in SFA, unsaturated fat and SFA with fish oil. In APOE4s a greater LDLR binding affinity of postprandial TRL after SFA, and lower LDL binding and hepatocyte internalization, provide mechanisms for the greater LDL-cholesterol raising effect. The SPR technique developed may be used for the future study of the impact of genotype, and physiological and behavioral variables on lipoprotein metabolism
Crowding Alone Cannot Account for Cosolute Effect on Amyloid Aggregation
Amyloid fiber formation is a specific form of protein aggregation, often resulting from the misfolding of native proteins. Aimed at modeling the crowded environment of the cell, recent experiments showed a reduction in fibrillation halftimes for amyloid-forming peptides in the presence of cosolutes that are preferentially excluded from proteins and peptides. The effect of excluded cosolutes has previously been attributed to the large volume excluded by such inert cellular solutes, sometimes termed “macromolecular crowding”. Here, we studied a model peptide that can fold to a stable monomeric β-hairpin conformation, but under certain solution conditions aggregates in the form of amyloid fibrils. Using Circular Dichroism spectroscopy (CD), we found that, in the presence of polyols and polyethylene glycols acting as excluded cosolutes, the monomeric β-hairpin conformation was stabilized with respect to the unfolded state. Stabilization free energy was linear with cosolute concentration, and grew with molecular volume, as would also be predicted by crowding models. After initiating the aggregation process with a pH jump, fibrillation in the presence and absence of cosolutes was followed by ThT fluorescence, transmission electron microscopy, and CD spectroscopy. Polyols (glycerol and sorbitol) increased the lag time for fibril formation and elevated the amount of aggregated peptide at equilibrium, in a cosolute size and concentration dependent manner. However, fibrillation rates remained almost unaffected by a wide range of molecular weights of soluble polyethylene glycols. Our results highlight the importance of other forces beyond the excluded volume interactions responsible for crowding that may contribute to the cosolute effects acting on amyloid formation
Imaging brain metabolism in a mouse model of Huntington's disease
Introduction: Huntington's disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease, whose key pathological signature is the formation of intracellular inclusions. However, the exact role of inclusions in driving HD pathology remains to be clearly understood. Our lab has previously shown that the formation of huntingtin inclusions correlates with neuroblastoma cells becoming functionally quiescent and undergoing a slow death by necrosis. We hypothesize that inclusion formation establishes cellular quiescence in vivo. Our goal is to assess the extent to which neurons in vivo are metabolically quiescent and how this relates to the presence of inclusions in a transgenic mouse model (R6/1) of HD.Methods: We have studied the metabolic turnover of neuronal membrane lipids by feeding wild-type (WT) and HD mice with deuterated water at asymptomatic, pre-symptomatic &fully symptomatic ages of the disease. The left hemisphere of the brain was used for determining the spatial distribution and the abundance of neuronal lipids using MALDI-TOF imaging mass spectrometry (MALDI-IMS), while the right hemisphere was reserved for cross-validation using Liquid-Chromatography mass spectrometry (LC-MS). Results: Our data points towards alterations in neuronal lipids that play a critical role in neurotransmission, synaptic plasticity, myelination, and Endoplasmic reticulum (ER)- stress, thus providing lipid correlates for hippocampal-dependent cognitive deficits observed in HD pathology. Moreover, we found a remodeling of lipid synthesis in hippocampal areas that are densely populated by inclusions, detected using EM48-immunohistochemistry. We have also developed a novel bioinformatics tool to study in vivo kinetics using stable isotope labelling (Deuterium) coupled with a spatial metabolic approach.Conclusion: Collectively, this data reveals age-specific changes in brain lipids, providing mechanistic insights into the progressive changes observed in HD. Accelerated lipid synthesis observed in asymptomatic HD mice, hints at its possible role as an adaptive stress response to cope with ER-stress, thus providing an early biomarker for identification of HD
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Model of biologically active apolipoprotein E bound to dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine
Apolipoprotein (apo) E plays a critical role in cholesterol transport, through high affinity binding to the low density lipoprotein receptor. This interaction requires apoE to be associated with a lipoprotein particle. To determine the structure of biologically active apoE on a lipoprotein particle, we crystallized dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine particles containing two apoE molecules and determined the molecular envelope of apoE at 10 angstrom resolution. On the basis of the molecular envelope and supporting biochemical evidence, we propose a model in which each apoE molecule is folded into a helical hairpin with the binding region for the low density lipoprotein receptor at its apex
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