49 research outputs found

    A Distance-Dependent Distribution of Presynaptic Boutons Tunes Frequency-Dependent Dendritic Integration

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    How presynaptic inputs and neurotransmitter release dynamics are distributed along a dendritic tree is not well established. Here, we show that presynaptic boutons that form onto basal dendrites of CA1 pyramidal neurons display a decrease in active zone (AZ) size with distance from the soma, resulting in a distance-dependent increase in short-term facilitation. Our findings suggest that the spatial distribution of short-term facilitation serves to compensate for the electrotonic attenuation of subthreshold distal inputs during repeated stimulation and fine-tunes the preferred input frequency of dendritic domains

    Regulatory T Cell Extracellular Vesicles Modify T-Effector Cell Cytokine Production and Protect Against Human Skin Allograft Damage

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    Regulatory T cells (Tregs) are a subpopulation of CD4āŗ T cells with a fundamental role in maintaining immune homeostasis and inhibiting unwanted immune responses using several different mechanisms. Recently, the intercellular transfer of molecules between Tregs and their target cells has been shown via trogocytosis and the release of small extracellular vesicles (sEVs). In this study, CD4āŗCD25āŗCD127Ė”įµ’ human Tregs were found to produce sEVs capable of inhibiting the proliferation of effector T cells (Teffs) in a dose dependent manner. These vesicles also modified the cytokine profile of Teffs leading to an increase in the production of IL-4 and IL-10 whilst simultaneously decreasing the levels of IL-6, IL-2, and IFNĪ³. MicroRNAs found enriched in the Treg EVs were indirectly linked to the changes in the cytokine profile observed. In a humanized mouse skin transplant model, human Treg derived EVs inhibited alloimmune-mediated skin tissue damage by limiting immune cell infiltration. Taken together, Treg sEVs may represent an exciting cell-free therapy to promote transplant survival

    Female and Male Gamete Mitochondria Are Distinct and Complementary in Transcription, Structure, and Genome Function

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    This article has been accepted for publication in Genome Biology and Evolution. https://doi.org/10.1093/gbe/evt147. Published by Oxford University Press.This work was supported by the Leverhulme Trust as research grant F/07 476/AQ to J.F.A., by the U.K. Natural Environment Research Council as research grant NE/G005516/1 to C.H.L., and by the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y TecnologĆ­a Research Grant 179835 to F.M

    Prelamin A mediates myocardial inflammation in dilated and HIV-associated cardiomyopathies

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    Cardiomyopathies are complex heart muscle diseases that can be inherited or acquired. Dilated cardiomyopathy can result from mutations in LMNA, encoding the nuclear intermediate filament proteins lamin A/C. Some LMNA mutations lead to accumulation of the lamin A precursor, prelamin A, which is disease causing in a number of tissues, yet its impact upon the heart is unknown. Here, we discovered myocardial prelamin A accumulation occurred in a case of dilated cardiomyopathy, and we show that a potentially novel mouse model of cardiac-specific prelamin A accumulation exhibited a phenotype consistent with inflammatory cardiomyopathy, which we observed to be similar to HIV-associated cardiomyopathy, an acquired disease state. Numerous HIV protease therapies are known to inhibit ZMPSTE24, the enzyme responsible for prelamin A processing, and we confirmed that accumulation of prelamin A occurred in HIV+ patient cardiac biopsies. These findings (a) confirm a unifying pathological role for prelamin A common to genetic and acquired cardiomyopathies; (b) have implications for the management of HIV patients with cardiac disease, suggesting protease inhibitors should be replaced with alternative therapies (i.e., nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors); and (c) suggest that targeting inflammation may be a useful treatment strategy for certain forms of inherited cardiomyopathy

    Cellular dissection of malaria parasite invasion of human erythrocytes using viable Plasmodium knowlesi merozoites

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    Plasmodium knowlesi, a zoonotic parasite causing severe-to-lethal malaria disease in humans, has only recently been adapted to continuous culture with human red blood cells (RBCs). In comparison with the most virulent human malaria, Plasmodium falciparum, there are, however, few cellular tools available to study its biology, in particular direct investigation of RBC invasion by blood-stage P. knowlesi merozoites. This leaves our current understanding of biological differences across pathogenic Plasmodium spp. incomplete. Here, we report a robust method for isolating viable and invasive P. knowlesi merozoites to high purity and yield. Using this approach, we present detailed comparative dissection of merozoite invasion (using a variety of microscopy platforms) and direct assessment of kinetic differences between knowlesi and falciparum merozoites. We go on to assess the inhibitory potential of molecules targeting discrete steps of invasion in either species via a quantitative invasion inhibition assay, identifying a class of polysulfonate polymer able to efficiently inhibit invasion in both, providing a foundation for pan-Plasmodium merozoite inhibitor development. Given the close evolutionary relationship between P. knowlesi and P. vivax, the second leading cause of malaria-related morbidity, this study paves the way for inter-specific dissection of invasion by all three major pathogenic malaria species

    ALS/FTDā€associated FUS activates GSKā€3Ī² to disrupt the VAPBā€“PTPIP51 interaction and ERā€“mitochondria associations

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    Defective FUS metabolism is strongly associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia (ALS/FTD), but the mechanisms linking FUS to disease are not properly understood. However, many of the functions disrupted in ALS/FTD are regulated by signalling between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria. This signalling is facilitated by close physical associations between the two organelles that are mediated by binding of the integral ER protein VAPB to the outer mitochondrial membrane protein PTPIP51, which act as molecular scaffolds to tether the two organelles. Here, we show that FUS disrupts the VAPBā€“PTPIP51 interaction and ERā€“mitochondria associations. These disruptions are accompanied by perturbation of Ca2+ uptake by mitochondria following its release from ER stores, which is a physiological readā€out of ERā€“mitochondria contacts. We also demonstrate that mitochondrial ATP production is impaired in FUSā€expressing cells; mitochondrial ATP production is linked to Ca2+ levels. Finally, we demonstrate that the FUSā€induced reductions to ERā€“mitochondria associations and are linked to activation of glycogen synthase kinaseā€3Ī² (GSKā€3Ī²), a kinase already strongly associated with ALS/FTD

    Prelamin A mediates inflammation in dilated and HIV associated cardiomyopathies

    Get PDF
    Cardiomyopathies are complex heart muscle diseases that can be inherited or acquired. Dilated cardiomyopathy can result from mutations in LMNA, encoding the nuclear intermediate filament proteins lamin A/C. Some LMNA mutations lead to accumulation of the lamin A precursor, prelamin A, which is disease causing in a number of tissues yet its impact upon the heart is unknown. Here we discovered myocardial prelamin A accumulation occurred in a case of dilated cardiomyopathy and show that a novel mouse model of cardiac specific prelamin A accumulation exhibited a phenotype consistent with ā€˜inflammatory cardiomyopathyā€™ which we observed to be similar to HIV associated cardiomyopathy, an acquired disease state. Numerous HIV protease therapies are known to inhibit ZMPSTE24, the enzyme responsible for prelamin A processing, and we confirmed that accumulation of prelamin A occurred in HIV+ patient cardiac biopsies. These findings: (1) confirm a unifying pathological role for prelamin A common to genetic and acquired cardiomyopathies; (2) have implications for the management of HIV patients with cardiac disease suggesting protease inhibitors should be replaced with alternative therapies i.e. non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors; and (3) suggest that targeting inflammation may be a useful treatment strategy for certain forms of inherited cardiomyopathy

    Mitochondria form cholesterol-rich contact sites with the nucleus during retrograde response

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    Cholesterol metabolism is pivotal to cellular homeostasis, hormones production, and membranes composition. Its dysregulation associates with malignant reprogramming and therapy resistance. Cholesterol is trafficked into the mitochondria for steroidogenesis by the transduceome protein complex, which assembles on the outer mitochondrial membrane (OMM). The highly conserved, cholesterol-binding, stress-reactive, 18kDa translocator protein (TSPO), is a key component of this complex. Here, we modulate TSPO to study the process of mitochondrial retrograde signalling with the nucleus, by dissecting the role played by cholesterol and its oxidized forms. Using confocal and ultrastructural imaging, we describe that TSPO enriched mitochondria, remodel around the nucleus, gathering in cholesterol-enriched domains (or contact sites). This communication is controlled by HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins), molecular and pharmacological regulation of TSPO. The described Nucleus-Associated Mitochondria (NAM) seem to be implementing survival signalling in aggressive forms of breast cancer. This work therefore provides the first evidence for a functional and bio-mechanical tethering between mitochondria and nucleus, as being the basis of pro-survival mechanisms, thus establishing a new paradigm in cross-organelle communication via cholesterol re-distribution

    Prelamin A mediates myocardial inflammation in dilated and HIV-Associated cardiomyopathies

    Get PDF
    Cardiomyopathies are complex heart muscle diseases that can be inherited or acquired. Dilated cardiomyopathy can result from mutations in LMNA, encoding the nuclear intermediate filament proteins lamin A/C. Some LMNA mutations lead to accumulation of the lamin A precursor, prelamin A, which is disease causing in a number of tissues, yet its impact upon the heart is unknown. Here, we discovered myocardial prelamin A accumulation occurred in a case of dilated cardiomyopathy, and we show that a potentially novel mouse model of cardiac-specific prelamin A accumulation exhibited a phenotype consistent with inflammatory cardiomyopathy, which we observed to be similar to HIV-associated cardiomyopathy, an acquired disease state. Numerous HIV protease therapies are known to inhibit ZMPSTE24, the enzyme responsible for prelamin A processing, and we confirmed that accumulation of prelamin A occurred in HIV' patient cardiac biopsies. These findings (a) confirm a unifying pathological role for prelamin A common to genetic and acquired cardiomyopathies; (b) have implications for the management of HIV patients with cardiac disease, suggesting protease inhibitors should be replaced with alternative therapies (i.e., nonnucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors); and (c) suggest that targeting inflammation may be a useful treatment strategy for certain forms of inherited cardiomyopathy

    ALS/FTD-associated FUS activates GSK-3 to disrupt the VAPB-PTPIP51 interaction and ER-mitochondria associations

    Get PDF
    Defective FUS metabolism is strongly associated with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and frontotemporal dementia (ALS/FTD), but the mechanisms linking FUS to disease are not properly understood. However, many of the functions disrupted in ALS/FTD are regulated by signalling between the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and mitochondria. This signalling is facilitated by close physical associations between the two organelles that are mediated by binding of the integral ER protein VAPB to the outer mitochondrial membrane protein PTPIP51, which act as molecular scaffolds to tether the two organelles. Here, we show that FUS disrupts the VAPBā€“PTPIP51 interaction and ERā€“mitochondria associations. These disruptions are accompanied by perturbation of Ca2+ uptake by mitochondria following its release from ER stores, which is a physiological readā€out of ERā€“mitochondria contacts. We also demonstrate that mitochondrial ATP production is impaired in FUSā€expressing cells; mitochondrial ATP production is linked to Ca2+ levels. Finally, we demonstrate that the FUSā€induced reductions to ERā€“mitochondria associations and are linked to activation of glycogen synthase kinaseā€3Ī² (GSKā€3Ī²), a kinase already strongly associated with ALS/FTD
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