Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Andrew Loudon is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Andrew Loudon.


Cell | 2001

Posttranslational Mechanisms Regulate the Mammalian Circadian Clock

Choogon Lee; Jean-Pierre Etchegaray; Felino R. Cagampang; Andrew Loudon; Steven M. Reppert

We have examined posttranslational regulation of clock proteins in mouse liver in vivo. The mouse PERIOD proteins (mPER1 and mPER2), CLOCK, and BMAL1 undergo robust circadian changes in phosphorylation. These proteins, the cryptochromes (mCRY1 and mCRY2), and casein kinase I epsilon (CKIepsilon) form multimeric complexes that are bound to DNA during negative transcriptional feedback. CLOCK:BMAL1 heterodimers remain bound to DNA over the circadian cycle. The temporal increase in mPER abundance controls the negative feedback interactions. Analysis of clock proteins in mCRY-deficient mice shows that the mCRYs are necessary for stabilizing phosphorylated mPER2 and for the nuclear accumulation of mPER1, mPER2, and CKIepsilon. We also provide in vivo evidence that casein kinase I delta is a second clock relevant kinase.


Neuron | 2008

Setting clock speed in mammals: the CK1 epsilon tau mutation in mice accelerates circadian pacemakers by selectively destabilizing PERIOD proteins.

Qing Jun Meng; Larisa Logunova; Elizabeth S. Maywood; Monica Gallego; Jake Lebiecki; Timothy M. Brown; Martin Sládek; Andrei S. Semikhodskii; Nick R. J. Glossop; Hugh D. Piggins; Johanna E. Chesham; David A. Bechtold; Seung Hee Yoo; Joseph S. Takahashi; David M. Virshup; Ray Boot-Handford; Michael H. Hastings; Andrew Loudon

The intrinsic period of circadian clocks is their defining adaptive property. To identify the biochemical mechanisms whereby casein kinase1 (CK1) determines circadian period in mammals, we created mouse null and tau mutants of Ck1 epsilon. Circadian period lengthened in CK1epsilon-/-, whereas CK1epsilon(tau/tau) shortened circadian period of behavior in vivo and suprachiasmatic nucleus firing rates in vitro, by accelerating PERIOD-dependent molecular feedback loops. CK1epsilon(tau/tau) also accelerated molecular oscillations in peripheral tissues, revealing its global role in circadian pacemaking. CK1epsilon(tau) acted by promoting degradation of both nuclear and cytoplasmic PERIOD, but not CRYPTOCHROME, proteins. Together, these whole-animal and biochemical studies explain how tau, as a gain-of-function mutation, acts at a specific circadian phase to promote degradation of PERIOD proteins and thereby accelerate the mammalian clockwork in brain and periphery.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

The nuclear receptor REV-ERBα mediates circadian regulation of innate immunity through selective regulation of inflammatory cytokines

Julie Gibbs; John Blaikley; Stephen Beesley; Laura Matthews; Karen D. Simpson; Susan H. Boyce; Stuart N. Farrow; Kathryn J. Else; Dave Singh; David Ray; Andrew Loudon

Diurnal variation in inflammatory and immune function is evident in the physiology and pathology of humans and animals, but molecular mechanisms and mediating cell types that provide this gating remain unknown. By screening cytokine responses in mice to endotoxin challenge at different times of day, we reveal that the magnitude of response exhibited pronounced temporal dependence, yet only within a subset of proinflammatory cytokines. Disruption of the circadian clockwork in macrophages (primary effector cells of the innate immune system) by conditional targeting of a key clock gene (bmal1) removed all temporal gating of endotoxin-induced cytokine response in cultured cells and in vivo. Loss of circadian gating was coincident with suppressed rev-erbα expression, implicating this nuclear receptor as a potential link between the clock and inflammatory pathways. This finding was confirmed in vivo and in vitro through genetic and pharmacological modulation of REV-ERBα activity. Circadian gating of endotoxin response was lost in rev-erbα−/− mice and in cultured macrophages from these animals, despite maintenance of circadian rhythmicity within these cells. Using human macrophages, which show circadian clock gene oscillations and rhythmic endotoxin responses, we demonstrate that administration of a synthetic REV-ERB ligand, or genetic knockdown of rev-erbα expression, is effective at modulating the production and release of the proinflammatory cytokine IL-6. This work demonstrates that the macrophage clockwork provides temporal gating of systemic responses to endotoxin, and identifies REV-ERBα as the key link between the clock and immune function. REV-ERBα may therefore represent a unique therapeutic target in human inflammatory disease.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Entrainment of disrupted circadian behavior through inhibition of casein kinase 1 (CK1) enzymes

Qing Jun Meng; Elizabeth S. Maywood; David A. Bechtold; Wei Qun Lu; Jian Li; Julie Gibbs; Sandrine M. Dupre; Johanna E. Chesham; Francis Rajamohan; John D. Knafels; Blossom Sneed; Laura E. Zawadzke; Jeffrey F. Ohren; Kevin Walton; Travis T. Wager; Michael H. Hastings; Andrew Loudon

Circadian pacemaking requires the orderly synthesis, posttranslational modification, and degradation of clock proteins. In mammals, mutations in casein kinase 1 (CK1) ε or δ can alter the circadian period, but the particular functions of the WT isoforms within the pacemaker remain unclear. We selectively targeted WT CK1ε and CK1δ using pharmacological inhibitors (PF-4800567 and PF-670462, respectively) alongside genetic knockout and knockdown to reveal that CK1 activity is essential to molecular pacemaking. Moreover, CK1δ is the principal regulator of the clock period: pharmacological inhibition of CK1δ, but not CK1ε, significantly lengthened circadian rhythms in locomotor activity in vivo and molecular oscillations in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) and peripheral tissue slices in vitro. Period lengthening mediated by CK1δ inhibition was accompanied by nuclear retention of PER2 protein both in vitro and in vivo. Furthermore, phase mapping of the molecular clockwork in vitro showed that PF-670462 treatment lengthened the period in a phase-specific manner, selectively extending the duration of PER2-mediated transcriptional feedback. These findings suggested that CK1δ inhibition might be effective in increasing the amplitude and synchronization of disrupted circadian oscillators. This was tested using arrhythmic SCN slices derived from Vipr2−/− mice, in which PF-670462 treatment transiently restored robust circadian rhythms of PER2::Luc bioluminescence. Moreover, in mice rendered behaviorally arrhythmic by the Vipr2−/− mutation or by constant light, daily treatment with PF-670462 elicited robust 24-h activity cycles that persisted throughout treatment. Accordingly, selective pharmacological targeting of the endogenous circadian regulator CK1δ offers an avenue for therapeutic modulation of perturbed circadian behavior.


Nature Medicine | 2014

An epithelial circadian clock controls pulmonary inflammation and glucocorticoid action

Julie Gibbs; Louise Ince; Laura Matthews; Junjie Mei; Thomas J. Bell; Nan Yang; Ben Saer; Nicola Begley; Toryn M. Poolman; Marie Pariollaud; Stuart N. Farrow; Francesco J. DeMayo; Tracy Hussell; G Scott Worthen; David Ray; Andrew Loudon

The circadian system is an important regulator of immune function. Human inflammatory lung diseases frequently show time-of-day variation in symptom severity and lung function, but the mechanisms and cell types underlying these effects remain unclear. We show that pulmonary antibacterial responses are modulated by a circadian clock within epithelial club (Clara) cells. These drive circadian neutrophil recruitment to the lung via the chemokine CXCL5. Genetic ablation of the clock gene Bmal1 (also called Arntl or MOP3) in bronchiolar cells disrupts rhythmic Cxcl5 expression, resulting in exaggerated inflammatory responses to lipopolysaccharide and an impaired host response to Streptococcus pneumoniae infection. Adrenalectomy blocks rhythmic inflammatory responses and the circadian regulation of CXCL5, suggesting a key role for the adrenal axis in driving CXCL5 expression and pulmonary neutrophil recruitment. Glucocorticoid receptor occupancy at the Cxcl5 locus shows circadian oscillations, but this is disrupted in mice with bronchiole-specific ablation of Bmal1, leading to enhanced CXCL5 expression despite normal corticosteroid secretion. The therapeutic effects of the synthetic glucocorticoid dexamethasone depend on intact clock function in the airway. We now define a regulatory mechanism that links the circadian clock and glucocorticoid hormones to control both time-of-day variation and the magnitude of pulmonary inflammation and responses to bacterial infection.


Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics | 2009

Selective inhibition of casein kinase 1 epsilon minimally alters circadian clock period.

Kevin Walton; Katherine Fisher; David M. Rubitski; Michael Marconi; Qing Jun Meng; Martin Sládek; Jessica Adams; Michael Bass; Rama Y. Chandrasekaran; Todd William Butler; Matt Griffor; Francis Rajamohan; Megan Serpa; Yuhpyng Chen; Michelle Claffey; Michael H. Hastings; Andrew Loudon; Elizabeth S. Maywood; Jeffrey F. Ohren; Angela C. Doran; Travis T. Wager

The circadian clock links our daily cycles of sleep and activity to the external environment. Deregulation of the clock is implicated in a number of human disorders, including depression, seasonal affective disorder, and metabolic disorders. Casein kinase 1 epsilon (CK1ϵ) and casein kinase 1 delta (CK1δ) are closely related Ser-Thr protein kinases that serve as key clock regulators as demonstrated by mammalian mutations in each that dramatically alter the circadian period. Therefore, inhibitors of CK1δ/ϵ may have utility in treating circadian disorders. Although we previously demonstrated that a pan-CK1δ/ϵ inhibitor, 4-[3-cyclohexyl-5-(4-fluoro-phenyl)-3H-imidazol-4-yl]-pyrimidin-2-ylamine (PF-670462), causes a significant phase delay in animal models of circadian rhythm, it remains unclear whether one of the kinases has a predominant role in regulating the circadian clock. To test this, we have characterized 3-(3-chloro-phenoxymethyl)-1-(tetrahydro-pyran-4-yl)-1H-pyrazolo[3,4-d]pyrimidin-4-ylamine (PF-4800567), a novel and potent inhibitor of CK1ϵ (IC50 = 32 nM) with greater than 20-fold selectivity over CK1δ. PF-4800567 completely blocks CK1ϵ-mediated PER3 nuclear localization and PER2 degradation. In cycling Rat1 fibroblasts and a mouse model of circadian rhythm, however, PF-4800567 has only a minimal effect on the circadian clock at concentrations substantially over its CK1ϵ IC50. This is in contrast to the pan-CK1δ/ϵ inhibitor PF-670462 that robustly alters the circadian clock under similar conditions. These data indicate that CK1ϵ is not the predominant mediator of circadian timing relative to CK1δ. PF-4800567 should prove useful in probing unique roles between these two kinases in multiple signaling pathways.


Neuron | 2013

A Gq-Ca2+ axis controls circuit-level encoding of circadian time in the suprachiasmatic nucleus.

Marco Brancaccio; Elizabeth S. Maywood; Johanna E. Chesham; Andrew Loudon; Michael H. Hastings

Summary The role of intracellular transcriptional/post-translational feedback loops (TTFL) within the circadian pacemaker of the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is well established. In contrast, contributions from G-coupled pathways and cytosolic rhythms to the intercellular control of SCN pacemaking are poorly understood. We therefore combined viral transduction of SCN slices with fluorescence/bioluminescence imaging to visualize GCaMP3-reported circadian oscillations of intracellular calcium [Ca2+]i alongside activation of Ca2+/cAMP-responsive elements. We phase-mapped them to the TTFL, in time and SCN space, and demonstrated their dependence upon G-coupled vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) signaling. Pharmacogenetic manipulation revealed the individual contributions of Gq, Gs, and Gi to cytosolic and TTFL circadian rhythms. Importantly, activation of Gq-dependent (but not Gs or Gi) pathways in a minority of neurons reprogrammed [Ca2+]i and TTFL rhythms across the entire SCN. This reprogramming was mediated by intrinsic VIPergic signaling, thus revealing a Gq/[Ca2+]i-VIP leitmotif and unanticipated plasticity within network encoding of SCN circadian time.


Journal of Neuroendocrinology | 2003

Leptin and seasonal mammals.

Karine Rousseau; Z. Atcha; Andrew Loudon

Seasonal mammals commonly exhibit robust annual cycles of adiposity, food intake and energy metabolism. These cycles are driven by changes in the external daylength signal, which generates a diurnal melatonin profile and acts on neuroendocrine pathways. The white adipose tissue hormone leptin reflects overall adiposity in seasonal mammals, and consequently undergoes significant seasonal fluctuations in secretion. The seasonally breeding Siberian (Djungarian) hamster is a convenient laboratory model to study the effect of a seasonal time‐keeping clock on energy metabolism, appetite regulation and the control of adiposity. We have shown that administration of exogenous leptin at physiological doses induces significant loss of adipose tissue for short‐day housed winter‐like hamsters in which endogenous adipose tissue and leptin concentrations are already low. By contrast, long‐day housed hamsters with high adipose tissue reserves are refractory to the effects of leptin. This phenomenon of seasonal leptin resistance appears to be a general feature of other seasonally breeding mammals, and may reflect the operation of an annual timer controlling leptin uptake and/or action on central nervous system signal transduction pathways. The mobilization of fat by leptin in short‐day housed hamsters is not associated with changes in expression in either anorexic or anabolic peptides expressed in leptin‐receptor rich structures in the arcuate region of the hypothalamus, and suggests that leptin may target other structures. These data contrast with studies, which show that homeostatic mechanisms in response to feed‐restriction induce changes in hypothalamic peptides in a similar manner to nonphotoperiodic species. Thus, the long‐term seasonal regulation of body weight set point and leptin feedback may operate through separate pathways to those responsible for acute responses to food restriction.


Journal of Cell Science | 2008

Ligand modulation of REV-ERBα function resets the peripheral circadian clock in a phasic manner

Qing Jun Meng; Andrew McMaster; Stephen Beesley; Wei Qun Lu; Julie Gibbs; Derek J. Parks; Jon L. Collins; Stuart N. Farrow; Rachelle Donn; David Ray; Andrew Loudon

The nuclear receptor REV-ERBα is a key negative-feedback regulator of the biological clock. REV-ERBα binds to ROR elements of the Bmal1 (Arntl) promoter and represses Bmal1 transcription. This stabilizing negative loop is important for precise control of the circadian pacemaker. In the present study, we identified a novel synthetic REV-ERBα ligand, which enhances the recruitment of nuclear receptor co-repressor (NCoR) to REV-ERBα. In order to explore REV-ERBα action on resetting responses of the molecular clock, we first established the rhythmic transcription profile and expression level of REV-ERBα in Rat-1 fibroblasts. When applied at different phases of the circadian oscillation to cell models containing stably transfected Bmal1::Luc or Per2::Luc, the REV-ERBα ligand induced phase-dependent bi-directional phase shifts. When the phase changes were plotted against time, a clear phase response curve was revealed, with a significant peak-to-trough amplitude of ca. 5 hours. The phase-resetting effect was also observed when the compound was applied to primary lung fibroblasts and ectopic lung slices from transgenic PER2::Luc mice. Therefore, similar regulation of REV-ERBα function by endogenous ligands, such as heme, is likely to be an important mechanism for clock resetting. In addition, we identify a new means to generate phasic shifts in the clock.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Lithium Impacts on the Amplitude and Period of the Molecular Circadian Clockwork

Jian Li; Wei Qun Lu; Stephen Beesley; Andrew Loudon; Qing Jun Meng

Lithium salt has been widely used in treatment of Bipolar Disorder, a mental disturbance associated with circadian rhythm disruptions. Lithium mildly but consistently lengthens circadian period of behavioural rhythms in multiple organisms. To systematically address the impacts of lithium on circadian pacemaking and the underlying mechanisms, we measured locomotor activity in mice in vivo following chronic lithium treatment, and also tracked clock protein dynamics (PER2::Luciferase) in vitro in lithium-treated tissue slices/cells. Lithium lengthens period of both the locomotor activity rhythms, as well as the molecular oscillations in the suprachiasmatic nucleus, lung tissues and fibroblast cells. In addition, we also identified significantly elevated PER2::LUC expression and oscillation amplitude in both central and peripheral pacemakers. Elevation of PER2::LUC by lithium was not associated with changes in protein stabilities of PER2, but instead with increased transcription of Per2 gene. Although lithium and GSK3 inhibition showed opposing effects on clock period, they acted in a similar fashion to up-regulate PER2 expression and oscillation amplitude. Collectively, our data have identified a novel amplitude-enhancing effect of lithium on the PER2 protein rhythms in the central and peripheral circadian clockwork, which may involve a GSK3-mediated signalling pathway. These findings may advance our understanding of the therapeutic actions of lithium in Bipolar Disorder or other psychiatric diseases that involve circadian rhythm disruptions.

Collaboration


Dive into the Andrew Loudon's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Julie Gibbs

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Le Yu

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dave Burt

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Qing Jun Meng

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Blaikley

University of Manchester

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge