Angela Richard-Londt
UCL Institute of Neurology
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Featured researches published by Angela Richard-Londt.
Cell Metabolism | 2013
Laura D. Osellame; Ahad A. Rahim; Iain Hargreaves; Matthew E. Gegg; Angela Richard-Londt; Sebastian Brandner; Simon N. Waddington; A. H. V. Schapira; Michael R. Duchen
Summary Mutations in the glucocerebrosidase (gba) gene cause Gaucher disease (GD), the most common lysosomal storage disorder, and increase susceptibility to Parkinson’s disease (PD). While the clinical and pathological features of idiopathic PD and PD related to gba (PD-GBA) mutations are very similar, cellular mechanisms underlying neurodegeneration in each are unclear. Using a mouse model of neuronopathic GD, we show that autophagic machinery and proteasomal machinery are defective in neurons and astrocytes lacking gba. Markers of neurodegeneration—p62/SQSTM1, ubiquitinated proteins, and insoluble α-synuclein—accumulate. Mitochondria were dysfunctional and fragmented, with impaired respiration, reduced respiratory chain complex activities, and a decreased potential maintained by reversal of the ATP synthase. Thus a primary lysosomal defect causes accumulation of dysfunctional mitochondria as a result of impaired autophagy and dysfunctional proteasomal pathways. These data provide conclusive evidence for mitochondrial dysfunction in GD and provide insight into the pathogenesis of PD and PD-GBA.
Nature | 2015
Emmanuel A. Asante; Michelle Smidak; Andrew Grimshaw; R. A. Houghton; Andrew Tomlinson; Asif Jeelani; Tatiana Jakubcova; Shyma Hamdan; Angela Richard-Londt; Jacqueline M. Linehan; Sebastian Brandner; Michael P. Alpers; Jerome Whitfield; Simon Mead; Jonathan D. F. Wadsworth; John Collinge
Mammalian prions, transmissible agents causing lethal neurodegenerative diseases, are composed of assemblies of misfolded cellular prion protein (PrP). A novel PrP variant, G127V, was under positive evolutionary selection during the epidemic of kuru—an acquired prion disease epidemic of the Fore population in Papua New Guinea—and appeared to provide strong protection against disease in the heterozygous state. Here we have investigated the protective role of this variant and its interaction with the common, worldwide M129V PrP polymorphism. V127 was seen exclusively on a M129 PRNP allele. We demonstrate that transgenic mice expressing both variant and wild-type human PrP are completely resistant to both kuru and classical Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease (CJD) prions (which are closely similar) but can be infected with variant CJD prions, a human prion strain resulting from exposure to bovine spongiform encephalopathy prions to which the Fore were not exposed. Notably, mice expressing only PrP V127 were completely resistant to all prion strains, demonstrating a different molecular mechanism to M129V, which provides its relative protection against classical CJD and kuru in the heterozygous state. Indeed, this single amino acid substitution (G→V) at a residue invariant in vertebrate evolution is as protective as deletion of the protein. Further study in transgenic mice expressing different ratios of variant and wild-type PrP indicates that not only is PrP V127 completely refractory to prion conversion but acts as a potent dose-dependent inhibitor of wild-type prion propagation.
Nature Communications | 2014
Malin K. Sandberg; Huda Al-Doujaily; Bernadette Sharps; De Oliveira Mw; Schmidt C; Angela Richard-Londt; Lyall S; Jacqueline M. Linehan; S Brandner; Jdf Wadsworth; Anthony R. Clarke; John Collinge
Prions are lethal infectious agents thought to consist of multi-chain forms (PrPSc) of misfolded cellular prion protein (PrPC). Prion propagation proceeds in two distinct mechanistic phases: an exponential phase 1, which rapidly reaches a fixed level of infectivity irrespective of PrPC expression level, and a plateau (phase 2), which continues until clinical onset with duration inversely proportional to PrPC expression level. We hypothesized that neurotoxicity relates to distinct neurotoxic species produced following a pathway switch when prion levels saturate. Here we show a linear increase of proteinase K-sensitive PrP isoforms distinct from classical PrPSc at a rate proportional to PrPC concentration, commencing at the phase transition and rising until clinical onset. The unaltered level of total PrP during phase 1, when prion infectivity increases a million-fold, indicates that prions comprise a small minority of total PrP. This is consistent with PrPC concentration not being rate limiting to exponential prion propagation and neurotoxicity relating to critical concentrations of alternate PrP isoforms whose production is PrPC concentration dependent.
Cancer Cell | 2017
Manav Pathania; Nicolas De Jay; Nicola Maestro; Ashot S. Harutyunyan; Justyna Nitarska; Pirasteh Pahlavan; Stephen Henderson; Leonie G. Mikael; Angela Richard-Londt; Ying Zhang; Joana R. Costa; Steven Hébert; Sima Khazaei; Nisreen Samir Ibrahim; Javier Herrero; Antonella Riccio; Steffen Albrecht; Robin Ketteler; Sebastian Brandner; Claudia L. Kleinman; Nada Jabado; Paolo Salomoni
Gain-of-function mutations in histone 3 (H3) variants are found in a substantial proportion of pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGG), often in association with TP53 loss and platelet-derived growth factor receptor alpha (PDGFRA) amplification. Here, we describe a somatic mouse model wherein H3.3K27M and Trp53 loss alone are sufficient for neoplastic transformation if introduced in utero. H3.3K27M-driven lesions are clonal, H3K27me3 depleted, Olig2 positive, highly proliferative, and diffusely spreading, thus recapitulating hallmark molecular and histopathological features of pHGG. Addition of wild-type PDGFRA decreases latency and increases tumor invasion, while ATRX knockdown is associated with more circumscribed tumors. H3.3K27M-tumor cells serially engraft in recipient mice, and preliminary drug screening reveals mutation-specific vulnerabilities. Overall, we provide a faithful H3.3K27M-pHGG model which enables insights into oncohistone pathogenesis and investigation of future therapies.
Open Biology | 2016
Raya Al-Shawi; Glenys A. Tennent; David J. Millar; Angela Richard-Londt; Sebastian Brandner; David J. Werring; J. Paul Simons; Mark B. Pepys
Human amyloid deposits always contain the normal plasma protein serum amyloid P component (SAP), owing to its avid but reversible binding to all amyloid fibrils, including the amyloid β (Aβ) fibrils in the cerebral parenchyma plaques and cerebrovascular amyloid deposits of Alzheimers disease (AD) and cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA). SAP promotes amyloid fibril formation in vitro, contributes to persistence of amyloid in vivo and is also itself directly toxic to cerebral neurons. We therefore developed (R)-1-[6-[(R)-2-carboxy-pyrrolidin-1-yl]-6-oxo-hexanoyl]pyrrolidine-2-carboxylic acid (CPHPC), a drug that removes SAP from the blood, and thereby also from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), in patients with AD. Here we report that, after introduction of transgenic human SAP expression in the TASTPM double transgenic mouse model of AD, all the amyloid deposits contained human SAP. Depletion of circulating human SAP by CPHPC administration in these mice removed all detectable human SAP from both the intracerebral and cerebrovascular amyloid. The demonstration that removal of SAP from the blood and CSF also removes it from these amyloid deposits crucially validates the strategy of the forthcoming ‘Depletion of serum amyloid P component in Alzheimers disease (DESPIAD)’ clinical trial of CPHPC. The results also strongly support clinical testing of CPHPC in patients with CAA.
Nature Medicine | 2018
Giulia Massaro; Citra Nurfarah Zaini Mattar; Andrew Wong; Ernestas Sirka; Suzanne M. K. Buckley; Bronwen R. Herbert; Stefan Karlsson; Dany Perocheau; Derek Burke; Simon Heales; Angela Richard-Londt; Sebastian Brandner; Mylene Huebecker; David A. Priestman; Frances M. Platt; Kevin Mills; Arijit Biswas; Jonathan D. Cooper; Jerry Chan; Seng H. Cheng; Simon N. Waddington; Ahad A. Rahim
For inherited genetic diseases, fetal gene therapy offers the potential of prophylaxis against early, irreversible and lethal pathological change. To explore this, we studied neuronopathic Gaucher disease (nGD), caused by mutations in GBA. In adult patients, the milder form presents with hepatomegaly, splenomegaly and occasional lung and bone disease; this is managed, symptomatically, by enzyme replacement therapy. The acute childhood lethal form of nGD is untreatable since enzyme cannot cross the blood–brain barrier. Patients with nGD exhibit signs consistent with hindbrain neurodegeneration, including neck hyperextension, strabismus and, often, fatal apnea1. We selected a mouse model of nGD carrying a loxP-flanked neomycin disruption of Gba plus Cre recombinase regulated by the keratinocyte-specific K14 promoter. Exclusive skin expression of Gba prevents fatal neonatal dehydration. Instead, mice develop fatal neurodegeneration within 15 days2. Using this model, fetal intracranial injection of adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector reconstituted neuronal glucocerebrosidase expression. Mice lived for up to at least 18 weeks, were fertile and fully mobile. Neurodegeneration was abolished and neuroinflammation ameliorated. Neonatal intervention also rescued mice but less effectively. As the next step to clinical translation, we also demonstrated the feasibility of ultrasound-guided global AAV gene transfer to fetal macaque brains.In utero GBA gene therapy extends lifespan and provides long-lasting phenotypic amelioration in a mouse model of neuronopathic Gaucher disease. Fetal ultrasound-guided in utero gene vector delivery is also achieved in the non-human primate brain.
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2018
Clare Rusbridge; F.J. Salguero; Monique David; Kiterie M. E. Faller; Jose T. Bras; Rita Guerreiro; Angela Richard-Londt; Duncan Grainger; Elizabeth Head; Sebastian Brandner; Brian A. Summers; John Hardy; Mourad Tayebi
Many of the molecular and pathological features associated with human Alzheimer disease (AD) are mirrored in the naturally occurring age-associated neuropathology in the canine species. In aged dogs with declining learned behavior and memory the severity of cognitive dysfunction parallels the progressive build up and location of Aβ in the brain. The main aim of this work was to study the biological behavior of soluble oligomers isolated from an aged dog with cognitive dysfunction through investigating their interaction with a human cell line and synthetic Aβ peptides. We report that soluble oligomers were specifically detected in the dogs blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) via anti-oligomer- and anti-Aβ specific binders. Importantly, our results reveal the potent neurotoxic effects of the dogs CSF on cell viability and the seeding efficiency of the CSF-borne soluble oligomers on the thermodynamic activity and the aggregation kinetics of synthetic human Aβ. The value of further characterizing the naturally occurring Alzheimer-like neuropathology in dogs using genetic and molecular tools is discussed.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Marie K. Bondulich; Nelly Jolinon; Georgina F. Osborne; Edward J. Smith; Ivan Rattray; Andreas Neueder; Kirupa Sathasivam; Mhoriam Ahmed; Nadira Ali; Agnesska C. Benjamin; Xiaoli Chang; James R.T. Dick; Matthew Ellis; Sophie A. Franklin; Daniel Goodwin; Linda Inuabasi; Hayley Lazell; Adam Lehar; Angela Richard-Londt; Jim Rosinski; Donna L. Smith; Tobias C. Wood; Sarah J. Tabrizi; Sebastian Brandner; Linda Greensmith; David Howland; Ignacio Munoz-Sanjuan; Se-Jin Lee; Gillian P. Bates
Huntington’s disease (HD) is an inherited neurodegenerative disorder of which skeletal muscle atrophy is a common feature, and multiple lines of evidence support a muscle-based pathophysiology in HD mouse models. Inhibition of myostatin signaling increases muscle mass, and therapeutic approaches based on this are in clinical development. We have used a soluble ActRIIB decoy receptor (ACVR2B/Fc) to test the effects of myostatin/activin A inhibition in the R6/2 mouse model of HD. Weekly administration from 5 to 11 weeks of age prevented body weight loss, skeletal muscle atrophy, muscle weakness, contractile abnormalities, the loss of functional motor units in EDL muscles and delayed end-stage disease. Inhibition of myostatin/activin A signaling activated transcriptional profiles to increase muscle mass in wild type and R6/2 mice but did little to modulate the extensive Huntington’s disease-associated transcriptional dysregulation, consistent with treatment having little impact on HTT aggregation levels. Modalities that inhibit myostatin signaling are currently in clinical trials for a variety of indications, the outcomes of which will present the opportunity to assess the potential benefits of targeting this pathway in HD patients.
Cell Reports | 2017
Valeria Amodeo; Deli A; Joanne Betts; Stefano Bartesaghi; Ying Zhang; Angela Richard-Londt; Matthew Ellis; Rozita Roshani; Mikaella Vouri; Sara Galavotti; Sarah Oberndorfer; Ana Paula Leite; Alan Mackay; Aikaterini Lampada; Eva W. Stratford; Ningning Li; David Dinsdale; David Grimwade; Chris Jones; Pierluigi Nicotera; David Michod; Sebastian Brandner; Paolo Salomoni
Neuro-oncology | 2018
Ying Zhang; Li Ningning; Joanne Lau; Angela Richard-Londt; Andreas von Deimling; Stefan Pusch; Sebastian Brandner