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Dive into the research topics where Anne M. Glazier is active.

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Featured researches published by Anne M. Glazier.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Identification of Cd36 (Fat) as an insulin-resistance gene causing defective fatty acid and glucose metabolism in hypertensive rats

Timothy J. Aitman; Anne M. Glazier; Caroline A. Wallace; Lisa D. Cooper; Penny J. Norsworthy; Faisal N. Wahid; Khulood M. Al-Majali; Paul M. Trembling; Christopher J. Mann; Carol C. Shoulders; Daniel Graf; Elizabeth St. Lezin; Theodore W. Kurtz; Vladimir Kren; Michal Pravenec; Azeddine Ibrahimi; Nada A. Abumrad; Lawrence W. Stanton; James Scott

The human insulin-resistance syndromes, type 2 diabetes, obesity, combined hyperlipidaemia and essential hypertension, are complex disorders whose genetic basis is unknown. The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) is insulin resistant and a model of these human syndromes. Quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for SHR defects in glucose and fatty acid metabolism, hypertriglyceridaemia and hypertension map to a single locus on rat chromosome 4. Here we combine use of cDNA microarrays, congenic mapping and radiation hybrid (RH) mapping to identify a defective SHR gene, Cd36 (also known as Fat, as it encodes fatty acid translocase), at the peak of linkage to these QTLs. SHR Cd36 cDNA contains multiple sequence variants, caused by unequal genomic recombination of a duplicated ancestral gene. The encoded protein product is undetectable in SHR adipocyte plasma membrane. Transgenic mice overexpressing Cd36 have reduced blood lipids. We conclude that Cd36 deficiency underlies insulin resistance, defective fatty acid metabolism and hypertriglyceridaemia in SHR and may be important in the pathogenesis of human insulin-resistance syndromes.


Nature Genetics | 2001

Transgenic rescue of defective Cd36 ameliorates insulin resistance in spontaneously hypertensive rats

Michal Pravenec; Vladimír Landa; Vaclav Zidek; Alena Musilova; Vladimir Kren; Ludmila Kazdova; Timothy J. Aitman; Anne M. Glazier; Azeddine Ibrahimi; Nada A. Abumrad; Nianning Qi; Jia-Ming Wang; Elizabeth St. Lezin; Theodore W. Kurtz

Spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) display several features of the human insulin-resistance syndromes. Cd36 deficiency is genetically linked to insulin resistance in SHR. We show that transgenic expression of Cd36 in SHR ameliorates insulin resistance and lowers serum fatty acids. Our results provide direct evidence that Cd36 deficiency can promote defective insulin action and disordered fatty-acid metabolism in spontaneous hypertension.


Mammalian Genome | 2002

Molecular basis of the Cd36 chromosomal deletion underlying SHR defects in insulin action and fatty acid metabolism

Anne M. Glazier; James Scott; Timothy J. Aitman

Abstract. The human insulin resistance syndromes—type 2 diabetes, obesity, combined hyperlipidemia, and essential hypertension—are genetically complex disorders whose molecular basis is largely unknown. The spontaneously hypertensive rate (SHR) is a model of these human syndromes. In the SHR/NCrlBR strain, a chromosomal deletion event that occurred at the Cd36 locus during the evolution of this SHR strain has been proposed as a cause of defective insulin action and fatty acid metabolism. In this study, three copies of the Cd36 gene, one transcribed copy and two pseudogenes, were identified in normal rat strains, but only a single gene in SHR/NCrlBR. Analysis of SHR genomic sequence localized the chromosomal deletion event between intron 4 of the normally transcribed copy of the gene and intron 4 of the second pseudogene. The deletion led to the creation of a single chimeric Cd36 gene in SHR/NCrlBR. The boundaries of the recombination/deletion junction identified within intron 4 were surrounded by long interspersed nuclear elements (LINEs) and DNA topoisomerase I recognition sequences. An 8-bp deletion at the intron 14/exon 15 boundary of the second pseudogene abolishes the putative splice acceptor site and is the cause of an aberrant 3′ UTR previously observed in SHR/NCrlBR. We conclude that in SHR/NCrlBR, the complex trait of insulin resistance and defective fatty acid metabolism is caused by Cd36 deficiency, resulting from a chromosomal deletion caused by unequal recombination. This demonstrates that chromosomal deletions caused by unequal recombination can be a cause of quantitative or complex mammalian phenotypes.


Experimental Nephrology | 2002

Segregation of experimental autoimmune glomerulonephritis as a complex genetic trait and exclusion of Col4a3 as a candidate gene.

John Reynolds; Paul R. Cook; James J. Ryan; Penny J. Norsworthy; Anne M. Glazier; Mark Duda; David J. Evans; Timothy J. Aitman; Charles D. Pusey

Experimental autoimmune glomerulonephritis (EAG), an animal model of Goodpasture’s disease, can be induced in Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats (RT1-l) by immunization with rat glomerular basement membrane (GBM) in adjuvant. The model in this rat strain is characterized by anti-GBM antibody production accompanied by focal necrotizing glomerulonephritis with crescent formation. The main autoantigen in humans and rats has been identified as the non-collagenous domain of the α3 chain of type IV collagen (α3(IV)NC1). By contrast, Lewis (LEW) rats with the same MHC background (RT1-l), immunized with the same antigen, develop similar levels of circulating anti-GBM antibodies, but no histological evidence of nephritis. In order to investigate the genetic basis of susceptibility to EAG, we examined the response of both F1 (WKY × LEW) and backcross (BC1; WKY × F1) rats to immunization with rat GBM. F1 animals were completely resistant to the development of EAG, while BC1 animals showed a range of responses from severe crescentic glomerulonephritis to no histological evidence of disease. The results indicate that EAG is inherited as a complex trait under the control of WKY genes unlinked to the MHC. cDNA sequence analysis of α3(IV)NC1 in the two parental strains was identical, indicating no predicted amino acid sequence variation in the α3(IV)NC1 domain between these strains. Radiation hybrid mapping, using two separate PCR amplicons from rat α3(IV)NC1, localized rat Col4a3 to a region of chromosome 9. Since Col4a3 (encoding the autoantigen) is a candidate for susceptibility to EAG, we screened the region of rat chromosome 9 where Col4a3 is localized, using polymorphic microsatellite markers in segregating BC1 progeny. No significant linkage was detected. These results exclude Col4a3 as a recessive susceptibility gene for EAG in the BC1 progeny.


Mammalian Genome | 1999

A high-resolution radiation hybrid map of the proximal region of rat Chromosome 4

Khulood M. Al-Majali; Anne M. Glazier; Penny J. Norsworthy; Faisal N. Wahid; Lisa D. Cooper; Caroline A. Wallace; James Scott; Berthold Lausen; Timothy J. Aitman

Abstract. Radiation hybrid (RH) mapping has been used to produce genome maps in the human and mouse, but as yet the technique has been applied little to other species. We describe the use of RH mapping in the rat, using a newly available rat/hamster RH panel, to construct an RH map of the proximal part of rat Chromosome (Chr) 4. This region is of interest because quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for defective insulin and catecholamine action, hypertension, and dyslipidemia map to this region. The RH map includes 23 rat genes or microsatellites previously mapped to this part of Chr 4, one rat gene not previously mapped in the rat, and markers for four new genes, homologs of which map to the syntenic region of the mouse genome. The RH map integrates genetic markers previously mapped on several rat crosses, increases the resolution of existing maps, and may provide a suitable basis for physical map construction and gene identification in this chromosomal region. Our results demonstrate the utility of RH mapping in the rat genome and show that RH mapping can be used to localize, in the rat genome, the homologs of genes from other species such as the mouse. This will facilitate identification of candidate genes underlying QTLs on this chromosomal segment.


Mammalian Genome | 2002

Radiation hybrid mapping of 70 rat genes from a data set of differentially expressed genes

Caroline A. Wallace; Saira Ali; Anne M. Glazier; Penny J. Norsworthy; Danilo C. Carlos; James Scott; Tom C. Freeman; Lawrence W. Stanton; Anne E. Kwitek; Timothy J. Aitman

Abstract. The spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) is a model of human essential hypertension. Increased blood pressure in SHR is associated with other risk factors associated with cardiovascular disease, including insulin resistance and dyslipidemia. DNA microarray studies identified over 200 differentially expressed genes and ESTs between SHR and normotensive control rats. These clones represent candidate genes that may underlie previously detected QTLs in SHR. This study made use of the publication of two whole-genome maps to identify positional QTL candidates. Radiation hybrid (RH) mapping was used to determine the chromosomal locations of 70 rat genes and ESTs from this dataset. Most of the locations are novel, but in five cases we identified a definitive map location for genes previously mapped by somatic cell hybrids and/or linkage analysis. Genes for which the mouse genome map location was already determined mapped to syntenic segments in the rat genome map, except for two rat genes whose map locations confirmed previous findings. Where synteny comparisons could be made only with the human, 74% of the genes mapped in this study lay in a conserved syntenic segment. Chromosomal localisation of these mouse and human orthologs to syntenic segments produces a high level of confidence in the data presented in this study. The data provide new map locations for rat genes and will aid efforts to advance the rat genome map. The data may also be used to prioritize candidate QTL genes in SHR and other rat strains on the basis of their map location.


Science | 2002

Finding genes that underlie complex traits

Anne M. Glazier; Joseph H. Nadeau; Timothy J. Aitman


Diabetes | 2000

Cd36 and molecular mechanisms of insulin resistance in the stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rat.

Mary Collison; Anne M. Glazier; Delyth Graham; James J. Morton; Marek H. Dominiczak; Timothy J. Aitman; John M. Connell; Gwyn W. Gould; Anna F. Dominiczak


Biometrics | 2006

Bayesian modeling of differential gene expression.

Alex Lewin; Sylvia Richardson; Clare Marshall; Anne M. Glazier; Tim Aitman


Archive | 2006

Bayesian modelling of di erential gene expression

Alexandra M. Lewin; Sylvia Richardson; Clare Marshall; Anne M. Glazier; Timothy J. Aitman

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Tim Aitman

Imperial College London

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Alex Lewin

Imperial College London

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