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Featured researches published by C. Mclean.


Cell Reports | 2017

Arc requires PSD95 for assembly into postsynaptic complexes involved with neural dysfunction and intelligence

Esperanza Fernández; Mark O. Collins; René A.W. Frank; Fei Zhu; Maksym V. Kopanitsa; Jess Nithianantharajah; Sarah Lempriere; David Fricker; Kathryn A. Elsegood; Catherine L. McLaughlin; Mike D R Croning; C. Mclean; J. Douglas Armstrong; W. David Hill; Ian J. Deary; Giulia Cencelli; Claudia Bagni; Menachem Fromer; Shaun Purcell; Andrew Pocklington; Jyoti S. Choudhary; Noboru H. Komiyama; Seth G. N. Grant

Summary Arc is an activity-regulated neuronal protein, but little is known about its interactions, assembly into multiprotein complexes, and role in human disease and cognition. We applied an integrated proteomic and genetic strategy by targeting a tandem affinity purification (TAP) tag and Venus fluorescent protein into the endogenous Arc gene in mice. This allowed biochemical and proteomic characterization of native complexes in wild-type and knockout mice. We identified many Arc-interacting proteins, of which PSD95 was the most abundant. PSD95 was essential for Arc assembly into 1.5-MDa complexes and activity-dependent recruitment to excitatory synapses. Integrating human genetic data with proteomic data showed that Arc-PSD95 complexes are enriched in schizophrenia, intellectual disability, autism, and epilepsy mutations and normal variants in intelligence. We propose that Arc-PSD95 postsynaptic complexes potentially affect human cognitive function.


Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience | 2017

Synaptic Interactome Mining Reveals p140Cap as a New Hub for PSD Proteins Involved in Psychiatric and Neurological Disorders

Annalisa Alfieri; Oksana Sorokina; Annie Adrait; Costanza Angelini; Isabella Russo; Alessandro Morellato; Michela Matteoli; Elisabetta Menna; Elisabetta Boeri Erba; C. Mclean; J. Douglas Armstrong; Ugo Ala; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Yohann Couté; Silvia De Rubeis; Emilia Turco; Paola Defilippi

Altered synaptic function has been associated with neurological and psychiatric conditions including intellectual disability, schizophrenia and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Amongst the recently discovered synaptic proteins is p140Cap, an adaptor that localizes at dendritic spines and regulates their maturation and physiology. We recently showed that p140Cap knockout mice have cognitive deficits, impaired long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD), and immature, filopodia-like dendritic spines. Only a few p140Cap interacting proteins have been identified in the brain and the molecular complexes and pathways underlying p140Cap synaptic function are largely unknown. Here, we isolated and characterized the p140Cap synaptic interactome by co-immunoprecipitation from crude mouse synaptosomes, followed by mass spectrometry-based proteomics. We identified 351 p140Cap interactors and found that they cluster to sub complexes mostly located in the postsynaptic density (PSD). p140Cap interactors converge on key synaptic processes, including transmission across chemical synapses, actin cytoskeleton remodeling and cell-cell junction organization. Gene co-expression data further support convergent functions: the p140Cap interactors are tightly co-expressed with each other and with p140Cap. Importantly, the p140Cap interactome and its co-expression network show strong enrichment in genes associated with schizophrenia, autism, bipolar disorder, intellectual disability and epilepsy, supporting synaptic dysfunction as a shared biological feature in brain diseases. Overall, our data provide novel insights into the molecular organization of the synapse and indicate that p140Cap acts as a hub for postsynaptic complexes relevant to psychiatric and neurological disorders.


Proteome | 2018

Regional Diversity in the Postsynaptic Proteome of the Mouse Brain

Marcia Roy; Oksana Sorokina; C. Mclean; Silvia Tapia-González; Javier DeFelipe; J. D. Armstrong; Seth G. N. Grant

The proteome of the postsynaptic terminal of excitatory synapses comprises over one thousand proteins in vertebrate species and plays a central role in behavior and brain disease. The brain is organized into anatomically distinct regions and whether the synapse proteome differs across these regions is poorly understood. Postsynaptic proteomes were isolated from seven forebrain and hindbrain regions in mice and their composition determined using proteomic mass spectrometry. Seventy-four percent of proteins showed differential expression and each region displayed a unique compositional signature. These signatures correlated with the anatomical divisions of the brain and their embryological origins. Biochemical pathways controlling plasticity and disease, protein interaction networks and individual proteins involved with cognition all showed differential regional expression. Combining proteomic and connectomic data shows that interconnected regions have specific proteome signatures. Diversity in synapse proteome composition is key feature of mouse and human brain structure.


Journal of Proteomics & Bioinformatics | 2016

Improved Functional Enrichment Analysis of Biological Networks using Scalable Modularity Based Clustering

C. Mclean; Xin He; Ian T Simpson; Douglas J Armstrong


Archive | 2018

A synapse proteome resource for mouse brain regions

Oksana Sorokina; Marcia Roy; J. Douglas Armstrong; C. Mclean; Seth G. N. Grant; Silvia Tapia Gonzalez; Javier DeFelipe


Edinburgh Neuroscience Day 2017 | 2017

Community detection identifies a subnetwork of the synaptic proteome associated with differences in educational attainment

Grant Robertson; C. Mclean; Oksana Sorokina; David C. Sterratt; Emilia Wysocka; Katharina Heil; W. David Hill; Ian T Simpson; Douglas J Armstrong; Ian J. Deary

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Ian J. Deary

University of Edinburgh

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Marcia Roy

University of Edinburgh

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Javier DeFelipe

Spanish National Research Council

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David Fricker

Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

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