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Dive into the research topics where Carol Readhead is active.

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Featured researches published by Carol Readhead.


Neuron | 1994

Premature arrest of myelin formation in transgenic mice with increased proteolipid protein gene dosage

Carol Readhead; Armin Schneider; I. R. Griffiths; Klaus-Armin Nave

Proteolipid protein (PLP) is an integral membrane protein of CNS myelin. Mutations of the X chromosome-linked PLP gene cause glial cell death and myelin deficiency in jimpy mice and other neurological mutants. As part of an attempt to rescue these mutants by transgenic complementation, we generated normal mouse lines expressing autosomal copies of the entire wild-type PLP gene. Surprisingly, increase of the PLP gene dosage in nonmutant mice with only 2-fold transcriptional overexpression results in a novel phenotype characterized by severe hypomyelination and astrocytosis, seizures, and premature death. This demonstrates that precise control of the PLP gene is a critical determinant of terminal oligodendrocyte differentiation. Dysmyelination of PLP transgenic mice provides experimental evidence that Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease, previously associated with a partial duplication of the human X chromosome, can be caused by doubling of the PLP gene dosage.


Cell | 1987

Myelin deficient mice: Expression of myelin basic protein and generation of mice with varying levels of myelin

Brian Popko; Carmie Puckett; Eric Lai; H. David Shine; Carol Readhead; Naoki Takahashi; Stephen W. Hunt; Richard L. Sidman; Leroy Hood

Mice homozygous for the mutation myelin deficient (mld), an allele of shiverer, exhibit decreased CNS myelination, tremors, and convulsions of progressively increasing severity leading to an early death. In this report we demonstrate in mld mice that the gene encoding myelin basic protein (MBP) is expressed at decreased levels and on an abnormal temporal schedule relative to the wild-type gene. Southern blot analyses, field-inversion gel electrophoresis studies, and analyses of mld MBP cosmid clones indicate that there are multiple linked copies of the MBP gene in mld mice. We have introduced an MBP transgene into mld mice and found that myelination increases and tremors and convulsions decrease. Mld and shiverer mice with zero, one, or two copies of the MBP transgene express distinct levels of MBP mRNA and myelin. The availability of a range of mice expressing graded levels of myelin should facilitate quantitative analysis of the roles of MBP in the myelination process and of myelin in nerve function.


NeuroImage | 2006

Statistical diffusion tensor histology reveals regional dysmyelination effects in the shiverer mouse mutant

J. Michael Tyszka; Carol Readhead; Elaine L. Bearer; Robia G. Pautler; Russell E. Jacobs

Shiverer is an important model of central nervous system dysmyelination characterized by a deletion in the gene encoding myelin basic protein with relevance to human dysmyelinating and demyelinating diseases. Perfusion fixed brains from shiverer mutant (C3Fe.SWV Mbp(shi)/Mbp(shi)n = 6) and background control (C3HeB.FeJ, n = 6) mice were compared using contrast enhanced volumetric diffusion tensor magnetic resonance microscopy with a nominal isotropic spatial resolution of 80 mum. Images were accurately coregistered using non-linear warping allowing voxel-wise statistical parametric mapping of tensor invariant differences between control and shiverer groups. Highly significant differences in the tensor trace and both the axial and radial diffusivity were observed within the major white matter tracts and in the thalamus, midbrain, brainstem and cerebellar white matter, consistent with a high density of myelinated axons within these regions. The fractional anisotropy was found to be much less sensitive than the trace and eigenvalues to dysmyelination and associated microanatomic changes.


ieee visualization | 1998

Visualizing diffusion tensor images of the mouse spinal cord

David H. Laidlaw; Eric T. Ahrens; David Kremers; Matthew J. Avalos; Russell E. Jacobs; Carol Readhead

Within biological systems, water molecules undergo continuous stochastic Brownian motion. The diffusion rate can give clues to the structure of the underlying tissues. In some tissues, the rate is anisotropic. Diffusion-rate images can be calculated from diffusion-weighted MRI. A 2D diffusion tensor image (DTI) and an associated anatomical scalar field define seven values at each spatial location. We present two new methods for visually representing DTIs. The first method displays an array of ellipsoids, where the shape of each ellipsoid represents one tensor value. The ellipsoids are all normalized to approximately the same size so that they can be displayed simultaneously in context. The second method uses concepts from oil painting to represent the seven-valued data with multiple layers of varying brush strokes. Both methods successfully display most or all of the information in DTIs and provide exploratory methods for understanding them. The ellipsoid method has a simpler interpretation and explanation than the painting-motivated method; the painting-motivated method displays more of the information and is easier to read quantatively. We demonstrate the methods on images of the mouse spinal cord. The visualizations show significant differences between spinal cords from mice suffering from experimental allergic encephalomyelitis and spinal cords from wild-type mice. The differences are consistent with differences shown histologically and suggest that our new non-invasive imaging methodology and visualization of the results could have early diagnostic value for neurodegenerative diseases.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 1992

Morphometric Analysis of Normal, Mutant, and Transgenic CNS: Correlation of Myelin Basic Protein Expression to Myelinogenesis

H. David Shine; Carol Readhead; Brian Popko; Leroy Hood; Richard L. Sidman

Abstract: The neurological mutant mice shiverer (shi) and myelin deficient (shimld) lack a functional gene for the myelin basic proteins (MBP), have virtually no myelin in their CNS, shiver, seize, and die early. Mutant mice homozygous for an MBP transgene have MBP mRNA and MBP in net amounts approximately 25% of normal, have compact myelin, do not shiver or seize, and live normal life spans. We bred mice with various combinations of the normal, transgenic, shi, and shimld genes to produce mice that expressed MBP mRNA at levels of 0, 5, 12.5, 17.5, 50, 62.5, and 100% of normal. The CNS of these mice were analyzed for MBP content, tissue localization of MBP, degree of myelination, axon size, and myelin thickness. MBP protein content correlated with predicted MBP gene expression. Immunocytochemical staining localized MBP to white matter in normal and transgenic shi mice with an intensity of staining comparable to the degree of MBP gene expression. An increase in the percentage of myelinated axons and the thickness of myelin correlated with increased gene expression up to 50% of normal. The percentage of myelinated axons and myelin thickness remained constant at expression levels greater than 50%. The presence of axons loosely wrapped with oligodendrocytic membrane in mice expressing lower amounts of MBP mRNA and protein suggested that the oligodendroglia produced sufficient MBP to elicit axon wrapping but not enough to form compact myelin. Mean axon circumference of myelinated axons was greater than axon circumference of unmyelinated axons at each level of gene expression, further evidence that oligodendroglial cells preferentially myelinate axons of larger caliber. These data suggest that oligodendroglial function is governed in part by the degree of MBP expression.


Behavior Genetics | 1990

The dysmyelinating mouse mutations shiverer (shi) and myelin deficient (shimld)

Carol Readhead; Leroy Hood

Shiverer (shi/shi) is an autosomal recessive mouse mutation that produces a shivering phenotype in affected mice. A shivering gait can be seen from a few weeks after birth until their early death, which occurs between 50 and 100 days. The central nervous system of the mutant mouse is hypomyelinated but the peripheral nervous system appears normal. The myelin of the CNS, wherever present, is not well compacted and lacks the major dense line. Myelin basic protein (MBP), which is associated with the major dense line, is absent, and this is due to a deletion of the major part of the gene encoding MBP. Transgenic shiverer mice that have integrated and express the wild-type mouse MBP transgene no longer shiver and have normal life spans. Conversely, normal mice that have integrated an antisense MBP transgene, shiver. Myelin deficient shimld/shimld is allelic to shiverer (shi/shi) but the mutant mouse is less severely affected. Although MBP is present in the CNS, it is low in quantity and is not developmentally regulated. The gene encoding MBP has been both duplicated and inverted. Transgenic shimld/shimld mice with the wild-type MBP transgene have normal phenotypes.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2000

Methylation of the Cyclin A1 Promoter Correlates with Gene Silencing in Somatic Cell Lines, while Tissue-Specific Expression of Cyclin A1 Is Methylation Independent

Carsten Müller; Carol Readhead; Sven Diederichs; Gregory Idos; Rong Yang; Nicola Tidow; Hubert Serve; Wolfgang E. Berdel; H. Phillip Koeffler

ABSTRACT Gene expression in mammalian organisms is regulated at multiple levels, including DNA accessibility for transcription factors and chromatin structure. Methylation of CpG dinucleotides is thought to be involved in imprinting and in the pathogenesis of cancer. However, the relevance of methylation for directing tissue-specific gene expression is highly controversial. The cyclin A1 gene is expressed in very few tissues, with high levels restricted to spermatogenesis and leukemic blasts. Here, we show that methylation of the CpG island of the human cyclin A1 promoter was correlated with nonexpression in cell lines, and the methyl-CpG binding protein MeCP2 suppressed transcription from the methylated cyclin A1 promoter. Repression could be relieved by trichostatin A. Silencing of a cyclin A1 promoter-enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) transgene in stable transfected MG63 osteosarcoma cells was also closely associated with de novo promoter methylation. Cyclin A1 could be strongly induced in nonexpressing cell lines by trichostatin A but not by 5-aza-cytidine. The cyclin A1 promoter-EGFP construct directed tissue-specific expression in male germ cells of transgenic mice. Expression in the testes of these mice was independent of promoter methylation, and even strong promoter methylation did not suppress promoter activity. MeCP2 expression was notably absent in EGFP-expressing cells. Transcription from the transgenic cyclin A1 promoter was repressed in most organs outside the testis, even when the promoter was not methylated. These data show the association of methylation with silencing of the cyclin A1 gene in cancer cell lines. However, appropriate tissue-specific repression of the cyclin A1 promoter occurs independently of CpG methylation.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Region-Specific Myelin Pathology in Mice Lacking the Golli Products of the Myelin Basic Protein Gene

E. Jacobs; Thomas M. Pribyl; Kathy Kampf; Celia W. Campagnoni; Christopher S. Colwell; Samuel D. Reyes; Melanie Martin; Vance Handley; Timothy D. Hiltner; Carol Readhead; Russell E. Jacobs; Albee Messing; Robin S. Fisher; Anthony T. Campagnoni

The myelin basic protein (MBP) gene encodes two families of proteins, the classic MBP constituents of myelin and the golli-MBPs, the function of which is less well understood. In this study, targeted ablation of the golli-MBPs, but not the classic MBPs, resulted in a distinct phenotype unlike that of knock-outs (KOs) of the classic MBPs or other myelin proteins. Although the golli KO animals did not display an overt dysmyelinating phenotype, they did exhibit delayed and/or hypomyelination in selected areas of the brain, such as the visual cortex and the optic nerve, as determined by Northern and Western blots and immunohistochemical analysis with myelin protein markers. Hypomyelination in some areas, such as the visual cortex, persisted into adulthood. Ultrastructural analysis of the KOs confirmed both the delay and hypomyelination and revealed abnormalities in myelin structure and in some oligodendrocytes. Abnormal visual-evoked potentials indicated that the hypomyelination in the visual cortex had functional consequences in the golli KO brain. Evidence that the abnormal myelination in these animals was a consequence of intrinsic problems with the oligodendrocyte was indicated by an impaired ability of oligodendrocytes to form myelin sheets in culture and by the presence of abnormal Ca2+ transients in purified cortical oligodendrocytes studied in vitro. The Ca2+ results reported in this study complement previous results implicating golli proteins in modulating intracellular signaling in T-cells. Together, all these findings suggest a role for golli proteins in oligodendrocyte differentiation, migration, and/or myelin elaboration in the brain.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2008

Phase-Contrast OCT Imaging of Transverse Flows in the Mouse Retina and Choroid

Jeff Fingler; Carol Readhead; Daniel M. Schwartz; Scott E. Fraser

PURPOSE To test the hypothesis that a novel phase-contrast optical coherence tomography (OCT) system can image retinal and choroidal vessels in the living mouse. METHODS A high-speed spectral domain optical coherence tomography (SDOCT) system, which measures the reflections for the entire depth of the retina at once with each axial scan (A-scan), was developed for mouse retinal imaging. Acquiring multiple A-scans over a transverse line across the mouse retina offers a two-dimensional cross-sectional image (B-scan); several neighboring B-scans can be assembled into a three-dimensional OCT image. To visualize mobility and transverse flow in retinal vessels, the statistical variance of phase for each location was calculated from multiple B-scans acquired successively for the same retinal cross-section. Such measures of phase variance offer a direct measure of motions over a large dynamic range of flow velocities. RESULTS Three-dimensional phase-contrast images of the live mouse retina were created using multiple two-dimensional cross-sectional image slices through the retina. For the data presented here, each cross-sectional phase-contrast slice resulted from five images of 100 or 200 transverse pixels, acquired over 25 ms or 50 ms, respectively. The approach offered clear identification of motion regions at different depths, including flow in the retinal microvasculature and in the choroidal vessels. CONCLUSIONS Phase-contrast OCT enables three-dimensional visualization of retinal and choroidal vasculature in vivo.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1999

Distinct Phenotypes Associated with Increasing Dosage of the PLP Gene: Implications for CMT1A Due to PMP22 Gene Duplication

T. J. Anderson; Matthias Klugmann; Christine E. Thomson; Armin Schneider; Carol Readhead; Klaus-Armin Nave; I. R. Griffiths

ABSTRACT: Increased dosage of the proteolipid protein (Plp) gene causes CNS disease (Pelizaeus‐Merzbacher disease [PMD]), which has many similarities to disorders of the PNS associated with duplication of the peripheral myelin protein‐22 (PMP22) gene locus. Transgenic mice carrying extra copies of the wild‐type Plp gene provide a valid model of PMD. Variations in gene dosage can cause a wide range of phenotypes from severe, lethal dysmyelination through late‐onset demyelination. A predilection for different fiber diameters may occur within the various phenotypes with dysmyelination being more obvious in large fibers and late‐onset degeneration predominantly affecting small fibers. Although the frequency of apoptotic oligodendrocytes is increased with high gene dosage, the number of mature oligodendrocytes appears adequate. Oligodendrocytes in the dysmyelinated CNS express a range of genes typical of mature cells, yet are unable to assemble sufficient myelin. Oligodendrocytes contain abnormal vacuoles and stain intensely for PLP and other proteins such as MAG. The findings suggest that with high gene dosage much of the PLP, and possibly other proteins, is missorted and degraded in the lysosomal system.

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Robert Winston

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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Leroy Hood

University of Washington

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Scott E. Fraser

University of Southern California

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Russell E. Jacobs

California Institute of Technology

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Outi Hovatta

Imperial College London

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Sadanori Akita

University of California

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Shlomo Melmed

Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

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