Caroline A. Horton
University of Liverpool
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Publication
Featured researches published by Caroline A. Horton.
Science | 2009
Louise Ashall; Caroline A. Horton; David E. Nelson; Pawel Paszek; Claire V. Harper; Kate Sillitoe; Sheila Ryan; David G. Spiller; John Unitt; David S. Broomhead; Douglas B. Kell; David A. Rand; Violaine Sée; Michael R. H. White
The nuclear factor κB (NF-κB) transcription factor regulates cellular stress responses and the immune response to infection. NF-κB activation results in oscillations in nuclear NF-κB abundance. To define the function of these oscillations, we treated cells with repeated short pulses of tumor necrosis factor–α at various intervals to mimic pulsatile inflammatory signals. At all pulse intervals that were analyzed, we observed synchronous cycles of NF-κB nuclear translocation. Lower frequency stimulations gave repeated full-amplitude translocations, whereas higher frequency pulses gave reduced translocation, indicating a failure to reset. Deterministic and stochastic mathematical models predicted how negative feedback loops regulate both the resetting of the system and cellular heterogeneity. Altering the stimulation intervals gave different patterns of NF-κB–dependent gene expression, which supports the idea that oscillation frequency has a functional role.
Journal of Cell Science | 2010
David Andrew Turner; Pawel Paszek; Dan J. Woodcock; David E. Nelson; Caroline A. Horton; Yunjiao Wang; David G. Spiller; David A. Rand; Michael R. H. White; Claire V. Harper
Nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) signalling is activated by cellular stress and inflammation and regulates cytokine expression. We applied single-cell imaging to investigate dynamic responses to different doses of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNFα). Lower doses activated fewer cells and those responding showed an increasingly variable delay in the initial NF-κB nuclear translocation and associated IκBα degradation. Robust 100 minute nuclear:cytoplasmic NF-κB oscillations were observed over a wide range of TNFα concentrations. The result is supported by computational analyses, which identified a limit cycle in the system with a stable 100 minute period over a range of stimuli, and indicated no co-operativity in the pathway activation. These results suggest that a stochastic threshold controls functional all-or-nothing responses in individual cells. Deterministic and stochastic models simulated the experimentally observed activation threshold and gave rise to new predictions about the structure of the system and open the way for better mechanistic understanding of physiological TNFα activation of inflammatory responses in cells and tissues.
Journal of Theoretical Biology | 2012
Yunjiao Wang; Pawel Paszek; Caroline A. Horton; Hong Yue; Michael R. H. White; Douglas B. Kell; Mark Muldoon; David S. Broomhead
Whites lab established that strong, continuous stimulation with tumour necrosis factor-α (TNFα) can induce sustained oscillations in the subcellular localisation of the transcription factor nuclear factor κB (NF-κB). But the intensity of the TNFα signal varies substantially, from picomolar in the blood plasma of healthy organisms to nanomolar in diseased states. We report on a systematic survey using computational bifurcation theory to explore the relationship between the intensity of TNFα stimulation and the existence of sustained NF-κB oscillations. Using a deterministic model developed by Ashall et al. in 2009, we find that the systems responses to TNFα are characterised by a supercritical Hopf bifurcation point: above a critical intensity of TNFα the system exhibits sustained oscillations in NF-kB localisation. For TNFα below this critical value, damped oscillations are observed. This picture depends, however, on the values of the models other parameters. When the values of certain reaction rates are altered the response of the signalling pathway to TNFα stimulation changes: in addition to the sustained oscillations induced by high-dose stimulation, a second oscillatory regime appears at much lower doses. Finally, we define scores to quantify the sensitivity of the dynamics of the system to variation in its parameters and use these scores to establish that the qualitative dynamics are most sensitive to the details of NF-κB mediated gene transcription.
Essays in Biochemistry | 2008
Dhanya Mullassery; Caroline A. Horton; Christopher D. Wood; Michael R. H. White
Understanding how mammalian cells function requires a dynamic perspective. However, owing to the complexity of signalling networks, these non-linear systems can easily elude human intuition. The central aim of systems biology is to improve our understanding of the temporal complexity of cell signalling pathways, using a combination of experimental and computational approaches. Live-cell imaging and computational modelling are compatible techniques which allow quantitative analysis of cell signalling pathway dynamics. Non-invasive imaging techniques, based on the use of various luciferases and fluorescent proteins, trace cellular events such as gene expression, protein-protein interactions and protein localization in cells. By employing a number of markers in a single assay, multiple parameters can be measured simultaneously in the same cell. Following acquisition using specialized microscopy, analysis of multi-parameter time-lapse images facilitates the identification of important qualitative and quantitative relationships-linking intracellular signalling, gene expression and cell fate.
Science | 2004
David E. Nelson; A.E.C. Ihekwaba; M Elliott; James Johnson; C. A. Gibney; B. E. Foreman; Glyn Nelson; Violaine Sée; Caroline A. Horton; Dave G. Spiller; Steven W. Edwards; H P McDowell; John Unitt; Elaine Sullivan; R. Grimley; Neil Benson; David S. Broomhead; Douglas B. Kell; Michael R. H. White
BMC Systems Biology | 2011
Yunjiao Wang; Pawel Paszek; Caroline A. Horton; Douglas B. Kell; Michael R. H. White; David S. Broomhead; Mark Muldoon
Science | 2005
David E. Nelson; Caroline A. Horton; Violaine Sée; James Johnson; Glyn Nelson; Dave G. Spiller; Douglas B. Kell; Michael R. H. White
Biochemical Society Transactions | 2007
Kate Sillitoe; Caroline A. Horton; Dave G. Spiller; Michael R. H. White
MIMS Eprint . 2009;105. | 2009
Yunjiao Wang; David S. Broomhead; Caroline A. Horton; Douglas B. Kell; Michael R. H. White
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2008
Michael R. H. White; Caroline A. Horton; David E. Nelson; Pawel Paszek; Louise Ashall; Kate Sillitoe; Violaine Sée; Dave G. Spiller; Douglas B. Kell; David S. Broomhead; David A. Rand; Mrh. White