Caroline L. Benn
Pfizer
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Caroline L. Benn.
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2008
Maria Björkqvist; Edward J. Wild; Jenny Thiele; Aurelio Silvestroni; Ralph Andre; Nayana Lahiri; Elsa Raibon; Richard V. Lee; Caroline L. Benn; Denis Soulet; Anna Magnusson; Ben Woodman; Christian Landles; Mahmoud A. Pouladi; Michael R. Hayden; Azadeh Khalili-Shirazi; Mark W. Lowdell; Patrik Brundin; Gillian P. Bates; Blair R. Leavitt; Thomas Möller; Sarah J. Tabrizi
Huntingtons disease (HD) is an inherited neurodegenerative disorder characterized by both neurological and systemic abnormalities. We examined the peripheral immune system and found widespread evidence of innate immune activation detectable in plasma throughout the course of HD. Interleukin 6 levels were increased in HD gene carriers with a mean of 16 years before the predicted onset of clinical symptoms. To our knowledge, this is the earliest plasma abnormality identified in HD. Monocytes from HD subjects expressed mutant huntingtin and were pathologically hyperactive in response to stimulation, suggesting that the mutant protein triggers a cell-autonomous immune activation. A similar pattern was seen in macrophages and microglia from HD mouse models, and the cerebrospinal fluid and striatum of HD patients exhibited abnormal immune activation, suggesting that immune dysfunction plays a role in brain pathology. Collectively, our data suggest parallel central nervous system and peripheral pathogenic pathways of immune activation in HD.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008
Caroline L. Benn; Tingting Sun; Ghazaleh Sadri-Vakili; Karen N. McFarland; Derek P. DiRocco; George J. Yohrling; Timothy W.I. Clark; Bérengère Bouzou; Jang-Ho J. Cha
Transcriptional dysregulation is a central pathogenic mechanism in Huntingtons disease, a fatal neurodegenerative disorder associated with polyglutamine (polyQ) expansion in the huntingtin (Htt) protein. In this study, we show that mutant Htt alters the normal expression of specific mRNA species at least partly by disrupting the binding activities of many transcription factors which govern the expression of the dysregulated mRNA species. Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) demonstrates Htt occupation of gene promoters in vivo in a polyQ-dependent manner, and furthermore, ChIP-on-chip and ChIP subcloning reveal that wild-type and mutant Htt exhibit differential genomic distributions. Exon 1 Htt binds DNA directly in the absence of other proteins and alters DNA conformation. PolyQ expansion increases Htt–DNA interactions, with binding to recognition elements of transcription factors whose function is altered in HD. Together, these findings suggest mutant Htt modulates gene expression through abnormal interactions with genomic DNA, altering DNA conformation and transcription factor binding.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Michal Mielcarek; Caroline L. Benn; Sophie A. Franklin; Donna L. Smith; Ben Woodman; Paul A. Marks; Gillian P. Bates
Huntingtons disease (HD) is a progressive neurological disorder for which there are no disease-modifying treatments. Transcriptional dysregulation is a major molecular feature of HD, which significantly contributes to disease progression. Therefore, the development of histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors as therapeutics for HD has been energetically pursued. Suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) – a class I HDAC as well an HDAC6 inhibitor, improved motor impairment in the R6/2 mouse model of HD. Recently it has been found that SAHA can also promote the degradation of HDAC4 and possibly other class IIa HDACs at the protein level in various cancer cell lines. To elucidate whether SAHA is a potent modifier of HDAC protein levels in vivo, we performed two independent mouse trials. Both WT and R6/2 mice were chronically treated with SAHA and vehicle. We found that prolonged SAHA treatment causes the degradation of HDAC4 in cortex and brain stem, but not hippocampus, without affecting its transcript levels in vivo. Similarly, SAHA also decreased HDAC2 levels without modifying the expression of its mRNA. Consistent with our previous data, SAHA treatment diminishes Hdac7 transcript levels in both wild type and R6/2 brains and unexpectedly was found to decrease Hdac11 in R6/2 but not wild type. We investigated the effects of SAHA administration on well-characterised molecular readouts of disease progression. We found that SAHA reduces SDS-insoluble aggregate load in the cortex and brain stem but not in the hippocampus of the R6/2 brains, and that this was accompanied by restoration of Bdnf cortical transcript levels.
Neurobiology of Disease | 2006
Alice Chen-Plotkin; Ghazaleh Sadri-Vakili; George J. Yohrling; Melissa W. Braveman; Caroline L. Benn; Kelly E. Glajch; Derek P. DiRocco; Laurie A. Farrell; Dimitri Krainc; Silvia Ginés; Marcy E. MacDonald; Jang Ho J Cha
Huntingtons disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by expansion of a polyglutamine tract within the huntingtin protein. Transcriptional dysregulation has been implicated in HD pathogenesis; recent evidence suggests a defect in Sp1-mediated transcription. We used chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) assays followed by real-time PCR to quantify the association of Sp1 with individual genes. We find that, despite normal protein levels and normal to increased overall nuclear binding activity, Sp1 has decreased binding to specific promoters of susceptible genes in transgenic HD mouse brain, in striatal HD cells, and in human HD brain. Genes whose mRNA levels are decreased in HD have abnormal Sp1-DNA binding, whereas genes with unchanged mRNA levels have normal levels of Sp1 association. Moreover, the altered binding seen with Sp1 is not found with another transcription factor, NF-Y. These findings suggest that mutant huntingtin dissociates Sp1 from target promoters, inhibiting transcription of specific genes.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006
Zhihua Qiu; Fran Norflus; Bhupinder Singh; Mary K. Swindell; Rodica Buzescu; Michelle Bejarano; Raman Chopra; Birgit Zucker; Caroline L. Benn; Derek P. DiRocco; Jang-Ho J. Cha; Robert J. Ferrante; Steven M. Hersch
Interactions between mutant huntingtin (Htt) and a variety of transcription factors including specificity proteins (Sp) have been suggested as a central mechanism in Huntington disease (HD). However, the transcriptional activity induced by Htt in neurons that triggers neuronal death has yet to be fully elucidated. In the current study, we characterized the relationship of Sp1 to Htt protein aggregation and neuronal cell death. We found increased levels of Sp1 in neuronal-like PC12 cells expressing mutant Htt, primary striatal neurons, and brain tissue of HD transgenic mice. Sp1 levels were also elevated when 3-nitropropionate (3-NP) was used to induce cell death in PC12 cells. To assess the effects of knocking down Sp1 in HD pathology, we used Sp1 siRNA, a heterozygous Sp1 knock-out mouse, and mithramycin A, a DNA-intercalating agent that inhibits Sp1 function. The three approaches consistently yielded reduced levels of Sp1 which ameliorated toxicity caused by either mutant Htt or 3-NP. In addition, when HD mice were crossed with Sp1 heterozygous knock-out mice, the resulting offspring did not experience the loss of dopamine D2 receptor mRNA characteristic of HD mice, and survived longer than their HD counterparts. Our data suggest that enhancement of transcription factor Sp1 contributes to the pathology of HD and demonstrates that its suppression is beneficial.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014
Dalia Barsyte-Lovejoy; Fengling Li; Menno J. Oudhoff; John Howard Tatlock; Aiping Dong; Hong Zeng; Hong Wu; Spencer A. Freeman; Matthieu Schapira; Guillermo Senisterra; Ekaterina Kuznetsova; Richard Marcellus; Abdellah Allali-Hassani; Steven Kennedy; Jean-Philippe Lambert; Amber L. Couzens; Ahmed Aman; Anne-Claude Gingras; Rima Al-awar; Paul V. Fish; Brian S. Gerstenberger; Lee R. Roberts; Caroline L. Benn; Rachel L. Grimley; Mitchell J.S. Braam; Fabio Rossi; Marius Sudol; Peter J. Brown; Mark Edward Bunnage; Dafydd R. Owen
Significance Protein methyltransferases constitute an emerging but undercharacterized class of therapeutic targets with diverse roles in normal human biology and disease. Small-molecule “chemical probes” can be powerful tools for the functional characterization of such enzymes, and here we report the discovery of (R)-PFI-2—a first-in-class, potent, highly selective, and cell-active inhibitor of the methyltransferase activity of SETD7 [SET domain containing (lysine methyltransferase) 7]—and two related compounds for control and chemoproteomics studies. We used these compounds to characterize the role of SETD7 in signaling, in the Hippo pathway, that controls cell growth and organ size. Our work establishes a chemical biology tool kit for the study of the diverse roles of SETD7 in cells and further validates protein methyltransferases as a druggable target class. SET domain containing (lysine methyltransferase) 7 (SETD7) is implicated in multiple signaling and disease related pathways with a broad diversity of reported substrates. Here, we report the discovery of (R)-PFI-2—a first-in-class, potent (Kiapp = 0.33 nM), selective, and cell-active inhibitor of the methyltransferase activity of human SETD7—and its 500-fold less active enantiomer, (S)-PFI-2. (R)-PFI-2 exhibits an unusual cofactor-dependent and substrate-competitive inhibitory mechanism by occupying the substrate peptide binding groove of SETD7, including the catalytic lysine-binding channel, and by making direct contact with the donor methyl group of the cofactor, S-adenosylmethionine. Chemoproteomics experiments using a biotinylated derivative of (R)-PFI-2 demonstrated dose-dependent competition for binding to endogenous SETD7 in MCF7 cells pretreated with (R)-PFI-2. In murine embryonic fibroblasts, (R)-PFI-2 treatment phenocopied the effects of Setd7 deficiency on Hippo pathway signaling, via modulation of the transcriptional coactivator Yes-associated protein (YAP) and regulation of YAP target genes. In confluent MCF7 cells, (R)-PFI-2 rapidly altered YAP localization, suggesting continuous and dynamic regulation of YAP by the methyltransferase activity of SETD7. These data establish (R)-PFI-2 and related compounds as a valuable tool-kit for the study of the diverse roles of SETD7 in cells and further validate protein methyltransferases as a druggable target class.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Caroline L. Benn; Rachel Butler; Lydia Mariner; Jude Nixon; Hilary Moffitt; Michal Mielcarek; Ben Woodman; Gillian P. Bates
Huntingtons disease (HD) is an inherited, progressive neurological disorder caused by a CAG/polyglutamine repeat expansion, for which there is no effective disease modifying therapy. In recent years, transcriptional dysregulation has emerged as a pathogenic process that appears early in disease progression. Administration of histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors such as suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) have consistently shown therapeutic potential in models of HD, at least partly through increasing the association of acetylated histones with down-regulated genes and by correcting mRNA abnormalities. The HDAC enzyme through which SAHA mediates its beneficial effects in the R6/2 mouse model of HD is not known. Therefore, we have embarked on a series of genetic studies to uncover the HDAC target that is relevant to therapeutic development for HD. HDAC7 is of interest in this context because SAHA has been shown to decrease HDAC7 expression in cell culture systems in addition to inhibiting enzyme activity. After confirming that expression levels of Hdac7 are decreased in the brains of wild type and R6/2 mice after SAHA administration, we performed a genetic cross to determine whether genetic reduction of Hdac7 would alleviate phenotypes in the R6/2 mice. We found no improvement in a number of physiological or behavioral phenotypes. Similarly, the dysregulated expression levels of a number of genes of interest were not improved suggesting that reduction in Hdac7 does not alleviate the R6/2 HD-related transcriptional dysregulation. Therefore, we conclude that the beneficial effects of HDAC inhibitors are not predominantly mediated through the inhibition of HDAC7.
Neuroscience | 2007
Caroline L. Benn; Elizabeth J. Slow; Laurie A. Farrell; Rona K. Graham; Yu Deng; Michael R. Hayden; Jang-Ho J. Cha
A yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) mouse model of Huntingtons disease (YAC128) develops motor abnormalities, age-dependent striatal atrophy and neuronal loss. Alteration of neurotransmitter receptors, particularly glutamate and dopamine receptors, is a pathological hallmark of Huntingtons disease. We therefore analyzed neurotransmitter receptors in symptomatic YAC128 Huntingtons disease mice. We found significant increases in N-methyl-d-aspartate, AMPA and metabotropic glutamate receptor binding, which were not due to increases in receptor subunit mRNA expression levels. Subcellular fractionation analysis revealed increased levels of glutamate receptor subunits in synaptic membrane fractions from YAC128 mice. We found no changes in dopamine, GABA or adenosine receptor binding, nor did we see alterations in dopamine D1, D2 or adenosine A2a receptor mRNA levels. The receptor abnormalities in YAC128 transgenic mice thus appear limited to glutamate receptors. We also found a significant decrease in preproenkephalin mRNA in the striatum of YAC128 mice, which contrasts with the lack of change in levels of mRNA encoding neurotransmitter receptors. Taken together, the abnormal and selective increases in glutamate receptor subunit expression and binding are not due to increases in receptor subunit expression and may exert detrimental effects. The decrease in preproenkephalin mRNA suggests a selective transcriptional deficit, as opposed to neuronal loss, and could additionally contribute to the abnormal motor symptoms in YAC128 mice.
Molecular Neurodegeneration | 2008
Caroline L. Benn; Helen Fox; Gillian P. Bates
BackgroundTranscriptional dysregulation is an early, key pathogenic mechanism in Huntingtons disease (HD). Therefore, gene expression analyses have biomarker potential for measuring therapeutic efficacy in pre-clinical trials, particularly those aimed at correcting gene expression abnormalities. Housekeeping genes are commonly used as endogenous references in gene expression studies. However, a systematic study comparing the suitability of candidate reference genes for use in HD mouse models has not been performed. To remedy this situation, 12 housekeeping genes were examined to identify suitable reference genes for use in expression assays.ResultsWe found that commonly used reference genes are dysregulated at later time points in the R6/2 mouse model of HD. Therefore, in order to reliably measure gene expression changes for use as pre-clinical trial biomarkers, we set out to identify suitable reference genes for use in R6/2 mice. The expression of potential reference genes was examined in striatum, cortex and cerebellum from 15 week old R6/2 and matched wild-type littermates. Expression levels of candidate reference genes varied according to genotype and brain region. GeNorm software was used to identify the three most stably expressed genes for each brain region. Relative quantification methods using the geometric mean of three reference genes for normalisation enables accurate determination of gene expression levels in wild-type and R6/2 mouse brain regions.ConclusionOur study has identified a reproducible, reliable method by which we able to accurately determine the relative expression level of target genes in specific brain regions, thus increasing the potential of gene expression analysis as a biomarker in HD pre-clinical trials.
Molecular Therapy | 2014
Gareth T. Young; Alex Gutteridge; Heather De Fox; Anna Wilbrey; Lishuang Cao; Lily Ty Cho; Adam R Brown; Caroline L. Benn; Laura R Kammonen; Julia H Friedman; Magda Bictash; Paul Whiting; James Bilsland; Edward B. Stevens
The generation of human sensory neurons by directed differentiation of pluripotent stem cells opens new opportunities for investigating the biology of pain. The inability to generate this cell type has meant that up until now their study has been reliant on the use of rodent models. Here, we use a combination of population and single-cell techniques to perform a detailed molecular, electrophysiological, and pharmacological phenotyping of sensory neurons derived from human embryonic stem cells. We describe the evolution of cell populations over 6 weeks of directed differentiation; a process that results in the generation of a largely homogeneous population of neurons that are both molecularly and functionally comparable to human sensory neurons derived from mature dorsal root ganglia. This work opens the prospect of using pluripotent stem-cell-derived sensory neurons to study human neuronal physiology and as in vitro models for drug discovery in pain and sensory disorders.The generation of human sensory neurons by directed differentiation of pluripotent stem cells opens new opportunities for investigating the biology of pain. The inability to generate this cell type has meant that up until now their study has been reliant on the use of rodent models. Here, we use a combination of population and single-cell techniques to perform a detailed molecular, electrophysiological, and pharmacological phenotyping of sensory neurons derived from human embryonic stem cells. We describe the evolution of cell populations over 6 weeks of directed differentiation; a process that results in the generation of a largely homogeneous population of neurons that are both molecularly and functionally comparable to human sensory neurons derived from mature dorsal root ganglia. This work opens the prospect of using pluripotent stem-cell–derived sensory neurons to study human neuronal physiology and as in vitro models for drug discovery in pain and sensory disorders.