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Dive into the research topics where Caroline Vance is active.

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Featured researches published by Caroline Vance.


Science | 2008

TDP-43 mutations in familial and sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Jemeen Sreedharan; Ian P. Blair; Vineeta Tripathi; Xun Hu; Caroline Vance; Boris Rogelj; Steven Ackerley; Jennifer C Durnall; Kelly L. Williams; Emanuele Buratti; Francisco E. Baralle; Jacqueline de Belleroche; J. Douglas Mitchell; P. Nigel Leigh; Ammar Al-Chalabi; Christopher Miller; Garth A. Nicholson; Christopher Shaw

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal motor neuron disorder characterized pathologically by ubiquitinated TAR DNA binding protein (TDP-43) inclusions. The function of TDP-43 in the nervous system is uncertain, and a mechanistic role in neurodegeneration remains speculative. We identified neighboring mutations in a highly conserved region of TARDBP in sporadic and familial ALS cases. TARDBPM337V segregated with disease within one kindred and a genome-wide scan confirmed that linkage was restricted to chromosome 1p36, which contains the TARDBP locus. Mutant forms of TDP-43 fragmented in vitro more readily than wild type and, in vivo, caused neural apoptosis and developmental delay in the chick embryo. Our evidence suggests a pathophysiological link between TDP-43 and ALS.


Science | 2009

Mutations in FUS, an RNA Processing Protein, Cause Familial Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Type 6

Caroline Vance; Boris Rogelj; Tibor Hortobágyi; Kurt J. De Vos; Agnes L. Nishimura; Jemeen Sreedharan; Xun Hu; Bradley Smith; Deborah Ruddy; Paul D. Wright; Jeban Ganesalingam; Kelly L. Williams; Vineeta Tripathi; Safa Al-Saraj; Ammar Al-Chalabi; P. Nigel Leigh; Ian P. Blair; Garth A. Nicholson; Jackie de Belleroche; Jean-Marc Gallo; Christopher Miller; Christopher Shaw

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease that is familial in 10% of cases. We have identified a missense mutation in the gene encoding fused in sarcoma (FUS) in a British kindred, linked to ALS6. In a survey of 197 familial ALS index cases, we identified two further missense mutations in eight families. Postmortem analysis of three cases with FUS mutations showed FUS-immunoreactive cytoplasmic inclusions and predominantly lower motor neuron degeneration. Cellular expression studies revealed aberrant localization of mutant FUS protein. FUS is involved in the regulation of transcription and RNA splicing and transport, and it has functional homology to another ALS gene, TARDBP, which suggests that a common mechanism may underlie motor neuron degeneration.


PLOS Genetics | 2008

Novel mutations in TARDBP (TDP-43) in patients with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Nicola J. Rutherford; Yong Jie Zhang; Matt Baker; Jennifer Gass; NiCole Finch; Yafei Xu; Heather Stewart; Brendan J. Kelley; Karen M. Kuntz; Richard Crook; Jemeen Sreedharan; Caroline Vance; Eric J. Sorenson; Carol F. Lippa; Eileen H. Bigio; Daniel H. Geschwind; David S. Knopman; Hiroshi Mitsumoto; Ronald C. Petersen; Neil R. Cashman; Mike Hutton; Christopher Shaw; Kevin B. Boylan; Bradley F. Boeve; Neill R. Graff-Radford; Zbigniew K. Wszolek; Richard J. Caselli; Dennis W. Dickson; Ian R. Mackenzie; Leonard Petrucelli

The TAR DNA-binding protein 43 (TDP-43) has been identified as the major disease protein in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitin inclusions (FTLD-U), defining a novel class of neurodegenerative conditions: the TDP-43 proteinopathies. The first pathogenic mutations in the gene encoding TDP-43 (TARDBP) were recently reported in familial and sporadic ALS patients, supporting a direct role for TDP-43 in neurodegeneration. In this study, we report the identification and functional analyses of two novel and one known mutation in TARDBP that we identified as a result of extensive mutation analyses in a cohort of 296 patients with variable neurodegenerative diseases associated with TDP-43 histopathology. Three different heterozygous missense mutations in exon 6 of TARDBP (p.M337V, p.N345K, and p.I383V) were identified in the analysis of 92 familial ALS patients (3.3%), while no mutations were detected in 24 patients with sporadic ALS or 180 patients with other TDP-43–positive neurodegenerative diseases. The presence of p.M337V, p.N345K, and p.I383V was excluded in 825 controls and 652 additional sporadic ALS patients. All three mutations affect highly conserved amino acid residues in the C-terminal part of TDP-43 known to be involved in protein-protein interactions. Biochemical analysis of TDP-43 in ALS patient cell lines revealed a substantial increase in caspase cleaved fragments, including the ∼25 kDa fragment, compared to control cell lines. Our findings support TARDBP mutations as a cause of ALS. Based on the specific C-terminal location of the mutations and the accumulation of a smaller C-terminal fragment, we speculate that TARDBP mutations may cause a toxic gain of function through novel protein interactions or intracellular accumulation of TDP-43 fragments leading to apoptosis.


Cell Reports | 2013

Hexanucleotide Repeats in ALS/FTD Form Length-Dependent RNA Foci, Sequester RNA Binding Proteins, and Are Neurotoxic

Youn Bok Lee; Han-Jou Chen; João N. Peres; Jorge Gomez-Deza; Maja Štalekar; Claire Troakes; Agnes L. Nishimura; Emma L. Scotter; Caroline Vance; Yoshitsugu Adachi; Valentina Sardone; John Miller; Bradley Smith; Jean-Marc Gallo; Jernej Ule; Frank Hirth; Boris Rogelj; Corinne Houart; Christopher Shaw

Summary The GGGGCC (G4C2) intronic repeat expansion within C9ORF72 is the most common genetic cause of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Intranuclear neuronal RNA foci have been observed in ALS and FTD tissues, suggesting that G4C2 RNA may be toxic. Here, we demonstrate that the expression of 38× and 72× G4C2 repeats form intranuclear RNA foci that initiate apoptotic cell death in neuronal cell lines and zebrafish embryos. The foci colocalize with a subset of RNA binding proteins, including SF2, SC35, and hnRNP-H in transfected cells. Only hnRNP-H binds directly to G4C2 repeats following RNA immunoprecipitation, and only hnRNP-H colocalizes with 70% of G4C2 RNA foci detected in C9ORF72 mutant ALS and FTD brain tissues. We show that expanded G4C2 repeats are potently neurotoxic and bind hnRNP-H and other RNA binding proteins. We propose that RNA toxicity and protein sequestration may disrupt RNA processing and contribute to neurodegeneration.


Lancet Neurology | 2010

Chromosome 9p21 in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in the UK and seven other countries: a genome-wide association study

Aleksey Shatunov; Kin Mok; Stephen Newhouse; Michael E. Weale; Bradley Smith; Caroline Vance; Lauren Johnson; Jan H. Veldink; Michael A. van Es; Leonard H. van den Berg; Wim Robberecht; Philip Van Damme; Orla Hardiman; Anne Farmer; Cathryn M. Lewis; Amy W. Butler; Olubunmi Abel; Peter Andersen; Isabella Fogh; Vincenzo Silani; Adriano Chiò; Bryan J. Traynor; Judith Melki; Vincent Meininger; John Landers; Peter McGuffin; Jonathan D. Glass; Hardev Pall; P. Nigel Leigh; John Hardy

Summary Background Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease of motor neurons that results in progressive weakness and death from respiratory failure, commonly within about 3 years. Previous studies have shown association of a locus on chromosome 9p with ALS and linkage with ALS–frontotemporal dementia. We aimed to test whether this genomic region is also associated with ALS in an independent set of UK samples, and to identify risk factors associated with ALS in a further genome-wide association study that combined data from the independent analysis with those from other countries. Methods We collected samples from patients with sporadic ALS from 20 UK hospitals and obtained UK control samples from the control groups of the Depression Case Control study, the Bipolar Affective Case Control Study, and the British 1958 birth cohort DNA collection. Genotyping of DNA in this independent analysis was done with Illumina HumanHap550 BeadChips. We then undertook a joint genome-wide analysis that combined data from the independent set with published data from the UK, USA, Netherlands, Ireland, Italy, France, Sweden, and Belgium. The threshold for significance was p=0·05 in the independent analysis, because we were interested in replicating a small number of previously reported associations, whereas the Bonferroni-corrected threshold for significance in the joint analysis was p=2·20×10−7 Findings After quality control, samples were available from 599 patients and 4144 control individuals in the independent set. In this analysis, two single nucleotide polymorphisms in a locus on chromosome 9p21.2 were associated with ALS: rs3849942 (p=2·22×10−6; odds ratio [OR] 1·39, 95% CI 1·21–1·59) and rs2814707 (p=3·32×10−6; 1·38, 1·20–1·58). In the joint analysis, which included samples from 4312 patients with ALS and 8425 control individuals, rs3849942 (p=4·64×10−10; OR 1·22, 95% CI 1·15–1·30) and rs2814707 (p=4·72×10−10; 1·22, 1·15–1·30) were associated with ALS. Interpretation We have found strong evidence of a genetic association of two single nucleotide polymorphisms on chromosome 9 with sporadic ALS, in line with findings from previous independent GWAS of ALS and linkage studies of ALS–frontotemporal dementia. Our findings together with these earlier findings suggest that genetic variation at this locus on chromosome 9 causes sporadic ALS and familial ALS–frontotemporal dementia. Resequencing studies and then functional analysis should be done to identify the defective gene. Funding ALS Therapy Alliance, the Angel Fund, the Medical Research Council, the Motor Neurone Disease Association of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, the Wellcome Trust, and the National Institute for Health Research Dementias and Neurodegenerative Diseases Research Network (DeNDRoN).


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis is associated with a mutation in D-amino acid oxidase

John C. Mitchell; Praveen Paul; Han-Jou Chen; Alex Morris; Miles Payling; Mario Falchi; Jj Habgood; Stefania Panoutsou; Sabine Winkler; Veronica Tisato; Amin Hajitou; Bradley Smith; Caroline Vance; Christopher Shaw; Nicholas D. Mazarakis; Jacqueline de Belleroche

We report a unique mutation in the D-amino acid oxidase gene (R199W DAO) associated with classical adult onset familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) in a three generational FALS kindred, after candidate gene screening in a 14.52 cM region on chromosome 12q22-23 linked to disease. Neuronal cell lines expressing R199W DAO showed decreased viability and increased ubiquitinated aggregates compared with cells expressing the wild-type protein. Similarly, lentiviral-mediated expression of R199W DAO in primary motor neuron cultures caused increased TUNEL labeling. This effect was also observed when motor neurons were cocultured on transduced astrocytes expressing R199W, indicating that the motor neuron cell death induced by this mutation is mediated by both cell autonomous and noncell autonomous processes. DAO controls the level of D-serine, which accumulates in the spinal cord in cases of sporadic ALS and in a mouse model of ALS, indicating that this abnormality may represent a fundamental component of ALS pathogenesis.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

The C9ORF72 expansion mutation is a common cause of ALS+/-FTD in Europe and has a single founder.

Bradley Smith; Stephen Newhouse; Aleksey Shatunov; Caroline Vance; Simon Topp; Lauren Johnson; John Miller; Youn Bok Lee; Claire Troakes; Kirsten M. Scott; Ashley Jones; Ian Gray; Jamie Wright; Tibor Hortobágyi; Safa Al-Sarraj; Boris Rogelj; John Powell; Michelle K. Lupton; Simon Lovestone; Peter C. Sapp; Markus Weber; Peter J. Nestor; Helenius J. Schelhaas; Anneloor ten Asbroek; Vincenzo Silani; Cinzia Gellera; Franco Taroni; Nicola Ticozzi; Leonard H. van den Berg; Jan H. Veldink

A massive hexanucleotide repeat expansion mutation (HREM) in C9ORF72 has recently been linked to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Here we describe the frequency, origin and stability of this mutation in ALS+/−FTD from five European cohorts (total n=1347). Single-nucleotide polymorphisms defining the risk haplotype in linked kindreds were genotyped in cases (n=434) and controls (n=856). Haplotypes were analysed using PLINK and aged using DMLE+. In a London clinic cohort, the HREM was the most common mutation in familial ALS+/−FTD: C9ORF72 29/112 (26%), SOD1 27/112 (24%), TARDBP 1/112 (1%) and FUS 4/112 (4%) and detected in 13/216 (6%) of unselected sporadic ALS cases but was rare in controls (3/856, 0.3%). HREM prevalence was high for familial ALS+/−FTD throughout Europe: Belgium 19/22 (86%), Sweden 30/41 (73%), the Netherlands 10/27 (37%) and Italy 4/20 (20%). The HREM did not affect the age at onset or survival of ALS patients. Haplotype analysis identified a common founder in all 137 HREM carriers that arose around 6300 years ago. The haplotype from which the HREM arose is intrinsically unstable with an increased number of repeats (average 8, compared with 2 for controls, P<10−8). We conclude that the HREM has a single founder and is the most common mutation in familial and sporadic ALS in Europe.


Neuropathology | 2012

An MND/ALS phenotype associated with C9orf72 repeat expansion: Abundant p62-positive, TDP-43-negative inclusions in cerebral cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum but without associated cognitive decline

Claire Troakes; Satomi Maekawa; Lokesh Wijesekera; Boris Rogelj; László Siklós; Christopher G. Bell; Bradley Smith; Stephen Newhouse; Caroline Vance; Lauren Johnson; Tibor Hortobágyi; Aleksey Shatunov; Ammar Al-Chalabi; Nigel Leigh; Christopher Shaw; Andrew King; Safa Al-Sarraj

The transactive response DNA binding protein (TDP‐43) proteinopathies describe a clinico‐pathological spectrum of multi‐system neurodegeneration that spans motor neuron disease/amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (MND/ALS) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD). We have identified four male patients who presented with the clinical features of a pure MND/ALS phenotype (without dementia) but who had distinctive cortical and cerebellar pathology that was different from other TDP‐43 proteinopathies. All patients initially presented with weakness of limbs and respiratory muscles and had a family history of MND/ALS. None had clinically identified cognitive decline or dementia during life and they died between 11 and 32 months after symptom onset. Neuropathological investigation revealed lower motor neuron involvement with TDP‐43‐positive inclusions typical of MND/ALS. In contrast, the cerebral pathology was atypical, with abundant star‐shaped p62‐immunoreactive neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions in the cerebral cortex, basal ganglia and hippocampus, while TDP‐43‐positive inclusions were sparse. This pattern was also seen in the cerebellum where p62‐positive, TDP‐43‐negative inclusions were frequent in granular cells. Western blots of cortical lysates, in contrast to those of sporadic MND/ALS and FTLD‐TDP, showed high p62 levels and low TDP‐43 levels with no high molecular weight smearing. MND/ALS‐associated SOD1, FUS and TARDBP gene mutations were excluded; however, further investigations revealed that all four of the cases did show a repeat expansion of C9orf72, the recently reported cause of chromosome 9‐linked MND/ALS and FTLD. We conclude that these chromosome 9‐linked MND/ALS cases represent a pathological sub‐group with abundant p62 pathology in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum but with no significant associated cognitive decline.


Journal of Cell Science | 2014

Differential roles of the ubiquitin proteasome system and autophagy in the clearance of soluble and aggregated TDP-43 species

Emma L. Scotter; Caroline Vance; Agnes L. Nishimura; Youn Bok Lee; Han-Jou Chen; Hazel Urwin; Valentina Sardone; Jacqueline C. Mitchell; Boris Rogelj; David C. Rubinsztein; Christopher Shaw

ABSTRACT TAR DNA-binding protein (TDP-43, also known as TARDBP) is the major pathological protein in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Large TDP-43 aggregates that are decorated with degradation adaptor proteins are seen in the cytoplasm of remaining neurons in ALS and FTD patients post mortem. TDP-43 accumulation and ALS-linked mutations within degradation pathways implicate failed TDP-43 clearance as a primary disease mechanism. Here, we report the differing roles of the ubiquitin proteasome system (UPS) and autophagy in the clearance of TDP-43. We have investigated the effects of inhibitors of the UPS and autophagy on the degradation, localisation and mobility of soluble and insoluble TDP-43. We find that soluble TDP-43 is degraded primarily by the UPS, whereas the clearance of aggregated TDP-43 requires autophagy. Cellular macroaggregates, which recapitulate many of the pathological features of the aggregates in patients, are reversible when both the UPS and autophagy are functional. Their clearance involves the autophagic removal of oligomeric TDP-43. We speculate that, in addition to an age-related decline in pathway activity, a second hit in either the UPS or the autophagy pathway drives the accumulation of TDP-43 in ALS and FTD. Therapies for clearing excess TDP-43 should therefore target a combination of these pathways.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

ALS mutant FUS disrupts nuclear localization and sequesters wild-type FUS within cytoplasmic stress granules

Caroline Vance; Emma L. Scotter; Agnes L. Nishimura; Claire Troakes; Jacqueline C. Mitchell; Claudia Kathe; Hazel Urwin; Catherine Manser; Christopher Miller; Tibor Hortobágyi; Mike Dragunow; Boris Rogelj; Christopher Shaw

Mutations in the gene encoding Fused in Sarcoma (FUS) cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a fatal neurodegenerative disorder. FUS is a predominantly nuclear DNA- and RNA-binding protein that is involved in RNA processing. Large FUS-immunoreactive inclusions fill the perikaryon of surviving motor neurons of ALS patients carrying mutations at post-mortem. This sequestration of FUS is predicted to disrupt RNA processing and initiate neurodegeneration. Here, we demonstrate that C-terminal ALS mutations disrupt the nuclear localizing signal (NLS) of FUS resulting in cytoplasmic accumulation in transfected cells and patient fibroblasts. FUS mislocalization is rescued by the addition of the wild-type FUS NLS to mutant proteins. We also show that oxidative stress recruits mutant FUS to cytoplasmic stress granules where it is able to bind and sequester wild-type FUS. While FUS interacts with itself directly by protein–protein interaction, the recruitment of FUS to stress granules and interaction with PABP are RNA dependent. These findings support a two-hit hypothesis, whereby cytoplasmic mislocalization of FUS protein, followed by cellular stress, contributes to the formation of cytoplasmic aggregates that may sequester FUS, disrupt RNA processing and initiate motor neuron degeneration.

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Boris Rogelj

University of Ljubljana

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