Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Cathryn L. Haigh is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Cathryn L. Haigh.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

A Functional Role for Aβ in Metal Homeostasis? N-Truncation and High-Affinity Copper Binding†

Mariusz Mital; Nina Ewa Wezynfeld; Tomasz Frączyk; Magdalena Z. Wiloch; Urszula E. Wawrzyniak; Arkadiusz Bonna; Carolin Tumpach; Kevin J. Barnham; Cathryn L. Haigh; Wojciech Bal; Simon C. Drew

Accumulation of the β-amyloid (Aβ) peptide in extracellular senile plaques rich in copper and zinc is a defining pathological feature of Alzheimers disease (AD). The Aβ1-x (x=16/28/40/42) peptides have been the primary focus of Cu(II) binding studies for more than 15 years; however, the N-truncated Aβ4-42 peptide is a major Aβ isoform detected in both healthy and diseased brains, and it contains a novel N-terminal FRH sequence. Proteins with His at the third position are known to bind Cu(II) avidly, with conditional log K values at pH 7.4 in the range of 11.0-14.6, which is much higher than that determined for Aβ1-x peptides. By using Aβ4-16 as a model, it was demonstrated that its FRH sequence stoichiometrically binds Cu(II) with a conditional Kd value of 3×10(-14)  M at pH 7.4, and that both Aβ4-16 and Aβ4-42 possess negligible redox activity. Combined with the predominance of Aβ4-42 in the brain, our results suggest a physiological role for this isoform in metal homeostasis within the central nervous system.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2009

Increased Proportions of C1 Truncated Prion Protein Protect Against Cellular M1000 Prion Infection

Victoria Lewis; Andrew F. Hill; Cathryn L. Haigh; Genevieve M. Klug; Colin L. Masters; Victoria A. Lawson; Steven J. Collins

Prion disease pathogenesis is linked to the cell-associated propagation of misfolded protease-resistant conformers (PrPres) of the normal cellular prion protein (PrPC). Ongoing PrPC expression is the only known absolute requirement for successful prion disease transmission and PrPres propagation. Further typifying prion disease is selective neuronal dysfunction and loss, although the precise mechanisms underlying this are undefined. We utilized a single prion strain (M1000) and a range of neuronal and nonneuronal, PrPC endogenously expressing and transgenically modified overexpressing cell lines, to evaluate whether PrPC glycosylation patterns or constitutive N-terminal cleavage events may be determinants of sustained PrPres propagation. Our data demonstrates that relative proportions offull-length and C1 truncated PrPC are the most important characteristics influencing susceptibility to sustained M1000 prion infection, supporting PrPC &agr;-cleavage as a protective event, which may contribute to the selective neuronal vulnerability observed in vivo.


Cell Research | 2009

PrPC-related signal transduction is influenced by copper, membrane integrity and the alpha cleavage site

Cathryn L. Haigh; Victoria Lewis; Laura J. Vella; Colin L. Masters; Andrew F. Hill; Victoria A. Lawson; Steven J. Collins

The copper-binding, membrane-anchored, cellular prion protein (PrPC) has two constitutive cleavage sites producing distinct N- and C-terminal fragments (N1/C1 and N2/C2). Using RK13 cells expressing either human PrPC, mouse PrPC or mouse PrPC carrying the 3F4 epitope, this study explored the influence of the PrPC primary sequence on endoproteolytic cleavage and one putative PrPC function, MAP kinase signal transduction, in response to exogenous copper with or without a perturbed membrane environment. PrPC primary sequence, especially that around the N1/C1 cleavage site, appeared to influence basal levels of proteolysis at this location and extracellular signal-regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK1/2) phosphorylation, with increased processing demonstrating an inverse relationship with basal ERK1/2 activation. Human PrPC showed increased N1/C1 cleavage in response to copper alone, accompanied by specific p38 and JNK/SAPK phosphorylation. Combined exposure to copper plus the cholesterol-sequestering antibiotic filipin resulted in a mouse PrPC-specific substantial increase in signal protein phosphorylation, accompanied by an increase in N1/C1 cleavage. Mouse PrPC harboring the human N1/C1 cleavage site assumed more human-like profiles basally and in response to copper and altered membrane environments. Our results demonstrate that the PrPC primary sequence around the N1/C1 cleavage site influences endoproteolytic processing at this location, which appears linked to MAP kinase signal transduction both basally and in response to copper. Further, the primary sequence appears to confer a mutual dependence of N1/C1 cleavage and membrane integrity on the fidelity of PrPC-related signal transduction in response to exogenous stimuli.


Journal of Cell Science | 2009

Dominant roles of the polybasic proline motif and copper in the PrP23-89-mediated stress protection response.

Cathryn L. Haigh; Simon C. Drew; Martin Boland; Colin L. Masters; Kevin J. Barnham; Victoria A. Lawson; Steven J. Collins

Beta-cleavage of the neurodegenerative disease-associated prion protein (PrP) protects cells from death induced by oxidative insults. The beta-cleavage event produces two fragments, designated N2 and C2. We investigated the role of the N2 fragment (residues 23-89) in cellular stress response, determining mechanisms involved and regions important for this reaction. The N2 fragment differentially modulated the reactive oxygen species (ROS) response induced by serum deprivation, with amelioration when copper bound. Amino acid residues 23-50 alone mediated a ROS reduction response. PrP23-50 ROS reduction was not due to copper binding or direct antioxidant activity, but was instead mediated through proteoglycan binding partners localised in or interacting with cholesterol-rich membrane domains. Furthermore, mutational analyses of both PrP23-50 and N2 showed that their protective capacity requires the sterically constraining double proline motif within the N-terminal polybasic region. Our findings show that N2 is a biologically active fragment that is able to modulate stress-induced intracellular ROS through interaction of its structurally defined N-terminal polybasic region with cell-surface proteoglycans.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2011

Acute exposure to prion infection induces transient oxidative stress progressing to be cumulatively deleterious with chronic propagation in vitro

Cathryn L. Haigh; Amelia McGlade; Victoria Lewis; Colin L. Masters; Victoria A. Lawson; Steven J. Collins

Neuronal loss is a pathological feature of prion diseases for which increased reactive oxygen species (ROS) and consequent oxidative stress is one proposed mechanism. The processes underlying ROS production in prion disease and the precise relationship to misfolding of the prion protein remain obscure. Using cell culture models of prion infection we found that cells demonstrate a rapid, prion protein (PrP) dependent, increase in intracellular ROS following exposure to infectious inoculum. ROS production correlated with internalisation and increased intracellular protease resistant PrP (PrP(Res)). The ROS increase was predominantly lysosomal in origin but not sustained, with cells adapting within 48 hours. Overall ROS levels remained normal in the chronically prion infected cell population; however a subpopulation characterised by loss of membrane phosphatidylserine asymmetry exhibited highly peroxidised intracellular aggregates that localised with PrP and intense caspase activation. These apoptotic cells showed increased ROS closely correlating with increased PrP(Res). Our findings demonstrate that a PrP-dependent, transient, increase in intracellular ROS is characteristic of acute cellular prion infection, while chronic phases of prion infection in vitro are associated with a significant subpopulation manifesting apoptosis accompanying heightened oxidative stress and increased PrP(Res) burden. Such observations strengthen the direct links between heightened ROS and ongoing prion propagation with eventual cellular demise.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Anionic Phospholipid Interactions of the Prion Protein N Terminus Are Minimally Perturbing and Not Driven Solely by the Octapeptide Repeat Domain

Martin Boland; Claire R. Hatty; Frances Separovic; Andrew F. Hill; Deborah J. Tew; Kevin J. Barnham; Cathryn L. Haigh; Michael James; Colin L. Masters; Steven J. Collins

Although the N terminus of the prion protein (PrPC) has been shown to directly associate with lipid membranes, the precise determinants, biophysical basis, and functional implications of such binding, particularly in relation to endogenously occurring fragments, are unresolved. To better understand these issues, we studied a range of synthetic peptides: specifically those equating to the N1 (residues 23–110) and N2 (23–89) fragments derived from constitutive processing of PrPC and including those representing arbitrarily defined component domains of the N terminus of mouse prion protein. Utilizing more physiologically relevant large unilamellar vesicles, fluorescence studies at synaptosomal pH (7.4) showed absent binding of all peptides to lipids containing the zwitterionic headgroup phosphatidylcholine and mixtures containing the anionic headgroups phosphatidylglycerol or phosphatidylserine. At pH 5, typical of early endosomes, quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation showed the highest affinity binding occurred with N1 and N2, selective for anionic lipid species. Of particular note, the absence of binding by individual peptides representing component domains underscored the importance of the combination of the octapeptide repeat and the N-terminal polybasic regions for effective membrane interaction. In addition, using quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation and solid-state NMR, we characterized for the first time that both N1 and N2 deeply insert into the lipid bilayer with minimal disruption. Potential functional implications related to cellular stress responses are discussed.


Frontiers in Bioscience | 2010

Copper, endoproteolytic processing of the prion protein and cell signalling

Cathryn L. Haigh; Shai Y Marom; Steven J. Collins

Recently, understanding of many molecular interactions has progressed appreciably and cellular events once thought to be by-products of more important reactions or to be detrimental to cellular function are now known to be part of complex interactions of the cell with its environment. Numerous proteins can elicit differing effects depending upon post-translational modification events such as complex glycosylation and endoproteolytic cleavage or through binding co-factors including metal ions; the prion protein (PrP) is likely one such example. Its absolute requirement for pathogenesis has made the function of PrP an area of intense study but with apparently inconsistent results. This may, in part, stem from the ability of PrP to undergo different modifications to varying extents depending upon precise cellular circumstances. Specific modifications may promote altered association with binding partners resulting in apparent promiscuity of PrP interactions and activation of different signalling pathways, producing the diversity of functions suggested for this protein. This review discusses how modification of PrP by internal cleavage and metal ion co-ordination might influence, or be influenced by, signal transduction cascades. 2.


ACS Chemical Neuroscience | 2010

Near-infrared fluorescence imaging of apoptotic neuronal cell death in a live animal model of prion disease.

Victoria A. Lawson; Cathryn L. Haigh; Blaine R. Roberts; Vijaya Kenche; Helen M. J. Klemm; Colin L. Masters; Steven J. Collins; Kevin J. Barnham; Simon C. Drew

Apoptotic cell death via activation of the caspase family of cysteine proteases is a common feature of many neurodegenerative diseases including Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. Molecular imaging of cysteine protease activities at the preclinical stage may provide valuable mechanistic information about pathophysiological pathways involved in disease evolution and in response to therapy. In this study, we report synthesis and characterization of a near-infrared (NIR) fluorescent contrast agent capable of noninvasively imaging neuronal apoptosis in vivo, by conjugating a NIR cyanine dye to Val-Ala-Asp-fluoromethylketone (VAD-fmk), a general inhibitor of active caspases. Following intravenous administration of the NIR-VAD-fmk contrast agent, in vivo fluorescence reflectance imaging identified significantly higher levels of active caspases in the brain of mice with advanced but preclinical prion disease, when compared with healthy controls. The contrast agent and related analogues will enable the longitudinal study of disease progression and therapy in animal models of many neurodegenerative conditions.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2011

Optical imaging detects apoptosis in the brain and peripheral organs of prion-infected mice.

Simon C. Drew; Cathryn L. Haigh; Helen M. J. Klemm; Colin L. Masters; Steven J. Collins; Kevin J. Barnham; Victoria A. Lawson

Activation of the caspase family of cysteine proteases is proposed tobe an important cell death mechanism in transmissible spongiform encephalopathies or prion diseases. We determined the extent of caspase activation in the brain and peripheral organs of mice that showed clinical signs after intracerebral inoculation with mouse-adapted prionsby in vivo administration of a red fluorescent pan-caspase inhibitor, sulforhodamine B-Val-Ala-Asp(OMe)-fluoromethylketone. Fluorescence reflectance imaging identified a significant increase in active caspases in brains of prion-infected, but not uninfected, mice that correlated with increases in procaspase-3 and cleaved caspase-3, a central effector caspase, assessed by Western immunoblot analysis. Fluorescence was found in brain regions in which neuronal loss occurs; immunohistochemical analysis indicated that fluorescence waslocalized within and adjacent to deposits of abnormal disease-associated conformers of the prion protein (PrPSc). Fluorescence was also significantly increased in the kidney, lung, and ileum of prion-infected mice. This premortem labeling of caspase activation in the brain, and importantly in peripheral organs, could be exploited as a biomarker for longitudinal monitoring of prion disease progression and the impact of therapy in vivo in addition to, or independently of, PrPSc and spongiform changes.


Disease Models & Mechanisms | 2013

Cytosolic caspases mediate mislocalised SOD2 depletion in an in vitro model of chronic prion infection

Layla Sinclair; Victoria Lewis; Steven J. Collins; Cathryn L. Haigh

SUMMARY Oxidative stress as a contributor to neuronal death during prion infection is supported by the fact that various oxidative damage markers accumulate in the brain during the course of this disease. The normal cellular substrate of the causative agent, the prion protein, is also linked with protective functions against oxidative stress. Our previous work has found that, in chronic prion infection, an apoptotic subpopulation of cells exhibit oxidative stress and the accumulation of oxidised lipid and protein aggregates with caspase recruitment. Given the likely failure of antioxidant defence mechanisms within apoptotic prion-infected cells, we aimed to investigate the role of the crucial antioxidant pathway components, superoxide dismutases (SOD) 1 and 2, in an in vitro model of chronic prion infection. Increased total SOD activity, attributable to SOD1, was found in the overall population coincident with a decrease in SOD2 protein levels. When apoptotic cells were separated from the total population, the induction of SOD activity in the infected apoptotic cells was lost, with activity reduced back to levels seen in mock-infected control cells. In addition, mitochondrial superoxide production was increased and mitochondrial numbers decreased in the infected apoptotic subpopulation. Furthermore, a pan-caspase probe colocalised with SOD2 outside of mitochondria within cytosolic aggregates in infected cells and inhibition of caspase activity was able to restore cellular levels of SOD2 in the whole unseparated infected population to those of mock-infected control cells. Our results suggest that prion propagation exacerbates an apoptotic pathway whereby mitochondrial dysfunction follows mislocalisation of SOD2 to cytosolic caspases, permitting its degradation. Eventually, cellular capacity to maintain oxidative homeostasis is overwhelmed, thus resulting in cell death.

Collaboration


Dive into the Cathryn L. Haigh's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge