Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Cheryl L. Wellington is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Cheryl L. Wellington.


Cell | 2006

Cleavage at the Caspase-6 Site Is Required for Neuronal Dysfunction and Degeneration Due to Mutant Huntingtin

Rona K. Graham; Yu Deng; Elizabeth J. Slow; Brendan J. Haigh; Nagat Bissada; Ge Lu; Jacqueline Pearson; Jacqueline Shehadeh; Lisa Bertram; Zoe Murphy; Simon C. Warby; Crystal N. Doty; Sophie Roy; Cheryl L. Wellington; Blair R. Leavitt; Lynn A. Raymond; Donald W. Nicholson; Michael R. Hayden

Cleavage of huntingtin (htt) has been characterized in vitro, and accumulation of caspase cleavage fragments represents an early pathological change in brains of Huntingtons disease (HD) patients. However, the relationship between htt proteolysis and the pathogenesis of HD is unknown. To determine whether caspase cleavage of htt is a key event in the neuronal dysfunction and selective neurodegeneration in HD, we generated YAC mice expressing caspase-3- and caspase-6-resistant mutant htt. Mice expressing mutant htt, resistant to cleavage by caspase-6 but not caspase-3, maintain normal neuronal function and do not develop striatal neurodegeneration. Furthermore, caspase-6-resistant mutant htt mice are protected against neurotoxicity induced by multiple stressors including NMDA, quinolinic acid (QA), and staurosporine. These results are consistent with proteolysis of htt at the caspase-6 cleavage site being an important event in mediating neuronal dysfunction and neurodegeneration and highlight the significant role of htt proteolysis and excitotoxicity in HD.


Neuron | 2002

Increased Sensitivity to N-Methyl-D-Aspartate Receptor-Mediated Excitotoxicity in a Mouse Model of Huntington's Disease

Melinda M Zeron; Oskar Hansson; Nansheng Chen; Cheryl L. Wellington; Blair R. Leavitt; Patrik Brundin; Michael R. Hayden; Lynn A. Raymond

Previous work suggests N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) activation may be involved in degeneration of medium-sized spiny striatal neurons in Huntingtons disease (HD). Here we show that these neurons are more vulnerable to NMDAR-mediated death in a YAC transgenic FVB/N mouse model of HD expressing full-length mutant huntingtin, compared with wild-type FVB/N mice. Excitotoxic death of these neurons was increased after intrastriatal injection of quinolinate in vivo, and after NMDA but not AMPA exposure in culture. NMDA-induced cell death was abolished by an NR2B subtype-specific antagonist. In contrast, NMDAR-mediated death of cerebellar granule neurons was not enhanced, consistent with cell-type and NMDAR subtype specificity. Moreover, increased NMDA-evoked current amplitude and caspase-3 activity were observed in transgenic striatal neurons. Our data support a role for NR2B-subtype NMDAR activation as a trigger for selective neuronal degeneration in HD.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Caspase Cleavage of Gene Products Associated with Triplet Expansion Disorders Generates Truncated Fragments Containing the Polyglutamine Tract

Cheryl L. Wellington; Lisa M. Ellerby; Abigail S. Hackam; Russell L. Margolis; Mark Trifiro; Roshni R. Singaraja; Krista McCutcheon; Guy S. Salvesen; Stephanie S. Propp; Michael Bromm; Kathleen Rowland; Taiqi Zhang; Dita M. Rasper; Sophie Roy; Nancy A. Thornberry; Leonard Pinsky; Akira Kakizuka; Christopher A. Ross; Donald W. Nicholson; Dale E. Bredesen; Michael R. Hayden

The neurodegenerative diseases Huntington disease, dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy, spinocerebellar atrophy type 3, and spinal bulbar muscular atrophy are caused by expansion of a polyglutamine tract within their respective gene products. There is increasing evidence that generation of truncated proteins containing an expanded polyglutamine tract may be a key step in the pathogenesis of these disorders. We now report that, similar to huntingtin, atrophin-1, ataxin-3, and the androgen receptor are cleaved in apoptotic extracts. Furthermore, each of these proteins is cleaved by one or more purified caspases, cysteine proteases involved in apoptotic death. The CAG length does not modulate susceptibility to cleavage of any of the full-length proteins. Our results suggest that by generation of truncated polyglutamine-containing proteins, caspase cleavage may represent a common step in the pathogenesis of each of these neurodegenerative diseases.


Neuron | 2003

Huntingtin and huntingtin-associated protein 1 influence neuronal calcium signaling mediated by inositol-(1,4,5) triphosphate receptor type 1.

Tie-Shan Tang; Huiping Tu; Edmond Chan; Anton Maximov; Zhengnan Wang; Cheryl L. Wellington; Michael R. Hayden; Ilya Bezprozvanny

Huntingtons disease (HD) is caused by polyglutamine expansion (exp) in huntingtin (Htt). The type 1 inositol (1,4,5)-triphosphate receptor (InsP3R1) is an intracellular calcium (Ca2+) release channel that plays an important role in neuronal function. In a yeast two-hybrid screen with the InsP3R1 carboxy terminus, we isolated Htt-associated protein-1A (HAP1A). We show that an InsP3R1-HAP1A-Htt ternary complex is formed in vitro and in vivo. In planar lipid bilayer reconstitution experiments, InsP3R1 activation by InsP3 is sensitized by Httexp, but not by normal Htt. Transfection of full-length Httexp or caspase-resistant Httexp, but not normal Htt, into medium spiny striatal neurons faciliates Ca2+ release in response to threshold concentrations of the selective mGluR1/5 agonist 3,5-DHPG. Our findings identify a novel molecular link between Htt and InsP3R1-mediated neuronal Ca2+ signaling and provide an explanation for the derangement of cytosolic Ca2+ signaling in HD patients and mouse models.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2002

Caspase Cleavage of Mutant Huntingtin Precedes Neurodegeneration in Huntington's Disease

Cheryl L. Wellington; Claire-Anne Gutekunst; Danny Rogers; Simon C. Warby; Rona K. Graham; Odell Loubser; Jeremy M. Van Raamsdonk; Roshni R. Singaraja; Yu-Zhou Yang; Juliette Gafni; Dale E. Bredesen; Steven M. Hersch; Blair R. Leavitt; Sophie Roy; Donald W. Nicholson; Michael R. Hayden

Huntingtons disease (HD) results from polyglutamine expansion in huntingtin (htt), a protein with several consensus caspase cleavage sites. Despite the identification of htt fragments in the brain, it has not been shown conclusively that htt is cleaved by caspases in vivo. Furthermore, no study has addressed when htt cleavage occurs with respect to the onset of neurodegeneration. Using antibodies that detect only caspase-cleaved htt, we demonstrate that htt is cleaved in vivo specifically at the caspase consensus site at amino acid 552. We detect caspase-cleaved htt in control human brain as well as in HD brains with early grade neuropathology, including one homozygote. Cleaved htt is also seen in wild-type and HD transgenic mouse brains before the onset of neurodegeneration. These results suggest that caspase cleavage of htt may be a normal physiological event. However, in HD, cleavage of mutant htt would release N-terminal fragments with the potential for increased toxicity and accumulation caused by the presence of the expanded polyglutamine tract. Furthermore, htt fragments were detected most abundantly in cortical projection neurons, suggesting that accumulation of expanded htt fragments in these neurons may lead to corticostriatal dysfunction as an early event in the pathogenesis of HD.


Laboratory Investigation | 2002

ABCA1 mRNA and Protein Distribution Patterns Predict Multiple Different Roles and Levels of Regulation

Cheryl L. Wellington; Elizabeth K.-Y. Walker; Agripina Suarez; Anita Kwok; Nagat Bissada; Roshni R. Singaraja; Yu-Zhou Yang; Lin-Hua Zhang; Erick R. James; Janet E. Wilson; Omar Francone; Bruce M. McManus; Michael R. Hayden

Mutations in ABCA1 cause the allelic disorders familial hypolipoproteinemia and Tangier Disease. To identify where ABCA1 was likely to have a functional role, we determined the cellular and tissue-specific patterns of murine ABCA1 expression. RT-PCR and Western blot analysis on dissected murine tissues demonstrated broad expression of ABCA1 mRNA and protein in many tissues with prominent protein expression in liver, testis, and adrenal tissue. In situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry experiments demonstrated specific patterns of ABCA1 expression at the cellular level, with hepatocytes, the epithelial lining of the digestive system and bladder, the proximal convoluted tubule of the kidney, and Purkinje and cortical pyramidal neurons containing abundant ABCA1 protein. Significant discordance between relative mRNA and protein expression patterns suggests the possibility of post-transcriptional regulation of ABCA1 expression in selected cells or tissues. We also show that ABCA1 protein levels are up-regulated specifically in the liver after exposure to an atherogenic diet for 7 days, supporting a major role for the liver in dietary modulation of HDL-C levels. Our observations show that ABCA1 is expressed in a pattern consistent with its role in HDL-C metabolism. Additionally, ABCA1 may have important functional roles in other cell types independent of HDL-C regulation.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 1999

Kennedy's disease: caspase cleavage of the androgen receptor is a crucial event in cytotoxicity.

Lisa M. Ellerby; Abigail S. Hackam; Stephanie S. Propp; H. Michael Ellerby; Shahrooz Rabizadeh; Neil R. Cashman; Mark Trifiro; Leonard Pinsky; Cheryl L. Wellington; Guy S. Salvesen; Michael R. Hayden; Dale E. Bredesen

Abstract : X‐linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), Kennedys disease, is a degenerative disease of the motor neurons that is associated with an increase in the number of CAG repeats encoding a polyglutamine stretch within the androgen receptor (AR). Recent work has demonstrated that the gene products associated with open reading frame triplet repeat expansions may be substrates for the cysteine protease cell death executioners, the caspases. However, the role that caspase cleavage plays in the cytotoxicity associated with expression of the disease‐associated alleles is unknown. Here, we report the first conclusive evidence that caspase cleavage is a critical step in cytotoxicity ; the expression of the AR with an expanded polyglutamine stretch enhances its ability to induce apoptosis when compared with the normal AR. The AR is cleaved by a caspase‐3 subfamily protease at Asp146, and this cleavage is increased during apoptosis. Cleavage of the AR at Asp146 is critical for the induction of apoptosis by AR, as mutation of the cleavage site blocks the ability of the AR to induce cell death. Further, mutation of the caspase cleavage site at Asp146 blocks the ability of the SBMA AR to form perinuclear aggregates. These studies define a fundamental role for caspase cleavage in the induction of neural cell death by proteins displaying expanded polyglutamine tracts, and therefore suggest a strategy that may be useful to treat neurodegenrative diseases associated with polyglutamine repeat expansions.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2008

Overexpression of ABCA1 reduces amyloid deposition in the PDAPP mouse model of Alzheimer disease

Suzanne E. Wahrle; Hong Jiang; Maia Parsadanian; Jungsu Kim; Aimin Li; Amanda Knoten; Sanjay Jain; Veronica Hirsch-Reinshagen; Cheryl L. Wellington; Kelly R. Bales; Steven M. Paul; David M. Holtzman

APOE genotype is a major genetic risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD). ABCA1, a member of the ATP-binding cassette family of active transporters, lipidates apoE in the CNS. Abca1(-/-) mice have decreased lipid associated with apoE and increased amyloid deposition in several AD mouse models. We hypothesized that mice overexpressing ABCA1 in the brain would have increased lipidation of apoE-containing lipoproteins and decreased amyloid deposition. To address these hypotheses, we created PrP-mAbca1 Tg mice that overexpress mouse Abca1 throughout the brain under the control of the mouse prion promoter. We bred the PrP-mAbca1 mice to the PDAPP AD mouse model, a transgenic line overexpressing a mutant human amyloid precursor protein. PDAPP/Abca1 Tg mice developed a phenotype remarkably similar to that seen in PDAPP/Apoe(-/-) mice: there was significantly less amyloid beta-peptide (Abeta) deposition, a redistribution of Abeta to the hilus of the dentate gyrus in the hippocampus, and an almost complete absence of thioflavine S-positive amyloid plaques. Analyses of CSF from PrP-mAbca1 Tg mice and media conditioned by PrP-mAbca1 Tg primary astrocytes demonstrated increased lipidation of apoE-containing particles. These data support the conclusions that increased ABCA1-mediated lipidation of apoE in the CNS can reduce amyloid burden and that increasing ABCA1 function may have a therapeutic effect on AD.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2004

Specific caspase interactions and amplification are involved in selective neuronal vulnerability in Huntington's disease

Evan Hermel; Juliette Gafni; S S Propp; B R Leavitt; Cheryl L. Wellington; J E Young; A S Hackam; Anna Logvinova; Alyson Peel; Sylvia F. Chen; Vivian Hook; Roshni R. Singaraja; Stanislaw Krajewski; Paul Goldsmith; H M Ellerby; Michael R. Hayden; Dale E. Bredesen

AbstractHuntingtons disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant progressive neurodegenerative disorder resulting in selective neuronal loss and dysfunction in the striatum and cortex. The molecular pathways leading to the selectivity of neuronal cell death in HD are poorly understood. Proteolytic processing of full-length mutant huntingtin (Htt) and subsequent events may play an important role in the selective neuronal cell death found in this disease. Despite the identification of Htt as a substrate for caspases, it is not known which caspase(s) cleaves Htt in vivo or whether regional expression of caspases contribute to selective neuronal cells loss. Here, we evaluate whether specific caspases are involved in cell death induced by mutant Htt and if this correlates with our recent finding that Htt is cleaved in vivo at the caspase consensus site 552. We find that caspase-2 cleaves Htt selectively at amino acid 552. Further, Htt recruits caspase-2 into an apoptosome-like complex. Binding of caspase-2 to Htt is polyglutamine repeat-length dependent, and therefore may serve as a critical initiation step in HD cell death. This hypothesis is supported by the requirement of caspase-2 for the death of mouse primary striatal cells derived from HD transgenic mice expressing full-length Htt (YAC72). Expression of catalytically inactive (dominant-negative) forms of caspase-2, caspase-7, and to some extent caspase-6, reduced the cell death of YAC72 primary striatal cells, while the catalytically inactive forms of caspase-3, -8, and -9 did not. Histological analysis of post-mortem human brain tissue and YAC72 mice revealed activation of caspases and enhanced caspase-2 immunoreactivity in medium spiny neurons of the striatum and the cortical projection neurons when compared to controls. Further, upregulation of caspase-2 correlates directly with decreased levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the cortex and striatum of 3-month YAC72 transgenic mice and therefore suggests that these changes are early events in HD pathogenesis. These data support the involvement of caspase-2 in the selective neuronal cell death associated with HD in the striatum and cortex.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2001

Mutant huntingtin enhances excitotoxic cell death.

Melinda M Zeron; Nansheng Chen; Ali Moshaver; Allen Ting-Chun Lee; Cheryl L. Wellington; Michael R. Hayden; Lynn A. Raymond

Evidence suggests overactivation of NMDA-type glutamate receptors (NMDARs) contributes to selective degeneration of medium-sized spiny striatal neurons in Huntingtons disease (HD). Here we determined whether expression of huntingtin containing the polyglutamine expansion augments NMDAR-mediated excitotoxicity. HEK293 cells coexpressing mutant huntingtin (htt-138Q) and either NR1A/NR2A- or NR1A/NR2B-type NMDARs exposed to 1 mM NMDA showed a significant increase in excitotoxic cell death compared to controls (cells coexpressing htt-15Q or GFP), but the difference was larger for NR1A/NR2B. Moreover, agonist-dependent cell death showed apoptotic features for cells coexpressing htt-138Q and NR1A/NR2B, but not for cells expressing htt-138Q and NR1A/NR2A. Further, NR1A/NR2B-mediated apoptosis was not seen with coexpression of an N-terminal fragment of mutant htt. Since NR1A/NR2B is the predominant NMDAR subtype in neostriatal medium-sized spiny neurons, enhancement of NMDA-induced apoptotic death in NR1A/NR2B-expressing cells by full-length mutant htt may contribute to selective neurodegeneration in HD.

Collaboration


Dive into the Cheryl L. Wellington's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Michael R. Hayden

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sophie Stukas

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jianjia Fan

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Anna Wilkinson

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dhananjay Namjoshi

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeniffer Chan

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Neil R. Cashman

University of British Columbia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge