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Dive into the research topics where Chibeza C. Agley is active.

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Featured researches published by Chibeza C. Agley.


Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience | 2014

Defining the nociceptor transcriptome.

Matthew Thakur; Megan Crow; Natalie Richards; Gareth I. J. Davey; Emma Levine; Jayne H. Kelleher; Chibeza C. Agley; Franziska Denk; Stephen D. R. Harridge; Stephen B. McMahon

Unbiased “omics” techniques, such as next generation RNA-sequencing, can provide entirely novel insights into biological systems. However, cellular heterogeneity presents a significant barrier to analysis and interpretation of these datasets. The neurons of the dorsal root ganglia (DRG) are an important model for studies of neuronal injury, regeneration and pain. The majority of investigators utilize a dissociated preparation of whole ganglia when studying cellular and molecular function. We demonstrate that the standard methods for producing these preparations gives a 10%-neuronal mixture of cells, with the remainder of cells constituting satellite glia and other non-neuronal cell types. Using a novel application of magnetic purification, we consistently obtain over 95% pure, viable neurons from adult tissue, significantly enriched for small diameter nociceptors expressing the voltage gated ion channel Nav1.8. Using genome-wide RNA-sequencing we compare the currently used (10% neuronal) and pure (95% nociceptor) preparations and find 920 genes enriched. This gives an unprecedented insight into the molecular composition of small nociceptive neurons in the DRG, potentially altering the interpretation of previous studies performed at the tissue level, and indicating a number of novel markers of this widely-studied population of cells. We anticipate that the ease of use, affordability and speed of this technique will see it become widely adopted, delivering a greatly improved capacity to study the roles of nociceptors in health and disease.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2012

An image analysis method for the precise selection and quantitation of fluorescently labeled cellular constituents: application to the measurement of human muscle cells in culture.

Chibeza C. Agley; Cristiana P. Velloso; Norman R. Lazarus; Stephen D. R. Harridge

The accurate measurement of the morphological characteristics of cells with nonuniform conformations presents difficulties. We report here a straightforward method using immunofluorescent staining and the commercially available imaging program Adobe Photoshop, which allows objective and precise information to be gathered on irregularly shaped cells. We have applied this measurement technique to the analysis of human muscle cells and their immunologically marked intracellular constituents, as these cells are prone to adopting a highly branched phenotype in culture. Use of this method can be used to overcome many of the long-standing limitations of conventional approaches for quantifying muscle cell size in vitro. In addition, wider applications of Photoshop as a quantitative and semiquantitative tool in immunocytochemistry are explored.


Aging Cell | 2013

Primary human muscle precursor cells obtained from young and old donors produce similar proliferative, differentiation and senescent profiles in culture

Mansour Alsharidah; Norman R. Lazarus; Tomasz George; Chibeza C. Agley; Cristiana P. Velloso; Stephen D. R. Harridge

The myogenic behaviour of primary human muscle precursor cells (MPCs) obtained from young (aged 20–25 years) and elderly people (aged 67–82 years) was studied in culture. Cells were compared in terms of proliferation, DNA damage, time course and extent of myogenic marker expression during differentiation, fusion, size of the formed myotubes, secretion of the myogenic regulatory cytokine TGF‐β1 and sensitivity to TGF‐β1 treatment. No differences were observed between cells obtained from the young and elderly people. The cell populations were expanded in culture until replicative senescence. Cultures that maintained their initial proportion of myogenic cells (desmin positive) with passaging (n = 5) were studied and compared with cells from the same individuals in the non‐senescent state. The senescent cells exhibited a greater number of cells with DNA damage (γ‐H2AX positive), showed impaired expression of markers of differentiation, fused less well, formed smaller myotubes and secreted more TGF‐β. The data strongly suggest that MPCs from young and elderly people have similar myogenic behaviour.


Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2015

Isolation and quantitative immunocytochemical characterization of primary myogenic cells and fibroblasts from human skeletal muscle.

Chibeza C. Agley; Anthea Rowlerson; Cristiana P. Velloso; Norman L. Lazarus; Stephen D. R. Harridge

The repair and regeneration of skeletal muscle requires the action of satellite cells, which are the resident muscle stem cells. These can be isolated from human muscle biopsy samples using enzymatic digestion and their myogenic properties studied in culture. Quantitatively, the two main adherent cell types obtained from enzymatic digestion are: (i) the satellite cells (termed myogenic cells or muscle precursor cells), identified initially as CD56(+) and later as CD56(+)/desmin(+) cells and (ii) muscle-derived fibroblasts, identified as CD56(-) and TE-7(+). Fibroblasts proliferate very efficiently in culture and in mixed cell populations these cells may overrun myogenic cells to dominate the culture. The isolation and purification of different cell types from human muscle is thus an important methodological consideration when trying to investigate the innate behavior of either cell type in culture. Here we describe a system of sorting based on the gentle enzymatic digestion of cells using collagenase and dispase followed by magnetic activated cell sorting (MACS) which gives both a high purity (>95% myogenic cells) and good yield (~2.8 x 10(6) ± 8.87 x 10(5) cells/g tissue after 7 days in vitro) for experiments in culture. This approach is based on incubating the mixed muscle-derived cell population with magnetic microbeads beads conjugated to an antibody against CD56 and then passing cells though a magnetic field. CD56(+) cells bound to microbeads are retained by the field whereas CD56(-) cells pass unimpeded through the column. Cell suspensions from any stage of the sorting process can be plated and cultured. Following a given intervention, cell morphology, and the expression and localization of proteins including nuclear transcription factors can be quantified using immunofluorescent labeling with specific antibodies and an image processing and analysis package.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Active GSK3β and an intact β-catenin TCF complex are essential for the differentiation of human myogenic progenitor cells

Chibeza C. Agley; Fiona C. Lewis; Oihane Jaka; Norman R. Lazarus; Cristiana P. Velloso; Philippa Francis-West; Georgina M. Ellison-Hughes; Stephen D. R. Harridge

Wnt-β-catenin signalling is essential for skeletal muscle myogenesis during development, but its role in adult human skeletal muscle remains unknown. Here we have used human primary CD56Pos satellite cell-derived myogenic progenitors obtained from healthy individuals to study the role of Wnt-β-catenin signalling in myogenic differentiation. We show that dephosphorylated β-catenin (active-β-catenin), the central effector of the canonical Wnt cascade, is strongly upregulated at the onset of differentiation and undergoes nuclear translocation as differentiation progresses. To establish the role of Wnt signalling in regulating the differentiation process we manipulated key nodes of this pathway through a series of β-catenin gain-of-function (GSK3 inhibition and β-catenin overexpression) or loss-of-function experiments (dominant negative TCF4). Our data showed that manipulation of these critical pathway components led to varying degrees of disruption to the normal differentiation phenotype indicating the importance of Wnt signalling in regulating this process. We reveal an independent necessity for active-β-catenin in the fusion and differentiation of human myogenic progenitors and that dominant negative inhibition of TCF4 prevents differentiation completely. Together these data add new mechanistic insights into both Wnt signalling and adult human myogenic progenitor differentiation.


Survey of Anesthesiology | 2014

Acute Skeletal Muscle Wasting in Critical Illness

Zudin Puthucheary; J Rawal; Mark McPhail; Bronwen Connolly; Gamunu Ratnayake; Pearl Chan; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; Rahul Padhke; Tracy Dew; Paul S. Sidhu; Cristiana P. Velloso; John Seymour; Chibeza C. Agley; Anna Selby; Marie C. Limb; Lindsay M. Edwards; Kenneth Smith; Anthea Rowlerson; Michael J. Rennie; John Moxham; Stephen D. R. Harridge; Nicholas Hart; Hugh Montgomery


Development | 2014

Human skeletal muscle fibroblasts, but not myogenic cells, readily undergo adipogenic differentiation

Chibeza C. Agley; Anthea Rowlerson; Cristiana P. Velloso; Norman R. Lazarus; Stephen D. R. Harridge


american thoracic society international conference | 2012

The musculoskeletal ultrasound in critical care: Longitudinal evaluation (UK-MUSCLE) study: Severity of acute critical illness determines the degree of muscle wasting

Zudin Puthucheary; J Rawal; Bronwen Connolly; Mark McPhail; Gamanu Ratnayake; Paul S. Sidhu; Dinesh Shrikrishna; Phillip Hopkins; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; Michael I. Polkey; Cristiana P. Velloso; Chibeza C. Agley; Michael J. Rennie; Anthea Rowlerson; John Moxham; Stephen D. R. Harridge; Nicholas Hart; Hugh Montgomery


american thoracic society international conference | 2012

The Musculoskeletal Ultrasound In Critical Care: Longitudinal Evaluation (UK-MUSCLE) Study: Measurement Of Protein Synthesis And Signalling Drivers In Critically Ill Patients

Zudin Puthucheary; J Rawal; Mark McPhail; Gamanu Ratnayake; Phillip Hopkins; Kenneth Smith; Michael J. Rennie; Crisitiana Velloso; Chibeza C. Agley; John Moxham; Stephen D. R. Harridge; Nicholas Hart; Hugh Montgomery

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Hugh Montgomery

University College London

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J Rawal

University College London

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Mark McPhail

Imperial College London

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Nicholas Hart

Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust

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