Christopher Hugh Reynolds
King's College London
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Featured researches published by Christopher Hugh Reynolds.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002
Christopher Hugh Reynolds; Joanna Betts; Walter P. Blackstock; A R Nebreda; Brian H. Anderton
Abstract: The stress‐activated kinases c‐Jun N‐terminal kinase (JNK) and p38 are members of the mitogen‐activated protein (MAP) kinase family and take part in signalling cascades initiated by various forms of stress. Their targets include the microtubule‐associated protein tau, which becomes hyperphosphorylated in Alzheimers disease. It is necessary, as a forerunner for in vivo studies, to identify the protein kinases and phosphatases that are responsible for phosphate turnover at individual sites. Using nanoelectrospray mass spectrometry, we have undertaken an extensive comparison of phosphorylation in vitro by several candidate tau kinases, namely, JNK, p38, ERK2, and glycogen synthase kinase 3β (GSK3β). Between 10 and 15 sites were identified for each kinase. The three MAP kinases phosphorylated Ser202 and Thr205 but not detectably Ser199, whereas conversely GSK3β phosphorylated Ser199 but not detectably Ser202 or Thr205. Phosphorylated Ser404 was found with all of these kinases except JNK. The MAP kinases may not be strictly proline specific: p38 phosphorylated the nonproline sites Ser185, Thr245, Ser305, and Ser356, whereas ERK2 was the most strict. All of the sites detected except Thr245 and Ser305 are known or suspected phosphorylation sites in paired helical filament‐tau extracted from Alzheimer brains. Thus, the three MAP kinases and GSK3β are importantly all strong candidates as tau kinases that may be involved in the pathogenic hyperphosphorylation of tau in Alzheimers disease.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007
Diane P. Hanger; Helen Byers; Selina Wray; K Y Leung; Malcolm Saxton; Anjan Seereeram; Christopher Hugh Reynolds; Malcolm Ward; Brian H. Anderton
Tau in Alzheimer disease brain is highly phosphorylated and aggregated into paired helical filaments comprising characteristic neurofibrillary tangles. Here we have analyzed insoluble Tau (PHF-tau) extracted from Alzheimer brain by mass spectrometry and identified 11 novel phosphorylation sites, 10 of which were assigned unambiguously to specific amino acid residues. This brings the number of directly identified sites in PHF-tau to 39, with an additional six sites indicated by reactivity with phosphospecific antibodies to Tau. We also identified five new phosphorylation sites in soluble Tau from control adult human brain, bringing the total number of reported sites to nine. To assess which kinases might be responsible for Tau phosphorylation, we used mass spectrometry to determine which sites were phosphorylated in vitro by several kinases. Casein kinase 1δ and glycogen synthase kinase-3β were each found to phosphorylate numerous sites, and each kinase phosphorylated at least 15 sites that are also phosphorylated in PHF-tau from Alzheimer brain. A combination of casein kinase 1δ and glycogen synthase kinase-3β activities could account for over three-quarters of the serine/threonine phosphorylation sites identified in PHF-tau, indicating that casein kinase 1δ may have a role, together with glycogen synthase kinase-3β, in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer disease.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008
Christopher Hugh Reynolds; Claire J. Garwood; Selina Wray; C Price; Stuart Kellie; Timothy Pietro Suren Perera; M Zvelebil; A Yang; Paul W. Sheppard; Ian M. Varndell; Diane P. Hanger; Brian H. Anderton
The microtubule-associated protein tau can associate with various other proteins in addition to tubulin, including the SH3 domains of Src family tyrosine kinases. Tau is well known to aggregate to form hyperphosphorylated filamentous deposits in several neurodegenerative diseases (tauopathies) including Alzheimer disease. We now report that tau can bind to SH3 domains derived from the p85α subunit of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, phospholipase Cγ1, and the N-terminal (but not the C-terminal) SH3 of Grb2 as well as to the kinases Fyn, cSrc, and Fgr. However, the short inserts found in neuron-specific isoforms of Src prevented the binding of tau. The experimentally determined binding of tau peptides is well accounted for when modeled into the peptide binding cleft in the SH3 domain of Fyn. After phosphorylation in vitro or in transfected cells, tau showed reduced binding to SH3 domains; no binding was detected with hyperphosphorylated tau isolated from Alzheimer brain, but SH3 binding was restored by phosphatase treatment. Tau mutants with serines and threonines replaced by glutamate, to mimic phosphorylation, showed reduced SH3 binding. These results strongly suggest that tau has a potential role in cell signaling in addition to its accepted role in cytoskeletal assembly, with regulation by phosphorylation that may be disrupted in the tauopathies including Alzheimer disease.
Molecular Psychiatry | 2014
Richard Killick; Elena M. Ribe; Raya Al-Shawi; Bilal Malik; Claudie Hooper; Cathy Fernandes; Richard Dobson; Nolan Pm; Anbarasu Lourdusamy; Simon J. Furney; Kuang Lin; Gerome Breen; Richard Wroe; Alvina W.M. To; Karelle Leroy; Mirsada Causevic; Alessia Usardi; Robinson M; Wendy Noble; Richard Williamson; Katie Lunnon; Stuart Kellie; Christopher Hugh Reynolds; Chantal Bazenet; Angela Hodges; Jean Pierre Brion; John Stephenson; Simons Jp; Simon Lovestone
Although the mechanism of Aβ action in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has remained elusive, it is known to increase the expression of the antagonist of canonical wnt signalling, Dickkopf-1 (Dkk1), whereas the silencing of Dkk1 blocks Aβ neurotoxicity. We asked if clusterin, known to be regulated by wnt, is part of an Aβ/Dkk1 neurotoxic pathway. Knockdown of clusterin in primary neurons reduced Aβ toxicity and DKK1 upregulation and, conversely, Aβ increased intracellular clusterin and decreased clusterin protein secretion, resulting in the p53-dependent induction of DKK1. To further elucidate how the clusterin-dependent induction of Dkk1 by Aβ mediates neurotoxicity, we measured the effects of Aβ and Dkk1 protein on whole-genome expression in primary neurons, finding a common pathway suggestive of activation of wnt–planar cell polarity (PCP)–c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) signalling leading to the induction of genes including EGR1 (early growth response-1), NAB2 (Ngfi-A-binding protein-2) and KLF10 (Krüppel-like factor-10) that, when individually silenced, protected against Aβ neurotoxicity and/or tau phosphorylation. Neuronal overexpression of Dkk1 in transgenic mice mimicked this Aβ-induced pathway and resulted in age-dependent increases in tau phosphorylation in hippocampus and cognitive impairment. Furthermore, we show that this Dkk1/wnt–PCP–JNK pathway is active in an Aβ-based mouse model of AD and in AD brain, but not in a tau-based mouse model or in frontotemporal dementia brain. Thus, we have identified a pathway whereby Aβ induces a clusterin/p53/Dkk1/wnt–PCP–JNK pathway, which drives the upregulation of several genes that mediate the development of AD-like neuropathologies, thereby providing new mechanistic insights into the action of Aβ in neurodegenerative diseases.
Neurobiology of Aging | 2002
Timothy M.E. Scales; R Williamson; Brian H. Anderton; Christopher Hugh Reynolds; C Price; Stuart Kellie; Ian N. Bird; K Y Leung; Helen Byers; Malcolm Ward; Ian M. Varndell; Paul W. Sheppard
Nova Science Publishers Inc | 2014
Bilal Malik; Cathy Fernandes; Richard Killick; Alessia Usardi; Ritchie Williamson; Stuart Kellie; Brian H. Anderton; Christopher Hugh Reynolds
Archive | 2005
Malcolm Ward; Helen Byers; Brian H. Anderton; Pascal Derkinderen; Christopher Hugh Reynolds; Ritchie Williamson
Archive | 2005
Malcolm Ward; Helen Byers; Brian H. Anderton; Pascal Derkinderen; Christopher Hugh Reynolds; Ritchie Williamson
Archive | 2005
Malcom Ward; Helen Byers; Brian H. Anderton; Pascal Derkinderen; Christopher Hugh Reynolds; R Williamson
Archive | 2005
Malcolm Andrew Ward; Helen Byers; Brian H. Anderton; Pascal Derkinderen; Christopher Hugh Reynolds; Ritchie Williamson