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Dive into the research topics where Christopher R. Dunston is active.

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Featured researches published by Christopher R. Dunston.


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2010

The effect of ageing on macrophage Toll‐like receptor‐mediated responses in the fight against pathogens

Christopher R. Dunston; Helen R. Griffiths

The cellular changes during ageing are incompletely understood yet immune system dysfunction is implicated in the age‐related decline in health. The acquired immune system shows a functional decline in ability to respond to new pathogens whereas serum levels of cytokines are elevated with age. Despite these age‐associated increases in circulating cytokines, the function of aged macrophages is decreased. Pathogen‐associated molecular pattern receptors such as Toll‐like receptors (TLRs) are vital in the response of macrophages to pathological stimuli. Here we review the evidence for defective TLR signalling in normal ageing. Gene transcription, protein expression and cell surface expression of members of the TLR family of receptors and co‐effector molecules do not show a consistent age‐dependent change across model systems. However, there is evidence for impaired downstream signalling events, including inhibition of positive and activation of negative modulators of TLR induced signalling events. In this paper we hypothesize that despite a poor inflammatory response via TLR activation, the ineffective clearance of pathogens by macrophages increases the duration of their activation and contributes to perpetuation of inflammatory responses and ageing.


Proteomics | 2011

Proteomic analysis of the anti-inflammatory action of minocycline.

Christopher R. Dunston; Helen R. Griffiths; Peter A. Lambert; Susan Staddon; Ann B. Vernallis

Minocycline possesses anti‐inflammatory properties independently of its antibiotic activity although the underlying molecular mechanisms are unclear. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS)‐induced cytokines and pro‐inflammatory protein expression are reduced by minocycline in cultured macrophages. Here, we tested a range of clinically important tetracycline compounds (oxytetracycline, doxycycline, minocycline and tigecycline) and showed that they all inhibited LPS‐induced nitric oxide production. We made the novel finding that tigecycline inhibited LPS‐induced nitric oxide production to a greater extent than the other tetracycline compounds tested. To identify potential targets for minocycline, we assessed alterations in the macrophage proteome induced by LPS in the presence or absence of a minocycline pre‐treatment using 2‐DE and nanoLC‐MS. We found a number of proteins, mainly involved in cellular metabolism (ATP synthase β‐subunit and aldose reductase) or stress response (heat shock proteins), which were altered in expression in response to LPS, some of which were restored, at least in part, by minocycline. This is the first study to document proteomic changes induced by minocycline. The observation that minocycline inhibits some, but not all, of the LPS‐induced proteomic changes shows that minocycline specifically affects some signalling pathways and does not completely inhibit macrophage activation.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2012

Palmitate promotes monocyte atherogenicity via de novo ceramide synthesis

Dan Gao; Chathyan Pararasa; Christopher R. Dunston; Clifford J. Bailey; Helen R. Griffiths

Elevated plasma free fatty acids (FAs) are associated with increased risk of cardiovascular disease. This study investigates the effects of the saturated FA palmitate and unsaturated FA oleate on monocyte phenotype and function. Incubation of human U937 and THP-1 monocytes with palmitate for 24h increased cell surface expression of integrin CD11b and scavenger receptor CD36 in a concentration-dependent manner with some decrease in mitochondrial reducing capacity at high concentration (300 μM). Monocytes incubated with palmitate, but not oleate, showed increased uptake of oxidized LDL and increased adhesion to rat aortic endothelium, particularly at bifurcations. The palmitate-induced increase in CD11b and CD36 expression was associated with increased cellular C16 ceramide and sphingomyelin, loss of reduced glutathione, and increased reactive oxygen species (ROS). Increased monocyte surface CD11b and CD36 was inhibited by fumonisin B1, an inhibitor of de novo ceramide synthesis, but not by the superoxide dismutase mimetic MnTBap. In contrast, MnTBap prevented the mitochondrial ROS increase and metabolic inhibition due to 300μM palmitate. This study demonstrates that in viable monocytes, palmitate but not oleate increases expression of surface CD11b and CD36. Palmitate increases monocyte adhesion to the aortic wall and promotes uptake of oxidized LDL and this involves de novo ceramide synthesis.


Chemistry Central Journal | 2013

Healthy ageing and depletion of intracellular glutathione influences T cell membrane thioredoxin-1 levels and cytokine secretion

Rita C. Torrão; Irundika H.K. Dias; Stuart J. Bennett; Christopher R. Dunston; Helen R. Griffiths

BackgroundDuring ageing an altered redox balance has been observed in both intracellular and extracellular compartments, primarily due to glutathione depletion and metabolic stress. Maintaining redox homeostasis is important for controlling proliferation and apoptosis in response to specific stimuli for a variety of cells. For T cells, the ability to generate specific response to antigen is dependent on the oxidation state of cell surface and cytoplasmic protein-thiols. Intracellular thiols are maintained in their reduced state by a network of redox regulating peptides, proteins and enzymes such as glutathione, thioredoxins and thioredoxin reductase. Here we have investigated whether any relationship exists between age and secreted or cell surface thioredoxin-1, intracellular glutathione concentration and T cell surface thioredoxin 1 (Trx-1) and how this is related to interleukin (IL)-2 production.ResultsHealthy older adults have reduced lymphocyte surface expression and lower circulating plasma Trx-1 concentrations. Using buthionine sulfoximine to deplete intracellular glutathione in Jurkat T cells we show that cell surface Trx-1 is lowered, secretion of Trx-1 is decreased and the response to the lectin phytohaemagglutinin measured as IL-2 production is also affected. These effects are recapitulated by another glutathione depleting agent, diethylmaleate.ConclusionTogether these data suggest that a relationship exists between the intracellular redox compartment and Trx-1 proteins. Loss of lymphocyte surface Trx-1 may be a useful biomarker of healthy ageing.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2014

Thioredoxin as a putative biomarker and candidate target in age-related immune decline

Helen R. Griffiths; Stuart J. Bennett; Peter Olofsson; Christopher R. Dunston

The oxidoreductase Trx-1 (thioredoxin 1) is highly conserved and found intra- and extra-cellularly in mammalian systems. There is increasing interest in its capacity to regulate immune function based on observations of altered distribution and expression during ageing and disease. We have investigated previously whether extracellular T-cell or peripheral blood mononuclear cell Trx-1 levels serve as a robust marker of ageing. In a preliminary study of healthy older adults compared with younger adults, we showed that there was a significant, but weak, relationship with age. Interestingly, patients with rheumatoid arthritis and cancer have been described by others to secrete or express greater surface Trx-1 than predicted. It is interesting to speculate whether a decline in Trx-1 during ageing protects against such conditions, but correspondingly increases risk of disease associated with Trx-1 depletion such as cardiovascular disease. These hypotheses are being explored in the MARK-AGE study, and preliminary findings confirm an inverse correlation of surface Trx-1 with age. We review recent concepts around the role of Trx-1 and its partners in T-cell function on the cell surface and as an extracellular regulator of redox state in a secreted form. Further studies on the redox state and binding partners of surface and secreted Trx-1 in larger patient datasets are needed to improve our understanding of why Trx-1 is important for lifespan and immune function.


Journal of Pharmacy and Pharmacology | 2015

Improving T cell-induced response to subunit vaccines:opportunities for a proteomic systems approach

Christopher R. Dunston; Rebecca Herbert; Helen R. Griffiths

Prophylactic vaccines are an effective strategy to prevent development of many infectious diseases. With new and re‐emerging infections posing increasing risks to food stocks and the health of the population in general, there is a need to improve the rationale of vaccine development. One key challenge lies in development of an effective T cell‐induced response to subunit vaccines at specific sites and in different populations.


Proteomics | 2012

Terminal galactose residues on transferrin are increased in midlife adults compared to young adults

Christopher R. Dunston; Khujesta Choudhury; Helen R. Griffiths

Humans undergo biological ageing at different rates. This associates with functional decline in a number of physiological systems and increasing incidence of age‐related pathologies. The discovery of robust biomarkers of ageing could be used to identify early divergence from a path of healthy ageing towards age‐related disease. In the present study, we undertook proteomic analysis of plasma from healthy young men (mean age = 21.4 ± 1.5 years) and healthy midlife men (mean age = 57.0 ± 1.6 years). We identified 12 spots including transferrin, complement C3b and transthyretin that differed in abundance between the age groups. Transferrin spots showed an acidic pI shift in older males. Sandwich ELISAs were used to investigate the changes further. C3b levels were below the level of detection by ELISA and plasma concentrations of total transferrin or transthyretin were not different between the age groups studied here. However, analysis of transferrin N‐glycan structures showed an increase in terminal galactose residues in older men, suggesting that the loss of terminal N‐acetyl neuraminic acid residues contributes to the more acid pI of transferrin spots observed with age. Terminal galactosylation of transferrin may be a biomarker of healthy ageing and is now under investigation in the MARK‐AGE study.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2015

Novel ageing-biomarker discovery using data-intensive technologies

Helen R. Griffiths; Edyta Augustyniak; Stuart J. Bennett; Florence Debacq-Chainiaux; Christopher R. Dunston; Peter Kristensen; Connie Jenning Melchjorsen; Santos A. Navarrete; Andreas Simm; Olivier Toussaint

Ageing is accompanied by many visible characteristics. Other biological and physiological markers are also well-described e.g. loss of circulating sex hormones and increased inflammatory cytokines. Biomarkers for healthy ageing studies are presently predicated on existing knowledge of ageing traits. The increasing availability of data-intensive methods enables deep-analysis of biological samples for novel biomarkers. We have adopted two discrete approaches in MARK-AGE Work Package 7 for biomarker discovery; (1) microarray analyses and/or proteomics in cell systems e.g. endothelial progenitor cells or T cell ageing including a stress model; and (2) investigation of cellular material and plasma directly from tightly-defined proband subsets of different ages using proteomic, transcriptomic and miR array. The first approach provided longitudinal insight into endothelial progenitor and T cell ageing. This review describes the strategy and use of hypothesis-free, data-intensive approaches to explore cellular proteins, miR, mRNA and plasma proteins as healthy ageing biomarkers, using ageing models and directly within samples from adults of different ages. It considers the challenges associated with integrating multiple models and pilot studies as rational biomarkers for a large cohort study. From this approach, a number of high-throughput methods were developed to evaluate novel, putative biomarkers of ageing in the MARK-AGE cohort.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2015

CD4(+) T cell surface alpha enolase is lower in older adults.

Stuart J. Bennett; Edyta Augustyniak; Christopher R. Dunston; Richard A. Brown; Eduard Shantsila; Gregory Y.H. Lip; Rita C. Torrão; Chathyan Pararasa; Ali Hussein Remtulla; Romain Ladouce; Bertrand Friguet; Helen R. Griffiths

To identify novel cell ageing markers in order to gain insight into ageing mechanisms, we adopted membrane enrichment and comparison of the CD4(+) T cell membrane proteome (purified by cell surface labelling using Sulfo-NHS-SS-Biotin reagent) between healthy young (n=9, 20-25 years) and older (n=10; 50-70 years) male adults. Following two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DE) to separate pooled membrane proteins in triplicates, the identity of protein spots with age-dependent differences (p<0.05 and >1.4 fold difference) was determined using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Seventeen protein spot density differences (ten increased and seven decreased in the older adult group) were observed between young and older adults. From spot intensity analysis, CD4(+) T cell surface α-enolase was decreased in expression by 1.5 fold in the older age group; this was verified by flow cytometry (n=22) and qPCR with significantly lower expression of cellular α-enolase mRNA and protein compared to young adult CD4(+) T cells (p<0.05). In an independent age-matched case-control study, lower CD4(+) T cell surface α-enolase expression was observed in age-matched patients with cardiovascular disease (p<0.05). An immune-modulatory role has been proposed for surface α-enolase and our findings of decreased expression suggest that deficits in surface α-enolase merit investigation in the context of immune dysfunction during ageing and vascular disease.


Journal of Infection | 2016

Addition of PLA2 to CRP enhances sepsis diagnosis

T.S.J. Elliott; A.L. Casey; Tarja J. Karpanen; Miruna D. David; Tony Whitehouse; Peter A. Lambert; Ann B. Vernallis; Tony Worthington; Gita Parekh; Christopher R. Dunston; Josh Kirby; Paul A. Davis

Letter to the Editor refers to: Fredrikke Christie Knudtzen, Stig Lonberg Nielsen, Kim Oren Gradel, Annmarie Touborg Lassen, Hans Jorn Kolmos, Thoger Gorm Jensen, Pernille Just Vinholt, Court Pedersen, Characteristics of patients with community-acquired bacteremia who have low levels of C-reactive protein (≤20 mg/L), Journal of Infection, Volume 68, Issue 2, February 2014, Pages 149-155

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Dan Gao

University of Liverpool

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