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Dive into the research topics where Diane E. Merry is active.

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Featured researches published by Diane E. Merry.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Castration Restores Function and Neurofilament Alterations of Aged Symptomatic Males in a Transgenic Mouse Model of Spinal and Bulbar Muscular Atrophy

Erica S. Chevalier-Larsen; Christopher J. O'Brien; Huiyi Wang; Shannon C. Jenkins; Latia Holder; Andrew P. Lieberman; Diane E. Merry

Transgenic models of neurodegenerative disease have proved uniquely powerful for delineating pathways of neuronal dysfunction and cell death. We have developed a transgenic model of the polyglutamine disease spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), an adult-onset, slowly progressive motor neuron disease caused by polyglutamine expansion in the androgen receptor (AR). Mice bearing a human AR with 112 glutamines reproduce many aspects of SBMA, including slowly progressive, gender-specific motor deficits, and neuronal intranuclear inclusions. Despite substantial motor deficits in male AR112Q mice, no motor neuron loss was observed, indicating that neuronal dysfunction, rather than neuronal death, is central to disease. Moreover, reduced levels of unphosphorylated neurofilament heavy chain (NF-H) were observed in motor neurons, suggesting a role for NF-H in SBMA neuronal dysfunction. The elimination of androgens by surgical castration of severely affected, aged 112Q male mice partially restored motor function as well as NF-H levels. These data suggest that hormone-based therapies designed to treat SBMA patients, even with advanced disease, are likely to be effective.


Nature Medicine | 2007

ASC-J9 ameliorates spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy phenotype via degradation of androgen receptor

Zhiming Yang; Yu-Jia Chang; I-Chen Yu; Shuyuan Yeh; Cheng-Chia Wu; Hiroshi Miyamoto; Diane E. Merry; Gen Sobue; Lu-Min Chen; Shu-Shi Chang; Chawnshang Chang

Motor neuron degeneration resulting from the aggregation of the androgen receptor with an expanded polyglutamine tract (AR-polyQ) has been linked to the development of spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA or Kennedy disease). Here we report that adding 5-hydroxy-1,7-bis(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)-1,4,6-heptatrien-3-one (ASC-J9) disrupts the interaction between AR and its coregulators, and also increases cell survival by decreasing AR-polyQ nuclear aggregation and increasing AR-polyQ degradation in cultured cells. Intraperitoneal injection of ASC-J9 into AR-polyQ transgenic SBMA mice markedly improved disease symptoms, as seen by a reduction in muscular atrophy. Notably, unlike previous approaches in which surgical or chemical castration was used to reduce SBMA symptoms, ASC-J9 treatment ameliorated SBMA symptoms by decreasing AR-97Q aggregation and increasing VEGF164 expression with little change of serum testosterone. Moreover, mice treated with ASC-J9 retained normal sexual function and fertility. Collectively, our results point to a better therapeutic and preventative approach to treating SBMA, by disrupting the interaction between AR and AR coregulators.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2013

Activation of Hsp70 reduces neurotoxicity by promoting polyglutamine protein degradation

Adrienne M. Wang; Yoshinari Miyata; Susan Klinedinst; Hwei Ming Peng; Jason P. Chua; Tomoko Komiyama; Xiaokai Li; Yoshihiro Morishima; Diane E. Merry; William B. Pratt; Yoichi Osawa; Catherine A. Collins; Jason E. Gestwicki; Andrew P. Lieberman

We sought novel strategies to reduce levels of the polyglutamine androgen receptor (polyQ AR) and achieve therapeutic benefits in models of spinobulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), a protein aggregation neurodegenerative disorder. Proteostasis of the polyQ AR is controlled by the Hsp90/Hsp70-based chaperone machinery, but mechanisms regulating the protein’s turnover are incompletely understood. We demonstrate that overexpression of Hip, a co-chaperone that enhances binding of Hsp70 to its substrates, promotes client protein ubiquitination and polyQ AR clearance. Furthermore, we identify a small molecule that acts similarly to Hip by allosterically promoting Hsp70 binding to unfolded substrates. Like Hip, this synthetic co-chaperone enhances client protein ubiquitination and polyQ AR degradation. Both genetic and pharmacologic approaches targeting Hsp70 alleviate toxicity in a Drosophila model of SBMA. These findings highlight the therapeutic potential of allosteric regulators of Hsp70, and provide new insights into the role of the chaperone machinery in protein quality control.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Cytoplasmic Retention of Polyglutamine-Expanded Androgen Receptor Ameliorates Disease via Autophagy in a Mouse Model of Spinal and Bulbar Muscular Atrophy

Heather L. Montie; Maria S. Cho; Latia Holder; Yuhong Liu; Andrey S. Tsvetkov; Steven Finkbeiner; Diane E. Merry

The nucleus is the primary site of protein aggregation in many polyglutamine diseases, suggesting a central role in pathogenesis. In SBMA, the nucleus is further implicated by the critical role for disease of androgens, which promote the nuclear translocation of the mutant androgen receptor (AR). To clarify the importance of the nucleus in SBMA, we genetically manipulated the nuclear localization signal of the polyglutamine-expanded AR. Transgenic mice expressing this mutant AR displayed inefficient nuclear translocation and substantially improved motor function compared with SBMA mice. While we found that nuclear localization of polyglutamine-expanded AR is required for SBMA, we also discovered, using cell models of SBMA, that it is insufficient for both aggregation and toxicity and requires androgens for these disease features. Through our studies of cultured motor neurons, we further found that the autophagic pathway was able to degrade cytoplasmically retained expanded AR and represents an endogenous neuroprotective mechanism. Moreover, pharmacologic induction of autophagy rescued motor neurons from the toxic effects of even nuclear-residing mutant AR, suggesting a therapeutic role for autophagy in this nucleus-centric disease. Thus, our studies firmly establish that polyglutamine-expanded AR must reside within nuclei in the presence of its ligand to cause SBMA. They also highlight a mechanistic basis for the requirement for nuclear localization in SBMA neurotoxicity, namely the lack of mutant AR removal by the autophagic protein degradation pathway.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Soluble androgen receptor oligomers underlie pathology in a mouse model of spinobulbar muscular atrophy.

Mei Li; Erica S. Chevalier-Larsen; Diane E. Merry; Marc I. Diamond

In polyglutamine diseases such as X-linked spinobulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), it is unknown whether the toxic form of the protein is an insoluble or soluble aggregate or a monomer. We have addressed this question by studying a full-length androgen receptor (AR) mouse model of SBMA. We used biochemistry and atomic force microscopy to immunopurify oligomers soluble after ultracentrifugation that are comprised of a single ∼50-kDa N-terminal polyglutamine-containing AR fragment. AR oligomers appeared several weeks prior to symptom onset, were distinct and temporally dissociated from intranuclear inclusions, and disappeared rapidly after castration, which halts disease. This is the first demonstration of soluble AR oligomers in vivo and suggests that they underlie neurodegeneration in SBMA.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002

A cell culture model for androgen effects in motor neurons

Brian P. Brooks; Diane E. Merry; Henry L. Paulson; Andrew P. Lieberman; Dennis L. Kolson; Kenneth H. Fischbeck

Abstract: Androgens are known to alter the morphology, survival, and axonal regeneration of lower motor neurons in vivo. To understand better the molecular mechanisms of androgen action in neurons, we created a model system by stably expressing the human androgen receptor (AR) in motor neuron hybrid cells. Motor neuron hybrid cells express markers consistent with anterior horn cells and can be differentiated into a neuronal phenotype. When differentiated in the presence of androgen, AR‐expressing cells, but not control cells, exhibit a dose‐dependent change in morphology: androgen‐treated cells develop larger cell bodies and broader neuritic processes while continuing to express neuronal markers. In addition, androgen promotes the survival of AR‐expressing cells, but not control cells, under low‐serum conditions. Our results demonstrate a direct trophic effect of androgens on lower motor neurons, mediated through the AR expressed in this population of neurons.


Neurobiology of Disease | 1997

Characterization of an expanded glutamine repeat androgen receptor in a neuronal cell culture system

Brian P. Brooks; Henry L. Paulson; Diane E. Merry; Edgar F. Salazar-Grueso; Albert O. Brinkmann; Elizabeth M. Wilson; Kenneth H. Fischbeck

Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) is an inherited form of lower motor neuron degeneration caused by expansion of a CAG repeat in the androgen receptor (AR) gene. To study the mechanism by which this mutation causes neuronal pathology, we stably transfected a motor neuron hybrid cell line with human AR cDNAs containing either 24 or 65 repeats (AR24 and AR65, respectively). Both forms of receptor were able to bind ligand and activate transcription of a reporter construct equally well. Likewise, the subcellular localizations of AR24 and AR65 were similar, in both the presence and the absence of ligand. AR24- and AR65-expressing clones were phenotypically indistinguishable. They survived equally well after differentiation and were equally susceptible to damage by oxidative stress. Our studies thus demonstrate that, in a neuronal system, the expanded repeat AR functions like the normal repeat AR in several important ways. Because levels of AR65 expression were consistently lower than levels of AR24 expression, we propose that the loss of function of AR seen in SBMA may be due to decreased levels of receptor expression rather than to a difference in intrinsic properties. The postulated gain of function responsible for neuronal degeneration remains to be determined.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 1999

Overexpression of Bcl-2 is neuroprotective after experimental brain injury in transgenic mice.

Michio Nakamura; Ramesh Raghupathi; Diane E. Merry; Uwe Scherbel; Kathryn E. Saatman; Tracy K. McIntosh

The cell death regulatory protein, Bcl‐2, has been suggested to participate in the pathophysiology of various neurological disorders, including traumatic brain injury (TBI). The cognitive function and histopathologic sequelae after controlled cortical impact brain injury were evaluated in transgenic (TG) mice that overexpress human Bcl‐2 protein (n = 13) and their wild type (WT) controls (n = 9). Although brain‐injured Bcl‐2 TG mice exhibited similar posttraumatic deficits in a Morris water maze (MWM) test of spatial memory as their WT counterparts at 1 week postinjury, the preinjury learning ability of Bcl‐2 TG mice was impaired significantly compared with their WT littermates (P < 0.05). In contrast, histopathologic analysis revealed significantly attenuated tissue loss in the ipsilateral hemisphere (p < 0.01) and decreased tissue loss in ipsilateral hippocampal area CA3 (P < 0.001) and the dentate gyrus (P < 0.01) in brain‐injured Bcl‐2 TG mice compared with brain‐injured WT mice. Immunohistochemical evaluation of glial fibrillary acidic protein also revealed a significant decrease in reactive astrocytosis in the ipsilateral dorsal thalamus (P < 0.05) and the ventral thalamus (P < 0.01) in brain‐injured Bcl‐2 TG mice. These results suggest that overexpression of Bcl‐2 protein may play a protective role in neuropathologic sequelae after TBI. J. Comp. Neurol. 412:681–692, 1999.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

FOXO3a is broadly neuroprotective in vitro and in vivo against insults implicated in motor neuron diseases

Jelena Mojsilovic-Petrovic; Natalia B. Nedelsky; Marco Boccitto; Itzhak Mano; Savvas N. Georgiades; Weiguo Zhou; Yuhong Liu; Rachael L. Neve; J. Paul Taylor; Monica Driscoll; Jon Clardy; Diane E. Merry; Robert G. Kalb

Aging is a risk factor for the development of adult-onset neurodegenerative diseases. Although some of the molecular pathways regulating longevity and stress resistance in lower organisms are defined (i.e., those activating the transcriptional regulators DAF-16 and HSF-1 in Caenorhabditis elegans), their relevance to mammals and disease susceptibility are unknown. We studied the signaling controlled by the mammalian homolog of DAF-16, FOXO3a, in model systems of motor neuron disease. Neuron death elicited in vitro by excitotoxic insult or the expression of mutant SOD1, mutant p150glued, or polyQ-expanded androgen receptor was abrogated by expression of nuclear-targeted FOXO3a. We identify a compound [Psammaplysene A (PA)] that increases nuclear localization of FOXO3a in vitro and in vivo and show that PA also protects against these insults in vitro. Administration of PA to invertebrate model systems of neurodegeneration similarly blocked neuron death in a DAF-16/FOXO3a-dependent manner. These results indicate that activation of the DAF-16/FOXO3a pathway, genetically or pharmacologically, confers protection against the known causes of motor neuron diseases.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

SIRT1 Modulates Aggregation and Toxicity through Deacetylation of the Androgen Receptor in Cell Models of SBMA

Heather L. Montie; Richard G. Pestell; Diane E. Merry

Posttranslational protein modifications can play a major role in disease pathogenesis; phosphorylation, sumoylation, and acetylation modulate the toxicity of a variety of proteotoxic proteins. The androgen receptor (AR) is substantially modified, in response to hormone binding, by phosphorylation, sumoylation, and acetylation; these modifications might thus contribute to DHT-dependent polyglutamine (polyQ)-expanded AR proteotoxicity in spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA). SIRT1, a nuclear protein and deacetylase of the AR, is neuroprotective in many neurodegenerative disease models. Our studies reveal that SIRT1 also offers protection against polyQ-expanded AR by deacetylating the AR at lysines 630/632/633. This finding suggested that nuclear AR acetylation plays a role in the aberrant metabolism and toxicity of polyQ-expanded AR. Subsequent studies revealed that the polyQ-expanded AR is hyperacetylated and that pharmacologic reduction of acetylation reduces mutant AR aggregation. Moreover, genetic mutation to inhibit polyQ-expanded AR acetylation of lysines 630/632/633 substantially decreased its aggregation and completely abrogated its toxicity in cell lines and motor neurons. Our studies also reveal one means by which the AR acetylation state likely modifies polyQ-expanded AR metabolism and toxicity, through its effect on DHT-dependent AR stabilization. Overall, our findings reveal a neuroprotective function of SIRT1 that operates through its deacetylation of polyQ-expanded AR and highlight the potential of both SIRT1 and AR acetylation as powerful therapeutic targets in SBMA.

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Heather L. Montie

Thomas Jefferson University

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Kenneth H. Fischbeck

National Institutes of Health

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Yuhong Liu

Thomas Jefferson University

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Erin Heine

Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine

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Jessica Walcott

Thomas Jefferson University

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