Edwin D.W. Moore
University of British Columbia
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Featured researches published by Edwin D.W. Moore.
Biophysical Journal | 2000
David R.L. Scriven; Pauline Dan; Edwin D.W. Moore
We have examined the distribution of ryanodine receptors, L-type Ca(2+) channels, calsequestrin, Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchangers, and voltage-gated Na(+) channels in adult rat ventricular myocytes. Enzymatically dissociated cells were fixed and dual-labeled with specific antibodies using standard immunocytochemistry protocols. Images were deconvolved to reverse the optical distortion produced by wide-field microscopes equipped with high numerical aperture objectives. Every image showed a well-ordered array of fluorescent spots, indicating that all of the proteins examined were distributed in discrete clusters throughout the cell. Mathematical analysis of the images revealed that dyads contained only ryanodine receptors, L-type Ca(2+) channels, and calsequestrin, and excluded Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchangers and voltage-gated Na(+) channels. The Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger and voltage-gated Na(+) channels were distributed largely within the t-tubules, on both transverse and axial elements, but were not co-localized. The t-tubule can therefore be subdivided into at least three structural domains; one of coupling (dyads), one containing the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger, and one containing voltage-gated Na(+) channels. We conclude that if either the slip mode conductance of the Na(+) channel or the reverse mode of the Na(+)/Ca(2+) exchanger are to contribute to the contractile force, the fuzzy space must extend outside of the dyad.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Nagesh Chopra; Tao Yang; Parisa Asghari; Edwin D.W. Moore; Sabine Huke; Brandy L. Akin; Robert A. Cattolica; Claudio F. Perez; Thinn Hlaing; Barbara Knollmann-Ritschel; Larry R. Jones; Isaac N. Pessah; Paul D. Allen; Clara Franzini-Armstrong; Björn C. Knollmann
Heart muscle excitation–contraction (E-C) coupling is governed by Ca2+ release units (CRUs) whereby Ca2+ influx via L-type Ca2+ channels (Cav1.2) triggers Ca2+ release from juxtaposed Ca2+ release channels (RyR2) located in junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (jSR). Although studies suggest that the jSR protein triadin anchors cardiac calsequestrin (Casq2) to RyR2, its contribution to E-C coupling remains unclear. Here, we identify the role of triadin using mice with ablation of the Trdn gene (Trdn−/−). The structure and protein composition of the cardiac CRU is significantly altered in Trdn−/− hearts. jSR proteins (RyR2, Casq2, junctin, and junctophilin 1 and 2) are significantly reduced in Trdn−/− hearts, whereas Cav1.2 and SERCA2a remain unchanged. Electron microscopy shows fragmentation and an overall 50% reduction in the contacts between jSR and T-tubules. Immunolabeling experiments show reduced colocalization of Cav1.2 with RyR2 and substantial Casq2 labeling outside of the jSR in Trdn−/− myocytes. CRU function is impaired in Trdn−/− myocytes, with reduced SR Ca2+ release and impaired negative feedback of SR Ca2+ release on Cav1.2 Ca2+ currents (ICa). Uninhibited Ca2+ influx via ICa likely contributes to Ca2+ overload and results in spontaneous SR Ca2+ releases upon β-adrenergic receptor stimulation with isoproterenol in Trdn−/− myocytes, and ventricular arrhythmias in Trdn−/− mice. We conclude that triadin is critically important for maintaining the structural and functional integrity of the cardiac CRU; triadin loss and the resulting alterations in CRU structure and protein composition impairs E-C coupling and renders hearts susceptible to ventricular arrhythmias.
Infection and Immunity | 2004
Victoria S. Conlin; Susan B. Curtis; Ying Zhao; Edwin D.W. Moore; Valerie C. Smith; R. Mark Meloche; B. Brett Finlay; A.M.J. Buchan
ABSTRACT The human gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori attaches to antral epithelial cells in vivo. Cultured human antral epithelial cells, AGS and NCI-N87 cell lines, were grown in the absence or presence of H. pylori and compared with respect to gene transcript levels, protein expression, organization of the actin cytoskeleton, and the regulation of cell migration. The Clontech Neurobiology array detected differentially expressed transcripts, while Western blots were used to investigate related changes in protein levels. Infection with H. pylori consistently upregulated annexin II, S100 A7, Rho-GTP, and IQGAP-1, whereas SSTR-1 was downregulated upon H. pylori infection. In the adherens junction, E-cadherin and IQGAP-1 were translocated from the plasma membrane to intracellular vesicles. The primary and NCI-N87 cells were similar with respect to cell-cell and cell-matrix adhesion and cell migratory behavior; in contrast the AGS cells were significantly different from the primary gastric epithelial cell preparations, and thus caution must be used when using this cell line for studies of gastric disease. These studies demonstrate a correlation between H. pylori infection and alterations to epithelial cell adhesion molecules, including increased levels of Rho-GTP and cell migration. These data indicate that destabilizing epithelial cell adherence is one of the factors increasing the risk of H. pylori-infected individuals developing gastric cancer.
Biophysical Journal | 2009
Parisa Asghari; Meredith N. Schulson; David R.L. Scriven; Garnet Martens; Edwin D.W. Moore
Ryanodine receptors (RyRs) are located primarily on the junctional sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR), adjacent to the transverse tubules and on the cell surface near the Z-lines, but some RyRs are on junctional SR adjacent to axial tubules. Neither the size of the axial junctions nor the numbers of RyRs that they contain have been determined. RyRs may also be located on the corbular SR and on the free or network SR. Because determining and quantifying the distribution of RyRs is critical for both understanding and modeling calcium dynamics, we investigated the distribution of RyRs in healthy adult rat ventricular myocytes, using electron microscopy, electron tomography, and immunofluorescence. We found RyRs in only three regions: in couplons on the surface and on transverse tubules, both of which are near the Z-line, and in junctions on most of the axial tubules--axial junctions. The axial junctions averaged 510 nm in length, but they occasionally spanned an entire sarcomere. Numerical analysis showed that they contain as much as 19% of a cells RyRs. Tomographic analysis confirmed the axial junctions architecture, which is indistinguishable from junctions on transverse tubules or on the surface, and revealed a complexly structured tubule whose lumen was only 26 nm at its narrowest point. RyRs on axial junctions colocalize with Ca(v)1.2, suggesting that they play a role in excitation-contraction coupling.
FEBS Letters | 2006
Jodene Eldstrom; David R. Van Wagoner; Edwin D.W. Moore; David Fedida
Voltage‐gated potassium (Kv) channel subtypes localize to the plasma membrane of a number of cell types, and the sarcolemma in myocytes. Because many signaling molecules concentrate in subdomains of the plasma membrane, the localization of Kv channels to these sites may have important implications for channel function and regulation. In this study, the association of the voltage‐gated potassium channel Kv1.5 with a specific subtype of lipid rafts, caveolae, in rat and canine cardiac myocytes has been investigated. Interactions between caveolin‐3 and β‐dystroglycan or eNOS, as well as between Kv1.5 and α‐actinin were readily detected in co‐immunoprecipitation experiments, whereas no association between Kv1.5 and caveolin‐3 was evident. Wide‐field microscopy and deconvolution techniques revealed that the percent co‐localization of Kv1.5 with caveolin‐3 was extremely low in atrial myocytes from rat and canine hearts (8 ± 1% and 12.2 ± 2%, respectively), and limited in ventricular myocytes (11 ± 4% and 20 ± 3% in rat and canine, respectively). Immunoelectron microscopic imaging of rat atrial and ventricular tissues showed that Kv1.5 and caveolin‐3 labeling generally did not overlap. In HEK293 cells stably expressing the channel, Kv1.5 did not target to the low buoyant density raft fraction along with flotillin but instead fractionated along with the non‐raft associated transferrin receptor. Taken together, these results suggest that Kv1.5 is not present in caveolae of rat and canine heart.
Developmental Biology | 2010
Alexander D. Perkins; Stephanie J. Ellis; Parisa Asghari; Arash Shamsian; Edwin D.W. Moore; Guy Tanentzapf
Integrin-mediated adhesion to the ECM is essential for normal development of animal tissues. During muscle development, integrins provide the structural stability required to construct such a highly tensile, force generating tissue. Mutations that disrupt integrin-mediated adhesion in skeletal muscles give rise to a myopathy in humans and mice. To determine if this is due to defects in formation or defects in maintenance of muscle tissue, we used an inducible, targeted RNAi based approach to disrupt integrin-mediated adhesion in fully formed adult fly muscles. A decrease in integrin-mediated adhesion in adult muscles led to a progressive loss of muscle function due to a failure to maintain normal sarcomeric cytoarchitecture. This defect was due to a gradual, age dependent disorganization of the sarcomeric actin, Z-line, and M-line. Electron microscopic analysis showed that reduction in integrin-mediated adhesion resulted in detachment of actin filaments from the Z-lines, separation of the Z-lines from the membrane, and eventually to disintegration of the Z-lines. Our results show that integrin-mediated adhesion is essential for maintaining sarcomeric integrity and illustrate that the seemingly stable adhesive contacts underlying sarcomeric architecture are inherently dynamic.
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006
David R.L. Scriven; Agnieszka M. Klimek; Kelly L. Lee; Edwin D.W. Moore
Abstract: We have used standard indirect immunofluorescence techniques in combination with wide‐field microscopy and image deconvolution to assess the distribution of proteins implicated in excitation‐contraction coupling and Ca2+ homeostasis in adult rat cardiomyocytes. We begin by discussing our earlier results and summarizing what is known about the molecular architecture of this species to provide a rationale for the work presented here. The previous results showed that the dyads contain Ca2+ channels and ryanodine receptors, but few Na+ channels or Na+/Ca2+ exchangers. The latter proteins were not colocalized elsewhere on the membrane, and we have now found that they appear to be minimally associated with caveolin‐3. None of the molecules examined are distributed uniformly in the membranes in which they are located but are organized into discrete clusters attached to the underlying cytoskeleton, an arrangement that, at the level of light microscopy, does not appear to be affected by the enzymatic dissociation used to study single cells. Analysis of how the clusters are organized and distributed throughout the volume of the cell suggests that there may be differences in excitation‐contraction coupling between the cell surface and the interior.
Cardiovascular Research | 2013
David R.L. Scriven; Parisa Asghari; Edwin D.W. Moore
This review highlights recent and ongoing discoveries that are transforming the previously held view of dyad structure and function. New data show that dyads vary greatly in both structure and in their associated molecules. Dyads can contain varying numbers of type 2 ryanodine receptor (RYR2) clusters that range in size from one to hundreds of tetramers and they can adopt numerous orientations other than the expected checkerboard. The association of Ca(v)1.2 with RYR2, which defines the couplon, is not absolute, leading to a number of scenarios such as dyads without couplons and those in which only a fraction of the clusters are in couplons. Different dyads also vary in the transporters and exchangers with which they are associated producing functional differences that amplify their structural diversity. The essential role of proteins, such as junctophilin-2, calsequestrin, triadin, and junctin that maintain both the functional and structural integrity of the dyad have recently been elucidated giving a new mechanistic understanding of heart diseases, such as arrhythmias, hypertension, failure, and sudden cardiac death.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2008
David R.L. Scriven; Ronald M. Lynch; Edwin D.W. Moore
Colocalization, in which images of two or more fluorescent markers are overlaid, and coincidence between the probes is measured or displayed, is a common analytical tool in cell biology. Interpreting the images and the meaning of this identified coincidence is difficult in the absence of basic information about the acquisition parameters. In this commentary, we highlight important factors in the acquisition of images used to demonstrate colocalization, and we discuss the minimum information that authors should include in a manuscript so that a reader can interpret both the fluorescent images and any observed colocalization.
Biophysical Journal | 2010
David R.L. Scriven; Parisa Asghari; Meredith N. Schulson; Edwin D.W. Moore
We analyzed the distribution of ryanodine receptor (RyR) and Cav1.2 clusters in adult rat ventricular myocytes using three-dimensional object-based colocalization metrics. We found that ∼75% of the Cav1.2 clusters and 65% of the RyR clusters were within couplons, and both were roughly two and a half times larger than their extradyadic counterparts. Within a couplon, Cav1.2 was concentrated near the center of the underlying RyR cluster and accounted for ∼67% of its size. These data, together with previous findings from binding studies, enable us to estimate that a couplon contains 74 RyR tetramers and 10 copies of the α-subunit of Cav1.2. Extradyadic clusters of RyR contained ∼30 tetramers, whereas the extradyadic Cav1.2 clusters contained, on average, only four channels. Between 80% and 85% of both RyR and Cav1.2 molecules are within couplons. RyR clusters were in the closest proximity, with a median nearest-neighbor distance of 552 nm; comparable values for Cav1.2 clusters and couplons were 619 nm and 735 nm, respectively. Extradyadic RyR clusters were significantly closer together (624 nm) and closer to the couplons (674 nm) than the couplons were to each other. In contrast, the extradyadic clusters of Cav1.2 showed no preferential localization and were broadly distributed. These results provide a wealth of morphometric data that are essential for understanding intracellular Ca2+ regulation and modeling Ca2+ dynamics.