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Dive into the research topics where Elizabeth L. Ostler is active.

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Featured researches published by Elizabeth L. Ostler.


Experimental Gerontology | 2009

Microarray analysis of senescent vascular smooth muscle cells: A link to atherosclerosis and vascular calcification

Dominick G. A. Burton; Peter Giles; Angela Sheerin; S. Kaye Smith; Jessica J. Lawton; Elizabeth L. Ostler; William Rhys-Williams; David Kipling; Richard G. A. Faragher

Little is known about the senescent phenotype of human vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and the potential involvement of senescent VSMCs in age-related vascular disease, such as atherosclerosis. As such, VSMCs were grown and characterised in vitro to generate senescent VSMCs needed for microarray analysis (Affymetrix). Comparative analysis of the transcriptome profiles of early (14 CPD) and late (39-42 CPD) passage VSMCs found a total of 327 probesets called as differentially expressed: 149 are up-regulated in senescence and 178 repressed (p-value<0.5%, minimum effect size of at least 2-fold differential regulation, explore data at http://www.madras.cf.ac.uk/vsmc). Data mining shows a differential regulation of genes at senescence associated with the development of atherosclerosis and vascular calcification. These included genes with roles in inflammation (IL1beta, IL8, ICAM1, TNFAP3, ESM1 and CCL2), tissue remodelling (VEGF, VEGFbeta, ADM and MMP14) and vascular calcification (MGP, BMP2, SPP1, OPG and DCN). The microarray data for IL1beta, IL8 and MGP were validated by either, ELISA, Western blot analysis or RT-PCR. These data thus provide the first evidence for a role of VSMC senescence in the development of vascular calcification and provides further support for the involvement of senescent VSMCs in the progression of atherosclerosis.


Journal of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2000

Telomerase and the cellular lifespan: implications of the aging process.

Elizabeth L. Ostler; Corrin Wallis; Bilal Aboalchamat; Richard G. A. Faragher

ABSTRACT The aging process has multiple causes. However, there is now substantial evidence consistent with the hypothesis that (i) all normal mammalian somatic cells have a finite capacity to replicate and (ii) that gradual cell turnover throughout the lifespan of a mammal eventually exhausts this finite capacity. This results in a gradual accumulation of senescent (irreversibly post-mitotic) cells with increasing age. These cells display a radically different phenotype to their growing counterparts, which has the potential to compromise tissue function. Perhaps the best evidence for this is seen in Werner’s syndrome, a rare genetic disease, in which patients display most of the features of accelerated aging, together with a profoundly compromised replicative lifespan in certain tissue lineages. Several classes of human cells are now known to count divisions by monitoring the progressive attrition of chromosomal ends (telomeres), leading to the activation of a p53-p21waf - dependent G1 checkpoint. Ectopic expression of telomerase has been shown to prevent senescence in several cell types and offers the potential for interventions in the aging process based on tissue engineering, gene therapy or homeografts. However, this telomere-driven senescence mechanism seems to be absent from rodents, which use telomere-independent means (perhaps based upon p14arf) to count divisions. Similar senescence pathways are now being reported in humans, and this, coupled with the demonstration of tissue-specific telomeric loss rates, has the potential to render strategies based on the use of telomerase dependent on the characteristics of the target tissue. Werner’s syndrome may provide strong clues regarding the potential limitations and prospects of such future treatments.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2007

Cyclin D1 overexpression permits the reproducible detection of senescent human vascular smooth muscle cells.

Dominick G. A. Burton; Angela Sheerin; Elizabeth L. Ostler; Kaye Smith; Peter Giles; Jill Lowe; William Rhys-Williams; David Kipling; Richard G. A. Faragher

Abstract:  The senescence of mitotic cells is hypothesized to play a causal role in organismal aging. Cultures of normal human cells become senescent in vitro as a result of a continuous decline in the mitotic fraction from cell turnover. However, one potential barrier to the evaluation of the frequency and distribution of senescent cells in tissues is the absence of a panel of robust markers for the senescent state. In parallel with an analysis of the growth kinetics of human vascular smooth muscle cells, we have undertaken transcriptomic comparisons of early‐ and late‐passage cultures of human vascular smooth muscle cells to identify potential markers that can distinguish between senescent and growth‐competent cells. A wide range of genes are upregulated at senescence in human vascular smooth muscle cells. In particular, we have identified a 12‐fold upregulation of expression in the cyclin D1 message, which is reflected in a concomitant upregulation at the protein level. Quantitative cytochemical analysis of senescent and growing vascular smooth muscle cells indicates that cyclin D1 reactivity is a considerably better marker of replicative senescence than senescence‐associated β‐galactosidase activity. We have applied this new marker (in combination with Ki67, COMET, and TUNEL staining) to the study of human vascular smooth muscle cells treated with resveratrol, a putative anti‐aging molecule known to have significant effects on cell growth.


BMC Cell Biology | 2017

Small molecule modulation of splicing factor expression is associated with rescue from cellular senescence

Eva Latorre; Vishal C. Birar; Angela Sheerin; J. Charles C. Jeynes; Amy Hooper; Helen R. Dawe; David Melzer; Lynne S. Cox; Richard G. A. Faragher; Elizabeth L. Ostler; Lorna W. Harries

BackgroundAltered expression of mRNA splicing factors occurs with ageing in vivo and is thought to be an ageing mechanism. The accumulation of senescent cells also occurs in vivo with advancing age and causes much degenerative age-related pathology. However, the relationship between these two processes is opaque. Accordingly we developed a novel panel of small molecules based on resveratrol, previously suggested to alter mRNA splicing, to determine whether altered splicing factor expression had potential to influence features of replicative senescence.ResultsTreatment with resveralogues was associated with altered splicing factor expression and rescue of multiple features of senescence. This rescue was independent of cell cycle traverse and also independent of SIRT1, SASP modulation or senolysis. Under growth permissive conditions, cells demonstrating restored splicing factor expression also demonstrated increased telomere length, re-entered cell cycle and resumed proliferation. These phenomena were also influenced by ERK antagonists and agonists.ConclusionsThis is the first demonstration that moderation of splicing factor levels is associated with reversal of cellular senescence in human primary fibroblasts. Small molecule modulators of such targets may therefore represent promising novel anti-degenerative therapies.


Age | 2009

Chemical changes in aging Drosophila melanogaster

Aamira Iqbal; Matthew D.W. Piper; Richard G. A. Faragher; Declan P. Naughton; Linda Partridge; Elizabeth L. Ostler

The “Green Theory” of aging proposes that organismal lifespan is limited by the failure to repair molecular damage generated by a broad range of metabolic processes. Two specific predictions arise from this: (1) that these processes will produce a wide variety of stable but dysfunctional compounds that increase in concentration with age, and (2) that organisms maintained under conditions that extend lifespan will display a reduced rate of accumulation of such “molecular rubbish”. To test these predictions, novel analytical techniques were developed to investigate the accumulation of damaged compounds in Drosophila melanogaster. Simple preparative techniques were developed to produce digests of whole D. melanogaster for use in three-dimensional (3D) fluorimetry and 1H NMR spectrometry. Cohorts of Drosophila maintained under normal conditions showed an age-related increase in signals consistent with damage whereas those maintained under conditions of low temperature and dietary restriction did not. 1H NMR revealed distinct age-associated spectral changes that will facilitate the identification of novel compounds that both increase and decrease during aging in this species. These findings are consistent with the predictions of the “Green Theory”.


Biochemical Journal | 2004

Evidence for ‘lock and key’ character in an anti-phosphonate hydrolytic antibody catalytic site augmented by non-reaction centre recognition: variation in substrate selectivity between an anti-phosphonate antibody, an anti-phosphate antibody and two hydrolytic enzymes

Sanjiv Sonkaria; Guillaume Boucher; José Flórez-Álvarez; Bilal Said; Syeed Hussain; Elizabeth L. Ostler; Sheraz Gul; Emrys W. Thomas; Marina Resmini; Gerard Gallacher; Keith Brocklehurst

The substrate selectivities of an anti-phosphonate and an anti-phosphate kinetically homogeneous polyclonal catalytic antibody preparation and two hydrolytic enzymes were compared by using hapten-analogous and truncated carbonate and ester substrates each containing a 4-nitrophenolate leaving group. Syntheses of the truncated substrates devoid of recognition features in the non-leaving group parts of the substrates are reported. The relatively high kinetic selectivity of the more active anti-phosphonate antibody preparation is considered to depend on a relatively rigid catalytic site with substantial reaction centre specificity together with other important recognition interactions with the extended non-leaving group part of the substrate. In contrast, the less catalytically active, more flexible anti-phosphate antibody exhibits much lower kinetic selectivity for the substrate reaction centre comparable with that of the hydrolytic enzymes with activity much less dependent on recognition interactions with the non-leaving group part of the substrate. The ways in which haptenic flexibility and IgG architecture might contribute to the differential kinetic selectivities are indicated.


Chemical Communications | 2002

Polyclonal antibody-catalysed hydrolysis of a β-lactam

Elizabeth L. Ostler; Marina Resmini; Guillaume Boucher; Nickolas Romanov; Keith Brocklehurst; Gerard Gallacher

We report the first example of antibody-catalysed hydrolysis of a β-lactam where the antibodies were generated by a simple transition-state analogue; in this example the antibodies are polyclonal.


Biochemical Journal | 2003

Improvement in hydrolytic antibody activity by change in haptenic structure from phosphate to phosphonate with retention of a common leaving-group determinant: evidence for the 'flexibility' hypothesis.

Sheraz Gul; Sanjiv Sonkaria; Surapong Pinitglang; José Flórez-Álvarez; Syeed Hussain; Emrys W. Thomas; Elizabeth L. Ostler; Gerard Gallacher; Marina Resmini; Keith Brocklehurst

To investigate the hypothesis that decreased hapten flexibility may lead to increased catalytic antibody activity, we used two closely related immunogens differing only in the flexibility of the atomic framework around the structural motif of the haptens, analogous to the reaction centre of the corresponding substrates. Identical leaving-group determinants in the haptens and identical leaving groups in the substrates removed the ambiguity inherent in some data reported in the literature. Anti-phosphate and anti-phosphonate kinetically homogeneous polyclonal catalytic antibody preparations were compared by using carbonate and ester substrates respectively, each containing a 4-nitrophenolate leaving group. Synthetic routes to a new phosphonate hapten and new ester substrate were developed. The kinetic advantage of the more rigid anti-phosphonate/ester system was demonstrated at pH 8.0 by a 13-fold advantage in k(cat)/k(non-cat) and a 100-fold advantage in the proficiency constant, k(cat)/k (non-cat) x K(m). Despite these differences, the pH-dependences of the kinetic and binding characteristics and the results of chemical modification studies suggest closely similar catalytic mechanisms. The possible origin of the kinetic advantage of the more rigid hapten/substrate system is discussed.


Biochemical Journal | 2007

Evidence that the mechanism of antibody-catalysed hydrolysis of arylcarbamates can be determined by the structure of the immunogen used to elicit the catalytic antibody.

Guillaume Boucher; Bilal Said; Elizabeth L. Ostler; Marina Resmini; Keith Brocklehurst; Gerard Gallacher

A kinetically homogeneous anti-phosphate catalytic antibody preparation was shown to catalyse the hydrolysis of a series of O-aryl N-methyl carbamates containing various substituents in the 4-position of the O-phenyl group. The specific nature of the antibody catalysis was demonstrated by the adherence of these reactions to the Michaelis-Menten equation, the complete inhibition by a hapten analogue, and the failure of the antibody to catalyse the hydrolysis of the 2-nitrophenyl analogue of the 4-nitrophenylcarbamate substrate. Hammett sigma-rho analysis suggests that both the non-catalysed and antibody-catalysed reactions proceed by mechanisms in which development of the aryloxyanion of the leaving group is well advanced in the transition state of the rate-determining step. This is probably the ElcB (elimination-addition) mechanism for the non-catalysed reaction, but for the antibody-catalysed reaction might be either ElcB or B(Ac)2 (addition-elimination), in which the elimination of the aryloxy group from the tetrahedral intermediate has become rate-determining. This result provides evidence of the dominance of recognition of phenolate ion character in the phosphate hapten in the elicitation process, and is discussed in connection with data from the literature that suggest a B(Ac)2 mechanism, with rate-determining formation of the tetrahedral intermediate for the hydrolysis of carbamate substrates catalysed by an antibody elicited by a phosphonamidate hapten in which phenolate anion character is minimized. The present paper contributes to the growing awareness that small differences in the structure of haptens can produce large differences in catalytic characteristics.


Chemistry Central Journal | 2015

A facile, stereoselective, one-pot synthesis of resveratrol derivatives

Vishal C. Birar; Angela Sheerin; Jana Milkovicova; Richard G. A. Faragher; Elizabeth L. Ostler

AbstractBackgroundCompounds based on trans-1,2-diphenylethene are the subject of intense interest both for their optical properties and as potential leads for drug discovery, as a consequence of their anticancer, anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties. Perhaps the best known of these is trans-3,5,4′-trihydroxystilbene (resveratrol), that has been identified as a promising lead in the search for anti-ageing therapeutics.ResultsWe report here a new, convenient, one-pot stereo-selective synthesis of resveratrol and other trans-stilbene derivatives. A wide range of known and novel “Resveralogues” were synthesised by using this simple protocol, including examples with electron donating and electron withdrawing substituents, in uniformly high yield. The structures of all compounds were confirmed by standard methods including 1H and 13C NMR, IR and High Resolution Mass spectroscopy.ConclusionsWe have established a simple and convenient protocol for resveralogue synthesis. It is readily scalable, and sufficiently robust and simple for ready use in automated synthesis or for library development of resveralogues. This supersedes previously reported synthetic methods that required inert conditions, extensive purification and/or costly reagents. Graphical abstractOne-pot preparation of diverse Resveralogues - high yields of product with minimal purification.

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Keith Brocklehurst

Queen Mary University of London

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Marina Resmini

Queen Mary University of London

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Bilal Said

University of Brighton

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