Elizabeth M. Muir
University of Cambridge
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Featured researches published by Elizabeth M. Muir.
Molecular Brain Research | 2002
Elizabeth M. Muir; Kathryn H. Adcock; Daniel A. Morgenstern; R Clayton; N von Stillfried; Kate E. Rhodes; C Ellis; James W. Fawcett; John Rogers
Matrix metalloproteases (MMPs) and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteases (TIMPs) are involved in many cell migration phenomena and produced by many cell types, including neurons and glia. To assess their possible roles in brain injury and regeneration, we investigate their production by glial cells, after brain injury and in tissue culture, and we investigate whether they are capable of digesting known axon-inhibitory proteoglycans. To determine the action of MMPs, we incubated astrocyte conditioned medium with activated MMPs, then did western blots for several chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans. MMP-3 digested all five proteoglycans tested, whereas MMP-2 digested only two and MMP-9 none. To determine whether MMPs or TIMPs are produced by astrocytes in vitro, we tested both primary cultures and astrocyte cell lines by western blotting, and compared them with Schwann cells. All cultures produced at least some MMPs and TIMPs, with no obvious correlation with the ability of axons to grow on those cells. Both MMP-9 and TIMP-3 were regulated by various cytokines. To determine which cells produce MMPs and TIMPs after brain injury, we made lesions of adult rat cortex, and did immunohistochemistry. MMP-2 was seen to be induced in activated astrocytes through the whole thickness of the cortex but not deeper, but MMP-3 was not seen in the injured brain. TIMP-2 and TIMP-3 immunoreactivities were induced in activated astrocytes in deep cortex and the underlying white matter. In situ hybridisation confirmed induction of TIMP-2 in glia as well as neurons, but showed no expression of TIMP-4. These results show that both MMPs and TIMPs are produced by some astrocytes, but TIMP production is particularly strong, especially in deep cortex and white matter which is more inhibitory for axon regeneration. Conversely the MMPs produced may not be adequate to promote migration of cells and axons within the glial scar.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2005
Francesca Properzi; Daniela Carulli; Richard A. Asher; Elizabeth M. Muir; Luiz M. Camargo; Toin H. van Kuppevelt; Gerdy B. ten Dam; Yoko Furukawa; Tadishima Mikami; Kazuyuki Sugahara; Toshihiko Toida; Herbert M. Geller; James W. Fawcett
Chondroitin sulphate proteoglycans (CSPGs) are up‐regulated in the CNS after injury and inhibit axon regeneration mainly through their glycosaminoglycan (CS‐GAG) chains. We have analysed the mRNA levels of the CS‐GAG synthesizing enzymes and measured the CS‐GAG disaccharide composition by chromatography and immunocytochemistry. Chondroitin 6‐sulfotransferase 1 (C6ST1) is up‐regulated in most glial types around cortical injuries, and its sulphated product CS‐C is also selectively up‐regulated. Treatment with TGFα and TGFβ, which are released after brain injury, promotes the expression of C6ST1 and the synthesis of 6‐sulphated CS‐GAGs in primary astrocytes. Oligodendrocytes, oligodendrocyte precursors and meningeal cells are all inhibitory to axon regeneration, and all express high levels of CS‐GAG, including high levels of 6‐sulphated GAG. In axon growth‐inhibitory Neu7 astrocytes C6ST1 and 6‐sulphated GAGs are expressed at high levels, whereas in permissive A7 astrocytes they are not detectable. These results suggest that the up‐regulation of CSPG after CNS injury is associated with a specific sulphation pattern on CS‐GAGs, mediating the inhibitory properties of proteoglycans on axonal regeneration.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014
Katalin Bartus; Nicholas D. James; Athanasios Didangelos; Karen D. Bosch; Joost Verhaagen; Rafael J. Yáñez-Muñoz; John Rogers; Bernard L. Schneider; Elizabeth M. Muir; Elizabeth J. Bradbury
Chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs) inhibit repair following spinal cord injury. Here we use mammalian-compatible engineered chondroitinase ABC (ChABC) delivered via lentiviral vector (LV-ChABC) to explore the consequences of large-scale CSPG digestion for spinal cord repair. We demonstrate significantly reduced secondary injury pathology in adult rats following spinal contusion injury and LV-ChABC treatment, with reduced cavitation and enhanced preservation of spinal neurons and axons at 12 weeks postinjury, compared with control (LV-GFP)-treated animals. To understand these neuroprotective effects, we investigated early inflammatory changes following LV-ChABC treatment. Increased expression of the phagocytic macrophage marker CD68 at 3 d postinjury was followed by increased CD206 expression at 2 weeks, indicating that large-scale CSPG digestion can alter macrophage phenotype to favor alternatively activated M2 macrophages. Accordingly, ChABC treatment in vitro induced a significant increase in CD206 expression in unpolarized monocytes stimulated with conditioned medium from spinal-injured tissue explants. LV-ChABC also promoted the remodelling of specific CSPGs as well as enhanced vascularity, which was closely associated with CD206-positive macrophages. Neuroprotective effects of LV-ChABC corresponded with improved sensorimotor function, evident as early as 1 week postinjury, a time point when increased neuronal survival correlated with reduced apoptosis. Improved function was maintained into chronic injury stages, where improved axonal conduction and increased serotonergic innervation were also observed. Thus, we demonstrate that ChABC gene therapy can modulate secondary injury processes, with neuroprotective effects that lead to long-term improved functional outcome and reveal novel mechanistic evidence that modulation of macrophage phenotype may underlie these effects.
Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 1999
Martin J. Wilby; Elizabeth M. Muir; Juin Fok-Seang; Barbara J. Gour; Orest W. Blaschuk; James W. Fawcett
Astrocytes exclude Schwann cells (SCs) from the central nervous system (CNS) at peripheral nerve entry zones and restrict their migration after transplantation into the CNS. We have modeled the interactions between SCs, astrocytes, and fibroblasts in vitro. Astrocytes and SCs in vitro form separate territories, with sharp boundaries between them. SCs migrate poorly when placed on astrocyte monolayers, but migrate well on various other surfaces such as laminin (LN) and skin fibroblasts. Interactions between individual SCs and astrocytes result in long-lasting adhesive contacts during which the SC is unable to migrate away from the astrocyte. In contrast, SC interactions with fibroblasts are much shorter with less arrest of migration. SCs adhere strongly to astrocytes and other SCs, but less well to substrates that promote migration, such as LN and fibroblasts. SC-astrocyte and SC-SC adhesion is mediated by the calcium-dependent cell adhesion molecule N-cadherin. Inhibition of N-cadherin function by calcium withdrawal, peptides containing the classical cadherin cell adhesion recognition sequence His-Ala-Val, or antibodies directed against this sequence inhibit SC adhesion and increase SC migration on astrocytes. We suggest that N-cadherin-mediated adhesion to astrocytes inhibits the widespread migration of SCs in CNS tissue.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014
Haruo Kanno; Yelena Pressman; Alison Moody; Randall Berg; Elizabeth M. Muir; John Rogers; Hiroshi Ozawa; Eiji Itoi; Damien D. Pearse; Mary Bartlett Bunge
Transplantation of Schwann cells (SCs) is a promising therapeutic strategy for spinal cord repair. SCs introduced into lesions support axon regeneration, but because these axons do not exit the transplant, additional approaches with SCs are needed. Here, we transplanted SCs genetically modified to secrete a bifunctional neurotrophin (D15A) and chondroitinase ABC (ChABC) into a subacute contusion injury in rats. We examined the effects of these modifications on graft volume, SC number, degradation of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans (CSPGs), astrogliosis, SC myelination of axons, propriospinal and supraspinal axon numbers, locomotor outcome (BBB scoring, CatWalk gait analysis), and mechanical and thermal sensitivity on the hind paws. D15A secreted from transplanted SCs increased graft volume and SC number and myelinated axon number. SCs secreting ChABC significantly decreased CSPGs, led to some egress of SCs from the graft, and increased propriospinal and 5-HT-positive axons in the graft. SCs secreting both D15A and ChABC yielded the best responses: (1) the largest number of SC myelinated axons, (2) more propriospinal axons in the graft and host tissue around and caudal to it, (3) more corticospinal axons closer to the graft and around and caudal to it, (4) more brainstem neurons projecting caudal to the transplant, (5) increased 5-HT-positive axons in the graft and caudal to it, (6) significant improvement in aspects of locomotion, and (7) improvement in mechanical and thermal allodynia. This is the first evidence that the combination of SC transplants engineered to secrete neurotrophin and chondroitinase further improves axonal regeneration and locomotor and sensory function.
Brain Research | 1995
Juin Fok-Seang; L.C. Smith-Thomas; Sally Meiners; Elizabeth M. Muir; Jian-Sheng Du; Elizabeth Housden; Alan R. Johnson; Andreas Faissner; Herbert M. Geller; Roger J. Keynes; John Rogers; James W. Fawcett
The adult mammalian central nervous system (CNS) lacks the capacity to support axonal regeneration. There is increasing evidence to suggest that astrocytes, the major glial population in the CNS, may possess both axon-growth promoting and axon-growth inhibitory properties and the latter may contribute to the poor regenerative capacity of the CNS. In order to examine the molecular differences between axon-growth permissive and axon-growth inhibitory astrocytes, a panel of astrocyte cell lines exhibiting a range of axon-growth promoting properties was generated and analysed. No clear correlation was found between the axon-growth promoting properties of these astrocyte cell lines with: (i) the expression of known neurite-outgrowth promoting molecules such as laminin, fibronectin and N-cadherin; (ii) the expression of known inhibitory molecules such tenascin and chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan; (iii) plasminogen activator and plasminogen activator inhibitor activity; and (iv) growth cone collapsing activity. EM studies on aggregates formed from astrocyte cell lines, however, revealed the presence of an abundance of extracellular matrix material associated with the more inhibitory astrocyte cell lines. When matrix deposited by astrocyte cell lines was assessed for axon-growth promoting activity, matrix from permissive lines was found to be a good substrate, whereas matrix from the inhibitory astrocyte lines was a poor substrate for neuritic growth. Our findings, taken together, suggest that the functional differences between the permissive and the inhibitory astrocyte cell lines reside largely with the ECM.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 1998
Juin Fok-Seang; Nicholas A. DiProspero; Sally Meiners; Elizabeth M. Muir; James W. Fawcett
Repair of demyelination in the CNS requires that oligodendrocyte precursors (OPs) migrate, divide and then myelinate. Repair of axon damage requires axonal regeneration. Limited remyelination and axon regeneration occurs soon after injury, but usually ceases in a few days. In vivo and in vitro experiments have shown that astrocytic environments are not very permissive for migration of OPs or for axonal re‐growth. Yet remyelination and axon sprouting early after injury occurs in association with astrocytes, while later astrocytes can exclude remyelination and prevent axon regeneration. A large and changing cast of cytokines are released following CNS injury, so we investigated whether some of these alone or in combination can affect the ability of astrocytes to support migration of OPs and neuritic outgrowth. Interleukin (IL) 1α, tumour necrosis factor α, transforming growth factor (TGF) β, basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF), platelet‐derived growth factor and epidermal growth factor alone exerted little or no effect on migration of OPs on astrocytes, whereas interferon (IFN) γ was inhibitory. The combination of IL‐1α + bFGF was found to be pro‐migratory, and this effect could be neutralized by TGFβ. We also examined neuritic outgrowth from dorsal root ganglion explants in three‐dimensional astrocyte cultures treated with cytokines and found that IL‐1α + bFGF greatly increased axon outgrowth and that this effect could be blocked by TGFβ and IFNγ. All these effects were absent or much smaller when OP migration or axon growth was tested on laminin, so the main effect of the cytokines was via astrocytes. The cytokine effects did not correlate with expression on astrocytes of laminin, fibronectin, tenascin, chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan, N‐cadherin, polysialyated NCAM (PSA‐NCAM), tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) or urokinase (uPA).
Mechanisms of Development | 1995
Jonathan Ellis; Qiurong Liu; Martin L. Breitman; Nancy A. Jenkins; Debra J. Gilbert; Neal G. Copeland; Heidi V. Tempest; Simon Warren; Elizabeth M. Muir; Heather Schilling; Fred Fletcher; Steven F. Ziegler; John Rogers
A new gene belonging to the Eph/Eck/Elk receptor tyrosine kinase family has been cloned from mouse brain. The gene maps to mouse chromosome 4. In the adult brain it is expressed exclusively and abundantly in the hippocampus. We propose to name it Ebk (embryo brain kinase), as in situ hybridisation shows expression in many parts of the developing mouse brain. The most abundant expression is in the subcommissural organ, and the earliest expression is in the forebrain neural folds, in rhombomeres 2-6, and in somites and heart. Other regions positive at various stages include the cochlear duct, trigeminal ganglion, lung, first branchial arch, and tooth primordia. Also positive are areas of mesenchyme underlying various epithelia during morphogenesis, especially in the mouth and nose, as well as in the eyelids and toes. We compare these patterns with the available data on the 12 other known members of this gene family. Most of them, like Ebk, are expressed in brain (especially adult hippocampus and embryonic rhombomeres) and in organs rich in epithelia (especially lung), although the spatial and temporal patterns differ. We suggest that combinatorial patterns of these receptors act as labels for the regional identity of neurons and epithelia, and could mediate fine control of neurite pathfinding and epithelial morphogenesis.
Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2011
Rong-Rong Zhao; Elizabeth M. Muir; João Nuno Alves; Hannah Rickman; Anna Y. Allan; Jessica C. F. Kwok; Kasper C. D. Roet; Joost Verhaagen; Bernard L. Schneider; Jean-Charles Bensadoun; Sherif G. Ahmed; Rafael J. Yáñez-Muñoz; Roger J. Keynes; James W. Fawcett; John Rogers
Highlights ► Lentiviral vectors can transduce neurons and glia to secrete chondroitinase. ► The active enzyme is secreted from long-distance axon projections from the cerebral cortex. ► Chondroitinase transduction promotes preservation and sprouting of damaged corticospinal axons.
Journal of Biotechnology | 2010
Elizabeth M. Muir; Ian Fyfe; Sonya Gardiner; Li Li; Philippa Warren; James W. Fawcett; Roger J. Keynes; John Rogers
Although many eukaryotic proteins have been secreted by transfected bacterial cells, little is known about how a bacterial protein is treated as it passes through the secretory pathway when expressed in a eukaryotic cell. The eukaryotic N-glycosylation system could interfere with folding and secretion of prokaryotic proteins whose sequence has not been adapted for glycosylation in structurally appropriate locations. Here we show that such interference does indeed occur for chondroitinase ABC from the bacterium Proteus vulgaris, and can be overcome by eliminating potential N-glycosylation sites. Chondroitinase ABC was heavily glycosylated when expressed in mammalian cells or in a mammalian translation system, and this process prevented secretion of functional enzyme. Directed mutagenesis of selected N-glycosylation sites allowed efficient secretion of active chondroitinase. As these proteoglycans are known to inhibit regeneration of axons in the mammalian central nervous system, the modified chondroitinase gene is a potential tool for gene therapy to promote neural regeneration, ultimately in human spinal cord injury.