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Dive into the research topics where Ellen R. Busby is active.

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Featured researches published by Ellen R. Busby.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2011

Evolution of GnRH: Diving deeper

Graeme J. Roch; Ellen R. Busby; Nancy M. Sherwood

Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) plays a central role in vertebrate reproduction. The evolutionary origin of this neuropeptide and its receptor is not obvious, but the advent of genomics makes it possible to examine the roots of GnRH and delve deeper into its ancestral relationships. New peptide sequences identified in invertebrates from annelids to tunicates reveal GnRH-like peptides of 10-12 amino acids. Structural conservation suggests homology between the 15 known invertebrate peptides and the 15 known vertebrate GnRHs. The functions of the invertebrate GnRH-like peptides are not necessarily related to reproduction. We suggest that structurally related families of invertebrate peptides including corazonin and adipokinetic hormone (AKH) form a superfamily of neuropeptides with the GnRH family. GnRH receptors have also been identified in invertebrates from annelids to tunicates suggesting that the origin of GnRH and its receptor extends deep in evolution to the origin of bilaterian animals. To resolve the relationship of invertebrate and vertebrate receptors, we conducted large-scale phylogenetic analysis using maximum likelihood. The data support a superfamily that includes GnRH, AKH and corazonin receptors derived from both published sequences and unpublished gene model predictions. Closely related to the GnRHR superfamily is the vasopressin/oxytocin superfamily of receptors. Phylogenetic analysis suggests a shared ancestry with deep roots. A functional role for GnRH in vertebrates or invertebrates leads to questions about the evolutionary origin of the pituitary. Our analysis suggests a functioning pituitary was the result of genomic duplications in early vertebrates.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2014

GnRH receptors and peptides: skating backward.

Graeme J. Roch; Ellen R. Busby; Nancy M. Sherwood

Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and its receptor are essential for reproduction in vertebrates. Although there are three major types of GnRH peptides and two major types of receptors in vertebrates, the pattern of distribution is unusual. Evidence is presented from genome mining that type I GnRHRs are not restricted to mammals, but can be found in the lobe-finned and cartilaginous fishes. This implies that this tail-less GnRH receptor emerged early in vertebrate evolution, followed by several independent losses in different lineages. Also, we have identified representatives from the three major GnRH peptide types (mammalian GnRH1, vertebrate GnRH2 and dogfish GnRH3) in a single cartilaginous fish, the little skate. Skate and coelacanth are the only examples of animals with both type I and II GnRH receptors and all three peptide types, suggesting this was the ancestral condition in vertebrates. Our analysis of receptor synteny in combination with phylogeny suggests that there were three GnRH receptor types present before the two rounds of whole genome duplication in early vertebrates. To further understand the origin of the GnRH peptide-receptor system, the relationship of vertebrate and invertebrate homologs was examined. Our evidence supports the hypothesis of a GnRH superfamily with a common ancestor for the vertebrate GnRHs, invertebrate (inv)GnRHs, corazonins and adipokinetic hormones. The invertebrate deuterostomes (echinoderms, hemichordates and amphioxus) have derived GnRH-like peptides, although one amphioxus GnRH with a syntenic relationship to human GnRHs has been shown to be functional. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that gene duplications in the ancestral bilaterian produced two receptor types, one of which became adipokinetic hormone receptor/GnRHR and the other corazonin receptor/invGnRHR. It appears that the ancestral deuterostome had both a GnRHR and invGnRHR, and this is still the case in amphioxus. During the transition to vertebrates both the invertebrate-type peptide and receptor were lost, leaving only the vertebrate-type system that presently exists.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2003

Evolution of glutamine synthetase in vertebrates: multiple glutamine synthetase genes expressed in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).

Brent W. Murray; Ellen R. Busby; Thomas P. Mommsen; Patricia A. Wright

SUMMARY Glutamine synthetase (GSase) is a key enzyme in nitrogen metabolism and encoded by a single gene in mammals. Using PCR cloning techniques, including RT-PCR from total RNA and PCR from a cDNA library, we find evidence of four expressed GSase mRNAs for the tetraploid rainbow trout. For two of these mRNAs (Onmy-GS01, -GS02) we characterize the full-length coding regions, and for two others (Onmy-GS03, -GS04), we describe partial sequences. Northern analysis of Onmy-GS01, -GS02, -GS03 and -GS04 indicates that (1) Onmy-GS02 is expressed at higher levels relative to the other transcripts in most adult tissues, with the exception of brain and gill, where Onmy-GS01 is at the highest level, and (2) the tissue with the highest level of expression of all four transcripts is the brain, with decreasing levels in the intestine, liver, red muscle, gill/kidney, white muscle and heart. Clearly, rainbow trout possess multiple GSase genes with differing levels of tissue expression, implying manifold potential routes of regulation for this octameric enzyme. Our data also indicate that caution should be taken when interpreting mRNA expression data of a single gene, unless multiple genes have been ruled out. Consistent with a southern blot, phylogenetic and intron sequence analyses imply that the trout genes are encoded by at least four separate loci, belonging to two distinct evolutionary branches. Our data on rainbow trout, together with those from two full-length zebrafish Danio rerio GSase genes compiled from GenBank ESTs, support the idea that fish GSases are polyphyletic and that gene duplications have occurred at multiple points and in independent lineages throughout the evolution of bony fishes.


Endocrinology | 2010

Disruption of the Single Copy Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone Receptor in Mice by Gene Trap: Severe Reduction of Reproductive Organs and Functions in Developing and Adult Mice

Sheng Wu; Michael D. Wilson; Ellen R. Busby; Emma R. Isaac; Nancy M. Sherwood

Mutations in the GnRH receptor gene (GNRHR) can result in hypogonadotropic hypogonadism in humans. Unlike most mammals, mice lack a second form of GnRH (GnRH2) and a type 2 GnRH receptor. To determine whether the GnRH receptor is critical at all stages of reproduction and whether this receptor has additional physiological functions in developing and adult mice, we have generated mice from an embryonic stem cell line containing a retroviral vector with multiple stop codons inserted into intron 1 of the Gnrhr gene. This gene trap insertion resulted in the disruption of exon 2 and exon 3 of the Gnrhr gene. The insertion also contained a lacZ gene that was used as a reporter for GnRH receptor expression in these mice. This model has a similar phenotype to the clinical syndrome of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. Null Gnrhr mice had small sexual organs, low levels of FSH, LH, and steroid hormones, failure of sexual maturation, infertility, and inability to respond to exogenous GnRH. However, the defective GnRH receptor did not prevent morula/blastocyst development, implantation, masculinization of fetal male mice, or maintenance of early pregnancy. The phenotype of this null Gnrhr mouse was more severe than models in the literature, including the N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea-induced Gnrhr mutant, the kisspeptin (Kiss1) knockout, and the kisspeptin receptor (Gpr54) knockout. In terms of gonadal morphology, adult gene trap-Gnrhr null mice demonstrate a complete cessation of reproduction and serve as an important model for understanding GnRH/GnRHR physiology.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

Sexual Differentiation of the Brain Requires Perinatal Kisspeptin-GnRH Neuron Signaling

Jenny Clarkson; Ellen R. Busby; Milen Kirilov; Günther Schütz; Nancy M. Sherwood; Allan E. Herbison

Sex differences in brain function underlie robust differences between males and females in both normal and disease states. Although alternative mechanisms exist, sexual differentiation of the male mammalian brain is initiated predominantly by testosterone secreted by the testes during the perinatal period. Despite considerable advances in understanding how testosterone and its metabolite estradiol sexually differentiate the brain, little is known about the mechanism that generates the male-specific perinatal testosterone surge. In mice, we show that a male-specific activation of GnRH neurons occurs 0–2 h following birth and that this correlates with the male-specific surge of testosterone occurring up to 5 h after birth. The necessity of GnRH signaling for the sexually differentiating effects of the perinatal testosterone surge was demonstrated by the persistence of female-like brain characteristics in adult male, GnRH receptor knock-out mice. Kisspeptin neurons have recently been identified to be potent, direct activators of GnRH neurons. We demonstrate that a population of kisspeptin neurons appears in the preoptic area of only the male between E19 and P1. The importance of kisspeptin inputs to GnRH neurons for the process of sexual differentiation was demonstrated by the lack of a normal neonatal testosterone surge, and disordered brain sexual differentiation of male mice in which the kisspeptin receptor was deleted selectively from GnRH neurons. These observations demonstrate the necessity of perinatal GnRH signaling for driving brain sexual differentiation and indicate that kisspeptin inputs to GnRH neurons are essential for this process to occur.


Fish Physiology | 2010

Endocrinology of zebrafish: A small fish with a large gene pool

Ellen R. Busby; Graeme J. Roch; Nancy M. Sherwood

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the endocrinology of zebrafish. The endocrinology of zebrafish comprising the reproductive, stress, growth, and thyroidal systems is supported by a full cascade of neurohormones, pituitary hormones, and peripheral hormones including steroids comparable to human forms with duplicate genes in some cases. Zebrafish possess two forms of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (Gnrh) compared to most other teleosts with three forms. However, zebrafish have Gnrh2, which is identical to one of the human forms (GNRH2), and Gnrh3, which is unique to teleost fishes, but 80% identical to the other human form (GNRH1). The vertebrate stress axis involves a signaling chain of several hormones and receptors. The primary stress response is initiated when corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) is secreted by hypothalamic neurons to bind its receptor in the anterior pituitary on the surface of corticotrope cells. This is followed by the release of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), a post-translational product of pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC). Zebrafish, like other teleosts, have a thyroid axis similar to that of mammals and amphibians, with a few unique variations. Thyrotropin releasing hormone (Trh) is detected throughout the zebrafish brain with a wider distribution than in other teleosts or mammals, suggesting possible additional functions in zebrafish. Zebrafish possess all of the major hormonal components found in mammals necessary to maintain osmotic balance. The best characterized zebrafish osmoregulatory neuropeptides are isotocin (It) and arginine vasotocin (Avt), the fish orthologs of mammalian oxytocin and arginine vasopressin, respectively.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2016

Proglucagons in vertebrates: Expression and processing of multiple genes in a bony fish.

Ellen R. Busby; Thomas P. Mommsen

In contrast to mammals, where a single proglucagon (PG) gene encodes three peptides: glucagon, glucagon-like peptide 1 and glucagon-like peptide 2 (GLP-1; GLP-2), many non-mammalian vertebrates carry multiple PG genes. Here, we investigate proglucagon mRNA sequences, their tissue expression and processing in a diploid bony fish. Copper rockfish (Sebastes caurinus) express two independent genes coding for distinct proglucagon sequences (PG I, PG II), with PG II lacking the GLP-2 sequence. These genes are differentially transcribed in the endocrine pancreas, the brain, and the gastrointestinal tract. Alternative splicing identified in rockfish is only one part of this complex regulation of the PG transcripts: the system has the potential to produce two glucagons, four GLP-1s and a single GLP-2, or any combination of these peptides. Mass spectrometric analysis of partially purified PG-derived peptides in endocrine pancreas confirms translation of both PG transcripts and differential processing of the resulting peptides. The complex differential regulation of the two PG genes and their continued presence in this extant teleostean fish strongly suggests unique and, as yet largely unidentified, roles for the peptide products encoded in each gene.


Handbook of Neuroendocrinology | 2012

Evolution of Reproductive Neurohormones

Graeme J. Roch; Ellen R. Busby; Nancy M. Sherwood

Publisher Summary Gonadotropin–releasing hormone (GnRH) is a small neuropeptide secreted from the hypothalamus to stimulate the release of pituitary gonadotropins that regulate sexual development and function. An array of neurohormones influences reproduction, but within the collection, gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and kisspeptin (Kiss) are central in day-to-day control of the reproductive axis. GnRH is well known as a hypothalamic neuropeptide involved in the regulation of the reproductive axis. After release from the hypothalamus, GnRH acts on the pituitary to stimulate the release of luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle–stimulating hormone (FSH), which then induce steroid production and gametogenesis in the gonad. The first GnRH to be identified was mammalian GnRH, or GnRH1, with a primary sequence invariant across mammals, amphibians and bony fish that evolved before the teleost fishes. Initial functional characterization of the Crz, ACP and AKH peptides does not immediately point to roles in reproduction, although in some species there are connections. Divergent functions are likely to have arisen as these peptides evolved from the ancestors they share with GnRH.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor (Gnrhr) gene knock out: Normal growth and development of sensory, motor and spatial orientation behavior but altered metabolism in neonatal and prepubertal mice

Ellen R. Busby; Nancy M. Sherwood

Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is important in the control of reproduction, but its actions in non-reproductive processes are less well known. In this study we examined the effect of disrupting the GnRH receptor in mice to determine if growth, metabolism or behaviors that are not associated with reproduction were affected. To minimize the effects of other hormones such as FSH, LH and sex steroids, the neonatal-prepubertal period of 2 to 28 days of age was selected. The study shows that regardless of sex or phenotype in the Gnrhr gene knockout line, there was no significant difference in the daily development of motor control, sensory detection or spatial orientation among the wildtype, heterozygous or null mice. This included a series of behavioral tests for touch, vision, hearing, spatial orientation, locomotory behavior and muscle strength. Neither the daily body weight nor the final weight on day 28 of the kidney, liver and thymus relative to body weight varied significantly in any group. However by day 28, metabolic changes in the GnRH null females compared with wildtype females showed a significant reduction in inguinal fat pad weight normalized to body weight; this was accompanied by an increase in glucose compared with wildtype females shown by Student-Newman-Keuls Multiple Comparison test and Students unpaired t tests. Our studies show that the GnRH-GnRHR system is not essential for growth or motor/sensory/orientation behavior during the first month of life prior to puberty onset. The lack of the GnRH-GnRHR axis, however, did affect females resulting in reduced subcutaneous inguinal fat pad weight and increased glucose with possible insulin resistance; the loss of the normal rise of estradiol at postnatal days 15–28 may account for the altered metabolism in the prepubertal female pups.


Archive | 2006

Glucagon and Friends

Thomas P. Mommsen; Ellen R. Busby

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Brent W. Murray

University of Northern British Columbia

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Sheng Wu

University of Victoria

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