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Dive into the research topics where Frances A. Lemckert is active.

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Featured researches published by Frances A. Lemckert.


Nature Genetics | 2007

Loss of ACTN3 gene function alters mouse muscle metabolism and shows evidence of positive selection in humans

Daniel G. MacArthur; Jane T. Seto; Joanna M. Raftery; Kate G. R. Quinlan; Gavin A. Huttley; Jeff Hook; Frances A. Lemckert; Michael R. Edwards; Yemima Berman; Edna C. Hardeman; Peter Gunning; Simon Easteal; Nan Yang; Kathryn N. North

More than a billion humans worldwide are predicted to be completely deficient in the fast skeletal muscle fiber protein α-actinin-3 owing to homozygosity for a premature stop codon polymorphism, R577X, in the ACTN3 gene. The R577X polymorphism is associated with elite athlete status and human muscle performance, suggesting that α-actinin-3 deficiency influences the function of fast muscle fibers. Here we show that loss of α-actinin-3 expression in a knockout mouse model results in a shift in muscle metabolism toward the more efficient aerobic pathway and an increase in intrinsic endurance performance. In addition, we demonstrate that the genomic region surrounding the 577X null allele shows low levels of genetic variation and recombination in individuals of European and East Asian descent, consistent with strong, recent positive selection. We propose that the 577X allele has been positively selected in some human populations owing to its effect on skeletal muscle metabolism.


FEBS Journal | 2013

Oxidative stress and pathology in muscular dystrophies: focus on protein thiol oxidation and dysferlinopathies

Jessica R. Terrill; Hannah G. Radley-Crabb; Tomohito Iwasaki; Frances A. Lemckert; Peter G. Arthur; Miranda D. Grounds

The muscular dystrophies comprise more than 30 clinical disorders that are characterized by progressive skeletal muscle wasting and degeneration. Although the genetic basis for many of these disorders has been identified, the exact mechanism for pathogenesis generally remains unknown. It is considered that disturbed levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) contribute to the pathology of many muscular dystrophies. Reactive oxygen species and oxidative stress may cause cellular damage by directly and irreversibly damaging macromolecules such as proteins, membrane lipids and DNA; another major cellular consequence of reactive oxygen species is the reversible modification of protein thiol side chains that may affect many aspects of molecular function. Irreversible oxidative damage of protein and lipids has been widely studied in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and we have recently identified increased protein thiol oxidation in dystrophic muscles of the mdx mouse model for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. This review evaluates the role of elevated oxidative stress in Duchenne muscular dystrophy and other forms of muscular dystrophies, and presents new data that show significantly increased protein thiol oxidation and high levels of lipofuscin (a measure of cumulative oxidative damage) in dysferlin‐deficient muscles of A/J mice at various ages. The significance of this elevated oxidative stress and high levels of reversible thiol oxidation, but minimal myofibre necrosis, is discussed in the context of the disease mechanism for dysferlinopathies, and compared with the situation for dystrophin‐deficient mdx mice.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Calpains, Cleaved Mini-DysferlinC72, and L-Type Channels Underpin Calcium-Dependent Muscle Membrane Repair

Angela Lek; Frances J. Evesson; Frances A. Lemckert; Gregory M. I. Redpath; Ann-Katrin Lueders; Lynne Turnbull; Cynthia B. Whitchurch; Kathryn N. North; Sandra T. Cooper

Dysferlin is proposed as a key mediator of calcium-dependent muscle membrane repair, although its precise role has remained elusive. Dysferlin interacts with a new membrane repair protein, mitsugumin 53 (MG53), an E3 ubiquitin ligase that shows rapid recruitment to injury sites. Using a novel ballistics assay in primary human myotubes, we show it is not full-length dysferlin recruited to sites of membrane injury but an injury-specific calpain-cleavage product, mini-dysferlinC72. Mini-dysferlinC72-rich vesicles are rapidly recruited to injury sites and fuse with plasma membrane compartments decorated by MG53 in a process coordinated by L-type calcium channels. Collective interplay between activated calpains, dysferlin, and L-type channels explains how muscle cells sense a membrane injury and mount a specialized response in the unique local environment of a membrane injury. Mini-dysferlinC72 and MG53 form an intricate lattice that intensely labels exposed phospholipids of injury sites, then infiltrates and stabilizes the membrane lesion during repair. Our results extend functional parallels between ferlins and synaptotagmins. Whereas otoferlin exists as long and short splice isoforms, dysferlin is subject to enzymatic cleavage releasing a synaptotagmin-like fragment with a specialized protein- or phospholipid-binding role for muscle membrane repair.


Endocrinology | 2008

The Murine Stanniocalcin 2 Gene Is a Negative Regulator of Postnatal Growth

Andrew C. Chang; Jeff Hook; Frances A. Lemckert; Michelle M. McDonald; Mai-Anh Nguyen; Edna C. Hardeman; David G. Little; Peter Gunning; Roger R. Reddel

Stanniocalcin (STC), a secreted glycoprotein, was first studied in fish as a classical hormone with a role in regulating serum calcium levels. There are two closely related proteins in mammals, STC1 and STC2, with functions that are currently unclear. Both proteins are expressed in numerous mammalian tissues rather than being secreted from a specific endocrine gland. No phenotype has been detected yet in Stc1-null mice, and to investigate whether Stc2 could have compensated for the loss of Stc1, we have now generated Stc2(-/-) and Stc1(-/-) Stc2(-/-) mice. Although Stc1 is expressed in the ovary and lactating mouse mammary glands, like the Stc1(-/-) mice, the Stc1(-/-) Stc2(-/-) mice had no detected decrease in fertility, fecundity, or weight gain up until weaning. Serum calcium and phosphate levels were normal in Stc1(-/-) Stc2(-/-) mice, indicating it is unlikely that the mammalian stanniocalcins have a major physiological role in mineral homeostasis. Mice with Stc2 deleted were 10-15% larger and grew at a faster rate than wild-type mice from 4 wk onward, and the Stc1(-/-) Stc2(-/-) mice had a similar growth phenotype. This effect was not mediated through the GH/IGF-I axis. The results are consistent with STC2 being a negative regulator of postnatal growth.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

Gamma Tropomyosin Gene Products Are Required for Embryonic Development

Jeff Hook; Frances A. Lemckert; H. Qin; Galina Schevzov; Peter Gunning

ABSTRACT The actin filament system is essential for many cellular functions, including shape, motility, cytokinesis, intracellular trafficking, and tissue organization. Tropomyosins (Tms) are rod-like components of most actin filaments that differentially affect their stability and flexibility. The Tm gene family consists of four genes, αTm, βTm, γTm (Tm5 NM, where “NM” indicates “nonmuscle”), and δTm (Tm4). Multiple isoforms of the Tm family are generated by alternative splicing of three of these genes, and their expression is highly regulated. Extensive spatial and temporal sorting of Tm isoforms into different cellular compartments has been shown to occur in several cell types. We have addressed the function of the low-molecular-weight Tms encoded by the γTm gene by eliminating the corresponding amino-terminal coding sequences from this gene. Heterozygous mice were generated, and subsequent intercrossing of the F1 pups did not result in any viable homozygous knockouts. Genotype analysis of day 2.5 morulae also failed to detect any homozygous knockouts. We have failed in our attempts to delete the second allele and generate in vitro double-knockout cells, although 51 clones displayed homologous recombination back into the originally targeted locus. We therefore conclude that low-molecular-weight products from the γTm gene are essential for both embryonic development and cell survival.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2011

Dysferlin, annexin A1, and mitsugumin 53 are upregulated in muscular dystrophy and localize to longitudinal tubules of the T-system with stretch.

Leigh B. Waddell; Frances A. Lemckert; Xi F. Zheng; Jenny Tran; Frances J. Evesson; J. Hawkes; Angela Lek; Neil Street; Peihui Lin; Nigel F. Clarke; Andrew P. Landstrom; Michael J. Ackerman; Noah Weisleder; Jianjie Ma; Kathryn N. North; Sandra T. Cooper

Mutations in dysferlin cause an inherited muscular dystrophy because of defective membrane repair. Three interacting partners of dysferlin are also implicated in membrane resealing: caveolin-3 (in limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 1C), annexin A1, and the newly identified protein mitsugumin 53 (MG53). Mitsugumin 53 accumulates at sites of membrane damage, and MG53-knockout mice display a progressive muscular dystrophy. This study explored the expression and localization of MG53 in human skeletal muscle, how membrane repair proteins are modulated in various forms of muscular dystrophy, and whether MG53 is a primary cause of human muscle disease. Mitsugumin 53 showed variable sarcolemmal and/or cytoplasmic immunolabeling in control human muscle and elevated levels in dystrophic patients. No pathogenic MG53 mutations were identified in 50 muscular dystrophy patients, suggesting that MG53 is unlikely to be a common cause of muscular dystrophy in Australia. Western blot analysis confirmed upregulation of MG53, as well as of dysferlin, annexin A1, and caveolin-3 to different degrees, in different muscular dystrophies. Importantly, MG53, annexin A1, and dysferlin localize to the t-tubule network and show enriched labeling at longitudinal tubules of the t-system in overstretch. Our results suggest that longitudinal tubules of the t-system may represent sites of physiological membrane damage targeted by this membrane repair complex.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Divergent regulation of the sarcomere and the cytoskeleton.

Galina Schevzov; Thomas Fath; Bernadette Vrhovski; Nicole Vlahovich; Sudarsan Rajan; Jeff Hook; Josephine E. Joya; Frances A. Lemckert; Franz Puttur; Jim Jung-Ching Lin; Edna C. Hardeman; David F. Wieczorek; Geraldine M. O'Neill; Peter Gunning

The existence of a feedback mechanism regulating the precise amounts of muscle structural proteins, such as actin and the actin-associated protein tropomyosin (Tm), in the sarcomeres of striated muscles is well established. However, the regulation of nonmuscle or cytoskeletal actin and Tms in nonmuscle cell structures has not been elucidated. Unlike the thin filaments of striated muscles, the actin cytoskeleton in nonmuscle cells is intrinsically dynamic. Given the differing requirements for the structural integrity of the actin thin filaments of the sarcomere compared with the requirement for dynamicity of the actin cytoskeleton in nonmuscle cells, we postulated that different regulatory mechanisms govern the expression of sarcomeric versus cytoskeletal Tms, as key regulators of the properties of the actin cytoskeleton. Comprehensive analyses of tissues from transgenic and knock-out mouse lines that overexpress the cytoskeletal Tms, Tm3 and Tm5NM1, and a comparison with sarcomeric Tms provide evidence for this. Moreover, we show that overexpression of a cytoskeletal Tm drives the amount of filamentous actin.


Brain | 2011

Hypertrophy and dietary tyrosine ameliorate the phenotypes of a mouse model of severe nemaline myopathy

Mai-Anh Nguyen; Josephine E. Joya; Ana Domazetovska; Nan Yang; Jeff Hook; Frances A. Lemckert; Emma Kettle; Valentina A. Valova; Philip J. Robinson; Kathryn N. North; Peter Gunning; Christina A. Mitchell; Edna C. Hardeman

Nemaline myopathy, the most common congenital myopathy, is caused by mutations in genes encoding thin filament and thin filament-associated proteins in skeletal muscles. Severely affected patients fail to survive beyond the first year of life due to severe muscle weakness. There are no specific therapies to combat this muscle weakness. We have generated the first knock-in mouse model for severe nemaline myopathy by replacing a normal allele of the α-skeletal actin gene with a mutated form (H40Y), which causes severe nemaline myopathy in humans. The Acta1(H40Y) mouse has severe muscle weakness manifested as shortened lifespan, significant forearm and isolated muscle weakness and decreased mobility. Muscle pathologies present in the human patients (e.g. nemaline rods, fibre atrophy and increase in slow fibres) were detected in the Acta1(H40Y) mouse, indicating that it is an excellent model for severe nemaline myopathy. Mating of the Acta1(H40Y) mouse with hypertrophic four and a half LIM domains protein 1 and insulin-like growth factor-1 transgenic mice models increased forearm strength and mobility, and decreased nemaline pathologies. Dietary L-tyrosine supplements also alleviated the mobility deficit and decreased the chronic repair and nemaline rod pathologies. These results suggest that L-tyrosine may be an effective treatment for muscle weakness and immobility in nemaline myopathy.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2014

Calpain cleavage within dysferlin exon 40a releases a synaptotagmin-like module for membrane repair

Gregory M. I. Redpath; Natalie Woolger; A. K. Piper; Frances A. Lemckert; Angela Lek; Peter A. Greer; Kathryn N. North; Sandra T. Cooper

The muscular dystrophy protein dysferlin plays a key role in the calcium-activated vesicle fusion of membrane repair. This study establishes calpains as upstream regulators of dysferlin in the membrane repair cascade and further demonstrates that similar C-terminal modules are enzymatically released from other ferlin family members.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Negative Autoregulation of GTF2IRD1 in Williams-Beuren Syndrome via a Novel DNA Binding Mechanism

Stephen J. Palmer; Nicole Santucci; Jocelyn Widagdo; Sara J. Bontempo; Kylie M. Taylor; Enoch S. E. Tay; Jeff Hook; Frances A. Lemckert; Peter Gunning; Edna C. Hardeman

The GTF2IRD1 gene is of principal interest to the study of Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS). This neurodevelopmental disorder results from the hemizygous deletion of a region of chromosome 7q11.23 containing 28 genes including GTF2IRD1. WBS is thought to be caused by haploinsufficiency of certain dosage-sensitive genes within the deleted region, and the feature of supravalvular aortic stenosis (SVAS) has been attributed to reduced elastin caused by deletion of ELN. Human genetic mapping data have implicated two related genes GTF2IRD1 and GTF2I in the cause of some the key features of WBS, including craniofacial dysmorphology, hypersociability, and visuospatial deficits. Mice with mutations of the Gtf2ird1 allele show evidence of craniofacial abnormalities and behavioral changes. Here we show the existence of a negative autoregulatory mechanism that controls the level of GTF2IRD1 transcription via direct binding of the GTF2IRD1 protein to a highly conserved region of the GTF2IRD1 promoter containing an array of three binding sites. The affinity for this protein-DNA interaction is critically dependent upon multiple interactions between separate domains of the protein and at least two of the DNA binding sites. This autoregulatory mechanism leads to dosage compensation of GTF2IRD1 transcription in WBS patients. The GTF2IRD1 promoter represents the first established in vivo gene target of the GTF2IRD1 protein, and we use it to model its DNA interaction capabilities.

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Peter Gunning

University of New South Wales

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Jeff Hook

University of New South Wales

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Edna C. Hardeman

University of New South Wales

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Galina Schevzov

University of New South Wales

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Frances J. Evesson

Children's Hospital at Westmead

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Gregory M. I. Redpath

Children's Hospital at Westmead

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