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Dive into the research topics where Gavin Clive Higgins is active.

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Featured researches published by Gavin Clive Higgins.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2010

Oxidative Stress: Emerging Mitochondrial and Cellular Themes and Variations in Neuronal Injury

Gavin Clive Higgins; Philip M. Beart; Yea Seul Shin; Minghui Jessica Chen; Nam Sang Cheung; Phillip Nagley

Oxidative stress plays a central role in neuronal injury and cell death in acute and chronic pathological conditions. The cellular responses to oxidative stress embrace changes in mitochondria and other organelles, notably endoplasmic reticulum, and can lead to a number of cell death paradigms, which cover a spectrum from apoptosis to necrosis and include autophagy. In Alzheimers disease, and other pathologies including Parkinsons disease, protein aggregation provides further cellular stresses that can initiate or feed into the pathways to cell death engendered by oxidative stress. Specific attention is paid here to mitochondrial dysfunction and programmed cell death, and the diverse modes of cell death mediated by mitochondria under oxidative stress. Novel insights into cellular responses to neuronal oxidative stress from a range of different stressors can be gained by detailed transcriptomics analyses. Such studies at the cellular level provide the key for understanding the molecular and cellular pathways whereby neurons respond to oxidative stress and undergo injury and death. These considerations underpin the development of detailed knowledge in more complex integrated systems, up to the intact human bearing the neuropathology, facilitating therapeutic advances.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2010

Multifaceted deaths orchestrated by mitochondria in neurones

Phillip Nagley; Gavin Clive Higgins; Julie D. Atkin; Philip M. Beart

Neurones undergo diverse forms of cell death depending on the nature and severity of the stress. These death outcomes are now classified into various types of programmed cell death, including apoptosis, autophagy and necrosis. Each of these pathways can run in parallel and all have mitochondria as a central feature. Recruitment of mitochondria into cell death signalling involves either (or both) induction of specific death responses through release of apoptogenic proteins into the cytosol, or perturbation in function leading to loss of mitochondrial energization and ATP synthesis. Cross-talk between these signalling pathways, particularly downstream of mitochondria, determines the resultant pattern of cell death. The differential recruitment of specific death pathways depends on the timing of engagement of mitochondrial signalling. Other influences on programmed cell death pathways occur through stress of the endoplasmic reticulum and the associated ubiquitin-proteasome system normally handling potentially neurotoxic protein aggregates. Based upon contemporary evidence apoptosis is a relatively rare in the mature brain whereas the contribution of programmed necrosis to various neuropathologies has been underestimated. The death outcomes that neurones exhibit during acute or chronic injury or pathological conditions considered here (oxidative stress, hypoxic-ischaemic injury, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Parkinsons and Huntingtons diseases) fall within a spectrum of the diverse death types across the apoptosis-necrosis continuum. Indeed, dying or dead neurones may simultaneously manifest characteristics of more than one type of death pathway. Understanding neuronal death pathways and their cross-talk not only informs the detailed pathobiology but also suggests novel therapeutic strategies.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2014

Mitochondrial dysfunction and mitophagy: the beginning and end to diabetic nephropathy?

Gavin Clive Higgins; Melinda T. Coughlan

Diabetic nephropathy (DN) is a progressive microvascular complication arising from diabetes. Within the kidney, the glomeruli, tubules, vessels and interstitium are disrupted, ultimately impairing renal function and leading to end‐stage renal disease (ESRD). Current pharmacological therapies used in individuals with DN do not prevent the inevitable progression to ESRD; therefore, new targets of therapy are urgently required. Studies from animal models indicate that disturbances in mitochondrial homeostasis are central to the pathogenesis of DN. Since renal proximal tubule cells rely on oxidative phosphorylation to provide adequate ATP for tubular reabsorption, an impairment of mitochondrial bioenergetics can result in renal functional decline. Defects at the level of the electron transport chain have long been established in DN, promoting electron leakage and formation of superoxide radicals, mediating microinflammation and contributing to the renal lesion. More recent studies suggest that mitochondrial‐associated proteins may be directly involved in the pathogenesis of tubulointerstitial fibrosis and glomerulosclerosis. An accumulation of fragmented mitochondria are found in the renal cortex in both humans and animals with DN, suggesting that in tandem with a shift in dynamics, mitochondrial clearance mechanisms may be impaired. The process of mitophagy is the selective targeting of damaged or dysfunctional mitochondria to autophagosomes for degradation through the autophagy pathway. The current review explores the concept that an impairment in the mitophagy system leads to the accelerated progression of renal pathology. A better understanding of the cellular and molecular events that govern mitophagy and dynamics in DN may lead to improved therapeutic strategies.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2011

Autophagic activity in cortical neurons under acute oxidative stress directly contributes to cell death.

Gavin Clive Higgins; Rodney J. Devenish; Philip M. Beart; Phillip Nagley

Primary neurons undergo insult-dependent programmed cell death. We examined autophagy as a process contributing to cell death in cortical neurons after treatment with either hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) or staurosporine. Although caspase-9 activation and cleavage of procaspase-3 were significant following staurosporine treatment, neither was observed following H2O2 treatment, indicating a non-apoptotic death. Autophagic activity increased rapidly with H2O2, but slowly with staurosporine, as quantified by processing of endogenous LC3. Autophagic induction by both stressors increased the abundance of fluorescent puncta formed by GFP-LC3, which could be blocked by 3-methyladenine. Significantly, such inhibition of autophagy blocked cell death induced by H2O2 but not staurosporine. Suppression of Atg7 inhibited cell death by H2O2, but not staurosporine, whereas suppression of Beclin 1 prevented cell death by both treatments, suggesting it has a complex role regulating both apoptosis and autophagy. We conclude that autophagic mechanisms are activated in an insult-dependent manner and that H2O2 induces autophagic cell death.


Clinical Science | 2016

Mapping time-course mitochondrial adaptations in the kidney in experimental diabetes.

Melinda T. Coughlan; Tuong Vi Nguyen; Sally A. Penfold; Gavin Clive Higgins; Vicki Thallas-Bonke; Sih Min Tan; Nicole J. Van Bergen; Karly C. Sourris; Brooke E. Harcourt; David R. Thorburn; Ian A. Trounce; Mark E. Cooper; Josephine M. Forbes

Oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) drives ATP production by mitochondria, which are dynamic organelles, constantly fusing and dividing to maintain kidney homoeostasis. In diabetic kidney disease (DKD), mitochondria appear dysfunctional, but the temporal development of diabetes-induced adaptations in mitochondrial structure and bioenergetics have not been previously documented. In the present study, we map the changes in mitochondrial dynamics and function in rat kidney mitochondria at 4, 8, 16 and 32 weeks of diabetes. Our data reveal that changes in mitochondrial bioenergetics and dynamics precede the development of albuminuria and renal histological changes. Specifically, in early diabetes (4 weeks), a decrease in ATP content and mitochondrial fragmentation within proximal tubule epithelial cells (PTECs) of diabetic kidneys were clearly apparent, but no changes in urinary albumin excretion or glomerular morphology were evident at this time. By 8 weeks of diabetes, there was increased capacity for mitochondrial permeability transition (mPT) by pore opening, which persisted over time and correlated with mitochondrial hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) generation and glomerular damage. Late in diabetes, by week 16, tubular damage was evident with increased urinary kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) excretion, where an increase in the Complex I-linked oxygen consumption rate (OCR), in the context of a decrease in kidney ATP, indicated mitochondrial uncoupling. Taken together, these data show that changes in mitochondrial bioenergetics and dynamics may precede the development of the renal lesion in diabetes, and this supports the hypothesis that mitochondrial dysfunction is a primary cause of DKD.


The review of diabetic studies : RDS | 2015

Targeting Mitochondria and Reactive Oxygen Species-Driven Pathogenesis in Diabetic Nephropathy.

Lindblom R; Gavin Clive Higgins; Melinda T. Coughlan; de Haan Jb

Diabetic kidney disease is one of the major microvascular complications of both type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus. Approximately 30% of patients with diabetes experience renal complications. Current clinical therapies can only mitigate the symptoms and delay the progression to end-stage renal disease, but not prevent or reverse it. Oxidative stress is an important player in the pathogenesis of diabetic nephropathy. The activity of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/NS), which are by-products of the diabetic milieu, has been found to correlate with pathological changes observed in the diabetic kidney. However, many clinical studies have failed to establish that antioxidant therapy is renoprotective. The discovery that increased ROS/NS activity is linked to mitochondrial dysfunction, endoplasmic reticulum stress, inflammation, cellular senescence, and cell death calls for a refined approach to antioxidant therapy. It is becoming clear that mitochondria play a key role in the generation of ROS/NS and their consequences on the cellular pathways involved in apoptotic cell death in the diabetic kidney. Oxidative stress has also been associated with necrosis via induction of mitochondrial permeability transition. This review highlights the importance of mitochondria in regulating redox balance, modulating cellular responses to oxidative stress, and influencing cell death pathways in diabetic kidney disease. ROS/NS-mediated cellular dysfunction corresponds with progressive disease in the diabetic kidney, and consequently represents an important clinical target. Based on this consideration, this review also examines current therapeutic interventions to prevent ROS/NS-derived injury in the diabetic kidney. These interventions, mainly aimed at reducing or preventing mitochondrial-generated oxidative stress, improving mitochondrial antioxidant defense, and maintaining mitochondrial integrity, may deliver alternative approaches to halt or prevent diabetic kidney disease.


Diabetes | 2016

Deficiency in apoptosis inducing factor recapitulates chronic kidney disease via aberrant mitochondrial homeostasis

Melinda T. Coughlan; Gavin Clive Higgins; Tuong Vi Nguyen; Sally A. Penfold; Vicki Thallas-Bonke; Sih Min Tan; Georg Ramm; Nicole J. Van Bergen; Darren C. Henstridge; Karly C. Sourris; Brooke E. Harcourt; Ian A. Trounce; Portia M Robb; Adrienne Laskowski; Sean L. McGee; Amanda J Genders; Ken Walder; Brian G. Drew; Paul Gregorevic; Hongwei Qian; Merlin C. Thomas; George Jerums; Richard J. MacIsaac; Alison Skene; David Anthony Power; Elif I. Ekinci; Xiaonan W. Wijeyeratne; Linda A. Gallo; Michal Herman-Edelstein; Michael T. Ryan

Apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) is a mitochondrial flavoprotein with dual roles in redox signaling and programmed cell death. Deficiency in AIF is known to result in defective oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), via loss of complex I activity and assembly in other tissues. Because the kidney relies on OXPHOS for metabolic homeostasis, we hypothesized that a decrease in AIF would result in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Here, we report that partial knockdown of Aif in mice recapitulates many features of CKD, in association with a compensatory increase in the mitochondrial ATP pool via a shift toward mitochondrial fusion, excess mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production, and Nox4 upregulation. However, despite a 50% lower AIF protein content in the kidney cortex, there was no loss of complex I activity or assembly. When diabetes was superimposed onto Aif knockdown, there were extensive changes in mitochondrial function and networking, which augmented the renal lesion. Studies in patients with diabetic nephropathy showed a decrease in AIF within the renal tubular compartment and lower AIFM1 renal cortical gene expression, which correlated with declining glomerular filtration rate. Lentiviral overexpression of Aif1m rescued glucose-induced disruption of mitochondrial respiration in human primary proximal tubule cells. These studies demonstrate that AIF deficiency is a risk factor for the development of diabetic kidney disease.


Neurochemistry International | 2017

MDMA-induced neurotoxicity of serotonin neurons involves autophagy and rilmenidine is protective against its pathobiology

Linda D Mercer; Gavin Clive Higgins; Chew L. Lau; Andrew J. Lawrence; Philip M. Beart

Abstract Toxicity of 3,4‐methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) towards biogenic amine neurons is well documented and in primate brain predominantly affects serotonin (5‐HT) neurons. MDMA induces damage of 5‐HT axons and nerve fibres and intracytoplasmic inclusions. Whilst its pathobiology involves mitochondrially‐mediated oxidative stress, we hypothesised MDMA possessed the capacity to activate autophagy, a proteostatic mechanism for degradation of cellular debris. We established a culture of ventral pons from embryonic murine brain enriched in 5‐HT neurons to explore mechanisms of MDMA neurotoxicity and recruitment of autophagy, and evaluated possible neuroprotective actions of the clinically approved agent rilmenidine. MDMA (100 &mgr;M–1 mM) reduced cell viability, like rapamycin (RM) and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), in a concentration‐ and time‐dependent manner. Immunocytochemistry revealed dieback of 5‐HT arbour: MDMA‐induced injury was slower than for RM and H2O2, neuritic blebbing occurred at 48 and 72 h and Hoechst labelling revealed nuclear fragmentation with 100 &mgr;M MDMA. MDMA effected concentration‐dependent inhibition of [3H]5‐HT uptake with 500 &mgr;M MDMA totally blocking transport. Western immunoblotting for microtubule associated protein light chain 3 (LC3) revealed autophagosome formation after treatment with MDMA. Confocal analyses and immunocytochemistry for 5‐HT, Hoechst and LC3 confirmed MDMA induced autophagy with abundant LC3‐positive puncta within 5‐HT neurons. Rilmenidine (1 &mgr;M) protected against MDMA‐induced injury and image analysis showed full preservation of 5‐HT arbours. MDMA had no effect on GABA neurons, indicating specificity of action at 5‐HT neurons. MDMA‐induced neurotoxicity involves autophagy induction in 5‐HT neurons, and rilmenidine via beneficial actions against toxic intracellular events represents a potential treatment for its pathobiology in sustained usage. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available. HighlightsMDMA reduced cellular viability producing dieback of 5‐HT neuronal arbours and blockade of 5‐HT uptake.MDMA‐induced injury of 5‐HT neurones involved nuclear fragmentation with recruitment of autophagy.The autophagy activator rilmenidine fully and selectively protected 5‐HT neurones against MDMA‐induced injury.Beneficial actions of rilmenidine represent a potential treatment for 5‐HT dysfunction in MDMA pathobiology in humans.


Diabetes | 2018

RAGE Deletion Confers Renoprotection by Reducing Responsiveness to Transforming Growth Factor-β and Increasing Resistance to Apoptosis

Shinji Hagiwara; Karly C. Sourris; Mark Ziemann; Wu Tieqiao; Muthukumar Mohan; Aaron McClelland; Eoin Brennan; Josephine M. Forbes; Melinda T. Coughlan; Brooke E. Harcourt; Sally A. Penfold; Bo Wang; Gavin Clive Higgins; Raelene Pickering; Assam El-Osta; Merlin C. Thomas; Mark E. Cooper; Phillip Kantharidis

Signaling via the receptor of advanced glycation end products (RAGE)—though complex and not fully elucidated in the setting of diabetes—is considered a key injurious pathway in the development of diabetic nephropathy (DN). We report here that RAGE deletion resulted in increased expression of fibrotic markers (collagen I and IV, fibronectin) and the inflammatory marker MCP-1 in primary mouse mesangial cells (MCs) and in kidney cortex. RNA sequencing analysis in MCs from RAGE−/− and wild-type mice confirmed these observations. Nevertheless, despite these gene expression changes, decreased responsiveness to transforming growth factor-β was identified in RAGE−/− mice. Furthermore, RAGE deletion conferred a more proliferative phenotype in MCs and reduced susceptibility to staurosporine-induced apoptosis. RAGE restoration experiments in RAGE−/− MCs largely reversed these gene expression changes, resulting in reduced expression of fibrotic and inflammatory markers. This study highlights that protection against DN in RAGE knockout mice is likely to be due in part to the decreased responsiveness to growth factor stimulation and an antiapoptotic phenotype in MCs. Furthermore, it extends our understanding of the role of RAGE in the progression of DN, as RAGE seems to play a key role in modulating the sensitivity of the kidney to injurious stimuli such as prosclerotic cytokines.


Nephrology | 2018

Methods in renal research: Measurement of autophagic flux in the renal cortex ex vivo

Gavin Clive Higgins; Tuong-Vi Nguyen; Georg Ramm; Melinda T. Coughlan

The role of autophagy in the kidney and many nephrological diseases has gained prominence in recent years. Much of this research has been focused on markers of autophagy that are static and reveal little about the state of this dynamic pathway. Other mechanistic investigations are limited to in vitro studies, that often provide circumstantial evidence of autophagic flux. Here we describe a method for measuring autophagic flux ex vivo that allows more direct observations to be made in situ regarding the state of autophagic flux within the renal cortex of a single animal.

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Philip M. Beart

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Karly C. Sourris

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Sally A. Penfold

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Sih Min Tan

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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Tuong Vi Nguyen

Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute

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