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Dive into the research topics where George G. Harmison is active.

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Featured researches published by George G. Harmison.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2006

A motor neuron disease-associated mutation in p150Glued perturbs dynactin function and induces protein aggregation.

Jennifer R. Levy; Charlotte J. Sumner; Juliane P. Caviston; Mariko Tokito; Srikanth Ranganathan; Lee A. Ligon; Karen Wallace; Bernadette H. LaMonte; George G. Harmison; Imke Puls; Kenneth H. Fischbeck; Erika L.F. Holzbaur

The microtubule motor cytoplasmic dynein and its activator dynactin drive vesicular transport and mitotic spindle organization. Dynactin is ubiquitously expressed in eukaryotes, but a G59S mutation in the p150Glued subunit of dynactin results in the specific degeneration of motor neurons. This mutation in the conserved cytoskeleton-associated protein, glycine-rich (CAP-Gly) domain lowers the affinity of p150Glued for microtubules and EB1. Cell lines from patients are morphologically normal but show delayed recovery after nocodazole treatment, consistent with a subtle disruption of dynein/dynactin function. The G59S mutation disrupts the folding of the CAP-Gly domain, resulting in aggregation of the p150Glued protein both in vitro and in vivo, which is accompanied by an increase in cell death in a motor neuron cell line. Overexpression of the chaperone Hsp70 inhibits aggregate formation and prevents cell death. These data support a model in which a point mutation in p150Glued causes both loss of dynein/dynactin function and gain of toxic function, which together lead to motor neuron cell death.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Mitochondrial abnormalities in spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy

Srikanth Ranganathan; George G. Harmison; Kristin Meyertholen; Maria Pennuto; Barrington G. Burnett; Kenneth H. Fischbeck

Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) is a motor neuron disease caused by polyglutamine expansion mutation in the androgen receptor (AR). We investigated whether the mutant protein alters mitochondrial function. We found that constitutive and doxycycline-induced expression of the mutant AR in MN-1 and PC12 cells, respectively, are associated with depolarization of the mitochondrial membrane. This was mitigated by cyclosporine A, which inhibits opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. We also found that the expression of the mutant protein in the presence of ligand results in an elevated level of reactive oxygen species, which is blocked by the treatment with the antioxidants co-enzyme Q10 and idebenone. The mutant protein in MN-1 cells also resulted in increased Bax, caspase 9 and caspase 3. We assessed the effects of mutant AR on the transcription of mitochondrial proteins and found altered expression of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ coactivator 1 and the mitochondrial specific antioxidant superoxide dismutase-2 in affected tissues of SBMA knock-in mice. In addition, we found that the AR associates with mitochondria in cultured cells. This study thus provides evidence for mitochondrial dysfunction in SBMA cell and animal models, either through indirect effects on the transcription of nuclear-encoded mitochondrial genes or through direct effects of the mutant protein on mitochondria or both. These findings indicate possible benefit from mitochondrial therapy for SBMA.


Neurology | 2006

SMN mRNA and protein levels in peripheral blood Biomarkers for SMA clinical trials

Charlotte J. Sumner; Stephen J. Kolb; George G. Harmison; N. O. Jeffries; K. Schadt; Richard S. Finkel; Gideon Dreyfuss; Kenneth H. Fischbeck

Background: Clinical trials of drugs that increase SMN protein levels in vitro are currently under way in patients with spinal muscular atrophy. Objective: To develop and validate measures of SMN mRNA and protein in peripheral blood and to establish baseline SMN levels in a cohort of controls, carriers, and patients of known genotype, which could be used to follow response to treatment. Methods: SMN1 and SMN2 gene copy numbers were determined in blood samples collected from 86 subjects. Quantitative reverse transcription PCR was used to measure blood levels of SMN mRNA with and without exon 7. A cell immunoassay was used to measure blood levels of SMN protein. Results: Blood levels of SMN mRNA and protein were measured with high reliability. There was little variation in SMN levels in individual subjects over a 5-week period. Levels of exon 7-containing SMN mRNA and SMN protein correlated with SMN1 and SMN2 gene copy number. With the exception of type I SMA, there was no correlation between SMN levels and disease severity. Conclusion: SMN mRNA and protein levels can be reliably measured in the peripheral blood and used during clinical trials in spinal muscular atrophy, but these levels do not necessarily predict disease severity.


Molecular Medicine | 2012

Insulinlike Growth Factor (IGF)-1 Administration Ameliorates Disease Manifestations in a Mouse Model of Spinal and Bulbar Muscular Atrophy

Carlo Rinaldi; Laura C. Bott; Ke-lian Chen; George G. Harmison; Masahisa Katsuno; Gen Sobue; Maria Pennuto; Kenneth H. Fischbeck

Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy is an X-linked motor neuron disease caused by polyglutamine expansion in the androgen receptor. Patients develop slowly progressive proximal muscle weakness, muscle atrophy and fasciculations. Affected individuals often show gynecomastia, testicular atrophy and reduced fertility as a result of mild androgen insensitivity. No effective disease-modifying therapy is currently available for this disease. Our recent studies have demonstrated that insulinlike growth factor (IGF)-1 reduces the mutant androgen receptor toxicity through activation of Akt in vitro, and spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy transgenic mice that also overexpress a noncirculating muscle isoform of IGF-1 have a less severe phenotype. Here we sought to establish the efficacy of daily intraperitoneal injections of mecasermin rinfabate, recombinant human IGF-1 and IGF-1 binding protein 3, in a transgenic mouse model expressing the mutant androgen receptor with an expanded 97 glutamine tract. The study was done in a controlled, randomized, blinded fashion, and, to reflect the clinical settings, the injections were started after the onset of disease manifestations. The treatment resulted in increased Akt phosphorylation and reduced mutant androgen receptor aggregation in muscle. In comparison to vehicle-treated controls, IGF-1–treated transgenic mice showed improved motor performance, attenuated weight loss and increased survival. Our results suggest that peripheral tissue can be targeted to improve the spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy phenotype and indicate that IGF-1 warrants further investigation in clinical trials as a potential treatment for this disease.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2010

B2 attenuates polyglutamine-expanded androgen receptor toxicity in cell and fly models of spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy

Isabella Palazzolo; Natalia B. Nedelsky; Caitlin E. Askew; George G. Harmison; Aleksey G. Kasantsev; J. Paul Taylor; Kenneth H. Fischbeck; Maria Pennuto

Expanded polyglutamine tracts cause neurodegeneration through a toxic gain‐of‐function mechanism. Generation of inclusions is a common feature of polyglutamine diseases and other protein misfolding disorders. Inclusion formation is likely to be a defensive response of the cell to the presence of unfolded protein. Recently, the compound B2 has been shown to increase inclusion formation and decrease toxicity of polyglutamine‐expanded huntingtin in cultured cells. We explored the effect of B2 on spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA). SBMA is caused by expansion of polyglutamine in the androgen receptor (AR) and is characterized by the loss of motor neurons in the brainstem and spinal cord. We found that B2 increases the deposition of mutant AR into nuclear inclusions, without altering the ligand‐induced aggregation, expression, or subcellular distribution of the mutant protein. The effect of B2 on inclusions was associated with a decrease in AR transactivation function. We show that B2 reduces mutant AR toxicity in cell and fly models of SBMA, further supporting the idea that accumulation of polyglutamine‐expanded protein into inclusions is protective. Our findings suggest B2 as a novel approach to therapy for SBMA.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2014

Stem cell-derived motor neurons from spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy patients.

Christopher Grunseich; Kristen Zukosky; Ilona Kats; Laboni Ghosh; George G. Harmison; Laura C. Bott; Carlo Rinaldi; Ke-lian Chen; Guibin Chen; Manfred Boehm; Kenneth H. Fischbeck

Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA, Kennedys disease) is a motor neuron disease caused by polyglutamine repeat expansion in the androgen receptor. Although degeneration occurs in the spinal cord and muscle, the exact mechanism is not clear. Induced pluripotent stem cells from spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy patients provide a useful model for understanding the disease mechanism and designing effective therapy. Stem cells were generated from six patients and compared to control lines from three healthy individuals. Motor neurons from four patients were differentiated from stem cells and characterized to understand disease-relevant phenotypes. Stem cells created from patient fibroblasts express less androgen receptor than control cells, but show androgen-dependent stabilization and nuclear translocation. The expanded repeat in several stem cell clones was unstable, with either expansion or contraction. Patient stem cell clones produced a similar number of motor neurons compared to controls, with or without androgen treatment. The stem cell-derived motor neurons had immunoreactivity for HB9, Isl1, ChAT, and SMI-32, and those with the largest repeat expansions were found to have increased acetylated α-tubulin and reduced HDAC6. Reduced HDAC6 was also found in motor neuron cultures from two other patients with shorter repeats. Evaluation of stably transfected mouse cells and SBMA spinal cord showed similar changes in acetylated α-tubulin and HDAC6. Perinuclear lysosomal enrichment, an HDAC6 dependent process, was disrupted in motor neurons from two patients with the longest repeats. SBMA stem cells present new insights into the disease, and the observations of reduced androgen receptor levels, repeat instability, and reduced HDAC6 provide avenues for further investigation of the disease mechanism and development of effective therapy.


Annals of Neurology | 2014

Genetics of low spinal muscular atrophy carrier frequency in sub‐Saharan Africa

Modibo Sangare; Brant Hendrickson; Hammadoun Ali Sango; Ke-lian Chen; Jonathan Nofziger; Abdelbasset Amara; Amalia Dutra; Alice B. Schindler; Aldiouma Guindo; Mahamadou Traoré; George G. Harmison; Evgenia Pak; Fatoumata N'Go Yaro; Katherine V. Bricceno; Christopher Grunseich; Guibin Chen; Manfred Boehm; Kristen Zukosky; Nouhoum Bocoum; Katherine G. Meilleur; Fatoumata Daou; Koumba Bagayogo; Yaya I. Coulibaly; Mahamadou Diakite; Michael P. Fay; Hee‐Suk Lee; Ali Saad; Moez Gribaa; Andrew Singleton; Youssoufa Maiga

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is one of the most common severe hereditary diseases of infancy and early childhood in North America, Europe, and Asia. SMA is usually caused by deletions of the survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene. A closely related gene, SMN2, modifies the disease severity. SMA carriers have only 1 copy of SMN1 and are relatively common (1 in 30–50) in populations of European and Asian descent. SMN copy numbers and SMA carrier frequencies have not been reliably estimated in Malians and other sub‐Saharan Africans.


Journal of neuromuscular diseases | 2016

Sexual Reassignment Fails to Prevent Kennedy’s Disease

Tyler Lanman; Dara Bakar; Nisha M. Badders; Ailbhe Burke; Angela Kokkinis; Joseph A. Shrader; Galen O. Joe; Alice B. Schindler; Laura C. Bott; George G. Harmison; J. Paul Taylor; Kenneth H. Fischbeck; Christopher Grunseich

Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy is caused by polyglutamine expansion in the androgen receptor. As an X-linked disease dependent on androgens, symptoms and findings are only fully manifest in males. Here we describe a 40-year-old male-to-female transgender SBMA patient who developed full disease manifestations despite undetectable levels of androgens. We used cell culture and animal models to show that spironolactone, the anti-androgen she had taken for 15 years, promotes nuclear localization and toxicity of the mutant protein, which may explain the disease manifestations in this patient.


Archive | 1995

Targeted Defective Interfering HIV-1 Particles as Renewable Antivirals?

Manfred Schubert; Akhil C. Banerjea; Soon-Young Paik; George G. Harmison; Chang-Jie Chen

Defective viruses are viral mutants which are incapable of replication because they lack essential regions of the viral genome. They are ubiquitous and can be detected within all DNA and RNA virus families.1 The replication of the defective virus requires functions which are carried out by gene products encoded in the missing regions. These functions must be provided in trans by a helper virus, which is usually the virus from which the defective virus originated. Many defective viral genomes contain all essential cis-acting nucleotide sequences, such as the origin of replication and the packaging signal necessary for viral assembly.2 With defective proviruses, some of these cis elements may also be deleted and replaced by host sequences. In such cases, the defective virus cannot be transmitted by virus particle formation. Initial observations with acute transforming retroviruses led to the discoveries of oncogenes and the roles of defective proviruses and their regulatory sequences in neoplastic transformation.3 Most defective proviruses, however, do not give rise to a recognizable cellular phenotype. Replication of these defective proviruses only occurs by cell division which the provirus itself can promote in some cases.


Retrovirology | 2005

Targeted infection of HIV-1 Env expressing cells by HIV(CD4/CXCR4) vectors reveals a potential new rationale for HIV-1 mediated down-modulation of CD4

Zhiping Ye; George G. Harmison; Jack A. Ragheb; Manfred Schubert

BackgroundEfficient targeted gene transfer and cell type specific transgene expression are important for the safe and effective expression of transgenes in vivo. Enveloped viral vectors allow insertion of exogenous membrane proteins into their envelopes, which could potentially aid in the targeted transduction of specific cell types. Our goal was to specifically target cells that express the T cell tropic HIV-1 envelope protein (Env) using the highly specific interaction of Env with its cellular receptor (CD4) inserted into the envelope of an HIV-1-based viral vector.ResultsTo generate HIV-1-based vectors carrying the CD4 molecule in their envelope, the CD4 ectodomain was fused to diverse membrane anchors and inserted together with the HIV-1 coreceptor CXCR4 into the envelopes of HIV-1 vector particles. Independent of the type of CD4 anchor, all chimeric CD4 proteins inserted into HIV-1 vector envelopes and the resultant HIV(CD4/CXCR4) particles were able to selectively confer neomycin resistance to cells expressing the fusogenic T cell tropic HIV-1 Env protein. Unexpectedly, in the absence of Env on the target cells, all vector particles carrying the CD4 ectodomain anchored in their envelope adhered to various cell types without infecting these cells. This cell adhesion was very avid. It was independent of the presence of Env on the target cell, the type of CD4 anchor or the presence of CXCR4 on the particle. In mixed cell populations with defined ratios of Env+/Env- cells, the targeted transduction of Env+ cells by HIV(CD4/CXCR4) particles was diminished in proportion to the number of Env- cells.ConclusionVector diversion caused by a strong, non-selective cell binding of CD4+-vector particles effectively prevents the targeted transduction of HIV-1 Env expressing cells in mixed cell populations. This Env-independent cell adhesion severely limits the effective use of targeted HIV(CD4/CXCR4) vectors designed to interfere with HIV-1 replication in vivo. Importantly, the existence of this newly described and remarkably strong CD4-dependent cell adhesion suggests that the multiple viral efforts to reduce CD4 cell surface expression may, in part, be to prevent cell adhesion to non-target cells and thereby to increase the infectivity of viral progeny. Preventing CD4 down-modulation by HIV-1 might be an effective component of a multi-faceted antiviral strategy.

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Kenneth H. Fischbeck

National Institutes of Health

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Manfred Schubert

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Ke-lian Chen

National Institutes of Health

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Akhil C. Banerjea

National Institutes of Health

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Carlo Rinaldi

National Institutes of Health

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Chang-Jie Chen

National Institutes of Health

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Manfred Schubert

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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Christopher Grunseich

National Institutes of Health

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Alice B. Schindler

National Institutes of Health

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