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Dive into the research topics where Harriet P. Lo is active.

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Featured researches published by Harriet P. Lo.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2009

MURC/Cavin-4 and cavin family members form tissue-specific caveolar complexes

Michele Bastiani; Libin Liu; Michelle M. Hill; Mark P. Jedrychowski; Susan J. Nixon; Harriet P. Lo; Daniel Abankwa; Robert Luetterforst; Manuel A. Fernandez-Rojo; Michael Breen; Steven P. Gygi; J. Vinten; Piers J. Walser; Kathryn N. North; John F. Hancock; Paul F. Pilch; Robert G. Parton

Polymerase I and transcript release factor (PTRF)/Cavin is a cytoplasmic protein whose expression is obligatory for caveola formation. Using biochemistry and fluorescence resonance energy transfer–based approaches, we now show that a family of related proteins, PTRF/Cavin-1, serum deprivation response (SDR)/Cavin-2, SDR-related gene product that binds to C kinase (SRBC)/Cavin-3, and muscle-restricted coiled-coil protein (MURC)/Cavin-4, forms a multiprotein complex that associates with caveolae. This complex can constitutively assemble in the cytosol and associate with caveolin at plasma membrane caveolae. Cavin-1, but not other cavins, can induce caveola formation in a heterologous system and is required for the recruitment of the cavin complex to caveolae. The tissue-restricted expression of cavins suggests that caveolae may perform tissue-specific functions regulated by the composition of the cavin complex. Cavin-4 is expressed predominantly in muscle, and its distribution is perturbed in human muscle disease associated with Caveolin-3 dysfunction, identifying Cavin-4 as a novel muscle disease candidate caveolar protein.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2008

Limb–girdle muscular dystrophy: Diagnostic evaluation, frequency and clues to pathogenesis

Harriet P. Lo; Sandra T. Cooper; Frances J. Evesson; Jane T. Seto; Maria Chiotis; Valerie Tay; Alison G. Compton; Anita G. Cairns; A. Corbett; Daniel G. MacArthur; Nan Yang; Katrina Reardon; Kathryn N. North

We characterized the frequency of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) subtypes in a cohort of 76 Australian muscular dystrophy patients using protein and DNA sequence analysis. Calpainopathies (8%) and dysferlinopathies (5%) are the most common causes of LGMD in Australia. In contrast to European populations, cases of LGMD2I (due to mutations in FKRP) are rare in Australasia (3%). We have identified a cohort of patients in whom all common disease candidates have been excluded, providing a valuable resource for identification of new disease genes. Cytoplasmic localization of dysferlin correlates with fiber regeneration in a subset of muscular dystrophy patients. In addition, we have identified a group of patients with unidentified forms of LGMD and with markedly abnormal dysferlin localization that does not correlate with fiber regeneration. This pattern is mimicked in primary caveolinopathy, suggesting a subset of these patients may also possess mutations within proteins required for membrane targeting of dysferlin.


Traffic | 2009

A Single Method for Cryofixation and Correlative Light, Electron Microscopy and Tomography of Zebrafish Embryos

Susan J. Nixon; Richard I. Webb; Matthias Floetenmeyer; Nicole L. Schieber; Harriet P. Lo; Robert G. Parton

The zebrafish is a powerful vertebrate system for cell and developmental studies. In this study, we have optimized methods for fast freezing and processing of zebrafish embryos for electron microscopy (EM). We show that in the absence of primary chemical fixation, excellent ultrastructure, preservation of green fluorescent protein (GFP) fluorescence, immunogold labelling and electron tomography can be obtained using a single technique involving high‐pressure freezing and embedding in Lowicryl resins at low temperature. As well as being an important new tool for zebrafish research, the maintenance of GFP fluorescence after fast freezing, freeze substitution and resin embedding will be of general use for correlative light and EM of biological samples.


Neurology | 2003

Single section Western blot: Improving the molecular diagnosis of the muscular dystrophies

Sandra T. Cooper; Harriet P. Lo; Kathryn N. North

Single section Western blot (SSWB) is an improved methodology for molecular diagnosis of the muscular dystrophies, requiring only a single 8-μm muscle biopsy cryosection for the simultaneous analysis of multiple disease candidates. The authors demonstrate that SSWB can be used for diagnosis of dystrophinopathies, to identify haploinsufficiency in autosomal dominant laminopathy, and as a tool to distinguish between primary and secondary immunohistochemical abnormalities in limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2B.


PLOS Biology | 2014

Endocytic Crosstalk: Cavins, Caveolins, and Caveolae Regulate Clathrin-Independent Endocytosis

Natasha Chaudhary; Guillermo A. Gomez; Mark T. Howes; Harriet P. Lo; Kerrie-Ann McMahon; James Rae; Nicole L. Schieber; Michelle M. Hill; Katharina Gaus; Alpha S. Yap; Robert G. Parton

Caveolar proteins and caveolae negatively regulate a second clathrin-independent endocytic CLIC/GEEC pathway; caveolin-1 affects membrane diffusion properties of raft-associated CLIC cargo, and the scaffolding domain of caveolin-1 is required and sufficient for endocytic inhibition.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2015

The caveolin–cavin system plays a conserved and critical role in mechanoprotection of skeletal muscle

Harriet P. Lo; Susan J. Nixon; Thomas E. Hall; Belinda S. Cowling; Charles Ferguson; Garry P. Morgan; Nicole L. Schieber; Manuel A. Fernandez-Rojo; Michele Bastiani; Matthias Floetenmeyer; Nick Martel; Jocelyn Laporte; Paul F. Pilch; Robert G. Parton

The caveolar membrane microdomain plays an integral role in stabilizing the muscle fiber surface in mice and zebrafish.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2010

Reduced plasma membrane expression of dysferlin mutants is attributed to accelerated endocytosis via a syntaxin-4-associated pathway

Frances J. Evesson; Rachel A. Peat; Angela Lek; Fabienne Brilot; Harriet P. Lo; Russell C. Dale; Robert G. Parton; Kathryn N. North; Sandra T. Cooper

Ferlins are an ancient family of C2 domain-containing proteins, with emerging roles in vesicular trafficking and human disease. Dysferlin mutations cause inherited muscular dystrophy, and dysferlin also shows abnormal plasma membrane expression in other forms of muscular dystrophy. We establish dysferlin as a short-lived (protein half-life ∼4–6 h) and transitory transmembrane protein (plasma membrane half-life ∼3 h), with a propensity for rapid endocytosis when mutated, and an association with a syntaxin-4 endocytic route. Dysferlin plasma membrane expression and endocytic rate is regulated by the C2B-FerI-C2C motif, with a critical role identified for C2C. Disruption of C2C dramatically reduces plasma membrane dysferlin (by 2.5-fold), due largely to accelerated endocytosis (by 2.5-fold). These properties of reduced efficiency of plasma membrane expression due to accelerated endocytosis are also a feature of patient missense mutant L344P (within FerI, adjacent to C2C). Importantly, dysferlin mutants that demonstrate accelerated endocytosis also display increased protein lability via endosomal proteolysis, implicating endosomal-mediated proteolytic degradation as a novel basis for dysferlin-deficiency in patients with single missense mutations. Vesicular labeling studies establish that dysferlin mutants rapidly transit from EEA1-positive early endosomes through to dextran-positive lysosomes, co-labeled by syntaxin-4 at multiple stages of endosomal transit. In summary, our studies define a transient biology for dysferlin, relevant to emerging patient therapeutics targeting dysferlin replacement. We introduce accelerated endosomal-directed degradation as a basis for lability of dysferlin missense mutants in dysferlinopathy, and show that dysferlin and syntaxin-4 similarly transit a common endosomal pathway in skeletal muscle cells.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2007

Dystrophinopathy carrier determination and detection of protein deficiencies in muscular dystrophy using lentiviral MyoD-forced myogenesis

Sandra T. Cooper; Eddy Kizana; Jonathon D. Yates; Harriet P. Lo; Nan Yang; Zhan He Wu; Ian E. Alexander; Kathryn N. North

The objective of this study is to expand the applications of MyoD-forced myogenesis for research and diagnosis of human muscle disorders using a lentiviral vector (LVhMyoD) for efficient trans-differentiation of patient primary cells. LVhMyoD transduced cells readily formed striated, multinucleate myotubes expressing a wide range of genes associated with muscular dystrophy (dystrophin, dysferlin, sarcoglycans, caveolin-3) and congenital myopathy (nebulin, actin, desmin, tropomyosin, troponin). We demonstrate that MyoD gene-modified fibroblasts reproduce protein deficiencies associated with different forms of muscular dystrophy, and confirm that LVhMyoD gene-modified chorionic villus can be used successfully to determine the dystrophin status of the developing fetus, augmenting prenatal diagnosis of dystrophinopathy patients. Using muscle-specific cDNA derived from LVhMyoD gene-modified patient cells, we identified a female carrier bearing a large dystrophin deletion and a previously unidentified non-coding splice-site mutation within dystrophin in a Becker muscular dystrophy patient. This study highlights the significant potential of lentiviral MyoD-forced myogenesis for study of a wide range of human muscle disorders; a field constrained by the limited availability of human tissue. LVhMyoD gene-modified patient cells provide a renewable source of mutant protein and muscle-specific mRNA, facilitating accelerated mutation screening of large genes, molecular analyses of splicing abnormalities and study of disease-causing mutations.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2008

Muscular dystrophy associated with α-dystroglycan deficiency in Sphynx and Devon Rex cats

Paul T. Martin; G. Diane Shelton; Peter J. Dickinson; Beverly K. Sturges; Rui Xu; Richard A. LeCouteur; Ling T. Guo; Robert A. Grahn; Harriet P. Lo; Kathryn N. North; Richard Malik; Eva Engvall; Leslie A. Lyons

Recent studies have identified a number of forms of muscular dystrophy, termed dystroglycanopathies, which are associated with loss of natively glycosylated alpha-dystroglycan. Here we identify a new animal model for this class of disorders in Sphynx and Devon Rex cats. Affected cats displayed a slowly progressive myopathy with clinical and histologic hallmarks of muscular dystrophy including skeletal muscle weakness with no involvement of peripheral nerves or CNS. Skeletal muscles had myopathic features and reduced expression of alpha-dystroglycan, while beta-dystroglycan, sarcoglycans, and dystrophin were expressed at normal levels. In the Sphynx cat, analysis of laminin and lectin binding capacity demonstrated no loss in overall glycosylation or ligand binding for the alpha-dystroglycan protein, only a loss of protein expression. A reduction in laminin-alpha2 expression in the basal lamina surrounding skeletal myofibers was also observed. Sequence analysis of translated regions of the feline dystroglycan gene (DAG1) in affected cats did not identify a causative mutation, and levels of DAG1 mRNA determined by real-time QRT-PCR did not differ significantly from normal controls. Reduction in the levels of glycosylated alpha-dystroglycan by immunoblot was also identified in an affected Devon Rex cat. These data suggest that muscular dystrophy in Sphynx and Devon Rex cats results from a deficiency in alpha-dystroglycan protein expression, and as such may represent a new type of dystroglycanopathy where expression, but not glycosylation, is affected.


ChemBioChem | 2012

Flexible and General Synthesis of Functionalized Phosphoisoprenoids for the Study of Prenylation in vivo and in vitro

Debapratim Das; Zakir Tnimov; Uyen T. T. Nguyen; Govindaraju Thimmaiah; Harriet P. Lo; Daniel Abankwa; Yao-Wen Wu; Roger S. Goody; Herbert Waldmann; Kirill Alexandrov

Protein modification with isoprenoid lipids affects hundreds of signaling proteins in eukaryotic cells. Modification of isoprenoids with reporter groups is the main approach for the creation of probes for the analysis of protein prenylation in vitro and in vivo. Here, we describe a new strategy for the synthesis of functionalized phosphoisoprenoids that uses an aminederivatized isoprenoid scaffold as a starting point for the synthesis of functionalized phosphoisoprenoid libraries. This overcomes a long‐standing problem in the field, where multistep synthesis had to be carried out for each individual isoprenoid analogue. The described approach enabled us to synthesize a range of new compounds, including two novel fluorescent isoprenoids that previously could not be generated by conventional means. The fluorescent probes that were developed using the described approach possess significant spectroscopic advantages to all previously generated fluorescent isoprenoid analogue. Using these analogues for flow cytometry and cell imaging, we analyzed the uptake of isoprenoids by mammalian cells and zebrafish embryos. Furthermore, we demonstrate that derivatization of the scaffold can be coupled in a one‐pot reaction to enzymatic incorporation of the resulting isoprenoid group into proteins. This enables rapid evaluation of functional groups for compatibility with individual prenyltransferases and identification of the prenyltransferase specific substrates.

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Alison G. Compton

Children's Hospital at Westmead

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Thomas E. Hall

University of Queensland

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Nan Yang

Children's Hospital at Westmead

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Nick Martel

University of Queensland

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Susan J. Nixon

University of Queensland

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Carol G. Au

Children's Hospital at Westmead

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