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Dive into the research topics where Hrvoje Augustin is active.

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Featured researches published by Hrvoje Augustin.


PLOS Genetics | 2010

Inhibition of GSK-3 ameliorates Abeta pathology in an adult-onset Drosophila model of Alzheimer's disease.

Oyinkan Sofola; Fiona Kerr; Iain Rogers; Richard Killick; Hrvoje Augustin; Carina Gandy; Marcus J. Allen; John Hardy; Simon Lovestone; Linda Partridge

Aβ peptide accumulation is thought to be the primary event in the pathogenesis of Alzheimers disease (AD), with downstream neurotoxic effects including the hyperphosphorylation of tau protein. Glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) is increasingly implicated as playing a pivotal role in this amyloid cascade. We have developed an adult-onset Drosophila model of AD, using an inducible gene expression system to express Arctic mutant Aβ42 specifically in adult neurons, to avoid developmental effects. Aβ42 accumulated with age in these flies and they displayed increased mortality together with progressive neuronal dysfunction, but in the apparent absence of neuronal loss. This fly model can thus be used to examine the role of events during adulthood and early AD aetiology. Expression of Aβ42 in adult neurons increased GSK-3 activity, and inhibition of GSK-3 (either genetically or pharmacologically by lithium treatment) rescued Aβ42 toxicity. Aβ42 pathogenesis was also reduced by removal of endogenous fly tau; but, within the limits of detection of available methods, tau phosphorylation did not appear to be altered in flies expressing Aβ42. The GSK-3–mediated effects on Aβ42 toxicity appear to be at least in part mediated by tau-independent mechanisms, because the protective effect of lithium alone was greater than that of the removal of tau alone. Finally, Aβ42 levels were reduced upon GSK-3 inhibition, pointing to a direct role of GSK-3 in the regulation of Aβ42 peptide level, in the absence of APP processing. Our study points to the need both to identify the mechanisms by which GSK-3 modulates Aβ42 levels in the fly and to determine if similar mechanisms are present in mammals, and it supports the potential therapeutic use of GSK-3 inhibitors in AD.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Invertebrate models of age-related muscle degeneration

Hrvoje Augustin; Linda Partridge

Functional and structural deterioration of muscles is an inevitable consequence of ageing in a wide variety of animal species. What underlies these changes is a complex network of interactions between the muscle-intrinsic and muscle-extrinsic factors, making it very difficult to distinguish between the cause and the consequence. Many of the genes, structures, and processes implicated in mammalian skeletal muscle ageing are preserved in invertebrate species Drosophila melanogaster and Caenorhabditis elegans. The absence in these organisms of mechanisms that promote muscle regeneration, and substantially different hormonal environment, warrant caution when extrapolating experimental data from studies conducted in invertebrates to mammalian species. The simplicity and accessibility of these models, however, offer ample opportunities for studying age-related myopathologies as well as investigating drugs and therapies to alleviate them.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2011

Dietary restriction delays aging, but not neuronal dysfunction, in Drosophila models of Alzheimer's disease.

Fiona Kerr; Hrvoje Augustin; Matthew D.W. Piper; Carina Gandy; Marcus J. Allen; Simon Lovestone; Linda Partridge

Dietary restriction (DR) extends lifespan in diverse organisms and, in animal and cellular models, can delay a range of aging-related diseases including Alzheimers disease (AD). A better understanding of the mechanisms mediating these interactions, however, may reveal novel pathways involved in AD pathogenesis, and potential targets for disease-modifying treatments and biomarkers for disease progression. Drosophila models of AD have recently been developed and, due to their short lifespan and susceptibility to genetic manipulation, we have used the fly to investigate the molecular connections among diet, aging and AD pathology. DR extended lifespan in both Arctic mutant Aβ42 and WT 4R tau over-expressing flies, but the underlying molecular pathology was not altered and neuronal dysfunction was not prevented by dietary manipulation. Our data suggest that DR may alter aging through generalised mechanisms independent of the specific pathways underlying AD pathogenesis in the fly, and hence that lifespan-extending manipulations may have varying effects on aging and functional declines in aging-related diseases. Alternatively, our analysis of the specific effects of DR on neuronal toxicity downstream of Aβ and tau pathologies with negative results may simply confirm that the neuro-protective effects of DR are upstream of the initiating events involved in the pathogenesis of AD.


Fly | 2017

Complex roles of myoglianin in regulating adult performance and lifespan

Hrvoje Augustin; Jennifer Adcott; Christopher J. H. Elliott; Linda Partridge

ABSTRACT Myoglianin, the Drosophila homolog of the secreted vertebrate proteins Myostatin and GDF-11, is an important regulator of neuronal modeling, and synapse function and morphology. While Myoglianin suppression during development elicits positive effects on the neuromuscular system, genetic manipulations of myoglianin expression levels have a varied effect on the outcome of performance tests in aging flies. Specifically, Myoglianin preserves jumping ability, has no effect on negative geotaxis, and negatively regulates flight performance in aging flies. In addition, Myoglianin exhibits a tissue-specific effect on longevity, with myoglianin upregulation in glial cells increasing the median lifespan. These findings indicate complex role for this TGF-β-like protein in governing neuromuscular signaling and consequent behavioral outputs and lifespan in adult flies.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Deletion of endogenous Tau proteins is not detrimental in Drosophila

Sylvie Burnouf; Sebastian Grönke; Hrvoje Augustin; Jacqueline Dols; Marianna Karina Gorsky; Jennifer Werner; Fiona Kerr; Nazif Alic; Pedro Martinez; Linda Partridge

Human Tau (hTau) is a highly soluble and natively unfolded protein that binds to microtubules within neurons. Its dysfunction and aggregation into insoluble paired helical filaments is involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), constituting, together with accumulated β-amyloid (Aβ) peptides, a hallmark of the disease. Deciphering both the loss-of-function and toxic gain-of-function of hTau proteins is crucial to further understand the mechanisms leading to neurodegeneration in AD. As the fruit fly Drosophila melanogaster expresses Tau proteins (dTau) that are homologous to hTau, we aimed to better comprehend dTau functions by generating a specific tau knock-out (KO) fly line using homologous recombination. We observed that the specific removal of endogenous dTau proteins did not lead to overt, macroscopic phenotypes in flies. Indeed, survival, climbing ability and neuronal function were unchanged in tau KO flies. In addition, we did not find any overt positive or negative effect of dTau removal on human Aβ-induced toxicity. Altogether, our results indicate that the absence of dTau proteins has no major functional impact on flies, and suggests that our tau KO strain is a relevant model to further investigate the role of dTau proteins in vivo, thereby giving additional insights into hTau functions.


PLOS Biology | 2017

Reduced insulin signaling maintains electrical transmission in a neural circuit in aging flies

Hrvoje Augustin; Kieran McGourty; Marcus J. Allen; Sirisha Kudumala Madem; Jennifer Adcott; Fiona Kerr; Chi Tung Wong; Alec Vincent; Tanja A. Godenschwege; Emmanuel Boucrot; Linda Partridge

Lowered insulin/insulin-like growth factor (IGF) signaling (IIS) can extend healthy lifespan in worms, flies, and mice, but it can also have adverse effects (the “insulin paradox”). Chronic, moderately lowered IIS rescues age-related decline in neurotransmission through the Drosophila giant fiber system (GFS), a simple escape response neuronal circuit, by increasing targeting of the gap junctional protein innexin shaking-B to gap junctions (GJs). Endosomal recycling of GJs was also stimulated in cultured human cells when IIS was reduced. Furthermore, increasing the activity of the recycling small guanosine triphosphatases (GTPases) Rab4 or Rab11 was sufficient to maintain GJs upon elevated IIS in cultured human cells and in flies, and to rescue age-related loss of GJs and of GFS function. Lowered IIS thus elevates endosomal recycling of GJs in neurons and other cell types, pointing to a cellular mechanism for therapeutic intervention into aging-related neuronal disorders.


Development | 2017

Myostatin-like proteins regulate synaptic function and neuronal morphology.

Hrvoje Augustin; Kieran McGourty; Joern R. Steinert; Helena M. Cochemé; Jennifer Adcott; Melissa Cabecinha; Alec Vincent; Els F. Halff; Josef T. Kittler; Emmanuel Boucrot; Linda Partridge

Growth factors of the TGFβ superfamily play key roles in regulating neuronal and muscle function. Myostatin (or GDF8) and GDF11 are potent negative regulators of skeletal muscle mass. However, expression of myostatin and its cognate receptors in other tissues, including brain and peripheral nerves, suggests a potential wider biological role. Here, we show that Myoglianin (MYO), the Drosophila homolog of myostatin and GDF11, regulates not only body weight and muscle size, but also inhibits neuromuscular synapse strength and composition in a Smad2-dependent manner. Both myostatin and GDF11 affected synapse formation in isolated rat cortical neuron cultures, suggesting an effect on synaptogenesis beyond neuromuscular junctions. We also show that MYO acts in vivo to inhibit synaptic transmission between neurons in the escape response neural circuit of adult flies. Thus, these anti-myogenic proteins act as important inhibitors of synapse function and neuronal growth. Summary: Myostatin-like proteins can modulate neuromuscular synapse strength as well as synaptogenesis beyond neuromuscular junctions, highlighting a key role for these proteins in synapse function and neuronal growth.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Pseudo-acetylation of multiple sites on human Tau proteins alters Tau phosphorylation and microtubule binding, and ameliorates amyloid beta toxicity

Marianna Karina Gorsky; Sylvie Burnouf; Oyinkan Sofola-Adesakin; Jacqueline Dols; Hrvoje Augustin; Carina Marianne Weigelt; Sebastian Grönke; Linda Partridge

Tau is a microtubule-associated protein that is highly soluble and natively unfolded. Its dysfunction is involved in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimer’s disease (AD), where it aggregates within neurons. Deciphering the physiological and pathogenic roles of human Tau (hTau) is crucial to further understand the mechanisms leading to its dysfunction in vivo. We have used a knock-out/knock-in strategy in Drosophila to generate a strain with hTau inserted into the endogenous fly tau locus and expressed under the control of the endogenous fly tau promoter, thus avoiding potential toxicity due to genetic over-expression. hTau knock-in (KI) proteins were expressed at normal, endogenous levels, bound to fly microtubules and were post-translationally modified, hence displaying physiological properties. We used this new model to investigate the effects of acetylation on hTau toxicity in vivo. The simultaneous pseudo-acetylation of hTau at lysines 163, 280, 281 and 369 drastically decreased hTau phosphorylation and significantly reduced its binding to microtubules in vivo. These molecular alterations were associated with ameliorated amyloid beta toxicity. Our results indicate acetylation of hTau on multiple sites regulates its biology and ameliorates amyloid beta toxicity in vivo.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2018

Impact of insulin signaling and proteasomal activity on physiological output of a neuronal circuit in aging Drosophila melanogaster

Hrvoje Augustin; Kieran McGourty; Marcus J. Allen; Jennifer Adcott; Chi Tung Wong; Emmanuel Boucrot; Linda Partridge

The insulin family of growth factors plays an important role in development and function of the nervous system. Reduced insulin and insulin-growth-factor signaling (IIS), however, can improve symptoms of neurodegenerative diseases in laboratory model organisms and protect against age-associated decline in neuronal function. Recently, we showed that chronic, moderately lowered IIS rescues age-related decline in neurotransmission through the Drosophila giant fiber escape response circuit. Here, we expand our initial findings by demonstrating that reduced functional output in the giant fiber system of aging flies can be prevented by increasing proteasomal activity within the circuit. Manipulations of IIS in neurons can also affect longevity, underscoring the relevance of the nervous system for aging.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2015

Erratum to “Dietary restriction delays aging, but not neuronal dysfunction, in Drosophila models of Alzheimer's disease.” [Neurobiol. Aging 32 (2011) 1977–1989]

Fiona Kerr; Hrvoje Augustin; Matthew D.W. Piper; Carina Gandy; Marcus J. Allen; Simon Lovestone; Linda Partridge

Fig. 4. Analysis of fully fed vs DR food effects on tau levels and phosphorylation in flies over-expressing WT human tau. (A) Tau expression and phosphorylation levels were measured by western blotting in control flies (welav/+, w;UAS-4Rtau/+), and at the indicated time points in welav/+;UAS-4Rtau/+flies treated on1.0 vs 2.0 Y medium. Primary antibodies were as follows: Anti-tau (total tau; Dako, UK), PHF-1 (phospho-Ser396/404 tau), AT8 (phospho-Ser199/202 tau), pS422(phospho-Ser422 tau) and anti-actin. (B) Phospho-tau levels, in welav/+;UAS-4R tau/+flies, were normalised to total tau protein for each sample, and are expressed as average relative intensities SEM. Dietary manipulation did not alter the level or pattern of tau phosphorylation across age at Ser396/404 (P 1⁄4 0.412), Ser199/202 (P 1⁄4 0.838) or Ser422 (P 1⁄4 0.677) epitopes (two-way ANOVA).

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Fiona Kerr

University College London

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Jennifer Adcott

University College London

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