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Dive into the research topics where Jan-Willem Taanman is active.

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Featured researches published by Jan-Willem Taanman.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1999

The mitochondrial genome: structure, transcription, translation and replication

Jan-Willem Taanman

Mitochondria play a central role in cellular energy provision. The organelles contain their own genome with a modified genetic code. The mammalian mitochondrial genome is transmitted exclusively through the female germ line. The human mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is a double-stranded, circular molecule of 16569 bp and contains 37 genes coding for two rRNAs, 22 tRNAs and 13 polypeptides. The mtDNA-encoded polypeptides are all subunits of enzyme complexes of the oxidative phosphorylation system. Mitochondria are not self-supporting entities but rely heavily for their functions on imported nuclear gene products. The basic mechanisms of mitochondrial gene expression have been solved. Cis-acting mtDNA sequences have been characterised by sequence comparisons, mapping studies and mutation analysis both in vitro and in patients harbouring mtDNA mutations. Characterisation of trans-acting factors has proven more difficult but several key enzymes involved in mtDNA replication, transcription and protein synthesis have now been biochemically identified and some have been cloned. These studies revealed that, although some factors may have an additional function elsewhere in the cell, most are unique to mitochondria. It is expected that cell cultures of patients with mitochondrial diseases will increasingly be used to address fundamental questions about mtDNA expression.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Mitofusin 1 and mitofusin 2 are ubiquitinated in a PINK1/parkin-dependent manner upon induction of mitophagy

Matthew E. Gegg; J. Mark Cooper; Kai-Yin Chau; Manuel Rojo; A. H. V. Schapira; Jan-Willem Taanman

Mitochondrial dysfunction and perturbed degradation of proteins have been implicated in Parkinsons disease (PD) pathogenesis. Mutations in the Parkin and PINK1 genes are a cause of familial PD. PINK1 is a putative kinase associated with mitochondria, and loss of PINK1 expression leads to mitochondrial dysfunction, which increases with time. Parkin is suggested to be downstream of PINK1 and also mediates the removal of damaged mitochondria by macroautophagy (mitophagy). We investigated whether mitochondrial dysfunction in dopaminergic SH-SY5Y cells following decreased PINK1 expression by RNAi may in part be due to the inhibition of mitophagy. Reduced flux through the macroautophagy pathway was found to be coincident with the inhibition of ATP synthesis following 12 days of PINK1 silencing. Overexpression of parkin in these cells restored both autophagic flux and ATP synthesis. Overexpression and RNAi studies also indicated that PINK1 and parkin were required for mitophagy following CCCP-induced mitochondrial damage. The ubiquitination of several mitochondrial proteins, including mitofusin 1 and mitofusin 2, were detected within 3 h of CCCP treatment. These post-translational modifications were reduced following the silencing of parkin or PINK1. The ubiquitination of mitochondrial proteins appears to identify mitochondria for degradation and facilitate mitophagy. PINK1 and parkin are thus required for the removal of damaged mitochondria in dopaminergic cells, and inhibition of this pathway may lead to the accumulation of defective mitochondria which may contribute to PD pathogenesis.


Annals of Neurology | 1999

Biochemical abnormalities and excitotoxicity in Huntington's disease brain

Sarah J. Tabrizi; M. W. J. Cleeter; Jh Xuereb; Jan-Willem Taanman; Jm Cooper; A. H. V. Schapira

The physiological role of huntingtin and the mechanisms by which the expanded CAG repeat in ITI5 and its polyglutamine stretch in mutant huntingtin induce Huntingtons disease (HD) are unknown. Several techniques have now demonstrated abnormal metabolism in HD brain; direct measurement of respiratory chain enzyme activities has shown severe deficiency of complex II/III and a milder defect of complex IV. We confirm that these abnormalities appear to be confined to the striatum within the HD brain. Analysis of complex II/III activity in HD fibroblasts was normal, despite expression of mutant huntingtin. Although glyceraldehyde 3‐phosphate dehydrogenase (a huntingtin binding protein) activity was normal in all areas studied, aconitase activity was decreased to 8% in HD caudate, 27% in putamen, and 52% in cerebral cortex, but normal in HD cerebellum and fibroblasts. We have demonstrated that although complexes II and III are those parts of the respiratory chain most vulnerable to inhibition in the presence of a nitric oxide (NO•) generator, aconitase activity was even more sensitive to inhibition. The pattern of these enzyme deficiencies and their parallel to the anatomical distribution of HD pathology support an important role for NO• and excitotoxicity in HD pathogenesis. Furthermore, based on the biochemical defects we have described, we suggest that NO• generation produces a graded response, with aconitase inhibition followed by complex II/III inhibition and the initiation of a self‐amplifying cycle of free radical generation and aconitase inhibition, which results in severe ATP depletion. We propose that these events are important in determining neuronal cell death and are critical steps in the pathogenesis of HD. Ann Neurol 1999;45:25–32


Nature Communications | 2011

Parkinson's disease induced pluripotent stem cells with triplication of the α-synuclein locus

Michael J. Devine; Mina Ryten; Petr Vodicka; Alison J. Thomson; Tom Burdon; Henry Houlden; Fatima Cavaleri; Masumi Nagano; Nicola Drummond; Jan-Willem Taanman; Anthony H. V. Schapira; Katrina Gwinn; John Hardy; Patrick A. Lewis; Tilo Kunath

A major barrier to research on Parkinsons disease is inaccessibility of diseased tissue for study. One solution is to derive induced pluripotent stem cells from patients and differentiate them into neurons affected by disease. Triplication of SNCA, encoding α-synuclein, causes a fully penetrant, aggressive form of Parkinsons disease with dementia. α-Synuclein dysfunction is the critical pathogenic event in Parkinsons disease, multiple system atrophy and dementia with Lewy bodies. Here we produce multiple induced pluripotent stem cell lines from an SNCA triplication patient and an unaffected first-degree relative. When these cells are differentiated into midbrain dopaminergic neurons, those from the patient produce double the amount of α-synuclein protein as neurons from the unaffected relative, precisely recapitulating the cause of Parkinsons disease in these individuals. This model represents a new experimental system to identify compounds that reduce levels of α-synuclein, and to investigate the mechanistic basis of neurodegeneration caused by α-synuclein dysfunction.


Nature Genetics | 2001

A mutant mitochondrial respiratory chain assembly protein causes complex III deficiency in patients with tubulopathy, encephalopathy and liver failure

Pascale de Lonlay; Isabelle Valnot; Antoni Barrientos; Marina Gorbatyuk; Alexander Tzagoloff; Jan-Willem Taanman; Emmanuel Benayoun; Dominique Chretien; Noman Kadhom; Anne Lombès; Hélène Ogier de Baulny; Patrick Niaudet; Arnold Munnich; Pierre Rustin; Agnès Rötig

Complex III (CIII; ubiquinol cytochrome c reductase of the mitochondrial respiratory chain) catalyzes electron transfer from succinate and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide-linked dehydrogenases to cytochrome c. CIII is made up of 11 subunits, of which all but one (cytochrome b) are encoded by nuclear DNA. CIII deficiencies are rare and manifest heterogeneous clinical presentations. Although pathogenic mutations in the gene encoding mitochondrial cytochrome b have been described, mutations in the nuclear-DNA-encoded subunits have not been reported. Involvement of various genes has been indicated in assembly of yeast CIII (refs. 8–11). So far only one such gene, BCS1L, has been identified in human. BCS1L represents, therefore, an obvious candidate gene in CIII deficiency. Here, we report BCS1L mutations in six patients, from four unrelated families and presenting neonatal proximal tubulopathy, hepatic involvement and encephalopathy. Complementation study in yeast confirmed the deleterious effect of these mutations. Mutation of BCS1L would seem to be a frequent cause of CIII deficiency, as one-third of our patients have BCS1L mutations.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Silencing of PINK1 Expression Affects Mitochondrial DNA and Oxidative Phosphorylation in DOPAMINERGIC Cells

Matthew E. Gegg; Jm Cooper; A. H. V. Schapira; Jan-Willem Taanman

Background Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated in the pathogenesis of Parkinsons disease (PD). Impairment of the mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) and an increased frequency in deletions of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA), which encodes some of the subunits of the ETC, have been reported in the substantia nigra of PD brains. The identification of mutations in the PINK1 gene, which cause an autosomal recessive form of PD, has supported mitochondrial involvement in PD. The PINK1 protein is a serine/threonine kinase localized in mitochondria and the cytosol. Its precise function is unknown, but it is involved in neuroprotection against a variety of stress signalling pathways. Methodology/Principal Findings In this report we have investigated the effect of silencing PINK1 expression in human dopaminergic SH-SY5Y cells by siRNA on mtDNA synthesis and ETC function. Loss of PINK1 expression resulted in a decrease in mtDNA levels and mtDNA synthesis. We also report a concomitant loss of mitochondrial membrane potential and decreased mitochondrial ATP synthesis, with the activity of complex IV of the ETC most affected. This mitochondrial dysfunction resulted in increased markers of oxidative stress under basal conditions and increased cell death following treatment with the free radical generator paraquat. Conclusions This report highlights a novel function of PINK1 in mitochondrial biogenesis and a role in maintaining mitochondrial ETC activity. Dysfunction of both has been implicated in sporadic forms of PD suggesting that these may be key pathways in the development of the disease.


Methods in Enzymology | 1995

Mammalian cytochrome-c oxidase: Characterization of enzyme and immunological detection of subunits in tissue extracts and whole cells

Roderick A. Capaldi; Michael F. Marusich; Jan-Willem Taanman

Publisher Summary To explore the biogenesis of mammalian cytochrome-c oxidase and to examine the defects of this enzyme in human disease, approaches are required to measure the hemes spectrally and assay enzyme activity in tissue extracts. This chapter discusses these approaches. It is important to be able to characterize the subunit composition of the enzyme to look for alterations in any subunit based on their migration in sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gels, absence of any subunit, and incomplete assembly. The panel of monoclonal antibodies for such studies and their use is described. Several of the monoclonal antibodies will be useful in isolation of the cytochrome-c oxidase complex by immuno-affinity chromatography after covalent binding to Sepharose CL-4B (Pharmacia LKB Biotechnology). This method is established for the purification of the yeast enzyme, using monoclonal antibodies to yeast subunit III, and a similar method is developed for the purification of the human enzyme.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2004

Cytochrome c Oxidase Subassemblies in Fibroblast Cultures from Patients Carrying Mutations in COX10, SCO1, or SURF1

Sl Williams; Isabelle Valnot; Pierre Rustin; Jan-Willem Taanman

Cytochrome c oxidase contains two redox-active copper centers (CuA and CuB) and two redox-active heme A moieties. Assembly of the enzyme relies on several assembly factors in addition to the constituent subunits and prosthetic groups. We studied fibroblast cultures from patients carrying mutations in the assembly factors COX10, SCO1, or SURF1. COX10 is involved in heme A biosynthesis. SCO1 is required for formation of the CuA center. The function of SURF1 is unknown. Immunoblot analysis of native gels demonstrated severely decreased levels of holoenzyme in the patient cultures compared with controls. In addition, the blots revealed the presence of five subassemblies: three subassemblies involving the core subunit MTCO1 but apparently no other subunits; a subassembly containing subunits MTCO1, COX4, and COX5A; and a subassembly containing at least subunits MTCO1, MTCO2, MTCO3, COX4, and COX5A. As some of the subassemblies correspond to known assembly intermediates of human cytochrome c oxidase, we think that these subassemblies are probably assembly intermediates that accumulate in patient cells. The MTCO1·COX4·COX5A subassembly was not detected in COX10-deficient cells, which suggests that heme A incorporation into MTCO1 occurs prior to association of MTCO1 with COX4 and COX5A. SCO1-deficient cells contained accumulated levels of the MTCO1·COX4·COX5A subassembly, suggesting that MTCO2 associates with the MTCO1·COX4·COX5A subassembly after the CuA center of MTCO2 is formed. Assembly in SURF1-deficient cells appears to stall at the same stage as in SCO1-deficient cells, pointing to a role for SURF1 in promoting the association of MTCO2 with the MTCO1·COX4·COX5A subassembly.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Creation of an Open-Access, Mutation-Defined Fibroblast Resource for Neurological Disease Research

Selina Wray; Matthew Self; Patrick A. Lewis; Jan-Willem Taanman; Natalie S. Ryan; Colin J. Mahoney; Yuying Liang; Michael J. Devine; Una-Marie Sheerin; Henry Houlden; Huw R. Morris; Daniel G. Healy; Jose-Felix Marti-Masso; Elisavet Preza; Suzanne Barker; Margaret Sutherland; Roderick A. Corriveau; Michael R D'Andrea; A. H. V. Schapira; Ryan J. Uitti; Mark Guttman; Grzegorz Opala; Barbara Jasinska-Myga; Andreas Puschmann; Christer Nilsson; Alberto J. Espay; Jarosław Sławek; Ludwig Gutmann; Bradley F. Boeve; Kevin B. Boylan

Our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of many neurological disorders has been greatly enhanced by the discovery of mutations in genes linked to familial forms of these diseases. These have facilitated the generation of cell and animal models that can be used to understand the underlying molecular pathology. Recently, there has been a surge of interest in the use of patient-derived cells, due to the development of induced pluripotent stem cells and their subsequent differentiation into neurons and glia. Access to patient cell lines carrying the relevant mutations is a limiting factor for many centres wishing to pursue this research. We have therefore generated an open-access collection of fibroblast lines from patients carrying mutations linked to neurological disease. These cell lines have been deposited in the National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) Repository at the Coriell Institute for Medical Research and can be requested by any research group for use in in vitro disease modelling. There are currently 71 mutation-defined cell lines available for request from a wide range of neurological disorders and this collection will be continually expanded. This represents a significant resource that will advance the use of patient cells as disease models by the scientific community.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

A Missense Mutation of Cytochrome Oxidase Subunit II Causes Defective Assembly and Myopathy

Shamima Rahman; Jan-Willem Taanman; J. Mark Cooper; I. Nelson; Ian Hargreaves; Brigitte Meunier; Michael G. Hanna; José J. Garcı́a; Roderick A. Capaldi; Brian D. Lake; J. V. Leonard; A. H. V. Schapira

We report the first missense mutation in the mtDNA gene for subunit II of cytochrome c oxidase (COX). The mutation was identified in a 14-year-old boy with a proximal myopathy and lactic acidosis. Muscle histochemistry and mitochondrial respiratory-chain enzymology demonstrated a marked reduction in COX activity. Immunohistochemistry and immunoblot analyses with COX subunit-specific monoclonal antibodies showed a pattern suggestive of a primary mtDNA defect, most likely involving CO II, for COX subunit II (COX II). mtDNA-sequence analysis demonstrated a novel heteroplasmic T-->A transversion at nucleotide position 7,671 in CO II. This mutation changes a methionine to a lysine residue in the middle of the first N-terminal membrane-spanning region of COX II. The immunoblot studies demonstrated a severe reduction in cross-reactivity, not only for COX II but also for the mtDNA-encoded subunit COX III and for nuclear-encoded subunits Vb, VIa, VIb, and VIc. Steady-state levels of the mtDNA-encoded subunit COX I showed a mild reduction, but spectrophotometric analysis revealed a dramatic decrease in COX I-associated heme a3 levels. These observations suggest that, in the COX protein, a structural association of COX II with COX I is necessary to stabilize the binding of heme a3 to COX I.

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A. H. V. Schapira

UCL Institute of Neurology

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Shamima Rahman

Great Ormond Street Hospital

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J. V. Leonard

UCL Institute of Child Health

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Jm Cooper

St Bartholomew's Hospital

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Sl Williams

University College London

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Thomas T. Warner

UCL Institute of Neurology

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Mary G. Sweeney

UCL Institute of Neurology

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Andrew J. Duncan

UCL Institute of Child Health

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