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Dive into the research topics where Josie McConnell is active.

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Featured researches published by Josie McConnell.


Hypertension | 2008

Diet-Induced Obesity in Female Mice Leads to Offspring Hyperphagia, Adiposity, Hypertension, and Insulin Resistance A Novel Murine Model of Developmental Programming

Anne-Maj Samuelsson; Phillippa A. Matthews; Marco Argenton; Michael R. Christie; Josie McConnell; Eugene Jansen; Aldert H. Piersma; Susan E. Ozanne; Denise Fernandez Twinn; Claude Remacle; Anthea Rowlerson; Lucilla Poston; Paul D. Taylor

Maternal obesity is increasingly prevalent and may affect the long-term health of the child. We investigated the effects of maternal diet-induced obesity in mice on offspring metabolic and cardiovascular function. Female C57BL/6J mice were fed either a standard chow (3% fat, 7% sugar) or a palatable obesogenic diet (16% fat, 33% sugar) for 6 weeks before mating and throughout pregnancy and lactation. Offspring of control (OC) and obese dams (OO) were weaned onto standard chow and studied at 3 and 6 months of age. OO were hyperphagic from 4 to 6 weeks of age compared with OC and at 3 months locomotor activity was reduced and adiposity increased (abdominal fat pad mass; P<0.01). OO were heavier than OC at 6 months (body weight, P<0.05). OO abdominal obesity was associated with adipocyte hypertrophy and altered mRNA expression of &bgr;-adrenoceptor 2 and 3, 11&bgr;HSD-1, and PPAR-&ggr; 2. OO showed resistance artery endothelial dysfunction at 3 months, and were hypertensive, as assessed by radiotelemetry (nighttime systolic blood pressure at 6 months [mm Hg] mean±SEM, male OO, 134±1 versus OC, 124±2, n=8, P<0.05; female OO, 137±2 versus OC, 122±4, n=8, P<0.01). OO skeletal muscle mass (tibialis anterior) was significantly reduced (P<0.01) OO fasting insulin was raised at 3 months and by 6 months fasting plasma glucose was elevated. Exposure to the influences of maternal obesity in the developing mouse led to adult offspring adiposity and cardiovascular and metabolic dysfunction. Developmentally programmed hyperphagia, physical inactivity, and altered adipocyte metabolism may play a mechanistic role.


Hepatology | 2009

Maternal high-fat feeding primes steatohepatitis in adult mice offspring, involving mitochondrial dysfunction and altered lipogenesis gene expression.

Kimberley D. Bruce; Felino R. Cagampang; Marco Argenton; Junlong Zhang; Priya L. Ethirajan; Graham C. Burdge; Adrian C Bateman; Geraldine F. Clough; Lucilla Poston; Mark A. Hanson; Josie McConnell; Christopher D. Byrne

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) describes an increasingly prevalent spectrum of liver disorders associated with obesity and metabolic syndrome. It is uncertain why steatosis occurs in some individuals, whereas nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) occurs in others. We have generated a novel mouse model to test our hypothesis: that maternal fat intake contributes to the development of NAFLD in adult offspring. Female mice were fed either a high‐fat (HF) or control chow (C) diet before and during gestation and lactation. Resulting offspring were fed either a C or a HF diet after weaning, to generate four offspring groups; HF/HF, HF/C, C/HF, C/C. At 15 weeks of age, liver histology was normal in both the C/C and HF/C offspring. Kleiner scoring showed that although the C/HF offspring developed nonalcoholic fatty liver, the HF/HF offspring developed NASH. At 30 weeks, histological analysis and Kleiner scoring showed that both the HF/C and C/HF groups had NAFLD, whereas the HF/HF had a more severe form of NASH. Therefore, exposure to a HF diet in utero and during lactation contributes toward NAFLD progression. We investigated the mechanisms by which this developmental priming is mediated. At 15 weeks of age, hepatic mitochondrial electron transport chain (ETC) enzyme complex activity (I, II/III, and IV) was reduced in both groups of offspring from HF‐fed mothers (HF/C and HF/HF). In addition, measurement of hepatic gene expression indicated that lipogenesis, oxidative stress, and inflammatory pathways were up‐regulated in the 15‐week‐old HF/C and HF/HF offspring. Conclusion: Maternal fat intake contributes toward the NAFLD progression in adult offspring, which is mediated through impaired hepatic mitochondrial metabolism and up‐regulated hepatic lipogenesis. (HEPATOLOGY 2009.)


PLOS ONE | 2010

Maternal Diet-Induced Obesity Alters Mitochondrial Activity and Redox Status in Mouse Oocytes and Zygotes

Natalia Igosheva; Andrey Y. Abramov; Lucilla Poston; Judith J. Eckert; Tom P. Fleming; Michael R. Duchen; Josie McConnell

The negative impact of obesity on reproductive success is well documented but the stages at which development of the conceptus is compromised and the mechanisms responsible for the developmental failure still remain unclear. Recent findings suggest that mitochondria may be a contributing factor. However to date no studies have directly addressed the consequences of maternal obesity on mitochondria in early embryogenesis. Using an established murine model of maternal diet induced obesity and a live cell dynamic fluorescence imaging techniques coupled with molecular biology we have investigated the underlying mechanisms of obesity-induced reduced fertility. Our study is the first to show that maternal obesity prior to conception is associated with altered mitochondria in mouse oocytes and zygotes. Specifically, maternal diet-induced obesity in mice led to an increase in mitochondrial potential, mitochondrial DNA content and biogenesis. Generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) was raised while glutathione was depleted and the redox state became more oxidised, suggestive of oxidative stress. These altered mitochondrial properties were associated with significant developmental impairment as shown by the increased number of obese mothers who failed to support blastocyst formation compared to lean dams. We propose that compromised oocyte and early embryo mitochondrial metabolism, resulting from excessive nutrient exposure prior to and during conception, may underlie poor reproductive outcomes frequently reported in obese women.


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2004

Mitochondrial DNA turnover occurs during preimplantation development and can be modulated by environmental factors.

Josie McConnell; Linda Petrie

There is increasing evidence in humans that abnormal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is associated with common degenerative disorders of the twenty-first century. MtDNA is exclusively female in origin and abnormalities in mtDNA can either be inherited, or generated de novo by adverse environmental factors that disturb mitochondrial DNA synthesis or destabilize mtDNA. The preimplantation period of development in mammals was thought to be relatively immune from environmentally induced changes to mtDNA, since no replication of mtDNA was thought to occur at this stage. This study demonstrates that there is a very short period of mtDNA synthesis immediately after fertilization, which can be affected by environmental stress. Adverse culture conditions during this phase of development could therefore alter the mitochondrial genome, with possible long-term consequences for the health of the offspring. The findings have relevance for all assisted reproduction programmes and for the rapidly emerging field of stem cell technologies.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2009

Altered skeletal muscle insulin signaling and mitochondrial complex II-III linked activity in adult offspring of obese mice.

Piran Shelley; Malgorzata S. Martin-Gronert; Anthea Rowlerson; Lucilla Poston; S.J.R. Heales; Iain Hargreaves; Josie McConnell; Susan E. Ozanne; Denise S. Fernandez-Twinn

We recently reported insulin resistance in adult offspring of obese C57BL/6J mice. We have now evaluated whether parameters of skeletal muscle structure and function may play a role in insulin resistance in this model of developmental programming. Obesity was induced in female mice by feeding a highly palatable sugar and fat-rich diet for 6 wk prior to pregnancy, and during pregnancy and lactation. Offspring of obese dams were weaned onto standard laboratory chow. At 3 mo of age, skeletal muscle insulin signaling protein expression, mitochondrial electron transport chain activity (ETC), muscle fiber type, fiber density, and fiber cross-sectional area were compared with that of offspring of control dams weaned onto the chow diet. Female offspring of obese dams demonstrated decreased skeletal muscle expression of p110beta, the catalytic subunit of PI3K (P < 0.01), as well as reduced Akt phosphorylation at Serine residue 473 compared with control offspring. Male offspring of obese dams demonstrated increased skeletal muscle Akt2 and PKCzeta expression (P < 0.01; P < 0.001, respectively). A decrease in mitochondrial-linked complex II-III was observed in male offspring of obese dams (P < 0.01), which was unrelated to CoQ deficiency. This was not observed in females. There were no differences in muscle fiber density between offspring of obese dams and control offspring in either sex. Sex-related alterations in key insulin-signaling proteins and in mitochondrial ETC may contribute to a state of insulin resistance in offspring of obese mice.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2002

Serum concentrations of homocysteine are elevated during early pregnancy in rodent models of fetal programming

Linda Petrie; Susan J. Duthie; William D. Rees; Josie McConnell

Maternal malnutrition can lead to fetal abnormalities and increase susceptibility to disease in later life. Rat models have been developed to study the physiology and metabolism underlying this phenomenon. One particular model of 50 % protein restriction during pregnancy, the low-protein diet (LPD) supplemented with methionine, has been developed to investigate the underlying mechanisms. Recent studies have shown that rats fed a LPD during only the first 4 d of pregnancy produce offspring that develop hypertension. These results suggest that the very earliest stages of embryo development are susceptible to diet-induced heritable changes. We demonstrate a marked elevation of maternal serum homocysteine (hcy) concentrations during the initial phases of pregnancy in both rats and mice fed an LPD. Fetal growth and many of the circulating amino acids are similarly perturbed in both rats and mice fed the LPD during pregnancy, indicating that the response to the LPD diet is similar in rats and mice. These findings allow us to exploit the advantages of the mouse experimental system in future analyses aimed at understanding the molecular basis of fetal programming. Our present findings are discussed with particular reference to mechanisms which may initiate fetal programming, and to the feasibility of dietary interventions aimed at reducing early pregnancy loss and pre-eclampsia in man.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2007

Rapid neonatal weight gain in rats results in a renal ubiquinone (CoQ) deficiency associated with premature death.

Piran Shelley; Jane L. Tarry-Adkins; Malgorzata S. Martin-Gronert; Lucilla Poston; Simon Heales; John B. Clark; Susan E. Ozanne; Josie McConnell

We have recently reported that maternal dietary imbalance during pregnancy and lactation can reduce the lifespan of offspring. Rats that were growth restricted in utero by maternal protein restriction and underwent rapid weight gain when suckled by control fed dams died earlier than animals whose mothers were fed a control diet throughout pregnancy and lactation. We demonstrate here that mitochondrial abnormalities and DNA damage occur in the kidney of offspring who die prematurely. We have established by direct measurement and by in vitro supplementation that mitochondrial abnormalities occur because of a functional deficit of the mitochondrial cofactor coenzyme Q9 (CoQ9). These data provide molecular insight into the association between maternal nutrition and determination of offspring lifespan, and identify, a potential dietary intervention to prevent detrimental consequences of imbalanced maternal nutrition.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2008

Staufen1 is expressed in preimplantation mouse embryos and is required for embryonic stem cell differentiation.

Hannah Gautrey; Josie McConnell; Majlinda Lako; Judith Hall; John E. Hesketh

Pluripotent mouse embryonic stem (mES) cells derived from the blastocyst of the preimplantation embryo can be induced to differentiate in vitro along different cell lineages. However the molecular and cellular factors that signal and/or determine the expression of key genes, and the localisation of the encoded proteins, during the differentiation events are poorly understood. One common mechanism by which proteins can be targeted to specific regions of the cell is through the asymmetric localisation of mRNAs and Staufen, a double-stranded RNA binding protein, is known to play a direct role in mRNA transport and localisation. The aims of the present study were to describe the expression of Staufen in preimplantation embryos and mES cells and to use RNA interference (RNAi) to investigate the roles of Staufen1 in mES cell lineage differentiation. Western blotting and immunocytochemistry demonstrated that Staufen is present in the preimplantation mouse embryo, pluripotent mES cells and mES cells stimulated to differentiate into embryoid bodies, but the Staufen staining patterns did not support asymmetric distribution of the protein. Knockdown of Staufen1 gene expression in differentiating mES cells reduced the synthesis of lineage-specific markers including Brachyury, alpha-fetoprotein (AFP), PAX-6, and Vasa. There was however no significant change in either the gene expression of Nanog and Oct4, or in the synthesis of SSEA-1, all of which are key markers of pluripotency. These data indicate that inhibition of Staufen1 gene expression by RNAi affects an early step in mES cell differentiation and suggest a key role for Staufen in the cell lineage differentiation of mES cells.


FEBS Letters | 2005

Polarised distribution of the RNA-binding protein Staufen in differentiated intestinal epithelial cells.

Hannah Gautrey; Josie McConnell; Judith Hall; John E. Hesketh

mRNA localisation, as a mechanism for directing localised protein synthesis, plays a vital role in the functioning of certain cells, such as neurons and oocytes. Potentially this mechanism may also occur in polarised intestinal epithelial cells. Here we show that Staufen155, a protein involved in mRNA localisation and transport, is asymmetrically distributed in differentiated Caco‐2 intestinal epithelial cells and partly co‐localised with calnexin, a marker of the endoplasmic reticulum. The localisation to the apical region of the cell indicates that Staufen may be involved in localisation of transcripts to this domain.


FEBS Letters | 1986

Construction of a representative cDNA library from mRNA isolated from mouse oocytes

Josie McConnell; Christine J. Watson

A representative cDNA library has been constructed from the small quantities of poly(A)+ RNA present in unfertilised mouse oocytes. The construction of this library has been achieved by use of cow pea mosaic virus RNA as a carrier during isolation of polyadenylated message and during subsequent cloning procedures. This approach may be applicable to any system in which amounts of mRNA are limiting.

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Linda Petrie

Rowett Research Institute

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Mark A. Hanson

University of Southampton

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