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Dive into the research topics where Judit Pallos is active.

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Featured researches published by Judit Pallos.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

SIRT2 inhibition achieves neuroprotection by decreasing sterol biosynthesis

Ruth Luthi-Carter; David M. Taylor; Judit Pallos; Emmanuel Lambert; Allison Amore; Alex Parker; Hilary Moffitt; Donna L. Smith; Heike Runne; Ozgun Gokce; Alexandre Kuhn; Zhongmin Xiang; Michele M. Maxwell; Steven A. Reeves; Gillian P. Bates; Christian Neri; Leslie M. Thompson; J. Lawrence Marsh; Aleksey G. Kazantsev

Huntington’s disease (HD), an incurable neurodegenerative disorder, has a complex pathogenesis including protein aggregation and the dysregulation of neuronal transcription and metabolism. Here, we demonstrate that inhibition of sirtuin 2 (SIRT2) achieves neuroprotection in cellular and invertebrate models of HD. Genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of SIRT2 in a striatal neuron model of HD resulted in gene expression changes including significant down-regulation of RNAs responsible for sterol biosynthesis. Whereas mutant huntingtin fragments increased sterols in neuronal cells, SIRT2 inhibition reduced sterol levels via decreased nuclear trafficking of SREBP-2. Importantly, manipulation of sterol biosynthesis at the transcriptional level mimicked SIRT2 inhibition, demonstrating that the metabolic effects of SIRT2 inhibition are sufficient to diminish mutant huntingtin toxicity. These data identify SIRT2 inhibition as a promising avenue for HD therapy and elucidate a unique mechanism of SIRT2-inhibitor-mediated neuroprotection. Furthermore, the ascertainment of SIRT2’s role in regulating cellular metabolism demonstrates a central function shared with other sirtuin proteins.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

A cell-based assay for aggregation inhibitors as therapeutics of polyglutamine-repeat disease and validation in Drosophila

Barbara L. Apostol; Alexsey Kazantsev; Simona Raffioni; Judit Pallos; Laszlo Bodai; Natalia Slepko; James E. Bear; Frank B. Gertler; Steven M. Hersch; David E. Housman; J. Lawrence Marsh; Leslie M. Thompson

The formation of polyglutamine-containing aggregates and inclusions are hallmarks of pathogenesis in Huntingtons disease that can be recapitulated in model systems. Although the contribution of inclusions to pathogenesis is unclear, cell-based assays can be used to screen for chemical compounds that affect aggregation and may provide therapeutic benefit. We have developed inducible PC12 cell-culture models to screen for loss of visible aggregates. To test the validity of this approach, compounds that inhibit aggregation in the PC12 cell-based screen were tested in a Drosophila model of polyglutamine-repeat disease. The disruption of aggregation in PC12 cells strongly correlates with suppression of neuronal degeneration in Drosophila. Thus, the engineered PC12 cells coupled with the Drosophila model provide a rapid and effective method to screen and validate compounds.


Neuron | 2003

A rapid cellular FRET assay of polyglutamine aggregation identifies a novel inhibitor

Sonia K Pollitt; Judit Pallos; Jieya Shao; Urvee A. Desai; Aye Aye K. Ma; Leslie M. Thompson; J. Lawrence Marsh; Marc I. Diamond

Many neurodegenerative diseases, including tauopathies, Parkinsons disease, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and the polyglutamine diseases, are characterized by intracellular aggregation of pathogenic proteins. It is difficult to study modifiers of this process in intact cells in a high-throughput and quantitative manner, although this could facilitate molecular insights into disease pathogenesis. Here we introduce a high-throughput assay to measure intracellular polyglutamine protein aggregation using fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). We screened over 2800 biologically active small molecules for inhibitory activity and have characterized one lead compound in detail. Y-27632, an inhibitor of the Rho-associated kinase p160ROCK, diminished polyglutamine protein aggregation (EC(50) congruent with 5 microM) and reduced neurodegeneration in a Drosophila model of polyglutamine disease. This establishes a novel high-throughput approach to study protein misfolding and aggregation associated with neurodegenerative diseases and implicates a signaling pathway of previously unrecognized importance in polyglutamine protein processing.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2012

Histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors targeting HDAC3 and HDAC1 ameliorate polyglutamine-elicited phenotypes in model systems of Huntington's disease

Haiqun Jia; Judit Pallos; Vincent Jacques; Alice Lau; Bin Tang; Andrew Cooper; Adeela Syed; Judith Purcell; Yi Chen; Shefali Sharma; Gavin R. Sangrey; Shayna B. Darnell; Heather L. Plasterer; Ghazaleh Sadri-Vakili; Joel M. Gottesfeld; Leslie M. Thompson; James R. Rusche; J. Lawrence Marsh; Elizabeth A. Thomas

We have previously demonstrated amelioration of Huntingtons disease (HD)-related phenotypes in R6/2 transgenic mice in response to treatment with the novel histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor 4b. Here we have measured the selectivity profiles of 4b and related compounds against class I and class II HDACs and have tested their ability to restore altered expression of genes related to HD pathology in mice and to rescue disease effects in cell culture and Drosophila models of HD. R6/2 transgenic and wild-type (wt) mice received daily injections of HDAC inhibitors for 3 days followed by real-time PCR analysis to detect expression differences for 13 HD-related genes. We find that HDACi 4b and 136, two compounds showing high potency for inhibiting HDAC3 were most effective in reversing the expression of genes relevant to HD, including Ppp1r1b, which encodes DARPP-32, a marker for medium spiny striatal neurons. In contrast, compounds targeting HDAC1 were less effective at correcting gene expression abnormalities in R6/2 transgenic mice, but did cause significant increases in the expression of selected genes. An additional panel of 4b-related compounds was tested in a Drosophila model of HD and in STHdhQ111 striatal cells to further distinguish HDAC selectivity. Significant improvement in huntingtin-elicited Drosophila eye neurodegeneration in the fly was observed in response to treatment with compounds targeting human HDAC1 and/or HDAC3. In STHdhQ111 striatal cells, the ability of HDAC inhibitors to improve huntingtin-elicited metabolic deficits correlated with the potency at inhibiting HDAC1 and HDAC3, although the IC50 values for HDAC1 inhibition were typically 10-fold higher than for inhibition of HDAC3. Assessment of HDAC protein localization in brain tissue by Western blot analysis revealed accumulation of HDAC1 and HDAC3 in the nucleus of HD transgenic mice compared to wt mice, with a concurrent decrease in cytoplasmic localization, suggesting that these HDACs contribute to a repressive chromatin environment in HD. No differences were detected in the localization of HDAC2, HDAC4 or HDAC7. These results suggest that inhibition of HDACs 1 and 3 can relieve HD-like phenotypes in model systems and that HDAC inhibitors targeting these isotypes might show therapeutic benefit in human HD.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2010

Inhibition of transglutaminase 2 mitigates transcriptional dysregulation in models of Huntington disease

Stephen J. McConoughey; Manuela Basso; Zoya V. Niatsetskaya; Sama F. Sleiman; Natalia A. Smirnova; Brett Langley; Lata Mahishi; Arthur J. L. Cooper; Marc A. Antonyak; Rick Cerione; Bo Li; Anatoly A. Starkov; Rajnish Kumar Chaturvedi; M. Flint Beal; Giovanni Coppola; Daniel H. Geschwind; Hoon Ryu; Li Xia; Siiri E. Iismaa; Judit Pallos; Ralf Pasternack; Martin Hils; Jing Fan; Lynn A. Raymond; J. Lawrence Marsh; Leslie M. Thompson; Rajiv R. Ratan

Caused by a polyglutamine expansion in the huntingtin protein, Huntingtons disease leads to striatal degeneration via the transcriptional dysregulation of a number of genes, including those involved in mitochondrial biogenesis. Here we show that transglutaminase 2, which is upregulated in HD, exacerbates transcriptional dysregulation by acting as a selective corepressor of nuclear genes; transglutaminase 2 interacts directly with histone H3 in the nucleus. In a cellular model of HD, transglutaminase inhibition de‐repressed two established regulators of mitochondrial function, PGC‐1α and cytochrome c and reversed susceptibility of human HD cells to the mitochondrial toxin, 3‐nitroproprionic acid; however, protection mediated by transglutaminase inhibition was not associated with improved mitochondrial bioenergetics. A gene microarray analysis indicated that transglutaminase inhibition normalized expression of not only mitochondrial genes but also 40% of genes that are dysregulated in HD striatal neurons, including chaperone and histone genes. Moreover, transglutaminase inhibition attenuated degeneration in a Drosophila model of HD and protected mouse HD striatal neurons from excitotoxicity. Altogether these findings demonstrate that selective TG inhibition broadly corrects transcriptional dysregulation in HD and defines a novel HDAC‐independent epigenetic strategy for treating neurodegeneration.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2008

CEP-1347 reduces mutant huntingtin-associated neurotoxicity and restores BDNF levels in R6/2 mice

Barbara L. Apostol; Danielle A. Simmons; Chiara Zuccato; Judit Pallos; Malcolm Casale; Paola Conforti; Catarina Ramos; Margaret Roarke; Satish Kathuria; J. Lawrence Marsh; Leslie M. Thompson

Huntingtons disease (HD) is a devastating neurodegenerative disorder caused by an expanded polyglutamine repeat within the protein Huntingtin (Htt). We previously reported that mutant Htt expression activates the ERK1/2 and JNK pathways [Apostol, B.L., Illes, K., Pallos, J., Bodai, L., Wu, J., Strand, A., Schweitzer, E.S., Olson, J.M., Kazantsev, A., Marsh, J.L., Thompson, L.M., 2006. Mutant huntingtin alters MAPK signaling pathways in PC12 and striatal cells: ERK1/2 protects against mutant huntingtin-associated toxicity. Hum. Mol. Genet. 15, 273-285]. Chemical and genetic modulation of these pathways promotes cell survival and death, respectively. Here we test the ability of two closely related compounds, CEP-11004 and CEP-1347, which inhibit Mixed Lineage Kinases (MLKs) and are neuroprotective, to suppress mutant Htt-mediated pathogenesis in multiple model systems. CEP-11004/CEP-1347 treatment significantly decreased toxicity in mutant Htt-expressing cells that evoke a strong JNK response. However, suppression of cellular dysfunction in cell lines that exhibit only mild Htt-associated toxicity and little JNK activation was associated with activation of ERK1/2. These compounds also reduced neurotoxicity in immortalized striatal neurons from mutant knock-in mice and Drosophila expressing a mutant Htt fragment. Finally, CEP-1347 improved motor performance in R6/2 mice and restored expression of BDNF, a critical neurotrophic factor that is reduced in HD. These studies suggest a novel therapeutic approach for a currently untreatable neurodegenerative disease, HD, via CEP-1347 up-regulation of BDNF.


Archive | 2010

Inhibition of transglutaminase 2 mitigates transcriptional dysregulation in models of Huntington disease - eScholarship

Stephen J. McConoughey; Manuela Basso; Zoya V. Niatsetskaya; Sama F. Sleiman; Natalia A. Smirnova; Brett Langley; Lata Mahishi; Arthur J. L. Cooper; Marc A. Antonyak; Rick Cerione; Bo Li; Anatoly A. Starkov; Rajnish Kumar Chaturvedi; M. Flint Beal; Giovanni Coppola; Daniel H. Geschwind; Hoon Ryu; Li Xia; Siiri E. Iismaa; Judit Pallos; Ralf Pasternack; Martin Hils; Jing Fan; Lynn A. Raymond; J. Lawrence Marsh; Leslie M. Thompson; Rajiv R. Ratan

Caused by a polyglutamine expansion in the huntingtin protein, Huntingtons disease leads to striatal degeneration via the transcriptional dysregulation of a number of genes, including those involved in mitochondrial biogenesis. Here we show that transglutaminase 2, which is upregulated in HD, exacerbates transcriptional dysregulation by acting as a selective corepressor of nuclear genes; transglutaminase 2 interacts directly with histone H3 in the nucleus. In a cellular model of HD, transglutaminase inhibition de‐repressed two established regulators of mitochondrial function, PGC‐1α and cytochrome c and reversed susceptibility of human HD cells to the mitochondrial toxin, 3‐nitroproprionic acid; however, protection mediated by transglutaminase inhibition was not associated with improved mitochondrial bioenergetics. A gene microarray analysis indicated that transglutaminase inhibition normalized expression of not only mitochondrial genes but also 40% of genes that are dysregulated in HD striatal neurons, including chaperone and histone genes. Moreover, transglutaminase inhibition attenuated degeneration in a Drosophila model of HD and protected mouse HD striatal neurons from excitotoxicity. Altogether these findings demonstrate that selective TG inhibition broadly corrects transcriptional dysregulation in HD and defines a novel HDAC‐independent epigenetic strategy for treating neurodegeneration.


Cell Reports | 2013

SUMO-2 and PIAS1 Modulate Insoluble Mutant Huntingtin Protein Accumulation

Jacqueline Gire O’Rourke; Jaclyn R. Gareau; Joseph Ochaba; Wan Song; Tamás Raskó; David Reverter; John H. Lee; Alex Mas Monteys; Judit Pallos; Lisa Mee; Malini Vashishtha; Barbara L. Apostol; Thomas Peter Nicholson; Ya-Zhen Zhu; Mary Dasso; Gillian P. Bates; Marian DiFiglia; Beverly L. Davidson; Erich E. Wanker; J. Lawrence Marsh; Christopher D. Lima; Joan S. Steffan; Leslie M. Thompson

SUMMARY A key feature in Huntington disease (HD) is the accumulation of mutant Huntingtin (HTT) protein, which may be regulated by posttranslational modifications. Here, we define the primary sites of SUMO modification in the amino-terminal domain of HTT, show modification downstream of this domain, and demonstrate that HTT is modified by the stress-inducible SUMO-2. A systematic study of E3 SUMO ligases demonstrates that PIAS1 is an E3 SUMO ligase for both HTT SUMO-1 and SUMO-2 modification and that reduction of dPIAS in a mutant HTT Drosophila model is protective. SUMO-2 modification regulates accumulation of insoluble HTT in HeLa cells in a manner that mimics proteasome inhibition and can be modulated by overexpression and acute knockdown of PIAS1. Finally, the accumulation of SUMO-2-modified proteins in the insoluble fraction of HD postmortem striata implicates SUMO-2 modification in the age-related pathogenic accumulation of mutant HTT and other cellular proteins that occurs during HD progression.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2003

[General Articles] Altered Protein Acetylation in Polyglutamine Diseases

Laszlo Bodai; Judit Pallos; Leslie M. Thompson; J. L. Marsh

Polyglutamine diseases are hereditary neurodegenerative disorders caused by the expansion of a CAG repeat in the disease gene. A dominant gain of function is associated with these expanded alleles. The resulting elongated polyglutamine repeats are thought to cause structural changes in the affected proteins, leading to aberrant interactions such as those that allow formation of extra- and intranuclear aggregates. However, self-association is not the only interaction the polyglutamine domain is capable of mediating. Many cellular proteins can be sequestered into inclusions or bound by more soluble forms of the mutant proteins. One group of proteins that binds to and whose activity may be altered by polyglutamines is Histone Acetyltransferases (HATs). HATs are responsible for the acetylation of histones and several other important proteins and this modification results in altered function of the target protein. HATs regulate cellular processes at levels as different as modifying transcriptional competence of chromosomes, temporal regulation of promoter activity and protein activation / inactivation. Recent studies show that the altered balance between protein acetylation and deacetylation may be a key process contributing to expanded polyglutamine-induced pathogenesis. The restoration of this balance is possible by the genetic or pharmacological reduction of the opposing enzyme group, i.e. the Histone Deacetylases (HDACs). Recent progress in HDAC research has made the development of inhibitors of specific HDAC family proteins possible and these compounds could be effective candidates for treatment of these devastating diseases.


Neurodegenerative Diseases | 2012

Pcaf modulates polyglutamine pathology in a Drosophila model of Huntington's disease

Laszlo Bodai; Judit Pallos; Leslie M. Thompson; J. Lawrence Marsh

Huntingtin peptides with elongated polyglutamine domains, the root causes of Huntington’s disease, hinder histone acetylation, which leads to transcriptional dysregulation. However, the range of acetyltransferases interacting with mutant Huntingtin has not been systematically evaluated. We used genetic interaction tests in Drosophila to determine whether specific acetyltransferases belonging to distinct protein families influence polyglutamine pathology. We found that flies expressing a mutant form of the Huntingtin protein (Httex1pQ93) exhibit reduced viability, which is further decreased by partial loss of Pcaf or nejire, while the tested MYST family acetyltransferases did not affect pathology. Reduced levels of Pcaf also led to the increased degeneration of photoreceptor neurons in the retina. Overexpression of Pcaf, however, was not sufficient to ameliorate these phenotypes, and the level of soluble Pcaf is unchanged in Httex1pQ93-expressing flies. Thus, our results indicate that while Pcaf has a significant impact on Huntington’s disease pathology, therapeutic strategies aimed at elevating its levels are likely to be ineffective in ameliorating Huntington’s disease pathology; however, strategies that aim to increase the specific activity of Pcaf remain to be tested.

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Natalia Slepko

University of California

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Malcolm Casale

University of California

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Namita Agrawal

University of California

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