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Dive into the research topics where Kevin J. Barnham is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin J. Barnham.


Nature Reviews Drug Discovery | 2004

Neurodegenerative diseases and oxidative stress

Kevin J. Barnham; Colin L. Masters; Ashley I. Bush

Oxidative stress has been implicated in the progression of Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Oxygen is vital for life but is also potentially dangerous, and a complex system of checks and balances exists for utilizing this essential element. Oxidative stress is the result of an imbalance in pro-oxidant/antioxidant homeostasis that leads to the generation of toxic reactive oxygen species. The systems in place to cope with the biochemistry of oxygen are complex, and many questions about the mechanisms of oxygen regulation remain unanswered. However, this same complexity provides a number of therapeutic targets, and different strategies, including novel metal–protein attenuating compounds, aimed at a variety of targets have shown promise in clinical studies.


Neuron | 2001

Treatment with a Copper-Zinc Chelator Markedly and Rapidly Inhibits β-Amyloid Accumulation in Alzheimer's Disease Transgenic Mice

Robert A. Cherny; Craig S. Atwood; Michel Xilinas; Danielle N. Gray; Walton D Jones; Catriona McLean; Kevin J. Barnham; Irene Volitakis; Fiona W. Fraser; Youngseon Kim; Xudong Huang; Lee E. Goldstein; Robert D. Moir; James Lim; Konrad Beyreuther; Hui Zheng; Rudolph E. Tanzi; Colin L. Masters; Ashley I. Bush

Inhibition of neocortical beta-amyloid (Abeta) accumulation may be essential in an effective therapeutic intervention for Alzheimers disease (AD). Cu and Zn are enriched in Abeta deposits in AD, which are solubilized by Cu/Zn-selective chelators in vitro. Here we report a 49% decrease in brain Abeta deposition (-375 microg/g wet weight, p = 0.0001) in a blinded study of APP2576 transgenic mice treated orally for 9 weeks with clioquinol, an antibiotic and bioavailable Cu/Zn chelator. This was accompanied by a modest increase in soluble Abeta (1.45% of total cerebral Abeta); APP, synaptophysin, and GFAP levels were unaffected. General health and body weight parameters were significantly more stable in the treated animals. These results support targeting the interactions of Cu and Zn with Abeta as a novel therapy for the prevention and treatment of AD.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Alzheimer's disease amyloid-β binds copper and zinc to generate an allosterically ordered membrane-penetrating structure containing superoxide dismutase-like subunits

Cyril C. Curtain; Feda E. Ali; Irene Volitakis; Robert A. Cherny; Raymond S. Norton; Konrad Beyreuther; Colin J. Barrow; Colin L. Masters; Ashley I. Bush; Kevin J. Barnham

Amyloid β peptide (Aβ) is the major constituent of extracellular plaques and perivascular amyloid deposits, the pathognomonic neuropathological lesions of Alzheimers disease. Cu2+ and Zn2+ bind Aβ, inducing aggregation and giving rise to reactive oxygen species. These reactions may play a deleterious role in the disease state, because high concentrations of iron, copper, and zinc have been located in amyloid in diseased brains. Here we show that coordination of metal ions to Aβ is the same in both aqueous solution and lipid environments, with His6, His13, and His14 all involved. At Cu2+/peptide molar ratios >0.3, Aβ coordinated a second Cu2+ atom in a highly cooperative manner. This effect was abolished if the histidine residues were methylated at Nε 2, indicating the presence of bridging histidine residues, as found in the active site of superoxide dismutase. Addition of Cu2+ or Zn2+ to Aβ in a negatively charged lipid environment caused a conformational change from β-sheet to α-helix, accompanied by peptide oligomerization and membrane penetration. These results suggest that metal binding to Aβ generated an allosterically ordered membrane-penetrating oligomer linked by superoxide dismutase-like bridging histidine residues.


Neuron | 2008

Rapid Restoration of Cognition in Alzheimer's Transgenic Mice with 8-Hydroxy Quinoline Analogs Is Associated with Decreased Interstitial Aβ

Paul A. Adlard; Robert A. Cherny; David Finkelstein; Elisabeth Gautier; Elysia Robb; Mikhalina Cortes; Irene Volitakis; Xiang Liu; Jeffrey P. Smith; Keyla Perez; Katrina M. Laughton; Qiao-Xin Li; Susan A. Charman; Joseph A. Nicolazzo; Simon Wilkins; Karolina Deleva; Toni Lynch; Gaik Beng Kok; Craig W. Ritchie; Rudolph E. Tanzi; Roberto Cappai; Colin L. Masters; Kevin J. Barnham; Ashley I. Bush

As a disease-modifying approach for Alzheimers disease (AD), clioquinol (CQ) targets beta-amyloid (Abeta) reactions with synaptic Zn and Cu yet promotes metal uptake. Here we characterize the second-generation 8-hydroxy quinoline analog PBT2, which also targets metal-induced aggregation of Abeta, but is more effective as a Zn/Cu ionophore and has greater blood-brain barrier permeability. Given orally to two types of amyloid-bearing transgenic mouse models of AD, PBT2 outperformed CQ by markedly decreasing soluble interstitial brain Abeta within hours and improving cognitive performance to exceed that of normal littermate controls within days. Nontransgenic mice were unaffected by PBT2. The current data demonstrate that ionophore activity, inhibition of in vitro metal-mediated Abeta reactions, and blood-brain barrier permeability are indices that predict a potential disease-modifying drug for AD. The speed of recovery of the animals underscores the acutely reversible nature of the cognitive deficits associated with transgenic models of AD.


Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2008

Metals in Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Diseases

Kevin J. Barnham; Ashley I. Bush

There has been steadily growing interest in the participation of metal ions (especially, zinc, copper, and iron) in neurobiological processes, such as the regulation of synaptic transmission. Recent descriptions of the release of zinc and copper in the cortical glutamatergic synapse, and influencing the response of the NMDA receptor underscore the relevance of understanding the inorganic milieu of the synapse to neuroscience. Additionally, major neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimers disease and Parkinsons disease, are characterized by elevated tissue iron, and miscompartmentalization of copper and zinc (e.g. accumulation in amyloid). Increasingly sophisticated medicinal chemistry approaches, which correct these metal abnormalities without causing systemic disturbance of these essential minerals, are being tested. These small molecules show promise of being disease-modifying.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Alzheimer's disease amyloid-β binds Cu and Zn to generate an allosterically-ordered membrane-penetrating structure containing SOD-like subunits

Cyril C. Curtain; Feda E. Ali; Irene Volitakis; Robert A. Cherny; Raymond S. Norton; Konrad Beyreuther; Colin J. Barrow; Colin L. Masters; Ashley I. Bush; Kevin J. Barnham

Amyloid β peptide (Aβ) is the major constituent of extracellular plaques and perivascular amyloid deposits, the pathognomonic neuropathological lesions of Alzheimers disease. Cu2+ and Zn2+ bind Aβ, inducing aggregation and giving rise to reactive oxygen species. These reactions may play a deleterious role in the disease state, because high concentrations of iron, copper, and zinc have been located in amyloid in diseased brains. Here we show that coordination of metal ions to Aβ is the same in both aqueous solution and lipid environments, with His6, His13, and His14 all involved. At Cu2+/peptide molar ratios >0.3, Aβ coordinated a second Cu2+ atom in a highly cooperative manner. This effect was abolished if the histidine residues were methylated at Nε 2, indicating the presence of bridging histidine residues, as found in the active site of superoxide dismutase. Addition of Cu2+ or Zn2+ to Aβ in a negatively charged lipid environment caused a conformational change from β-sheet to α-helix, accompanied by peptide oligomerization and membrane penetration. These results suggest that metal binding to Aβ generated an allosterically ordered membrane-penetrating oligomer linked by superoxide dismutase-like bridging histidine residues.


Cell | 2010

Iron-export ferroxidase activity of β-amyloid precursor protein is inhibited by zinc in Alzheimer's disease.

James A. Duce; Andrew Tsatsanis; Michael A. Cater; Simon A. James; Elysia Robb; Krutika Wikhe; Su Ling Leong; Keyla Perez; Timothy Johanssen; Mark Greenough; Hyun-Hee Cho; Denise Galatis; Robert D. Moir; Colin L. Masters; Catriona McLean; Rudolph E. Tanzi; Roberto Cappai; Kevin J. Barnham; Giuseppe D. Ciccotosto; Jack T. Rogers; Ashley I. Bush

Alzheimers Disease (AD) is complicated by pro-oxidant intraneuronal Fe(2+) elevation as well as extracellular Zn(2+) accumulation within amyloid plaque. We found that the AD β-amyloid protein precursor (APP) possesses ferroxidase activity mediated by a conserved H-ferritin-like active site, which is inhibited specifically by Zn(2+). Like ceruloplasmin, APP catalytically oxidizes Fe(2+), loads Fe(3+) into transferrin, and has a major interaction with ferroportin in HEK293T cells (that lack ceruloplasmin) and in human cortical tissue. Ablation of APP in HEK293T cells and primary neurons induces marked iron retention, whereas increasing APP695 promotes iron export. Unlike normal mice, APP(-/-) mice are vulnerable to dietary iron exposure, which causes Fe(2+) accumulation and oxidative stress in cortical neurons. Paralleling iron accumulation, APP ferroxidase activity in AD postmortem neocortex is inhibited by endogenous Zn(2+), which we demonstrate can originate from Zn(2+)-laden amyloid aggregates and correlates with Aβ burden. Abnormal exchange of cortical zinc may link amyloid pathology with neuronal iron accumulation in AD.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Copper-Dependent Inhibition of Human Cytochrome c Oxidase by a Dimeric Conformer of Amyloid-β1-42

Peter J. Crouch; Rachel E. Blake; James A. Duce; Giuseppe D. Ciccotosto; Qiao-Xin Li; Kevin J. Barnham; Cyril C. Curtain; Robert A. Cherny; Roberto Cappai; Thomas Dyrks; Colin L. Masters; Ian A. Trounce

In studies of Alzheimers disease pathogenesis there is an increasing focus on mechanisms of intracellular amyloid-β (Aβ) generation and toxicity. Here we investigated the inhibitory potential of the 42 amino acid Aβ peptide (Aβ1-42) on activity of electron transport chain enzyme complexes in human mitochondria. We found that synthetic Aβ1-42 specifically inhibited the terminal complex cytochrome c oxidase (COX) in a dose-dependent manner that was dependent on the presence of Cu2+ and specific “aging” of the Aβ1-42 solution. Maximal COX inhibition occurred when using Aβ1-42 solutions aged for 3-6 h at 30°C. The level of Aβ1-42-mediated COX inhibition increased with aging time up to ∼6 h and then declined progressively with continued aging to 48 h. Photo-induced cross-linking of unmodified proteins followed by SDS-PAGE analysis revealed dimeric Aβ as the only Aβ species to provide significant temporal correlation with the observed COX inhibition. Analysis of brain and liver from an Alzheimers model mouse (Tg2576) revealed abundant Aβ immunoreactivity within the brain mitochondria fraction. Our data indicate that endogenous Aβ is associated with brain mitochondria and that Aβ1-42, possibly in its dimeric conformation, is a potent inhibitor of COX, but only when in the presence of Cu2+. We conclude that Cu2+-dependent Aβ-mediated inhibition of COX may be an important contributor to the neurodegeneration process in Alzheimers disease.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Cisplatin Binding Sites on Human Albumin

Andrei I. Ivanov; John Christodoulou; John A. Parkinson; Kevin J. Barnham; Alan Tucker; John Woodrow; Peter J. Sadler

Reactions of cisplatin (cis-[PtCl2(NH3)2]) with albumin are thought to play an important role in the metabolism of this anticancer drug. They are investigated here via (i) labeling of cisplatin with 15N and use of two-dimensional1H,15N NMR spectroscopy, (ii) comparison of natural human serum albumin with recombinant human albumin (higher homogeneity and SH content), (iii) chemical modification of Cys, Met, and His residues, (iv) reactions of bound platinum with thiourea, and (v) gel filtration chromatography. In contrast to previous reports, it is shown that the major sulfur-containing binding site involves Met and not Cys-34, and also a N ligand, in the form of an S,N macrochelate. Additional monofunctional adducts involving other Met residues and Cys-34 are also observed. During the later stages of reactions of cisplatin with albumin, release of NH3 occurs due to the strong trans influence of Met sulfur, which weakens the Pt-NH3 bonds, and protein cross-linking is observed. The consequences of these findings for the biological activity of cisplatin-albumin complexes are discussed.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Degradation of the Alzheimer Disease Amyloid β-Peptide by Metal-dependent Up-regulation of Metalloprotease Activity

Anthony R. White; Tai Du; Katrina M. Laughton; Irene Volitakis; Robyn A. Sharples; Michel Xilinas; David E. Hoke; R. M. Damian Holsinger; Genevieve Evin; Robert A. Cherny; Andrew F. Hill; Kevin J. Barnham; Qiao-Xin Li; Ashley I. Bush; Colin L. Masters

Biometals play an important role in Alzheimer disease, and recent reports have described the development of potential therapeutic agents based on modulation of metal bioavailability. The metal ligand clioquinol (CQ) has shown promising results in animal models and small phase clinical trials; however, the actual mode of action in vivo has not been determined. We now report a novel effect of CQ on amyloid β-peptide (Aβ) metabolism in cell culture. Treatment of Chinese hamster ovary cells overexpressing amyloid precursor protein with CQ and Cu2+ or Zn2+ resulted in an ∼85–90% reduction of secreted Aβ-(1–40) and Aβ-(1–42) compared with untreated controls. Analogous effects were seen in amyloid precursor protein-overexpressing neuroblastoma cells. The secreted Aβ was rapidly degraded through up-regulation of matrix metalloprotease (MMP)-2 and MMP-3 after addition of CQ and Cu2+. MMP activity was increased through activation of phosphoinositol 3-kinase and JNK. CQ and Cu2+ also promoted phosphorylation of glycogen synthase kinase-3, and this potentiated activation of JNK and loss of Aβ-(1–40). Our findings identify an alternative mechanism of action for CQ in the reduction of Aβ deposition in the brains of CQ-treated animals and potentially in Alzheimer disease patients.

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Ashley I. Bush

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Robert A. Cherny

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Keyla Perez

University of Melbourne

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Anthony R. White

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

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