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Dive into the research topics where Laura M. Garrick is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura M. Garrick.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1) contributes to neurodegeneration in animal models of Parkinson's disease

Julio Salazar; Natalia Mena; Stéphane Hunot; Annick Prigent; Daniel Alvarez-Fischer; Miguel Arredondo; Charles Duyckaerts; Véronique Sazdovitch; Lin Zhao; Laura M. Garrick; Marco T. Núñez; Michael D. Garrick; Rita Raisman-Vozari; Etienne C. Hirsch

Dopaminergic cell death in the substantia nigra (SN) is central to Parkinsons disease (PD), but the neurodegenerative mechanisms have not been completely elucidated. Iron accumulation in dopaminergic and glial cells in the SN of PD patients may contribute to the generation of oxidative stress, protein aggregation, and neuronal death. The mechanisms involved in iron accumulation also remain unclear. Here, we describe an increase in the expression of an isoform of the divalent metal transporter 1 (DMT1/Nramp2/Slc11a2) in the SN of PD patients. Using the PD animal model of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) intoxication in mice, we showed that DMT1 expression increases in the ventral mesencephalon of intoxicated animals, concomitant with iron accumulation, oxidative stress, and dopaminergic cell loss. In addition, we report that a mutation in DMT1 that impairs iron transport protects rodents against parkinsonism-inducing neurotoxins MPTP and 6-hydroxydopamine. This study supports a critical role for DMT1 in iron-mediated neurodegeneration in PD.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2001

Distribution of divalent metal transporter 1 and metal transport protein 1 in the normal and Belgrade rat.

Joseph R. Burdo; Sharon Menzies; Ian A. Simpson; Laura M. Garrick; Michael D. Garrick; Kevin G. Dolan; D.J. Haile; John L. Beard; James R. Connor

Iron accumulation in the brain occurs in a number of neurodegenerative diseases. Two new iron transport proteins have been identified that may help elucidate the mechanism of abnormal iron accumulation. The Divalent Metal Transporter 1 (DMT1), is responsible for iron uptake from the gut and transport from endosomes. The Metal Transport Protein 1 (MTP1) promotes iron export. In this study we determined the cellular and regional expression of these two transporters in the brains of normal adult and Belgrade rats. Belgrade rats have a defect in DMT1 that is associated with lower levels of iron in the brain. In the normal rat, DMT1 expression is highest in neurons in the striatum, cerebellum, thalamus, ependymal cells lining the third ventricle, and vascular cells throughout the brain. The staining in the ependymal cells and endothelial cells suggests that DMT1 has an important role in iron transport into the brain. In Belgrade rats, there is generalized decrease in immunodetectable DMT1 compared to normal rats except in the ependymal cells. This decrease in immunoreactivity, however, was absent on immunoblots. The immunoblot analysis indicates that this protein did not upregulate to compensate for the chronic defect in iron transport. MTP1 staining is found in most brain regions. MTP1 expression in the brain is robust in pyramidal neurons of the cerebral cortex but is not detected in the vascular endothelial cells and ependymal cells. MTP1 staining in Belgrade rats was decreased compared to normal, but similar to DMT1 this decrease was not corroborated by immunoblotting. These results indicate that DMT1 and MTP1 are involved in brain iron transport and this involvement is regionally and cellularly specific. J Neurosci. Res. 66:1198–1207, 2001.


Neuroscience | 1999

Cellular distribution of iron in the brain of the Belgrade rat.

Joseph R. Burdo; J. Martin; Sharon Menzies; Kevin G. Dolan; Michelle A. Romano; R.J. Fletcher; Michael D. Garrick; Laura M. Garrick; James R. Connor

In this study, we investigated the cellular distribution of iron in the brain of Belgrade rats. These rats have a mutation in Divalent Metal Transporter 1, which has been implicated in iron transport from endosomes. The Belgrade rats have iron-positive pyramidal neurons, but these are fewer in number and less intensely stained than in controls. In the white matter, iron is normally present in patches of intensely iron-stained oligodendrocytes and myelin, but there is dramatically less iron staining in the Belgrade rat. Those oligodendrocytes that stained for iron did so strongly and were associated with blood vessels. Astrocytic iron staining was seen in the cerebral cortex for both normal rats and Belgrade rats, but the iron-stained astrocytes were less numerous in the mutants. Iron staining in tanycytes, modified astrocytes coursing from the third ventricle to the hypothalamus, was not affected in the Belgrade rat, but was affected by diet. The results of this study indicate that Divalent Metal Transporter 1 is important to iron transport in the brain. Iron is essential in the brain for basic metabolic processes such as heme formation, neurotransmitter production and ATP synthesis. Excess brain iron is associated with a number of common neurodegenerative diseases. Consequently, elucidating the mechanisms of brain iron delivery is critical for understanding the role of iron in pathological conditions.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2009

Cellular iron transport

Michael D. Garrick; Laura M. Garrick

Iron has a split personality as an essential nutrient that also has the potential to generate reactive oxygen species. We discuss how different cell types within specific tissues manage this schizophrenia. The emphasis in enterocytes is on regulating the bodys supply of iron by regulating transport into the blood stream. In developing red blood cells, adaptations in transport manage the bodys highest flux of iron. Hepatocytes buffer the bodys stock of iron. Macrophage recycle the iron from effete red cells among other iron management tasks. Pneumocytes provide a barrier to prevent illicit entry that, when at risk of breaching, leads to a need to handle the dangers in a fashion essentially shared with macrophage. We also discuss or introduce cell types including renal cells, neurons, other brain cells, and more where our ignorance, currently still vast, needs to be removed by future research.


Biochemical Journal | 2006

Comparison of mammalian cell lines expressing distinct isoforms of divalent metal transporter 1 in a tetracycline-regulated fashion

Michael D. Garrick; Hung-Chieh Kuo; Farida Vargas; Steven T. Singleton; Lin Zhao; Jaime J. Smith; Prasad N. Paradkar; Jerome A. Roth; Laura M. Garrick

DMT1 (divalent metal transporter; also known as SLC11A2, DCT1 or Nramp2) is responsible for ferrous iron uptake in the duodenum, iron exit from endosomes during the transferrin cycle and some transferrin-independent iron uptake in many cells. Four protein isoforms differ by starting in exon 1A or 2 and ending with alternative peptides encoded by mRNA that contains or lacks an IRE (iron responsive element; +/-IRE). We have compared 1A/+IRE and 2/-IRE DMT1 during regulated ectopic expression. HEK-293-F (human embryonic kidney-293-fast growing variant) cells were stably transfected with each construct expressed from a tetracycline-regulated CMV promoter. Reverse transcriptase-PCR analysis showed that construct expression responded to doxycycline. Immunofluorescence staining of cells, using antibodies specific for DMT1 isoforms, confirmed an increase in expression in the plasma membrane and cytosolic vesicles after doxycycline treatment, but with isoform specific distributions. Immunoblotting also revealed stimulation of expression. Nevertheless, both DMT1 isoforms performed similarly in assays for functional properties based on 54Mn2+ and 59Fe2+ uptake. Mn incorporation after doxycycline treatment was approximately 10-fold greater than that of untreated cells, while expression in the untreated cells was approximately 5-fold greater than in the untransfected cells. Uptake of Mn depended on addition of doxycycline, with half maximal response at approximately 1 nM doxycycline. Doxycycline-stimulated Mn and Fe uptake was linear with time for 10 min but not over longer periods. Transport exhibited a pH optimum at approximately 5.5 and dependence on incubation temperature and Mn or Fe concentration. The new cell lines should prove useful for research on metal homoeostasis, toxicological studies and efforts to identify distinctive properties of the isoforms.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 1999

Non‐transferrin‐bound iron uptake in Belgrade and normal rat erythroid cells

Laura M. Garrick; Kevin G. Dolan; Michelle A. Romano; Michael D. Garrick

Belgrade (b) rats have an autosomal recessive, microcytic, hypochromic anemia. Transferrin (Tf)‐dependent iron uptake is defective because of a mutation in DMT1 (Nramp2), blocking endosomal iron efflux. This experiment of nature permits the present study to address whether the mutation also affects non‐Tf‐bound iron (NTBI) uptake and to use NTBI uptake compared to Tf‐Fe utilization to increase understanding of the phenotype of the b mutation. The distribution of 59Fe2+ into intact erythroid cells and cytosolic, stromal, heme, and nonheme fractions was different after NTBI uptake vs. Tf‐Fe uptake, with the former exhibiting less iron into heme but more into stromal and nonheme fractions. Both reticulocytes and erythrocytes exhibit NTBI uptake. Only reticulocytes had heme incorporation after NTBI uptake. Properly normalized, incorporation into b/b heme was ∼20% of +/b, a decrease similar to that for Tf‐Fe utilization. NTBI uptake into heme was inhibited by bafilomycin A1, concanamycin, NH4Cl, or chloroquine, consistent with the endosomal location of the transporter; cellular uptake was uninhibited. NTBI uptake was unaffected after removal of Tf receptors by Pronase or depletion of endogenous Tf. Concentration dependence revealed that NTBI uptake into cells, cytosol, stroma, and the nonheme fraction had an apparent low affinity for iron; heme incorporation behaved like a high‐affinity process, as did an expression assay for DMT1. DMT1 serves in both apparent high‐affinity NTBI membrane transport and the exit of iron from the endosome during Tf delivery of iron in rat reticulocytes; the low‐affinity membrane transporter, however, exhibits little dependence on DMT1. J. Cell. Physiol. 178:349–358, 1999.


Biometals | 1997

Iron supplementation moderates but does not cure the Belgrade anemia

Michael D. Garrick; Donna Scott; Susannah Walpole; Eric Finkelstein; Joy Whitbred; Sandeep Chopra; Lalitha Trivikram; David Mayes; Daphne Rhodes; Kimberly Cabbagestalk; Rahmi Oklu; Adnan Sadiq; Brett Mascia; James E. Hoke; Laura M. Garrick

Belgrade rats inherit microcytic, hypochromic anemia as an autosomalrecessive trait (gene symbol b). Erythrocytes and tissue are iron deficientin the face of elevated TIBC (total iron binding capacity) and percent ironsaturation; iron injections increased the number of erythrocytes but theirappearance remained abnormal. We have investigated iron supplements toimprove husbandry of b/b rats and to learn more about the underlying defectand its tissue distribution. Weekly IM (intramuscular) injections ofiron–dextran (Imferon at 30 mg kg) improved the anemia but did not alter thered cell morphology. Certain diets also improved the health of b/b rats whencompared to standard rat chows by the criteria of weight, survival toadulthood, hematology and reproduction. The critical nutritional factorturned out to be iron bioavailability, with ferrous iron added to the dietimproving the health of Belgrade rats without affecting the underlyingerythroid defect. Tissue iron measurements after dietary or parenteralsupplementation confirmed the iron deficient status of untreated b/b rats andestablished that dietary ferrous iron partially relieved this deficiency,with injections leading to greater amounts of tissue iron. Serum iron andTIBC were also found to be elevated in untreated b/b rats, with dietarysupplementation decreasing but not eliminating the elevation in TIBC. Thesestudies indicate that iron supplements can improve the health of b/b ratswithout altering the underlying defect and also suggest that the mutationcould alter iron uptake in the GI (gastrointestinal) tract.


Biological Research | 2006

Iron homeostasis in the lung

Andrew J. Ghio; Jennifer L. Turi; Funmei Yang; Laura M. Garrick; Michael D. Garrick

Iron is essential for many aspects of cellular function. However, it also can generate oxygen-based free radicals that result in injury to biological molecules. For this reason, iron acquisition and distribution are tightly regulated. Constant exposure to the atmosphere results in significant exposure of the lungs to catalytically active iron. The lungs have a mechanism for detoxification to prevent associated generation of oxidative stress. Those same proteins that participate in iron uptake in the gut are also employed in the lung, to transport iron intracellularly and sequester it in an inactive form within ferritin. The release of metal is expedited (as transferrin and ferritin) from lung tissue to the respiratory lining fluid for clearance by the mucocilliary pathway or to the reticuloendothelial system for long-term storage. This pathway is likely to be the major method for the control of oxidative stress presented to the respiratory tract.


American Journal of Physiology-gastrointestinal and Liver Physiology | 2008

Induction of arachidonate 12-lipoxygenase (Alox15) in intestine of iron-deficient rats correlates with the production of biologically active lipid mediators

James F. Collins; Zihua Hu; Dian Feng; Laura M. Garrick; Michael D. Garrick; Richard W. Browne

To identify novel genes associated with iron metabolism, we performed gene chip studies in two models of iron deficiency: iron-deprived rats and rats deficient in the principal intestinal iron transporter, divalent metal transporter 1 (i.e., Belgrade rats). Affymetrix rat genome gene chips were utilized (RAE230) with cRNA samples derived from duodenum and jejunum of experimental and control animals. Computational analysis and statistical data reduction identified 29 candidate genes, which were induced in both models of iron deficiency. Gene ontology analysis showed enrichment for genes related to lipid homeostasis, and one gene related to this physiological process, a leukocyte type, arachidonate 12-lipoxygenase (Alox15), was selected for further examination. TaqMan real-time PCR studies demonstrated strong induction of Alox15 throughout the small and large intestine, and in the liver of iron-deficient rats. Polyclonal antibodies were developed and utilized to demonstrate that proteins levels are significantly increased in the intestinal epithelium of iron-deprived rats. HPLC analysis revealed altered intestinal lipid metabolism indicative of Alox15 activity, which resulted in the production of biologically active lipid molecules (12-HETE, 13-HODE, and 13-HOTE). The overall effect is a perturbation of intestinal lipid homeostasis, which results in the production of lipids essentially absent in the intestine of control rats. We have thus provided mechanistic insight into the alteration in lipid metabolism that occurs during iron deficiency, in that induction of Alox15 mRNA expression may be the primary event. The resulting lipid mediators may be related to documented alterations in villus structure and cell proliferation rates in iron deficiency, or to structural alterations in membrane lipid composition.


Biometals | 2012

ISOFORM SPECIFIC REGULATION OF DIVALENT METAL (ION) TRANSPORTER (DMT1) BY PROTEASOMAL DEGRADATION

Michael D. Garrick; Lin Zhao; Jerome A. Roth; Houbo Jiang; Jian Feng; Natalie J. Foot; Hazel Dalton; Sharad Kumar; Laura M. Garrick

Divalent metal ion transporter (DMT1) is the major transporter for iron entrance into mammalian cells and iron exit from endosomes during the transferrin cycle. Four major mRNA isoforms correspond to four protein isoforms, differing at 5′/3′ and N-/C-termini, respectively. Isoforms are designated 1A versus 1B reflecting where transcription starts or +iron responsive element (+IRE) versus −IRE reflecting the presence/absence of an IRE in the 3′ end of the mRNA. These differences imply regulation at transcriptional and posttranscriptional levels. Many proteins are degraded by a ubiquitination-dependent mechanism. Two different ubiquitin ligases (E3s) appear to be involved in DMT1 ubiquitination: Parkin or neuronal precursor cell-expressed developmentally downregulated 4 (Nedd4) family E3s which often utilize Nedd4 family interacting protein-1 and -2 (Ndfip1 and 2) to ubiquitinate their substrate proteins. Prior data suggest that Parkin ubiquitinates 1B DMT1 but not 1A DMT1 while Nedd4/Ndfips ligate ubiquitin to DMT1 in the duodenum where 1A/+IRE DMT1 predominates. Our assay for whether these systems target DMT1 depends on two HEK293 cell lines that express permanently transfected 1A/+IRE DMT1 or 1B/−IRE DMT1 after induction by doxycycline. Transient transfection with a Parkin construct before induction diminishes 1B/−IRE DMT1 detected by immune-blots but not 1A/+IRE DMT1. Mutant Parkin serves as a control that does not affect DMT1 levels. Thus DMT1 regulation in an isoform specific fashion can occur by ubiquitination and the events involved have implications for DMT1 function and disease processes.

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Lin Zhao

University at Buffalo

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Andrew J. Ghio

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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