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Dive into the research topics where Lawrence J. Hayward is active.

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Featured researches published by Lawrence J. Hayward.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Axonal Transport Defects in Neurodegenerative Diseases

Gerardo Morfini; Matthew Burns; Lester I. Binder; Nicholas M. Kanaan; Nichole E. LaPointe; Daryl A. Bosco; Robert H. Brown; Hannah E. Brown; Ashutosh Tiwari; Lawrence J. Hayward; Julia M. Edgar; Klaus-Armin Nave; James Garberrn; Yuka Atagi; Yuyu Song; Gustavo Pigino; Scott T. Brady

Adult-onset neurodegenerative diseases (AONDs) comprise a heterogeneous group of neurological disorders characterized by a progressive, age-dependent decline in neuronal function and loss of selected neuronal populations. Alterations in synaptic function and axonal connectivity represent early and critical pathogenic events in AONDs, but molecular mechanisms underlying these defects remain elusive. The large size and complex subcellular architecture of neurons render them uniquely vulnerable to alterations in axonal transport (AT). Accordingly, deficits in AT have been documented in most AONDs, suggesting a common defect acquired through different pathogenic pathways. These observations suggest that many AONDs can be categorized as dysferopathies, diseases in which alterations in AT represent a critical component in pathogenesis. Topics here address various molecular mechanisms underlying alterations in AT in several AONDs. Illumination of such mechanisms provides a framework for the development of novel therapeutic strategies aimed to prevent axonal and synaptic dysfunction in several major AONDs.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

Mutant FUS proteins that cause amyotrophic lateral sclerosis incorporate into stress granules

Daryl A. Bosco; Nathan Lemay; Hae Kyung Ko; Hongru Zhou; Christopher J. Burke; Thomas J. Kwiatkowski; Peter C. Sapp; Diane McKenna-Yasek; Robert H. Brown; Lawrence J. Hayward

Mutations in the RNA-binding protein FUS (fused in sarcoma) are linked to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), but the mechanism by which these mutants cause motor neuron degeneration is not known. We report a novel ALS truncation mutant (R495X) that leads to a relatively severe ALS clinical phenotype compared with FUS missense mutations. Expression of R495X FUS, which abrogates a putative nuclear localization signal at the C-terminus of FUS, in HEK-293 cells and in the zebrafish spinal cord caused a striking cytoplasmic accumulation of the protein to a greater extent than that observed for recessive (H517Q) and dominant (R521G) missense mutants. Furthermore, in response to oxidative stress or heat shock conditions in cultures and in vivo, the ALS-linked FUS mutants, but not wild-type FUS, assembled into perinuclear stress granules in proportion to their cytoplasmic expression levels. These findings demonstrate a potential link between FUS mutations and cellular pathways involved in stress responses that may be relevant to altered motor neuron homeostasis in ALS.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2003

Amyloid-Like Filaments and Water-Filled Nanotubes Formed by Sod1 Mutant Proteins Linked to Familial Als

Jennifer Stine Elam; Alexander B. Taylor; Richard W. Strange; Svetlana V. Antonyuk; Peter A. Doucette; Jorge A. Rodriguez; S. Samar Hasnain; Lawrence J. Hayward; Joan Selverstone Valentine; Todd O. Yeates; P. John Hart

Mutations in the SOD1 gene cause the autosomal dominant, neurodegenerative disorder familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS). In spinal cord neurons of human FALS patients and in transgenic mice expressing these mutant proteins, aggregates containing FALS SOD1 are observed. Accumulation of SOD1 aggregates is believed to interfere with axonal transport, protein degradation and anti-apoptotic functions of the neuronal cellular machinery. Here we show that metal-deficient, pathogenic SOD1 mutant proteins crystallize in three different crystal forms, all of which reveal higher-order assemblies of aligned β-sheets. Amyloid-like filaments and water-filled nanotubes arise through extensive interactions between loop and β-barrel elements of neighboring mutant SOD1 molecules. In all cases, non-native conformational changes permit a gain of interaction between dimers that leads to higher-order arrays. Normal β-sheet–containing proteins avoid such self-association by preventing their edge strands from making intermolecular interactions. Loss of this protection through conformational rearrangement in the metal-deficient enzyme could be a toxic property common to mutants of SOD1 linked to FALS.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Interaction between Familial Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS)-linked SOD1 Mutants and the Dynein Complex

Fujian Zhang; Anna-Lena Ström; Kei Fukada; Sangmook Lee; Lawrence J. Hayward; Haining Zhu

Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive motor neuron death. More than 90 mutations in the copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD1) gene cause a subset of familial ALS. Toxic properties have been proposed for the ALS-linked SOD1 mutants, but the nature of the toxicity has not been clearly specified. Cytoplasmic inclusion bodies containing mutant SOD1 and a number of other proteins are a pathological hallmark of mutant SOD1-mediated familial ALS, but whether such aggregates are toxic to motor neurons remains unclear. In this study, we identified a dynein subunit as a component of the mutant SOD1-containing high molecular weight complexes using proteomic techniques. We further demonstrated interaction and colocalization between dynein and mutant SOD1, but not normal SOD1, in cultured cells and also in G93A and G85R transgenic rodent tissues. Moreover, the interaction occurred early, prior to the onset of symptoms in the ALS animal models and increased over the disease progression. Motor neurons with long axons are particularly susceptible to defects in axonal transport. Our results demonstrate a direct “gain-of-interaction” between mutant SOD1 and dynein, which may provide insights into the mechanism by which mutant SOD1 could contribute to a defect in retrograde axonal transport or other dynein functions. The aberrant interaction is potentially critical to the formation of mutant SOD1 aggregates as well as the toxic cascades leading to motor neuron degeneration in ALS.


Biophysical Journal | 1997

Slow inactivation differs among mutant Na channels associated with myotonia and periodic paralysis.

Lawrence J. Hayward; Robert H. Brown; Stephen C. Cannon

Several heritable forms of myotonia and hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (HyperPP) are caused by missense mutations in the alpha subunit of the skeletal muscle Na channel (SkM1). These mutations impair fast inactivation or shift activation toward hyperpolarized potentials, inducing persistent Na currents that may cause muscle depolarization, myotonia, and onset of weakness. It has been proposed that the aberrant Na current and resulting weakness will be sustained only if Na channel slow inactivation is also impaired. We therefore measured slow inactivation for wild-type and five mutant Na channels constructed in the rat skeletal muscle isoform (rSkM1) and expressed in HEK cells. Two common HyperPP mutations (T698M in domain II-S5 and M1585V in IV-S6) had defective slow inactivation. This defect reduced use-dependent inhibition of Na currents elicited during 50-Hz stimulation. A rare HyperPP mutation (M1353V in IV-S1) and mutations within the domain III-IV linker that cause myotonia (G1299E) or myotonia plus weakness (T1306M) did not impair slow inactivation. We also observed that slow inactivation of wild-type rSkM1 was incomplete; therefore it is possible that stable membrane depolarization and subsequent muscle weakness may be caused solely by defects in fast inactivation or activation. Model simulations showed that abnormal slow inactivation, although not required for expression of a paralytic phenotype, may accentuate muscle membrane depolarization, paralysis, and sensitivity to hyperkalemia.


Neurology | 1999

Defective slow inactivation of sodium channels contributes to familial periodic paralysis

Lawrence J. Hayward; Gisela M. Sandoval; Stephen C. Cannon

Objective: To evaluate the effects of missense mutations within the skeletal muscle sodium (Na) channel on slow inactivation (SI) in periodic paralysis and related myotonic disorders. Background: Na channel mutations in hyperkalemic periodic paralysis and the nondystrophic myotonias interfere with the normally rapid inactivation of muscle Na currents following an action potential. This defect causes persistent inward Na currents that produce muscle depolarization, myotonia, or onset of weakness. Distinct from fast inactivation is the process called SI, which limits availability of Na channels on a time scale of seconds to minutes, thereby influencing muscle excitability. Methods: Human Na channel cDNAs containing mutations associated with paralytic and nonparalytic phenotypes were transiently expressed in human embryonic kidney cells for whole-cell Na current recording. Extent of SI over a range of conditioning voltages (−120 to +20 mV) was defined as the fraction of Na current that failed to recover within 20 ms at −100 mV. The time course of entry to SI at −30 mV was measured using a conditioning pulse duration of 20 ms to 60 seconds. Recovery from SI at −100 mV was assessed over 20 ms to 10 seconds. Results: The two most common hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (HyperPP) mutations responsible for episodic attacks of weakness or paralysis, T704M and M1592V, showed clearly impaired SI, as we and others have observed previously for the rat homologs of these mutations. In addition, a new paralysis-associated mutant, I693T, with cold-induced weakness, exhibited a comparable defect in SI. However, SI remained intact for both the HyperPP/paramyotonia congenita (PMC) mutant, A1156T, and the nonparalytic potassium-aggravated myotonia (PAM) mutant, V1589M. Conclusions: SI is defective in a subset of mutant Na channels associated with episodic weakness (HyperPP or PMC) but remains intact for mutants studied so far that cause myotonia without weakness (PAM).


PLOS Biology | 2011

A Yeast Model of FUS/TLS-Dependent Cytotoxicity

Shulin Ju; Daniel F. Tardiff; Haesun Han; Kanneganti Divya; Quan Zhong; Lynne E. Maquat; Daryl A. Bosco; Lawrence J. Hayward; Robert H. Brown; Susan Lindquist; Dagmar Ringe; Gregory A. Petsko

FUS/TLS is a nucleic acid binding protein that, when mutated, can cause a subset of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (fALS). Although FUS/TLS is normally located predominantly in the nucleus, the pathogenic mutant forms of FUS/TLS traffic to, and form inclusions in, the cytoplasm of affected spinal motor neurons or glia. Here we report a yeast model of human FUS/TLS expression that recapitulates multiple salient features of the pathology of the disease-causing mutant proteins, including nuclear to cytoplasmic translocation, inclusion formation, and cytotoxicity. Protein domain analysis indicates that the carboxyl-terminus of FUS/TLS, where most of the ALS-associated mutations are clustered, is required but not sufficient for the toxicity of the protein. A genome-wide genetic screen using a yeast over-expression library identified five yeast DNA/RNA binding proteins, encoded by the yeast genes ECM32, NAM8, SBP1, SKO1, and VHR1, that rescue the toxicity of human FUS/TLS without changing its expression level, cytoplasmic translocation, or inclusion formation. Furthermore, hUPF1, a human homologue of ECM32, also rescues the toxicity of FUS/TLS in this model, validating the yeast model and implicating a possible insufficiency in RNA processing or the RNA quality control machinery in the mechanism of FUS/TLS mediated toxicity. Examination of the effect of FUS/TLS expression on the decay of selected mRNAs in yeast indicates that the nonsense-mediated decay pathway is probably not the major determinant of either toxicity or suppression.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2005

Aberrantly Increased Hydrophobicity Shared by Mutants of Cu,Zn-Superoxide Dismutase in Familial Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Ashutosh Tiwari; Zuoshang Xu; Lawrence J. Hayward

More than 100 different mutations in the gene encoding Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (SOD1) cause preferential motor neuron degeneration in familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Although the cellular target(s) of mutant SOD1 toxicity have not been precisely specified, evidence to date supports the hypothesis that ALS-related mutations may increase the burden of partially unfolded SOD1 species. Influences that may destabilize SOD1 in vivo include impaired metal ion binding, reduction of the intrasubunit disulfide bond, or oxidative modification. In this study, we observed that metal-deficient as-isolated SOD1 mutants (H46R, G85R, D124V, D125H, and S134N) with disordered electrostatic and zinc-binding loops exhibited aberrant binding to hydrophobic beads in the absence of other destabilizing agents. Other purified ALS-related mutants that can biologically incorporate nearly normal amounts of stabilizing zinc ions (A4V, L38V, G41S, D90A, and G93A) exhibited maximal hydrophobic behavior after exposure to both a disulfide reducing agent and a metal chelator, while normal SOD1 was more resistant to these agents. Moreover, we detected hydrophobic SOD1 species in lysates from affected tissues in G85R and G93A mutant but not wildtype SOD1 transgenic mice. These findings suggest that a susceptibility to the cellular disulfide reducing environment and zinc loss may convert otherwise stable SOD1 mutants into metal-deficient forms with locally destabilized electrostatic and zinc-binding loops. These abnormally hydrophobic SOD1 species may promote aberrant interactions of the enzyme with itself or with other cellular constituents to produce toxicity in familial ALS.


Neurology | 1998

Missense mutation in the mtDNA cytochrome b gene in a patient with myopathy

A. L. Andreu; C. Bruno; S. Shanske; Alexander Shtilbans; Michio Hirano; Sindu Krishna; Lawrence J. Hayward; D. S. Systrom; Robert H. Brown; Salvatore DiMauro

A patient with progressive exercise intolerance, proximal weakness, and complex III deficiency in skeletal muscle had a missense mutation in the cytochrome b gene of mitochondrial DNA (G15762A). The mutation, which leads to the substitution of a highly conserved amino acid (G339E), was heteroplasmic (85%) in the patients muscle and was not present in 100 individuals of different ethnic backgrounds. These data strongly suggest that this molecular defect is the primary cause of the myopathy.


Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2009

Sensitive and Specific Identification of Wild Type and Variant Proteins from 8 to 669 kDa Using Top-down Mass Spectrometry

Nezihi Murat Karabacak; Long Li; Ashutosh Tiwari; Lawrence J. Hayward; Pengyu Hong; Michael L. Easterling; Jeffrey N. Agar

Top-down and bottom-up mass spectrometry methods can generate gas phase fragments and use these to identify proteins. Top-down methods, in addition, can provide the mass of the protein itself and therefore additional structural information. Despite the conceptual advantage of top-down methods, the market share advantage belongs to bottom-up methods as a result of their more robust sample preparation, fragmentation, and data processing methods. Here we report improved fragmentation and data processing methods for top-down mass spectrometry. Specifically we report the use of funnel-skimmer dissociation, a variation of nozzle-skimmer dissociation, and compare its performance with electron capture dissociation. We also debut BIG Mascot, an extended version of Mascot with incorporated top-down MS2 search ability and the first search engine that can perform both bottom-up and top-down searches. Using BIG Mascot, we demonstrated the ability to identify proteins 1) using only intact protein MS1, 2) using only MS2, and 3) using the combination of MS1 and MS2. We correctly identified proteins with a wide range of masses, including 13 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-associated variants of the protein Cu/Zn-superoxide dismutase, and extended the upper mass limit of top-down protein identification to 669 kDa by identifying thyroglobulin.

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Ashutosh Tiwari

Michigan Technological University

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Robert H. Brown

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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P. John Hart

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Stephen C. Cannon

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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