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Featured researches published by Leah E. Worton.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2008

Characterisation of inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase expression during retinal development: Differences between variants and isoforms.

Jennifer H. Gunter; Elaine C. Thomas; Nadia Lengefeld; Sarah J. Kruger; Leah E. Worton; Edith M. Gardiner; Alun Jones; Nigel L. Barnett; Jonathan P. Whitehead

In mammals there are two ubiquitous, catalytically indistinguishable isoforms of inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase and mutations in the type I isoform, but not type II, cause retina-specific disorders. We have characterised the spatio-temporal expression of these proteins during development of the rat retina and performed functional investigations of the recently described retinal type I variants. Inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase was present in all immature cells throughout the retina during embryonic and neonatal development. Following eye opening and cell differentiation its distribution was restricted to the photoreceptors and bipolar cells, becoming prominent in Müller cells with aging. Type II was present in early, developing retinae whilst type I was undetectable. An isoform switch occurred around P10, after which the type I variants, type Ialpha and type Igamma, were the major forms. Functional investigations indicate type Igamma has greater catalytic activity compared with other variants and isoforms. Finally, all forms of type I show an increased propensity to form intracellular macrostructures compared to type II and these structures appear to be regulated in response to changing intracellular GTP levels. Collectively these data demonstrate that (i) type I does not play a role in early retinal development, (ii) type Igamma has greater activity and (iii) there are differences between type I and type II isoforms. These observations are consistent with the aetiology of retinitis pigmentosa and raise the possibility that programmed expression of specific inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase proteins may have arisen to meet the requirements of the cellular environment.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2014

Botulinum Toxin Induces Muscle Paralysis and Inhibits Bone Regeneration in Zebrafish

Anthony M Recidoro; Amanda C Roof; Michael W. Schmitt; Leah E. Worton; Timothy A. Petrie; Nicholas S. Strand; Brandon J. Ausk; Sundar Srinivasan; Randall T. Moon; Edith M. Gardiner; Werner Kaminsky; Steven D. Bain; Christopher H. Allan; Ted S. Gross; Ronald Y. Kwon

Intramuscular administration of Botulinum toxin (BTx) has been associated with impaired osteogenesis in diverse conditions of bone formation (eg, development, growth, and healing), yet the mechanisms of neuromuscular‐bone crosstalk underlying these deficits have yet to be identified. Motivated by the emerging utility of zebrafish (Danio rerio) as a rapid, genetically tractable, and optically transparent model for human pathologies (as well as the potential to interrogate neuromuscular‐mediated bone disorders in a simple model that bridges in vitro and more complex in vivo model systems), in this study, we developed a model of BTx‐induced muscle paralysis in adult zebrafish, and we examined its effects on intramembranous ossification during tail fin regeneration. BTx administration induced rapid muscle paralysis in adult zebrafish in a manner that was dose‐dependent, transient, and focal, mirroring the paralytic phenotype observed in animal and human studies. During fin regeneration, BTx impaired continued bone ray outgrowth, morphology, and patterning, indicating defects in early osteogenesis. Further, BTx significantly decreased mineralizing activity and crystalline mineral accumulation, suggesting delayed late‐stage osteoblast differentiation and/or altered secondary bone apposition. Bone ray transection proximal to the amputation site focally inhibited bone outgrowth in the affected ray, implicating intra‐ and/or inter‐ray nerves in this process. Taken together, these studies demonstrate the potential to interrogate pathological features of BTx‐induced osteoanabolic dysfunction in the regenerating zebrafish fin, define the technological toolbox for detecting bone growth and mineralization deficits in this process, and suggest that pathways mediating neuromuscular regulation of osteogenesis may be conserved beyond established mammalian models of bone anabolic disorders.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Systems-Based Identification of Temporal Processing Pathways during Bone Cell Mechanotransduction

Leah E. Worton; Brandon J. Ausk; Leah M. Downey; Steven D. Bain; Edith M. Gardiner; Sundar Srinivasan; Ted S. Gross; Ronald Y. Kwon

Bone has long been established to be a highly mechanosensitive tissue. When subjected to mechanical loading, bone exhibits profoundly different anabolic responses depending on the temporal pattern in which the stimulus is applied. This phenomenon has been termed temporal processing, and involves complex signal amplification mechanisms that are largely unidentified. In this study, our goal was to characterize transcriptomic perturbations arising from the insertion of intermittent rest periods (a temporal variation with profound effects on bone anabolism) in osteoblastic cells subjected to fluid flow, and assess the utility of these perturbations to identify signaling pathways that are differentially activated by this temporal variation. At the level of the genome, we found that the common and differential alterations in gene expression arising from the two flow conditions were distributionally distinct, with the differential alterations characterized by many small changes in a large number of genes. Using bioinformatics analysis, we identified distinct up- and down-regulation transcriptomic signatures associated with the insertion of rest intervals, and found that the up-regulation signature was significantly associated with MAPK signaling. Confirming the involvement of the MAPK pathway, we found that the insertion of rest intervals significantly elevated flow-induced p-ERK1/2 levels by enabling a second spike in activity that was not observed in response to continuous flow. Collectively, these studies are the first to characterize distinct transcriptomic perturbations in bone cells subjected to continuous and intermittent stimulation, and directly demonstrate the utility of systems-based transcriptomic analysis to identify novel acute signaling pathways underlying temporal processing in bone cells.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Distinct Cyclosporin A Doses Are Required to Enhance Bone Formation Induced by Cyclic and Rest-Inserted Loading in the Senescent Skeleton

Sundar Srinivasan; DeWayne Threet; Leah E. Worton; Brandon J. Ausk; Steven D. Bain; Edith M. Gardiner; Ronald Y. Kwon; Ted S. Gross

Age-related decline in periosteal adaptation negatively impacts the ability to utilize exercise to enhance bone mass and strength in the elderly. We recently observed that in senescent animals subject to cyclically applied loading, supplementation with Cyclosporin A (CsA) substantially enhanced the periosteal bone formation rates to levels observed in young animals. We therefore speculated that if the CsA supplement could enhance bone response to a variety of types of mechanical stimuli, this approach could readily provide the means to expand the range of mild stimuli that are robustly osteogenic at senescence. Here, we specifically hypothesized that a given CsA supplement would enhance bone formation induced in the senescent skeleton by both cyclic (1-Hz) and rest-inserted loading (wherein a 10-s unloaded rest interval is inserted between each load cycle). To examine this hypothesis, the right tibiae of senescent female C57BL/6 mice (22 Mo) were subjected to cyclic or rest-inserted loading supplemented with CsA at 3.0 mg/kg. As previously, we initially found that while the periosteal bone formation rate (p.BFR) induced by cyclic loading was enhanced when supplemented with 3.0 mg/kg CsA (by 140%), the response to rest-inserted loading was not augmented at this CsA dosage. In follow-up experiments, we observed that while a 30-fold lower CsA dosage (0.1 mg/kg) significantly enhanced p.BFR induced by rest-inserted loading (by 102%), it was ineffective as a supplement with cyclic loading. Additional experiments and statistical analysis confirmed that the dose-response relations were significantly different for cyclic versus rest-inserted loading, only because the two stimuli required distinct CsA dosages for efficacy. While not anticipated a priori, clarifying the complexity underlying the observed interaction between CsA dosage and loading type holds potential for insight into how bone response to a broad range of mechanical stimuli may be substantially enhanced in the senescent skeleton.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2017

Ectodermal-Neural Cortex 1 Isoforms Have Contrasting Effects on MC3T3-E1 Osteoblast Mineralization and Gene Expression

Leah E. Worton; Yan-Chuan Shi; Elisabeth J Smith; Simon C. Barry; Thomas J. Gonda; Jonathan P. Whitehead; Edith M. Gardiner

The importance of Wnt pathway signaling in development of bone has been well established. Here we investigated the role of a known Wnt target, ENC1 (ectodermal‐neural cortex 1; NRP/B), in osteoblast differentiation. Enc1 expression was detected in mouse osteoblasts, chondrocytes, and osteocytes by in situ hybridization, and osteoblastic expression was verified in differentiating primary cultures and MC3T3‐E1 pre‐osteoblast cells, with 57 kDa and 67 kDa ENC1 protein isoforms detected throughout differentiation. Induced knockdown of both ENC1 isoforms reduced alkaline phosphatase staining and virtually abolished MC3T3‐E1 mineralization. At culture confluence, Alpl (alkaline phosphatase liver/bone/kidney) expression was markedly reduced compared with control cells, and there was significant and coordinated alteration of other genes involved in cellular phosphate biochemistry. In contrast, with 67 kDa‐selective knockdown mineralized nodule formation was enhanced and there was a two‐fold increase in Alpl expression at confluence. There was enhanced expression of Wnt/β‐catenin target genes with knockdown of both isoforms at this time‐point and a five‐fold increase in Frzb (Frizzled related protein) with 67 kDa‐selective knockdown at mineralization, indicating possible ENC1 interactions with Wnt signaling in osteoblasts. These results are the first to demonstrate a role for ENC1 in the control of osteoblast differentiation. Additionally, the contrasting mineralization phenotypes and transcriptional patterns seen with coordinate knockdown of both ENC1 isoforms vs selective knockdown of 67 kDa ENC1 suggest opposing roles for the isoforms in regulation of osteoblastic differentiation, through effects on Alpl expression and phosphate cellular biochemistry. This study is the first to report differential roles for the ENC1 isoforms in any cell lineage. J. Cell. Biochem. 118: 2141–2150, 2017.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2017

Muscle paralysis induces bone marrow inflammation and predisposition to formation of giant osteoclasts

Brandon J. Ausk; Leah E. Worton; Kate S. Smigiel; Ronald Y. Kwon; Steven D. Bain; Sundar Srinivasan; Edith M. Gardiner; Ted S. Gross

Transient muscle paralysis engendered by a single injection of botulinum toxin A (BTxA) rapidly induces profound focal bone resorption within the medullary cavity of adjacent bones. While initially conceived as a model of mechanical disuse, osteoclastic resorption in this model is disproportionately severe compared with the modest gait defect that is created. Preliminary studies of bone marrow following muscle paralysis suggested acute upregulation of inflammatory cytokines, including TNF-α and IL-1. We therefore hypothesized that BTxA-induced muscle paralysis would rapidly alter the inflammatory microenvironment and the osteoclastic potential of bone marrow. We tested this hypothesis by defining the time course of inflammatory cell infiltration, osteoinflammatory cytokine expression, and alteration in osteoclastogenic potential in the tibia bone marrow following transient muscle paralysis of the calf muscles. Our findings identified inflammatory cell infiltration within 24 h of muscle paralysis. By 72 h, osteoclast fusion and pro-osteoclastic inflammatory gene expression were upregulated in tibia bone marrow. These alterations coincided with bone marrow becoming permissive to the formation of osteoclasts of greater size and greater nuclei numbers. Taken together, our data are consistent with the thesis that transient calf muscle paralysis induces acute inflammation within the marrow of the adjacent tibia and that these alterations are temporally consistent with a role in mediating muscle paralysis-induced bone resorption.


Volume 1A: Abdominal Aortic Aneurysms; Active and Reactive Soft Matter; Atherosclerosis; BioFluid Mechanics; Education; Biotransport Phenomena; Bone, Joint and Spine Mechanics; Brain Injury; Cardiac Mechanics; Cardiovascular Devices, Fluids and Imaging; Cartilage and Disc Mechanics; Cell and Tissue Engineering; Cerebral Aneurysms; Computational Biofluid Dynamics; Device Design, Human Dynamics, and Rehabilitation; Drug Delivery and Disease Treatment; Engineered Cellular Environments | 2013

FLUID DYNAMIC GAUGING-BASED ASSAYS FOR HIGH-THROUGHPUT INVESTIGATION OF CELLULAR MECHANOTRANSDUCTION

Leah E. Worton; Sundar Srinivasan; Ronald Y. Kwon

Within bone, the mechanotransduction pathway is recognized as one of the primary pathways determining bone strength. However, despite an intense research effort over the last 30 years seeking to identify potential mechanosensing molecules in bone cells, only a handful of candidates have been identified. This is due in large part to the low throughput of existing mechanotransduction assays, which preclude them from powerful approaches for de novo discovery such as high-throughput screens and systems biology-based investigations.Copyright


Bone | 2007

Effects of continuous activation of vitamin D and Wnt response pathways on osteoblastic proliferation and differentiation

Yan-Chuan Shi; Leah E. Worton; Luis M. Esteban; Paul A. Baldock; Colette Fong; John A. Eisman; Edith M. Gardiner


Cellular and Molecular Bioengineering | 2014

Enhancement of Flow-Induced AP-1 Gene Expression by Cyclosporin A Requires NFAT-Independent Signaling in Bone Cells

Leah E. Worton; Ronald Y. Kwon; Edith M. Gardiner; Ted S. Gross; Sundar Srinivasan


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2007

Ectoderm neural cortex 1, a Wnt target gene, is expressed in chondrocytic and osteoblastic cells

Leah E. Worton; Yan-Chuan Shi; Elisabeth J Smith; David G. Little; J. P. Whitehead; Edith M. Gardiner

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Ronald Y. Kwon

University of Washington

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Ted S. Gross

University of Washington

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Steven D. Bain

University of Washington

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Yan-Chuan Shi

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Elisabeth J Smith

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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John A. Eisman

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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