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Dive into the research topics where Lianne C. Davis is active.

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Featured researches published by Lianne C. Davis.


Current Biology | 2010

Purified TPC Isoforms Form NAADP Receptors with Distinct Roles for Ca2+ Signaling and Endolysosomal Trafficking

Margarida Ruas; Katja Rietdorf; Abdelilah Arredouani; Lianne C. Davis; Emyr Lloyd-Evans; Heidi Koegel; Timothy Michael Funnell; Anthony J. Morgan; John A. Ward; Keiko Watanabe; Xiaotong Cheng; Grant C. Churchill; Michael X. Zhu; Frances M. Platt; Gary M. Wessel; John Parrington; Antony Galione

Summary Intracellular Ca2+ signals constitute key elements in signal transduction. Of the three major Ca2+ mobilizing messengers described, the most potent, nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAADP) is the least well understood in terms of its molecular targets [1]. Recently, we showed that heterologous expression of two-pore channel (TPC) proteins enhances NAADP-induced Ca2+ release, whereas the NAADP response was abolished in pancreatic beta cells from Tpcn2 gene knockout mice [2]. However, whether TPCs constitute native NAADP receptors is unclear. Here we show that immunopurified endogenous TPC complexes possess the hallmark properties ascribed to NAADP receptors, including nanomolar ligand affinity [3–5]. Our study also reveals important functional differences between the three TPC isoforms. Thus, TPC1 and TPC2 both mediate NAADP-induced Ca2+ release, but the subsequent amplification of this trigger Ca2+ by IP3Rs is more tightly coupled for TPC2. In contrast, TPC3 expression suppressed NAADP-induced Ca2+ release. Finally, increased TPC expression has dramatic and contrasting effects on endolysosomal structures and dynamics, implicating a role for NAADP in the regulation of vesicular trafficking. We propose that NAADP regulates endolysosomal Ca2+ storage and release via TPCs and coordinates endoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ release in a role that impacts on Ca2+ signaling in health and disease [6].


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

Bidirectional Ca2+ signaling occurs between the endoplasmic reticulum and acidic organelles

Anthony J. Morgan; Lianne C. Davis; Siegfried Karl Wagner; Alexander M. Lewis; John Parrington; Grant C. Churchill; Antony Galione

After acidic organelles induce signaling to activate ER calcium ion release, local microdomains of high calcium at ER–acidic organelle junctions feed back to activate further acidic organelle calcium release.


Developmental Dynamics | 2007

Flipping the switch: How a sperm activates the egg at fertilization

John Parrington; Lianne C. Davis; Antony Galione; Gary M. Wessel

Sperm interaction with an egg in animals was first documented 160 years ago in sea urchins by Alphonse Derbès (1847) when he noted the formation of an “envelope” following the sperms “approach” to the egg. The “envelope” in sea urchins is an obvious phenotype of fertilization in this animal and over the past 35 years has served to indicate a presence of calcium released from cytoplasmic stores essential to activate the egg. The mechanism of calcium release has been intensely studied because it is a universal regulator of cellular activity, and recently several intersecting pathways of calcium release have been defined. Here we examine these various mechanisms with special emphasis on recent work in eggs of both sea urchins and mice. Developmental Dynamics 236:2027–2038, 2007.


Fertility and Sterility | 2009

Phospholipase C zeta undergoes dynamic changes in its pattern of localization in sperm during capacitation and the acrosome reaction.

Claire Young; Patricia Grasa; Kevin Coward; Lianne C. Davis; John Parrington

OBJECTIVE To evaluate the localization of phospholipase C zeta (PLC zeta) in non-capacitated, capacitated, and ionophore-treated sperm. DESIGN Phospholipase C zeta was cloned from the hamster, an important model organism for studying fertilization. Next, we used hamster and mouse models to investigate the localization of PLC zeta in non-capacitated and capacitated sperm and in sperm treated with ionophore to induce the acrosome reaction. SETTING University laboratory. ANIMAL(S) Male mice and hamsters, 4-6 weeks old. INTERVENTION(S) None. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S) Phospholipase C zeta localization in non-capacitated, capacitated, and ionophore-treated sperm. RESULT(S) Full-length hamster PLC zeta complementary DNA is 1953 base pairs in size, encoding an open reading frame of 651 amino acids, sharing 85% amino acid similarity with the mouse. Phospholipase C zeta was localized in acrosomal and post-acrosomal regions of sperm. The post-acrosomal localization, which became more evident after capacitation and was maintained after ionophore treatment, is in line with PLC zeta being the endogenous agent of egg activation. However, the acrosomal PLC zeta population, which was lost after ionophore treatment, suggests that PLC zeta could have other functions besides egg activation. CONCLUSION(S) Phospholipase C zeta is localized to acrosomal and post-acrosomal regions and undergoes dynamic changes during capacitation and the acrosome reaction, indicating a potential role regulating not only egg activation but other sperm functions.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2010

NAADP as an intracellular messenger regulating lysosomal calcium-release channels.

Antony Galione; Anthony J. Morgan; Abdelilah Arredouani; Lianne C. Davis; Katja Rietdorf; Margarida Ruas; John Parrington

Recent studies into the mechanisms of action of the Ca(2+)-mobilizing messenger NAADP (nicotinic acid-adenine dinucleotide phosphate) have demonstrated that a novel family of intracellular Ca(2+)-release channels termed TPCs (two-pore channels) are components of the NAADP receptor. TPCs appear to be exclusively localized to the endolysosomal system. These findings confirm previous pharmacological and biochemical studies suggesting that NAADP targets acidic Ca(2+) stores rather than the endoplasmic reticulum, the major site of action of the other two principal Ca(2+)-mobilizing messengers, InsP(3) and cADPR (cADP-ribose). Studies of the messenger roles of NAADP and the function of TPCs highlight the novel role of lysosomes and other organelles of the endocytic pathway as messenger-regulated Ca(2+) stores which also affects the regulation of the endolysosomal system.


Current Biology | 2012

NAADP activates two-pore channels on T cell cytolytic granules to stimulate exocytosis and killing.

Lianne C. Davis; Anthony J. Morgan; Ji-Li Chen; Charlotte M. Snead; Duncan Bloor-Young; Eugene Shenderov; Megan N. Stanton-Humphreys; Stuart J. Conway; Grant C. Churchill; John Parrington; Vincenzo Cerundolo; Antony Galione

Summary A cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) kills an infected or tumorigenic cell by Ca2+-dependent exocytosis of cytolytic granules at the immunological synapse formed between the two cells. Although inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3)-mediated Ca2+ release from the endoplasmic reticulum activates the store-operated Ca2+-influx pathway that is necessary for exocytosis, it is not a sufficient stimulus [1–4]. Here we identify the Ca2+-mobilizing messenger nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAADP) and its recently identified molecular target, two-pore channels (TPCs) [5–7], as being important for T cell receptor signaling in CTLs. We demonstrate that cytolytic granules are not only reservoirs of cytolytic proteins but are also the acidic Ca2+ stores mobilized by NAADP via TPC channels on the granules themselves, so that TPCs migrate to the immunological synapse upon CTL activation. Moreover, NAADP activates TPCs to drive exocytosis in a way that is not mimicked by global Ca2+ signals induced by IP3 or ionomycin, suggesting that critical, local Ca2+ nanodomains around TPCs stimulate granule exocytosis. Hence, by virtue of the NAADP/TPC pathway, cytolytic granules generate Ca2+ signals that lead to their own exocytosis and to cell killing. This study highlights a selective role for NAADP in stimulating exocytosis crucial for immune cell function and may impact on stimulus-secretion coupling in wider cellular contexts.


The EMBO Journal | 2015

Expression of Ca2+‐permeable two‐pore channels rescues NAADP signalling in TPC‐deficient cells

Margarida Ruas; Lianne C. Davis; Cheng Chang Chen; Anthony J. Morgan; Kai Ting Chuang; Timothy F. Walseth; Christian Grimm; Clive Garnham; Trevor Powell; Nick Platt; Frances M. Platt; Martin Biel; Christian Wahl-Schott; John Parrington; Antony Galione

The second messenger NAADP triggers Ca2+ release from endo‐lysosomes. Although two‐pore channels (TPCs) have been proposed to be regulated by NAADP, recent studies have challenged this. By generating the first mouse line with demonstrable absence of both Tpcn1 and Tpcn2 expression (Tpcn1/2−/−), we show that the loss of endogenous TPCs abolished NAADP‐dependent Ca2+ responses as assessed by single‐cell Ca2+ imaging or patch‐clamp of single endo‐lysosomes. In contrast, currents stimulated by PI(3,5)P2 were only partially dependent on TPCs. In Tpcn1/2−/− cells, NAADP sensitivity was restored by re‐expressing wild‐type TPCs, but not by mutant versions with impaired Ca2+‐permeability, nor by TRPML1. Another mouse line formerly reported as TPC‐null likely expresses truncated TPCs, but we now show that these truncated proteins still support NAADP‐induced Ca2+ release. High‐affinity [32P]NAADP binding still occurs in Tpcn1/2−/− tissue, suggesting that NAADP regulation is conferred by an accessory protein. Altogether, our data establish TPCs as Ca2+‐permeable channels indispensable for NAADP signalling.


Current Biology | 2008

Ca(2+) signaling occurs via second messenger release from intraorganelle synthesis sites.

Lianne C. Davis; Anthony J. Morgan; Margarida Ruas; Julian L. Wong; Richard Graeff; Albert J. Poustka; Hon Cheung Lee; Gary M. Wessel; John Parrington; Antony Galione

Summary Cyclic ADP-ribose is an important Ca2+-mobilizing cytosolic messenger synthesized from β-NAD+ by ADP-ribosyl cyclases (ARCs). However, the focus upon ectocellular mammalian ARCs (CD38 and CD157) has led to confusion as to how extracellular enzymes generate intracellular messengers in response to stimuli. We have cloned and characterized three ARCs in the sea urchin egg and found that endogenous ARCβ and ARCγ are intracellular and located within the lumen of acidic, exocytotic vesicles, where they are optimally active. Intraorganelle ARCs are shielded from cytosolic substrate and targets by the organelle membrane, but this barrier is circumvented by nucleotide transport. We show that a β-NAD+ transporter provides ARC substrate that is converted luminally to cADPR, which, in turn, is shuttled out to the cytosol via a separate cADPR transporter. Moreover, nucleotide transport is integral to ARC activity physiologically because three transport inhibitors all inhibited the fertilization-induced Ca2+ wave that is dependent upon cADPR. This represents a novel signaling mechanism whereby an extracellular stimulus increases the concentration of a second messenger by promoting messenger transport from intraorganelle synthesis sites to the cytosol.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2014

TPC1 Has Two Variant Isoforms, and Their Removal Has Different Effects on Endo-Lysosomal Functions Compared to Loss of TPC2

Margarida Ruas; Kai-Ting Chuang; Lianne C. Davis; Areej Al-Douri; Patricia W. Tynan; Ruth Tunn; Lydia Teboul; Antony Galione; John Parrington

ABSTRACT Organelle ion homeostasis within the endo-lysosomal system is critical for physiological functions. Two-pore channels (TPCs) are cation channels that reside in endo-lysosomal organelles, and overexpression results in endo-lysosomal trafficking defects. However, the impact of a lack of TPC expression on endo-lysosomal trafficking is unknown. Here, we characterize Tpcn1 expression in two transgenic mouse lines (Tpcn1XG716 and Tpcn1T159) and show expression of a novel evolutionarily conserved Tpcn1B transcript from an alternative promoter, raising important questions regarding the status of Tpcn1 expression in mice recently described to be Tpcn1 knockouts. We show that the transgenic Tpcn1T159 line lacks expression of both Tpcn1 isoforms in all tissues analyzed. Using mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) from Tpcn1−/− and Tpcn2−/− animals, we show that a lack of Tpcn1 or Tpcn2 expression has no significant impact on resting endo-lysosomal pH or morphology. However, differential effects in endo-lysosomal function were observed upon the loss of Tpcn1 or Tpcn2 expression; thus, while Tpcn1−/− MEFs have impaired trafficking of cholera toxin from the plasma membrane to the Golgi apparatus, Tpcn2−/− MEFs show slower kinetics of ligand-induced platelet-derived growth factor receptor β (PDGFRβ) degradation, which is dependent on trafficking to lysosomes. Our findings indicate that TPC1 and TPC2 have important but distinct roles in the endo-lysosomal pathway.


Blood | 2014

Altered distribution and function of natural killer cells in murine and human Niemann-Pick disease type C1

Anneliese O. Speak; D te Vruchte; Lianne C. Davis; Anthony J. Morgan; David A. Smith; Nicole M. Yanjanin; Louise Simmons; Ralf Hartung; Heiko Runz; Eugen Mengel; Michael Beck; Jackie Imrie; Elizabeth Jacklin; J. E. Wraith; Christian J. Hendriksz; Robin H. Lachmann; C Cognet; Rohini Sidhu; Hideji Fujiwara; Daniel S. Ory; Antony Galione; Forbes D. Porter; E Vivier; Frances M. Platt

Niemann-Pick type C (NPC) is a neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disorder caused by defects in the lysosomal proteins NPC1 or NPC2. NPC cells are characterized by reduced lysosomal calcium levels and impaired sphingosine transport from lysosomes. Natural killer (NK) cells kill virally infected/transformed cells via degranulation of lysosome-related organelles. Their trafficking from lymphoid tissues into the circulation is dependent on sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) gradients, sensed by S1P receptor 5 (S1P5). We hypothesized that NK-cell function and trafficking could be affected in NPC disease due to the combined effects of the lysosomal calcium defect and sphingosine storage. In an NPC1 mouse model, we found the frequency of NK cells was altered and phenocopied S1P5-deficient mice, consistent with defects in S1P levels. NK cells from NPC1 mice also had a defect in cytotoxicity due to a failure in degranulation of cytotoxic granules, which was associated with reduced lysosomal calcium levels. Affected NPC1 patients and NPC1 heterozygote carriers had reduced NK-cell numbers in their blood and showed similar phenotypic and developmental changes to those observed in the NPC1 mouse. These findings highlight the effects of lysosomal storage on the peripheral immune system.

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