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Dive into the research topics where Linda Petrie is active.

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Featured researches published by Linda Petrie.


Reproductive Biomedicine Online | 2004

Mitochondrial DNA turnover occurs during preimplantation development and can be modulated by environmental factors.

Josie McConnell; Linda Petrie

There is increasing evidence in humans that abnormal mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is associated with common degenerative disorders of the twenty-first century. MtDNA is exclusively female in origin and abnormalities in mtDNA can either be inherited, or generated de novo by adverse environmental factors that disturb mitochondrial DNA synthesis or destabilize mtDNA. The preimplantation period of development in mammals was thought to be relatively immune from environmentally induced changes to mtDNA, since no replication of mtDNA was thought to occur at this stage. This study demonstrates that there is a very short period of mtDNA synthesis immediately after fertilization, which can be affected by environmental stress. Adverse culture conditions during this phase of development could therefore alter the mitochondrial genome, with possible long-term consequences for the health of the offspring. The findings have relevance for all assisted reproduction programmes and for the rapidly emerging field of stem cell technologies.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2002

Serum concentrations of homocysteine are elevated during early pregnancy in rodent models of fetal programming

Linda Petrie; Susan J. Duthie; William D. Rees; Josie McConnell

Maternal malnutrition can lead to fetal abnormalities and increase susceptibility to disease in later life. Rat models have been developed to study the physiology and metabolism underlying this phenomenon. One particular model of 50 % protein restriction during pregnancy, the low-protein diet (LPD) supplemented with methionine, has been developed to investigate the underlying mechanisms. Recent studies have shown that rats fed a LPD during only the first 4 d of pregnancy produce offspring that develop hypertension. These results suggest that the very earliest stages of embryo development are susceptible to diet-induced heritable changes. We demonstrate a marked elevation of maternal serum homocysteine (hcy) concentrations during the initial phases of pregnancy in both rats and mice fed an LPD. Fetal growth and many of the circulating amino acids are similarly perturbed in both rats and mice fed the LPD during pregnancy, indicating that the response to the LPD diet is similar in rats and mice. These findings allow us to exploit the advantages of the mouse experimental system in future analyses aimed at understanding the molecular basis of fetal programming. Our present findings are discussed with particular reference to mechanisms which may initiate fetal programming, and to the feasibility of dietary interventions aimed at reducing early pregnancy loss and pre-eclampsia in man.


Experimental Cell Research | 1989

Specificity and timing of the Zn2+ requirement for DNA synthesis by 3T3 cells

John K. Chesters; Linda Petrie; Hazel Vint

Addition of the chelator DTPA to synchronized cultures of 3T3 cells inhibited thymidine incorporation by up to 90% and only Zn2+ of the divalent cations tested was effective in reversing this effect. Fe2+ given alone had no effect on the inhibition by DTPA but when added to Zn2+ supplemented cultures increased thymidine incorporation from approximately 80-90 to over 100% of that in control cultures. Investigations indicated that the major requirement for Zn2+ was within the period from 8 h after stimulation of quiescent cells with serum until 3 h before the start of S phase. There was also an indication of a further requirement for Zn2+ at the G/S transition.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 1999

A possible role for cyclins in the zinc requirements during G1 and G2 phases of the cell cycle.

John K. Chesters; Linda Petrie

Zinc has been shown to be required for the passage of cells through the mid-G1 phase of the cell cycle and for differentiation of myoblasts. However, it has been suggested that zinc has other roles during the cell cycle. The experiments reported here indicate that readily available zinc is not required for DNA synthesis per se but is needed for a process contemporaneous with the S phase and required for subsequent progress of the cells through G2 and mitosis. The G1 and S/G2 requirements for zinc showed virtually identical sensitivities to zinc deprivation. Each of the above requirements for zinc coincides with the induction of specific cyclin mRNAs, and the concentrations of these mRNAs have now been shown to decrease in the absence of adequate zinc. This is the first study to indicate a possible common factor underlying the requirement for available zinc during both cell replication and differentiation.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 1996

Zinc and the initiation of myoblast differentiation

Linda Petrie; Jean N. Buskin; John K. Chesters

Abstract Previous studies have indicated that a lack of available zinc inhibited myoblast differentiation as shown by a failure of the cells to fuse and low expression of creatine kinase mRNA and activity. However, the nature of the requirement for zinc and its relationship to the events leading to differentiation have been unclear. The current studies with C2C12 cells indicated that the muscle-specific enhancer present in the 5′-flanking region of the creatine kinase gene contributed to the zinc sensitivity of this enzyme. Because this enhancer can be activated by expression of the myogenic factors MyoD and myogenin, their sensitivity to zinc was investigated. The concentrations of both MyoD and, particularly, myogenin mRNA, were decreased by zinc deficiency. In vitro translation experiments suggested that these changes closely corresponded with alterations in their rates of synthesis. Further experiments failed to indicate a major effect of zinc on the stabilities of these mRNAs. Because an induction of myogenin mRNA is one of the earliest known events in myoblast differentiation, its particular sensitivity to lack of zinc suggests that zinc may be required before or during the initiation of myoblast differentiation.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 1990

Effects of growth, food intake, and dietary zinc on diadenosine tetraphosphate concentrations in rats

John K. Chesters; Ronald Boyne; Linda Petrie

The nucleotide diadenosine tetraphosphate has been suggested to function as a signal molecule for the initiation of DNA replication. Previous studies have indicated that diadenosine tetraphosphate is synthesized by certain aminoacyl tRNA synthetases and that diversion of AMP from the amino acid-enzyme complex to ATP to form diadenosine tetraphosphate is facilitated by zinc ions. The growth retardation of zinc-deficient rats is associated with specific reduction in DNA replication and also with a potentially growth-limiting decrease in food intake. The possibility has been investigated that in zinc-deficient rats, lack of Zn(2+) restricts diadenosine tetraphosphate synthesis, resulting in a failure to synthesize DNA and in a reduction in growth. The results indicate that the depressed growth potential caused by the reduction in food intake associated with the deficiency was sufficient to lower diadenosine tetraphosphate concentrations significantly in the liver and spleen. However, there was no indication of a specific effect of zinc deficiency on diadenosine tetraphosphate values.


Archive | 1988

5S Ribosomal RNA Synthesis in Zinc-Deficient Rats

John K. Chesters; Linda Petrie

Within a few days of being offered a Zn-deficient diet, young rats show an abrupt decline in growth rate and much effort has been directed to determining which function of Zn is most important in this context. Having reviewed the accumulated evidence, Chesters (1978) suggested that the critical requirement for Zn was associated with the alterations to the genetic expression of cells which occur during the induction of enzymes and the differentiation of tissues. However, low availability of Zn in EDTA-treated lymphocyte cultures resulted in delayed maturation of 32S ribosomal RNA precursor into 28S rRNA and reduced survival of 28S compared to 18S rRNA (Chesters, 1975). This sensitivity of post-transcriptional events to lack of Zn was hard to reconcile with the above hypothesis.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2005

Impaired glucose homeostasis and mitochondrial abnormalities in offspring of rats fed a fat-rich diet in pregnancy

Paul D. Taylor; Josie McConnell; Imran Y. Khan; Kathleen Holemans; Kevin M. Lawrence; Shanta J. Persaud; Peter M. Jones; Linda Petrie; Mark A. Hanson; Lucilla Poston


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 1993

Two zinc‐dependent steps during G1 to S phase transition

John K. Chesters; Linda Petrie; Kenneth E. Lipson


Molecular Reproduction and Development | 2005

Eomesodermin is expressed in mouse oocytes and pre-implantation embryos

Josie McConnell; Linda Petrie; Fiona Stennard; Kenneth Ryan; Jennifer Nichols

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Josie McConnell

Rowett Research Institute

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Mark A. Hanson

University of Southampton

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Ronald Boyne

Rowett Research Institute

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Kathleen Holemans

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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