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Dive into the research topics where Luke S. Tain is active.

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Featured researches published by Luke S. Tain.


Nature Neuroscience | 2009

Rapamycin activation of 4E-BP prevents parkinsonian dopaminergic neuron loss

Luke S. Tain; Heather Mortiboys; Ran N. Tao; Elena Ziviani; Oliver Bandmann; Alexander J. Whitworth

Mutations in PINK1 and PARK2 cause autosomal recessive parkinsonism, a neurodegenerative disorder that is characterized by the loss of dopaminergic neurons. To discover potential therapeutic pathways, we identified factors that genetically interact with Drosophila park and Pink1. We found that overexpression of the translation inhibitor Thor (4E-BP) can suppress all of the pathologic phenotypes, including degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in Drosophila. 4E-BP is activated in vivo by the TOR inhibitor rapamycin, which could potently suppress pathology in Pink1 and park mutants. Rapamycin also ameliorated mitochondrial defects in cells from individuals with PARK2 mutations. Recently, 4E-BP was shown to be inhibited by the most common cause of parkinsonism, dominant mutations in LRRK2. We also found that loss of the Drosophila LRRK2 homolog activated 4E-BP and was also able to suppress Pink1 and park pathology. Thus, in conjunction with recent findings, our results suggest that pharmacologic stimulation of 4E-BP activity may represent a viable therapeutic approach for multiple forms of parkinsonism.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2009

Drosophila HtrA2 is dispensable for apoptosis but acts downstream of PINK1 independently from Parkin.

Luke S. Tain; Ruhena B. Chowdhury; Ran N. Tao; Helene Plun-Favreau; Nicoleta Moisoi; Martins Lm; Julian Downward; Alexander J. Whitworth; N. Tapon

High temperature requirement A2 (HtrA2/Omi) is a mitochondrial protease that exhibits proapoptotic and cell-protective properties and has been linked to Parkinsons disease (PD). Impaired mitochondrial function is a common trait in PD patients, and is likely to play a significant role in pathogenesis of parkinsonism, but the molecular mechanisms remain poorly understood. Genetic studies in Drosophila have provided valuable insight into the function of other PD-linked genes, in particular PINK1 and parkin, and their role in maintaining mitochondrial integrity. Recently, HtrA2 was shown to be phosphorylated in a PINK1-dependent manner, suggesting it might act in the PINK1 pathway. Here, we describe the characterization of mutations in Drosophila HtrA2, and genetic analysis of its function with PINK1 and parkin. Interestingly, we find HtrA2 appears to be dispensable for developmental or stress-induced apoptosis. In addition, we found HtrA2 mutants share some phenotypic similarities with parkin and PINK1 mutants, suggesting that it may function in maintaining mitochondrial integrity. Our genetic interaction studies, including analysis of double-mutant combinations and epistasis experiments, suggest HtrA2 acts downstream of PINK1 but in a pathway parallel to Parkin.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

MTERF3 Regulates Mitochondrial Ribosome Biogenesis in Invertebrates and Mammals

Anna Wredenberg; Marie Lagouge; Ana Bratic; Metodi D. Metodiev; Henrik Spåhr; Arnaud Mourier; Christoph Freyer; Benedetta Ruzzenente; Luke S. Tain; Sebastian Grönke; Francesca Baggio; Christian Kukat; Elisabeth Kremmer; Rolf Wibom; Paola Loguercio Polosa; Bianca Habermann; Linda Partridge; Chan Bae Park; Nils-Göran Larsson

Regulation of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) expression is critical for the control of oxidative phosphorylation in response to physiological demand, and this regulation is often impaired in disease and aging. We have previously shown that mitochondrial transcription termination factor 3 (MTERF3) is a key regulator that represses mtDNA transcription in the mouse, but its molecular mode of action has remained elusive. Based on the hypothesis that key regulatory mechanisms for mtDNA expression are conserved in metazoans, we analyzed Mterf3 knockout and knockdown flies. We demonstrate here that decreased expression of MTERF3 not only leads to activation of mtDNA transcription, but also impairs assembly of the large mitochondrial ribosomal subunit. This novel function of MTERF3 in mitochondrial ribosomal biogenesis is conserved in the mouse, thus we identify a novel and unexpected role for MTERF3 in coordinating the crosstalk between transcription and translation for the regulation of mammalian mtDNA gene expression.


PLOS Biology | 2014

Lowered Insulin Signalling Ameliorates Age-Related Sleep Fragmentation in Drosophila

Athanasios Metaxakis; Luke S. Tain; Sebastian Grönke; Oliver Hendrich; Yvonne Hinze; Ulrike Birras; Linda Partridge

Reduced insulin signaling improves sleep quality in flies and is protective against age-related sleep deterioration.


Cell Reports | 2016

Lithium Promotes Longevity through GSK3/NRF2-Dependent Hormesis

Jorge Iván Castillo-Quan; Li Li; Kerri J. Kinghorn; Dobril K. Ivanov; Luke S. Tain; Cathy Slack; Fiona Kerr; Tobias Nespital; Janet M. Thornton; John Hardy; Ivana Bjedov; Linda Partridge

Summary The quest to extend healthspan via pharmacological means is becoming increasingly urgent, both from a health and economic perspective. Here we show that lithium, a drug approved for human use, promotes longevity and healthspan. We demonstrate that lithium extends lifespan in female and male Drosophila, when administered throughout adulthood or only later in life. The life-extending mechanism involves the inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) and activation of the transcription factor nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor (NRF-2). Combining genetic loss of the NRF-2 repressor Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (Keap1) with lithium treatment revealed that high levels of NRF-2 activation conferred stress resistance, while low levels additionally promoted longevity. The discovery of GSK-3 as a therapeutic target for aging will likely lead to more effective treatments that can modulate mammalian aging and further improve health in later life.


Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2014

Lithium suppresses Aβ pathology by inhibiting translation in an adult Drosophila model of Alzheimer's disease.

Oyinkan Sofola-Adesakin; Jorge Ivan Castillo-Quan; Charalampos Rallis; Luke S. Tain; Ivana Bjedov; Iain Rogers; Li Li; Pedro Martinez; Mobina Khericha; Melissa Cabecinha; Jurg Bahler; Linda Partridge

The greatest risk factor for Alzheimers disease (AD) is age, and changes in the ageing nervous system are likely contributors to AD pathology. Amyloid beta (Aβ) accumulation, which occurs as a result of the amyloidogenic processing of amyloid precursor protein (APP), is thought to initiate the pathogenesis of AD, eventually leading to neuronal cell death. Previously, we developed an adult-onset Drosophila model of AD. Mutant Aβ42 accumulation led to increased mortality and neuronal dysfunction in the adult flies. Furthermore, we showed that lithium reduced Aβ42 protein, but not mRNA, and was able to rescue Aβ42-induced toxicity. In the current study, we investigated the mechanism/s by which lithium modulates Aβ42 protein levels and Aβ42 induced toxicity in the fly model. We found that lithium caused a reduction in protein synthesis in Drosophila and hence the level of Aβ42. At both the low and high doses tested, lithium rescued the locomotory defects induced by Aβ42, but it rescued lifespan only at lower doses, suggesting that long-term, high-dose lithium treatment may have induced toxicity. Lithium also down-regulated translation in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe associated with increased chronological lifespan. Our data highlight a role for lithium and reduced protein synthesis as potential therapeutic targets for AD pathogenesis.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2014

Drosophila melanogaster LRPPRC2 is involved in coordination of mitochondrial translation

Francesca Baggio; Ana Bratic; Arnaud Mourier; Timo E.S. Kauppila; Luke S. Tain; Christian Kukat; Bianca Habermann; Linda Partridge; Nils-Göran Larsson

Members of the pentatricopeptide repeat domain (PPR) protein family bind RNA and are important for post-transcriptional control of organelle gene expression in unicellular eukaryotes, metazoans and plants. They also have a role in human pathology, as mutations in the leucine-rich PPR-containing (LRPPRC) gene cause severe neurodegeneration. We have previously shown that the mammalian LRPPRC protein and its Drosophila melanogaster homolog DmLRPPRC1 (also known as bicoid stability factor) are necessary for mitochondrial translation by controlling stability and polyadenylation of mRNAs. We here report characterization of DmLRPPRC2, a second fruit fly homolog of LRPPRC, and show that it has a predominant mitochondrial localization and interacts with a stem-loop interacting RNA binding protein (DmSLIRP2). Ubiquitous downregulation of DmLrpprc2 expression causes respiratory chain dysfunction, developmental delay and shortened lifespan. Unexpectedly, decreased DmLRPPRC2 expression does not globally affect steady-state levels or polyadenylation of mitochondrial transcripts. However, some mitochondrial transcripts abnormally associate with the mitochondrial ribosomes and some products are dramatically overproduced and other ones decreased, which, in turn, results in severe deficiency of respiratory chain complexes. The function of DmLRPPRC2 thus seems to be to ensure that mitochondrial transcripts are presented to the mitochondrial ribosomes in an orderly fashion to avoid poorly coordinated translation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Nuclear hormone receptor DHR96 mediates the resistance to xenobiotics but not the increased lifespan of insulin-mutant Drosophila

Sonita Afschar; Janne M. Toivonen; Julia Hoffmann; Luke S. Tain; Daniela Wieser; Andrew John Finlayson; Yasmine Driege; Nazif Alic; Sahar Emran; Julia Stinn; Jenny Froehlich; Matthew D.W. Piper; Linda Partridge

Significance Lifespan of animals can be extended by genetic and environmental interventions, which often also induce resistance to toxins. This association has given rise to the Green Theory of Aging, which suggests that the ability to remove toxins is limiting for lifespan. To test this idea, we genetically increased resistance to toxins in Drosophila, but found no consequent increase in lifespan. Furthermore, we could block the xenobiotic resistance of genetically long-lived flies without reducing their lifespan. It will be important to understand whether the xenobiotic resistance of long-lived mice is also a correlated, rather than a causal, trait, and to understand the functional significance of the common increase in xenobiotic resistance in long-lived animals. Lifespan of laboratory animals can be increased by genetic, pharmacological, and dietary interventions. Increased expression of genes involved in xenobiotic metabolism, together with resistance to xenobiotics, are frequent correlates of lifespan extension in the nematode worm Caenorhabditis elegans, the fruit fly Drosophila, and mice. The Green Theory of Aging suggests that this association is causal, with the ability of cells to rid themselves of lipophilic toxins limiting normal lifespan. To test this idea, we experimentally increased resistance of Drosophila to the xenobiotic dichlordiphenyltrichlorethan (DDT), by artificial selection or by transgenic expression of a gene encoding a cytochrome P450. Although both interventions increased DDT resistance, neither increased lifespan. Furthermore, dietary restriction increased lifespan without increasing xenobiotic resistance, confirming that the two traits can be uncoupled. Reduced activity of the insulin/Igf signaling (IIS) pathway increases resistance to xenobiotics and extends lifespan in Drosophila, and can also increase longevity in C. elegans, mice, and possibly humans. We identified a nuclear hormone receptor, DHR96, as an essential mediator of the increased xenobiotic resistance of IIS mutant flies. However, the IIS mutants remained long-lived in the absence of DHR96 and the xenobiotic resistance that it conferred. Thus, in Drosophila IIS mutants, increased xenobiotic resistance and enhanced longevity are not causally connected. The frequent co-occurrence of the two traits may instead have evolved because, in nature, lowered IIS can signal the presence of pathogens. It will be important to determine whether enhanced xenobiotic metabolism is also a correlated, rather than a causal, trait in long-lived mice.


eLife | 2017

Changes of mitochondrial ultrastructure and function during ageing in mice and Drosophila

Tobias Brandt; Arnaud Mourier; Luke S. Tain; Linda Partridge; Nils-Göran Larsson; Werner Kühlbrandt

Ageing is a progressive decline of intrinsic physiological functions. We examined the impact of ageing on the ultrastructure and function of mitochondria in mouse and fruit flies (Drosophila melanogaster) by electron cryo-tomography and respirometry. We discovered distinct age-related changes in both model organisms. Mitochondrial function and ultrastructure are maintained in mouse heart, whereas subpopulations of mitochondria from mouse liver show age-related changes in membrane morphology. Subpopulations of mitochondria from young and old mouse kidney resemble those described for apoptosis. In aged flies, respiratory activity is compromised and the production of peroxide radicals is increased. In about 50% of mitochondria from old flies, the inner membrane organization breaks down. This establishes a clear link between inner membrane architecture and functional decline. Mitochondria were affected by ageing to very different extents, depending on the organism and possibly on the degree to which tissues within the same organism are protected against mitochondrial damage. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.24662.001


Molecular Systems Biology | 2017

A proteomic atlas of insulin signalling reveals tissue-specific mechanisms of longevity assurance

Luke S. Tain; Robert Sehlke; Chirag Jain; Manopriya Chokkalingam; Nagarjuna Nagaraj; Paul Essers; Mark Rassner; Sebastian Grönke; Jenny Froelich; Christoph Dieterich; Matthias Mann; Nazif Alic; Andreas Beyer; Linda Partridge

Lowered activity of the insulin/IGF signalling (IIS) network can ameliorate the effects of ageing in laboratory animals and, possibly, humans. Although transcriptome remodelling in long‐lived IIS mutants has been extensively documented, the causal mechanisms contributing to extended lifespan, particularly in specific tissues, remain unclear. We have characterized the proteomes of four key insulin‐sensitive tissues in a long‐lived Drosophila IIS mutant and control, and detected 44% of the predicted proteome (6,085 proteins). Expression of ribosome‐associated proteins in the fat body was reduced in the mutant, with a corresponding, tissue‐specific reduction in translation. Expression of mitochondrial electron transport chain proteins in fat body was increased, leading to increased respiration, which was necessary for IIS‐mediated lifespan extension, and alone sufficient to mediate it. Proteasomal subunits showed altered expression in IIS mutant gut, and gut‐specific over‐expression of the RPN6 proteasomal subunit, was sufficient to increase proteasomal activity and extend lifespan, whilst inhibition of proteasome activity abolished IIS‐mediated longevity. Our study thus uncovered strikingly tissue‐specific responses of cellular processes to lowered IIS acting in concert to ameliorate ageing.

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