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Dive into the research topics where Martin R. Higgs is active.

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Featured researches published by Martin R. Higgs.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Hepatitis C virus proteins induce lipogenesis and defective triglyceride secretion in transgenic mice

Hervé Lerat; Helene L. Kammoun; Isabelle Hainault; Emilie Mérour; Martin R. Higgs; Céline Callens; Stanley M. Lemon; Fabienne Foufelle; Jean-Michel Pawlotsky

Chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is associated with altered lipid metabolism and hepatocellular steatosis. Virus-induced steatosis is a cytopathic effect of HCV replication. The goal of this study was to examine the mechanisms underlying HCV-induced lipid metabolic defects in a transgenic mouse model expressing the full HCV protein repertoire at levels corresponding to natural human infection. In this model, expression of the HCV full-length open reading frame was associated with hepatocellular steatosis and reduced plasma triglyceride levels. Triglyceride secretion was impaired, whereas lipogenesis was activated. Increased lipogenic enzyme transcription was observed, resulting from maturational activation and nuclear translocation of sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1c (SREBP1c). However, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress markers were expressed at similar levels in both HCV transgenic mice and their wild type counterparts, suggesting that SREBP1c proteolytic cleavage in the presence of HCV proteins was independent of ER stress. In conclusion, transgenic mice expressing the HCV full-length polyprotein at low levels have decreased plasma triglyceride levels and develop hepatocellular steatosis in the same way as HCV-infected patients. In these mice, SREBP1c activation by one or several HCV proteins induces de novo triglyceride synthesis via the lipogenic pathway, in a manner independent of ER stress, whereas triglyceride secretion is simultaneously reduced.


Cancer Research | 2010

Downregulation of Gadd45β Expression by Hepatitis C Virus Leads to Defective Cell Cycle Arrest

Martin R. Higgs; Hervé Lerat; Jean-Michel Pawlotsky

Members of the Gadd45 family play central roles in the cellular response to genotoxic stress and have been implicated in several human cancers, including hepatocellular carcinomas. Chronic infection by hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a major risk factor for the onset and development of primary hepatocellular tumors, although the underlying mechanisms are unclear. Here, we show a novel link between diminished Gadd45beta expression and HCV infection. Inhibited Gadd45beta expression was observed in both nontumoral and tumoral tissues from infected individuals, and in cell lines harboring a HCV replicon and the infectious HCV strain JFH1. Decreased Gadd45beta expression was confirmed in vivo in a transgenic murine model expressing the entire HCV open reading frame. Mechanistically, hypermethylation of the Gadd45beta promoter in the presence of HCV is responsible for this defect. Diminished Gadd45beta expression leads to aberrant cell cycle arrest and diminished DNA excision repair. Together, these results provide a novel insight into the mechanisms involved in HCV-associated hepatocellular carcinomas, showing that reduced Gadd45beta expression may play a contributory role to this process, and providing evidence that HCV may interfere with epigenetic gene expression by altering promoter methylation.


Journal of General Virology | 2014

'Liver let die': oxidative DNA damage and hepatotropic viruses.

Martin R. Higgs; Philippe Chouteau; H. Lerat

Chronic infections by the hepatotropic viruses hepatitis B virus (HBV) and hepatitis C virus (HCV) are major risk factors for the development of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). It is estimated that more than 700,000 individuals per year die from HCC, and around 80 % of HCC is attributable to HBV or HCV infection. Despite the clear clinical importance of virus-associated HCC, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely elusive. Oxidative stress, in particular DNA lesions associated with oxidative damage, play a major contributory role in carcinogenesis, and are strongly linked to the development of many cancers, including HCC. A large body of evidence demonstrates that both HBV and HCV induce hepatic oxidative stress, with increased oxidative DNA damage being observed both in infected individuals and in murine models of infection. Here, we review the impact of HBV and HCV on the incidence and repair of oxidative DNA damage. We begin by giving a brief overview of oxidative stress and the repair of DNA lesions induced by oxidative stress. We then review in detail the evidence surrounding the mechanisms by which both viruses stimulate oxidative stress, before focusing on how the viral proteins themselves may perturb the cellular response to oxidative DNA damage, impacting upon genome stability and thus hepatocarcinogenesis.


Molecular Cell | 2015

BOD1L Is Required to Suppress Deleterious Resection of Stressed Replication Forks

Martin R. Higgs; John J. Reynolds; Alicja Winczura; Andrew N. Blackford; Valérie Borel; Edward S. Miller; Anastasia Zlatanou; Jadwiga Nieminuszczy; Ellis L. Ryan; Nicholas J. Davies; Tatjana Stankovic; Simon J. Boulton; Wojciech Niedzwiedz; Grant S. Stewart

Recognition and repair of damaged replication forks are essential to maintain genome stability and are coordinated by the combined action of the Fanconi anemia and homologous recombination pathways. These pathways are vital to protect stalled replication forks from uncontrolled nucleolytic activity, which otherwise causes irreparable genomic damage. Here, we identify BOD1L as a component of this fork protection pathway, which safeguards genome stability after replication stress. Loss of BOD1L confers exquisite cellular sensitivity to replication stress and uncontrolled resection of damaged replication forks, due to a failure to stabilize RAD51 at these forks. Blocking DNA2-dependent resection, or downregulation of the helicases BLM and FBH1, suppresses both catastrophic fork processing and the accumulation of chromosomal damage in BOD1L-deficient cells. Thus, our work implicates BOD1L as a critical regulator of genome integrity that restrains nucleolytic degradation of damaged replication forks.


Nature Genetics | 2016

TRAIP promotes DNA damage response during genome replication and is mutated in primordial dwarfism

Margaret E. Harley; Olga Murina; Andrea Leitch; Martin R. Higgs; Louise S. Bicknell; Gökhan Yigit; Andrew N. Blackford; Anastasia Zlatanou; Karen J. Mackenzie; Kaalak Reddy; Mihail Halachev; Sarah McGlasson; Martin A. M. Reijns; Adeline Fluteau; Carol Anne Martin; Simone Sabbioneda; Nursel Elcioglu; Janine Altmüller; Holger Thiele; Lynn Greenhalgh; Luciana Chessa; Mohamad Maghnie; Mahmoud Salim; Michael B. Bober; Peter Nürnberg; Bernd Wollnik; Grant S. Stewart; Andrew P. Jackson

DNA lesions encountered by replicative polymerases threaten genome stability and cell cycle progression. Here we report the identification of mutations in TRAIP, encoding an E3 RING ubiquitin ligase, in patients with microcephalic primordial dwarfism. We establish that TRAIP relocalizes to sites of DNA damage, where it is required for optimal phosphorylation of H2AX and RPA2 during S-phase in response to ultraviolet (UV) irradiation, as well as fork progression through UV-induced DNA lesions. TRAIP is necessary for efficient cell cycle progression and mutations in TRAIP therefore limit cellular proliferation, providing a potential mechanism for microcephaly and dwarfism phenotypes. Human genetics thus identifies TRAIP as a component of the DNA damage response to replication-blocking DNA lesions.


Expert Review of Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2011

Animal models in the study of hepatitis C virus-associated liver pathologies

Hervé Lerat; Martin R. Higgs; Jean-Michel Pawlotsky

It is estimated that more than 170 million individuals worldwide are chronically infected with hepatitis C virus (HCV), with approximately 20% of the cases developing cirrhosis. Each year, between 1 and 4% of patients exhibiting cirrhosis develop hepatocellular carcinoma. Chronic HCV infection is also linked with the development of several metabolic disorders, including hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance. Research into HCV-related pathologies is hampered by a relative paucity of small animal models. As a result, little is known about the molecular mechanisms involved, and much of our current knowledge is drawn by inference from in vitro studies using overexpressed proteins. In this article, we will review the currently available animal models for the study of HCV pathogenesis, with an emphasis on murine models. Then, we will provide an overview of how these models have contributed to the deciphering of the molecular mechanisms underlying dysregulated lipid metabolism and hepatocellular carcinoma during HCV infection.


Nature Genetics | 2017

Mutations in DONSON disrupt replication fork stability and cause microcephalic dwarfism

John J. Reynolds; Louise S. Bicknell; Paula Carroll; Martin R. Higgs; Ranad Shaheen; Jennie E. Murray; Dimitrios K. Papadopoulos; Andrea Leitch; Olga Murina; Žygimantė Tarnauskaitė; Sarah R. Wessel; Anastasia Zlatanou; Audrey Vernet; Alex von Kriegsheim; Rachel M A Mottram; Clare V. Logan; Hannah Bye; Yun Li; Alexander Brean; Sateesh Maddirevula; Rachel Challis; Kassiani Skouloudaki; Agaadir Almoisheer; Hessa S. Alsaif; Ariella Amar; Natalie J. Prescott; Michael B. Bober; Angela L. Duker; Eissa Faqeih; Mohammed Zain Seidahmed

To ensure efficient genome duplication, cells have evolved numerous factors that promote unperturbed DNA replication and protect, repair and restart damaged forks. Here we identify downstream neighbor of SON (DONSON) as a novel fork protection factor and report biallelic DONSON mutations in 29 individuals with microcephalic dwarfism. We demonstrate that DONSON is a replisome component that stabilizes forks during genome replication. Loss of DONSON leads to severe replication-associated DNA damage arising from nucleolytic cleavage of stalled replication forks. Furthermore, ATM- and Rad3-related (ATR)-dependent signaling in response to replication stress is impaired in DONSON-deficient cells, resulting in decreased checkpoint activity and the potentiation of chromosomal instability. Hypomorphic mutations in DONSON substantially reduce DONSON protein levels and impair fork stability in cells from patients, consistent with defective DNA replication underlying the disease phenotype. In summary, we have identified mutations in DONSON as a common cause of microcephalic dwarfism and established DONSON as a critical replication fork protein required for mammalian DNA replication and genome stability.


Advances in Clinical Chemistry | 2015

Cancer therapy and replication stress: forks on the road to perdition.

Panagiotis Kotsantis; Rebecca M. Jones; Martin R. Higgs; Eva Petermann

Deregulated DNA replication occurs in cancer where it contributes to genomic instability. This process is a target of cytotoxic therapies. Chemotherapies exploit high DNA replication in cancer cells by modifying the DNA template or by inhibiting vital enzymatic activities that lead to slowing or stalling replication fork progression. Stalled replication forks can be converted into toxic DNA double-strand breaks resulting in cell death, i.e., replication stress. While likely crucial for many cancer treatments, replication stress is poorly understood due to its complexity. While we still know relatively little about the role of replication stress in cancer therapy, technical advances in recent years have shed new light on the effect that cancer therapeutics have on replication forks and the molecular mechanisms that lead from obstructed fork progression to cell death. This chapter will give an overview of our current understanding of replication stress in the context of cancer therapy.


Archive | 2015

Cancer Therapy and Replication Stress

Panagiotis Kotsantis; Rebecca M. Jones; Martin R. Higgs; Eva Petermann

Deregulated DNA replication occurs in cancer where it contributes to genomic instability. This process is a target of cytotoxic therapies. Chemotherapies exploit high DNA replication in cancer cells by modifying the DNA template or by inhibiting vital enzymatic activities that lead to slowing or stalling replication fork progression. Stalled replication forks can be converted into toxic DNA double-strand breaks resulting in cell death, i.e., replication stress. While likely crucial for many cancer treatments, replication stress is poorly understood due to its complexity. While we still know relatively little about the role of replication stress in cancer therapy, technical advances in recent years have shed new light on the effect that cancer therapeutics have on replication forks and the molecular mechanisms that lead from obstructed fork progression to cell death. This chapter will give an overview of our current understanding of replication stress in the context of cancer therapy.


Nature Communications | 2018

PARP1 and PARP2 stabilise replication forks at base excision repair intermediates through Fbh1-dependent Rad51 regulation

George E. Ronson; Ann Liza Piberger; Martin R. Higgs; Anna Olsen; Grant S. Stewart; Peter J. McHugh; Eva Petermann; Nicholas D. Lakin

PARP1 regulates the repair of DNA single-strand breaks generated directly, or during base excision repair (BER). However, the role of PARP2 in these and other repair mechanisms is unknown. Here, we report a requirement for PARP2 in stabilising replication forks that encounter BER intermediates through Fbh1-dependent regulation of Rad51. Whereas PARP2 is dispensable for tolerance of cells to SSBs or homologous recombination dysfunction, it is redundant with PARP1 in BER. Therefore, combined disruption of PARP1 and PARP2 leads to defective BER, resulting in elevated levels of replication-associated DNA damage owing to an inability to stabilise Rad51 at damaged replication forks and prevent uncontrolled DNA resection. Together, our results demonstrate how PARP1 and PARP2 regulate two independent, but intrinsically linked aspects of DNA base damage tolerance by promoting BER directly, and by stabilising replication forks that encounter BER intermediates.PARP1 has a well characterised role in DNA break repair and base excision repair, whereas the role of PARP2 is less well understood. Here, the authors show a requirement for PARP2 in stabilising replication forks that encounter base excision repair intermediates.

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Eva Petermann

University of Birmingham

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Rachel Bayley

University of Birmingham

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Amalia Goula

University of Birmingham

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Audrey Vernet

University of Birmingham

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