Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Maureen Dempster is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Maureen Dempster.


Nature | 1998

Enhanced long-term potentiation and impaired learning in mice with mutant postsynaptic density-95 protein

Martine Migaud; Paul Charlesworth; Maureen Dempster; Lorna C. Webster; Ayako M. Watabe; Michael Makhinson; Yong He; Mark Ramsay; Richard G. M. Morris; John H. Morrison; Thomas J. O'Dell; Seth G. N. Grant

Specific patterns of neuronal firing induce changes in synaptic strength that may contribute to learning and memory. If the postsynaptic NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptors are blocked, long-term potentiation (LTP) and long-term depression (LTD) of synaptic transmission and the learning of spatial information are prevented. The NMDA receptor can bind a protein known as postsynaptic density-95 (PSD-95), which may regulate the localization of and/or signalling by the receptor. In mutant mice lacking PSD-95, the frequency function of NMDA-dependent LTP and LTD is shifted to produce strikingly enhanced LTP at different frequencies of synaptic stimulation. In keeping with neural-network models that incorporate bidirectional learning rules, this frequency shift is accompanied by severely impaired spatial learning. Synaptic NMDA-receptor currents, subunit expression, localization and synaptic morphology are all unaffected in the mutant mice. PSD-95 thus appears to be important in coupling the NMDA receptor to pathways that control bidirectional synaptic plasticity and learning.


Human Genetics | 1996

Genetic basis of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in the United Kingdom: a systematic analysis of predisposing mutations and allelic variation in the PRNP gene

O. Windl; Maureen Dempster; J. Peter Estibeiro; Richard Lathe; Rajith de Silva; Thomas Esmonde; Robert G. Will; Anthea Springbett; Tracy Campbell; Katie Sidle; Mark S. Palmer; John Collinge

Abstract Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is a transmissible neurodegenerative disorder characterized by the accumulation of aggregates of a cellular protein, PrP, in the brain. In both human and animals, genetic alterations to the gene encoding PrP (PRNP in human) modulate susceptiblity to CJD. The recent epidemic of bovine spongiform encephalopathy in the UK has raised the possibility of transmission from animal produce to humans. To provide a baseline against which to assess possible risk factors, we have determined the frequencies of predisposing mutations and allelic variants in PRNP and their relative contributions to disease. Systematic PRNP genotype analysis was performed on suspected CJD cases referred to the National Surveillance Unit in the UK over the period 1990–1993. Inspection of 120 candidate cases revealed 67 patients with definite and probable CJD, based on clinical and neuropathological criteria. No PRNP mutations were detected in any of the remaining 53 patients assessed as “non-CJD”. A disease-associated mutation in the PRNP gene was identified in nine (13.4%) definite and probable cases of CJD, a reliable estimate of the incidence of PRNP-related inherited CJD based on a prospective epidemiological series. Within the group of sporadic CJD patients (lacking PRNP mutations), we confirmed that the genotype distribution with respect to the common methionine/valine (Met/Val) polymorphism at codon 129 within PRNP was significantly different from the normal Caucasian population. The incidence of Met homozygosity at this site was more than doubled and correlated with increased susceptibility to the development of sporadic CJD. Unlike other recent studies, Val homozygosity was also confirmed to be a significant risk factor in sporadic CJD, with the relative risks for the three genotypes Met/Met:Val/Val:Met/Val being 11:4:1.


Gene | 1995

A candidate marsupial PrP gene reveals two domains conserved in mammalian PrP proteins

O. Windl; Maureen Dempster; Peter Estibeiro; Rick Lathe

The normal function of the pathogenicity-related protein, PrP (or prion protein), is unknown. To shed light on functionally important domains, we have characterized a candidate marsupial PrP gene. The deduced marsupial PrP has an overall identity of about 80% to eutherian PrP at the amino acid (aa) level. This similarity is not equally distributed and two regions (aa 118-142 and 177-223) are particularly highly conserved. In contrast, a repeat region in the N-terminal half of the marsupial PrP shows dipeptide inserts not described in other PrP. Another particular feature of the marsupial gene is the lack of a continuous ORF on the antisense strand, as is found in most eutherian PrP. We propose that antisense ORFs found in other species are artefactual. Comparison with all known PrP argues that the molecule characterised is the true marsupial PrP orthologue.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1981

Characterisation of a New Tumorous-Head Mutant of Drosophila melanogaster

Mary Bownes; Sarah Roberts; Maureen Dempster; Nicole Bournias-Vardiabasis

SummaryA new homoeotic mutant, I127, showing abnormal growths in the head region including homoeotic transformation of eye to genitalia and antenna to leg, was isolated in a screen designed to find new alleles of the tumorous head (tuh-3), mutation. Similarities in the phenotype and genetics of the mutant, and complementation studies with tuh-1; tuh-3, suggest that I127 is indeed an allele of tuh-3. In combination with the first chromosome modifier tuh-1, the mutant is temperature-sensitive during the third larval instar, giving an increased penetrance of the tumorous head phenotype when reared at 25° C as opposed to 18° C. The isolation of further alleles at the tumorous-head locus are essential. The types of morphological defects which can result from mutations at this locus would enable us to establish if this is a complex locus, and if null mutations are lethal during development. The interactions of the tumorous-head gene with first chromosome modifiers and other homoeotic mutations will only be understood if we able to induce a number of mutations at this locus, and as a consequence begin to elucidate the role of the wild-type gene product in normal development.


Nature | 1990

Telomere reduction in human colorectal carcinoma and with ageing.

Nicholas D. Hastie; Maureen Dempster; Malcolm G. Dunlop; Alastair M. Thompson; Daryll K. Green; Robin C. Allshire


Nucleic Acids Research | 1989

Human telomeres contain at least three types of G–rich repeat distributed non-randomly

Robin C. Allshire; Maureen Dempster; Nicholas D. Hastie


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 1995

Inherited Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease in a British family associated with a novel 144 base pair insertion of the prion protein gene.

David Nicholl; O. Windl; R De Silva; S Sawcer; Maureen Dempster; James Ironside; J P Estibeiro; G M Yuill; Rick Lathe; Robert G. Will


Development | 1983

20-hydroxyecdysone stimulates tissue-specific yolk-protein gene transcription in both male and female Drosophila

Mary Bownes; Mairearad Blair; Robert Kozma; Maureen Dempster


Neuroscience Letters | 1994

Neuropathological phenotype and 'prion protein' genotype correlation in sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease

Rajith de Silva; James Ironside; Linda McCardle; Thomas Esmonde; Jeanne E. Bell; Robert G. Will; Otto Windl; Maureen Dempster; Peter Estibeiro; Rick Lathe


Development | 1983

Expression of the yolk-protein genes in the mutant doublesex dominant (dsxD) of Drosophila melanogaster

Mary Bownes; Maureen Dempster; Mairearad Blair

Collaboration


Dive into the Maureen Dempster's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mary Bownes

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

O. Windl

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rick Lathe

University of Edinburgh

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge