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Dive into the research topics where Michele M. Maxwell is active.

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Featured researches published by Michele M. Maxwell.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

SIRT2 inhibition achieves neuroprotection by decreasing sterol biosynthesis

Ruth Luthi-Carter; David M. Taylor; Judit Pallos; Emmanuel Lambert; Allison Amore; Alex Parker; Hilary Moffitt; Donna L. Smith; Heike Runne; Ozgun Gokce; Alexandre Kuhn; Zhongmin Xiang; Michele M. Maxwell; Steven A. Reeves; Gillian P. Bates; Christian Neri; Leslie M. Thompson; J. Lawrence Marsh; Aleksey G. Kazantsev

Huntington’s disease (HD), an incurable neurodegenerative disorder, has a complex pathogenesis including protein aggregation and the dysregulation of neuronal transcription and metabolism. Here, we demonstrate that inhibition of sirtuin 2 (SIRT2) achieves neuroprotection in cellular and invertebrate models of HD. Genetic or pharmacologic inhibition of SIRT2 in a striatal neuron model of HD resulted in gene expression changes including significant down-regulation of RNAs responsible for sterol biosynthesis. Whereas mutant huntingtin fragments increased sterols in neuronal cells, SIRT2 inhibition reduced sterol levels via decreased nuclear trafficking of SREBP-2. Importantly, manipulation of sterol biosynthesis at the transcriptional level mimicked SIRT2 inhibition, demonstrating that the metabolic effects of SIRT2 inhibition are sufficient to diminish mutant huntingtin toxicity. These data identify SIRT2 inhibition as a promising avenue for HD therapy and elucidate a unique mechanism of SIRT2-inhibitor-mediated neuroprotection. Furthermore, the ascertainment of SIRT2’s role in regulating cellular metabolism demonstrates a central function shared with other sirtuin proteins.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2008

Biological and potential therapeutic roles of sirtuin deacetylases.

David M. Taylor; Michele M. Maxwell; Ruth Luthi-Carter; Aleksey G. Kazantsev

Abstract.Sirtuins comprise a unique class of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+)-dependent deacetylases that target multiple protein substrates to execute diverse biological functions. These enzymes are key regulators of clinically important cellular and organismal processes, including metabolism, cell division and aging. The desire to understand the important determinants of human health and lifespan has resulted in a firestorm of work on the seven mammalian sirtuins in less than a decade. The implication of sirtuins in medically important areas such as diabetes, cancer, cardiovascular dysfunction and neurodegenerative disease has further catapulted them to a prominent status as potential targets for nutritional and therapeutic development. Here, we present a review of published results on sirtuin biology and its relevance to human disease.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

The Sirtuin 2 microtubule deacetylase is an abundant neuronal protein that accumulates in the aging CNS

Michele M. Maxwell; Elizabeth M. Tomkinson; Johnathan Nobles; John W. Wizeman; Allison Amore; Luisa Quinti; Vanita Chopra; Steven M. Hersch; Aleksey G. Kazantsev

Sirtuin 2 (SIRT2) is one of seven known mammalian protein deacetylases homologous to the yeast master lifespan regulator Sir2. In recent years, the sirtuin protein deacetylases have emerged as candidate therapeutic targets for many human diseases, including metabolic and age-dependent neurological disorders. In non-neuronal cells, SIRT2 has been shown to function as a tubulin deacetylase and a key regulator of cell division and differentiation. However, the distribution and function of the SIRT2 microtubule (MT) deacetylase in differentiated, postmitotic neurons remain largely unknown. Here, we show abundant and preferential expression of specific isoforms of SIRT2 in the mammalian central nervous system and find that a previously uncharacterized form, SIRT2.3, exhibits age-dependent accumulation in the mouse brain and spinal cord. Further, our studies reveal that focal areas of endogenous SIRT2 expression correlate with reduced α-tubulin acetylation in primary mouse cortical neurons and suggest that the brain-enriched species of SIRT2 may function as the predominant MT deacetylases in mature neurons. Recent reports have demonstrated an association between impaired tubulin acetyltransferase activity and neurodegenerative disease; viewed in this light, our results showing age-dependent accumulation of the SIRT2 neuronal MT deacetylase in wild-type mice suggest a functional link between tubulin acetylation patterns and the aging brain.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2011

A Brain-Permeable Small Molecule Reduces Neuronal Cholesterol by Inhibiting Activity of Sirtuin 2 Deacetylase

David M. Taylor; Uma Balabadra; Zhongmin Xiang; Ben Woodman; Sarah Meade; Allison Amore; Michele M. Maxwell; Steven A. Reeves; Gillian P. Bates; Ruth Luthi-Carter; Philip A. S. Lowden; Aleksey G. Kazantsev

Sirtuin 2 (SIRT2) deacetylase-dependent inhibition mediates neuroprotective reduction of cholesterol biosynthesis in an in vitro Huntingtons disease model. This study sought to identify the first brain-permeable SIRT2 inhibitor and to characterize its cholesterol-reducing properties in neuronal models. Using biochemical sirtuin deacetylation assays, we screened a brain-permeable in silico compound library, yielding 3-(1-azepanylsulfonyl)-N-(3-bromphenyl)benzamide as the most potent and selective SIRT2 inhibitor. Pharmacokinetic studies demonstrated brain-permeability but limited metabolic stability of the selected candidate. In accordance with previous observations, this SIRT2 inhibitor stimulated cytoplasmic retention of sterol regulatory element binding protein-2 and subsequent transcriptional downregulation of cholesterol biosynthesis genes, resulting in reduced total cholesterol in primary striatal neurons. Furthermore, the identified inhibitor reduced cholesterol in cultured naïve neuronal cells and brain slices from wild-type mice. The outcome of this study provides a clear opportunity for lead optimization and drug development, targeting metabolic dysfunctions in CNS disorders where abnormal cholesterol homeostasis is implicated.


PLOS Currents | 2010

Evaluation of Histone Deacetylases as Drug Targets in Huntington's Disease models Study of HDACs in brain tissues from R6/2 and CAG140 knock-in HD mouse models and human patients and in a neuronal HD cell model.

Luisa Quinti; Vanita Chopra; Dante Rotili; Sergio Valente; Allison Amore; Gianluigi Franci; Sarah Meade; Marta Valenza; Lucia Altucci; Michele M. Maxwell; Steven M. Hersch; Antonello Mai; Aleksey G. Kazantsev

The family of histone deacetylases (HDACs) has recently emerged as important drug targets for treatment of slow progressive neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntington’s disease (HD). Broad pharmaceutical inhibition of HDACs has shown neuroprotective effects in various HD models. Here we examined the susceptibility of HDAC targets for drug treatment in affected brain areas during HD progression. We observed increased HDAC1 and decreased HDAC4, 5 and 6 levels, correlating with disease progression, in cortices and striata of HD R6/2 mice. However, there were no significant changes in HDAC protein levels, assessed in an age-dependent manner, in HD knock-in CAG140 mice and we did not observe significant changes in HDAC1 levels in human HD brains. We further assessed acetylation levels of α-tubulin, as a biomarker of HDAC6 activity, and found it unchanged in cortices from R6/2, knock-in, and human subjects at all disease stages. Inhibition of deacetylase activities was identical in cortical extracts from R6/2 and wild-type mice treated with a class II-selective HDAC inhibitor. Lastly, treatment with class I- and II-selective HDAC inhibitors showed similar responses in HD and wild-type rat striatal cells. In conclusion, our results show that class I and class II HDAC targets are present and accessible for chronic drug treatment during HD progression and provide impetus for therapeutic development of brain-permeable class- or isoform-selective inhibitors.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2010

Dexamethasone induces dysferlin in myoblasts and enhances their myogenic differentiation

Joseph J. Belanto; Silvia Diaz-Perez; Clara E. Magyar; Michele M. Maxwell; Yasemin Yilmaz; Kasey Topp; Guney Boso; Catriona Jamieson; Nicholas A. Cacalano; Christina Jamieson

Glucocorticoids are beneficial in many muscular dystrophies but they are ineffective in treating dysferlinopathy, a rare muscular dystrophy caused by loss of dysferlin. We sought to understand the molecular basis for this disparity by studying the effects of a glucocorticoid on differentiation of the myoblast cell line, C2C12, and dysferlin-deficient C2C12s. We found that pharmacologic doses of dexamethasone enhanced the myogenic fusion efficiency of C2C12s and increased the induction of dysferlin, along with specific myogenic transcription factors, sarcolemmal and structural proteins. In contrast, the dysferlin-deficient C2C12 cell line demonstrated a reduction in long myotubes and early induction of particular muscle differentiation proteins, most notably, myosin heavy chain. Dexamethasone partially reversed the defect in myogenic fusion in the dysferlin-deficient C2C12 cells. We hypothesize that a key therapeutic benefit of glucocorticoids may be the up-regulation of dysferlin as an important component of glucocorticoid-enhanced myogenic differentiation.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2006

Two approaches to drug discovery in SOD1-mediated ALS.

Wendy J. Broom; Kristen E. Auwarter; Jake Ni; Deborah E. Russel; Li-An Yeh; Michele M. Maxwell; Marcie A. Glicksman; Aleksey G. Kazantsev; Robert H. Brown

Familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) accounts for 10% of all ALS cases; approximately 25% of these cases are due to mutations in the Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase gene (SOD1). To date, 105 different mutations spanning all 5 exons have been identified in the SOD1 gene. Mutant SOD1-associated ALS is caused by a toxic gain of function of the mutated protein. Therefore, regardless of the specific mechanism whereby mutant SOD1 initiates motor neuron death, the authors hypothesize that measures that decrease levels of mutant SOD1 protein should ameliorate the phenotype in transgenic mice and potentially in patients with SOD1-mediated disease. They have designed 2 cell-based screening assays to identify small, brain-permeant molecules that inactivate expression of the SOD1 gene or increase the degradation of the SOD1 protein. Here they describe the development and optimization of these assays and the results of high-throughput screening using a variety of compound libraries, including a total of more than 116,000 compounds. The majority of the hit compounds identified that down-regulated SOD1 were shown to be toxic in a cell-based viability assay or were nonselective transcription inhibitors, but work is continuing on a number of nonspecific inhibitors of SOD1 expression. Ultimately, the authors believe that these 2 cell-based assays will provide powerful strategies to identify novel therapies for the treatment of inherited SOD1-associated forms of ALS.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2007

Discovery of a Novel Small-Molecule Targeting Selective Clearance of Mutant Huntingtin Fragments

Myra Coufal; Michele M. Maxwell; Deborah E. Russel; Allison M. Amore; Stephen M. Altmann; Zane R. Hollingsworth; Anne B. Young; David E. Housman; Aleksey G. Kazantsev

CAG-triplet repeat extension, translated into polyglutamines within the coding frame of otherwise unrelated gene products, causes 9 incurable neurodegenerative disorders, including Huntingtons disease. Although an expansion in the CAG repeat length is the autosomal dominant mutation that causes the fully penetrant neurological phenotypes, the repeat length is inversely correlated with the age of onset. The precise molecular mechanism(s) of neurodegeneration remains elusive, but compelling evidence implicates the protein or its proteolytic fragments as the cause for the gain of novel pathological function(s). The authors sought to identify small molecules that target the selective clearance of polypeptides containing pathological polyglutamine extension. In a high-throughput chemical screen, they identified compounds that facilitate the clearance of a small huntingtin fragment with extended polyglutamines fused to green fluorescent protein reporter. Identified hits were validated in dose-response and toxicity tests. Compounds have been further tested in an assay for clearance of a larger huntingtin fragment, containing either pathological or normal polyglutamine repeats. In this assay, the authors identified compounds selectively targeting the clearance of mutant but not normal huntingtin fragments. These compounds were subjected to a functional assay, which yielded a lead compound that rescues cells from induced mutant polyglutamine toxicity. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2007:351-360)


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2012

Highlights of the Keystone Symposium: sirtuins in metabolism, aging and disease

Michele M. Maxwell; Julien Francisco Zaldivar‐Jolissaint; Antonello Mai; Tiago F. Outeiro; Aleksey G. Kazanstev

From February 12–16, 2012, leading members of the sirtuin scientific community assembled in Tahoe, CA to attend the Keystone Symposium “Sirtuins in Aging, Metabolism, and Disease.” It was a vibrant and lively meeting, and in the spirit of Keystone Symposia, both established sirtuin researchers and those new to the field enjoyed a unique opportunity to interact and exchange ideas.


Science | 2007

Sirtuin 2 Inhibitors Rescue α-Synuclein-Mediated Toxicity in Models of Parkinson's Disease

Tiago Fleming Outeiro; Eirene Kontopoulos; Stephen M. Altmann; Irina Kufareva; Katherine E. Strathearn; Allison Amore; Catherine B. Volk; Michele M. Maxwell; Jean-Christophe Rochet; Pamela J. McLean; Anne B. Young; Ruben Abagyan; Mel B. Feany; Bradley T. Hyman; Aleksey G. Kazantsev

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Ruth Luthi-Carter

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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David E. Housman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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