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Dive into the research topics where Michelle A. Cooper is active.

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Featured researches published by Michelle A. Cooper.


Cancer Research | 2004

Small Molecule Antagonists of the σ-1 Receptor Cause Selective Release of the Death Program in Tumor and Self-Reliant Cells and Inhibit Tumor Growth in Vitro and in Vivo

Barbara Ann Spruce; Lorna Campbell; Niall McTavish; Michelle A. Cooper; M. Virginia C.L. Appleyard; Mary O'Neill; Jacqueline Howie; Jayne Samson; Stephen Watt; Karen Murray; Doris McLean; Nick R. Leslie; Stephen T. Safrany; Michelle Ferguson; John A. Peters; Alan R. Prescott; Gary Box; Angela Hayes; Bernard Nutley; Florence I. Raynaud; C. Peter Downes; Jeremy J. Lambert; Alastair M. Thompson; Suzanne A. Eccles

The acquisition of resistance to apoptosis, the cell’s intrinsic suicide program, is essential for cancers to arise and progress and is a major reason behind treatment failures. We show in this article that small molecule antagonists of the σ-1 receptor inhibit tumor cell survival to reveal caspase-dependent apoptosis. σ antagonist-mediated caspase activation and cell death are substantially attenuated by the prototypic σ-1 agonists (+)-SKF10,047 and (+)-pentazocine. Although several normal cell types such as fibroblasts, epithelial cells, and even σ receptor-rich neurons are resistant to the apoptotic effects of σ antagonists, cells that can promote autocrine survival such as lens epithelial and microvascular endothelial cells are as susceptible as tumor cells. Cellular susceptibility appears to correlate with differences in σ receptor coupling rather than levels of expression. In susceptible cells only, σ antagonists evoke a rapid rise in cytosolic calcium that is inhibited by σ-1 agonists. In at least some tumor cells, σ antagonists cause calcium-dependent activation of phospholipase C and concomitant calcium-independent inhibition of phosphatidylinositol 3′-kinase pathway signaling. Systemic administration of σ antagonists significantly inhibits the growth of evolving and established hormone-sensitive and hormone-insensitive mammary carcinoma xenografts, orthotopic prostate tumors, and p53-null lung carcinoma xenografts in immunocompromised mice in the absence of side effects. Release of a σ receptor-mediated brake on apoptosis may offer a new approach to cancer treatment.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Dysfunctional Astrocytic and Synaptic Regulation of Hypothalamic Glutamatergic Transmission in a Mouse Model of Early-Life Adversity: Relevance to Neurosteroids and Programming of the Stress Response

Benjamin G. Gunn; Linda Cunningham; Michelle A. Cooper; Nicole L. Corteen; Mohsen Seifi; Jerome D. Swinny; Jeremy J. Lambert; Delia Belelli

Adverse early-life experiences, such as poor maternal care, program an abnormal stress response that may involve an altered balance between excitatory and inhibitory signals. Here, we explored how early-life stress (ELS) affects excitatory and inhibitory transmission in corticotrophin-releasing factor (CRF)-expressing dorsal-medial (mpd) neurons of the neonatal mouse hypothalamus. We report that ELS associates with enhanced excitatory glutamatergic transmission that is manifested as an increased frequency of synaptic events and increased extrasynaptic conductance, with the latter associated with dysfunctional astrocytic regulation of glutamate levels. The neurosteroid 5α-pregnan-3α-ol-20-one (5α3α-THPROG) is an endogenous, positive modulator of GABAA receptors (GABAARs) that is abundant during brain development and rises rapidly during acute stress, thereby enhancing inhibition to curtail stress-induced activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis. In control mpd neurons, 5α3α-THPROG potently suppressed neuronal discharge, but this action was greatly compromised by prior ELS exposure. This neurosteroid insensitivity did not primarily result from perturbations of GABAergic inhibition, but rather arose functionally from the increased excitatory drive onto mpd neurons. Previous reports indicated that mice (dams) lacking the GABAAR δ subunit (δ0/0) exhibit altered maternal behavior. Intriguingly, δ0/0 offspring showed some hallmarks of abnormal maternal care that were further exacerbated by ELS. Moreover, in common with ELS, mpd neurons of δ0/0 pups exhibited increased synaptic and extrasynaptic glutamatergic transmission and consequently a blunted neurosteroid suppression of neuronal firing. This study reveals that increased synaptic and tonic glutamatergic transmission may be a common maladaptation to ELS, leading to enhanced excitation of CRF-releasing neurons, and identifies neurosteroids as putative early regulators of the stress neurocircuitry.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Characterization of the Effects of Charged Residues in the Intracellular Loop on Ion Permeation in α1 Glycine Receptor Channels

Jane E. Carland; Michelle A. Cooper; Silas Sugiharto; Hyo-Jin Jeong; Trevor M. Lewis; Peter H. Barry; John A. Peters; Jeremy J. Lambert; Andrew J. Moorhouse

The Cys loop receptor channels mediate fast synaptic transmission in the nervous system. The M2-demarcated transmembrane pore is an important determinant of their ion permeation properties. Portals within the intracellular domain are also part of the permeation pathway in cationic Cys loop receptors, with charged residues in a helical MA stretch partially lining these openings profoundly affecting channel conductance. It is unknown whether analogous portals contribute to the permeation pathway in anionic Cys loop receptors. We therefore investigated the influence of charged residues within the proposed MA stretch on functional properties of the homomeric glycine α1 receptor. Up to eight basic residues in the MA stretch were concurrently mutated to a negatively charged glutamate, and wild-type and mutant subunits were expressed in HEK-293 cells. Mutation of all eight residues produced a non-functional receptor. The greatest reduction in conductance at negative membrane potentials (from 92.2 ± 2.8 to 60.0 ± 2.2 picosiemens) was observed with glutamate present at the 377, 378, 385, and 386 positions (the 4E subunit). Inclusion of additional glutamate residues within this subunit did not decrease conductance further. Neutralizing these residues (the 4A subunit) caused a modest decrease in conductance (80.5 ± 2.3 picosiemens). Outward conductance at positive potentials was not markedly affected. Anion to cation selectivity and concentration-response relationships were unaffected by the 4A or 4E mutations. Our results identify basic residues affecting conductance in the glycine receptor, suggesting that portals are part of the extended permeation pathway but that the M2-demarcated channel pore is the dominant determinant of permeation properties in glycine receptors.


The Journal of Physiology | 2010

Novel structural determinants of single channel conductance and ion selectivity in 5-hydroxytryptamine type 3 and nicotinic acetylcholine receptors

John A. Peters; Michelle A. Cooper; Jane E. Carland; Matthew R. Livesey; Tim G. Hales; Jeremy J. Lambert

Nicotinic acetylcholine (nACh) and 5‐hydroxytryptamine type 3 (5‐HT3) receptors are cation‐selective ion channels of the pentameric ligand‐gated ion channel (pLGIC) superfamily. Multiple lines of evidence adduced over the last 30 years indicate that the lining of the channel of such receptors is formed by the α‐helical second transmembrane (TM2) domain and flanking sequences contributed by each of the five subunits present within the receptor complex. Specific amino acid residues within, and adjacent to, the TM2 domain influence single channel conductance, ion selectivity, and other aspects of receptor function that include gating and desensitization. However, more recent work has revealed important structural determinants of single channel conductance and ion selectivity that are not associated with the TM2 domain. Direct experimental evidence indicates that the intracellular domain of eukaryotic pLGICs, in particular a region of the loop linking TM3 and TM4 termed the membrane‐associated (MA) stretch, exerts a strong influence upon ion channel biophysics. Moreover, recent computational approaches, complemented by experimentation, implicate the extracellular domain as an additional important determinant of ion conduction. This brief review describes how our knowledge of ion conduction and selectivity in cation‐selective pLGICs has evolved beyond TM2.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Structural Determinants of Ca2+ Permeability and Conduction in the Human 5-Hydroxytryptamine Type 3A Receptor

Matthew R. Livesey; Michelle A. Cooper; Tarek Z. Deeb; Jane E. Carland; Janna Kozuska; Tim G. Hales; Jeremy J. Lambert; John A. Peters

Cation-selective cysteine (Cys)-loop transmitter-gated ion channels provide an important pathway for Ca2+ entry into neurones. We examined the influence on Ca2+ permeation of amino acids located at intra- and extracellular ends of the conduction pathway of the human 5-hydroxytryptamine type 3A (5-HT3A) receptor. Mutation of cytoplasmic arginine residues 432, 436, and 440 to glutamine, aspartate, and alanine (the aligned residues of the human 5-HT3B subunit (yielding 5-HT3A(QDA)) increased PCa/PCs from 1.4 to 3.7. The effect was attributable to the removal of an electrostatic influence of the Arg-436 residue. Despite its relatively high permeability to Ca2+, the single channel conductance of the 5-HT3A(QDA) receptor was depressed in a concentration-dependent and voltage-independent manner by extracellular Ca2+. A conserved aspartate, located toward the extracellular end of the conduction pathway and known to influence ionic selectivity, contributed to the inhibitory effect of Ca2+ on macroscopic currents mediated by 5-HT3A receptors. We introduced a D293A mutation into the 5-HT3A(QDA) receptor (yielding the 5-HT3A(QDA D293A) construct) to determine whether the aspartate is required for the suppression of single channel conductance by Ca2+. The D293A mutation decreased the PCa/PCs ratio to 0.25 and reduced inwardly directed single channel conductance from 41 to 30 pS but did not prevent suppression of single channel conductance by Ca2+. The D293A mutation also reduced PCa/PCs when engineered into the wild-type 5-HT3A receptor. The data helped to identify key residues in the cytoplasmic domain (Arg-436) and extracellular vestibule (Asp-293) that markedly influence PCa/PCs and additionally directly demonstrated a depression of single channel conductance by Ca2+.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2007

Dynamic modification of a mutant cytoplasmic cysteine residue modulates the conductance of the human 5-HT3A receptor.

Tarek Z. Deeb; Jane E. Carland; Michelle A. Cooper; Matthew R. Livesey; Jeremy J. Lambert; John A. Peters; Tim G. Hales

Structural models suggest that Arg436 lies within five cytoplasmic portals of the 5-HT3A receptor. We tested both the accessibility of residue 436 and the influence of its charge on single channel conductance (γ) by substituting Arg436 with Cys and examining the effect of methanethiosulfonate (MTS) reagents on γ. Inclusion of positively charged 2-aminoethyl-MTS (MTSEA) within the electrode solution reduced γ of 5-HT3A(R436C) receptors in outside-out patches from 7.8 ± 0.5 to 5.0 ± 0.5 picosiemens (pS). To increase γ, we substituted Arg436 by Cys in the 5-HT3A(R432Q,R440A) mutant, yielding the 5-HT3A(QCA) construct with a γ of 17.7 ± 0.4 pS. Modification of 5-HT3A(QCA) receptors by MTSEA or 2-(trimethylammonium) ethyl-MTS reduced γ to 8.7 ± 0.5 and 6.7 ± 0.4 pS, respectively, both significantly below that of channels exposed to nonpolar propyl-MTS. Extracellular MTSEA, but not 2-(trimethylammonium) ethyl-MTS, crossed the membrane and in so doing slowly (τ = 94 s) reduced γ. MTSEA more rapidly (τ = 15 s) reduced the γ of 5-HT3A(QCA) receptors in inside-out patches, an effect reversed by the reducing agent dithiothreitol. Cys436 modification by negatively charged 2-carboxyethyl-MTS and 2-sulfonatoethyl-MTS increasedγ to 23 ± 1.0 and 26 ± 0.7 pS, respectively. MTS reagents did not affect γ values for 5-HT3A(QDA) constructs with Cys substituted for Lys431 predicted to be outside the entrance to the portals. Collectively, the data demonstrate that the dynamic modification of the charge of a cytoplasmic residue regulates γ, consistent with the existence of cytoplasmic portals that impose a rate-limiting barrier to ion conduction in Cys loop receptors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Rings of Charge within the Extracellular Vestibule Influence Ion Permeation of the 5-HT3A Receptor

Matthew R. Livesey; Michelle A. Cooper; Jeremy J. Lambert; John A. Peters

The determinants of single channel conductance (γ) and ion selectivity within eukaryotic pentameric ligand-gated ion channels have traditionally been ascribed to amino acid residues within the second transmembrane domain and flanking sequences of their component subunits. However, recent evidence suggests that γ is additionally controlled by residues within the intracellular and extracellular domains. We examined the influence of two anionic residues (Asp113 and Asp127) within the extracellular vestibule of a high conductance human mutant 5-hydroxytryptamine type-3A (5-HT3A) receptor (5-HT3A(QDA)) upon γ, modulation of the latter by extracellular Ca2+, and the permeability of Ca2+ with respect to Cs+ (PCa/PCs). Mutations neutralizing (Asp → Asn), or reversing (Asp → Lys), charge at the 113 locus decreased inward γ by 46 and 58%, respectively, but outward currents were unaffected. The D127N mutation decreased inward γ by 82% and also suppressed outward currents, whereas the D127K mutation caused loss of observable single channel currents. The forgoing mutations, except for D127K, which could not be evaluated, ameliorated suppression of inwardly directed single channel currents by extracellular Ca2+. The PCa/PCs of 3.8 previously reported for the 5-HT3A(QDA) construct was reduced to 0.13 and 0.06 by the D127N and D127K mutations, respectively, with lesser, but clearly significant, effects caused by the D113N (1.04) and D113K (0.60) substitutions. Charge selectivity between monovalent cations and anions (PNa/PCl) was unaffected by any of the mutations examined. The data identify two key residues in the extracellular vestibule of the 5-HT3A receptor that markedly influence γ, PCa/PCs, and additionally the suppression of γ by Ca2+.


Biochemical Society Transactions | 2006

Novel structural determinants of single-channel conductance in nicotinic acetylcholine and 5-hydroxytryptamine type-3 receptors.

John A. Peters; Jane E. Carland; Michelle A. Cooper; Matthew R. Livesey; Tarek Z. Deeb; Tim G. Hales; Jeremy J. Lambert

Nicotinic ACh (acetylcholine) and 5-HT3 (5-hydroxytryptamine type-3) receptors are cation-selective ion channels of the Cys-loop transmitter-gated ion channel superfamily. Numerous lines of evidence indicate that the channel lining domain of such receptors is formed by the alpha-helical M2 domain (second transmembrane domain) contributed by each of five subunits present within the receptor complex. Specific amino acid residues within the M2 domain have accordingly been demonstrated to influence both single-channel conductance (gamma) and ion selectivity. However, it is now clear from work performed on the homomeric 5-HT3A receptor, heteromeric 5-HT3A/5-HT3B receptor and 5-HT3A/5-HT3B receptor subunit chimaeric constructs that an additional major determinant of gamma resides within a cytoplasmic domain of the receptor termed the MA-stretch (membrane-associated stretch). The MA-stretch, within the M3-M4 loop, is not traditionally thought to be implicated in ion permeation and selection. Here, we describe how such observations extend to a representative neuronal nicotinic ACh receptor composed of alpha4 and beta2 subunits and, by inference, probably other members of the Cys-loop family. In addition, we will attempt to interpret our results within the context of a recently developed atomic scale model of the nicotinic ACh receptor of Torpedo marmorata (marbled electric ray).


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Mutagenic analysis of the intracellular portals of the human 5-HT3A receptor

Jane E. Carland; Michelle A. Cooper; Matthew R. Livesey; Tim G. Hales; John A. Peters; Jeremy J. Lambert

Background: 5-HT3R cytoplasmic arginine residues, within a putative amphipathic α-helix (MA helix), influence unitary conductance (γ); how other residues within this motif affect γ is unknown. Results: Alanine-, arginine-, and cysteine-scanning mutagenesis reveal that γ is affected by seven additional residues. Conclusion: The charge of 10 MA helix residues influences γ. Significance: Our findings support a proposed structure of ion-conducting cytoplasmic portals. Structural models of Cys-loop receptors based on homology with the Torpedo marmorata nicotinic acetylcholine receptor infer the existence of cytoplasmic portals within the conduction pathway framed by helical amphipathic regions (termed membrane-associated (MA) helices) of adjacent intracellular M3-M4 loops. Consistent with these models, two arginine residues (Arg436 and Arg440) within the MA helix of 5-hydroxytryptamine type 3A (5-HT3A) receptors act singularly as rate-limiting determinants of single-channel conductance (γ). However, there is little conservation in primary amino acid sequences across the cytoplasmic loops of Cys-loop receptors, limiting confidence in the fidelity of this particular aspect of the 5-HT3A receptor model. We probed the majority of residues within the MA helix of the human 5-HT3A subunit using alanine- and arginine-scanning mutagenesis and the substituted cysteine accessibility method to determine their relative influences upon γ. Numerous residues, prominently those at the 435, 436, 439, and 440 positions, were found to markedly influence γ. This approach yielded a functional map of the 5-HT3A receptor portals, which agrees well with the homology model.


Analytical Chemistry | 2018

Isotope Dilution-Based Targeted and Nontargeted Carbonyl Neurosteroid/Steroid Profiling

Sheila Sharp; Scott J. Mitchell; Monique Vallée; Elena Kuzmanova; Michelle A. Cooper; Delia Belelli; Jeremy J. Lambert; Jeffrey T.-J. Huang

Neurosteroids are brain-derived steroids, capable of rapidly modulating neuronal excitability in a nongenomic manner. Dysregulation of their synthesis or metabolism has been implicated in many pathological conditions. Here, we describe an isotope dilution based targeted and nontargeted (ID-TNT) profiling of carbonyl neurosteroids/steroids. The method combines stable isotope dilution, hydroxylamine derivatization, high-resolution MS scanning, and data-dependent MS/MS analysis, allowing absolute quantification of pregnenolone, progesterone, 5α-dihydroprogesterone, 3α,5α-tetrahydroprogesterone, and 3β,5α-tetrahydroprogesterone, and relative quantification of other carbonyl containing steroids. The utility and validity of this approach was tested in an acute stress mouse model and via pharmacological manipulation of the steroid metabolic pathway with finasteride. We report that brain levels of 3α,5α-tetrahydroprogesterone, a potent enhancer of GABAA receptor (GABAAR-mediated inhibitory function, from control mice is in the 5-40 pmol/g range, a value greater than previously reported. The approach allows the use of data from targeted analysis to guide the normalization strategy for nontargeted data. Furthermore, novel findings, including a striking increase of brain pregnenolone following finasteride administration were discovered in this study. Collectively, our results indicate that this approach has distinct advantages for examining targeted and nontargeted neurosteroid/steroid pathways in animal models and could facilitate a better understanding of the physiological and pathological roles of neurosteroids as modulators of brain excitability.

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Angela Hayes

Institute of Cancer Research

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