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Dive into the research topics where Michelle Couzens is active.

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Featured researches published by Michelle Couzens.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2002

Hypothalamic Y2 receptors regulate bone formation

Paul A. Baldock; Amanda Sainsbury; Michelle Couzens; Ronaldo F. Enriquez; Gethin P. Thomas; Edith M. Gardiner; Herbert Herzog

Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is a downstream modulator of leptin action, possibly at the level of the arcuate nucleus where NPY neurons are known to express both leptin receptors and Y2 receptors. In addition to the well-described role of NPY and leptin in energy balance and obesity, intracerebroventricular administration of NPY or leptin also causes bone loss. Here we show that Y2 receptor-deficient mice have a twofold increase in trabecular bone volume as well as greater trabecular number and thickness compared with control mice. We also demonstrate that central Y2 receptors are crucial for this process, since selective deletion of hypothalamic Y2 receptors in mature conditional Y2 knockout mice results in an identical increase in trabecular bone volume within 5 weeks. This hypothalamus-specific Y2 receptor deletion stimulates osteoblast activity and increases the rate of bone mineralization and formation, with no effect on osteoblast or osteoclast surface measurements. The lack of any changes in plasma total calcium, leptinemia, or hypothalamo-pituitary-corticotropic, -thyrotropic, -somatotropic, or -gonadotropic output suggests that Y2 receptors do not modulate bone formation by humoral mechanisms, and that alteration of autonomic function through hypothalamic Y2 receptors may play a key role in a major central regulatory circuit of bone formation.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Important role of hypothalamic Y2 receptors in body weight regulation revealed in conditional knockout mice

Amanda Sainsbury; Christoph Schwarzer; Michelle Couzens; Sergueï O. Fetissov; Sabine Furtinger; Arthur Jenkins; Helen M. Cox; Günther Sperk; Tomas Hökfelt; Herbert Herzog

Neuropeptide Y is implicated in energy homeostasis, and contributes to obesity when hypothalamic levels remain chronically elevated. To investigate the specific role of hypothalamic Y2 receptors in this process, we used a conditional Y2 knockout model, using the Cre-lox system and adenoviral delivery of Cre-recombinase. Hypothalamus-specific Y2-deleted mice showed a significant decrease in body weight and a significant increase in food intake that was associated with increased mRNA levels for the orexigenic NPY and AgRP, as well as the anorexic proopiomelanocortin (POMC) and cocaine- and amphetamine-regulated transcript (CART) in the arcuate nucleus. These hypothalamic changes persisted until at least 34 days after Y2 deletion, yet the effect on body weight and food intake subsided within this time. Plasma concentrations of pancreatic polypeptide and corticosterone were 3- to 5-fold increased in hypothalamus-specific Y2 knockout mice. Germ-line Y2 receptor knockout also produced a significant increase in plasma levels of pancreatic polypeptide. However, these mice differed from conditional knockout mice in that they showed a sustained reduction in body weight and adiposity associated with increased NPY and AgRP but decreased POMC and CART mRNA levels in the arcuate nucleus. The transience of the observed effects on food intake and body weight in the hypothalamus-specific Y2 knockout mice, and the difference of this model from germ-line Y2 knockout mice, underline the importance of conditional models of gene deletion, because developmental, secondary, or extrahypothalamic mechanisms may mask such effects in germ-line knockouts.


Diabetologia | 2006

Peptide YY ablation in mice leads to the development of hyperinsulinaemia and obesity

Dana Boey; Shu Lin; Tim Karl; Paul A. Baldock; Nicola J. Lee; Ronaldo F. Enriquez; Michelle Couzens; Katy Slack; R Dallmann; Amanda Sainsbury; Herbert Herzog

Aims/hypothesisObese people exhibit reduced circulating peptide YY (PYY) levels, but it is unclear whether this is a consequence or cause of obesity. We therefore investigated the effect of Pyy ablation on energy homeostasis.MethodsBody composition, i.p. glucose tolerance, food intake and hypothalamic neuropeptide expression were determined in Pyy knock-out and wild-type mice on a normal or high-fat diet.ResultsPyy knock-out significantly increased bodyweight and increased fat mass by 50% in aged females on a normal diet. Male chow-fed Pyy−/− mice were resistant to obesity but became significantly fatter and glucose-intolerant compared with wild-types when fed a high-fat diet. Pyy knock-out animals exhibited significantly elevated fasting or glucose-stimulated serum insulin concentrations vs wild-types, with no increase in basal or fasting-induced food intake. Pyy knock-out decreased or had no effect on neuropeptide Y expression in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus, and significantly increased proopiomelanocortin expression in this region. Male but not female knock-outs exhibited significantly increased growth hormone-releasing hormone expression in the ventromedial hypothalamus and significantly elevated serum IGF-I and testosterone levels. This sex difference in activation of the hypothalamo–pituitary somatotrophic axis by Pyy ablation may contribute to the resistance of chow-fed male knock-outs to late-onset obesity.Conclusions/interpretationPYY signalling is important in the regulation of energy balance and glucose homeostasis, possibly via regulation of insulin release. Therefore reduced PYY levels may predispose to the development of obesity, particularly with ageing or under conditions of high-fat feeding.


Journal of Bone and Mineral Research | 2005

Hypothalamic Control of Bone Formation: Distinct Actions of Leptin and Y2 Receptor Pathways

Paul A. Baldock; Amanda Sainsbury; Susan J. Allison; En-Ju D. Lin; Michelle Couzens; Dana Boey; Ronaldo F. Enriquez; Matthew J. During; Herbert Herzog; Edith M. Gardiner

Leptin and Y2 receptors on hypothalamic NPY neurons mediate leptin effects on energy homeostasis; however, their interaction in modulating osteoblast activity is not established. Here, direct testing of this possibility indicates distinct mechanisms of action for leptin anti‐osteogenic and Y2−/− anabolic pathways in modulating bone formation.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2003

Synergistic Effects of Y2 and Y4 Receptors on Adiposity and Bone Mass Revealed in Double Knockout Mice

Amanda Sainsbury; Paul A. Baldock; Christoph Schwarzer; Naohiko Ueno; Ronaldo F. Enriquez; Michelle Couzens; Akio Inui; Herbert Herzog; Edith M. Gardiner

ABSTRACT Neuropeptide Y regulates numerous physiological processes via at least five different Y receptors, but the specific roles of each receptor are still unclear. We previously demonstrated that Y2 receptor knockout results in a lean phenotype, increased cancellous bone volume, and an increase in plasma pancreatic polypeptide (PP), a ligand for Y4 receptors. PP-overexpressing mice are also known to have a lean phenotype. Deletion of the Y4 receptor also produced a lean phenotype and increased plasma PP levels. We therefore hypothesized that part of the Y2 phenotype results from increased PP action on Y4 receptors and tested this in PP transgenic Y4−/− and Y2−/− Y4−/− double knockout mice. Bone mass was not altered in Y4 knockout mice. Surprisingly, despite significant hyperphagia, Y2−/− Y4−/− mice retained a markedly lean phenotype, with reduced body weight, white adipose tissue mass, leptinemia, and insulinemia. Furthermore, bone volume was also increased threefold in Y2−/− Y4−/− mice, and this was associated with enhanced osteoblastic activity. These changes were more pronounced than those observed in Y2−/− mice, suggesting synergy between Y2 and Y4 receptor pathways. The lack of bone changes in PP transgenic mice suggests that PP alone is not responsible for the bone mass increases but might play a major role in the lean phenotype. However, a synergistic interaction between Y2 and Y4 pathways seems to regulate bone volume and adiposity and could have important implications for possible interventions in obesity and for anabolic treatment of osteoporotic bone loss.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2004

c-Cbl–deficient mice have reduced adiposity, higher energy expenditure, and improved peripheral insulin action

Juan Carlos Molero; Thomas E. Jensen; Phil C. Withers; Michelle Couzens; Herbert Herzog; Christine B.F. Thien; Wallace Y. Langdon; Ken Walder; Maria A. Murphy; David Bowtell; David E. James; Gregory J. Cooney

Casitas b-lineage lymphoma (c-Cbl) is an E3 ubiquitin ligase that has an important role in regulating the degradation of cell surface receptors. In the present study we have examined the role of c-Cbl in whole-body energy homeostasis. c-Cbl-/- mice exhibited a profound increase in whole-body energy expenditure as determined by increased core temperature and whole-body oxygen consumption. As a consequence, these mice displayed a decrease in adiposity, primarily due to a reduction in cell size despite an increase in food intake. These changes were accompanied by a significant increase in activity (2- to 3-fold). In addition, c-Cbl-/- mice displayed a marked improvement in whole-body insulin action, primarily due to changes in muscle metabolism. We observed increased protein levels of the insulin receptor (4-fold) and uncoupling protein-3 (2-fold) in skeletal muscle and a significant increase in the phosphorylation of AMP-activated protein kinase and acetyl-CoA carboxylase. These findings suggest that c-Cbl plays an integral role in whole-body fuel homeostasis by regulating whole-body energy expenditure and insulin action.


Neuropeptides | 2008

PYY transgenic mice are protected against diet-induced and genetic obesity

Dana Boey; Shu Lin; Ronaldo F. Enriquez; Nicola J. Lee; Katy Slack; Michelle Couzens; Paul A. Baldock; Herbert Herzog; Amanda Sainsbury

The gut-derived hormone, peptide YY (PYY) reduces food intake and enhances satiety in both humans and animals. Obese individuals also have a deficiency in circulating peptide YY, although whether this is a cause or a consequence of obesity is unclear. Our aims were to determine whether peptide YY (PYY) over-expression may have therapeutic effects for the treatment of obesity by altering energy balance and glucose homeostasis. We generated PYY transgenic mice and measured body weight, food intake, temperature, adiposity, glucose tolerance, circulating hormone and lipid concentrations and hypothalamic neuropeptide levels (neuropeptide Y; proopiomelanocortin, and thyrotropin-releasing hormone) under chow and high-fat feeding and after crossing these mice onto the genetically obese leptin-deficient ob/ob mouse background. PYY transgenic mice were protected against diet-induced obesity in association with increased body temperature (indicative of increased thermogenesis) and sustained expression of thyrotropin-releasing hormone in the paraventricular nucleus of the hypothalamus. Moreover, PYY transgenic mice crossed onto the genetically obese ob/ob background had significantly decreased weight gain and adiposity, reduced serum triglyceride levels and improved glucose tolerance compared to ob/ob controls. There was no effect of PYY transgenic over expression on basal or fasting-induced food intake measured at 11-12 weeks of age. Together, these findings suggest that long-term administration of PYY, PYY-like compounds or agents that stimulate PYY synthesis in vivo can reduce excess adiposity and improve glucose tolerance, possibly via effects on the hypothalamo-pituitary-thyroid axis and thermogenesis.


Neuropeptides | 2005

Compensatory changes in [125I]-PYY binding in Y receptor knockout mice suggest the potential existence of further Y receptor(s).

Shu Lin; Dana Boey; Michelle Couzens; Nicola J. Lee; Amanda Sainsbury; Herbert Herzog

Gene knockout approaches have helped to better understand the functions of the different Y receptors. However, some results obtained from these knockout mice are unexpected and differ from the results of pharmacological intervention experiments. One possible explanation for this is that germ-line gene deletion of a particular Y receptor can influence expression and function of the remaining Y receptors. Here we show that such compensation in mRNA and protein expression does occur in Y receptor single, double and triple knockout models. Radio-ligand binding experiments using [(125)I]-PYY revealed significant up- and down-regulation of remaining Y receptor binding sites in various Y receptor knockout models compared to results from control mice employing Y receptor preferring agonist or antagonists for displacement of the radio-ligand. The most obvious change can be seen in the hippocampus of Y(1) knockout mice, where the level of the remaining Y receptors is strongly down-regulated. In Y(2) knockout mice no such trend can be seen, however, the expression pattern is significantly changed with a strong up-regulation of [(125)I]-PYY specific binding in the dentate gyrus. Interestingly, this pattern was also seen in Y(1)Y(2)Y(4) triple knockout mice. Y(5) receptor mRNA was approximately 20% higher in the hippocampus and dentate gyrus in the triple knockout mice compared to wild-type controls, while Y(6) mRNA expression could not be detected. However, competition binding experiments in Y(1)Y(2)Y(4) triple knockout mice with the Y(5) receptor preferring ligands [Leu(31), Pro(34)] NPY and [A(31), Aib(32)] NPY were able to replace only approximately 50% of [(125)I]-PYY binding in the dentate gyrus suggesting the existence of further yet unidentified Y receptor(s).


Molecular Brain Research | 2000

Molecular cloning and characterisation of GPR74 a novel G-protein coupled receptor closest related to the Y-receptor family

Rachel Parker; Neal G. Copeland; Helen J. Eyre; Marjorie Liu; Debra J. Gilbert; Joanna Crawford; Michelle Couzens; Grant R. Sutherland; Nancy A. Jenkins; Herbert Herzog

A novel gene product, GPR74, with homology to the seven transmembrane-domain receptor superfamily, has been cloned. GPR74 has been identified from the expressed sequence tags (EST) database. Subsequent PCR amplification of that sequence and screening of a human heart cDNA library led to the isolation of a 1.7-kb cDNA clone encoding a protein of 408 amino acids. GPR74 shows highest amino acid identity (33%) to the human neuropeptide Y-receptor subtype Y2. The human and mouse genes for GPR74 have been isolated and their exon-intron structures determined. In both species the gene consists of four exons spanning around 20 kb with the exon-intron borders being 100% conserved. Northern analysis of various human tissues reveals highest levels of mRNA expression in brain and heart. In situ hybridisation analysis of rat brain tissue confirms this result and identifies the hippocampus and amygdala nuclei as the brain areas with particular high expression of GPR74 mRNA. Fluorescence in situ hybridisation, PCR analysis on a radiation hybrid panel and interspecific mouse backcross mapping have localised the genes to human chromosome 4q21 and mouse chromosome 5. Expression of the human GPR74 cDNA as a GFP-fusion protein in various cell lines reveals the inability of the recombinant receptor protein to reach the cell surface. This is consistent with the lack of NPY specific binding in these cells and suggests that unknown factors are required for a full functional receptor complex.


Genes & Development | 2002

Y4 receptor knockout rescues fertility in ob/ob mice

Amanda Sainsbury; Christoph Schwarzer; Michelle Couzens; Arthur Jenkins; Samantha R. Oakes; Christopher J. Ormandy; Herbert Herzog

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Herbert Herzog

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Ronaldo F. Enriquez

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Dana Boey

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Paul A. Baldock

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Nicola J. Lee

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Shu Lin

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Christoph Schwarzer

Innsbruck Medical University

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Katy Slack

Garvan Institute of Medical Research

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Tim Karl

University of Sydney

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