Queensta Millet
University College London
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Publication
Featured researches published by Queensta Millet.
Nature Communications | 2015
Michael S. Minett; Vanessa Pereira; Shafaq Sikandar; Ayako Matsuyama; Stéphane Lolignier; Alexandros H. Kanellopoulos; Flavia Mancini; Gian Domenico Iannetti; Yury D. Bogdanov; Sonia Santana-Varela; Queensta Millet; Giorgios Baskozos; Raymond MacAllister; James J. Cox; Jing Zhao; John N. Wood
Loss-of-function mutations in the SCN9A gene encoding voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 cause congenital insensitivity to pain in humans and mice. Surprisingly, many potent selective antagonists of Nav1.7 are weak analgesics. We investigated whether Nav1.7, as well as contributing to electrical signalling, may have additional functions. Here we report that Nav1.7 deletion has profound effects on gene expression, leading to an upregulation of enkephalin precursor Penk mRNA and met-enkephalin protein in sensory neurons. In contrast, Nav1.8-null mutant sensory neurons show no upregulated Penk mRNA expression. Application of the opioid antagonist naloxone potentiates noxious peripheral input into the spinal cord and dramatically reduces analgesia in both female and male Nav1.7-null mutant mice, as well as in a human Nav1.7-null mutant. These data suggest that Nav1.7 channel blockers alone may not replicate the analgesic phenotype of null mutant humans and mice, but may be potentiated with exogenous opioids.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2014
Mattia F M Gerli; S.M. Maffioletti; Queensta Millet; Francesco Saverio Tedesco
Patient-derived iPSCs could be an invaluable source of cells for future autologous cell therapy protocols. iPSC-derived myogenic stem/progenitor cells similar to pericyte-derived mesoangioblasts (iPSC-derived mesoangioblast-like stem/progenitor cells: IDEMs) can be established from iPSCs generated from patients affected by different forms of muscular dystrophy. Patient-specific IDEMs can be genetically corrected with different strategies (e.g. lentiviral vectors, human artificial chromosomes) and enhanced in their myogenic differentiation potential upon overexpression of the myogenesis regulator MyoD. This myogenic potential is then assessed in vitro with specific differentiation assays and analyzed by immunofluorescence. The regenerative potential of IDEMs is further evaluated in vivo, upon intramuscular and intra-arterial transplantation in two representative mouse models displaying acute and chronic muscle regeneration. The contribution of IDEMs to the host skeletal muscle is then confirmed by different functional tests in transplanted mice. In particular, the amelioration of the motor capacity of the animals is studied with treadmill tests. Cell engraftment and differentiation are then assessed by a number of histological and immunofluorescence assays on transplanted muscles. Overall, this paper describes the assays and tools currently utilized to evaluate the differentiation capacity of IDEMs, focusing on the transplantation methods and subsequent outcome measures to analyze the efficacy of cell transplantation.
Embo Molecular Medicine | 2013
Monica Giannotta; Sara Benedetti; Francesco Saverio Tedesco; Monica Corada; Marianna Trani; Rocco D'Antuono; Queensta Millet; Fabrizio Orsenigo; Beatriz G. Gálvez; Giulio Cossu; Elisabetta Dejana
Muscular dystrophies are severe genetic diseases for which no efficacious therapies exist. Experimental clinical treatments include intra‐arterial administration of vessel‐associated stem cells, called mesoangioblasts (MABs). However, one of the limitations of this approach is the relatively low number of cells that engraft the diseased tissue, due, at least in part, to the sub‐optimal efficiency of extravasation, whose mechanisms for MAB are unknown. Leukocytes emigrate into the inflamed tissues by crossing endothelial cell‐to‐cell junctions and junctional proteins direct and control leukocyte diapedesis. Here, we identify the endothelial junctional protein JAM‐A as a key regulator of MAB extravasation. We show that JAM‐A gene inactivation and JAM‐A blocking antibodies strongly enhance MAB engraftment in dystrophic muscle. In the absence of JAM‐A, the exchange factors EPAC‐1 and 2 are down‐regulated, which prevents the activation of the small GTPase Rap‐1. As a consequence, junction tightening is reduced, allowing MAB diapedesis. Notably, pharmacological inhibition of Rap‐1 increases MAB engraftment in dystrophic muscle, which results into a significant improvement of muscle function offering a novel strategy for stem cell‐based therapies.
The EMBO Journal | 2018
Alexandros H. Kanellopoulos; Jennifer Koenig; Honglei Huang; Martina Pyrski; Queensta Millet; Stéphane Lolignier; Toru Morohashi; Samuel J. Gossage; Maude Jay; John E. Linley; Georgios Baskozos; Benedikt M. Kessler; James J. Cox; Annette C. Dolphin; Frank Zufall; John N. Wood; Jing Zhao
The voltage‐gated sodium channel NaV1.7 plays a critical role in pain pathways. We generated an epitope‐tagged NaV1.7 mouse that showed normal pain behaviours to identify channel‐interacting proteins. Analysis of NaV1.7 complexes affinity‐purified under native conditions by mass spectrometry revealed 267 proteins associated with Nav1.7 in vivo. The sodium channel β3 (Scn3b), rather than the β1 subunit, complexes with Nav1.7, and we demonstrate an interaction between collapsing‐response mediator protein (Crmp2) and Nav1.7, through which the analgesic drug lacosamide regulates Nav1.7 current density. Novel NaV1.7 protein interactors including membrane‐trafficking protein synaptotagmin‐2 (Syt2), L‐type amino acid transporter 1 (Lat1) and transmembrane P24‐trafficking protein 10 (Tmed10) together with Scn3b and Crmp2 were validated by co‐immunoprecipitation (Co‐IP) from sensory neuron extract. Nav1.7, known to regulate opioid receptor efficacy, interacts with the G protein‐regulated inducer of neurite outgrowth (Gprin1), an opioid receptor‐binding protein, demonstrating a physical and functional link between Nav1.7 and opioid signalling. Further information on physiological interactions provided with this normal epitope‐tagged mouse should provide useful insights into the many functions now associated with the NaV1.7 channel.
Brain | 2018
Shafaq Sikandar; Michael S. Minett; Queensta Millet; Sonia Santana-Varela; Joanne Lau; John N. Wood; Jing Zhao
The role of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in pain chronification and neuropathic pain has not been fully determined. Using conditional Bdnf knockout mice, Sikandar et al. show that sensory neuronal BDNF contributes to certain neuropathic pain states, and is particularly important in the transition from acute to chronic pain.
Wellcome Open Research | 2018
M.A. Bangash; Sascha R. A. Alles; Sonia Santana-Varela; Queensta Millet; Shafaq Sikandar; Larissa de Clauser; Freija ter Heegde; Abdella M. Habib; Vanessa Pereira; Jane E. Sexton; Edward C. Emery; Shengnan Li; Ana Paula Luiz; Janka Erdos; Samuel J. Gossage; Jing Zhao; James J. Cox; John N. Wood
Background: Sensory neurons play an essential role in almost all pain conditions, and have recently been classified into distinct subsets on the basis of their transcriptomes. Here we have analysed alterations in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) gene expression using microarrays in mouse models related to human chronic pain. Methods: Six different pain models were studied in male C57BL/6J mice: (1) bone cancer pain using cancer cell injection in the intramedullary space of the femur; (2) neuropathic pain using partial sciatic nerve ligation; (3) osteoarthritis pain using mechanical joint loading; (4) chemotherapy-induced pain with oxaliplatin; (5) chronic muscle pain using hyperalgesic priming; and (6) inflammatory pain using intraplantar complete Freund’s adjuvant. Microarray analyses were performed using RNA isolated from dorsal root ganglia and compared to sham/vehicle treated controls. Results: Differentially expressed genes (DEGs) were identified. Known and previously unreported genes were found to be dysregulated in each pain model. The transcriptomic profiles for each model were compared and expression profiles of DEGs within subsets of DRG neuronal populations were analysed to determine whether specific neuronal subsets could be linked to each of the pain models. Conclusions: Each pain model exhibits a unique set of altered transcripts implying distinct cellular responses to different painful stimuli. No simple direct link between genetically distinct sets of neurons and particular pain models could be discerned.
bioRxiv | 2018
Vanessa Pereira; Queensta Millet; José Aramburu; Cristina López-Rodríguez; Claire Gavériaux-Ruff; John N. Wood
Background: Functional deletion of the Scn9a (sodium voltage-gated channel alpha subunit 9) gene encoding sodium channel Nav1.7 makes humans and mice pain-free. Opioid signalling contributes to this analgesic state. We have used pharmacological and genetic approaches to identify the opioid receptors involved in this form of analgesia. We also examined the regulation of proenkephalin expression by the transcription factor Nfat5 that binds upstream of the Penk gene. Methods: We used specific µ-, δ- and κ-opioid receptor antagonists alone or in combination to examine which opioid receptors were necessary for Nav1.7 loss-associated analgesia in mouse behavioural assays of thermal pain. We also used µ- and δ-opioid receptor null mutant mice alone and in combination in behavioural assays to examine the role of these receptors in Nav1.7 knockouts pain free phenotype. Finally, we examined the levels of Penk mRNA in Nfat5-null mutant mice, as this transcription factor binds to consensus sequences upstream of the Penk gene. Results: The pharmacological block or deletion of both µ- and δ-opioid receptors was required to abolish Nav1.7-null opioid-related analgesia. κ-opioid receptor antagonists were without effect. Enkephalins encoded by the Penk gene are upregulated in Nav1.7 nulls. Deleting Nfat5, a transcription factor with binding motifs upstream of Penk, induces the same level of enkephalin mRNA expression as found in Nav1 .7 nulls, but without consequent analgesia. These data confirm that a combination of events linked to Scn9a gene loss is required for analgesia. Higher levels of endogenous enkephalins, potentiated opioid receptors, diminished electrical excitability and loss of neurotransmitter release together contribute to the analgesic phenotype found in Nav1.7-null mouse and human mutants. Conclusions: These observations help explain the failure of Nav1.7 channel blockers alone to produce analgesia and suggest new routes for analgesic drug development.
Science Signaling | 2018
Ramin Raouf; Stéphane Lolignier; Jane E. Sexton; Queensta Millet; Sonia Santana-Varela; Anna Biller; Alice M. Fuller; Vanessa Pereira; Jyoti S. Choudhary; Mark O. Collins; Stephen E. Moss; Richard J. Lewis; Julie Tordo; Els Henckaerts; Michael Linden; John N. Wood
The membrane-binding protein annexin A6 suppresses mechanically induced pain in a mouse model of osteoarthritis. A blocker of osteoarthritic pain Patients with osteoarthritis experience pain when moving or, sometimes, touching the affected joints. Raouf et al. identified proteins that bound to a toxin that inhibits mechanically induced pain, including the membrane-binding protein annexin A6. Mice lacking annexin A6 were more sensitive to mechanically induced pain, whereas overexpression of annexin A6 in sensory neurons reduced pain in a mouse model of osteoarthritis. These results suggest that strategies that increase the abundance of annexin A6 could alleviate the chronic pain of osteoarthritis. Mechanically activated, slowly adapting currents in sensory neurons have been linked to noxious mechanosensation. The conotoxin NMB-1 (noxious mechanosensation blocker-1) blocks such currents and inhibits mechanical pain. Using a biotinylated form of NMB-1 in mass spectrometry analysis, we identified 67 binding proteins in sensory neurons and a sensory neuron–derived cell line, of which the top candidate was annexin A6, a membrane-associated calcium-binding protein. Annexin A6–deficient mice showed increased sensitivity to mechanical stimuli. Sensory neurons from these mice showed increased activity of the cation channel Piezo2, which mediates a rapidly adapting mechano-gated current linked to proprioception and touch, and a decrease in mechanically activated, slowly adapting currents. Conversely, overexpression of annexin A6 in sensory neurons inhibited rapidly adapting currents that were partially mediated by Piezo2. Furthermore, overexpression of annexin A6 in sensory neurons attenuated mechanical pain in a mouse model of osteoarthritis, a disease in which mechanically evoked pain is particularly problematic. These data suggest that annexin A6 can be exploited to inhibit chronic mechanical pain.
bioRxiv | 2017
Shafaq Sikandar; Michael S. Minett; Joanne Lau; Queensta Millet; Sonia Santana-Varela; John N. Wood; Jing Zhao
Multiple studies support the pro-nociceptive role of brain-derived neurotrophin factor (BDNF) in pain processes in the peripheral and central nervous system. We have previously shown that nociceptor-derived BDNF is implicated in inflammatory pain. Microglial-derived BDNF has also been shown to be involved in neuropathic pain. However, the distinct contribution of primary afferent-derived BNDF to chronic pain processing remains undetermined. In this study, we used Advillin-CreERT2 mice to delete Bdnf from all adult peripheral sensory neurons. Conditional BDNF knockouts were healthy with no sensory neuron loss. Behavioural assays and in vivo electrophysiology indicated that spinal excitability was normal. Following formalin inflammation or neuropathy with a modified Chung model, we observed normal development of acute pain behaviour, but a deficit in second phase formalin-induced nocifensive responses and a reversal of neuropathy-induced mechanical hypersensitivity during the later chronic pain phase in conditional BDNF knockout mice. In contrast, we observed normal development of acute and chronic neuropathic pain in the Seltzer model, indicating differences in the contribution of BDNF to distinct models of neuropathy. We further used a model of hyperalgesic priming to examine the contribution of primary afferent-derived BDNF in the transition from acute to chronic pain, and found that primed BDNF knockout mice do not develop prolonged mechanical hypersensitivity. Our data suggest that BDNF derived from sensory neurons plays a critical role in mediating the transition from acute to chronic pain.
Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013
Efthimia Karra; Owen O'Daly; Agharul I. Choudhury; Ahmed Yousseif; Steven Millership; Marianne T. Neary; William R. Scott; Keval Chandarana; Sean Manning; Martin E. Hess; Hiroshi Iwakura; Takashi Akamizu; Queensta Millet; Cigdem Gelegen; Megan E. Drew; Sofia Rahman; Julian J. Emmanuel; Steven Williams; Ulrich Rüther; Jens C. Brüning; Dominic J. Withers; Fernando Zelaya; Rachel L. Batterham