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Dive into the research topics where Richard T. Libby is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard T. Libby.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

Axons of retinal ganglion cells are insulted in the optic nerve early in DBA/2J glaucoma.

Gareth R. Howell; Richard T. Libby; Tatjana C. Jakobs; Richard S. Smith; F. Campbell Phalan; Joseph W. Barter; Jessica M. Barbay; Jeffrey K. Marchant; Nagaraju Mahesh; Vittorio Porciatti; Alan V. Whitmore; Richard H. Masland; Simon W. M. John

Here, we use a mouse model (DBA/2J) to readdress the location of insult(s) to retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in glaucoma. We localize an early sign of axon damage to an astrocyte-rich region of the optic nerve just posterior to the retina, analogous to the lamina cribrosa. In this region, a network of astrocytes associates intimately with RGC axons. Using BAX-deficient DBA/2J mice, which retain all of their RGCs, we provide experimental evidence for an insult within or very close to the lamina in the optic nerve. We show that proximal axon segments attached to their cell bodies survive to the proximity of the lamina. In contrast, axon segments in the lamina and behind the eye degenerate. Finally, the Wlds allele, which is known to protect against insults to axons, strongly protects against DBA/2J glaucoma and preserves RGC activity as measured by pattern electroretinography. These experiments provide strong evidence for a local insult to axons in the optic nerve.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2005

Retinal ganglion cell degeneration is topological but not cell type specific in DBA/2J mice

Tatjana C. Jakobs; Richard T. Libby; Yixin Ben; Simon W. M. John; Richard H. Masland

Using a variety of double and triple labeling techniques, we have reevaluated the death of retinal neurons in a mouse model of hereditary glaucoma. Cell-specific markers and total neuron counts revealed no cell loss in any retinal neurons other than the ganglion cells. Within the limits of our ability to define cell types, no group of ganglion cells was especially vulnerable or resistant to degeneration. Retrograde labeling and neurofilament staining showed that axonal atrophy, dendritic remodeling, and somal shrinkage (at least of the largest cell types) precedes ganglion cell death in this glaucoma model. Regions of cell death or survival radiated from the optic nerve head in fan-shaped sectors. Collectively, the data suggest axon damage at the optic nerve head as an early lesion, and damage to axon bundles would cause this pattern of degeneration. However, the architecture of the mouse eye seems to preclude a commonly postulated source of mechanical damage within the nerve head.


PLOS Genetics | 2005

Susceptibility to Neurodegeneration in a Glaucoma Is Modified by Bax Gene Dosage

Richard T. Libby; Yan Li; Olga V. Savinova; Joseph W. Barter; Richard S. Smith; Robert W Nickells; Simon W. M. John

In glaucoma, harmful intraocular pressure often contributes to retinal ganglion cell death. It is not clear, however, if intraocular pressure directly insults the retinal ganglion cell axon, the soma, or both. The pathways that mediate pressure-induced retinal ganglion cell death are poorly defined, and no molecules are known to be required. DBA/2J mice deficient in the proapoptotic molecule BCL2-associated X protein (BAX) were used to investigate the roles of BAX-mediated cell death pathways in glaucoma. Both Bax +/− and Bax −/− mice were protected from retinal ganglion cell death. In contrast, axonal degeneration was not prevented in either Bax +/− or Bax −/− mice. While BAX deficiency did not prevent axonal degeneration, it did slow axonal loss. Additionally, we compared the effects of BAX deficiency on the glaucoma to its effects on retinal ganglion cell death due to two insults that are proposed to participate in glaucoma. As in the glaucoma, BAX deficiency protected retinal ganglion cells after axon injury by optic nerve crush. However, it did not protect retinal ganglion cells from N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-induced excitotoxicity. BAX is required for retinal ganglion cell death in an inherited glaucoma; however, it is not required for retinal ganglion cell axon degeneration. This indicates that distinct somal and axonal degeneration pathways are active in this glaucoma. Finally, our data support a role for optic nerve injury but not for NMDA receptor-mediated excitotoxicity in this glaucoma. These findings indicate a need to understand axon-specific degeneration pathways in glaucoma, and they suggest that distinct somal and axonal degeneration pathways may need to be targeted to save vision.


Visual Neuroscience | 2005

Inherited glaucoma in DBA/2J mice: pertinent disease features for studying the neurodegeneration.

Richard T. Libby; Michael G. Anderson; Iok-Hou Pang; Zachary H. Robinson; Olga V. Savinova; I. Mihai Cosma; Amy Snow; Lawriston A. Wilson; Richard S. Smith; Abbot F. Clark; Simon W. M. John

The glaucomas are neurodegenerative diseases involving death of retinal ganglion cells and optic nerve head excavation. A major risk factor for this neurodegeneration is a harmfully elevated intraocular pressure (IOP). Human glaucomas are typically complex, progressive diseases that are prevalent in the elderly. Family history and genetic factors are clearly important in human glaucoma. Mouse studies have proven helpful for investigating the genetic and mechanistic basis of complex diseases. We previously reported inherited, age-related progressive glaucoma in DBA/2J mice. Here, we report our updated findings from studying the disease in a large number of DBA/2J mice. The period when mice have elevated IOP extends from 6 months to 16 months, with 8-9 months representing an important transition to high IOP for many mice. Optic nerve degeneration follows IOP elevation, with the majority of optic nerves being severely damaged by 12 months of age. This information should help with the design of experiments, and we present the data in a manner that will be useful for future studies of retinal ganglion cell degeneration and optic neuropathy.


Nature Neuroscience | 2002

Reduced climbing and increased slipping adaptation in cochlear hair cells of mice with Myo7a mutations

Corné J. Kros; Walter Marcotti; van Sietse Netten; Tim Self; Richard T. Libby; Sdm Brown; Guy P. Richardson; Karen P. Steel

Mutations in Myo7a cause hereditary deafness in mice and humans. We describe the effects of two mutations, Myo7a6J and Myo7a4626SB, on mechano-electrical transduction in cochlear hair cells. Both mutations result in two major functional abnormalities that would interfere with sound transduction. The hair bundles need to be displaced beyond their physiological operating range for mechanotransducer channels to open. Transducer currents also adapt more strongly than normal to excitatory stimuli. We conclude that myosin VIIA participates in anchoring and holding membrane-bound elements to the actin core of the stereocilium. Myosin VIIA is therefore required for the normal gating of transducer channels.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

Molecular clustering identifies complement and endothelin induction as early events in a mouse model of glaucoma

Gareth R. Howell; Danilo G. Macalinao; Gregory L. Sousa; Michael Walden; Ileana Soto; Stephen C. Kneeland; Jessica M. Barbay; Benjamin L. King; Jeffrey K. Marchant; Matthew A. Hibbs; Beth Stevens; Ben A. Barres; Abbot F. Clark; Richard T. Libby; Simon W. M. John

Glaucoma is one of the most common neurodegenerative diseases. Despite this, the earliest stages of this complex disease are still unclear. This study was specifically designed to identify early stages of glaucoma in DBA/2J mice. To do this, we used genome-wide expression profiling of optic nerve head and retina and a series of computational methods. Eyes with no detectable glaucoma by conventional assays were grouped into molecularly defined stages of disease using unbiased hierarchical clustering. These stages represent a temporally ordered sequence of glaucoma states. We then determined networks and biological processes that were altered at these early stages. Early-stage expression changes included upregulation of both the complement cascade and the endothelin system, and so we tested the therapeutic value of separately inhibiting them. Mice with a mutation in complement component 1a (C1qa) were protected from glaucoma. Similarly, inhibition of the endothelin system with bosentan, an endothelin receptor antagonist, was strongly protective against glaucomatous damage. Since endothelin 2 is potently vasoconstrictive and was produced by microglia/macrophages, our data provide what we believe to be a novel link between these cell types and vascular dysfunction in glaucoma. Targeting early molecular events, such as complement and endothelin induction, may provide effective new treatments for human glaucoma.


Progress in Retinal and Eye Research | 2005

Glaucoma: thinking in new ways-a role for autonomous axonal self-destruction and other compartmentalised processes?

Alan V. Whitmore; Richard T. Libby; Simon W. M. John

Glaucoma is a common neurodegenerative disease that affects retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). Substantial effort is being expended to determine how RGCs die in glaucoma. As in other neurodegenerative diseases, the majority of effort focuses on characterising apoptotic self-destruct pathways. However, apoptosis is not the only self-destruct mechanism that may be activated in neurons. It is now known that neurons have distinct classes of self-destruct programme that are spatially compartmentalised. In addition to the well-described intracellular suicide machinery in the neuronal soma, responsible for apoptosis, there is another, molecularly distinct, self-destruct programme localised in the axon. Evidence also supports the existence of compartmentalised degeneration programmes in synapses and dendrites. RGCs are no exception to this. Recent data, from in vitro studies and from an inherited mouse model of glaucoma, suggest that molecularly distinct degenerative pathways underlie the destruction of RGC somata and RGC axons. In various neurodegenerative diseases, axons, dendrites and synapses often degenerate well before the cells die, and there is increasing evidence that this is important for the production of clinical symptoms and signs. We hypothesise that such compartmentalised and autonomous programmes are of critical importance in the pathophysiology of glaucoma, and we suggest that studies of these processes are essential for a complete understanding of this complex disease.


The EMBO Journal | 2003

Loss of myosin VI reduces secretion and the size of the Golgi in fibroblasts from Snell's waltzer mice.

Claire L. Warner; Abigail Stewart; J. Paul Luzio; Karen P. Steel; Richard T. Libby; John Kendrick-Jones; Folma Buss

Golgi morphology and function are dependent on an intact microtubule and actin cytoskeleton. Myosin VI, an unusual actin‐based motor protein moving towards the minus ends of actin filaments, has been localized to the Golgi complex at the light and electron microscopic level. Myosin VI is present in purified Golgi membranes as a peripheral membrane protein, targeted by its globular tail domain. To investigate the function of myosin VI at the Golgi complex, immortal fibroblastic cell lines of Snells waltzer mice lacking myosin VI were established. In these cell lines, where myosin VI is absent, the Golgi complex is reduced in size by ∼40% compared with wild‐type cells. Furthermore, protein secretion of a reporter protein from Snells waltzer cells is also reduced by 40% compared with wild‐type cells. Rescue experiments showed that fully functional myosin VI was able to restore Golgi complex morphology and protein secretion in Snells waltzer cells to the same level as that observed in wild‐type cells.


Journal of Cell Science | 2004

Role of myosin VIIa and Rab27a in the motility and localization of RPE melanosomes

Daniel Gibbs; Sassan M. Azarian; Concepción Lillo; Junko Kitamoto; Adriana E. Klomp; Karen P. Steel; Richard T. Libby; David S. Williams

Myosin VIIa functions in the outer retina, and loss of this function causes human blindness in Usher syndrome type 1B (USH1B). In mice with mutant Myo7a, melanosomes in the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) are distributed abnormally. In this investigation we detected many proteins in RPE cells that could potentially participate in melanosome transport, but of those tested, only myosin VIIa and Rab27a were found to be required for normal distribution. Two other expressed proteins, melanophilin and myosin Va, both of which are required for normal melanosome distribution in melanocytes, were not required in RPE, despite the association of myosin Va with the RPE melanosome fraction. Both myosin VIIa and myosin Va were immunodetected broadly in sections of the RPE, overlapping with a region of apical filamentous actin. Some 70-80% of the myosin VIIa in RPE cells was detected on melanosome membranes by both subcellular fractionation of RPE cells and quantitative immunoelectron microscopy, consistent with a role for myosin VIIa in melanosome motility. Time-lapse microscopy of melanosomes in primary cultures of mouse RPE cells demonstrated that the melanosomes move in a saltatory manner, interrupting slow movements with short bursts of rapid movement (>1 μm/second). In RPE cells from Myo7a-null mice, both the slow and rapid movements still occurred, except that more melanosomes underwent rapid movements, and each movement extended approximately five times longer (and further). Hence, our studies demonstrate the presence of many potential effectors of melanosome motility and localization in the RPE, with a specific requirement for Rab27a and myosin VIIa, which function by transporting and constraining melanosomes within a region of filamentous actin. The presence of two distinct melanosome velocities in both control and Myo7a-null RPE cells suggests the involvement of at least two motors other than myosin VIIa in melanosome motility, most probably, a microtubule motor and myosin Va.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

Radiation treatment inhibits monocyte entry into the optic nerve head and prevents neuronal damage in a mouse model of glaucoma

Gareth R. Howell; Ileana Soto; Xianjun Zhu; Margaret Ryan; Danilo G. Macalinao; Gregory L. Sousa; Lura B. Caddle; Katharine H. MacNicoll; Jessica M. Barbay; Vittorio Porciatti; Michael G. Anderson; Richard S. Smith; Abbot F. Clark; Richard T. Libby; Simon W. M. John

Glaucoma is a common ocular disorder that is a leading cause of blindness worldwide. It is characterized by the dysfunction and loss of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs). Although many studies have implicated various molecules in glaucoma, no mechanism has been shown to be responsible for the earliest detectable damage to RGCs and their axons in the optic nerve. Here, we show that the leukocyte transendothelial migration pathway is activated in the optic nerve head at the earliest stages of disease in an inherited mouse model of glaucoma. This resulted in proinflammatory monocytes entering the optic nerve prior to detectable neuronal damage. A 1-time x-ray treatment prevented monocyte entry and subsequent glaucomatous damage. A single x-ray treatment of an individual eye in young mice provided that eye with long-term protection from glaucoma but had no effect on the contralateral eye. Localized radiation treatment prevented detectable neuronal damage and dysfunction in treated eyes, despite the continued presence of other glaucomatous stresses and signaling pathways. Injection of endothelin-2, a damaging mediator produced by the monocytes, into irradiated eyes, combined with the other glaucomatous stresses, restored neural damage with a topography characteristic of glaucoma. Together, these data support a model of glaucomatous damage involving monocyte entry into the optic nerve.

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Simon W. M. John

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Kimberly A. Fernandes

University of Rochester Medical Center

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Gareth R. Howell

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Lin Gan

University of Rochester

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Abbot F. Clark

University of North Texas Health Science Center

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