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Dive into the research topics where Sharon Layfield is active.

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Featured researches published by Sharon Layfield.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002

Restricted, but abundant, expression of the novel rat gene-3 (R3) relaxin in the dorsal tegmental region of brain.

Tanya C. D. Burazin; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Mary Macris; Sharon Layfield; Andrew L. Gundlach; Geoffrey W. Tregear

Relaxin is a peptide hormone with known actions associated with female reproductive physiology, but it has also been identified in the brain. Only one relaxin gene had been characterized in rodents until recently when a novel human relaxin gene, human gene‐3 (H3) and its mouse equivalent (M3) were identified. The current study reports the identification of a rat homologue, rat gene‐3 (R3) relaxin that is highly expressed in a discrete region of the adult brain. The full R3 relaxin cDNA was generated using RT‐PCR and 3′ and 5′ RACE protocols. The derived amino acid sequence of R3 relaxin retains all the characteristic features of a relaxin peptide and has a high degree of homology with H3 and M3 relaxin. The distribution of R3 relaxin mRNA in adult rat brain was determined and highly abundant expression was only detected in neurons of the ventromedial dorsal tegmental nucleus (vmDTg) in the pons, whereas all other brain areas were unlabelled or contained much lower mRNA levels. Relaxin binding sites and relaxin immunoreactivity were also detected in the vmDTg. These together with earlier findings provide strong evidence for a role(s) for multiple relaxin peptides as neurotransmitters and/or modulators in the rat CNS.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Characterization of Novel Splice Variants of LGR7 and LGR8 Reveals That Receptor Signaling Is Mediated by Their Unique Low Density Lipoprotein Class A Modules

Daniel J. Scott; Sharon Layfield; Yan Yan; Satoko Sudo; Aaron J. W. Hsueh; Geoffrey W. Tregear; Ross A. D. Bathgate

The relaxin and insulin-like peptide 3 receptors, LGR7 and LGR8, respectively, are unique members of the leucine-rich repeat-containing G-protein-coupled receptor (LGR) family, because they possess an N-terminal motif with homology to the low density lipoprotein class A (LDLa) modules. By characterizing several LGR7 and LGR8 splice variants, we have revealed that the LDLa module directs ligand-activated cAMP signaling. The LGR8-short variant encodes an LGR8 receptor lacking the LDLa module, whereas LGR7-truncate, LGR7-truncate-2, and LGR7-truncate-3 all encode truncated secreted proteins retaining the LGR7 LDLa module. LGR8-short and an engineered LGR7 variant missing its LDLa module, LGR7-short, bound to their respective ligands with high affinity but lost their ability to signal via stimulation of intracellular cAMP accumulation. Conversely, secreted LGR7-truncate protein with the LDLa module was able to block relaxin-induced LGR7 cAMP signaling and did so without compromising the ability of LGR7 to bind to relaxin or be expressed on the cell membrane. Although the LDLa module of LGR7 was N-glycosylated at position Asn-14, an LGR7 N14Q mutant retained relaxin binding affinity and cAMP signaling, implying that glycosylation is not essential for optimal LDLa function. Using real-time PCR, the expression of mouse LGR7-truncate was detected to be high in, and specific to, the uterus of pregnant mice. The differential expression and evolutionary conservation of LGR7-truncate further suggests that it may also play an important role in vivo. This study highlights the essential role of the LDLa module in LGR7 and LGR8 function and introduces a novel model of GPCR regulation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

The A-chain of human relaxin family peptides has distinct roles in the binding and activation of the different relaxin family peptide receptors

Mohammed Akhter Hossain; Linda M. Haugaard-Jönsson; Soude Zhang; Sharon Layfield; Tania Ferraro; Norelle L. Daly; Geoffrey W. Tregear; John D. Wade; Ross A. D. Bathgate

The relaxin peptides are a family of hormones that share a structural fold characterized by two chains, A and B, that are cross-braced by three disulfide bonds. Relaxins signal through two different classes of G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), leucine-rich repeat-containing GPCRs LGR7 and LGR8 together with GPCR135 and GPCR142, now referred to as the relaxin family peptide (RXFP) receptors 1–4, respectively. Although key binding residues have been identified in the B-chain of the relaxin peptides, the role of the A-chain in their activity is currently unknown. A recent study showed that INSL3 can be truncated at the N terminus of its A-chain by up to 9 residues without affecting the binding affinity to its receptor RXFP2 while becoming a high affinity antagonist. This suggests that the N terminus of the INSL3 A-chain contains residues essential for RXFP2 activation. In this study, we have synthesized A-chain truncated human relaxin-2 and -3 (H2 and H3) relaxin peptides, characterized their structure by both CD and NMR spectroscopy, and tested their binding and cAMP activities on RXFP1, RXFP2, and RXFP3. In stark contrast to INSL3, A-chain-truncated H2 relaxin peptides lost RXFP1 and RXFP2 binding affinity and concurrently cAMP-stimulatory activity. H3 relaxin A-chain-truncated peptides displayed similar properties on RXFP1, highlighting a similar binding mechanism for H2 and H3 relaxin. In contrast, A-chain-truncated H3 relaxin peptides showed identical activity on RXFP3, highlighting that the B-chain is the sole determinant of the H3 relaxin-RXFP3 interaction. Our results provide new insights into the action of relaxins and demonstrate that the role of the A-chain for relaxin activity is both peptide- and receptor-dependent.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2012

Minimization of Human Relaxin-3 Leading to High-Affinity Analogues with Increased Selectivity for Relaxin-Family Peptide 3 Receptor (RXFP3) over RXFP1

Fazel Shabanpoor; Mohammad Akhter Hossain; Philip J. Ryan; Alessia Belgi; Sharon Layfield; Martina Kocan; Suode Zhang; Chrishan S. Samuel; Andrew L. Gundlach; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Frances Separovic; John D. Wade

Relaxin-3 is a neuropeptide that is implicated in the regulation of stress responses and memory. The elucidation of its precise physiological role(s) has, however, been hampered by cross-activation of the relaxin-2 receptor, RXFP1, in the brain. The current study undertook to develop analogues of human relaxin-3 (H3 relaxin) that can selectively bind and activate its receptor, RXFP3. We developed a high-affinity selective agonist (analogue 2) by removal of the intra-A chain disulfide bond and deletion of 10 residues from the N terminus of the A chain. Further truncation of this analogue from the C terminus of the B chain to Cys(B22) and addition of an Arg(B23) led to a high-affinity, RXFP3-selective, competitive antagonist (analogue 3). Central administration of analogue 2 in rats increased food intake, which was blocked by prior coadministration of analogue 3. These novel RXFP3-selective peptides represent valuable pharmacological tools to study the physiological roles of H3 relaxin/RXFP3 systems in the brain and important leads for the development of novel compounds for the treatment of affective and cognitive disorders.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005

Characterization of the Rat INSL3 Receptor

Daniel J. Scott; Ping Fu; Pei-Juan Shen; Andrew L. Gundlach; Sharon Layfield; Anne Riesewijk; Hideki Tomiyama; John M. Hutson; Geoffrey W. Tregear; Ross A. D. Bathgate

Abstract: Human LGR8, initially discovered as a low‐affinity relaxin receptor, has now been characterized as the INSL3 receptor. To investigate LGR8 function in the rat, an LGR8 ortholog was identified in the rat genome, and the full‐length sequence was cloned and expressed. Rat LGR8 bound INSL3 with high affinity, clearly demonstrating that it is the rat INSL3 receptor. Interestingly, native rat relaxin did not activate rat LGR8, indicating that relaxin is not an endogenous ligand for rat LGR8. LGR8 mRNA expression was demonstrated in the gubernaculum at the time of testis descent and in the testis associated with germ cells.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

The NMR solution structure of the relaxin (RXFP1) receptor lipoprotein receptor class a module and identification of key residues in the N-terminal region of the module that mediate receptor activation

Emma J. Hopkins; Sharon Layfield; Tania Ferraro; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Paul R. Gooley

The receptors for the peptide hormones relaxin and insulin-like peptide 3 (INSL3) are the leucine-rich repeat-containing G-protein-coupled receptors LGR7 and LGR8 recently renamed as the relaxin family peptide (RXFP) receptors, RXFP1 and RXFP2, respectively. These receptors differ from other LGRs by the addition of an N-terminal low density lipoprotein receptor class A (LDLa) module and are the only human G-protein-coupled receptors to contain such a domain. Recently it was shown that the LDLa module of the RXFP1 and RXFP2 receptors is essential for ligand-stimulated cAMP signaling. The mechanism by which the LDLa module modulates receptor signaling is unknown; however, it represents a unique paradigm in understanding G-protein-coupled receptor signaling. Here we present the structure of the RXFP1 receptor LDLa module determined by solution NMR spectroscopy. The structure is similar to other LDLa modules but shows small differences in side chain orientations and inter-residue packing. Interchange of the module with the second ligand binding domain of the LDL receptor, LB2, results in a receptor that binds relaxin with full affinity but is unable to signal. Furthermore, we demonstrate via structural studies on mutated LDLa modules and functional studies on mutated full-length receptors that a hydrophobic surface within the N-terminal region of the module is essential for activation of RXFP1 receptor signal in response to relaxin stimulation. This study has highlighted the necessity to understand the structural effects of single amino acid mutations on the LDLa module to fully interpret the effects of these mutations on receptor activity.


Molecular and Cellular Endocrinology | 2008

Adenovirus-mediated delivery of relaxin reverses cardiac fibrosis

Ross A. D. Bathgate; Edna D. Lekgabe; Jonathan T. McGuane; Yidan Su; Thao Pham; Tania Ferraro; Sharon Layfield; Ross D. Hannan; Walter G. Thomas; Chrishan S. Samuel; Xiao-Jun Du

We have evaluated the effectiveness of systemic adenovirally delivered mouse relaxin on reversing fibrosis in a transgenic murine model of fibrotic cardiomyopathy due to beta(2)-adrenergic receptor (beta(2)AR) overexpression. Recombinant adenoviruses expressing green fluorescent protein (Ad-GFP), rat relaxin (Ad-rRLN) and mouse relaxin (Ad-mRLN) were generated and Ad-rRLN and Ad-mRLN were demonstrated to direct the expression of bioactive relaxin peptides in vitro. A single systemic injection of Ad-mRLN resulted in transgene expression in the liver and bioactive relaxin peptide in the plasma. Ad-mRLN, but not Ad-GFP, treatment reversed the increased left ventricular collagen content in beta(2)AR mice to control levels without affecting collagen levels in other heart chambers or in the lung and kidney. Hence a single systemic injection of adenovirus producing mouse relaxin reverses cardiac fibrosis without adversely affecting normal collagen levels in other organs and establishes the potential for the use of relaxin gene therapy for the treatment of cardiac fibrosis.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 2004

Identification and characterization of the mouse and rat relaxin receptors as the novel orthologues of human leucine-rich repeat-containing G-protein-coupled receptor 7.

Daniel J. Scott; Sharon Layfield; A. Riesewijk; Hiroki Morita; Geoffrey W. Tregear; Ross A. D. Bathgate

1. Relaxin is an extracellular matrix (ECM)‐remodelling hormone that is functionally important in reproductive tissues, brain, lung and heart.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005

Characterization of the Mouse and Rat Relaxin Receptors

Daniel J. Scott; Sharon Layfield; Anne Riesewijk; Hiroki Morita; Geoffrey W. Tregear; Ross A. D. Bathgate

Abstract: Rodent models have been used for many years to probe the actions of relaxin. Identification of the orthologs of human leucine‐rich repeat‐containing g‐protein‐coupled receptor 7 (LGR7), the relaxin receptor, in mouse and rat will enable characterization of the response of LGR7 to relaxin in these species. Partial LGR7 homologous sequences from mouse and rat were discovered in the Celera and NCBI gene databases, amplified, cloned, and sequenced. At the protein level, mouse and rat LGR7 are 85.2% and 85.7% identical to human LGR7. Mouse and rat LGR7 were able to bind to and be activated by relaxin ligands.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2005

Restricted Expression of LGR8 in Intralaminar Thalamic Nuclei of Rat Brain Suggests a Role in Sensorimotor Systems

Pei-Juan Shen; Ping Fu; Kevin D. Phelan; Daniel J. Scott; Sharon Layfield; Geoffrey W. Tregear; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Andrew L. Gundlach

Abstract: LGR8 was recently identified as a cognate receptor for insulin‐like peptide‐3 (INSL3), and INSL3‐LGR8 signaling is best known for its role in testis descent during development. LGR8 mRNA has been detected in various human tissues including brain, but the regional and cellular distribution of LGR8 expression in the mammalian central nervous system is unknown. Therefore, in this study we investigated the presence and localization of LGR8 mRNA in rat brain using reverse transcription‐polymerase chain reaction and in situ hybridization histochemistry. Results revealed a distinct distribution of LGR8 in forebrain, with transcripts principally restricted to the posterior thalamus and highest densities detected in the parafascicular nucleus of both adult and developing rats. Unexpectedly, INSL3 mRNA was not detected in brain by similar methods, but preliminary electrophysiologic studies of parafascicular neurons revealed that INSL3 altered their activity. These findings suggest that LGR8 signaling may be involved in sensorimotor control in the rat and perhaps other species, particularly via actions on parafascicular neurons that project to basal ganglia and are depleted in Parkinsons disease.

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Ross A. D. Bathgate

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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John D. Wade

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Andrew L. Gundlach

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Daniel J. Scott

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Ping Fu

University of Melbourne

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