Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sheree D. Martin is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sheree D. Martin.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

The role of mitochondria in the aetiology of insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes

Sheree D. Martin; Sean L. McGee

BACKGROUND The prevalence of type 2 diabetes is rapidly increasing world-wide and insulin resistance is central to the aetiology of this disease. The biology underpinning the development of insulin resistance is not completely understood and the role of impaired mitochondrial function in the development of insulin resistance is controversial. SCOPE OF REVIEW This review will provide an overview of the major processes regulated by mitochondria, before examining the evidence that has investigated the relationship between mitochondrial function and insulin action. Further considerations aimed at clarifying some controversies surrounding this issue will also be proposed. MAJOR CONCLUSIONS Controversy on this issue is fuelled by our lack of understanding of some of the basic biological interactions between mitochondria and insulin regulated processes in the context of insults thought to induce insulin resistance. Aspects that have not yet been considered are tissue/cell type specific responses, mitochondrial responses to site-specific impairments in mitochondrial function and as yet uncharacterised retrograde signalling from mitochondria. GENERAL SIGNIFICANCE Further investigation of the relationship between mitochondria and insulin action could reveal novel mechanisms contributing to insulin resistance in specific patient subsets. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Frontiers of Mitochondrial Research.


The Journal of Physiology | 2009

NDRG2, a novel regulator of myoblast proliferation, is regulated by anabolic and catabolic factors

Victoria C. Foletta; Matthew Prior; Nicole Stupka; Kate A. Carey; David Segal; Sharon Jones; Courtney Swinton; Sheree D. Martin; David Cameron-Smith; Ken Walder

Skeletal muscle tissue undergoes adaptive changes in response to stress and the genes that control these processes are incompletely characterised. NDRG2 (N‐myc downstream‐regulated gene 2), a stress‐ and growth‐related gene, was investigated in skeletal muscle growth and adaption. While NDRG2 expression levels were found to be up‐regulated in both differentiated human and mouse myotubes compared with undifferentiated myoblasts, the suppression of NDRG2 in C2C12 myoblasts resulted in slowed myoblast proliferation. The increased expression levels of the cell cycle inhibitors, p21 Waf1/Cip1 and p27 Kip1, and of various muscle differentiation markers in NDRG2‐deficient myoblasts indicate that a lack of NDRG2 promoted cell cycle exiting and the onset of myogenesis. Furthermore, the analysis of NDRG2 regulation in C2C12 myotubes treated with catabolic and anabolic agents and in skeletal muscle from human subjects following resistance exercise training revealed NDRG2 gene expression to be down‐regulated during hypertrophic conditions, and conversely, up‐regulated during muscle atrophy. Together, these data demonstrate that NDRG2 expression is highly responsive to different stress conditions in skeletal muscle and suggest that the level of NDRG2 expression may be critical to myoblast growth and differentiation.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2013

Versican Processing by a Disintegrin-like and Metalloproteinase Domain with Thrombospondin-1 Repeats Proteinases-5 and -15 Facilitates Myoblast Fusion

Nicole Stupka; Christopher Kintakas; Jason D. White; Fiona W. Fraser; Michael Hanciu; Noriko Aramaki-Hattori; Sheree D. Martin; Chantal A. Coles; Fiona Collier; Alister C. Ward; Suneel S. Apte; Daniel R. McCulloch

Background: Skeletal muscle fiber formation requires myoblast cell-cell membrane contact and fusion. Results: A versican-rich pericellular matrix surrounding myoblasts is proteolytically cleared by ADAMTS versicanases facilitating myoblast contact and fusion. Conclusion: Versican processing by ADAMTS versicanases contribute to muscle fiber formation. Significance: Targeting versican remodeling could enhance the regenerative capacity of muscle by improving muscle fiber fusion during regeneration. Skeletal muscle development and regeneration requires the fusion of myoblasts into multinucleated myotubes. Because the enzymatic proteolysis of a hyaluronan and versican-rich matrix by ADAMTS versicanases is required for developmental morphogenesis, we hypothesized that the clearance of versican may facilitate the fusion of myoblasts during myogenesis. Here, we used transgenic mice and an in vitro model of myoblast fusion, C2C12 cells, to determine a potential role for ADAMTS versicanases. Versican processing was observed during in vivo myogenesis at the time when myoblasts were fusing to form multinucleated myotubes. Relevant ADAMTS genes, chief among them Adamts5 and Adamts15, were expressed both in developing embryonic muscle and differentiating C2C12 cells. Reducing the levels of Adamts5 mRNA in vitro impaired myoblast fusion, which could be rescued with catalytically active but not the inactive forms of ADAMTS5 or ADAMTS15. The addition of inactive ADAMTS5, ADAMTS15, or full-length V1 versican effectively impaired myoblast fusion. Finally, the expansion of a hyaluronan and versican-rich matrix was observed upon reducing the levels of Adamts5 mRNA in myoblasts. These data indicate that these ADAMTS proteinases contribute to the formation of multinucleated myotubes such as is necessary for both skeletal muscle development and during regeneration, by remodeling a versican-rich pericellular matrix of myoblasts. Our study identifies a possible pathway to target for the improvement of myogenesis in a plethora of diseases including cancer cachexia, sarcopenia, and muscular dystrophy.


Hepatology | 2012

Caveolin‐1 orchestrates the balance between glucose and lipid‐dependent energy metabolism: Implications for liver regeneration

Manuel A. Fernandez-Rojo; Christina Restall; Charles Ferguson; Nick Martel; Sally Martin; Marta Bosch; Adam Kassan; Gary M. Leong; Sheree D. Martin; Sean L. McGee; George E. O. Muscat; Robin L. Anderson; Carlos Enrich; Albert Pol; Robert G. Parton

Caveolin‐1 (CAV1) is a structural protein of caveolae involved in lipid homeostasis and endocytosis. Using newly generated pure Balb/C CAV1 null (Balb/CCAV1−/−) mice, CAV1−/− mice from Jackson Laboratories (JAXCAV1−/−), and CAV1−/− mice developed in the Kurzchalia Laboratory (KCAV1−/−), we show that under physiological conditions CAV1 expression in mouse tissues is necessary to guarantee an efficient progression of liver regeneration and mouse survival after partial hepatectomy. Absence of CAV1 in mouse tissues is compensated by the development of a carbohydrate‐dependent anabolic adaptation. These results were supported by extracellular flux analysis of cellular glycolytic metabolism in CAV1‐knockdown AML12 hepatocytes, suggesting cell autonomous effects of CAV1 loss in hepatic glycolysis. Unlike in KCAV1−/− livers, in JAXCAV1−/− livers CAV1 deficiency is compensated by activation of anabolic metabolism (pentose phosphate pathway and lipogenesis) allowing liver regeneration. Administration of 2‐deoxy‐glucose in JAXCAV1−/− mice indicated that liver regeneration in JAXCAV1−/− mice is strictly dependent on hepatic carbohydrate metabolism. Moreover, with the exception of regenerating JAXCAV1−/− livers, expression of CAV1 in mice is required for efficient hepatic lipid storage during fasting, liver regeneration, and diet‐induced steatosis in the three CAV1−/− mouse strains. Furthermore, under these conditions CAV1 accumulates in the lipid droplet fraction in wildtype mouse hepatocytes. Conclusion: Our data demonstrate that lack of CAV1 alters hepatocyte energy metabolism homeostasis under physiological and pathological conditions. (HEPATOLOGY 2011)


Molecular metabolism | 2014

Mitochondrial dysfunction has divergent, cell type-dependent effects on insulin action

Sheree D. Martin; Shona Morrison; Nicky Konstantopoulos; Sean L. McGee

The contribution of mitochondrial dysfunction to insulin resistance is a contentious issue in metabolic research. Recent evidence implicates mitochondrial dysfunction as contributing to multiple forms of insulin resistance. However, some models of mitochondrial dysfunction fail to induce insulin resistance, suggesting greater complexity describes mitochondrial regulation of insulin action. We report that mitochondrial dysfunction is not necessary for cellular models of insulin resistance. However, impairment of mitochondrial function is sufficient for insulin resistance in a cell type-dependent manner, with impaired mitochondrial function inducing insulin resistance in adipocytes, but having no effect, or insulin sensitising effects in hepatocytes. The mechanism of mitochondrial impairment was important in determining the impact on insulin action, but was independent of mitochondrial ROS production. These data can account for opposing findings on this issue and highlight the complexity of mitochondrial regulation of cell type-specific insulin action, which is not described by current reductionist paradigms.


American Journal of Physiology-endocrinology and Metabolism | 2015

ATGL-mediated triglyceride turnover and the regulation of mitochondrial capacity in skeletal muscle

Ruth C. R. Meex; Andrew J. Hoy; Rachael M. Mason; Sheree D. Martin; Sean L. McGee; Clinton R. Bruce; Matthew J. Watt

Emerging evidence indicates that skeletal muscle lipid droplets are an important control point for intracellular lipid homeostasis and that regulating fatty acid fluxes from lipid droplets might influence mitochondrial capacity. We used pharmacological blockers of the major triglyceride lipases, adipose triglyceride lipase (ATGL) and hormone-sensitive lipase, to show that a large proportion of the fatty acids that are transported into myotubes are trafficked through the intramyocellular triglyceride pool. We next tested whether increasing lipolysis from intramyocellular lipid droplets could activate transcriptional responses to enhance mitochondrial and fatty acid oxidative capacity. ATGL was overexpressed by adenoviral and adenoassociated viral infection in C2C12 myotubes and the tibialis anterior muscle of C57Bl/6 mice, respectively. ATGL overexpression in C2C12 myotubes increased lipolysis, which was associated with increased peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-∂ activity, transcriptional upregulation of some PPAR∂ target genes, and enhanced mitochondrial capacity. The transcriptional responses were specific to ATGL actions and not a generalized increase in fatty acid flux in the myotubes. Marked ATGL overexpression (20-fold) induced modest molecular changes in the skeletal muscle of mice, but these effects were not sufficient to alter fatty acid oxidation. Together, these data demonstrate the importance of lipid droplets for myocellular fatty acid trafficking and the capacity to modulate mitochondrial capacity by enhancing lipid droplet lipolysis in vitro; however, this adaptive program is of minor importance when superimposing the normal metabolic stresses encountered in free-moving animals.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 2015

Metabolic remodelling in obesity and type 2 diabetes: pathological or protective mechanisms in response to nutrient excess?

Timothy Connor; Sheree D. Martin; Kirsten F. Howlett; Sean L. McGee

Altered metabolism in tissues such as the liver, skeletal muscle and adipose tissue is observed in metabolic diseases characterized by nutrient excess and energy imbalance, such as obesity and type 2 diabetes. These alterations in metabolism can include resistance to the hormone insulin, lipid accumulation, mitochondrial dysfunction and transcriptional remodelling of major metabolic pathways. The underlying assumption has been that these same alterations in metabolism are fundamental to the pathogenesis of metabolic diseases. An alternative view is that these alterations in metabolism occur to protect cell and tissue viability in the face of constant positive energy balance. This speculative review presents evidence that many of the metabolic adaptations that occur in metabolic diseases characterized by nutrient excess can be viewed as protective in nature, rather than pathogenic per se for disease progression. Finally, we also briefly discuss the usefulness and potential pitfalls of therapeutic approaches that attempt to correct these same metabolic defects when energy balance is not altered, and the potential links between metabolic survival responses and other chronic diseases such as cancer.


Cytotechnology | 2009

Enhanced proliferation of human skeletal muscle precursor cells derived from elderly donors cultured in estimated physiological (5%) oxygen

Sheree D. Martin; Fiona Collier; Mark A. Kirkland; Ken Walder; Nicole Stupka

Human skeletal muscle precursor cells (myoblasts) have significant therapeutic potential and are a valuable research tool to study muscle cell biology. Oxygen is a critical factor in the successful culture of myoblasts with low (1–6%) oxygen culture conditions enhancing the proliferation, differentiation, and/or viability of mouse, rat, and bovine myoblasts. The specific effects of low oxygen depend on the myoblast source and oxygen concentration; however, variable oxygen conditions have not been tested in the culture of human myoblasts. In this study, muscle precursor cells were isolated from vastus lateralis muscle biopsies and myoblast cultures were established in 5% oxygen, before being divided into physiological (5%) or standard (20%) oxygen conditions for experimental analysis. Five percent oxygen increased proliferating myoblast numbers, and since low oxygen had no significant effect on myoblast viability, this increase in cell number was attributed to enhanced proliferation. The proportion of cells in the S (DNA synthesis) phase of the cell cycle was increased by 50%, and p21Cip1 gene and protein expression was decreased in 5 versus 20% oxygen. Unlike in rodent and bovine myoblasts, the increase in myoD, myogenin, creatine kinase, and myosin heavy chain IIa gene expression during differentiation was similar in 5 and 20% oxygen; as was myotube hypertrophy. These data indicate for the first time that low oxygen culture conditions stimulate proliferation, whilst maintaining (but not enhancing) the viability and the differentiation potential of human primary myoblasts and should be considered as optimum conditions for ex-vivo expansion of these cells.


Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism | 2017

Scriptaid enhances skeletal muscle insulin action and cardiac function in obese mice

Vidhi Gaur; Timothy Connor; Kylie Venardos; Darren C. Henstridge; Sheree D. Martin; Courtney Swinton; Shona Morrison; Kathryn Aston-Mourney; Stefan M. Gehrig; Roelof van Ewijk; Gordon S. Lynch; Mark A. Febbraio; Gregory R. Steinberg; Mark Hargreaves; Ken Walder; Sean L. McGee

To determine the effect of Scriptaid, a compound that can replicate aspects of the exercise adaptive response through disruption of the class IIa histone deacetylase (HDAC) corepressor complex, on muscle insulin action in obesity.


bioRxiv | 2018

A physiological drop in pH decreases mitochondrial respiration, and AMPK and Akt signalling, in L6 myocytes

Amanda J Genders; Sheree D. Martin; Sean L. McGee; David Bishop

Exercise stimulates mitochondrial biogenesis and increases mitochondrial respiratory function and content. However, during high-intensity exercise muscle pH can decrease below pH 6.8 with a concomitant increase in lactate concentration. This drop in muscle pH is associated with reduced exercise-induced mitochondrial biogenesis, whilst increased lactate may act as a signaling molecule to affect mitochondrial biogenesis. Therefore, in this study we wished to determine the impact of altering pH and lactate concentration in L6 myotubes on genes and proteins known to be involved in mitochondrial biogenesis. We also examined mitochondrial respiration in response to these perturbations. Differentiated L6 myotubes were exposed to normal (pH 7.5), low (pH 7.0) or high pH (pH 8.0) media with and without 20 mM sodium L-lactate for 1 and 6 h. Low pH and 20 mM Sodium L-Lactate resulted in decreased Akt (Ser473) and AMPK (T172) phosphorylation at 1 h compared to controls, whilst at 6 h the nuclear localisation of HDAC5 was decreased. When the pH was increased both Akt (Ser473) and AMPK (T172) phosphorylation was increased at 1 h. Overall increased lactate decreased the nuclear content of HDAC5 at 6 h. Exposure to both high and low pH media significantly decreased basal mitochondrial respiration, ATP turnover, and maximum mitochondrial respiratory capacity. These data indicate that muscle pH affects several metabolic signalling pathways, including those required for mitochondrial function.

Collaboration


Dive into the Sheree D. Martin's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Christina Restall

Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge