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Dive into the research topics where Suzanne J. Reid is active.

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Featured researches published by Suzanne J. Reid.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2010

An ovine transgenic Huntington's disease model

Jessie C. Jacobsen; C. Simon Bawden; Skye R. Rudiger; Clive J. McLaughlan; Suzanne J. Reid; Henry J. Waldvogel; Marcy E. MacDonald; James F. Gusella; Simon K. Walker; Jennifer M. Kelly; Graham C. Webb; Richard L.M. Faull; Mark I. Rees; Russell G. Snell

Huntingtons disease (HD) is an inherited autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by an expansion of a CAG trinucleotide repeat in the huntingtin (HTT) gene [Huntingtons Disease Collaborative Research Group (1993) A novel gene containing a trinucleotide repeat that is expanded and unstable on Huntingtons disease chromosomes. The Huntingtons Disease Collaborative Research Group. Cell, 72, 971-983]. Despite identification of the gene in 1993, the underlying life-long disease process and effective treatments to prevent or delay it remain elusive. In an effort to fast-track treatment strategies for HD into clinical trials, we have developed a new large-animal HD transgenic ovine model. Sheep, Ovis aries L., were selected because the developmental pattern of the ovine basal ganglia and cortex (the regions primarily affected in HD) is similar to the analogous regions of the human brain. Microinjection of a full-length human HTT cDNA containing 73 polyglutamine repeats under the control of the human promotor resulted in six transgenic founders varying in copy number of the transgene. Analysis of offspring (at 1 and 7 months of age) from one of the founders showed robust expression of the full-length human HTT protein in both CNS and non-CNS tissue. Further, preliminary immunohistochemical analysis demonstrated the organization of the caudate nucleus and putamen and revealed decreased expression of medium size spiny neuron marker DARPP-32 at 7 months of age. It is anticipated that this novel transgenic animal will represent a practical model for drug/clinical trials and surgical interventions especially aimed at delaying or preventing HD initiation. New sequence accession number for ovine HTT mRNA: FJ457100.


Neuroscience | 2005

TATA-binding protein in neurodegenerative disease

W.M.C. van Roon-Mom; Suzanne J. Reid; Richard L.M. Faull; Russell G. Snell

TATA binding protein (TBP) is a general transcription factor that plays an important role in initiation of transcription. In recent years evidence has emerged implicating TPB in the molecular mechanism of a number of neurodegenerative diseases. Wild type TBP in humans contains a long polyglutamine stretch ranging in size from 29 to 42. It has been found associated with aggregated proteins in several of the polyglutamine disorders. Expansion in the CAA/CAG composite repeat beyond 42 has been shown to cause a cerebellar ataxia, SCA17. The involvement of such an important housekeeping protein in the disease mechanism suggests a major impact on the functioning of cells. The question remains, does TBP contribute to these diseases through a loss of normal function, likely to be catastrophic to a cell, or the gain of an aberrant function? This review deals with the function of TBP in transcription and cell function. The distribution of the polyglutamine coding allele lengths in TBP of the normal population and in SCA17 is reviewed and an outline is given on the reported cases of SCA17. The role of TBP in other polyglutamine disorders will be addressed as well as its possible role in other neurodegenerative diseases.


Molecular Brain Research | 2002

Insoluble TATA-binding protein accumulation in Huntington’s disease cortex

Willeke M. C. van Roon-Mom; Suzanne J. Reid; A. Lesley Jones; Marcy E. MacDonald; Richard L.M. Faull; Russell G. Snell

Huntingtons disease is a dominantly inherited neurological disorder where specific neurodegeneration is caused by an extended polyglutamine stretch in the huntingtin protein. Proteins with expanded polyglutamine regions have the ability to self-aggregate and previous work in our laboratory, and by others, revealed sparse amyloid-like deposits in the Huntingtons disease brain, supporting the hypothesis that the polyglutamine stretches may fold into regular beta-sheet structures. This process of folding has similarities to other neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease, and the prion diseases which all exhibit beta-sheet protein accumulation. We were therefore interested in testing the hypothesis that TATA-binding protein may play a role in Huntingtons disease as it contains an elongated polymorphic polyglutamine stretch that ranges in size from 26 to 42 amino acids in normal individuals. A proportion of TBP alleles fall within the range of glutamine length that causes neurodegeneration when located in the huntingtin protein. In this study the distribution and cellular localisation of TATA-binding protein was compared to the distribution and cellular localisation of the huntingtin protein in the middle frontal gyrus of Huntingtons disease and neurologically normal subjects. Seven different morphological forms of TATA-binding protein-positive structures were detected in Huntingtons disease but not in control brain. TATA-binding protein labelling was relatively more abundant than huntingtin labelling and increased with the grade of the disease. At least a proportion of this accumulated TBP exists as insoluble protein. This suggests that TBP may play a role in the disease process.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2003

Molecular investigation of TBP allele length:: a SCA17 cellular model and population study

Suzanne J. Reid; Mark I. Rees; Willeke M. C. van Roon-Mom; Lesley Jones; Marcy E. MacDonald; Greg Sutherland; Matthew J. During; Richard L.M. Faull; Michael John Owen; M. Dragunow; Russell G. Snell

Recently, an inherited spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA17) has been attributed to polyglutamine coding expansions within the gene coding for human TATA-box binding protein (TBP). The normal repeat range is 25-42 units with patients having as few as 46 repeats. We undertook a TBP repeat length population study showing its relative stability, skewed distribution, and substantial population specific differences. To investigate the mechanism of neurodegeneration in SCA17 we have developed a cellular model expressing full-length TBP with a range of polyQ expansions. As has been found with other polyQ cellular models, insoluble intracellular inclusions form in a repeat-length-dependent manner. In addition, we have shown that the expanded TBP polyQ tract is able to interact with other overexpressed polyQ-containing proteins. Importantly, overexpression of expanded TBP results in increased Cre-dependent transcriptional activity. As TBP is required for transcription by all RNA polymerases, this may indicate a mechanism for aberrant polyQ gain of function.


Journal of Huntington's disease | 2013

Further Molecular Characterisation of the OVT73 Transgenic Sheep Model of Huntington's Disease Identifies Cortical Aggregates

Suzanne J. Reid; Stefano Patassini; Renee R. Handley; Skye R. Rudiger; Clive J. McLaughlan; Alexander P. Osmand; Jessie C. Jacobsen; A. Jennifer Morton; Andreas Weiss; Henry J. Waldvogel; Marcy E. MacDonald; James F. Gusella; C. Simon Bawden; Richard L.M. Faull; Russell G. Snell

BACKGROUND Huntingtons disease is a neurodegenerative disorder, typically with clinical manifestations in adult years, caused by an expanded polyglutamine-coding repeat in HTT. There are no treatments that delay or prevent the onset or progression of this devastating disease. OBJECTIVE AND METHODS In order to study its pre-symptomatic molecular progression and provide a large mammalian model for determining natural history of the disease and for therapeutic testing, we generated and previously reported on lines of transgenic sheep carrying a full length human HTT cDNA transgene, with expression driven by a minimal HTT promoter. We report here further characterization of our preferred line, OVT73. RESULTS This line reliably expresses the expanded human huntingtin protein at modest, but readily detectable levels throughout the brain, including the striatum and cortex. Transmission of the 73 unit glutamine coding repeat was relatively stable over three generations. At the first time-point of a longitudinal study, animals sacrificed at 6 months (7 transgenic, 7 control) showed reduced striatum GABAA α1 receptor, and globus pallidus leu-enkephalin immunoreactivity. Two of three 18 month old animals sacrificed revealed cortical neuropil aggregates. Furthermore, neuronal intranuclear inclusions were identified in the piriform cortex of a single 36 month old animal in addition to cortical neuropil aggregates. CONCLUSIONS Taken together, these data indicate that the OVT73 transgenic sheep line will progressively reveal early HD pathology and allow therapeutic testing over a period of time relevant to human patients.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2015

Identification of elevated urea as a severe, ubiquitous metabolic defect in the brain of patients with Huntington's disease.

Stefano Patassini; Paul Begley; Suzanne J. Reid; Jingshu Xu; Stephanie J. Church; Maurice Curtis; Mike Dragunow; Henry J. Waldvogel; Richard D. Unwin; Russell G. Snell; Richard L.M. Faull; Garth J. S. Cooper

Huntingtons disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder wherein the aetiological defect is a mutation in the Huntingtons gene (HTT), which alters the structure of the huntingtin protein through the lengthening of a polyglutamine tract and initiates a cascade that ultimately leads to dementia and premature death. However, neurodegeneration typically manifests in HD only in middle age, and processes linking the causative mutation to brain disease are poorly understood. Here, our objective was to elucidate further the processes that cause neurodegeneration in HD, by measuring levels of metabolites in brain regions known to undergo varying degrees of damage. We applied gas-chromatography/mass spectrometry-based metabolomics in a case-control study of eleven brain regions in short post-mortem-delay human tissue from nine well-characterized HD patients and nine controls. Unexpectedly, a single major abnormality was evident in all eleven brain regions studied across the forebrain, midbrain and hindbrain, namely marked elevation of urea, a metabolite formed in the urea cycle by arginase-mediated cleavage of arginine. Urea cycle activity localizes primarily in the liver, where it functions to incorporate protein-derived amine-nitrogen into urea for recycling or urinary excretion. It also occurs in other cell-types, but systemic over-production of urea is not known in HD. These findings are consistent with impaired local urea regulation in brain, by up-regulation of synthesis and/or defective clearance. We hypothesize that defective brain urea metabolism could play a substantive role in the pathogenesis of neurodegeneration, perhaps via defects in osmoregulation or nitrogen metabolism. Brain urea metabolism is therefore a target for generating novel monitoring/imaging strategies and/or therapeutic interventions aimed at ameliorating the impact of HD in patients.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Metabolic disruption identified in the Huntington’s disease transgenic sheep model

Renee R. Handley; Suzanne J. Reid; Stefano Patassini; Skye R. Rudiger; Vladimir Obolonkin; Clive J. McLaughlan; Jessie C. Jacobsen; James F. Gusella; Marcy E. MacDonald; Henry J. Waldvogel; C. Simon Bawden; Richard L.M. Faull; Russell G. Snell

Huntington’s disease (HD) is a dominantly inherited, progressive neurodegenerative disorder caused by a CAG repeat expansion within exon 1 of HTT, encoding huntingtin. There are no therapies that can delay the progression of this devastating disease. One feature of HD that may play a critical role in its pathogenesis is metabolic disruption. Consequently, we undertook a comparative study of metabolites in our transgenic sheep model of HD (OVT73). This model does not display overt symptoms of HD but has circadian rhythm alterations and molecular changes characteristic of the early phase disease. Quantitative metabolite profiles were generated from the motor cortex, hippocampus, cerebellum and liver tissue of 5 year old transgenic sheep and matched controls by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Differentially abundant metabolites were evident in the cerebellum and liver. There was striking tissue-specificity, with predominantly amino acids affected in the transgenic cerebellum and fatty acids in the transgenic liver, which together may indicate a hyper-metabolic state. Furthermore, there were more strong pair-wise correlations of metabolite abundance in transgenic than in wild-type cerebellum and liver, suggesting altered metabolic constraints. Together these differences indicate a metabolic disruption in the sheep model of HD and could provide insight into the presymptomatic human disease.


MethodsX | 2015

Rapid RNA analysis of individual Caenorhabditis elegans.

Kien Ly; Suzanne J. Reid; Russell G. Snell

Graphical abstract


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Metabolite mapping reveals severe widespread perturbation of multiple metabolic processes in Huntington’s disease human brain

Stefano Patassini; Paul Begley; Jingshu Xu; Stephanie J. Church; Suzanne J. Reid; Eric H. Kim; Maurice A. Curtis; M. Dragunow; Henry J. Waldvogel; Russell G. Snell; Richard D. Unwin; Richard L.M. Faull; Garth J. S. Cooper

Huntingtons disease (HD) is a genetically-mediated neurodegenerative disorder wherein the aetiological defect is a mutation in the Huntingtons gene (HTT), which alters the structure of the huntingtin protein (Htt) through lengthening of its polyglutamine tract, thus initiating a cascade that ultimately leads to premature death. However, neurodegeneration typically manifests in HD only in middle age, and mechanisms linking the causative mutation to brain disease are poorly understood. Brain metabolism is severely perturbed in HD, and some studies have indicated a potential role for mutant Htt as a driver of these metabolic aberrations. Here, our objective was to determine the effects of HD on brain metabolism by measuring levels of polar metabolites in regions known to undergo varying degrees of damage. We performed gas-chromatography/mass spectrometry-based metabolomic analyses in a case-control study of eleven brain regions in short post-mortem-delay human tissue from nine well-characterized HD patients and nine matched controls. In each patient, we measured metabolite content in representative tissue-samples from eleven brain regions that display varying degrees of damage in HD, thus identifying the presence and abundance of 63 different metabolites from several molecular classes, including carbohydrates, amino acids, nucleosides, and neurotransmitters. Robust alterations in regional brain-metabolite abundances were observed in HD patients: these included changes in levels of small molecules that play important roles as intermediates in the tricarboxylic-acid and urea cycles, and amino-acid metabolism. Our findings point to widespread disruption of brain metabolism and indicate a complex phenotype beyond the gradient of neuropathologic damage observed in HD brain.


Human Gene Therapy | 2017

Artificial miRNAs reduce human mutant Huntingtin throughout the striatum in a transgenic sheep model of Huntington’s disease

Edith L. Pfister; Natalie Dinardo; Erica Mondo; Florie Borel; Faith Conroy; Cara K. Fraser; Gwladys Gernoux; Xin Han; Danjing Hu; Emily S. Johnson; Lori A. Kennington; Pengpeng Liu; Suzanne J. Reid; Ellen Sapp; Petr Vodicka; Tim Kuchel; A. Jennifer Morton; David Howland; Richard P. Moser; Miguel Sena-Esteves; Guangping Gao; Christian Mueller; Marian DiFiglia; Neil Aronin

Huntingtons disease (HD) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease caused by a genetic expansion of the CAG repeat region in the huntingtin (HTT) gene. Studies in HD mouse models have shown that artificial miRNAs can reduce mutant HTT, but evidence for their effectiveness and safety in larger animals is lacking. HD transgenic sheep express the full-length human HTT with 73 CAG repeats. AAV9 was used to deliver unilaterally to HD sheep striatum an artificial miRNA targeting exon 48 of the human HTT mRNA under control of two alternative promoters: U6 or CβA. The treatment reduced human mutant (m) HTT mRNA and protein 50-80% in the striatum at 1 and 6 months post injection. Silencing was detectable in both the caudate and putamen. Levels of endogenous sheep HTT protein were not affected. There was no significant loss of neurons labeled by DARPP32 or NeuN at 6 months after treatment, and Iba1-positive microglia were detected at control levels. It is concluded that safe and effective silencing of human mHTT protein can be achieved and sustained in a large-animal brain by direct delivery of an AAV carrying an artificial miRNA.

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C. Simon Bawden

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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Skye R. Rudiger

South Australian Research and Development Institute

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