Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Tara L. Roberts is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Tara L. Roberts.


Science | 2009

HIN-200 proteins regulate caspase activation in response to foreign cytoplasmic DNA.

Tara L. Roberts; Adi Idris; Jasmyn A. Dunn; Greg M. Kelly; Carol M. Burnton; Samantha Hodgson; Lani Hardy; Valerie Garceau; Matthew J. Sweet; Ian L. Ross; David A. Hume; Katryn J. Stacey

The mammalian innate immune system is activated by foreign nucleic acids. Detection of double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) in the cytoplasm triggers characteristic antiviral responses and macrophage cell death. Cytoplasmic dsDNA rapidly activated caspase 3 and caspase 1 in bone marrow–derived macrophages. We identified the HIN-200 family member and candidate lupus susceptibility factor, p202, as a dsDNA binding protein that bound stably and rapidly to transfected DNA. Knockdown studies showed p202 to be an inhibitor of DNA-induced caspase activation. Conversely, the related pyrin domain–containing HIN-200 factor, AIM2 (p210), was required for caspase activation by cytoplasmic dsDNA. This work indicates that HIN-200 proteins can act as pattern recognition receptors mediating responses to cytoplasmic dsDNA.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2013

AIM2 and NLRP3 inflammasomes activate both apoptotic and pyroptotic death pathways via ASC.

Vitaliya Sagulenko; Sara J. Thygesen; David P. Sester; Adi Idris; Jasmyn A. Cridland; Parimala R. Vajjhala; Tara L. Roberts; Kate Schroder; James E. Vince; Justine M. Hill; John Silke; Katryn J. Stacey

Inflammasomes are protein complexes assembled upon recognition of infection or cell damage signals, and serve as platforms for clustering and activation of procaspase-1. Oligomerisation of initiating proteins such as AIM2 (absent in melanoma-2) and NLRP3 (NOD-like receptor family, pyrin domain-containing-3) recruits procaspase-1 via the inflammasome adapter molecule ASC (apoptosis-associated speck-like protein containing a CARD). Active caspase-1 is responsible for rapid lytic cell death termed pyroptosis. Here we show that AIM2 and NLRP3 inflammasomes activate caspase-8 and -1, leading to both apoptotic and pyroptotic cell death. The AIM2 inflammasome is activated by cytosolic DNA. The balance between pyroptosis and apoptosis depended upon the amount of DNA, with apoptosis seen at lower transfected DNA concentrations. Pyroptosis had a higher threshold for activation, and dominated at high DNA concentrations because it happens more rapidly. Gene knockdown showed caspase-8 to be the apical caspase in the AIM2- and NLRP3-dependent apoptotic pathways, with little or no requirement for caspase-9. Procaspase-8 localised to ASC inflammasome ‘specks’ in cells, and bound directly to the pyrin domain of ASC. Thus caspase-8 is an integral part of the inflammasome, and this extends the relevance of the inflammasome to cell types that do not express caspase-1.


Journal of Immunology | 2003

The Molecular Basis for the Lack of Immunostimulatory Activity of Vertebrate DNA

Katryn J. Stacey; Greg R. Young; Francis Clark; David P. Sester; Tara L. Roberts; Shalin H. Naik; Matthew J. Sweet; David A. Hume

Macrophages and B cells are activated by unmethylated CpG-containing sequences in bacterial DNA. The lack of activity of self DNA has generally been attributed to CpG suppression and methylation, although the role of methylation is in doubt. The frequency of CpG in the mouse genome is 12.5% of Escherichia coli, with unmethylated CpG occurring at ∼3% the frequency of E. coli. This suppression of CpG alone is insufficient to explain the inactivity of self DNA; vertebrate DNA was inactive at 100 μg/ml, 3000 times the concentration at which E. coli DNA activity was observed. We sought to resolve why self DNA does not activate macrophages. Known active CpG motifs occurred in the mouse genome at 18% of random occurrence, similar to general CpG suppression. To examine the contribution of methylation, genomic DNAs were PCR amplified. Removal of methylation from the mouse genome revealed activity that was 23-fold lower than E. coli DNA, although there is only a 7-fold lower frequency of known active CpG motifs in the mouse genome. This discrepancy may be explained by G-rich sequences such as GGAGGGG, which potently inhibited activation and are found in greater frequency in the mouse than the E. coli genome. In summary, general CpG suppression, CpG methylation, inhibitory motifs, and saturable DNA uptake combined to explain the inactivity of self DNA. The immunostimulatory activity of DNA is determined by the frequency of unmethylated stimulatory sequences within an individual DNA strand and the ratio of stimulatory to inhibitory sequences.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Cutting Edge: Species-Specific TLR9-Mediated Recognition of CpG and Non-CpG Phosphorothioate-Modified Oligonucleotides

Tara L. Roberts; M J Sweet; David A. Hume; Katryn J. Stacey

Different DNA motifs are required for optimal stimulation of mouse and human immune cells by CpG oligodeoxynucleotides (ODN). These species differences presumably reflect sequence differences in TLR9, the CpG DNA receptor. In this study, we show that this sequence specificity is restricted to phosphorothioate (PS)-modified ODN and is not observed when a natural phosphodiester backbone is used. Thus, human and mouse cells have not evolved to recognize different CpG motifs in natural DNA. Nonoptimal PS-ODN (i.e., mouse CpG motif on human cells and vice versa) gave delayed and less sustained phosphorylation of p38 MAPK than optimal motifs. When the CpG dinucleotide was inverted to GC in each ODN, some residual activity of the PS-ODN was retained in a species-specific, TLR-9-dependent manner. Thus, TLR9 may be responsible for mediating many published CpG-independent responses to PS-ODN.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2012

The mammalian PYHIN gene family: Phylogeny, evolution and expression

Jasmyn A. Cridland; Eva Z. Curley; Michelle N. Wykes; Kate Schroder; Matthew J. Sweet; Tara L. Roberts; Mark A. Ragan; Karin S. Kassahn; Katryn J. Stacey

BackgroundProteins of the mammalian PYHIN (IFI200/HIN-200) family are involved in defence against infection through recognition of foreign DNA. The family member absent in melanoma 2 (AIM2) binds cytosolic DNA via its HIN domain and initiates inflammasome formation via its pyrin domain. AIM2 lies within a cluster of related genes, many of which are uncharacterised in mouse. To better understand the evolution, orthology and function of these genes, we have documented the range of PYHIN genes present in representative mammalian species, and undertaken phylogenetic and expression analyses.ResultsNo PYHIN genes are evident in non-mammals or monotremes, with a single member found in each of three marsupial genomes. Placental mammals show variable family expansions, from one gene in cow to four in human and 14 in mouse. A single HIN domain appears to have evolved in the common ancestor of marsupials and placental mammals, and duplicated to give rise to three distinct forms (HIN-A, -B and -C) in the placental mammal ancestor. Phylogenetic analyses showed that AIM2 HIN-C and pyrin domains clearly diverge from the rest of the family, and it is the only PYHIN protein with orthology across many species. Interestingly, although AIM2 is important in defence against some bacteria and viruses in mice, AIM2 is a pseudogene in cow, sheep, llama, dolphin, dog and elephant. The other 13 mouse genes have arisen by duplication and rearrangement within the lineage, which has allowed some diversification in expression patterns.ConclusionsThe role of AIM2 in forming the inflammasome is relatively well understood, but molecular interactions of other PYHIN proteins involved in defence against foreign DNA remain to be defined. The non-AIM2 PYHIN protein sequences are very distinct from AIM2, suggesting they vary in effector mechanism in response to foreign DNA, and may bind different DNA structures. The PYHIN family has highly varied gene composition between mammalian species due to lineage-specific duplication and loss, which probably indicates different adaptations for fighting infectious disease. Non-genomic DNA can indicate infection, or a mutagenic threat. We hypothesise that defence of the genome against endogenous retroelements has been an additional evolutionary driver for PYHIN proteins.


Journal of Immunology | 2005

Differences in Macrophage Activation by Bacterial DNA and CpG-Containing Oligonucleotides

Tara L. Roberts; Jasmyn A. Dunn; Tamsin D. Terry; Michael P. Jennings; David A. Hume; Matthew J. Sweet; Katryn J. Stacey

Bacterial DNA activates mouse macrophages, B cells, and dendritic cells in a TLR9-dependent manner. Although short ssCpG-containing phosphodiester oligonucleotides (PO-ODN) can mimic the action of bacterial DNA on macrophages, they are much less immunostimulatory than Escherichia coli DNA. In this study we have assessed the structural differences between E. coli DNA and PO-ODN, which may explain the high activity of bacterial DNA on macrophages. DNA length was found to be the most important variable. Double-strandedness was not responsible for the increased activity of long DNA. DNA adenine methyltransferase (Dam) and DNA cytosine methyltransferase (Dcm) methylation of E. coli DNA did not enhance macrophage NO production. The presence of two CpG motifs on one molecule only marginally improved activity at low concentration, suggesting that ligand-mediated TLR9 cross-linking was not involved. The major contribution was from DNA length. Synthetic ODN >44 nt attained the same levels of activity as bacterial DNA. The response of macrophages to CpG DNA requires endocytic uptake. The length dependence of the CpG ODN response was found to correlate with the presence in macrophages of a length-dependent uptake process for DNA. This transport system was absent from B cells and fibroblasts.


Journal of Immunology | 2006

CpG DNA Activates Survival in Murine Macrophages through TLR9 and the Phosphatidylinositol 3-Kinase-Akt Pathway

David P. Sester; Kristian Brion; Angela Trieu; Helen S. Goodridge; Tara L. Roberts; Jasmyn A. Dunn; David A. Hume; Katryn J. Stacey; Matthew J. Sweet

Bacterial CpG-containing (CpG) DNA promotes survival of murine macrophages and triggers production of proinflammatory mediators. The CpG DNA-induced inflammatory response is mediated via TLR9, whereas a recent study reported that activation of the Akt prosurvival pathway occurs via DNA-dependent protein kinase (DNA-PK) and independently of TLR9. We show, in this study, that Akt activation and survival of murine bone marrow-derived macrophages (BMM) triggered by CpG-containing phosphodiester oligodeoxynucleotides or CpG-containing phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotides was completely dependent on TLR9. In addition, survival triggered by CpG-containing phosphodiester oligodeoxynucleotides was not compromised in BMM from SCID mice that express a catalytically inactive form of DNA-PK. CpG DNA-induced survival of BMM was inhibited by the PI3K inhibitor, LY294002, but not by the MEK1/2 inhibitor, PD98059. The effect of LY294002 was specific to survival, because treatment of BMM with LY294002 affected CpG DNA-induced TNF-α production only modestly. Therefore, CpG DNA activates macrophage survival via TLR9 and the PI3K-Akt pathway and independently of DNA-PK and MEK-ERK.


Molecular Oncology | 2014

Increased sensitivity to ionizing radiation by targeting the homologous recombination pathway in glioma initiating cells

Yi Chieh Lim; Tara L. Roberts; Bryan W. Day; Brett W. Stringer; Sergei Kozlov; Shazrul Fazry; Zara C. Bruce; Kathleen S. Ensbey; David G. Walker; Andrew W. Boyd; Martin F. Lavin

Glioblastoma is deemed the most malignant form of brain tumour, particularly due to its resistance to conventional treatments. A small surviving group of aberrant stem cells termed glioma initiation cells (GICs) that escape surgical debulking are suggested to be the cause of this resistance. Relatively quiescent in nature, GICs are capable of driving tumour recurrence and undergo lineage differentiation. Most importantly, these GICs are resistant to radiotherapy, suggesting that radioresistance contribute to their survival. In a previous study, we demonstrated that GICs had a restricted double strand break (DSB) repair pathway involving predominantly homologous recombination (HR) associated with a lack of functional G1/S checkpoint arrest. This unusual behaviour led to less efficient non‐homologous end joining (NHEJ) repair and overall slower DNA DSB repair kinetics. To determine whether specific targeting of the HR pathway with small molecule inhibitors could increase GIC radiosensitivity, we used the Ataxia‐telangiectasia mutated inhibitor (ATMi) to ablate HR and the DNA‐dependent protein kinase inhibitor (DNA‐PKi) to inhibit NHEJ. Pre‐treatment with ATMi prior to ionizing radiation (IR) exposure prevented HR‐mediated DNA DSB repair as measured by Rad51 foci accumulation. Increased cell death in vitro and improved in vivo animal survival could be observed with combined ATMi and IR treatment. Conversely, DNA‐PKi treatment had minimal impact on GICs ability to resolve DNA DSB after IR with only partial reduction in cell survival, confirming the major role of HR. These results provide a mechanistic insight into the predominant form of DNA DSB repair in GICs, which when targeted may be a potential translational approach to increase patient survival.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2012

A role for homologous recombination and abnormal cell-cycle progression in radioresistance of glioma-initiating cells

Yi Chieh Lim; Tara L. Roberts; Bryan W. Day; Angus Harding; Sergei Kozlov; Amanda W. Kijas; Kathleen S. Ensbey; David G. Walker; Martin F. Lavin

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common form of brain tumor with a poor prognosis and resistance to radiotherapy. Recent evidence suggests that glioma-initiating cells play a central role in radioresistance through DNA damage checkpoint activation and enhanced DNA repair. To investigate this in more detail, we compared the DNA damage response in nontumor forming neural progenitor cells (NPC) and glioma-initiating cells isolated from GBM patient specimens. As observed for GBM tumors, initial characterization showed that glioma-initiating cells have long-term self-renewal capacity. They express markers identical to NPCs and have the ability to form tumors in an animal model. In addition, these cells are radioresistant to varying degrees, which could not be explained by enhanced nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ). Indeed, NHEJ in glioma-initiating cells was equivalent, or in some cases reduced, as compared with NPCs. However, there was evidence for more efficient homologous recombination repair in glioma-initiating cells. We did not observe a prolonged cell cycle nor enhanced basal activation of checkpoint proteins as reported previously. Rather, cell-cycle defects in the G1–S and S-phase checkpoints were observed by determining entry into S-phase and radioresistant DNA synthesis following irradiation. These data suggest that homologous recombination and cell-cycle checkpoint abnormalities may contribute to the radioresistance of glioma-initiating cells and that both processes may be suitable targets for therapy. Mol Cancer Ther; 11(9); 1863–72. ©2012 AACR.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2011

A Novel Role for hSMG-1 in Stress Granule Formation

James A. L. Brown; Tara L. Roberts; Renee S. Richards; Rick Woods; Geoff W. Birrell; Yi Chieh Lim; Shigeo Ohno; Akio Yamashita; Robert T. Abraham; Nuri Gueven; Martin F. Lavin

ABSTRACT hSMG-1 is a member of the phosphoinositide 3 kinase-like kinase (PIKK) family with established roles in nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) of mRNA containing premature termination codons and in genotoxic stress responses to DNA damage. We report here a novel role for hSMG-1 in cytoplasmic stress granule (SG) formation. Exposure of cells to stress causing agents led to the localization of hSMG-1 to SG, identified by colocalization with TIA-1, G3BP1, and eIF4G. hSMG-1 small interfering RNA and the PIKK inhibitor wortmannin prevented formation of a subset of SG, while specific inhibitors of ATM, DNA-PKcs, or mTOR had no effect. Exposure of cells to H2O2 and sodium arsenite induced (S/T)Q phosphorylation of proteins. While Upf2 and Upf1, an essential substrate for hSMG-1 in NMD, were present in SG, NMD-specific Upf1 phosphorylation was not detected in SG, indicating hSMG-1s role in SG is separate from classical NMD. Thus, SG formation appears more complex than originally envisaged and hSMG-1 plays a central role in this process.

Collaboration


Dive into the Tara L. Roberts's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yi Chieh Lim

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hazel Quek

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jasmyn A. Dunn

University of Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Sergei Kozlov

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

John Luff

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bryan W. Day

QIMR Berghofer Medical Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge