Medical Biology - Research Publications

Permanent URI for this collection

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 25
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    An increase in mitochondrial TOM activates apoptosis to drive retinal neurodegeneration.
    Periasamy, A ; Mitchell, N ; Zaytseva, O ; Chahal, AS ; Zhao, J ; Colman, PM ; Quinn, LM ; Gulbis, JM (Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022-12-14)
    Intronic polymorphic TOMM40 variants increasing TOMM40 mRNA expression are strongly correlated to late onset Alzheimer's Disease. The gene product, hTomm40, encoded in the APOE gene cluster, is a core component of TOM, the translocase that imports nascent proteins across the mitochondrial outer membrane. We used Drosophila melanogaster eyes as an in vivo model to investigate the relationship between elevated Tom40 (the Drosophila homologue of hTomm40) expression and neurodegeneration. Here we provide evidence that an overabundance of Tom40 in mitochondria invokes caspase-dependent cell death in a dose-dependent manner, leading to degeneration of the primarily neuronal eye tissue. Degeneration is contingent on the availability of co-assembling TOM components, indicating that an increase in assembled TOM is the factor that triggers apoptosis and degeneration in a neural setting. Eye death is not contingent on inner membrane translocase components, suggesting it is unlikely to be a direct consequence of impaired import. Another effect of heightened Tom40 expression is upregulation and co-association of a mitochondrial oxidative stress biomarker, DmHsp22, implicated in extension of lifespan, providing new insight into the balance between cell survival and death. Activation of regulated death pathways, culminating in eye degeneration, suggests a possible causal route from TOMM40 polymorphisms to neurodegenerative disease.
  • Item
    No Preview Available
    The Bak core dimer focuses triacylglycerides in the membrane
    Smith, NA ; Wardak, AZ ; Cowan, AD ; Colman, PM ; Czabotar, PE ; Smith, BJ (CELL PRESS, 2022-02-01)
    Apoptosis, the intrinsic programmed cell death process, is mediated by the Bcl-2 family members Bak and Bax. Activation via formation of symmetric core dimers and oligomerization on the mitochondrial outer membrane (MOM) leads to permeabilization and cell death. Although this process is linked to the MOM, the role of the membrane in facilitating such pores is poorly understood. We recently described Bak core domain dimers, revealing lipid binding sites and an initial role of lipids in oligomerization. Here we describe simulations that identified localized clustering and interaction of triacylglycerides (TAGs) with a minimized Bak dimer construct. Coalescence of TAGs occurred beneath this Bak dimer, mitigating dimer-induced local membrane thinning and curvature in representative coarse-grain MOM and model membrane systems. Furthermore, the effects observed as a result of coarse-grain TAG cluster formation was concentration dependent, scaling from low physiological MOM concentrations to those found in other organelles. We find that increasing the TAG concentration in liposomes mimicking the MOM decreased the ability of activated Bak to permeabilize these liposomes. These results suggest that the presence of TAGs within a Bak-lipid membrane preserves membrane integrity and is associated with reduced membrane stress, suggesting a possible role of TAGs in Bak-mediated apoptosis.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Weight Gain in Early Life Predicts Risk of Islet Autoimmuity in Children With a First-Degree Relative With Type 1 Diabetes
    Couper, JJ ; Beresford, S ; Hirte, C ; Baghurst, PA ; Pollard, A ; Tait, BD ; Harrison, LC ; Colman, PG (AMER DIABETES ASSOC, 2009-01)
    OBJECTIVE: In a prospective birth cohort study, we followed infants who had a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes to investigate the relationship between early growth and infant feeding and the risk of islet autoimmunity. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Infants with a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes were identified during their mother's pregnancy. Dietary intake was recorded prospectively to determine duration of breast-feeding and age at introduction of cow's milk protein, cereals, meat, fruit, and vegetables. At 6-month reviews, length (or height) and weight, antibodies to insulin, GAD65, the tyrosine phosphatase-like insulinoma antigen, and tissue transglutaminase were measured. Islet autoimmunity was defined as persistent elevation of one or more islet antibodies at consecutive 6-month intervals, including the most recent measure, and was the primary outcome measure. RESULTS: Follow-up of 548 subjects for 5.7 +/- 3.2 years identified 46 children with islet autoimmunity. Weight z score and BMI z score were continuous predictors of risk of islet autoimmunity (adjusted hazard ratios 1.43 [95% CI 1.10-1.84], P = 0.007, and 1.29 [1.01-1.67], P = 0.04, respectively). The risk of islet autoimmunity was greater in subjects with weight z score >0 than in those with weight z score < or =0 over time (2.61 [1.26-5.44], P = 0.01). Weight z score and BMI z score at 2 years and change in weight z score between birth and 2 years, but not dietary intake, also predicted risk of islet autoimmunity. CONCLUSIONS: Weight gain in early life predicts risk of islet autoimmunity in children with a first-degree relative with type 1 diabetes.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Ion currents through Kir potassium channels are gated by anionic lipids
    Jin, R ; He, S ; Black, KA ; Clarke, OB ; Wu, D ; Bolla, JR ; Johnson, P ; Periasamy, A ; Wardak, A ; Czabotar, P ; Colman, PM ; Robinson, C ; Laver, D ; Smith, BJ ; Gulbis, JM (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2022-01-25)
    Ion currents through potassium channels are gated. Constriction of the ion conduction pathway at the inner helix bundle, the textbook gate of Kir potassium channels, has been shown to be an ineffective permeation control, creating a rift in our understanding of how these channels are gated. Here we present evidence that anionic lipids act as interactive response elements sufficient to gate potassium conduction. We demonstrate the limiting barrier to K+ permeation lies within the ion conduction pathway and show that this gate is operated by the fatty acyl tails of lipids that infiltrate the conduction pathway via fenestrations in the walls of the pore. Acyl tails occupying a surface groove extending from the cytosolic interface to the conduction pathway provide a potential means of relaying cellular signals, mediated by anionic lipid head groups bound at the canonical lipid binding site, to the internal gate.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Women with type 1 diabetes exhibit a progressive increase in gut Saccharomyces cerevisiae in pregnancy associated with evidence of gut inflammation
    Bandala-Sanchez, E ; Roth-Schulze, AJ ; Oakey, H ; Penno, MAS ; Bediaga, NG ; Naselli, G ; Ngui, KM ; Smith, AD ; Huang, D ; Zozaya-Valdes, E ; Thomson, RL ; Brown, JD ; Vuillermin, PJ ; Barry, SC ; Craig, ME ; Rawlinson, WD ; Davis, EA ; Harris, M ; Soldatos, G ; Colman, PG ; Wentworth, JM ; Haynes, A ; Morahan, G ; Sinnott, RO ; Papenfuss, AT ; Couper, JJ ; Harrison, LC (ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD, 2022-02)
    AIMS: Studies of the gut microbiome have focused on its bacterial composition. We aimed to characterize the gut fungal microbiome (mycobiome) across pregnancy in women with and without type 1 diabetes. METHODS: Faecal samples (n = 162) were collected from 70 pregnant women (45 with and 25 without type 1 diabetes) across all trimesters. Fungi were analysed by internal transcribed spacer 1 amplicon sequencing. Markers of intestinal inflammation (faecal calprotectin) and intestinal epithelial integrity (serum intestinal fatty acid binding protein; I-FABP), and serum antibodies to Saccharomyces cerevisiae (ASCA) were measured. RESULTS: Women with type 1 diabetes had decreased fungal alpha diversity by the third trimester, associated with an increased abundance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae that was inversely related to the abundance of the anti-inflammatory butyrate-producing bacterium Faecalibacterium prausnitzii. Women with type 1 diabetes had higher concentrations of calprotectin, I-FABP and ASCA. CONCLUSIONS: Women with type 1 diabetes exhibit a shift in the gut mycobiome across pregnancy associated with evidence of gut inflammation and impaired intestinal barrier function. The relevance of these findings to the higher rate of pregnancy complications in type 1 diabetes warrants further study.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Type 1 diabetes: a disease of developmental origins
    Phillips, JE ; Couper, JJ ; Penno, MAS ; Harrison, LC (WILEY-HINDAWI, 2017-09)
    The incidence of type 1 diabetes globally has increased dramatically over the last 50 years. Proposed environmental reasons for this increase mirror the modern lifestyle. Type 1 diabetes can be viewed as part of the non- communicable disease epidemic in our modern society. Meanwhile rapidly evolving new technologies are advancing our understanding of how human microbial communities interface with the immune system and metabolism, and how the modern pro-inflammatory environment is changing these communities and contributing to the rapid rise of non-communicable disease. The majority of children who present with clinical type 1 diabetes are of school age; however 80% of children who develop type 1 diabetes by 18 years of age will have detectable islet autoantibodies by 3 years of age. The evolving concept that type 1 diabetes in many children has developmental origins has directed research questions in search of prevention back to pregnancy and early life. To this end the world's first pregnancy to early childhood cohort study in at-risk children has commenced.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Simplifying prediction of disease progression in pre-symptomatic type 1 diabetes using a single blood sample
    Bediaga, NG ; Li-Wai-Suen, CSN ; Haller, MJ ; Gitelman, SE ; Evans-Molina, C ; Gottlieb, PA ; Hippich, M ; Ziegler, A-G ; Lernmark, A ; DiMeglio, LA ; Wherrett, DK ; Colman, PG ; Harrison, LC ; Wentworth, JM (SPRINGER, 2021-11)
    AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Accurate prediction of disease progression in individuals with pre-symptomatic type 1 diabetes has potential to prevent ketoacidosis and accelerate development of disease-modifying therapies. Current tools for predicting risk require multiple blood samples taken during an OGTT. Our aim was to develop and validate a simpler tool based on a single blood draw. METHODS: Models to predict disease progression using a single OGTT time point (0, 30, 60, 90 or 120 min) were developed using TrialNet data collected from relatives with type 1 diabetes and validated in independent populations at high genetic risk of type 1 diabetes (TrialNet, Diabetes Prevention Trial-Type 1, The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young [1]) and in a general population of Bavarian children who participated in Fr1da. RESULTS: Cox proportional hazards models combining plasma glucose, C-peptide, sex, age, BMI, HbA1c and insulinoma antigen-2 autoantibody status predicted disease progression in all populations. In TrialNet, the AUC for receiver operating characteristic curves for models named M60, M90 and M120, based on sampling at 60, 90 and 120 min, was 0.760, 0.761 and 0.745, respectively. These were not significantly different from the AUC of 0.760 for the gold standard Diabetes Prevention Trial Risk Score, which requires five OGTT blood samples. In TEDDY, where only 120 min blood sampling had been performed, the M120 AUC was 0.865. In Fr1da, the M120 AUC of 0.742 was significantly greater than the M60 AUC of 0.615. CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Prediction models based on a single OGTT blood draw accurately predict disease progression from stage 1 or 2 to stage 3 type 1 diabetes. The operational simplicity of M120, its validity across different at-risk populations and the requirement for 120 min sampling to stage type 1 diabetes suggest M120 could be readily applied to decrease the cost and complexity of risk stratification.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Type 1 diabetes in pregnancy is associated with distinct changes in the composition and function of the gut microbiome
    Roth-Schulze, AJ ; Penno, MAS ; Ngui, KM ; Oakey, H ; Bandala-Sanchez, E ; Smith, AD ; Allnutt, TR ; Thomson, RL ; Vuillermin, PJ ; Craig, ME ; Rawlinson, WD ; Davis, EA ; Harris, M ; Soldatos, G ; Colman, PG ; Wentworth, JM ; Haynes, A ; Barry, SC ; Sinnott, RO ; Morahan, G ; Bediaga, NG ; Smyth, GK ; Papenfuss, AT ; Couper, JJ ; Harrison, LC (BMC, 2021-08-06)
    BACKGROUND: The gut microbiome changes in response to a range of environmental conditions, life events and disease states. Pregnancy is a natural life event that involves major physiological adaptation yet studies of the microbiome in pregnancy are limited and their findings inconsistent. Pregnancy with type 1 diabetes (T1D) is associated with increased maternal and fetal risks but the gut microbiome in this context has not been characterized. By whole metagenome sequencing (WMS), we defined the taxonomic composition and function of the gut bacterial microbiome across 70 pregnancies, 36 in women with T1D. RESULTS: Women with and without T1D exhibited compositional and functional changes in the gut microbiome across pregnancy. Profiles in women with T1D were distinct, with an increase in bacteria that produce lipopolysaccharides and a decrease in those that produce short-chain fatty acids, especially in the third trimester. In addition, women with T1D had elevated concentrations of fecal calprotectin, a marker of intestinal inflammation, and serum intestinal fatty acid-binding protein (I-FABP), a marker of intestinal epithelial damage. CONCLUSIONS: Women with T1D exhibit a shift towards a more pro-inflammatory gut microbiome during pregnancy, associated with evidence of intestinal inflammation. These changes could contribute to the increased risk of pregnancy complications in women with T1D and are potentially modifiable by dietary means. Video abstract.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Higher frequency of vertebrate-infecting viruses in the gut of infants born to mothers with type 1 diabetes
    Kim, KW ; Allen, DW ; Briese, T ; Couper, JJ ; Barry, SC ; Colman, PG ; Cotterill, AM ; Davis, EA ; Giles, LC ; Harrison, LC ; Harris, M ; Haynes, A ; Horton, JL ; Isaacs, SR ; Jain, K ; Lipkin, WI ; McGorm, K ; Morahan, G ; Morbey, C ; Pang, ICN ; Papenfuss, AT ; Penno, MAS ; Sinnott, RO ; Soldatos, G ; Thomson, RL ; Vuillermin, P ; Wentworth, JM ; Wilkins, MR ; Rawlinson, WD ; Craig, ME (WILEY, 2020-02-05)
    Background: Microbial exposures in utero and early life shape the infant microbiome, which can profoundly impact on health. Compared to the bacterial microbiome, very little is known about the virome. We set out to characterize longitudinal changes in the gut virome of healthy infants born to mothers with or without type 1 diabetes using comprehensive virome capture sequencing. Methods: Healthy infants were selected from Environmental Determinants of Islet Autoimmunity (ENDIA), a prospective cohort of Australian children with a first‐degree relative with type 1 diabetes, followed from pregnancy. Fecal specimens were collected three‐monthly in the first year of life. Results: Among 25 infants (44% born to mothers with type 1 diabetes) at least one virus was detected in 65% (65/100) of samples and 96% (24/25) of infants during the first year of life. In total, 26 genera of viruses were identified and >150 viruses were differentially abundant between the gut of infants with a mother with type 1 diabetes vs without. Positivity for any virus was associated with maternal type 1 diabetes and older infant age. Enterovirus was associated with older infant age and maternal smoking. Conclusions: We demonstrate a distinct gut virome profile in infants of mothers with type 1 diabetes, which may influence health outcomes later in life. Higher prevalence and greater number of viruses observed compared to previous studies suggests significant underrepresentation in existing virome datasets, arising most likely from less sensitive techniques used in data acquisition.
  • Item
    Thumbnail Image
    Gut microbiome dysbiosis and increased intestinal permeability in children with islet autoimmunity and type 1 diabetes: A prospective cohort study
    Harbison, JE ; Roth-Schulze, AJ ; Giles, LC ; Tran, CD ; Ngui, KM ; Penno, MA ; Thomson, RL ; Wentworth, JM ; Colman, PG ; Craig, ME ; Morahan, G ; Papenfuss, AT ; Barry, SC ; Harrison, LC ; Couper, JJ (WILEY, 2019-08)
    AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: To investigate the longitudinal relationship between the gut microbiome, circulating short chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and intestinal permeability in children with islet autoimmunity or type 1 diabetes and controls. METHODS: We analyzed the gut bacterial microbiome, plasma SCFAs, small intestinal permeability and dietary intake in 47 children with islet autoimmunity or recent-onset type 1 diabetes and in 41 unrelated or sibling controls over a median (range) of 13 (2-34) months follow-up. RESULTS: Children with multiple islet autoantibodies (≥2 IA) or type 1 diabetes had gut microbiome dysbiosis. Anti-inflammatory Prevotella and Butyricimonas genera were less abundant and these changes were not explained by differences in diet. Small intestinal permeability measured by blood lactulose:rhamnose ratio was higher in type 1 diabetes. Children with ≥2 IA who progressed to type 1 diabetes (progressors), compared to those who did not progress, had higher intestinal permeability (mean [SE] difference +5.14 [2.0], 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.21, 9.07, P = .006), lower within-sample (alpha) microbial diversity (31.3 [11.2], 95% CI 9.3, 53.3, P = .005), and lower abundance of SCFA-producing bacteria. Alpha diversity (observed richness) correlated with plasma acetate levels in all groups combined (regression coefficient [SE] 0.57 [0.21], 95% CI 0.15, 0.99 P = .008). CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Children with ≥2 IA who progress to diabetes, like those with recent-onset diabetes, have gut microbiome dysbiosis associated with increased intestinal permeability. Interventions that expand gut microbial diversity, in particular SCFA-producing bacteria, may have a role to decrease progression to diabetes in children at-risk.