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EXPANDING THE TRUHD CELL LIBRARY OF HUNTINGTON’S DISEASE / EXPANDING THE TRUHD CELL LIBRARY OF HUNTINGTON’S DISEASE: CAPTURING THE PRODROMAL STAGE OF DISEASE AND EXAMINING HOW KINETIN AFFECTS HUNTINGTIN EXPRESSIONSheikh Muhammad, Hassaan 11 1900 (has links)
Huntington’s disease (HD) is a late-onset neurodegenerative disorder caused by the expansion of the CAG repeat in the HTT allele. This forms an expanded huntingtin protein which disrupts various cellular processes including DNA damage repair pathways. Many models have been developed to study HD. This includes the TruHD cells which are immortal patient-derived fibroblasts that retain characteristics of their original primary culture. However, the current TruHD cell library is limited. In this project, we expanded the library of TruHD cells, characterized their basal growth rate and huntingtin levels, identified a standard set of cells for future experiments, and amended the TruHD name to better guide future investigations. Furthermore, we developed and optimized qPCR as a tool for the TruHD cells. N6-furfuryladenine was also assessed and determined to not modulate HTT mRNA levels and not induce apoptosis in control cells. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc)
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Altered DNA Repair, Antioxidant and Cellular Proliferation Status as Determinants of Susceptibility to Methylmercury Toxicity in VitroOndovcik, Stephanie Lee 20 June 2014 (has links)
Methylmercury (MeHg) is a pervasive environmental contaminant with potent neurotoxic, teratogenic and likely carcinogenic activity, for which the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unclear. Base excision repair (BER) is important in mitigating the pathogenic effects of oxidative stress, which has also been implicated in the mechanism of MeHg toxicity, however the importance of BER in MeHg toxicity is currently unknown. Accordingly, we addressed this question using: (1) spontaneously- and Simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen-immortalized oxoguanine glycosylase 1-null (Ogg1-/-) murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs); and, (2) human Ogg1 (hOgg1)- or formamidopyrimidine glycosylase (Fpg)-expressing human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells; reciprocal in vitro cellular models with deficient and enhanced ability to repair oxidatively damaged DNA respectively. When spontaneously-immortalized wild-type and Ogg1-/- MEFs were exposed to environmentally relevant, low micromolar concentrations of MeHg, both underwent cell cycle arrest but Ogg1-/- cells exhibited a greater sensitivity to MeHg than wild-type controls with reduced clonogenic survival and increased apoptosis, DNA damage and DNA damage response activation. Antioxidative catalase alleviated the MeHg-initiated DNA damage in both wild-type and Ogg1-/- cells, but failed to block MeHg-mediated apoptosis at micromolar concentrations. As in spontaneously immortalized MEFs, MeHg induced cell cycle arrest in SV40 large T antigen-immortalized MEFs, with increased sensitivity to MeHg persisting in the Ogg1-/- MEFs. Importantly, cells seeded at a higher density exhibited compromised proliferation, which protected against MeHg-mediated cell cycle arrest and DNA damage. In the reciprocal model of enhanced DNA repair, hOgg1- and Fpg-expressing cells appeared paradoxically more sensitive than wild-type controls to acute MeHg exposure for all cellular and biochemical parameters, potentially due to the accumulation of toxic intermediary abasic sites. Accordingly, our results provide the first evidence that Ogg1 status represents a critical determinant of risk for MeHg toxicity independent of cellular immortalization method, with variations in cellular proliferation and interindividual variability in antioxidative and DNA repair capacities constituting important determinants of risk for environmentally-initiated oxidatively damaged DNA and its pathological consequences.
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Altered DNA Repair, Antioxidant and Cellular Proliferation Status as Determinants of Susceptibility to Methylmercury Toxicity in VitroOndovcik, Stephanie Lee 20 June 2014 (has links)
Methylmercury (MeHg) is a pervasive environmental contaminant with potent neurotoxic, teratogenic and likely carcinogenic activity, for which the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unclear. Base excision repair (BER) is important in mitigating the pathogenic effects of oxidative stress, which has also been implicated in the mechanism of MeHg toxicity, however the importance of BER in MeHg toxicity is currently unknown. Accordingly, we addressed this question using: (1) spontaneously- and Simian virus 40 (SV40) large T antigen-immortalized oxoguanine glycosylase 1-null (Ogg1-/-) murine embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs); and, (2) human Ogg1 (hOgg1)- or formamidopyrimidine glycosylase (Fpg)-expressing human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells; reciprocal in vitro cellular models with deficient and enhanced ability to repair oxidatively damaged DNA respectively. When spontaneously-immortalized wild-type and Ogg1-/- MEFs were exposed to environmentally relevant, low micromolar concentrations of MeHg, both underwent cell cycle arrest but Ogg1-/- cells exhibited a greater sensitivity to MeHg than wild-type controls with reduced clonogenic survival and increased apoptosis, DNA damage and DNA damage response activation. Antioxidative catalase alleviated the MeHg-initiated DNA damage in both wild-type and Ogg1-/- cells, but failed to block MeHg-mediated apoptosis at micromolar concentrations. As in spontaneously immortalized MEFs, MeHg induced cell cycle arrest in SV40 large T antigen-immortalized MEFs, with increased sensitivity to MeHg persisting in the Ogg1-/- MEFs. Importantly, cells seeded at a higher density exhibited compromised proliferation, which protected against MeHg-mediated cell cycle arrest and DNA damage. In the reciprocal model of enhanced DNA repair, hOgg1- and Fpg-expressing cells appeared paradoxically more sensitive than wild-type controls to acute MeHg exposure for all cellular and biochemical parameters, potentially due to the accumulation of toxic intermediary abasic sites. Accordingly, our results provide the first evidence that Ogg1 status represents a critical determinant of risk for MeHg toxicity independent of cellular immortalization method, with variations in cellular proliferation and interindividual variability in antioxidative and DNA repair capacities constituting important determinants of risk for environmentally-initiated oxidatively damaged DNA and its pathological consequences.
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