14 results on '"Martin Wilson"'
Search Results
2. Current practice in the use of MEGA-PRESS spectroscopy for the detection of GABA
- Author
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David McGonigle, Bhavana Solanky, Paul Mullins, Richard Edden, Ruth O'Gorman, Anita Opoku, Inês Violante, C. John Evans, Martin Wilson, and Matthew Brookes
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Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Brain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Data science ,Article ,Proton magnetic resonance ,Mega press ,Neurology ,Current practice ,Humans ,Psychology ,Neuroscience ,Algorithms ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid - Abstract
There is increasing interest in the use of edited proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy for the detection of GABA in the human brain. At a recent meeting held at Cardiff University, a number of spectroscopy groups met to discuss the acquisition, analysis and interpretation of GABA-edited MR spectra. This paper aims to set out the issues discussed at this meeting, reporting areas of consensus around parameters and procedures in the field and highlighting those areas where differences remain. It is hoped that this paper can fulfill two needs, providing a summary of the current ‘state-of-the-art’ in the field of GABA-edited MRS at 3 T using MEGA-PRESS and a basic guide to help researchers new to the field to avoid some of the pitfalls inherent in the acquisition and processing of edited MRS for GABA.
- Published
- 2014
3. Nicotinamide Riboside Augments the Aged Human Skeletal Muscle NAD+ Metabolome and Induces Transcriptomic and Anti-inflammatory Signatures
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Gareth G. Lavery, Martin Wilson, Ildem Akerman, Charles Brenner, Mark S. Schmidt, Gareth A. Wallis, Yasir S Elhassan, Craig L. Doig, Daniel A. Tennant, Claire V. Burley, Lucy Oakey, Andrew Philp, Katarina Kluckova, Alex P. Seabright, Konstantinos N. Manolopoulos, Peter Nightingale, Rachel Fletcher, Ned Jenkinson, Antje Garten, Yu-Chiang Lai, Samuel J. E. Lucas, and David Cartwright
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0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nicotinamide ,Chemistry ,Skeletal muscle ,Metabolism ,Mitochondrion ,Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,3. Good health ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,lcsh:Biology (General) ,Internal medicine ,Nicotinamide riboside ,medicine ,Metabolome ,NAD+ kinase ,lcsh:QH301-705.5 ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Summary: Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is modulated by conditions of metabolic stress and has been reported to decline with aging in preclinical models, but human data are sparse. Nicotinamide riboside (NR) supplementation ameliorates metabolic dysfunction in rodents. We aimed to establish whether oral NR supplementation in aged participants can increase the skeletal muscle NAD+ metabolome and if it can alter muscle mitochondrial bioenergetics. We supplemented 12 aged men with 1 g NR per day for 21 days in a placebo-controlled, randomized, double-blind, crossover trial. Targeted metabolomics showed that NR elevated the muscle NAD+ metabolome, evident by increased nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide and nicotinamide clearance products. Muscle RNA sequencing revealed NR-mediated downregulation of energy metabolism and mitochondria pathways, without altering mitochondrial bioenergetics. NR also depressed levels of circulating inflammatory cytokines. Our data establish that oral NR is available to aged human muscle and identify anti-inflammatory effects of NR. : Elhassan et al. show that oral nicotinamide riboside increases the NAD+ metabolome in aged human skeletal muscle, without apparently altering mitochondrial bioenergetics. Measures of muscle and whole-body metabolism are also unchanged. Nicotinamide riboside reduces the levels of circulating inflammatory cytokines. Studies in relevant human disease models are warranted. Keywords: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide, metabolism, aging, inflammation, cell adhesion
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- 2019
4. 1H magnetic resonance spectroscopy metabolites as biomarkers for cell cycle arrest and cell death in rat glioma cells
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Julian L. Griffin, Roger D.G. Malcomson, Martin Wilson, Christopher S. Shaw, Ladan Mirbahai, Carmel McConville, Risto A. Kauppinen, and Andrew C. Peet
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Programmed cell death ,Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy ,Cell cycle checkpoint ,Phosphorylcholine ,Cell ,Succinic Acid ,Biochemistry ,Flow cytometry ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,medicine ,Animals ,Propidium iodide ,Viability assay ,Amino Acids ,Cell Death ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,G1 Phase ,Glioma ,Cell Biology ,Cell cycle ,Molecular biology ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,Apoptosis ,Cisplatin ,Protons - Abstract
Improved non-invasive imaging biomarkers of treatment response contribute to optimising cancer management and metabolites detected by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((1)H MRS) show promise in this area. Understanding (1)H MRS changes occurring in cells during cell stress and cell death in vitro should aid the selection of pertinent biomarkers for clinical use.BT4C glioma cells in culture were exposed to either 50 μM cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum II (cisplatin) or starvation by culture in phosphate buffered saline. High resolution magic angle spinning (1)H MRS was performed on cells using a Varian 600 MHz nanoprobe and metabolites were quantified by a time domain fitting method. Cell viability was assessed by trypan blue, HE, 4',6-diamino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), DNA laddering and annexin V-FITC labelled flow cytometry; propidium iodide flow cytometry was used to assess the cell cycle phase.With cisplatin exposure, cells initially accumulated in the G1 stage of the cell cycle with low numbers of apoptotic and necrotic cells and this was associated with decreases in phosphocholine, succinate, alanine, taurine, glycine and glutamate and increases in lactate and glycerophosphocholine (GPC). Starvation, leading to necrotic cell death within 6-18 h, caused decreases in succinate, alanine, glycine, and glutamate and increases in GPC. Principal component analysis revealed two patterns of metabolite changes, one common to both types of cell stress and another specific for necrosis secondary to cell starvation.(1)H MRS reveals alterations in multiple metabolites during cell cycle arrest and cell death which may provide early biomarker profiles of treatment efficacy in vivo.
- Published
- 2011
5. Prostaglandin F2α-F-prostanoid receptor regulates CXCL8 expression in endometrial adenocarcinoma cells via the calcium–calcineurin–NFAT pathway
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Rob D. Catalano, Pamela Brown, Martin Wilson, David Maldonado-Pérez, Alistair R.W. Williams, Vivien Grant, Henry N. Jabbour, Kurt J. Sales, E. Aubrey Thompson, and Richard A. Anderson
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musculoskeletal diseases ,Chemokine ,Prostaglandin ,Receptors, Prostaglandin ,Transplantation, Heterologous ,Mice, Nude ,Adenocarcinoma ,Biology ,Dinoprost ,Response Elements ,Article ,Mice ,NFAT Pathway ,Cell Line, Tumor ,Animals ,Humans ,CXC chemokine receptors ,Receptor ,Molecular Biology ,Protein Kinase C ,NFATC Transcription Factors ,Calcineurin ,Interleukin-8 ,FP receptor ,Cell Biology ,respiratory system ,Endometrial Neoplasms ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic ,AP-1 transcription factor ,PGF2α ,CXCL8 ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Calcium ,Female ,Signal transduction ,Neoplasm Transplantation ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Pro-inflammatory mediators, like prostaglandin (PG) and chemokines, promote tumourigenesis by enhancing cell proliferation, migration of immune cells and recruitment of blood vessels. Recently we showed elevated expression of the chemokine (C-X-C motif) receptor 2 (CXCR2) in endometrial adenocarcinomas localized to neutrophils and neoplastic epithelial and vascular cells. Furthermore we found that PGF(2alpha)-F-prostanoid (FP) receptor regulates the expression of the CXCR2 ligand CXCL1, to promote neutrophil chemotaxis in endometrial adenocarcinomas. In the present study we identified another CXCR2 ligand, CXCL8 as a target for PGF(2alpha)-FP receptor signalling which enhances epithelial cell proliferation in endometrial adenocarcinoma cells in vitro and in nude mice in vivo. We found that PGF(2alpha)-FP receptor interaction induces CXCL8 expression in endometrial adenocarcinoma cells via the protein kinase C-calcium-calcineurin-NFAT signaling pathway. Promoter analysis revealed that CXCL8 transcriptional activation by PGF(2alpha) signaling is mediated by cooperative interactions between the AP1 and NFAT binding sites. Furthermore, PGF(2alpha) via the FP receptor induced the expression of the regulator of calcineurin 1 isoform 4 (RCAN1-4) via the calcineurin/NFAT pathway in a reciprocal manner to CXCL8. Using an adenovirus to overexpress RCAN1-4, we found that RCAN1-4 is a negative regulator of CXCL8 expression in endometrial adenocarcinoma cells. Taken together our data have elucidated the molecular and cellular mechanism whereby PGF(2alpha) regulates CXCL8 expression via the FP receptor in endometrial adenocarcinomas and have highlighted RCAN1-4 as a negative regulator of CXCL8 expression which may be exploited therapeutically to inhibit CXCL8-mediated tumour development.
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- 2009
6. The contraceptive potential of ZP3 and ZP3 peptides in a primate model
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Zoë A. Jennings, R. John Aitken, Martin Wilson, and Margaret Paterson
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Zona pellucida glycoprotein ,Immunogen ,Immunology ,Receptors, Cell Surface ,Zona Pellucida Glycoproteins ,Epitope ,Epitopes ,Mice ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Contraception, Immunologic ,Zona pellucida ,Zona Pellucida ,Sperm-Ovum Interactions ,Vaccines, Synthetic ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,biology ,Egg Proteins ,Ovary ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Callithrix ,biology.organism_classification ,Peptide Fragments ,Epitope mapping ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,Models, Animal ,biology.protein ,Female ,Folliculogenesis ,Antibody - Abstract
It has been known for some time that antibodies raised against ZP3, the major component of the glycoprotein shell that surrounds all mammalian oocytes, can successfully inhibit sperm-egg interaction in vitro. In our own studies using the non-human primate Callithrix jacchus, active immunisation was successfully achieved when homologous or heterologous ZP3 was used as an immunogen. However this long-term suppression of fertility was at the expense of ovarian function. An ovarian pathology was observed which was characterised by a disruption of folliculogenesis and depletion of the primordial follicle pool. Adverse auto-immune reactions have also been observed in mice following induction of immunity to mouse ZP3. Following careful selection of B-cell epitopes on mouse ZP3, peptide vaccines were formulated which could circumvent these adverse side effects and induce reversible infertility in actively immunised mice. To identify similar epitopes on primate ZP3, epitope mapping studies were performed and several candidate regions of the molecule were identified. These were incorporated into chimeric peptide vaccines and administered as single or triple peptide vaccines. Active immunisation successfully induced antibodies that bound exclusively to the zona pellucida of marmoset and human ovarian sections. These antibodies were able to suppress human sperm-egg binding by up to 60% in vitro. Encouragingly, no adverse side effects on ovarian function were observed following long-term immunisation however, no loss of fertility was consistently observed in vivo. Thus considerable research is still required to identify a combination of ZP epitopes that will induce reversible infertility in the absence of any ovarian dysfunction.
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- 2002
7. The Neuron-specific K-Cl Cotransporter, KCC2
- Author
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James W. Sharp, Vijaya G. Kumari, Jeffery R. Williams, John A. Payne, and Martin Wilson
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Cerebellum ,GABAA receptor ,Purkinje cell ,Colocalization ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Granule cell ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,nervous system ,Postsynaptic potential ,medicine ,Neuron ,Molecular Biology ,Glycine receptor - Abstract
The neuron-specific K-Cl cotransporter (KCC2) is hypothesized to function as an active Cl- extrusion pathway important in postsynaptic inhibition mediated by ligand-gated anion channels, like gamma-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) and glycine receptors. To understand better the functional role of KCC2 in the nervous system, we developed polyclonal antibodies to a KCC2 fusion protein and used these antibodies to characterize and localize KCC2 in the rat cerebellum. The antibodies specifically recognized the KCC2 protein which is an approximately 140-kDa glycoprotein detectable only within the central nervous system. The KCC2 protein displayed a robust and punctate distribution in primary cultured retinal amacrine cells known to form exclusively GABAAergic synapses in culture. In immunolocalization studies, KCC2 was absent from axons and glia but was highly expressed at neuronal somata and dendrites, indicating a specific postsynaptic distribution of the protein. In the granule cell layer, KCC2 exhibited a distinct colocalization with the beta2/beta3-subunits of the GABAA receptor at the plasma membrane of granule cell somata and at cerebellar glomeruli. KCC2 lightly labeled the plasma membrane of Purkinje cell somata. Within the molecular layer, KCC2 exhibited a distinctly punctate distribution along dendrites, indicating it may be highly localized at inhibitory synapses along these processes. The distinct postsynaptic localization of KCC2 and its colocalization with GABAA receptor in the cerebellum are consistent with the putative role of KCC2 in neuronal Cl- extrusion and postsynaptic inhibition.
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- 1999
8. Variation in GABA mini amplitude is the consequence of variation in transmitter concentration
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Salvador Borges, Matthew Frerking, and Martin Wilson
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Patch-Clamp Techniques ,Postsynaptic Current ,Neuroscience(all) ,Chick Embryo ,Biology ,Ion Channels ,Retina ,Synapse ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Receptors, GABA ,Postsynaptic potential ,Animals ,Patch clamp ,GABA Modulators ,Quantum ,Cells, Cultured ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,Diazepam ,General Neuroscience ,Transmitter ,Electric Conductivity ,Retinal ,Amplitude ,chemistry ,Phenobarbital ,Synapses ,Biophysics ,Regression Analysis ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Miniature postsynaptic currents (minis) in cultured retinal amacrine cells, as in other central neurons, show large variations in amplitude. To understand the origin of this variability, we have exploited a novel form of synapse in which pre- and postsynaptic receptors sample the same quantum of transmitter. At these synapses, mini amplitudes measured simultaneously in the 2 cells show a strong correlation, accounting for, on average, more than half of the variance in amplitude. Two pieces of evidence support the conclusion that variations in the amount of transmitter in different quanta underlie this correlation. First, diazepam, which enhances GABA binding, increases mini amplitude, implying therefore that transmitter concentration is not saturating. Second, we show that amplitude distributions from all cells, even those with a small number of release sites, have the same shape, implying that most or all variance is intrinsic to each release site.
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
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9. Synaptic Physiology: Plenty of Models to Choose from
- Author
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Martin Wilson
- Subjects
Neurotransmitter Agents ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences(all) ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all) ,Models, Neurological ,Physiology ,Biology ,Synaptic physiology ,Synaptic Transmission ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Diffusion ,Action (philosophy) ,Synapses ,Animals ,Graded potential ,Calcium ,Synaptic Vesicles ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Do graded potential synapses work the same way as action potential synapses? Recent work emphasizes the differences and suggests that graded potential synapses are not all the same either.
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- 2004
- Full Text
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10. 4101 ORAL Multicentre Prospective Classification of Childhood Brain Tumours Using Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy
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Martin Wilson, Dorothee P. Auer, Dawn E. Saunders, Theodoros N. Arvanitis, Richard Grundy, Tim Jaspan, Geoffrey S. Payne, Andrew C. Peet, N.R. Davies, and Lesley MacPherson
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Cancer Research ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nuclear magnetic resonance ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Medicine ,Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy ,business - Published
- 2011
11. Bipolar cell membrane currents and signal processing in the axolotl retina
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M. Tessier-Lavigne, Martin Wilson, David Attwell, and Peter Mobbs
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Signal processing ,Retina ,biology ,Chemistry ,Glutamic Acid ,Cell Separation ,General Medicine ,Glutamic acid ,In Vitro Techniques ,biology.organism_classification ,Ambystoma ,Ion Channels ,Membrane Potentials ,Cell biology ,Cell membrane ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Glutamates ,Axolotl ,Cell separation ,medicine ,Animals ,Neuroscience - Published
- 1987
12. Noise analysis predicts at least four states for channels closed by glutamate
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Martin Wilson, M. Tessier-Lavigne, and David Attwell
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Neurotransmitter Agents ,Electric Conductivity ,Biophysics ,Glutamate receptor ,Depolarization ,Glutamic acid ,Gating ,Neurotransmission ,Models, Biological ,Noise (electronics) ,Ion Channels ,Retina ,Kinetics ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Glutamates ,chemistry ,Animals ,Neurotransmitter ,Biological system ,Mathematics ,Ion channel ,Research Article - Abstract
For ion channels that are opened by neurotransmitters, analysis of current noise has given valuable information on the kinetics of synaptic channel gating. In depolarizing bipolar cells of the vertebrate retina, we have recently characterized a synaptic current for which the neurotransmitter glutamate closes channels, and for which the channel open probability is low even in the absence of glutamate. We present here predictions for the current noise spectrum expected for various models of glutamate's action on the ion channels. Comparison of these theoretical predictions with experimental data allows us to rule out several simple kinetic schemes for the action of glutamate, and to conclude that the channels closed by glutamate must be able to exist in at least four different states.
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- 1987
13. Culture of whole barley spikes stimulates high frequencies of pollen calluses in individual anthers
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Herbert Martin Wilson
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Gametophyte ,fungi ,Stamen ,food and beverages ,Soil Science ,Polyploid Cells ,Biology ,musculoskeletal system ,medicine.disease_cause ,Microspore ,Callus ,Plant production ,Pollen ,Botany ,medicine ,Ploidy ,Agronomy and Crop Science - Abstract
Whole barley spikes were cultured in agitated liquod medium. In some anthers 70% of all microspores divided abnormally, resulting in similar frequencies of pollen callus production. Macroscopic calluses subsequently developed from 30% of all anthers in certain spikes. These calluses contained mixtures of haploid, diploid and polyploid cells. This may be considered as a particularly suitable method for initiating plant production from the male gametophytes of cereal crops. However the requisite conditions or the large scale production of green plants from these calluses remain to be identified.
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- 1977
14. Design and construction of an inexpensive Huxley-type micromanipulator
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Robert P. Scobey and Martin Wilson
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Neurons ,Computer science ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Retina ,law.invention ,Electrophysiology ,Micromanipulation ,Microelectrode ,Clamp ,Simple (abstract algebra) ,law ,Animals ,Patch clamp ,business ,Micromanipulator ,Computer hardware - Abstract
A simple design for a micromanipulator having fine movements in 3 dimensions is described. An inexpensive and easily executed method of construction for this device is given.
- Published
- 1986
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