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Eileen J. Martin

Harvard University

Publishes on Mitochondrial Function and Pathology, Genetic Neurodegenerative Diseases, Muscle Physiology and Disorders. 6 papers and 1.2k citations.

6Publications
1.2kTotal Citations

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Mutant Huntingtin Expression in Clonal Striatal Cells: Dissociation of Inclusion Formation and Neuronal Survival by Caspase Inhibition
Manho Kim, H-S Lee, Genevieve Laforet et al.|Journal of Neuroscience|1999
Cited by 301Open Access

Neuronal intranuclear inclusions are found in the brains of patients with Huntington's disease and form from the polyglutamine-expanded N-terminal region of mutant huntingtin. To explore the properties of inclusions and their involvement in cell death, mouse clonal striatal cells were transiently transfected with truncated and full-length human wild-type and mutant huntingtin cDNAs. Both normal and mutant proteins localized in the cytoplasm, and infrequently, in dispersed and perinuclear vacuoles. Only mutant huntingtin formed nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions, which increased with polyglutamine expansion and with time after transfection. Nuclear inclusions contained primarily cleaved N-terminal products, whereas cytoplasmic inclusions contained cleaved and larger intact proteins. Cells with wild-type or mutant protein had distinct apoptotic features (membrane blebbing, shrinkage, cellular fragmentation), but those with mutant huntingtin generated the most cell fragments (apoptotic bodies). The caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK significantly increased cell survival but did not diminish nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions. In contrast, Z-DEVD-FMK significantly reduced nuclear and cytoplasmic inclusions but did not increase survival. A series of N-terminal products was formed from truncated normal and mutant proteins and from full-length mutant huntingtin but not from full-length wild-type huntingtin. One prominent N-terminal product was blocked by Z-VAD-FMK. In summary, the formation of inclusions in clonal striatal cells corresponds to that seen in the HD brain and is separable from events that regulate cell death. N-terminal cleavage may be linked to mutant huntingtin's role in cell death.

Cytoprotective actions of 2,4‐dimethoxybenzylidene anabaseine in differentiated PC12 cells and septal cholinergic neurons
Eileen J. Martin, Kiran S. Panickar, Michael A. King et al.|Drug Development Research|1994
Cited by 77

Abstract The potential cytoprotective actions of a novel nicotinic agent 2,4‐dimethoxybenzilidene anabaseine (DMXB) were investigated in differentiated PC12 cells and transected rat septal cholinergic neurons in vivo. In NGF‐differentiated PC12 cells, removal of both NGF and serum led to cell loss, a reduced % of cells expressing neurites, the release of lactate dehydrogenase, and a decrease in total cellular protein. Cell loss was apparent within 24 h, and remained constant between 4–8 days post‐NGF removal. NGF alone (100 ng/ml), DMXB (10 μM), but not nicotine (10 μM), prevented these cell and neurite losses. DMXB‐induced cytoprotection was blocked by 1 μM mecamylamine. DMXB (1 mg/kg, ip) injected twice but not once per day protected cholinesterase‐staining septal neurons from retrograde degeneration following unilateral fimbrial transections. The twice per day DMXB injection‐protocol also decreased cell roundness among cholinesterase‐staining cells in the lesioned septal hemisphere compared to saline‐injected animals. These studies suggest that DMXB may exert cytoprotective activity in NGF‐sensitive neuronal populations. © 1994 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

Analysis of huntingtin-associated protein 1 in mouse brain and immortalized striatal neurons
Eileen J. Martin, Manho Kim, James Velier et al.|The Journal of Comparative Neurology|1999
Cited by 50

Huntingtin, the protein product of the Huntington's disease (HD) gene, is expressed with an expanded polyglutamine domain in the brain and in nonneuronal tissues in patients with HD. Huntingtin-associated protein 1 (HAP-1), a brain-enriched protein, interacts preferentially with mutant huntingtin and thus may be important in HD pathogenesis. The function of HAP-1 is unknown, but recent evidence supports a role in microtubule-dependent organelle transport. We examined the subcellular localization of HAP-1 with an antibody made against the NH2-terminus of the protein. In immunoblot assays of mouse brain and immortalized striatal neurons, HAP-1 subtypes A and B migrated together at about 68 kD and separately at 95 kD and 110 kD, respectively. In dividing clonal striatal cells, HAP-1 localized to the mitotic spindle apparatus, especially at spindle poles and on vesicles and microtubules of the spindle body. Postmitotic striatal neurons had punctate HAP-1 labeling throughout the cytoplasm. Western blot analysis of protein extracts obtained after subcellular fractionation and differential centrifugation of the clonal striatal cells showed that HAP-1B was preferentially enriched in membrane fractions. Electron microscopic study of adult mouse basal forebrain and striatum showed HAP-1 localized to membrane-bound organelles including large endosomes, tubulovesicular structures, and budding vesicles in neurons. HAP-1 was also strongly associated with an unusual large "dense" organelle. Microtubules were labeled in dendrites and axonal fibers. Results support a role for HAP-1 in vesicle trafficking and organelle movement in mitotic cells and differentiated neurons and implicate HAP-1B as the predominant molecular subtype associated with vesicle membranes in striatal neurons.

An AAV promoter-driven neuropeptide Y gene delivery system using Sendai virosomes for neurons and rat brain.
Cited by 12

An adeno-associated virus (AAV)-derived construct (pJDT95npy) containing rat neuropeptide Y (NPY) cDNA inserted downstream of endogenous AAV promoters was used to investigate AAV-driven NPY expression in postmitotic neurons in vitro and in the brain. NPY mRNA was expressed in NT2/N and rat brain primary neuronal cultures after transfection. There was a corresponding increase in the number of neurons staining for NPY-like immunoreactivity and an increase in NPY release during depolarization in the primary cultures. Injections of Sendai-virosome encapsulated pJDT95npy into neocortex increased NPY-like immunoreactivity in neurons but not glia indicating that the latter cell type did not have the translational, post-translational or storage capacity to accumulate the peptide. Injections into the rat hypothalamic para-ventricular nucleus increased body weight and food intake for 21 days, though NPY-like immunoreactivity remained elevated for at least 50 days. These studies demonstrate that AAV-derived constructs may be useful for delivering genes into post-mitotic neurons, and that Sendai virosomes are effective for delivering these constructs in vivo.