ORCID Profile
0000-0002-4510-3615
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Biochemistry and cell biology | Synthetic biology | Genomics | Horticultural crop protection (incl. pests diseases and weeds)
Publisher: MDPI AG
Date: 29-06-2021
Abstract: It is now more than 20 years since the FRA16D common chromosomal fragile site was characterised and the WWOX gene spanning this site was identified. In this time, much information has been discovered about its contribution to disease however, the normal biological role of WWOX is not yet clear. Experiments leading to the identification of the WWOX gene are recounted, revealing enigmatic relationships between the fragile site, its gene and the encoded protein. We also highlight research mainly using the genetically tractable model organism Drosophila melanogaster that has shed light on the integral role of WWOX in metabolism. In addition to this role, there are some particularly outstanding questions that remain regarding WWOX, its gene and its chromosomal location. This review, therefore, also aims to highlight two unanswered questions. Firstly, what is the biological relationship between the WWOX gene and the FRA16D common chromosomal fragile site that is located within one of its very large introns? Secondly, what is the actual substrate and product of the WWOX enzyme activity? It is likely that understanding the normal role of WWOX and its relationship to chromosomal fragility are necessary in order to understand how the perturbation of these normal roles results in disease.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 06-2017
DOI: 10.1111/JEN.12411
Publisher: Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Date: 24-08-2015
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 24-11-2020
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 22-09-2015
DOI: 10.1002/GCC.22286
Abstract: Fragile site FRA16D exhibits DNA instability in cancer, resulting in diminished levels of protein from the WWOX gene that spans it. WWOX suppresses tumor growth by an undefined mechanism. WWOX participates in pathways involving aerobic metabolism and reactive oxygen species. WWOX comprises two WW domains as well as a short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase enzyme. Herein is described an in vivo genetic analysis in Drosophila melanogaster to identify functional interactions between WWOX and metabolic pathways. Altered WWOX levels modulate variable cellular outgrowths caused by genetic deficiencies of components of the mitochondrial respiratory complexes. This modulation requires the enzyme active site of WWOX, and the defective respiratory complex-induced cellular outgrowths are mediated by reactive oxygen species, dependent upon the Akt pathway and sensitive to levels of autophagy and hypoxia-inducible factor. WWOX is known to contribute to homeostasis by regulating the balance between oxidative phosphorylation and glycolysis. Reduction of WWOX levels results in diminished ability to respond to metabolic perturbation of normal cell growth. Thus, the ability of WWOX to facilitate escape from mitochondrial damage-induced glycolysis (Warburg effect) is, therefore, a plausible mechanism for its tumor suppressor activity.
Publisher: Springer US
Date: 2022
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-0716-2301-5_9
Abstract: Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) is a biocontrol strategy that has been widely utilized to suppress or eradicate outbreak populations of insect pests such as tephritid fruit flies. As SIT is highly favored due to it being species-specific and environmentally friendly, there are constant efforts to improve the efficiency and efficacy of this method in particular at low pest densities one of which is the use of genetically enhanced strains. Development of these desirable strains has been facilitated by the emergence of the CRISPR/Cas genome-editing technology that enables the rapid and precise genomic modification of non-model organisms. Here, we describe the manual microinjection of CRISPR/Cas9 reagents into tephritid pest Bactrocera tryoni (Queensland fruit fly) embryos to introduce ideal traits as well as the molecular methods used to detect successful mutagenesis.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 13-06-2013
DOI: 10.1002/GCC.22078
Abstract: The WWOX gene spans the FRA16D common chromosomal fragile site and is able to suppress tumor growth. FRA16D is a frequent site of DNA instability in cancer resulting in reduced levels of WWOX expression. Altered levels of WWOX have been shown to affect metabolism. Whereas metabolic reprograming of cells from oxidative phosphorylation to aerobic glycolysis is a major hallmark of tumors, the relationship between common chromosomal fragile site genes and altered metabolism has been unclear. Here we report that altering metabolism from glycolysis to oxidative phosphorylation causes stable increase in steady-state levels of transcripts of the WWOX gene. Consistent with this, exposure to hypoxic conditions, in which cells rely on glycolysis, causes a downregulation of WWOX mRNA. The function of WWOX is therefore intimately integrated with metabolism, as WWOX not only contributes to the metabolic state of cells, its transcript levels are also linked to intracellular metabolic state.
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 27-10-2015
DOI: 10.1038/ONC.2014.344
Abstract: Chromosomal INstability (CIN), a hallmark of cancer, refers to cells with an increased rate of gain or loss of whole chromosomes or chromosome parts. CIN is linked to the progression of tumors with poor clinical outcomes such as drug resistance. CIN can give tumors the ersity to resist therapy, but it comes at the cost of significant stress to tumor cells. To tolerate this, cancer cells must modify their energy use to provide adaptation against genetic changes as well as to promote their survival and growth. In this study, we have demonstrated that CIN induction causes sensitivity to metabolic stress. We show that mild metabolic disruption that does not affect normal cells, can lead to high levels of oxidative stress and subsequent cell death in CIN cells because they are already managing elevated stress levels. Altered metabolism is a differential characteristic of cancer cells, so our identification of key regulators that can exploit these changes to cause cell death may provide cancer-specific potential drug targets, especially for advanced cancers that exhibit CIN.
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 21-06-2019
DOI: 10.1111/IMB.12602
Abstract: Bactrocera tryoni (Queensland fruit fly) are polyphagous horticultural pests of eastern Australia. Heterogametic males contain a sex-determining Y-chromosome thought to be gene poor and repetitive. Here, we report 39 Y-chromosome scaffolds (~700 kb) from B. tryoni identified using genotype-by-sequencing data and whole-genome resequencing. Male diagnostic PCR assays validated eight Y-scaffolds, and one (Btry4096) contained a novel gene with five exons that encode a predicted 575 amino acid protein. The Y-gene, referred to as typo-gyf, is a truncated Y-chromosome paralogue of X-chromosome gene gyf (1773 aa). The Y-chromosome contained ~41 copies of typo-gyf, and expression occurred in male flies and embryos. Analysis of 13 tephritid transcriptomes confirmed typo-gyf expression in six additional Bactrocera species, including Bactrocera latifrons, Bactrocera dorsalis and Bactrocera zonata. Molecular dating estimated typo-gyf evolved within the past 8.02 million years (95% highest posterior density 10.56-5.52 million years), after the split with Bactrocera oleae. Phylogenetic analysis also highlighted complex evolutionary histories among several Bactrocera species, as discordant nuclear (116 genes) and mitochondrial (13 genes) topologies were observed. B. tryoni Y-sequences may provide useful sites for future transgene insertions, and typo-gyf could act as a Y-chromosome diagnostic marker for many Bactrocera species, although its function is unknown.
Publisher: Oxford University Press (OUP)
Date: 12-11-2010
DOI: 10.1093/HMG/DDQ495
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 05-2018
DOI: 10.1016/J.EXPNEUROL.2018.01.020
Abstract: Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA (MPS IIIA) is a lysosomal storage disorder resulting from the deficit of the N-sulfoglucosamine sulfohydrolase (SGSH) enzyme that leads to accumulation of partially-degraded heparan sulfate. MPS IIIA is characterized by severe neurological symptoms, clinically presenting as Sanfilippo syndrome, for which no effective therapy is available. The lysosomal SGSH enzyme is conserved in Drosophila and we have identified increased levels of heparan sulfate in flies with ubiquitous knockdown of SGSH/CG14291. Using neuronal specific knockdown of SGSH/CG14291 we have also observed a higher abundance of Lysotracker-positive puncta as well as increased expression of GFP tagged Ref(2)P supporting disruption to lysosomal function. We have also observed a progressive defect in climbing ability, a hallmark of neurological dysfunction. Genetic screens indicate proteins and pathways that can functionally modify the climbing phenotype, including autophagy-related proteins (Atg1 and Atg18), superoxide dismutase enzymes (Sod1 and Sod2) and heat shock protein (HSPA1). In addition, reducing heparan sulfate biosynthesis by knocking down sulfateless or slalom expression significantly worsens the phenotype an important observation given that substrate inhibition is being evaluated clinically as a treatment for MPS IIIA. Identifying the cellular pathways that can modify MPS IIIA neuropathology is an essential step in the development of novel therapeutic approaches to prevent and/or ameliorate symptoms in children with Sanfilippo syndrome.
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 12-2020
DOI: 10.1186/S12863-020-00934-3
Abstract: Pest eradication using the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) involves high-density releases of sterilized males that mate with wild females and ultimately suppress the population. Sterilized females are not required for SIT and their removal or separation from males prior to release remains challenging. In order to develop genetic sexing strains (GSS), conditional traits such as temperature sensitive lethality are required. Here we introduce a known Drosophila melanogaster temperature sensitive embryonic lethal mutation into Bactrocera tryoni , a serious horticultural pest in Australia. A non-synonymous point mutation in the D. melanogaster gene shibire causes embryonic lethality at 29 °C and we successfully used CRISPR/Cas9 technology to recreate the orthologous shibire temperature sensitive-1 ( shi ts1 ) mutation in B. tryoni . Genotypic analyses over three generations revealed that a high fitness cost was associated with the shi ts1 mutant allele and shi ts1 homozygotes were not viable at 21 °C, which is a more severe phenotype than that documented in D. melanogaster . We have demonstrated the first successful use of CRISPR/Cas9 to introduce precise single base substitutions in an endogenous gene via homology-directed repair in an agricultural pest insect and this technology can be used to trial other conditional mutations for the ultimate aim of generating genetic sexing strains for SIT.
Publisher: Elsevier BV
Date: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/J.IBMB.2016.11.008
Abstract: Bt toxins ingested by insect pests can bind to midgut receptors and cause death, although several steps in this process remain unclear. Multiple Bt toxin receptors have been identified in Lepidoptera, including a cadherin-like protein (CaLP), which is central to several models explaining Bt toxins' mode of action. Mutations in the Plutella xylostella ATP-dependent binding cassette transporter C2 (Px-abcc2), rather than CaLP, are genetically linked with Bt Cry1Ac resistance. Here we expressed Px-abcc2 in Drosophila and performed larval bioassays to determine whether this protein acts as an effective Bt receptor. Cry1Ac had no effect on larvae expressing Px-abcc2 in salivary glands, yet larvae expressing Px-abcc2 in the midgut were highly susceptible to both Cry1Ac protoxin and trypsin activated toxin. Furthermore, the CaLP orthologue has been lost from the Drosophila genome, making this a useful system for investigating the role of CaLP peptides from Manduca sexta (CR12-MPED), which are known to act as Bt synergists in larval feeding assays. Drosophila larvae expressing Px-ABCC2 in the midgut were fed LD
Publisher: MDPI AG
Date: 13-03-2021
Abstract: A major obstacle of sterile insect technique (SIT) programs is the availability of robust sex-separation systems for conditional removal of females. Sterilized male-only releases improve SIT efficiency and cost-effectiveness for agricultural pests, whereas it is critical to remove female disease-vector pests prior to release as they maintain the capacity to transmit disease. Some of the most successful Genetic Sexing Strains (GSS) reared and released for SIT control were developed for Mediterranean fruit fly (Medfly), Ceratitis capitata, and carry a temperature sensitive lethal (tsl) mutation that eliminates female but not male embryos when heat treated. The Medfly tsl mutation was generated by random mutagenesis and the genetic mechanism causing this valuable heat sensitive phenotype remains unknown. Conditional temperature sensitive lethal mutations have also been developed using random mutagenesis in the insect model, Drosophila melanogaster, and were used for some of the founding genetic research published in the fields of neuro- and developmental biology. Here we review mutations in select D. melanogaster genes shibire, Notch, RNA polymerase II 215kDa, pale, transformer-2, Dsor1 and CK2α that cause temperature sensitive phenotypes. Precise introduction of orthologous point mutations in pest insect species with CRISPR/Cas9 genome editing technology holds potential to establish GSSs with embryonic lethality to improve and advance SIT pest control.
Publisher: SAGE Publications
Date: 16-01-2015
Abstract: The WWOX gene spans the common chromosomal fragile site FRA16D that is located within a massive (780 kb) intron. The WWOX gene is very long, at 1.1 Mb, which may contribute to the very low abundance of the full-length 1.4 kb mRNA. Alternative splicing also accounts for a variety of aberrant transcripts, most of which are devoid of C-terminal sequences required for WWOX to act as an oxidoreductase. The mouse WWOX gene also spans a chromosomal fragile site implying some sort of functional relationship that confers a selective advantage. The encoded protein domains of WWOX are conserved through evolution (between humans and Drosophila melanogaster) and include WW domains, an NAD -binding site, short-chain dehydrogenase/reductase enzyme and nuclear compartmentalization signals. This homology has enabled functional analyses in D. melanogaster that demonstrate roles for WWOX in reactive oxygen species regulation and metabolism. Indeed the human WWOX gene is also responsive to altered metabolism. Cancer cells typically exhibit altered metabolism (Warburg effect). Many cancers exhibit FRA16D DNA instability that results in aberrant WWOX expression and is associated with poor prognosis for these cancers. It is therefore thought that aberrant WWOX expression contributes to the altered metabolism in cancer. In addition, others have found that a specific (low-expression) allele of WWOX genotype contributes to cancer predisposition.
Publisher: Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Date: 21-01-2021
DOI: 10.1038/S41467-020-20680-5
Abstract: Mass releases of sterilized male insects, in the frame of sterile insect technique programs, have helped suppress insect pest populations since the 1950s. In the major horticultural pests Bactrocera dorsalis, Ceratitis capitata , and Zeugodacus cucurbitae , a key phenotype white pupae (wp) has been used for decades to selectively remove females before releases, yet the gene responsible remained unknown. Here, we use classical and modern genetic approaches to identify and functionally characterize causal wp − mutations in these distantly related fruit fly species. We find that the wp phenotype is produced by parallel mutations in a single, conserved gene. CRISPR/Cas9-mediated knockout of the wp gene leads to the rapid generation of white pupae strains in C. capitata and B. tryoni . The conserved phenotype and independent nature of wp − mutations suggest this technique can provide a generic approach to produce sexing strains in other major medical and agricultural insect pests.
No related organisations have been discovered for Amanda Choo.
Start Date: 2023
End Date: 2023
Amount: $423,659.00
Funder: Australian Research Council
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