Publications by authors named "Kenneth R Pryde"

Article Synopsis
  • Antipsychotic drugs are primarily used to treat schizophrenia and assist with other mental health issues but can cause serious movement disorders called extrapyramidal syndromes (EPS) in some patients.
  • The newest generation of these drugs like aripiprazole act differently from older ones and are still linked to EPS in a small percentage of users, as their exact mechanism of causing these side effects is not completely understood.
  • Research indicates that aripiprazole and similar drugs can harm mitochondria in neurons, leading to reduced energy production and cell viability, with chronic use resulting in structural damage and locomotion problems in model organisms.
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PROteolysis TArgeting Chimeras (PROTACs) use the ubiquitin-proteasome system to degrade a protein of interest for therapeutic benefit. Advances made in targeted protein degradation technology have been remarkable, with several molecules having moved into clinical studies. However, robust routes to assess and better understand the safety risks of PROTACs need to be identified, which is an essential step toward delivering efficacious and safe compounds to patients.

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Disruption of mitochondrial function selectively targets tumour cells that are dependent on oxidative phosphorylation. However, due to their high energy demands, cardiac cells are disproportionately targeted by mitochondrial toxins resulting in a loss of cardiac function. An analysis of the effects of mubritinib on cardiac cells showed that this drug did not inhibit HER2 as reported, but directly inhibits mitochondrial respiratory complex I, reducing cardiac-cell beat rate, with prolonged exposure resulting in cell death.

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Mitochondrial dysfunction is implicated in numerous neurodegenerative disorders and in Parkinson's disease (PD) in particular. PINK1 and Parkin gene mutations are causes of autosomal recessive PD, and these respective proteins function cooperatively to degrade depolarized mitochondria (mitophagy). It is widely assumed that impaired mitophagy causes PD, as toxic reactive oxygen species (ROS)-producing mitochondria accumulate and progressively drive neurodegeneration.

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Mitochondrial fission is essential for the degradation of damaged mitochondria. It is currently unknown how the dynamin-related protein 1 (DRP1)-associated fission machinery is selectively targeted to segregate damaged mitochondria. We show that PTEN-induced putative kinase (PINK1) serves as a pro-fission signal, independently of Parkin.

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NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) is a major source of reactive oxygen species in mitochondria and a contributor to cellular oxidative stress. In isolated complex I the reduced flavin is known to react with molecular oxygen to form predominantly superoxide, but studies using intact mitochondria contend that superoxide may result from a semiquinone species that responds to the proton-motive force (Δp) also. Here, we use bovine heart submitochondrial particles to show that a single mechanism describes superoxide production by complex I under all conditions (during both NADH oxidation and reverse electron transfer).

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ROS (reactive oxygen species) are considered to be a major cause of cellular oxidative stress, linked to neuromuscular diseases and aging. Complex I (NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase) is one of the main contributors to superoxide production by mitochondria, and knowledge of its mechanism of O2 reduction is required for the formulation of causative connections between complex I defects and pathological effects. There is evidence for two distinct (but not mutually exclusive) sites of O2 reduction by complex I.

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GB virus B (GBV-B) is the closest relative to hepatitis C virus (HCV) with which it shares a common genome organization, however, unlike HCV in humans, it generally causes an acute resolving hepatitis in New World monkeys. It is important to understand the factors regulating the different disease profiles of the two viruses and in this regard, as well as playing a key role in viral RNA replication, the HCV NS5A non-structural protein modulates a variety of host-cell signalling pathways. We have shown previously that HCV NS5A, expressed either alone, or in the context of the complete polyprotein, inhibits the Ras-extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (Erk) pathway and activates the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) pathway.

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