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Author

Kevin Manley

Other affiliations: University at Albany, SUNY
Bio: Kevin Manley is an academic researcher from New York State Department of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Immune system & Huntington's disease. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 11 publications receiving 668 citations. Previous affiliations of Kevin Manley include University at Albany, SUNY.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that Msh2 is required for somatic instability of the HD CAG repeat, suggesting important functional correlations between repeat length and pathology.
Abstract: Huntington disease (HD), an autosomal dominant, progressive neurodegenerative disorder, is caused by an expanded CAG repeat sequence leading to an increase in the number of glutamine residues in the encoded protein. The normal CAG repeat range is 5-36, whereas 38 or more repeats are found in the diseased state; the severity of disease is roughly proportional to the number of CAG repeats. HD shows anticipation, in which subsequent generations display earlier disease onsets due to intergenerational repeat expansion. For longer repeat lengths, somatic instability of the repeat size has been observed both in human cases at autopsy and in transgenic mouse models containing either a genomic fragment of human HD exon 1 (ref. 9) or an expanded repeat inserted into the endogenous mouse gene Hdh (ref. 10). With increasing repeat number, the protein changes conformation and becomes increasingly prone to aggregation, suggesting important functional correlations between repeat length and pathology. Because dinucleotide repeat instability is known to increase when the mismatch repair enzyme MSH2 is missing, we examined instability of the HD CAG repeat by crossing transgenic mice carrying exon 1 of human HD (ref. 16) with Msh2-/- mice. Our results show that Msh2 is required for somatic instability of the CAG repeat.

375 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that in liver and striatum the R6/1 Huntington's disease (HD)∼100 transgene, when present in a congenic C57BL/6J (B6) background, incurred expansion-biased repeat mutations, whereas the repeat was stable in acongenic BALB/cByJ (CBy) background.
Abstract: Expansions of trinucleotide CAG/CTG repeats in somatic tissues are thought to contribute to ongoing disease progression through an affected individual's life with Huntington's disease or myotonic dystrophy. Broad ranges of repeat instability arise between individuals with expanded repeats, suggesting the existence of modifiers of repeat instability. Mice with expanded CAG/CTG repeats show variable levels of instability depending upon mouse strain. However, to date the genetic modifiers underlying these differences have not been identified. We show that in liver and striatum the R6/1 Huntington's disease (HD) (CAG)∼100 transgene, when present in a congenic C57BL/6J (B6) background, incurred expansion-biased repeat mutations, whereas the repeat was stable in a congenic BALB/cByJ (CBy) background. Reciprocal congenic mice revealed the Msh3 gene as the determinant for the differences in repeat instability. Expansion bias was observed in congenic mice homozygous for the B6 Msh3 gene on a CBy background, while the CAG tract was stabilized in congenics homozygous for the CBy Msh3 gene on a B6 background. The CAG stabilization was as dramatic as genetic deficiency of Msh2. The B6 and CBy Msh3 genes had identical promoters but differed in coding regions and showed strikingly different protein levels. B6 MSH3 variant protein is highly expressed and associated with CAG expansions, while the CBy MSH3 variant protein is expressed at barely detectable levels, associating with CAG stability. The DHFR protein, which is divergently transcribed from a promoter shared by the Msh3 gene, did not show varied levels between mouse strains. Thus, naturally occurring MSH3 protein polymorphisms are modifiers of CAG repeat instability, likely through variable MSH3 protein stability. Since evidence supports that somatic CAG instability is a modifier and predictor of disease, our data are consistent with the hypothesis that variable levels of CAG instability associated with polymorphisms of DNA repair genes may have prognostic implications for various repeat-associated diseases.

117 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These behavioral abnormalities precede the earliest neurochemical and molecular changes reported in the literature to date, and thus indicate subtle early pathology that has not yet been documented, and may be a useful tool for evaluating therapeutic agents.

60 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors report that exploratory and fear conditioning behavioral changes appear well before the onset of obvious pathology, and provide insight into functional mechanisms by which cellular and subcellular disease changes may mediate neurological symptoms.
Abstract: The Huntington's disease R6/2 transgenic mouse model, containing exon 1 of the human huntingtin gene with a greatly increased CAG repeat length, shows multiple effects of the altered polyglutamine in the resultant protein The authors report that exploratory and fear conditioning behavioral changes appear well before the onset of obvious pathology The first differences in exploratory and fear conditioning behavior emerge by 4 and 5 weeks of age, respectively These behaviors correlate with the earliest neurochemical and molecular changes previously reported and provide insight into functional mechanisms by which cellular and subcellular disease changes may mediate neurological symptoms These studies provide behavioral protocols suitable for high-throughput screening of therapeutic agents

59 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In fibroblasts derived from an adult mouse, there was an initial short truncation of the repeat, followed by an emerging population of cells showing continuous slow expansion, and the major CAG peak has increased from 155 to approximately 170 triplets.

41 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article reviews the current understanding of this multifaceted DNA-repair system in human cells and investigates how MMR status affects meiotic and mitotic recombination, DNA-damage signalling, apoptosis and cell-type-specific processes.
Abstract: By removing biosynthetic errors from newly synthesized DNA, mismatch repair (MMR) improves the fidelity of DNA replication by several orders of magnitude. Loss of MMR brings about a mutator phenotype, which causes a predisposition to cancer. But MMR status also affects meiotic and mitotic recombination, DNA-damage signalling, apoptosis and cell-type-specific processes such as class-switch recombination, somatic hypermutation and triplet-repeat expansion. This article reviews our current understanding of this multifaceted DNA-repair system in human cells.

1,228 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Defects in MMR are associated with genome-wide instability, predisposition to certain types of cancer including hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer, resistance to certain chemotherapeutic agents, and abnormalities in meiosis and sterility in mammalian systems.
Abstract: DNA mismatch repair (MMR) is a highly conserved biological pathway that plays a key role in maintaining genomic stability. The specificity of MMR is primarily for base-base mismatches and insertion/deletion mispairs generated during DNA replication and recombination. MMR also suppresses homeologous recombination and was recently shown to play a role in DNA damage signaling in eukaryotic cells. Escherichia coli MutS and MutL and their eukaryotic homologs, MutSalpha and MutLalpha, respectively, are key players in MMR-associated genome maintenance. Many other protein components that participate in various DNA metabolic pathways, such as PCNA and RPA, are also essential for MMR. Defects in MMR are associated with genome-wide instability, predisposition to certain types of cancer including hereditary non-polyposis colorectal cancer, resistance to certain chemotherapeutic agents, and abnormalities in meiosis and sterility in mammalian systems.

1,188 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
20 Jun 2007-Nature
TL;DR: It is becoming clear that the peculiar structures of repeat-containing transcripts are at the heart of the pathogenesis of these diseases, and the presence of expanded DNA repeats alters gene expression in human cells, leading to disease.
Abstract: Nearly 30 hereditary disorders in humans result from an increase in the number of copies of simple repeats in genomic DNA. These DNA repeats seem to be predisposed to such expansion because they have unusual structural features, which disrupt the cellular replication, repair and recombination machineries. The presence of expanded DNA repeats alters gene expression in human cells, leading to disease. Surprisingly, many of these debilitating diseases are caused by repeat expansions in the non-coding regions of their resident genes. It is becoming clear that the peculiar structures of repeat-containing transcripts are at the heart of the pathogenesis of these diseases.

881 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Experimental advances towards explaining the mechanisms of repeat instability have revealed surprising ways in which metabolic pathways can drive or protect from repeat instability.
Abstract: Disease-causing repeat instability is an important and unique form of mutation that is linked to more than 40 neurological, neurodegenerative and neuromuscular disorders. DNA repeat expansion mutations are dynamic and ongoing within tissues and across generations. The patterns of inherited and tissue-specific instability are determined by both gene-specific cis-elements and trans-acting DNA metabolic proteins. Repeat instability probably involves the formation of unusual DNA structures during DNA replication, repair and recombination. Experimental advances towards explaining the mechanisms of repeat instability have broadened our understanding of this mutational process. They have revealed surprising ways in which metabolic pathways can drive or protect from repeat instability.

876 citations