Robert W Taylor's research while affiliated with Newcastle University and other places

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Publications (697)


Figure 3. Hierarchical clustering of mtSSU protein expression reveals the composition of assembly modules of the mtSSU (A) Hierarchical clustering of Pearson correlation coefficients determined from the log-fold expression of all detected (25/29) MRPs. The heatmap colors indicate the Pearson correlation coefficient among the MRPs, with darker colors representing stronger correlations. The color bars show the identified assembly nodes. (B) Mapping of detected MRPs clusters on the mtSSU structure (PDB: 5AJ3). Not assigned proteins in black, 12S rRNA in gray.
Figure 6. Stability of mS37 is regulated by CX 9 C motif (A) Location of mS37 within the 55S mitoribosome. (B) Conservation of the CHCHD4/MIA40-oxidizable twin CX 9 C motifs in mS37 and (C) subsequent folding. (C) Schematic representation of 4 mutated cysteine residues into serine (C1234S). (D) Immunoblot of FLAG-tagged wild-type and C1234S mS37. Asterisks indicate low levels of C1234S mS37. (E) Immunoblot of mS37 protein level in patient-derived fibroblasts.
Supernumerary proteins of the human mitochondrial ribosomal small subunit are integral for assembly and translation
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June 2024

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17 Reads

iScience

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Christopher J. Carroll
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Clinical, neuroradiological and molecular characterization of mitochondrial threonyl-tRNA-synthetase (TARS2)-related disorder

July 2023

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210 Reads

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1 Citation

Genetics in medicine: official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics

Purpose Biallelic variants in TARS2, encoding the mitochondrial threonyl-tRNA-synthetase, have been reported in a small group of individuals displaying a neurodevelopmental phenotype, but with limited neuroradiological data and insufficient evidence for causality of the variants. Methods Exome or genome sequencing was carried out in 15 families. Clinical and neuroradiological evaluation was performed for all affected individuals, including review of 10 previously reported individuals. The pathogenicity of TARS2 variants was evaluated using in vitro assays, and a zebrafish model. Results We report 18 new individuals harboring biallelic TARS2 variants. Phenotypically, these individuals show developmental delay/intellectual disability, regression, cerebellar and cerebral atrophy, basal ganglia signal alterations, hypotonia, cerebellar signs and increased blood lactate. In vitro studies showed that variants within the TARS2301-381 region had decreased binding to Rag GTPases, likely impairing mTORC1 activity. The zebrafish model recapitulated key features of the human phenotype and unraveled dysregulation of downstream targets of mTORC1 signaling. Functional testing of the variants confirmed the pathogenicity in a zebrafish model. Conclusion We define the clinico-radiological spectrum of TARS2-related mitochondrial disease, unveil the likely involvement of the mTORC1 signaling pathway as a distinct molecular mechanism, and establish a TARS2 zebrafish model as an important tool to study variant pathogenicity.


Clinical and molecular characterization of novel FARS2 variants causing neonatal mitochondrial disease

July 2023

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38 Reads

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3 Citations

Molecular Genetics and Metabolism

FARS2 encodes the mitochondrial phenylalanyl-tRNA synthetase (mtPheRS), which is essential for charging mitochondrial (mt-) tRNAPhe with phenylalanine for use in intramitochondrial translation. Many biallelic, pathogenic FARS2 variants have been described previously, which are mostly associated with two distinct clinical phenotypes; an early onset epileptic mitochondrial encephalomyopathy or a later onset spastic paraplegia. In this study, we report on a patient who presented at 3 weeks of age with tachypnoea and poor feeding, which progressed to severe metabolic decompensation with lactic acidosis and seizure activity followed by death at 9 weeks of age. Rapid trio whole exome sequencing identified compound heterozygous FARS2 variants including a pathogenic exon 2 deletion on one allele and a rare missense variant (c.593G > T, p.(Arg198Leu)) on the other allele, necessitating further work to aid variant classification. Assessment of patient fibroblasts demonstrated severely decreased steady-state levels of mtPheRS, but no obvious defect in any components of the oxidative phosphorylation system. To investigate the potential pathogenicity of the missense variant, we determined its high-resolution crystal structure, demonstrating a local structural destabilization in the catalytic domain. Moreover, the R198L mutation reduced the thermal stability and impaired the enzymatic activity of mtPheRS due to a lower binding affinity for tRNAPhe and a slower turnover rate. Together these data confirm the pathogenicity of this FARS2 variant in causing early-onset mitochondrial epilepsy.


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FBXL4 suppresses mitophagy by restricting the accumulation of NIX and BNIP3 mitophagy receptors

May 2023

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67 Reads

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20 Citations

The EMBO Journal

To maintain both mitochondrial quality and quantity, cells selectively remove damaged or excessive mitochondria through mitophagy, which is a specialised form of autophagy. Mitophagy is induced in response to diverse conditions, including hypoxia, cellular differentiation and mitochondrial damage. However, the mechanisms that govern the removal of specific dysfunctional mitochondria under steady-state conditions to fine-tune mitochondrial content are not well understood. Here, we report that SCFFBXL4 , an SKP1/CUL1/F-box protein ubiquitin ligase complex, localises to the mitochondrial outer membrane in unstressed cells and mediates the constitutive ubiquitylation and degradation of the mitophagy receptors NIX and BNIP3 to suppress basal levels of mitophagy. We demonstrate that the pathogenic variants of FBXL4 that cause encephalopathic mtDNA depletion syndrome (MTDPS13) do not efficiently interact with the core SCF ubiquitin ligase machinery or mediate the degradation of NIX and BNIP3. Thus, we reveal a molecular mechanism whereby FBXL4 actively suppresses mitophagy by preventing NIX and BNIP3 accumulation. We propose that the dysregulation of NIX and BNIP3 turnover causes excessive basal mitophagy in FBXL4-associated mtDNA depletion syndrome.


Investigation of oxidative phosphorylation activity and complex composition in mitochondrial disease

January 2023

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10 Reads

Handbook of Clinical Neurology

A multidisciplinary approach to the laboratory diagnosis of mitochondrial disease has long been applied, with crucial information provided by deep clinical phenotyping, blood investigations, and biomarker screening as well as histopathological and biochemical testing of biopsy material to support molecular genetic screening. In an era of second and third generation sequencing technologies, traditional diagnostic algorithms for mitochondrial disease have been replaced by gene agnostic, genomic strategies including whole-exome sequencing (WES) and whole-genome sequencing (WGS), increasingly supported by other 'omics technologies (Alston et al., 2021). Whether a primary testing strategy, or one used to validate and interpret candidate genetic variants, the availability of a range of tests aimed at determining mitochondrial function (i.e., the assessment of individual respiratory chain enzyme activities in a tissue biopsy or cellular respiration in a patient cell line) remains an important part of the diagnostic armory. In this chapter, we summarize several disciplines used in the laboratory investigation of suspected mitochondrial disease, including the histopathological and biochemical assessment of mitochondrial function, as well as protein-based techniques to assess the steady-state levels of oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) subunits and assembly of OXPHOS complexes via traditional (immunoblotting) and cutting-edge (quantitative proteomic) approaches.


Novel DNM1L variants impair mitochondrial dynamics through divergent mechanisms

December 2022

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130 Reads

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11 Citations

Life Science Alliance

Imbalances in mitochondrial and peroxisomal dynamics are associated with a spectrum of human neurological disorders. Mitochondrial and peroxisomal fission both involve dynamin-related protein 1 (DRP1) oligomerisation and membrane constriction, although the precise biophysical mechanisms by which distinct DRP1 variants affect the assembly and activity of different DRP1 domains remains largely unexplored. We analysed four unreported de novo heterozygous variants in the dynamin-1-like gene DNM1L , affecting different highly conserved DRP1 domains, leading to developmental delay, seizures, hypotonia, and/or rare cardiac complications in infancy. Single-nucleotide DRP1 stalk domain variants were found to correlate with more severe clinical phenotypes, with in vitro recombinant human DRP1 mutants demonstrating greater impairments in protein oligomerisation, DRP1-peroxisomal recruitment, and both mitochondrial and peroxisomal hyperfusion compared to GTPase or GTPase-effector domain variants. Importantly, we identified a novel mechanism of pathogenesis, where a p.Arg710Gly variant uncouples DRP1 assembly from assembly-stimulated GTP hydrolysis, providing mechanistic insight into how assembly-state information is transmitted to the GTPase domain. Together, these data reveal that discrete, pathological DNM1L variants impair mitochondrial network maintenance by divergent mechanisms.


Nonstop mRNAs generate a ground state of mitochondrial gene expression noise

November 2022

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114 Reads

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7 Citations

Science Advances

A stop codon within the mRNA facilitates coordinated termination of protein synthesis, releasing the nascent polypeptide from the ribosome. This essential step in gene expression is impeded with transcripts lacking a stop codon, generating nonstop ribosome complexes. Here, we use deep sequencing to investigate sources of nonstop mRNAs generated from the human mitochondrial genome. We identify diverse types of nonstop mRNAs on mitochondrial ribosomes that are resistant to translation termination by canonical release factors. Failure to resolve these aberrations by the mitochondrial release factor in rescue (MTRFR) imparts a negative regulatory effect on protein synthesis that is associated with human disease. Our findings reveal a source of underlying noise in mitochondrial gene expression and the importance of responsive ribosome quality control mechanisms for cell fitness and human health.


Figure 2 Individual survival and hepatic phenotype. A. Supplementation therapy (red) influences survival probability of individuals with TRMU deficiency as compared with Kaplan-Meier estimates. B. Cause of death for the 14 deceased individuals with TRMU deficiency. C. Most common features of the hepatic presentation of individuals with TRMU deficiency. D. Density plot indicating the occurrence of ALF episodes over the first 15 months of life. E. Frequency of ALF episodes per individual across the cohort. F. Survival probability of individuals with TRMU deficiency with LTX therapy (red) and without LTX therapy (blue) is compared using Kaplan-Meier estimator. ALF, acute liver failure; LTX, liver transplantation.
Figure 3 Native liver survival, liver histology, clinical presentation, and course of TRMU-related symptoms. A. Supplementation therapy (blue) does not influence native liver survival, ie, the need for liver transplantation, as compared with Kaplan-Meier estimates. B. Most prevalent findings in liver histopathology. C. Common clinical presentation of individuals with TRMU deficiency besides hepatic symptoms. D. Course of individuals with neurodevelopmental delay over time. Note, that 1 individual was lost to follow up. E. Less common clinical findings in individuals with TRMU deficiency.
Genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of infantile liver failure due to pathogenic TRMU variants

October 2022

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285 Reads

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8 Citations

Genetics in medicine: official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics

Purpose: The study aimed to define the genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of reversible acute liver failure (ALF) of infancy resulting from biallelic pathogenic TRMU variants and to determine the role of cysteine supplementation in its treatment. Methods: Individuals with biallelic (likely) pathogenic variants in TRMU were studied through an international retrospective collection of de-identified patient data. Results: In 62 individuals, including 30 previously unreported cases, we described 48 (likely) pathogenic TRMU variants, of which, 18 were novel. Of these 62 individuals, 42 were alive at a median age of 6.8 (0.6-22) years after a median follow up of 3.6 (0.1-22) years. The most frequent finding, occurring in all but 2 individuals, was liver involvement. ALF occurred only in the first year of life and was reported in 43 of 62 individuals, 11 of whom received liver transplantation. Loss-of-function TRMU variants were associated with poor survival. Supplementation with at least 1 cysteine source, typically N-acetylcysteine, improved survival significantly. Neurodevelopmental delay was observed in 11 individuals and persisted in 4 of the survivors, but we were unable to determine whether this was a primary or a secondary consequence of TRMU deficiency. Conclusion: In most patients, TRMU-associated ALF is a transient, reversible disease and cysteine supplementation improved survival.


Clinical features of the individuals reported in this study and NFU1‐associated phenotypic continuum. (A) Ages of the affected individuals at the study recruitment. (B) Clinical features of the present cohort. (C) NFU1‐associated phenotypic continuum. HSP, hereditary spastic paraplegia. (D) Representative brain MRI features of the present cohort. Individual F1‐II:2 (A, D, G, L), individual F4‐II:5 (B), individual F10‐II:1 (C, F, I, M, N), individual F5‐II:2 (E, K), individual F7‐II:1 (H), individual F4‐II:6 (J), and individual F10‐II:2 (O, P, Q, R). T2/FLAIR hyperintense signal involving the bilateral posterior centrum semiovale (Q), corona radiata, and periatrial regions (A‐C). T2 hyperintense signal involving the bilateral thalami and basal ganglia (D‐F), pons, and cerebellum (G‐I). Hypoplastic corpus callosum and mega cisterna magna (J‐L). Bilateral cerebral white matter volume loss (A‐F, Q, R). Areas of restricted diffusion involving the bilateral subcortical white matter and cerebral peduncles (M‐P). Areas of cystic degeneration/leukomalacia in the white matter of the bilateral frontal lobes (Q, R). Vermian hypoplasia (K).
Overview of the genetic and biochemical characteristics of NFU1 variants. (A) Pedigrees and segregation results of the ten families included in this study. (B) NFU1 gene structure with the localization of all previously known mutations (black, above) and mutations reported in this cohort (colored, below). The corresponding amino acid changes is shown in (C) with known protein domains in NFU1 (NifU N‐terminal domain, residue 59 to 155, and NifU C‐terminal domain, residue 162 to 247) depicted in the illustration. The variant, p.(Val241Leu), was the only mutation discovered in this study to have been located outside of the NFU1 protein domains. Regions are not drawn to scales and both illustrations were created from the program.¹⁶ (D) Conservation of the nine mutations reported in the present cohort across 10 species. (E) Western blot analysis of structural subunits from each OXPHOS complex (CI [NDUFB8], CII [SDHB], CIII [UQCRC2], CIV [COXII], and CV [ATP5A]) in fibroblasts from F1‐II:1 (affected individual), F1‐I:1 (mother) and a pediatric control. GAPDH and VDAC1 were used as cell and mitochondrial loading controls, respectively. (F) Protein model of the NifU N‐terminal domain and NifU C‐terminal domain of the NFU1 structure. Positions of amino acids affected by NFU1 missense variants are indicated in orange.
Clinical features of the present cohort and description of NFU1 variants.
Phenotypic continuum of NFU1-related disorders

October 2022

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117 Reads

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1 Citation

Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology

Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology

Bi-allelic variants in Iron-Sulfur Cluster Scaffold (NFU1) have previously been associated with multiple mitochondrial dysfunctions syndrome 1 (MMDS1) characterized by early-onset rapidly fatal leukoencephalopathy. We report 19 affected individuals from 10 independent families with ultra-rare bi-allelic NFU1 missense variants associated with a spectrum of early-onset pure to complex hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) phenotype with a longer survival (16/19) on one end and neurodevelopmental delay with severe hypotonia (3/19) on the other. Reversible or irreversible neurological decompensation after a febrile illness was common in the cohort, and there were invariable white matter abnormalities on neuroimaging. The study suggests that MMDS1 and HSP could be the two ends of the NFU1-related phenotypic continuum.


FBXL4 suppresses mitophagy by restricting the accumulation of NIX and BNIP3 mitophagy receptors

October 2022

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42 Reads

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2 Citations

Cells selectively remove damaged or excessive mitochondria through mitophagy, a specialized form of autophagy, to maintain mitochondrial quality and quantity. Mitophagy is induced in response to diverse conditions, including hypoxia, cellular differentiation, and mitochondrial damage. However, the mechanisms by which cells remove specific dysfunctional mitochondria under steady-state conditions to fine-tune mitochondrial content are not well understood. Here, we report that SCFFBXL4, an SKP1/CUL1/F-box protein ubiquitin ligase complex, localizes to the mitochondrial outer membrane in unstressed cells and mediates the constitutive ubiquitylation and degradation of the mitophagy receptors NIX and BNIP3 to suppress basal levels of mitophagy. We demonstrate that, unlike wild-type FBXL4, pathogenic variants of FBXL4 that cause encephalopathic mtDNA depletion syndrome (MTDPS13), do not efficiently interact with the core SCF ubiquitin ligase machinery or mediate the degradation of NIX and BNIP3. Thus, we reveal a molecular mechanism that actively suppresses mitophagy via preventing NIX and BNIP3 accumulation and propose that excessive basal mitophagy in the FBXL4-associated mtDNA depletion syndrome is caused by dysregulation of NIX and BNIP3 turnover. Download figureOpen in new tab


Citations (84)


... 58 ES of subjects O-I-1, O-I-2 and O-II-3 where performed as described elsewhere. 59 Sanger sequencing was used to confirm next-generation sequencing findings and perform family segregation whenever possible. Recommendations of the Human Genome Variation Society were used to describe the cDNA and protein sequence variants using NM_006814.5 and NP_006805.2 ...

Reference:

PSMF1 variants cause a phenotypic spectrum from early-onset Parkinson's disease to perinatal lethality by disrupting mitochondrial pathways
Clinical and molecular characterization of novel FARS2 variants causing neonatal mitochondrial disease
  • Citing Article
  • July 2023

Molecular Genetics and Metabolism

... The TARS2 gene (MIM# 612805) encodes mitochondrial threonyl tRNA-synthetase. To the best of our knowledge, less than 30 patients of this particular mitochondrial disorder have been reported on to date (2,3). The main clinical features of COXPD21 include failure to thrive/growth retardation, developmental delay, axial hypotonia, hypertonus of the limbs, dystonia, seizures, and laboratory findings of lactic acidosis and elevated plasma alanine (1)(2)(3)(4). ...

Clinical, neuroradiological and molecular characterization of mitochondrial threonyl-tRNA-synthetase (TARS2)-related disorder

Genetics in medicine: official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics

... Loss of FBXL4 decreases the mitochondrial mass with concomitant mtDNA depletion and mitochondrial dysfunction in affected tissues in humans [57][58][59] and mice 56 . Three independent recent reports have shown that FBXL4 actively suppresses mitophagy by degrading the mitophagy receptors NIX and BNIP3 [60][61][62] . The absence of FBXL4 thus The wild type PRKN gene and alleles identified in the patient. ...

FBXL4 suppresses mitophagy by restricting the accumulation of NIX and BNIP3 mitophagy receptors

The EMBO Journal

... While the conventional thinking is that in a healthy wild type setting the full polycistronic transcripts are generated regularly from the light and heavy strand promoters of the genome, this view does not consider low-level processivity mistakes whereby the POLRMT-TEFM complex disassociates from the genome template and generates a partial transcript. Evidence points to the synthesis of incomplete mRNA transcripts that are subsequently polyadenylated [13,14]. Importantly, there appears to be no surveillance system to prevent translation initiation on mitochondrial mRNAs with aberrant 3 ends [14,15]. ...

Nonstop mRNAs generate a ground state of mitochondrial gene expression noise

Science Advances

... To assess the predicted impact of missense variants, commonly used prediction scores (Mendelian clinically applicable 15 We generated all biologically possible base substitutions in the EIF2AK3 coding sequence (transcript: NM_004836.7) and used the Mutalyzer Position Converter to match the resulting variant call format file to the GRCh37/hg19 reference genome. ...

Genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of infantile liver failure due to pathogenic TRMU variants

Genetics in medicine: official journal of the American College of Medical Genetics

... Finally, a recent study found that phosphorylation of Bnip3 at S60 and T66-two residues identified in our analysis-stabilizes this receptor by blocking its ubiquitination-mediated turnover (He et al., 2022). Notably, three independent studies recently identified the mitochondrial E3 ligase Fbxl4 as responsible for the basal turnover of Bnip3 and Nix (Elcocks et al., 2022;Jiang & Cao, 2022;Nguyen-Dien et al., 2022). Knockout of Fbxl4 increases Bnip3 and Nix protein levels and promotes excessive mitophagy, leading to diminished mitochondrial protein levels and perinatal lethality in mice (Alsina et al., 2020)-phenotypes that strikingly mirror those observed in our Pptc7 knockout models (Niemi et al., 2019). ...

FBXL4 suppresses mitophagy by restricting the accumulation of NIX and BNIP3 mitophagy receptors
  • Citing Preprint
  • October 2022

... Drp1, an evolutionary conserved cytosolic protein, stands as the primary regulator of mitochondrial fission. Genetic deficiencies or mutations in Drp1 result in pronounced mitochondrial anomalies, which are associated with severe neurodevelopmental delay (Bauer et al., 2023;Nolden et al., 2022;Robertson et al., 2023). Conversely, enhancement of Drp1 activity is implicated in neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, and Huntington's disease (Haun et al., 2013;Wang et al., 2011;Yan et al., 2015). ...

Novel DNM1L variants impair mitochondrial dynamics through divergent mechanisms

Life Science Alliance

... In patients with Alper's syndrome, there was a significant downregulation of both Complex I and IV in GABAergic interneurons in the occipital lobe. Interestingly, fast-spiking interneurons exhibited more pronounced Complex IV deficiency, suggesting their increased vulnerability to CcO deficiency [41,42]. In vitro studies further emphasize the multifaceted nature of epileptogenesis, highlighting that ATP production alone is not the sole factor influencing proconvulsant effects; ROS also plays a crucial role. ...

Delineating selective vulnerability of inhibitory interneurons in Alpers’ syndrome

Neuropathology and Applied Neurobiology

... These genes are TYMP, TK2, DGUOK, and RRM1 and RRM2B (encoding subunits of the ribonucleotide reductase). 9,12 Mutations in any of these nuclear genes can lead to imbalanced dNTPs and impaired mtDNA replication. 4,13,14 Mitochondrial DNA Replication ...

RRM1 variants cause a mitochondrial DNA maintenance disorder via impaired de novo nucleotide synthesis

The Journal of clinical investigation

... A few years ago, a rapidly fatal dilated cardiomyopathy was linked to pathogenic variants in the second enzyme of the pathway (phosphopantothenoylcysteine synthetase, PPCS) with the discovery of three affected families [6,7]. Very recently, variants in the third enzyme of the pathway (phosphopantothenoylcysteine decarboxylase, PPCDC) were associated with a similar cardiac condition in two sisters [8]. ...

Novel phosphopantothenoylcysteine synthetase (PPCS) mutations with prominent neuromuscular features: Expanding the phenotypical spectrum of PPCS‐related disorders
  • Citing Article
  • May 2022

American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A