Martin Borch Jensen

Martin Borch Jensen

United States
3K followers 500+ connections

About

Fundamental biological processes cause physiological decline with age, and are the #1…

Activity

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Experience

Education

  • National Institute on Aging / University of Copenhagen

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    Degree from University of Copenhagen, research performed mainly at the National Institute on Aging in Baltimore.
    EliteForsk Scholarship (16 recipients nationwide).

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    Activities and Societies: Novo Science Ambassador (Talks at high schools on my research and life as a scientist); Teaching Assistant (Electromagnetism​ and Classical mechanics & relativity); Research Assistant (Completed part of the Nano-chalk: Mere olie fri af kalken project, a collaboration between the University of Copenhagen and Mærsk Oil & Gas A/S).

    B.Sc. 2004-2007, M.S. 2007-2009.
    Received a Novo Scholarship for M.S. thesis research in Stamou lab.

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    Activities and Societies: 1st dan black belt Shotokan karate, 2nd place national youth championship; Football at Copenhagen Towers, 1st place national youth championship; National Physics Olympiad finalist; One of two delegates to the international Theory of Knowledge conference in Istanbul.

Volunteer Experience

  • Board Member

    Norn Group

    - Present 3 years 5 months

    Health

    Norn Group is a 501(c)3 non-profit devoted to supporting individuals and institutions that conduct research and development to extend healthy human lifespan. Our projects include the Longevity Apprenticeship, Longevity Impetus Grants (www.impetusgrants.org), and efforts to enable better research and clinical trials targeting aging biology.

  • Founder

    The Longevity Apprenticeship

    - 2 years 7 months

    Education

    As we age, our vulnerability to both chronic and infectious disease increases a thousand fold. Chronic pain, dementia, and cancer aren’t much of a concern when we’re young, but with age such maladies appear in rapid succession. Research has identified underlying processes for this vulnerability, and targeting these processes both extends life and delays the onset of all these diseases. Identifying therapies that change processes of aging in humans thus represents the biggest lever our race has…

    As we age, our vulnerability to both chronic and infectious disease increases a thousand fold. Chronic pain, dementia, and cancer aren’t much of a concern when we’re young, but with age such maladies appear in rapid succession. Research has identified underlying processes for this vulnerability, and targeting these processes both extends life and delays the onset of all these diseases. Identifying therapies that change processes of aging in humans thus represents the biggest lever our race has on health and disease. The field is poised for radical impact, but making this reality will take a lot of effort.

    The Apprenticeship is a training ground for people who can make that happen. From day one, apprentices get hands-on experience identifying bottlenecks for the field, and designing projects to address these bottlenecks. We produce roadmaps and materials to accelerate progress, with a focus on calibrated technical insight distilled into shovel-ready action plans.

    More at https://www.martinborchjensen.com/apprenticeship

  • Organizer

    Bay Area Aging Nexus

    - 2 years 6 months

    Science and Technology

    Various activities for people working in aging biology, including biotech founder dinners and a weekly discussion forum for researchers in aging biology and related disciplines.

Publications

  • In vivo Pooled Screening: A Scalable Tool to Study the Complexity of Aging and Age-Related Disease

    Frontiers in Aging

    Biological aging, and the diseases of aging, occur in a complex in vivo environment, driven by multiple interacting processes. A convergence of recently developed technologies has enabled in vivo pooled screening: direct administration of a library of different perturbations to a living animal, with a subsequent readout that distinguishes the identity of each perturbation and its effect on individual cells within the animal. Such screens hold promise for efficiently applying functional genomics…

    Biological aging, and the diseases of aging, occur in a complex in vivo environment, driven by multiple interacting processes. A convergence of recently developed technologies has enabled in vivo pooled screening: direct administration of a library of different perturbations to a living animal, with a subsequent readout that distinguishes the identity of each perturbation and its effect on individual cells within the animal. Such screens hold promise for efficiently applying functional genomics to aging processes in the full richness of the in vivo setting. In this review, we describe the technologies behind in vivo pooled screening, including a range of options for delivery, perturbation and readout methods, and outline their potential application to aging and age-related disease. We then suggest how in vivo pooled screening, together with emerging innovations in each of its technological underpinnings, could be extended to shed light on key open questions in aging biology, including the mechanisms and limits of epigenetic reprogramming and identifying cellular mediators of systemic signals in aging.

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  • Gut cytokines modulate olfaction through metabolic reprogramming of glia

    Nature

    Infection-induced aversion against enteropathogens is a conserved sickness behaviour that can promote host survival1,2. The aetiology of this behaviour remains poorly understood, but studies in Drosophila have linked olfactory and gustatory perception to avoidance behaviours against toxic microorganisms3,4,5. Whether and how enteric infections directly influence sensory perception to induce or modulate such behaviours remains unknown. Here we show that enteropathogen infection in Drosophila can…

    Infection-induced aversion against enteropathogens is a conserved sickness behaviour that can promote host survival1,2. The aetiology of this behaviour remains poorly understood, but studies in Drosophila have linked olfactory and gustatory perception to avoidance behaviours against toxic microorganisms3,4,5. Whether and how enteric infections directly influence sensory perception to induce or modulate such behaviours remains unknown. Here we show that enteropathogen infection in Drosophila can modulate olfaction through metabolic reprogramming of ensheathing glia of the antennal lobe. Infection-induced unpaired cytokine expression in the intestine activates JAK–STAT signalling in ensheathing glia, inducing the expression of glial monocarboxylate transporters and the apolipoprotein glial lazarillo (GLaz), and affecting metabolic coupling of glia and neurons at the antennal lobe. This modulates olfactory discrimination, promotes the avoidance of bacteria-laced food and increases fly survival. Although transient in young flies, gut-induced metabolic reprogramming of ensheathing glia becomes constitutive in old flies owing to age-related intestinal inflammation, which contributes to an age-related decline in olfactory discrimination. Our findings identify adaptive glial metabolic reprogramming by gut-derived cytokines as a mechanism that causes lasting changes in a sensory system in ageing flies.

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  • Latest advances in aging research and drug discovery

    Aging

    An increasing aging population poses a significant challenge to societies worldwide. A better understanding of the molecular, cellular, organ, tissue, physiological, psychological, and even sociological changes that occur with aging is needed in order to treat age-associated diseases. The field of aging research is rapidly expanding with multiple advances transpiring in many previously disconnected areas. Several major pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and consumer companies made aging research a…

    An increasing aging population poses a significant challenge to societies worldwide. A better understanding of the molecular, cellular, organ, tissue, physiological, psychological, and even sociological changes that occur with aging is needed in order to treat age-associated diseases. The field of aging research is rapidly expanding with multiple advances transpiring in many previously disconnected areas. Several major pharmaceutical, biotechnology, and consumer companies made aging research a priority and are building internal expertise, integrating aging research into traditional business models and exploring new go-to-market strategies. Many of these efforts are spearheaded by the latest advances in artificial intelligence, namely deep learning, including generative and reinforcement learning. To facilitate these trends, the Center for Healthy Aging at the University of Copenhagen and Insilico Medicine are building a community of Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) in these areas and launched the annual conference series titled “Aging Research and Drug Discovery (ARDD)” held in the capital of the pharmaceutical industry, Basel, Switzerland (www.agingpharma.org). This ARDD collection contains summaries from the 6th annual meeting that explored aging mechanisms and new interventions in age-associated diseases. The 7th annual ARDD exhibition will transpire 2nd-4th of September, 2020, in Basel.

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  • NAD+ augmentation restores mitophagy and limits accelerated aging in Werner syndrome

    Nature Communications

    Metabolic dysfunction is a primary feature of Werner syndrome (WS), a human premature aging disease caused by mutations in the gene encoding the Werner (WRN) DNA helicase. WS patients exhibit severe metabolic phenotypes, but the underlying mechanisms are not understood, and whether the metabolic deficit can be targeted for therapeutic intervention has not been determined. Here we report impaired mitophagy and depletion of NAD+, a fundamental ubiquitous molecule, in WS patient samples and WS…

    Metabolic dysfunction is a primary feature of Werner syndrome (WS), a human premature aging disease caused by mutations in the gene encoding the Werner (WRN) DNA helicase. WS patients exhibit severe metabolic phenotypes, but the underlying mechanisms are not understood, and whether the metabolic deficit can be targeted for therapeutic intervention has not been determined. Here we report impaired mitophagy and depletion of NAD+, a fundamental ubiquitous molecule, in WS patient samples and WS invertebrate models. WRN regulates transcription of a key NAD+ biosynthetic enzyme nicotinamide nucleotide adenylyltransferase 1 (NMNAT1). NAD+ repletion restores NAD+ metabolic profiles and improves mitochondrial quality through DCT-1 and ULK-1-dependent mitophagy. At the organismal level, NAD+ repletion remarkably extends lifespan and delays accelerated aging, including stem cell dysfunction, in Caenorhabditis elegans and Drosophila melanogaster models of WS. Our findings suggest that accelerated aging in WS is mediated by impaired mitochondrial function and mitophagy, and that bolstering cellular NAD+ levels counteracts WS phenotypes.

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  • Targeting mitochondrial proline dehydrogenase with a suicide inhibitor to exploit synthetic lethal interactions with p53 upregulation and glutaminase inhibition

    Molecular Cancer Therapeutics

    Proline dehydrogenase (PRODH) is a p53-inducible inner mitochondrial membrane flavoprotein linked to electron transport for anaplerotic glutamate and ATP production, most critical for cancer cell survival under microenvironmental stress conditions. Proposing that PRODH is a unique mitochondrial cancer target, we structurally model and compare its cancer cell activity and consequences upon exposure to either a reversible (S-5-oxo: S-5-oxo-2-tetrahydrofurancarboxylic acid) or irreversible (N-PPG:…

    Proline dehydrogenase (PRODH) is a p53-inducible inner mitochondrial membrane flavoprotein linked to electron transport for anaplerotic glutamate and ATP production, most critical for cancer cell survival under microenvironmental stress conditions. Proposing that PRODH is a unique mitochondrial cancer target, we structurally model and compare its cancer cell activity and consequences upon exposure to either a reversible (S-5-oxo: S-5-oxo-2-tetrahydrofurancarboxylic acid) or irreversible (N-PPG: N-propargylglycine) PRODH inhibitor. Unlike 5-oxo, the suicide inhibitor N-PPG induces early and selective decay of PRODH protein without triggering mitochondrial destruction, consistent with N-PPG activation of the mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRmt). Fly and breast tumor (MCF7)-xenografted mouse studies indicate that N-PPG doses sufficient to phenocopy PRODH knockout and induce its decay can be safely and effectively administered in vivo. Among breast cancer cell lines and tumor samples, PRODH mRNA expression is subtype-dependent and inversely correlated with glutaminase (GLS1) expression; combining inhibitors of PRODH (S-5-oxo, N-PPG) and GLS1 (CB-839) produces additive if not synergistic loss of cancer cell (ZR-75-1, MCF7, DU4475, BT474) growth and viability. While PRODH knockdown alone can induce cancer cell apoptosis, the anti-cancer potential of either reversible or irreversible PRODH inhibitors is strongly enhanced when p53 is simultaneously upregulated by an MDM2 antagonist (MI-63, Nutlin-3). However, maximum anti-cancer synergy is observed in vitro when the PRODH suicide inhibitor N-PPG is combined with both GLS1 inhibition and a p53-upregulating MDM2 antagonist. These findings provide preclinical rationale for the development of N-PPG-like PRODH inhibitors as cancer therapeutics to exploit synthetic lethal interactions with p53 upregulation and GLS1 inhibition.

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  • JNK modifies neuronal metabolism to promote proteostasisand longevity

    Aging Cell

    Aging is associated with a progressive loss of tissue and metabolic homeostasis. This loss can be delayed by single‐gene perturbations, increasing lifespan. How such perturbations affect metabolic and proteostatic networks to extend lifespan remains unclear. Here, we address this question by comprehensively characterizing age‐related changes in protein turnover rates in the Drosophila brain, as well as changes in the neuronal metabolome, transcriptome, and carbon flux in long‐lived animals with…

    Aging is associated with a progressive loss of tissue and metabolic homeostasis. This loss can be delayed by single‐gene perturbations, increasing lifespan. How such perturbations affect metabolic and proteostatic networks to extend lifespan remains unclear. Here, we address this question by comprehensively characterizing age‐related changes in protein turnover rates in the Drosophila brain, as well as changes in the neuronal metabolome, transcriptome, and carbon flux in long‐lived animals with elevated Jun‐N‐terminal Kinase signaling. We find that these animals exhibit a delayed age‐related decline in protein turnover rates, as well as decreased steady‐state neuronal glucose‐6‐phosphate levels and elevated carbon flux into the pentose phosphate pathway due to the induction of glucose‐6‐phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD). Over‐expressing G6PD in neurons is sufficient to phenocopy these metabolic and proteostatic changes, as well as extend lifespan. Our study identifies a link between metabolic changes and improved proteostasis in neurons that contributes to the lifespan extension in long‐lived mutants.

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  • Mutations of mitochondrial DNA are not major contributors to aging of fruit flies

    Proceeings of the National Academy of Sciences

    Mammals develop age-associated clonal expansion of somatic mtDNA mutations resulting in severe respiratory chain deficiency in a subset of cells in a variety of tissues. Both mathematical modeling based on descriptive data from humans and experimental data from mtDNA mutator mice suggest that the somatic mutations are formed early in life and then undergo mitotic segregation during adult life to reach very high levels in certain cells. To address whether mtDNA mutations have a universal effect…

    Mammals develop age-associated clonal expansion of somatic mtDNA mutations resulting in severe respiratory chain deficiency in a subset of cells in a variety of tissues. Both mathematical modeling based on descriptive data from humans and experimental data from mtDNA mutator mice suggest that the somatic mutations are formed early in life and then undergo mitotic segregation during adult life to reach very high levels in certain cells. To address whether mtDNA mutations have a universal effect on aging metazoans, we investigated their role in physiology and aging of fruit flies. To this end, we utilized genetically engineered flies expressing mutant versions of the catalytic subunit of mitochondrial DNA polymerase (DmPOLγA) as a means to introduce mtDNA mutations. We report here that lifespan and health in fruit flies are remarkably tolerant to mtDNA mutations. Our results show that the short lifespan and wide genetic bottleneck of fruit flies are limiting the extent of clonal expansion of mtDNA mutations both in individuals and between generations. However, an increase of mtDNA mutations to very high levels caused sensitivity to mechanical and starvation stress, intestinal stem cell dysfunction, and reduced lifespan under standard conditions. In addition, the effects of dietary restriction, widely considered beneficial for organismal health, were attenuated in flies with very high levels of mtDNA mutations.

    Other authors
    • Timo E. S. Kauppila
    • Ana Bratic
    • Francesca Baggio
    • Linda Partridge
    • Heinrich Jasper
    • Sebastian Grönke
    • Nils-Göran Larsson
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  • PGAM5 promotes lasting FoxO activation after developmental mitochondrial stress and extends lifespan in Drosophila

    eLife

    The mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRmt) has been associated with long lifespan across metazoans. In C. elegans, mild developmental mitochondrial stress activates UPRmt reporters and extends lifespan. We show that similar developmental stress is necessary and sufficient to extend Drosophila lifespan, and identify Phosphoglycerate Mutase 5 (PGAM5) as a mediator of this response. Developmental mitochondrial stress leads to activation of FoxO, via Apoptosis Signal-regulating Kinase 1…

    The mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRmt) has been associated with long lifespan across metazoans. In C. elegans, mild developmental mitochondrial stress activates UPRmt reporters and extends lifespan. We show that similar developmental stress is necessary and sufficient to extend Drosophila lifespan, and identify Phosphoglycerate Mutase 5 (PGAM5) as a mediator of this response. Developmental mitochondrial stress leads to activation of FoxO, via Apoptosis Signal-regulating Kinase 1 (ASK1) and Jun-N-terminal Kinase (JNK). This activation persists into adulthood and induces a select set of chaperones, many of which have been implicated in lifespan extension in flies. Persistent FoxO activation can be reversed by a high protein diet in adulthood, through mTORC1 and GCN-2 activity. Accordingly, the observed lifespan extension is prevented on a high protein diet and in FoxO-null flies. The diet-sensitivity of this pathway has important implications for interventions that seek to engage the UPRmt to improve metabolic health and longevity.

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  • Cockayne syndrome group A and B proteins converge on transcription-linked resolution of non-B DNA

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

    In this paper we describe a possible pathogenesis for the accelerated aging disease Cockayne syndrome that entails defective transcription through DNA secondary structures leading to activation of the DNA damage response enzyme poly-ADP-ribose polymerase 1 and downstream mitochondrial derangement. These findings are important because they signify a possible new role of transcription in the resolution of DNA structures that form spontaneously and suggest a possible pathogenesis for this…

    In this paper we describe a possible pathogenesis for the accelerated aging disease Cockayne syndrome that entails defective transcription through DNA secondary structures leading to activation of the DNA damage response enzyme poly-ADP-ribose polymerase 1 and downstream mitochondrial derangement. These findings are important because they signify a possible new role of transcription in the resolution of DNA structures that form spontaneously and suggest a possible pathogenesis for this accelerated aging disease.

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  • Suppressors of Superoxide-H2O2 Production at Site IQ of Mitochondrial Complex I Protect against Stem Cell Hyperplasia and Ischemia-Reperfusion Injury

    Cell Metabolism

    Using high-throughput screening we identified small molecules that suppress superoxide and/or H2O2 production during reverse electron transport through mitochondrial respiratory complex I (site IQ) without affecting oxidative phosphorylation (suppressors of site IQ electron leak, “S1QELs”). S1QELs diminished endogenous oxidative damage in primary astrocytes cultured at ambient or low oxygen tension, showing that site IQ is a normal contributor to mitochondrial superoxide-H2O2 production in…

    Using high-throughput screening we identified small molecules that suppress superoxide and/or H2O2 production during reverse electron transport through mitochondrial respiratory complex I (site IQ) without affecting oxidative phosphorylation (suppressors of site IQ electron leak, “S1QELs”). S1QELs diminished endogenous oxidative damage in primary astrocytes cultured at ambient or low oxygen tension, showing that site IQ is a normal contributor to mitochondrial superoxide-H2O2 production in cells. They diminished stem cell hyperplasia in Drosophila intestine in vivo and caspase activation in a cardiomyocyte cell model driven by endoplasmic reticulum stress, showing that superoxide-H2O2 production by site IQ is involved in cellular stress signaling. They protected against ischemia-reperfusion injury in perfused mouse heart, showing directly that superoxide-H2O2 production by site IQ is a major contributor to this pathology. S1QELs are tools for assessing the contribution of site IQ to cell physiology and pathology and have great potential as therapeutic leads.

    Other authors
    • Martin D. Brand
    • Renata L. S. Goncalves
    • Adam L. Orr
    • Leonardo Vargas
    • Akos A. Gerencser
    • Yves T. Wang
    • Simon Melov
    • Carolina N. Turk
    • Jason T. Matzen
    • H. Michael Petrassi
    See publication
  • A novel method for determining human ex vivo submaximal skeletal muscle mitochondrial function

    Journal of Physiology

    In spite of numerous studies there is no consensus whether mitochondrial function is altered with increased age. The novelty of the present study is the determination of mitochondrial function at submaximal activity rates which is more physiological relevant than the ex vivo functionality protocols previously used. Muscle biopsies were taken from 64 old or young male subjects (60-70 or 20-30 years old). Aged subjects were recruited as trained or untrained. Muscle biopsies were used for…

    In spite of numerous studies there is no consensus whether mitochondrial function is altered with increased age. The novelty of the present study is the determination of mitochondrial function at submaximal activity rates which is more physiological relevant than the ex vivo functionality protocols previously used. Muscle biopsies were taken from 64 old or young male subjects (60-70 or 20-30 years old). Aged subjects were recruited as trained or untrained. Muscle biopsies were used for isolation of mitochondria and subsequent measurements of DNA repair, antioxidant capacity and mitochondrial protein levels (complex I-V). Mitochondrial function was determined by simultaneous measures of oxygen consumption, membrane potential and hydrogen peroxide emission using pyruvate+malate (PM) or succinate+rotenone (SR) as substrates. Proton leak was lower in aged subjects when determined at the same membrane potential and was not affected by training status. State 3 respiration was lower in the aged untrained subjects. This effect, however, was alleviated in the aged trained subjects. H2O2 emission with PM was higher in the aged subjects, and exacerbated by training, but was not changed when using SR. However, with higher manganese superoxide dismuthase (MnSOD) content the trained aged subjects may actually have lower or similar mitochondrial superoxide emission when compared with the untrained subjects. We conclude that aging, and the physical activity level in aged subjects, are both related to changes in the intrinsic functionality of the mitochondrion in skeletal muscle. Both these changes could be important factors in determining the metabolic health of the aged skeletal muscle cell.

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  • Membrane curvature enables ​N-Ras lipid anchor sorting to liquid-ordered membrane phases

    Nature Chemical Biology

    Trafficking and sorting of membrane-anchored Ras GTPases are regulated by partitioning between distinct membrane domains. Here, in vitro experiments and microscopic molecular theory reveal membrane curvature as a new modulator of ​N-Ras lipid anchor and palmitoyl chain partitioning. Membrane curvature was essential for enrichment in raft-like liquid-ordered phases; enrichment was driven by relief of lateral pressure upon anchor insertion and most likely affects the localization of lipidated…

    Trafficking and sorting of membrane-anchored Ras GTPases are regulated by partitioning between distinct membrane domains. Here, in vitro experiments and microscopic molecular theory reveal membrane curvature as a new modulator of ​N-Ras lipid anchor and palmitoyl chain partitioning. Membrane curvature was essential for enrichment in raft-like liquid-ordered phases; enrichment was driven by relief of lateral pressure upon anchor insertion and most likely affects the localization of lipidated proteins in general.

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  • Dynamics of the DNA repair proteins WRN and BLM in the nucleoplasm and nucleoli

    European Biophysics Journal

    We have investigated the mobility of two EGFP-tagged DNA repair proteins, WRN and BLM. In particular, we focused on the dynamics in two locations, the nucleoli and the nucleoplasm. We found that both WRN and BLM use a "DNA-scanning" mechanism, with rapid binding-unbinding to DNA resulting in effective diffusion. In the nucleoplasm WRN and BLM have effective diffusion coefficients of 1.62 and 1.34 μm2/s, respectively. Likewise, the dynamics in the nucleoli are also best described by effective…

    We have investigated the mobility of two EGFP-tagged DNA repair proteins, WRN and BLM. In particular, we focused on the dynamics in two locations, the nucleoli and the nucleoplasm. We found that both WRN and BLM use a "DNA-scanning" mechanism, with rapid binding-unbinding to DNA resulting in effective diffusion. In the nucleoplasm WRN and BLM have effective diffusion coefficients of 1.62 and 1.34 μm2/s, respectively. Likewise, the dynamics in the nucleoli are also best described by effective diffusion, but with diffusion coefficients a factor of ten lower than in the nucleoplasm. From this large reduction in diffusion coefficient we were able to classify WRN and BLM as DNA damage scanners. In addition to WRN and BLM we also classified other DNA damage proteins and found they all fall into one of two categories. Either they are scanners, similar to WRN and BLM, with very low diffusion coefficients, suggesting a scanning mechanism, or they are almost freely diffusing, suggesting that they interact with DNA only after initiation of a DNA damage response.

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  • Mitochondrial Proteostasis in the Control of Aging and Longevity

    Cell Metabolism

    Mitochondria play a central role in the aging process. Studies in model organisms have started to integrate mitochondrial effects on aging with the maintenance of protein homeostasis. These findings center on the mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRmt), which has been implicated in lifespan extension in worms, flies, and mice, suggesting a conserved role in the long-term maintenance of cellular homeostasis. Here, we review current knowledge of the UPRmt and discuss its integration with…

    Mitochondria play a central role in the aging process. Studies in model organisms have started to integrate mitochondrial effects on aging with the maintenance of protein homeostasis. These findings center on the mitochondrial unfolded protein response (UPRmt), which has been implicated in lifespan extension in worms, flies, and mice, suggesting a conserved role in the long-term maintenance of cellular homeostasis. Here, we review current knowledge of the UPRmt and discuss its integration with cellular pathways known to regulate lifespan. We highlight how insight into the UPRmt is revolutionizing our understanding of mitochondrial lifespan extension and of the aging process.

    Other authors
    • Heinrich Jasper
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  • 1-dagskuren - I morgen kan du spise lige hvad du vil

    People's Press

    Popular science book about the science and practicalities of intermittent fasting for health benefits.

    Other authors
    • Anders Nedergaard
    • Michael Jeppesen
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  • The helicase and ATPase activities of RECQL4 are compromised by mutations reported in three human patients

    Aging

    RECQL4 is one of five members of the human RecQ helicase family, and is implicated in three syndromes displaying accelerating aging, developmental abnormalities and a predisposition to cancer. In this study, we purified three variants of RECQL4 carrying previously reported patient mutations. These three mutant proteins were analyzed for the known biochemical activities of RECQL4: DNA binding, unwinding of duplex DNA, ATP hydrolysis and annealing of simplex DNA. Further, the mutant proteins were…

    RECQL4 is one of five members of the human RecQ helicase family, and is implicated in three syndromes displaying accelerating aging, developmental abnormalities and a predisposition to cancer. In this study, we purified three variants of RECQL4 carrying previously reported patient mutations. These three mutant proteins were analyzed for the known biochemical activities of RECQL4: DNA binding, unwinding of duplex DNA, ATP hydrolysis and annealing of simplex DNA. Further, the mutant proteins were evaluated for stability and recruitment to sites of laser-induced DNA damage. One mutant was helicase-dead, had marginal ATPase activity and may be structurally compromised, while the other two showed greatly reduced helicase and ATPase activities. The remaining biochemical activities and ability to recruit to damage sites were not significantly impaired for any of the mutants. Our findings demonstrate a consistent pattern of functional deficiency and provide further support for a helicase-dependent cellular function of RECQL4 in addition to its N-terminus-dependent role in initiation of replication, a function that may underlie the phenotype of RECQL4-linked disease.

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  • Membrane curvature sensing by amphipathic helices: A single liposome study using alpha-synuclein and annexin B12

    Journal of Biological Chemistry

    Preferential binding of proteins on curved membranes (membrane curvature sensing) is increasingly emerging as a general mechanism whereby cells may effect protein localization and trafficking. Here we use a novel single liposome fluorescence microscopy assay to examine a common sensing motif, the amphipathic helix (AH), and provide quantitative measures describing and distinguishing membrane binding and sensing behavior. By studying two AH-containing proteins, α-synuclein and annexin B12, as…

    Preferential binding of proteins on curved membranes (membrane curvature sensing) is increasingly emerging as a general mechanism whereby cells may effect protein localization and trafficking. Here we use a novel single liposome fluorescence microscopy assay to examine a common sensing motif, the amphipathic helix (AH), and provide quantitative measures describing and distinguishing membrane binding and sensing behavior. By studying two AH-containing proteins, α-synuclein and annexin B12, as well as a range of AH peptide mutants, we reveal that both the hydrophobic and hydrophilic faces of the helix greatly influence binding and sensing. Although increased hydrophobic and electrostatic interactions with the membrane both lead to greater densities of bound protein, the former yields membrane curvature-sensitive binding, whereas the latter is not curvature-dependent. However, the relative contributions of both components determine the sensing of AHs. In contrast, charge density in the lipid membrane seems important primarily in attracting AHs to the membrane but does not significantly influence sensing. These observations were made possible by the ability of our assay to distinguish within our samples liposomes with and without bound protein as well as the density of bound protein. Our findings suggest that the description of membrane curvature-sensing requires consideration of several factors such as short and long range electrostatic interactions, hydrogen bonding, and the volume and structure of inserted hydrophobic residues.

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  • Membrane curvature induction and tubulation are common features of synucleins and apolipoproteins

    Journal of Biological Chemistry

    Synucleins and apolipoproteins have been implicated in a number of membrane and lipid trafficking events. Lipid interaction for both types of proteins is mediated by 11 amino acid repeats that form amphipathic helices. This similarity suggests that synucleins and apolipoproteins might have comparable effects on lipid membranes, but this has not been shown directly. Here, we find that α-synuclein, β-synuclein, and apolipoprotein A-1 have the conserved functional ability to induce membrane…

    Synucleins and apolipoproteins have been implicated in a number of membrane and lipid trafficking events. Lipid interaction for both types of proteins is mediated by 11 amino acid repeats that form amphipathic helices. This similarity suggests that synucleins and apolipoproteins might have comparable effects on lipid membranes, but this has not been shown directly. Here, we find that α-synuclein, β-synuclein, and apolipoprotein A-1 have the conserved functional ability to induce membrane curvature and to convert large vesicles into highly curved membrane tubules and vesicles. The resulting structures are morphologically similar to those generated by amphiphysin, a curvature-inducing protein involved in endocytosis. Unlike amphiphysin, however, synucleins and apolipoproteins do not require any scaffolding domains and curvature induction is mediated by the membrane insertion and wedging of amphipathic helices alone. Moreover, we frequently observed that α-synuclein caused membrane structures that had the appearance of nascent budding vesicles. The ability to function as a minimal machinery for vesicle budding agrees well with recent findings that α-synuclein plays a role in vesicle trafficking and enhances endocytosis. Induction of membrane curvature must be under strict regulation in vivo; however, as we find it can also cause disruption of membrane integrity. Because the degree of membrane curvature induction depends on the concerted action of multiple proteins, controlling the local protein density of tubulating proteins may be important. How cellular safeguarding mechanisms prevent such potentially toxic events and whether they go awry in disease remains to be determined.

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  • Tuning protein expression using synonymous codon libraries targeted to the 5′ mRNA coding region

    Protein Engineering, Design & Selection

    In bacteria, the 5′ mRNA coding region plays an important role in determining translation output. Here, we report synthetic sequences that when placed in the 5′-mRNA coding region, leading to recombinant proteins containing short N-terminal extensions, virtually abolish, enhance or produce intermediate expression levels of green fluorescent protein in Escherichia coli. At least in one case, no apparent effect on protein stability was observed, pointing to RNA level effects as the principal…

    In bacteria, the 5′ mRNA coding region plays an important role in determining translation output. Here, we report synthetic sequences that when placed in the 5′-mRNA coding region, leading to recombinant proteins containing short N-terminal extensions, virtually abolish, enhance or produce intermediate expression levels of green fluorescent protein in Escherichia coli. At least in one case, no apparent effect on protein stability was observed, pointing to RNA level effects as the principal reason for the observed expression differences. Targeting a synonymous codon library to the 5′ coding sequence allowed tuning of protein expression over ∼300-fold with preservation of amino acid identity. This approach is simple and should be generally applicable in bacteria. The data support that features in the 5′ mRNA coding region near the AUG start codon are key in determining translation output and hence is important to recombinant and, most certainly, endogenous gene expression.

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Projects

Honors & Awards

  • NIH Pathway to Independence Award (K99/R00)

    National Institute on Aging/NIH

  • Alfred Benzon Research Fellowship

    Alfred Benzon Foundation

    Three years of postdoctoral research funding.

  • EliteForsk Travel Scholarship

    Danish Ministry of Science

    One of sixteen recipients nationwide, allowing studies at the National Institute of Aging in Maryland during Ph.D.

  • Novo Scholarship

    Novozymes A/S

    Merit-based additional funding during master's thesis research.

  • Various travel & poster awards

    -

    From Keystone Symposia, EMBO, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratories, Buck Institute, University of Copenhagen.

Languages

  • English

    Native or bilingual proficiency

  • Japanese

    Elementary proficiency

  • German

    Elementary proficiency

  • French

    Elementary proficiency

  • Swedish

    Elementary proficiency

  • Spanish

    Elementary proficiency

  • Danish

    Native or bilingual proficiency

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