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Gail Breen

Gail Breen

Associate Professor Emeritus - Biological Sciences
 
972-883-2504
FO3620C
ORCID
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Professional Preparation

Postdoc
University of California, San Diego - 1980
Postdoc
Roswell Park Memorial Institute Buffalo - 1976
Ph.D. - Neurosciences
University of California at Los Angeles - 1974
B.S. - Pharmacy
University of Toronto - 1970

Research Areas

Research Interests

1. Transcriptional Regulation of the Mammalian Mitochondrial ATP Synthase Complex

The ATP synthase complex is the central enzyme of the oxidative phosphorylation system synthesizing ATP from ADP and Pi. The ATP synthase complex is a multisubunit enzyme made up of 14 different subunits that are encoded by two distinct genetic systems.  Our laboratory has been begun analyzing the expression and regulation of the nuclear gene (ATPA) that encodes the alpha-subunit of the mammalian ATP synthase complex. We have determined that the ATPA gene is expressed at high levels in tissues with high oxidative energy needs, such as heart and skeletal muscle, and at lower levels in tissues such as liver, intestine and stomach (Pierce et al., 1992).

In order to examine how the expression of the ATPA gene is regulated, we fused the 5'-flanking region of the ATPA gene to a reporter gene and transfected this construct into human cells. These experiments have identified several positive cis-acting regulatory elements that are important for expression of the ATPA gene (Vander Zee et al., 1994). These include cis-acting regulatory regions 1 and 2 in the upstream promoter and a regulatory region surrounding the major sites of transcriptional initiation. We have determined that the transcription factor, upstream stimulatory factor 2 (USF2), binds to and activates transcription of the ATPA gene through an E-box element (CANNTG) located in the cis-acting regulatory region 1 (Breen and Jordan, 1997).  Furthermore, we have identified two trans-acting regulatory factors that bind to the initiator element- the multifunctional regulatory factor, YY1 (Breen et al., 1996) and USF2 (Breen and Jordan, 1998).  Interestingly, expression of YY1 together with USF2 dramatically reduces the level of activation of the ATPA initiator element relative to transfection of USF2 alone (Breen and Jordan, 1998).  We have also determined that the transactivation of the ATPA initiator element by USF2 involves the recruitment of the coactivator, p300 (Breen and Jordan, 1999).  We have used the yeast one-hybrid screening method to identify another factor, COUP-TFII/ARP-1, which also binds to the ATPA cis-acting regulatory element 1 (Jordan et al., 2003).  Functional assays in HeLa cells showed that COUP-TFII/ARP-1 represses the ATPA promoter activity in a dose- and sequence-dependent manner. Furthermore, cotransfection assays demonstrated that COUP-TFII/ARP-1 inhibits the USF2-mediated activation of the wild-type ATPA gene promoter but not a mutant promoter that is defective in COUP-TFII/ARP-1-binding.  Overexpression of USF2 reversed the COUP-TFII/ARP-1-mediated repression of the ATPA promoter. Electrophoretic mobility shift assays revealed that COUP-TFII/ARP-1 and USF2 compete for an overlapping binding site in the ATPA regulatory element 1.

We are currently examining the effects of the transcriptional coativator, PGC-1, on the expression of the ATPA gene.  We have determined that ectopic expression of PGC-1 stimulates the activity of the ATPA gene promoter in a dose-dependent manner. Interestingly, expression of PGC-1 together with USF2 blunts the USF2-mediated activation of the ATPA gene promoter.  It is likely that the net expression of the ATPA gene in a given cell will result from the relative concentration and affinity of a number of transcription factors and cofactors, including USF2, YY1, COUP-TFII/ARP-1, p300 and PGC-1.

2.  Comparative Profiling of the Mitochondrial Proteome in Alzheimer's Disease

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is an age-dependent irreversible neurodegenerative disorder that causes a progressive deterioration of cognitive functions, including a profound loss of memory (www.alzheimers.org).  Reduced brain metabolism is a prominent and early feature of Alzheimer's disease. One of the mechanisms reducing brain metabolism in AD appears to be damage to or reduction of key mitochondrial components, including enzymes of the Krebs cycle and the oxidative phosphorylation system. The goal of our research is to use a quantitative proteomics approach to compare the levels of the mitochondrial proteins in the hippocampus and cortex of AD brain versus normal brain during the course of the disease (Breen et al., 2006). A triple transgenic mouse model of AD (3xTg-AD; PS1M146V, APPSwe and TauP301L) that exhibits both amyloid and tau pathologies in a region-dependent manner, as well as cognitive defects, is being used in these experiments.

Appointments

Associate Professor
University of Texas at Dallas [1989–Present]
Visit Scholar
Stanford University School of Medicine [1988–1989]
Associate Professor
University of Texas at Dallas [1985–1988]
Assistant Professor
University of Texas at Dallas [1980–1985]

Additional Information

37 publications in related fields

Activities

Synergistic Activities
I teach course in cell and molecular biology to graduate students, undergraduate Biology majors, and non-science majors.
Last summer, I developed and now teach a course in cell and molecular biology to K-12 science teachers.
I am a member of a number of Departmental committees, including the graduate recruitment committee.
I am a member of a number of University committees, including the Academic Senate and the Academic Council (which meets monthly and advises the President of UTD).
I have reviewed numerous papers for journals, grant proposals for the NIH and the NSF, and have served on several NIH site-review committees.

Affiliations

Collaborators
Elzora Jordan, B.S. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology,UTDallas, Richardson, TX Terri Worley, Ph.D. Rockefeller University, New York, NY
Graduate and Postdoctoral Advisors
Ph.D. Advisor: Professor Jean de Vellis, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA. Postdoctoral Advisors: Professor Kenneth Paigen, Jackson Labs, Bar Harbor, ME; and Professor Immo Scheffler, The University of California at San Diego, San Diego, CA.
Thesis Advisor and Postgraduate-Scholar Sponsor
T.Worley Postdoctoral Rockefeller University, NY, NY C.Vander Zee M.S.student Scientist, Luminex, Austin, TX D.Pierce Postdoctoral UT Southwestern Medical School, Dallas, TX R.Bohlin Ph.D. student Teacher, Probe Inc., Dallas, TX Y.-C. Xu Postdoctoral Scientist, Biosynthesis Inc., Lewisville, TX M. Wing M.S. student Research Scientist, Wayne State, Detroit, MI J.-Y. Shew M.S. student Professor, National Taiwan University, Taipei