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Apolipoprotein E4 impairs spontaneous blood brain barrier repair following traumatic brain injury.

Mol Neurodegener.

2018 Apr 04

Main BS, Villapol S, Sloley SS, Barton DJ, Parsadanian M, Agbaegbu C, Stefos K, McCann MS, Washington PM, Rodriguez OC, Burns MP.
PMID: 29618365 | DOI: 10.1186/s13024-018-0249-5

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) is a major cause of disability and mortality, to which there is currently no comprehensive treatment. Blood Brain Barrier (BBB) dysfunction is well documented in human TBI patients, yet the molecular mechanisms that underlie this neurovascular unit (NVU) pathology remains unclear. The apolipoprotein-E (apoE) protein has been implicated in controlling BBB integrity in an isoform dependent manner, via suppression of Cyclophilin A (CypA)-Matrix metallopeptidase-9 (MMP-9) signaling cascades, however the contribution of this pathway in TBI-induced BBB permeability is not fully investigated.

METHODS:

We exposed C57Bl/6 mice to controlled cortical impact and assessed NVU and BBB permeability responses up to 21 days post-injury. We pharmacologically probed the role of the CypA-MMP-9 pathway in BBB permeability after TBI using Cyclosporin A (CsA, 20 mg/kg). Finally, as the apoE4 protein is known to be functionally deficient compared to the apoE3 protein, we used humanized APOE mice as a clinically relevant model to study the role of apoE on BBB injury and repair after TBI.

RESULTS:

In C57Bl/6 mice there was an inverse relationship between soluble apoE and BBB permeability, such that damaged BBB stabilizes as apoE levels increase in the days following TBI. TBI mice displayed acute pericyte loss, increased MMP-9 production and activity, and reduced tight-junction expression. Treatment with the CypA antagonist CsA in C57Bl/6 mice attenuates MMP-9 responses and enhances BBB repair after injury, demonstrating that MMP-9 plays an important role in the timing of spontaneous BBB repair after TBI. We also show that apoe mRNA is present in both astrocytes and pericytes after TBI. We report that APOE3 and APOE4 mice have similar acute BBB responses to TBI, but APOE3 mice display faster spontaneous BBB repair than APOE4 mice. Isolated microvessel analysis reveals delayed pericyte repopulation, augmented and sustained MMP-9 expression at the NVU, and impaired stabilization of Zonula Occludens-1, Occludin and Claudin-5 expression at tight junctions in APOE4 mice after TBI compared to APOE3 mice.

CONCLUSIONS:

These data confirm apoE as an important modulator of spontaneous BBB stabilization following TBI, and highlights the APOE4 allele as a risk factor for poor outcome after TBI.

EGR4 is critical for cell-fate determination and phenotypic maintenance of geniculate ganglion neurons underlying sweet and umami taste

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

2023 May 30

Dutta Banik, D;Martin, LJ;Tang, T;Soboloff, J;Tourtellotte, WG;Pierchala, BA;
PMID: 37216536 | DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2217595120

The sense of taste starts with activation of receptor cells in taste buds by chemical stimuli which then communicate this signal via innervating oral sensory neurons to the CNS. The cell bodies of oral sensory neurons reside in the geniculate ganglion (GG) and nodose/petrosal/jugular ganglion. The geniculate ganglion contains two main neuronal populations: BRN3A+ somatosensory neurons that innervate the pinna and PHOX2B+ sensory neurons that innervate the oral cavity. While much is known about the different taste bud cell subtypes, considerably less is known about the molecular identities of PHOX2B+ sensory subpopulations. In the GG, as many as 12 different subpopulations have been predicted from electrophysiological studies, while transcriptional identities exist for only 3 to 6. Importantly, the cell fate pathways that diversify PHOX2B+ oral sensory neurons into these subpopulations are unknown. The transcription factor EGR4 was identified as being highly expressed in GG neurons. EGR4 deletion causes GG oral sensory neurons to lose their expression of PHOX2B and other oral sensory genes and up-regulate BRN3A. This is followed by a loss of chemosensory innervation of taste buds, a loss of type II taste cells responsive to bitter, sweet, and umami stimuli, and a concomitant increase in type I glial-like taste bud cells. These deficits culminate in a loss of nerve responses to sweet and umami taste qualities. Taken together, we identify a critical role of EGR4 in cell fate specification and maintenance of subpopulations of GG neurons, which in turn maintain the appropriate sweet and umami taste receptor cells.
Nav1.7 is essential for nociceptor action potentials in the mouse in a manner independent of endogenous opioids

Neuron

2023 Jun 15

Deng, L;Dourado, M;Reese, RM;Huang, K;Shields, SD;Stark, KL;Maksymetz, J;Lin, H;Kaminker, JS;Jung, M;Foreman, O;Tao, J;Ngu, H;Joseph, V;Roose-Girma, M;Tam, L;Lardell, S;Orrhult, LS;Karila, P;Allard, J;Hackos, DH;
PMID: 37352856 | DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2023.05.024

Loss-of-function mutations in Nav1.7, a voltage-gated sodium channel, cause congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP) in humans, demonstrating that Nav1.7 is essential for the perception of pain. However, the mechanism by which loss of Nav1.7 results in insensitivity to pain is not entirely clear. It has been suggested that loss of Nav1.7 induces overexpression of enkephalin, an endogenous opioid receptor agonist, leading to opioid-dependent analgesia. Using behavioral pharmacology and single-cell RNA-seq analysis, we find that overexpression of enkephalin occurs only in cLTMR neurons, a subclass of sensory neurons involved in low-threshold touch detection, and that this overexpression does not play a role in the analgesia observed following genetic removal of Nav1.7. Furthermore, we demonstrate using laser speckle contrast imaging (LSCI) and in vivo electrophysiology that Nav1.7 function is required for the initiation of C-fiber action potentials (APs), which explains the observed insensitivity to pain following genetic removal or inhibition of Nav1.7.
Green light analgesia in mice is mediated by visual activation of enkephalinergic neurons in the ventrolateral geniculate nucleus

Science translational medicine

2022 Dec 07

Tang, YL;Liu, AL;Lv, SS;Zhou, ZR;Cao, H;Weng, SJ;Zhang, YQ;
PMID: 36475906 | DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abq6474

Green light exposure has been shown to reduce pain in animal models. Here, we report a vision-associated enkephalinergic neural circuit responsible for green light-mediated analgesia. Full-field green light exposure at an intensity of 10 lux produced analgesic effects in healthy mice and in a model of arthrosis. Ablation of cone photoreceptors completely inhibited the analgesic effect, whereas rod ablation only partially reduced pain relief. The analgesic effect was not modulated by the ablation of intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells (ipRGCs), which are atypical photoreceptors that control various nonvisual effects of light. Inhibition of the retino-ventrolateral geniculate nucleus (vLGN) pathway completely abolished the analgesic effects. Activation of this pathway reduced nociceptive behavioral responses; such activation was blocked by the inhibition of proenkephalin (Penk)-positive neurons in the vLGN (vLGNPenk). Moreover, green light analgesia was prevented by knockdown of Penk in the vLGN or by ablation of vLGNPenk neurons. In addition, activation of the projections from vLGNPenk neurons to the dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) was sufficient to suppress nociceptive behaviors, whereas its inhibition abolished the green light analgesia. Our findings indicate that cone-dominated retinal inputs mediated green light analgesia through the vLGNPenk-DRN pathway and suggest that this signaling pathway could be exploited for reducing pain.
Developmental and oncogenic programs in H3K27M gliomas dissected by single-cell RNA-seq.

Science.

2018 Apr 20

Filbin MG, Tirosh I, Hovestadt V, Shaw ML, Escalante LE, Mathewson ND, Neftel C, Frank N, Pelton K, Hebert CM, Haberler C, Yizhak K, Gojo J, Egervari K, Mount C, van Galen P, Bonal DM, Nguyen QD, Beck A, Sinai C, Czech T, Dorfer C, Goumnerova L, Lavarino
PMID: 29674595 | DOI: 10.1126/science.aao4750

Gliomas with histone H3 lysine27-to-methionine mutations (H3K27M-glioma) arise primarily in the midline of the central nervous system of young children, suggesting a cooperation between genetics and cellular context in tumorigenesis. Although the genetics of H3K27M-glioma are well characterized, their cellular architecture remains uncharted. We performed single-cell RNA sequencing in 3321 cells from six primary H3K27M-glioma and matched models. We found that H3K27M-glioma primarily contain cells that resemble oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPC-like), whereas more differentiated malignant cells are a minority. OPC-like cells exhibit greater proliferation and tumor-propagating potential than their more differentiated counterparts and are at least in part sustained by PDGFRA signaling. Our study characterizes oncogenic and developmental programs in H3K27M-glioma at single-cell resolution and across genetic subclones, suggesting potential therapeutic targets in this disease.

Distinct Ventral Pallidal Neural Populations Mediate Separate Symptoms of Depression

Cell.

2017 Jul 13

Knowland D, Lilascharoen V, Pacia CP, Shin S, Wang EH, Lim BK.
PMID: 28689640 | DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2017.06.015

Major depressive disorder (MDD) patients display a common but often variable set of symptoms making successful, sustained treatment difficult to achieve. Separate depressive symptoms may be encoded by differential changes in distinct circuits in the brain, yet how discrete circuits underlie behavioral subsets of depression and how they adapt in response to stress has not been addressed. We identify two discrete circuits of parvalbumin-positive (PV) neurons in the ventral pallidum (VP) projecting to either the lateral habenula or ventral tegmental area contributing to depression. We find that these populations undergo different electrophysiological adaptations in response to social defeat stress, which are normalized by antidepressant treatment. Furthermore, manipulation of each population mediates either social withdrawal or behavioral despair, but not both. We propose that distinct components of the VP PV circuit can subserve related, yet separate depressive-like phenotypes in mice, which could ultimately provide a platform for symptom-specific treatments of depression.

Liver macrophages regulate systemic metabolism through non-inflammatory factors

Nature Metabolism

2019 Mar 25

Morgantini C, Jager J, Li X, Levi L, Azzimato V, Sulen A, Barreby E, Xu C, Tencerova M, Näslund E, Kumar C, Verdeguer F, Straniero S, Hultenby K, Björkström NK, Ellis E, Rydén M, Kutter C, Hurrell T, Lauschke VM, Boucher J, Tomčala A, Krejčová G, Bajgar A and Aouadi M
| DOI: 10.1038/s42255-019-0044-9

Liver macrophages (LMs) have been proposed to contribute to metabolic disease through secretion of inflammatory cytokines. However, anti-inflammatory drugs lead to only modest improvements in systemic metabolism. Here we show that LMs do not undergo a proinflammatory phenotypic switch in obesity-induced insulin resistance in flies, mice and humans. Instead, we find that LMs produce non-inflammatory factors, such as insulin-like growth factor–binding protein 7 (IGFBP7), that directly regulate liver metabolism. IGFBP7 binds to the insulin receptor and induces lipogenesis and gluconeogenesis via activation of extracellular-signal-regulated kinase (ERK) signalling. We further show that IGFBP7 is subject to RNA editing at a higher frequency in insulin-resistant than in insulin-sensitive obese patients (90% versus 30%, respectively), resulting in an IGFBP7 isoform with potentially higher capacity to bind to the insulin receptor. Our study demonstrates that LMs can contribute to insulin resistance independently of their inflammatory status and indicates that non-inflammatory factors produced by macrophages might represent new drug targets for the treatment of metabolic diseases.
Kappa Opioid Receptors Drive a Tonic Aversive Component of Chronic Pain.

J Neurosci.

2019 Mar 12

Liu SS, Pickens S, Burma NE, Ibarra-Lecue I, Yang H, Xue L, Cook C, Hakimian JK, Severino AL, Lueptow L, Komarek K, Taylor AMW, Olmstead MC, Carroll FI, Bass CE, Andrews AM, Walwyn W, Trang T, Evans CJ, Leslie F, Cahill CM.
PMID: 30862664 | DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0274-19.2019

Pain is a multidimensional experience and negative affect, or how much the pain is "bothersome", significantly impacts the sufferers' quality of life. It is well established that the kappa opioid system contributes to depressive and dysphoric states, but whether this system contributes to the negative affect precipitated by the occurrence of chronic pain remains tenuous. Using a model of persistent pain, we show by quantitative RT-PCR, florescence in situ hybridization, western blotting and GTPgS autoradiography an upregulation of expression and the function of kappa opioid receptors (KORs) and its endogenous ligand dynorphin in the mesolimbic circuitry in animals with chronic pain compared to surgical controls. Using in vivo microdialysis and microinjection of drugs into the mesolimbic dopamine system, we demonstrate that inhibiting KORs reinstates evoked dopamine release and reward related behaviors in chronic pain animals. Chronic pain enhanced KOR agonist-induced place aversion in a sex-dependent manner. Using various place preference paradigms, we show that activation of KORs drives pain aversive states in male but not female mice. However, KOR antagonist treatment was effective in alleviating anxiogenic and depressive affective-like behaviors in both sexes. Finally, ablation of KORs from dopamine neurons using AAV-TH-cre in KORloxP mice prevented pain-induced aversive states as measured by place aversion assays. Our results strongly support the use of KOR antagonists as therapeutic adjuvants to alleviate the emotional, tonic-aversive component of chronic pain, which is argued to be the most significant component of the pain experience that impacts patients' quality of life.Significance StatementWe show that KORs are sufficient to drive the tonic-aversive component of chronic pain - the emotional component of pain that is argued to significantly impact a patient's quality of life. The impact of our study is broadly relevant to affective disorders associated with disruption of reward circuitry and thus likely contributes to many of the devastating sequelae of chronic pain, including the poor response to treatment of many patients, debilitating affective disorders (other disorders including anxiety and depression that demonstrate high co-morbidity with chronic pain) and substance abuse. Indeed, co-existing psychopathology increases pain intensity, pain-related disability and effectiveness of treatments (Jamison and Edwards, 2013).

A Corticotropin Releasing Factor Network in the Extended Amygdala for Anxiety.

J Neurosci.

2019 Feb 06

Pomrenze MB, Tovar-Diaz J, Blasio A, Maiya R, Giovanetti SM, Lei K, Morikawa H, Hopf FW, Messing RO.
PMID: 30530860 | DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2143-18.2018

The central amygdala (CeA) is important for fear responses to discrete cues. Recent findings indicate that the CeA also contributes to states of sustained apprehension that characterize anxiety, although little is known about the neural circuitry involved. The stress neuropeptide corticotropin releasing factor (CRF) is anxiogenic and is produced by subpopulations of neurons in the lateral CeA and the dorsolateral bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (dlBST). Here we investigated the function of these CRF neurons in stress-induced anxiety using chemogenetics in male rats that express Cre recombinase from a Crh promoter. Anxiety-like behavior was mediated by CRF projections from the CeA to the dlBST and depended on activation of CRF1 receptors and CRF neurons within the dlBST. Our findings identify a CRFCeA→CRFdlBST circuit for generating anxiety-like behavior and provide mechanistic support for recent human and primate data suggesting that the CeA and BST act together to generate states of anxiety.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Anxiety is a negative emotional state critical to survival, but persistent, exaggerated apprehension causes substantial morbidity. Identifying brain regions and neurotransmitter systems that drive anxiety can help in developing effective treatment. Much evidence in rodents indicates that neurons in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BST) generate anxiety-like behaviors, but more recent findings also implicate neurons of the CeA. The neuronal subpopulations and circuitry that generate anxiety are currently subjects of intense investigation. Here we show that CeA neurons that release the stress neuropeptide corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) drive anxiety-like behaviors in rats via a pathway to dorsal BST that activates local BST CRF neurons. Thus, our findings identify a CeA→BST CRF neuropeptide circuit that generates anxiety-like behavior.

An integrate-and-fire approach to Ca2+ signaling—The noise of puffs

Biophysical Journal

2023 Feb 01

Ramlow, L;Falcke, M;Lindner, B;
| DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2022.11.1390

Stochastic spiking is a prominent feature of Ca2+ signaling. The main noise source at the cellular level are puffs from inositol-trisphosphate receptor (IP3R) channel clusters in the membrane of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). While the random cluster activity has been known for decades, a stringent method to derive the puff noise term acting on the cytosolic Ca2+ concentration is still lacking. We adopt a popular description of neural spike generation from neuroscience, the stochastic integrate-and-fire (IF) model, to describe Ca2+ spiking. Our model consists of two components describing i) activity of IP3R clusters and ii) dynamics of the global Ca2+ concentrations in the cytosol and in the ER. Cluster activity is modeled by a Markov chain, capturing the puff. The global Ca2+ concentrations are described by a two-variable IF model driven by the puff current. For the Markov chain we derive expressions for the statistics of interpuff interval, single-puff strength, and puff current assuming constant cytosolic Ca2+, an assumption often well met because the Ca2+ concentrations vary much slower than the cluster activity does. The latter assumption also allows to approximate the driving Ca2+ dependent puff current by a white Gaussian noise. This approximation results in an IF model with nonlinear drift and multiplicative noise. We consider this reduced model in a renewal version and in a version with cumulative refractoriness. Neglecting ER depletion, the stochastic IF model has only one variable and generates a renewal spike train, a point process with statistically independent interspike intervals (ISI). We derive analytical expressions for the mean and coefficient of variation of the ISI and suggest approximations for the ISI density and spike-train power spectrum. Taking into account ER depletion, the two-variable IF model displays cumulative refractoriness as seen in experimental data.
Single cell atlas of spinal cord injury in mice reveals a pro-regenerative signature in spinocerebellar neurons

Nature communications

2022 Sep 26

Matson, KJE;Russ, DE;Kathe, C;Hua, I;Maric, D;Ding, Y;Krynitsky, J;Pursley, R;Sathyamurthy, A;Squair, JW;Levi, BP;Courtine, G;Levine, AJ;
PMID: 36163250 | DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-33184-1

After spinal cord injury, tissue distal to the lesion contains undamaged cells that could support or augment recovery. Targeting these cells requires a clearer understanding of their injury responses and capacity for repair. Here, we use single nucleus RNA sequencing to profile how each cell type in the lumbar spinal cord changes after a thoracic injury in mice. We present an atlas of these dynamic responses across dozens of cell types in the acute, subacute, and chronically injured spinal cord. Using this resource, we find rare spinal neurons that express a signature of regeneration in response to injury, including a major population that represent spinocerebellar projection neurons. We characterize these cells anatomically and observed axonal sparing, outgrowth, and remodeling in the spinal cord and cerebellum. Together, this work provides a key resource for studying cellular responses to injury and uncovers the spontaneous plasticity of spinocerebellar neurons, uncovering a potential candidate for targeted therapy.
Localization and characterization of Proenkephalin-A as a potential biomarker for kidney disease in murine and human kidneys

Biomarkers : biochemical indicators of exposure, response, and susceptibility to chemicals

2022 Nov 10

Fuchs, MAA;Schrankl, J;Wagner, C;Daniel, C;Kurtz, A;Broeker, KA;
PMID: 36354355 | DOI: 10.1080/1354750X.2022.2146196

IntroductionExact measurement of renal function is essential for the treatment of patients. Elevated serum-creatinine levels, while established are influenced by other parameters and show a significant time-lag. This drives the search for novel biomarkers of renal function and injury. Beside Lipocalin-2 and kidney-injury-molecule-1(KIM-1), the endogenous opioid precursor proenkephalin-A(Penk) has recently emerged as a promising marker for renal function. But the cellular origin and regulation of Penk outside the brain has not yet been investigated in depth.Materials and MethodsThis study characterizes the cellular origin of Penk expression with high resolution in-situ hybridization in two models of renal fibrosis in mice and human tissue.ResultsInterstitial cells are the main expression site for renal Penk. This classifies Penk as biomarker for interstitial damage as opposed to tubular damage markers like Lipocalin-2 and KIM-1. Furthermore, our data indicate that renal Penk expression is not regulated by classical profibrotic pathways.DiscussionThis study characterizes changing Penk expression in the kidneys. The similarity of Penk expression across species gives rise to further investigations into the function of Penk in healthy and injured kidneys.ConclusionPenk is a promising biomarker for interstitial renal damage that warrants further studies to utilize its predictive potential.

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Description
sense
Example: Hs-LAG3-sense
Standard probes for RNA detection are in antisense. Sense probe is reverse complent to the corresponding antisense probe.
Intron#
Example: Mm-Htt-intron2
Probe targets the indicated intron in the target gene, commonly used for pre-mRNA detection
Pool/Pan
Example: Hs-CD3-pool (Hs-CD3D, Hs-CD3E, Hs-CD3G)
A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts
No-XSp
Example: Hs-PDGFB-No-XMm
Does not cross detect with the species (Sp)
XSp
Example: Rn-Pde9a-XMm
designed to cross detect with the species (Sp)
O#
Example: Mm-Islr-O1
Alternative design targeting different regions of the same transcript or isoforms
CDS
Example: Hs-SLC31A-CDS
Probe targets the protein-coding sequence only
EnEmProbe targets exons n and m
En-EmProbe targets region from exon n to exon m
Retired Nomenclature
tvn
Example: Hs-LEPR-tv1
Designed to target transcript variant n
ORF
Example: Hs-ACVRL1-ORF
Probe targets open reading frame
UTR
Example: Hs-HTT-UTR-C3
Probe targets the untranslated region (non-protein-coding region) only
5UTR
Example: Hs-GNRHR-5UTR
Probe targets the 5' untranslated region only
3UTR
Example: Rn-Npy1r-3UTR
Probe targets the 3' untranslated region only
Pan
Example: Pool
A mixture of multiple probe sets targeting multiple genes or transcripts

Enabling research, drug development (CDx) and diagnostics

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