Searched for: person:nixonr01 or ginsbs01 or levye01 or mathep01 or ohnom01 or raom01 or scharh01 or yangd02 or yuana01
Alzheimer research forum, 1 May 2007
Lobsiger CS, Boillee S, Cleveland DW. Toxicity from different SOD1 mutants dysregulates the complement system and the neuronal regenerative response in ALS motor neurons. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 May 1;104(18):7319-26
Ginsberg, Stephen D
(Website)CID: 453082
Microarray analysis of rab gene expression levels within individual cholinergic basal forebrain (CBF) neurons in Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment [Meeting Abstract]
Ginsberg, SD; Che, S; Counts, SE; Nixon, RA; Mufson, EJ
ORIGINAL:0008441
ISSN: 1558-3635
CID: 470992
Microarray analysis of CA1 pyramidal neurons and dentate gyrus granule cells in hTau mice [Meeting Abstract]
Alldred, MJ; Duff, K; Ginsberg, SD
ORIGINAL:0008440
ISSN: 1558-3635
CID: 470982
Differential regulation of catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) expression in the resident-intruder mouse model of aggression [Meeting Abstract]
Sershen, HW; Che, S; Hashim, A; Zavadil, J; Cancro, R; Volavka, J; Ginsberg, SD
ORIGINAL:0008439
ISSN: 1558-3635
CID: 470972
Expression profile analysis of brain aging
Chapter by: Ginsberg, Stephen D
in: Brain aging : models, methods, and mechanisms by Riddle, David R [Eds]
Boca Raton : CRC Press, c2007
pp. 159-185
ISBN: 0849338182
CID: 453252
NGF family of neurotrophins and their receptors : early involvement in the progression of Alzheimer's disease
Chapter by: Mufson, EJ; Counts, SE; Fahnestock, M; Ginsberg, Stephen D
in: Neurobiology of Alzheimer's disease by Dawbarn, David; Allen, Shelley J [Eds]
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2007
pp. 283-321
ISBN: 0198566611
CID: 453262
Ectopic granule cells of the rat dentate gyrus
Scharfman, Helen; Goodman, Jeffrey; McCloskey, Daniel
Granule cells of the mammalian dentate gyrus normally form a discrete layer, and virtually all granule cells migrate to this location. Exceptional granule cells that are positioned incorrectly, in 'ectopic' locations, are rare. Although the characteristics of such ectopic granule cells appear similar in many respects to granule cells located in the granule cell layer, their rare occurrence has limited a full evaluation of their structure and function. More information about ectopic granule cells has been obtained by studying those that develop after experimental manipulations that increase their number. For example, after severe seizures, the number of ectopic granule cells located in the hilus increases dramatically. These experimentally-induced ectopic granule cells may not be equivalent to normal ectopic granule cells necessarily, but the vastly increased numbers have allowed much more information to be obtained. Remarkably, the granule cells that are positioned ectopically develop intrinsic properties and an axonal projection that are similar to granule cells that are located normally, i.e., in the granule cell layer. However, dendritic structure and synaptic structure/function appear to differ. These studies have provided new insight into a rare type of granule cell in the dentate gyrus, and the plastic characteristics of dentate granule cells that appear to depend on the location of the cell body
PMCID:1934347
PMID: 17148946
ISSN: 0378-5866
CID: 73469
Relevance of seizure-induced neurogenesis in animal models of epilepsy to the etiology of temporal lobe epilepsy
Scharfman, Helen E; Gray, William P
Seizure induction in laboratory animals is followed by many changes in structure and function, and one of these is an increase in neurogenesis-the birth of new neurons. This phenomenon may be relevant to temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), because one of the regions of the brain where seizure-induced neurogenesis is most robust is the dentate gyrus-an area of the brain that has been implicated in the pathophysiology of TLE. Although initial studies predicted that neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus would be important to normal functions, such as learning and memory, the new neurons that are born after seizures may not necessarily promote normal function. There appears to be a complex functional and structural relationship between the new dentate gyrus neurons and preexisting cells, both in the animal models of TLE and in tissue resected from patients with intractable TLE. These studies provide new insights into the mechanisms of TLE, and suggest novel strategies for intervention that could be used to prevent or treat TLE
PMCID:2504501
PMID: 17571351
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 73473
The dentate gyrus : a comprehensive guide to structure function and clinical implications
Scharfman, Helen E
Amsterdam : Elsevier, 2007
Extent: xviii, 787 p. ; 27cm
ISBN: 0444530150
CID: 1379
The CA3 "backprojection" to the dentate gyrus
Scharfman, Helen E
The hippocampus is typically described in the context of the trisynaptic circuit, a pathway that relays information from the perforant path to the dentate gyrus, dentate to area CA3, and CA3 to area CA1. Associated with this concept is the assumption that most hippocampal information processing occurs along the trisynaptic circuit. However, the entorhinal cortex may not be the only major extrinsic input to consider, and the trisynaptic circuit may not be the only way information is processed in hippocampus. Area CA3 receives input from a variety of sources, and may be as much of an 'entry point' to hippocampus as the dentate gyrus. The axon of CA3 pyramidal cells targets diverse cell types, and has commissural projections, which together make it able to send information to much more of the hippocampus than granule cells. Therefore, CA3 pyramidal cells seem better designed to spread information through hippocampus than the granule cells. From this perspective, CA3 may be a point of entry that receives information which needs to be 'broadcasted,' whereas the dentate gyrus may be a point of entry that receives information with more selective needs for hippocampal processing. One aspect of the argument that CA3 pyramidal cells have a widespread projection is based on a part of its axonal arbor that has received relatively little attention, the collaterals that project in the opposite direction to the trisynaptic circuit, 'back' to the dentate gyrus. The evidence for this 'backprojection' to the dentate gyrus is strong, particularly in area CA3c, the region closest to the dentate gyrus, and in temporal hippocampus. The influence on granule cells is indirect, through hilar mossy cells and GABAergic neurons of the dentate gyrus, and appears to include direct projections in the case of CA3c pyramidal cells of ventral hippocampus. Physiological studies suggest that normally area CA3 does not have a robust excitatory influence on granule cells, but serves instead to inhibit it by activating dentate gyrus GABAergic neurons. Thus, GABAergic inhibition normally controls the backprojection to dentate granule cells, analogous to the way GABAergic inhibition appears to control the perforant path input to granule cells. From this perspective, the dentate gyrus has two robust glutamatergic inputs, entorhinal cortex and CA3, and two 'gates,' or inhibitory filters that reduce the efficacy of both inputs, keeping granule cells relatively quiescent. When GABAergic inhibition is reduced experimentally, or under pathological conditions, CA3 pyramidal cells activate granule cells reliably, and do so primarily by disynaptic excitation that is mediated by mossy cells. We suggest that the backprojection has important functions normally that are dynamically regulated by nonprincipal cells of the dentate gyrus. Slightly reduced GABAergic input would lead to increased polysynaptic associative processing between CA3 and the dentate gyrus. Under pathological conditions associated with loss of GABAergic interneurons, the backprojection may support reverberatory excitatory activity between CA3, mossy cells, and granule cells, possibly enhanced by mossy fiber sprouting. In this case, the backprojection could be important to seizure activity originating in hippocampus, and help explain the seizure susceptibility of ventral hippocampus
PMCID:1986638
PMID: 17765742
ISSN: 0079-6123
CID: 76103