Try a new search

Format these results:

Searched for:

person:nixonr01 or ginsbs01 or levye01 or mathep01 or ohnom01 or raom01 or scharh01 or yangd02 or yuana01

Total Results:

1148


Expression profiling and pharmacotherapeutic development in the central nervous system

Galvin, James E; Ginsberg, Stephen D
Expression profiling data is available for many diverse tissues throughout the body, allowing for exciting hypothesis testing of critical concepts such as cellular development, differentiation, normative function, and disease pathogenesis. The central nervous system is an ideal structure to evaluate relationships between functional genomics and expression data. Recent developments in gene array technologies, specifically cDNA microarray platforms, have made it easier to try to understand the multiplicity of gene alterations that occur within the brains of animal models and postmortem human tissues. However, unlike structures have one principal cell type, the brain contains diverse populations of phenotypically distinct cell types. A goal of modern molecular and cellular neuroscience is to assay gene expression from homogeneous populations of cells within a defined region without potential contamination by expression profiles of adjacent neuronal subtypes and non-neuronal cells. This is a difficult task that demands a multidisciplinary approach that is highlighted in this review within the context of neurodegenerative pathology
PMID: 15592143
ISSN: 0893-0341
CID: 110169

Expression of the steroidogenic acute regulatory (STAR) protein in steroidogenic cells of the day-old (P1) brain [Meeting Abstract]

King, SR; Ginsberg, SD; Lamb, DJ
ORIGINAL:0008397
ISSN: 1683-5506
CID: 461882

A Synthetic Peptide Blocking the Apolipoprotein E/{beta}-Amyloid Binding Mitigates {beta}-Amyloid Toxicity and Fibril Formation in Vitro and Reduces {beta}-Amyloid Plaques in Transgenic Mice

Sadowski, Marcin; Pankiewicz, Joanna; Scholtzova, Henrieta; Ripellino, James A; Li, Yongsheng; Schmidt, Stephen D; Mathews, Paul M; Fryer, John D; Holtzman, David M; Sigurdsson, Einar M; Wisniewski, Thomas
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is associated with accumulation of beta-amyloid (Abeta). A major genetic risk factor for sporadic AD is inheritance of the apolipoprotein (apo) E4 allele. ApoE can act as a pathological chaperone of Abeta, promoting its conformational transformation from soluble Abeta into toxic aggregates. We determined if blocking the apoE/Abeta interaction reduces Abeta load in transgenic (Tg) AD mice. The binding site of apoE on Abeta corresponds to residues 12 to 28. To block binding, we synthesized a peptide containing these residues, but substituted valine at position 18 to proline (Abeta12-28P). This changed the peptide's properties, making it non-fibrillogenic and non-toxic. Abeta12-28P competitively blocks binding of full-length Abeta to apoE (IC(50) = 36.7 nmol). Furthermore, Abeta12-28P reduces Abeta fibrillogenesis in the presence of apoE, and Abeta/apoE toxicity in cell culture. Abeta12-28P is blood-brain barrier-permeable and in AD Tg mice inhibits Abeta deposition. Tg mice treated with Abeta12-28P for 1 month had a 63.3% reduction in Abeta load in the cortex (P = 0.0043) and a 59.5% (P = 0.0087) reduction in the hippocampus comparing to age-matched control Tg mice. Antibodies against Abeta were not detected in sera of treated mice; therefore the observed therapeutic effect of Abeta12-28P cannot be attributed to an antibody clearance response. Our experiments demonstrate that compounds blocking the interaction between Abeta and its pathological chaperones may be beneficial for treatment of beta-amyloid deposition in AD
PMCID:1618605
PMID: 15331417
ISSN: 0002-9440
CID: 44511

Binding of cystatin C to Alzheimer's amyloid beta inhibits in vitro amyloid fibril formation

Sastre, Magdalena; Calero, Miguel; Pawlik, Monika; Mathews, Paul M; Kumar, Asok; Danilov, Vlatko; Schmidt, Stephen D; Nixon, Ralph A; Frangione, Blas; Levy, Efrat
The colocalization of cystatin C, an inhibitor of cysteine proteases, with amyloid beta (Abeta) in parenchymal and vascular amyloid deposits in brains of Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients may reflect cystatin C involvement in amyloidogenesis. We therefore sought to determine the association of cystatin C with Abeta. Immunofluorescence analysis of transfected cultured cells demonstrated colocalization of cystatin C and beta amyloid precursor protein (betaAPP) intracellularly and on the cell surface. Western blot analysis of immunoprecipitated cell lysate or medium proteins revealed binding of cystatin C to full-length betaAPP and to secreted betaAPP (sbetaAPP). Deletion mutants of betaAPP localized the cystatin C binding site within betaAPP to the Abeta region. Cystatin C association with betaAPP resulted in increased sbetaAPP but did not affect levels of secreted Abeta. Analysis of the association of cystatin C and Abeta demonstrated a specific, saturable and high affinity binding between cystatin C and both Abeta(1-42) and Abeta(1-40). Notably, cystatin C association with Abeta results in a concentration-dependent inhibition of Abeta fibril formation
PMID: 15212828
ISSN: 0197-4580
CID: 46126

Calpain mediates calcium-induced activation of the erk1,2 MAPK pathway and cytoskeletal phosphorylation in neurons: relevance to Alzheimer's disease

Veeranna; Kaji T; Boland B; Odrljin T; Mohan P; Basavarajappa BS; Peterhoff C; Cataldo A; Rudnicki A; Amin N; Li BS; Pant HC; Hungund BL; Arancio O; Nixon RA
Aberrant phosphorylation of the neuronal cytoskeleton is an early pathological event in Alzheimer's disease (AD), but the underlying mechanisms are unclear. Here, we demonstrate in the brains of AD patients that neurofilament hyperphosphorylation in neocortical pyramidal neurons is accompanied by activation of both Erk1,2 and calpain. Using immunochemistry, Western blot analysis, and kinase activity measurements, we show in primary hippocampal and cerebellar granule (CG) neurons that calcium influx activates calpain and Erk1,2 and increases neurofilament phosphorylation on carboxy terminal polypeptide sites known to be modulated by Erk1,2 and to be altered in AD. Blocking Erk1,2 activity either with antisense oligonucleotides to Erk1,2 mRNA sequences or by specifically inhibiting its upstream activating kinase MEK1,2 markedly reduced neurofilament phosphorylation. Calpeptin, a cell-permeable calpain inhibitor, blocked both Erk1,2 activation and neurofilament hyperphosphorylation at concentrations that inhibit calpain-mediated cleavage of brain spectrin. By contrast, inhibiting Erk1,2 with U-0126, a specific inhibitor of Mek1,2, had no appreciable effect on ionomycin-induced calpain activation. These findings demonstrate that, under conditions of calcium injury in neurons, calpains are upstream activators of Erk1,2 signaling and are likely to mediate in part the hyperphosphorylation of neurofilaments and tau seen at early stages of AD as well as the neuron survival-related functions of the MAP kinase pathway
PMCID:1618589
PMID: 15331404
ISSN: 0002-9440
CID: 46128

Visualization of beta-amyloid plaques in a transgenic mouse model of Alzheimer's disease using MR microscopy without contrast reagents

Lee, Sang-Pil; Falangola, Maria F; Nixon, Ralph A; Duff, Karen; Helpern, Joseph A
The visualization of beta-amyloid plaque deposition in brain, a key feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD), is important for the evaluation of disease progression and the efficacy of therapeutic interventions. In this study, beta-amyloid plaques in the PS/APP transgenic mouse brain, a model of human AD pathology, were detected using MR microscopy without contrast reagents. beta-Amyloid plaques were clearly visible in the cortex, thalamus, and hippocampus of fixed brains of PS/APP mice. The distribution of plaques identified by MRI was in excellent agreement with those found in the immunohistological analysis of the same brain sections. It was also demonstrated that image contrast for beta-amyloid plaques was present in freshly excised nonfixed brains. Furthermore, the detection of beta-amyloid plaques was achieved with a scan time as short as 2 hr, approaching the scan time considered reasonable for in vivo imaging
PMCID:3962264
PMID: 15334572
ISSN: 0740-3194
CID: 47817

Brain-derived neurotrophic factor

Binder, Devin K; Scharfman, Helen E
Since the purification of BDNF in 1982, a great deal of evidence has mounted for its central roles in brain development, physiology, and pathology. Aside from its importance in neural development and cell survival, BDNF appears essential to molecular mechanisms of synaptic plasticity. Basic activity-related changes in the central nervous system are thought to depend on BDNF modification of synaptic transmission, especially in the hippocampus and neocortex. Pathologic levels of BDNF-dependent synaptic plasticity may contribute to conditions such as epilepsy and chronic pain sensitization, whereas application of the trophic properties of BDNF may lead to novel therapeutic options in neurodegenerative diseases and perhaps even in neuropsychiatric disorders
PMCID:2504526
PMID: 15518235
ISSN: 0897-7194
CID: 73451

Abeta is targeted to the vasculature in a mouse model of hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis

Herzig, Martin C; Winkler, David T; Burgermeister, Patrick; Pfeifer, Michelle; Kohler, Esther; Schmidt, Stephen D; Danner, Simone; Abramowski, Dorothee; Sturchler-Pierrat, Christine; Burki, Kurt; van Duinen, Sjoerd G; Maat-Schieman, Marion L C; Staufenbiel, Matthias; Mathews, Paul M; Jucker, Mathias
The E693Q mutation in the amyloid beta precursor protein (APP) leads to cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), with recurrent cerebral hemorrhagic strokes and dementia. In contrast to Alzheimer disease (AD), the brains of those affected by hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis-Dutch type (HCHWA-D) show few parenchymal amyloid plaques. We found that neuronal overexpression of human E693Q APP in mice (APPDutch mice) caused extensive CAA, smooth muscle cell degeneration, hemorrhages and neuroinflammation. In contrast, overexpression of human wild-type APP (APPwt mice) resulted in predominantly parenchymal amyloidosis, similar to that seen in AD. In APPDutch mice and HCHWA-D human brain, the ratio of the amyloid-beta40 peptide (Abeta40) to Abeta42 was significantly higher than that seen in APPwt mice or AD human brain. Genetically shifting the ratio of AbetaDutch40/AbetaDutch42 toward AbetaDutch42 by crossing APPDutch mice with transgenic mice producing mutated presenilin-1 redistributed the amyloid pathology from the vasculature to the parenchyma. The understanding that different Abeta species can drive amyloid pathology in different cerebral compartments has implications for current anti-amyloid therapeutic strategies. This HCHWA-D mouse model is the first to develop robust CAA in the absence of parenchymal amyloid, highlighting the key role of neuronally produced Abeta to vascular amyloid pathology and emphasizing the differing roles of Abeta40 and Abeta42 in vascular and parenchymal amyloid pathology
PMID: 15311281
ISSN: 1097-6256
CID: 95399

Combined histochemical staining, RNA amplification, regional, and single cell cDNA analysis within the hippocampus

Ginsberg, Stephen D; Che, Shaoli
The use of five histochemical stains (cresyl violet, thionin, hematoxylin & eosin, silver stain, and acridine orange) was evaluated in combination with an expression profiling paradigm that included regional and single cell analyses within the hippocampus of post-mortem human brains and adult mice. Adjacent serial sections of human and mouse hippocampus were labeled by histochemistry or neurofilament immunocytochemistry. These tissue sections were used as starting material for regional and single cell microdissection followed by a newly developed RNA amplification procedure (terminal continuation (TC) RNA amplification) and subsequent hybridization to custom-designed cDNA arrays. Results indicated equivalent levels of global hybridization signal intensity and relative expression levels for individual genes for hippocampi stained by cresyl violet, thionin, and hematoxylin & eosin, and neurofilament immunocytochemistry. Moreover, no significant differences existed between the Nissl stains and neurofilament immunocytochemistry for individual CA1 neurons obtained via laser capture microdissection. In contrast, a marked decrement was observed in adjacent hippocampal sections stained for silver stain and acridine orange, both at the level of the regional dissection and at the CA1 neuron population level. Observations made on the cDNA array platform were validated by real-time qPCR using primers directed against beta-actin and glyceraldehyde-3 phosphate dehydrogenase. Thus, this report demonstrated the utility of using specific Nissl stains, but not stains that bind RNA species directly, in both human and mouse brain tissues at the regional and cellular level for state-of-the-art molecular fingerprinting studies
PMID: 15107803
ISSN: 0023-6837
CID: 44700

Aging, gender and APOE isotype modulate metabolism of Alzheimer's Abeta peptides and F-isoprostanes in the absence of detectable amyloid deposits

Yao, Jun; Petanceska, Suzana S; Montine, Thomas J; Holtzman, David M; Schmidt, Stephen D; Parker, Carolyn A; Callahan, Michael J; Lipinski, William J; Bisgaier, Charles L; Turner, Brian A; Nixon, Ralph A; Martins, Ralph N; Ouimet, Charles; Smith, Jonathan D; Davies, Peter; Laska, Eugene; Ehrlich, Michelle E; Walker, Lary C; Mathews, Paul M; Gandy, Sam
Aging and apolipoprotein E (APOE) isoform are among the most consistent risks for the development of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Metabolic factors that modulate risk have been elusive, though oxidative reactions and their by-products have been implicated in human AD and in transgenic mice with overt histological amyloidosis. We investigated the relationship between the levels of endogenous murine amyloid beta (Abeta) peptides and the levels of a marker of oxidation in mice that never develop histological amyloidosis [i.e. APOE knockout (KO) mice with or without transgenic human APOEepsilon3 or human APOEepsilon4 alleles]. Aging-, gender-, and APOE-genotype-dependent changes were observed for endogenous mouse brain Abeta40 and Abeta42 peptides. Levels of the oxidized lipid F2-isoprostane (F2-isoPs) in the brains of the same animals as those used for the Abeta analyses revealed aging- and gender-dependent changes in APOE KO and in human APOEepsilon4 transgenic KO mice. Human APOEepsilon3 transgenic KO mice did not exhibit aging- or gender-dependent increases in F2-isoPs. In general, the changes in the levels of brain F2-isoPs in mice according to age, gender, and APOE genotype mirrored the changes in brain Abeta levels, which, in turn, paralleled known trends in the risk for human AD. These data indicate that there exists an aging-dependent, APOE-genotype-sensitive rise in murine brain Abeta levels despite the apparent inability of the peptide to form histologically detectable amyloid. Human APOEepsilon3, but not human APOEepsilon4, can apparently prevent the aging-dependent rise in murine brain Abeta levels, consistent with the relative risk for AD associated with these genotypes. The fidelity of the brain Abeta/F2-isoP relationship across multiple relevant variables supports the hypothesis that oxidized lipids play a role in AD pathogenesis, as has been suggested by recent evidence that F2-isoPs can stimulate Abeta generation and aggregation
PMID: 15287908
ISSN: 0022-3042
CID: 56111