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Farfara D, Feierman E, Richards A, Revenko AS, MacLeod RA, Norris EH, Strickland S
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Knockdown of circulating C1 inhibitor induces neurovascular impairment, glial cell activation, neuroinflammation, and behavioral deficits

GLIA 2019 JUL; 67(7):1359-1373
The cross-talk between blood proteins, immune cells, and brain function involves complex mechanisms. Plasma protein C1 inhibitor (C1INH) is an inhibitor of vascular inflammation that is induced by activation of the kallikrein-kinin system (KKS) and the complement system. Knockout of C1INH was previously correlated with peripheral vascular permeability via the bradykinin pathway, yet there was no evidence of its correlation with blood-brain barrier (BBB) integrity and brain function. In order to understand the effect of plasma C1INH on brain pathology via the vascular system, we knocked down circulating C1INH in wild-type (WT) mice using an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO), without affecting C1INH expression in peripheral immune cells or the brain, and examined brain pathology. Long-term elimination of endogenous C1INH in the plasma induced the activation of the KKS and peritoneal macrophages but did not activate the complement system. Bradykinin pathway proteins were elevated in the periphery and the brain, resulting in hypotension. BBB permeability, extravasation of plasma proteins into the brain parenchyma, activation of glial cells, and elevation of pro-inflammatory response mediators were detected. Furthermore, infiltrating innate immune cells were observed entering the brain through the lateral ventricle walls and the neurovascular unit. Mice showed normal locomotion function, yet cognition was impaired and depressive-like behavior was evident. In conclusion, our results highlight the important role of regulated plasma C1INH as it acts as a gatekeeper to the brain via the neurovascular system. Thus, manipulation of C1INH in neurovascular disorders might be therapeutically beneficial.
Marrocco J, Gray JD, Kogan JF, Einhorn NR, O'Cinneide EM, Rubin TG, Carroll TS, Schmidt EF, McEwen BS
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Early Life Stress Restricts Translational Reactivity in CA3 Neurons Associated With Altered Stress Responses in Adulthood

FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE 2019 JUL 11; 13(?):? Article 157
Early life experiences program brain structure and function and contribute to behavioral endophenotypes in adulthood. Epigenetic control of gene expression by those experiences affect discrete brain regions involved in mood, cognitive function and regulation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. In rodents, acute restraint stress increases the expression of the repressive histone H3 lysine 9 tri-methylation (H3K9me3) in hippocampal fields, including the CA3 pyramidal neurons. These CA3 neurons are crucially involved in cognitive function and mood regulation as well as activation of glucocorticoid (CORT) secretion. CA3 neurons also exhibit structural and functional changes after early-life stress (ELS) as well as after chronic stress in adulthood. Using a protocol of chronic ELS induced by limited bedding and nesting material followed by acute-swim stress (AS) in adulthood, we show that mice with a history of ELS display a blunted CORT response to AS, despite exhibiting activation of immediate early genes after stress similar to that found in control mice. We find that ELS induced persistently increased expression of the repressive H3K9me3 histone mark in the CA3 subfield at baseline that was subsequently decreased following AS. In contrast, AS induced a transient increase of this mark in control mice. Using translating ribosome affinity purification (TRAP) method to isolate CA3 translating mRNAs, we found that expression of genes of the epigenetic gene family, GABA/glutamate family, and glucocorticoid receptors binding genes were decreased transiently in control mice by AS and showed a persistent reduction in ELS mice. In most cases, AS in ELS mice did not induce gene expression changes. A stringent filtering of genes affected by AS in control and ELS mice revealed a noteworthy decrease in gene expression change in ELS mice compared to control. Only 18 genes were selectively regulated by AS in ELS mice and encompassed pathways such as circadian rhythm, inflammatory response, opioid receptors, and more genes included in the glucocorticoid receptor binding family. Thus, ELS programs a restricted translational response to stress in stress-sensitive CA3 neurons leading to persistent changes in gene expression, some of which mimic the transient effects of AS in control mice, while leaving in operation the immediate early gene response to AS.
Galea S, Vaughan RD
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Public Health, Politics, and the Creation of Meaning: A Public Health of Consequence, July 2019

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH 2019 JUL; 109(7):966-968
Presslee S, Slater GJ, Pujos F, Forasiepi AM, Fischer R, Molloy K, Mackie M, Olsen JV, Kramarz A, Taglioretti M, Scaglia F, Lezcano M, Lanata JL, Southon J, Feranec R, Bloch J, Hajduk A, Martin FM, Gismondi RS, Reguero M, de Muizon C, Greenwood A, Chait BT, Penkman K, Collins M, MacPhee RDE
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Palaeoproteomics resolves sloth relationships

NATURE ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION 2019 JUL; 3(7):1121-1130
The living tree sloths Choloepus and Bradypus are the only remaining members of Folivora, a major xenarthran radiation that occupied a wide range of habitats in many parts of the western hemisphere during the Cenozoic, including both continents and the West Indies. Ancient DNA evidence has played only a minor role in folivoran systematics, as most sloths lived in places not conducive to genomic preservation. Here we utilize collagen sequence information, both separately and in combination with published mitochondrial DNA evidence, to assess the relationships of tree sloths and their extinct relatives. Results from phylogenetic analysis of these datasets differ substantially from morphology-based concepts: Choloepus groups with Mylodontidae, not Megalonychidae; Bradypus and Megalonyx pair together as megatherioids, while monophyletic Antillean sloths may be sister to all other folivorans. Divergence estimates are consistent with fossil evidence for mid-Cenozoic presence of sloths in the West Indies and an early Miocene radiation in South America.
Lapointe T
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Effects of combined escitalopram and aripiprazole in rats: role of the

PSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY 2019 JUL; 236(7):2273-2281
RationalePre-clinical and clinical studies have suggested that the
Ruess J
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Molecular noise of innate immunity shapes bacteria-phage ecologies

PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY 2019 JUL; 15(7):? Article e1007168
Mathematical models have been used successfully at diverse scales of
Penas C, Maloof ME, Stathias V, Long J, Tan SK, Mier J, Fang Y, Valdes C, Rodriguez-Blanco J, Chiang CM, Robbins DJ, Liebl DJ, Lee JK, Hatten ME, Clarke J, Ayad NG
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Time series modeling of cell cycle exit identifies Brd4 dependent regulation of cerebellar neurogenesis

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS 2019 JUL 10; 10(?):? Article 3028
Cerebellar neuronal progenitors undergo a series of divisions before irreversibly exiting the cell cycle and differentiating into neurons. Dysfunction of this process underlies many neurological diseases including ataxia and the most common pediatric brain tumor, medulloblastoma. To better define the pathways controlling the most abundant neuronal cells in the mammalian cerebellum, cerebellar granule cell progenitors (GCPs), we performed RNA-equencing of GCPs exiting the cell cycle. Time-series modeling of GCP cell cycle exit identified downregulation of activity of the epigenetic reader protein Brd4. Brd4 binding to the Gli1 locus is controlled by Casein Kinase 1 delta (CK1 delta)-dependent phosphorylation during GCP proliferation, and decreases during GCP cell cycle exit. Importantly, conditional deletion of Brd4 in vivo in the developing cerebellum induces cerebellar morphological deficits and ataxia. These studies define an essential role for Brd4 in cerebellar granule cell neurogenesis and are critical for designing clinical trials utilizing Brd4 inhibitors in neurological indications.
Castner J, Mammen MJ, Jungquist CR, Licata O, Pender JJ, Wilding GE, Sethi S
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Validation of fitness tracker for sleep measures in women with asthma

JOURNAL OF ASTHMA 2019 JUL 3; 56(7):719-730
Objective: Nighttime wakening with asthma symptoms is a key to assessment and therapy decisions, with no gold standard objective measure. The study aims were to (1) determine the feasibility, (2) explore equivalence, and (3) test concordance of a consumer-based accelerometer with standard actigraphy for measurement of sleep patterns in women with asthma as an adjunct to self-report. Methods: Panel study design of women with poorly controlled asthma from a university-affiliated primary care clinic system was used. We assessed sensitivity and specificity, equivalence and concordance of sleep time, sleep efficiency, and wake counts between the consumer-based accelerometer Fitbit Charge (TM) and Actigraph wGT3X+. We linked data between devices for comparison both automatically by 24-hour period and manually by sleep segment. Results: Analysis included 424 938 minutes, 738 nights, and 833 unique sleep segments from 47 women. The fitness tracker demonstrated 97% sensitivity and 40% specificity to identify sleep. Between device equivalence for total sleep time (15 and 42-minute threshold) was demonstrated by sleep segment. Concordance improved for wake counts and sleep efficiency when adjusting for a linear trend. Conclusions: There were important differences in total sleep time, efficiency, and wake count measures when comparing individual sleep segments versus 24-hour measures of sleep. Fitbit overestimates sleep efficiency and underestimates wake counts in this population compared to actigraphy. Low levels of systematic bias indicate the potential for raw measurements from the devices to achieve equivalence and concordance with additional processing, algorithm modification, and modeling. Fitness trackers offer an accessible and inexpensive method to quantify sleep patterns in the home environment as an adjunct to subjective reports, and require further informatics development.
Butelman ER, McElroy BD, Prisinzano TE, Kreek MJ
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Impact of Pharmacological Manipulation of the kappa-Opioid Receptor System on Self-grooming and Anhedonic-like Behaviors in Male Mice

JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS 2019 JUL 1; 370(1):1-8
The kappa (kappa) opioid receptor/dynorphin system modulates depression-like states and anhedonia, as well adaptations to stress and exposure to drugs of abuse. Several relatively short-acting small molecule kappa-receptor antagonists have been synthesized, and their behavioral profile has been examined under some conditions. The hypothesis of this study is that pharmacological manipulations of the kappa-receptor system will result in changes in ethologically relevant anhedonic-like behaviors in mice. Adult male C57BL/6j mice (n = 6-8) were examined for self-grooming behavior in the splash test (in which robust self-grooming is elicited by spraying the dorsum of the mouse with a sucrose solution). The kappa-agonist salvinorin A (0.56-1.8 mg/kg) produced dose-dependent decreases in self-grooming, a marker of anhedonia. The selectivity, potency, and duration of action of two relatively short-acting kappa-antagonists, LY2444296 [(S)-3-fluoro-4-(4-((2-(3-fluorophenyl)pyrrolidin-1-yl)methyl)phenoxy)be nzamide] and LY2795050 [3-chloro-4-(4-(((2S)-2-pyridin-3- ylpyrrolidin-1-yl)methyl) phenoxy)benzamide], were studied for their effectiveness in preventing grooming deficits caused by salvinorin A (1.8 mg/kg). kappa-selective doses of both LY2444296 (0.032-1 mg/kg) and LY2795050 (0.032-0.32 mg/kg) dose- and time-dependently prevented the grooming deficits caused by salvinorin A (1.8 m/kg). We also found that a kappa-selective dose of each of these antagonists decreased immobility in the forced swim test, a common test of anti-anhedonia effects. This study shows that the kappa-receptor system is involved in an ethologically relevant measure of anhedonia, and that kappa-selective doses of these antagonists can produce effects consistent with rapid anti-anhedonia.
Lu XD, Chu CSE, Fang T, Rayon-Estrada V, Fang F, Patke A, Qian Y, Clarke SH, Melnick AM, Zhang Y, Papavasiliou FN, Roeder RG
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MTA2/NuRD Regulates B Cell Development and Cooperates with OCA-B in Controlling the Pre-B to Immature B Cell Transition

CELL REPORTS 2019 JUL 9; 28(2):472-485.e5
The NuRD complex contains both chromatin remodeling and histone deacetylase activities. Mice lacking the MTA2 subunit of NuRD show developmental defects in pro-B, pre-B, immature B, and marginal zone B cells, and abnormal germinal center B cell differentiation during immune responses. Mta2 inactivation also causes a derepression of Igll1 and VpreB1 genes in pre-B cells. Furthermore, MTA2/NuRD interacts directly with AIOLOS/IKAROS and shows a striking overlap with AIOLOS/IKAROS target genes in human pre-B cells, suggesting a functional interdependence between MTA2/NuRD and AIOLOS. Mechanistically, MTA2 deficiency in mice leads to increased H3K27 acetylation at both Igll1 and VpreB1 promoters. Gene profiling analyses also identify distinct MTA2-dependent transcription programs in pro-B and pre-B cells. In addition, we find a strong synergy between MTA2 and OCA-B in repressing Igll1 and VpreB1 at the pre-B cell stage, and in regulating both the pre-B to immature B transition and splenic B cell development.