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Effects of Apolipoprotein A4 on Lipid Metabolism via Sympathetic Regulation
Obesity increases the risks and progression of hypertriglyceridemia, metabolic dysfunction- associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), and cardiovascular diseases. Previous studies demonstrate that a single injection of apolipoprotein A4 (APOA4) elevates sympathetic neural activity and fatty acid β-oxidation in adipose tissues; and consistent infusion of APOA4 in obese mice fed a high-fat diet lowers fat mass, reduces hypertriglyceridemia, elevates brown adipose tissue thermogenesis, and attenuates steatosis and enhances sympathetic neural activity in the liver. This project hypothesizes that APOA4 reduces hypertriglyceridemia by regulating lipid metabolism through sympathetic stimulation in adipose tissues (Specific Aim 1) and sympathetic action in the liver (Specific Aim 2). The role of sympathetic action via the neurotransmitter norepinephrine and adrenergic receptor-mediated pathways will be investigated, and their necessity in APOA4-mediated lipid metabolism will be tested. A strength of this project is the interdisciplinary collaboration between investigators with established successful collaboration and publications. The project will provide physiological, molecular, and neurochemical mechanisms underlying how APOA4 differentially regulates metabolism through sympathetic activation in various types of adipose tissues and the liver in male and female obese mice. Findings would provide impetus to develop unique, novel, targeted therapeutic applications against hypertriglyceridemia and MASLD. Importantly, this project will expose undergraduates and graduate students to meritorious research, provide students with hands-on biomedical research experience, and strengthen research environment at R15 eligible institutions.
Pathogenic mechanisms of expanded ZFHX3 in SCA4 cerebellar organoids
Spinocerebellar ataxia type 4 (SCA4) is a disabling neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive cerebellar ataxia, and the causative GGC-repeat expansion in ZFHX3 (ZHFX3-exp) was just discovered this year by our lab and others. Our research aims to understand how ZFHX3-exp causes SCA4 and to identify molecular therapeutic targets that can be quickly advanced into clinical trials. SCA4 is one of the four poly-glycine diseases that share the presence of neuronal intranuclear inclusion (NIIs) as a disease hallmark. In SCA4, NIIs are positive for ZFHX3, p62 and ubiquitin, indicating the loss of proteostasis as a mechanism of neurodegeneration. In addition, ZFHX3 RNA-gain-of-function may also contribute to neurodegeneration. Beyond this, knowledge of the disease mechanisms that underly SCA4 is extremely limited and there are currently no disease-modifying treatments for SCA4 or other polyG/NII diseases. There are no SCA4 mouse models and because of the high GC content in the repeat expansion complicates the production of SCA4 mouse models. We propose a novel approach to characterizing SCA4 Purkinje cell (PC) pathogenesis using human cerebellar organoids. Our approach allows for rapidly advancing the understanding of the pathogenesis and potential treatments of SCA4. Using cerebellar organoids will enable investigation on functional PCs, cerebellar neurodegeneration and the testing of potential therapeutic strategies. In aim 1, we will generate cerebellar organoids from five SCA4 patient-derived iPSC lines, and normal control iPSCs from individuals of the same family. These iPSC lines are already established in our laboratory. In aim 2, we will investigate PC viability, NII protein composition, proteostasis pathways, RNA gain-of-function and cell-type-specific dysregulated pathways by single nucleus RNA sequencing. In addition, we will study potential therapeutic targets by lentiviral knockdown and single nucleus RNA sequencing. SCA4 patient iPSCs express overabundant STAU1 and ATXN2. We will evaluate how lowering the abundance of these proteins modifies the PC molecular phenotype. Together, these experiments will establish a model to greatly enhance the understanding of human PC neurodegeneration, the pathological mechanisms of SCA4 and possible avenues of treatment.
Pitch and Time Interact in Auditory Perception
Research into pitch perception and time perception has typically treated the two as independent processes. However, previous studies of music and speech perception have suggested that pitch and timing information may be processed in an integrated manner, such that the pitch of an auditory stimulus can influence a person’s perception, expectation, and memory of its duration and tempo. Typically, higher-pitched sounds are perceived as faster and longer in duration than lower-pitched sounds with identical timing. We conducted a series of experiments to better understand the limits of this pitch-time integrality. Across several experiments, we tested whether the higher-equals-faster illusion generalizes across the broader frequency range of human hearing by asking participants to compare the tempo of a repeating tone played in one of six octaves to a metronomic standard. When participants heard tones from all six octaves, we consistently found an inverted U-shaped effect of the tone’s pitch height, such that perceived tempo peaked between A4 (440 Hz) and A5 (880 Hz) and decreased at lower and higher octaves. However, we found that the decrease in perceived tempo at extremely high octaves could be abolished by exposing participants to high-pitched tones only, suggesting that pitch-induced timing biases are context sensitive. We additionally tested how the timing of an auditory stimulus influences the perception of its pitch, using a pitch discrimination task in which probe tones occurred early, late, or on the beat within a rhythmic context. Probe timing strongly biased participants to rate later tones as lower in pitch than earlier tones. Together, these results suggest that pitch and time exert a bidirectional influence on one another, providing evidence for integrated processing of pitch and timing information in auditory perception. Identifying the mechanisms behind this pitch-time interaction will be critical for integrating current models of pitch and tempo processing.
Sleepless in Vienna - how to rescue folding-deficient dopamine transporters by pharmacochaperoning
Diseases that arise from misfolding of an individual protein are rare. However, collectively, these folding diseases represent a large proportion of hereditary and acquired disorders. In fact, the term "Molecular Medicine" was coined by Linus Pauling in conjunction with the study of a folding disease, i.e. sickle cell anemia. In the past decade, we have witnessed an exponential growth in the number of mutations, which have been identified in genes encoding solute carriers (SLC). A sizable faction - presumably the majority - of these mutations result in misfolding of the encoded protein. While studying the export of the GABA transporter (SLC6A1) and of the serotonin transporter (SLC6A4), from the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), we discovered by serendipity that some ligands can correct the folding defect imparted by point mutations. These bind to the inward facing state. The most effective compound is noribogaine, the metabolite of ibogaine (an alkaloid first isolated from the shrub Tabernanthe iboga). There are 13 mutations in the human dopamine transporter (DAT, SLC6A3), which give rise to a syndrome of infantile Parkinsonism and dystonia. We capitalized on our insights to explore, if the disease-relevant mutant proteins were amenable to pharmacological correction. Drosopohila melanogaster, which lack the dopamine transporter, are hyperactive and sleepless (fumin in Japanese). Thus, mutated human DAT variants can be introduced into fumin flies. This allows for examining the effect of pharmacochaperones on delivery of DAT to the axonal territory and on restoring sleep. We explored the chemical space populated by variations of the ibogaine structure to identify an analogue (referred to as compound 9b), which was highly effective: compound 9b also restored folding in DAT variants, which were not amenable to rescue by noribogaine. Deficiencies in the human creatine transporter-1 (CrT1, SLC6A8) give rise to a syndrome of intellectual disability and seizures and accounts for 5% of genetically based intellectual disabilities in boys. Point mutations occur, in part, at positions, which are homologous to those of folding-deficient DAT variants. CrT1 lacks the rich pharmacology of monoamine transporters. Nevertheless, our insights are also applicable to rescuing some disease-related variants of CrT1. Finally, the question arises how one can address the folding problem. We propose a two-pronged approach: (i) analyzing the effect of mutations on the transport cycle by electrophysiological recordings; this allows for extracting information on the rates of conformational transitions. The underlying assumption posits that - even when remedied by pharmacochaperoning - folding-deficient mutants must differ in the conformational transitions associated with the transport cycle. (ii) analyzing the effect of mutations on the two components of protein stability, i.e. thermodynamic and kinetic stability. This is expected to provide a glimpse of the energy landscape, which governs the folding trajectory.
Region-specific microRNA alterations in marmosets carrying SLC6A4 polymorphisms are associated with anxiety-like behavior
Substrate-specific loss of Tubulin-alpha4a polyglutamylation prevents oligomerization of hyper-phosphorylated Tau and microglia activation in brain
TAFA4 relieves injury-induced mechanical allodynia through LRP1 and modulation of spinal A-type potassium currents
De novo variants in GABRA4 are associated with a neurological phenotypic spectrum including developmental delay, behavioral abnormalities, and epilepsy
FENS Forum 2024
The region 35-HAEE-38 of alpha4 subunit plays a key role in the binding of alpha4beta2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor to beta-amyloid
FENS Forum 2024
SLC6A4 and TPH2 methylation as potential biomarkers to inform antidepressant treatment choices
FENS Forum 2024
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