TopicNeuroscience
Content Overview
7Total items
4Seminars
2Grants
1ePoster

Latest

GrantNeuroscience

Modulating the Action of Cylindrical Proteases to Eliminate Neisseria Gonorrhea and Chlamydia Trachomatis Infections

National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
May 31, 2031

Project Summary/Abstract Sexually transmitted bacteria diseases caused by Chlamydia trachomatis (Ctr) and Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG) are the two most common sexually transmitted bacterial diseases. The infections caused by these pathogens may result in infertility, ectopic pregnancy, blindness, and perinatal mortality. Over 1.70 M cases of chlamydia and 0.65 M cases of drug-resistant gonorrhea are reported yearly in the US. Women with gonorrhea are co- infected with chlamydia in 17.6%–57.9% of cases, while women with chlamydia are co-infected with gonorrhea in 2.1%–17.2% of cases. These infections are treated with broad spectrum antibiotics, which can favor the development of resistance on NG/CTr but also in other bacteria, or damage the microbiota, diminishing its protective function and allowing bacteria and viruses to infect the patient. The Caseinolytic protease (ClpP) proteolytic machinery regulates protein turnover and homeostasis and is key in bacterial growth and development The machinery consists of the proteolytic unit (the ClpP) and its chaperone (ClpX), which transports proteins to be degraded, and it is termed the ClpXP. Our theory is that molecules that inhibit the action of the ClpX chaperone can become efficient antibacterial agents against both pathogens. We have found that the dihydrothiazepines can erradicate both pathogens and prevent the action of the ClpXP complex. Our goal is to advance the dihydrothiazepines as selective agents against Ctr and NG infections. To develop these therapeutic agents, we have envisioned four specific aims. Specific Aim 1. Synthesis and Optimization of the Pharmacophore. Our goal is to use computational models to design dihydrothiazepines molecule that will be synthesized, purified, and characterized using chemical techniques. The molecules will be tested against Ctr and NG and their toxicity against human cells evaluated. Also, we will determine their effect in other bacterial, including those from the microbiota. Specific Aim 2. Assessment of Stability and In Vivo Activity. We will study the stability of the most active molecules under various conditions. Then, we will study the pharmacokinetics, biodistribution , and antibacterial activity against Ctr and NG in mice. Specific Aim 3. Target Validation and Effect. We will study the ability of the compounds to inhibit the activity of ClpX using a luciferase assay and to block protein degradation. We will try grow crystal of the protein and the molecule and will study if the molecules prevent the assembly of the ClpXP system. Finally, we will assess the ability of the bacteria to develop resistance to the molecules.

GrantNeuroscience

Characterization and functional impact of somatic numtogenesis in the human cortex

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
Mar 31, 2031

Project Summary This project focuses on studying nuclear mitochondrial insertions (numts), which are fragments of mitochondrial DNA that get integrated into the nuclear DNA of human cells. While this process, called numtogenesis, occurs naturally and can be passed down to future generations, it has also been observed to occur somatically in our bodies. Historically the function of numts has been difficult to study because they are repetitive and difficult to map with short read sequencing technologies, but there is emerging evidence that they can influence cell function and play a role in diseases, aging, and even complicate genetic studies. Our recent research discovered numts in the human brain’s cortex, and their presence appeared to be linked with earlier death, suggesting they may play a role in aging. However, due to limitations in the data we used, we could not fully explore the extent or impact of these insertions across different tissues or individuals. This project aims to map and study numts in more detail, especially in the human cortex, to further explore this ongoing transfer of DNA from the mitochondria to the nuclear genome and their potential to impact aging and brain function. We will accomplish this by 1) improving sequencing methods to detect numts, 2) comparing their presence across different tissues, and 3) investigating how they affect gene expression and DNA structure. By the end of the project, we aim to provide a model for how such somatic variation may occur and impact cellular function at the tissue level.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Bridging the gap between artificial models and cortical circuits

C. B. Currin
IST Austria
Nov 10, 2022

Artificial neural networks simplify complex biological circuits into tractable models for computational exploration and experimentation. However, the simplification of artificial models also undermines their applicability to real brain dynamics. Typical efforts to address this mismatch add complexity to increasingly unwieldy models. Here, we take a different approach; by reducing the complexity of a biological cortical culture, we aim to distil the essential factors of neuronal dynamics and plasticity. We leverage recent advances in growing neurons from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) to analyse ex vivo cortical cultures with only two distinct excitatory and inhibitory neuron populations. Over 6 weeks of development, we record from thousands of neurons using high-density microelectrode arrays (HD-MEAs) that allow access to individual neurons and the broader population dynamics. We compare these dynamics to two-population artificial networks of single-compartment neurons with random sparse connections and show that they produce similar dynamics. Specifically, our model captures the firing and bursting statistics of the cultures. Moreover, tightly integrating models and cultures allows us to evaluate the impact of changing architectures over weeks of development, with and without external stimuli. Broadly, the use of simplified cortical cultures enables us to use the repertoire of theoretical neuroscience techniques established over the past decades on artificial network models. Our approach of deriving neural networks from human cells also allows us, for the first time, to directly compare neural dynamics of disease and control. We found that cultures e.g. from epilepsy patients tended to have increasingly more avalanches of synchronous activity over weeks of development, in contrast to the control cultures. Next, we will test possible interventions, in silico and in vitro, in a drive for personalised approaches to medical care. This work starts bridging an important theoretical-experimental neuroscience gap for advancing our understanding of mammalian neuron dynamics.

SeminarNeuroscience

Reconstructing inhibitory circuits in a damaged brain

Robert Hunt
University of California-Irvine
May 18, 2022

Inhibitory interneurons govern the sparse activation of principal cells that permits appropriate behaviors, but they among the most vulnerable to brain damage. Our recent work has demonstrated important roles for inhibitory neurons in disorders of brain development, injury and epilepsy. These studies have motivated our ongoing efforts to understand how these cells operate at the synaptic, circuit and behavioral levels and in designing new technologies targeting specific populations of interneurons for therapy. I will discuss our recent efforts examining the role of interneurons in traumatic brain injury and in designing cell transplantation strategies - based on the generation of new inhibitory interneurons - that enable precise manipulation of inhibitory circuits in the injured brain. I will also discuss our ongoing efforts using monosynaptic virus tracing and whole-brain clearing methods to generate brain-wide maps of inhibitory circuits in the rodent brain. By comprehensively mapping the wiring of individual cell types on a global scale, we have uncovered a fundamental strategy to sustain and optimize inhibition following traumatic brain injury that involves spatial reorganization of local and long-range inputs to inhibitory neurons. These recent findings suggest that brain damage, even when focally restricted, likely has a far broader affect on brain-wide neural function than previously appreciated.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

CRISPR-based functional genomics in iPSC-based models of brain disease

Martin Kampmann
UCSF Department of Biochemistry and Biophysics
Jul 30, 2020

Human genes associated with brain-related diseases are being discovered at an accelerating pace. A major challenge is an identification of the mechanisms through which these genes act, and of potential therapeutic strategies. To elucidate such mechanisms in human cells, we established a CRISPR-based platform for genetic screening in human iPSC-derived neurons, astrocytes and microglia. Our approach relies on CRISPR interference (CRISPRi) and CRISPR activation (CRISPRa), in which a catalytically dead version of the bacterial Cas9 protein recruits transcriptional repressors or activators, respectively, to endogenous genes to control their expression, as directed by a small guide RNA (sgRNA). Complex libraries of sgRNAs enable us to conduct genome-wide or focused loss-of-function and gain-of-function screens. Such screens uncover molecular players for phenotypes based on survival, stress resistance, fluorescent phenotypes, high-content imaging and single-cell RNA-Seq. To uncover disease mechanisms and therapeutic targets, we are conducting genetic modifier screens for disease-relevant cellular phenotypes in patient-derived neurons and glia with familial mutations and isogenic controls. In a genome-wide screen, we have uncovered genes that modulate the formation of disease-associated aggregates of tau in neurons with a tauopathy-linked mutation (MAPT V337M). CRISPRi/a can also be used to model and functionally evaluate disease-associated changes in gene expression, such as those caused by eQTLs, haploinsufficiency, or disease states of brain cells. We will discuss an application to Alzheimer’s Disease-associated genes in microglia.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Functional characterization of human iPSC-derived neurons at single-cell resolution

Dr. Marie Obien, Dr. Michele Fiscella
VP Marketing and Sales at MaxWell Biosystems | VP Scientific Affairs at MaxWell Biosystems
Apr 23, 2020

Recent developments in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) technology have enabled easier access to human cells in vitro. With increasing availability of human iPSC-derived neurons, both healthy and disease cell lines, screening compounds for neurodegenerative diseases on human cells can potentially be performed in the earlier stages of drug discovery. To accelerate the functional characterization of iPSC-derived neurons and the effect of compounds, reproducible and relevant results are necessary. In this webinar, the speakers will: Introduce high-resolution functional imaging of human iPSC-derived neurons Showcase how to extract functional features of hundreds of cells in a cell culture sample label-free Discuss electrophysiological parameters for characterizing the differences among several human neuronal cell lines

ePosterNeuroscience

An Organ-on-chip platform to evaluate neuro-immune signal transmission using human cells

Tristan Gabriel, Jessica Rontard, Louise Miny, Fabien François, Aurélie Batut, Louise Dubuisson, Mélanie Gleyzes, Florian Larramendy, Catherine Massoubre, Stéphane Paul, Thibault Honegger, Lucas Arbabyazd

human cells coverage

7 items

Seminar4
Grant2
ePoster1

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