TopicNeuroscience

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2Total items
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1Seminar

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GrantNeuroscience

Development of a multi-modal mouse model of cluster headache

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
May 31, 2027

PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT Cluster headache (CH), which affects about 1 in 1,000 people, is a severe and debilitating primary headache disorder characterized by repeated attacks occurring in clusters over weeks or months. CH has clearly defined features: severe pain (worse than childbirth), facial autonomic changes (such as a watery eye), restlessness, and a striking circadian pattern of attacks (at the same time each day like clockwork in approximately 70.5% of patients). CH also has a well-defined pathophysiology of 3 systems: the trigeminovascular pain system, the autonomic nervous system, and the hypothalamic system (in particular the posterior hypothalamus, the first brain area activated during an attack). Despite the well-known features and systems involved in CH, no disease- specific treatments are available: all CH treatments are repurposed medications from other diseases. This lack of CH-specific treatments is due in large part to the lack of a viable animal model that faithfully recapitulates the aforementioned CH features. To develop a specific animal model for CH, we previously studied a trigeminovascular headache model (repeated nitroglycerin injections), and discovered a circadian pattern of pain responses that reflects the clockwork-like pattern of attacks in CH patients. Furthermore, our analysis also identified a recently discovered CH modifier gene Mertk (MER proto-oncogene, tyrosine receptor kinase) to be highly rhythmically expressed in the trigeminal ganglion. Deletion of Mertk (Mertk-KO) altered the normal circadian rhythm of pain sensitivity by increasing pain sensitivity over 24 hours. Finally, activation of the posterior hypothalamus (via c-Fos staining) was observed after NTG administration in wild-type mice. Based on these exciting preliminary findings, we hypothesize that a combination of trigeminovascular (nitroglycerin), genetic (Mertk-KO), and hypothalamic (direct optogenetic activation of the posterior hypothalamus) manipulations will generate the first multi-modal animal model of CH. In Aim 1 (the R61 phase), we will determine the contributions of each aspect of our combined model, alone or in combination (a 4x2 grid of NTG or control, Mertk KO mouse or wild-type control, and optogenetic injection or control). Our milestone for progression to the R33 phase will be significant differences in at least two pain behaviors in our model compared to controls. In Aims 2 and 3 (the R33 phase), we will validate our model through face validity (lacrimation and restlessness), construct validity (CGRP, PACAP, and VIP in the trigeminal ganglion and hypothalamus), and predictive validity (ability of first-line and new treatments to ameliorate the pain behaviors of our model). This project is highly significant and innovative, addressing a profound need for a specific and comprehensive animal model for this devastating yet understudied disease. With the unique combination of complementary expertise in CH (laboratory and clinical), circadian biology, pharmacology, optogenetics and pain, we are ideally suited to generate this combined CH model with the goal of providing insights into CH pathophysiology and developing novel therapeutics.

SeminarNeuroscience

PET imaging in brain diseases

Bianca Jupp and Lucy Vivash
Monash University
Jun 8, 2022

Talk 1. PET based biomarkers of treatment efficacy in temporal lobe epilepsy A critical aspect of drug development involves identifying robust biomarkers of treatment response for use as surrogate endpoints in clinical trials. However, these biomarkers also have the capacity to inform mechanisms of disease pathogenesis and therapeutic efficacy. In this webinar, Dr Bianca Jupp will report on a series of studies using the GABAA PET ligand, [18F]-Flumazenil, to establish biomarkers of treatment response to a novel therapeutic for temporal lobe epilepsy, identifying affinity at this receptor as a key predictor of treatment outcome. Dr Bianca Jupp is a Research Fellow in the Department of Neuroscience, Monash University and Lead PET/CT Scientist at the Alfred Research Alliance–Monash Biomedical Imaging facility. Her research focuses on neuroimaging and its capacity to inform the neurobiology underlying neurological and neuropsychiatric disorders. Talk 2. The development of a PET radiotracer for reparative microglia Imaging of neuroinflammation is currently hindered by the technical limitations associated with TSPO imaging. In this webinar, Dr Lucy Vivash will discuss the development of PET radiotracers that specifically image reparative microglia through targeting the receptor kinase MerTK. This includes medicinal chemistry design and testing, radiochemistry, and in vitro and in vivo testing of lead tracers. Dr Lucy Vivash is a Research Fellow in the Department of Neuroscience, Monash University. Her research focuses on the preclinical development and clinical translation of novel PET radiotracers for the imaging of neurodegenerative diseases.

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