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Browsing by Author "Baucum, Anthony J."
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Item Astrocytes Regulate the Development and Maturation of Retinal Ganglion Cells Derived from Human Pluripotent Stem Cells(Elsevier, 2019-02-12) VanderWall, Kirstin B.; Vij, Ridhima; Ohlemacher, Sarah K.; Sridhar, Akshayalakshmi; Fligor, Clarisse M.; Feder, Elyse M.; Edler, Michael C.; Baucum, Anthony J.; Cummins, Theodore R.; Meyer, Jason S.; Biology, School of ScienceRetinal ganglion cells (RGCs) form the connection between the eye and the brain, with this connectivity disrupted in numerous blinding disorders. Previous studies have demonstrated the ability to derive RGCs from human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs); however, these cells exhibited some characteristics that indicated a limited state of maturation. Among the many factors known to influence RGC development in the retina, astrocytes are known to play a significant role in their functional maturation. Thus, efforts of the current study examined the functional maturation of hPSC-derived RGCs, including the ability of astrocytes to modulate this developmental timeline. Morphological and functional properties of RGCs were found to increase over time, with astrocytes significantly accelerating the functional maturation of hPSC-derived RGCs. The results of this study clearly demonstrate the functional and morphological maturation of RGCs in vitro, including the effects of astrocytes on the maturation of hPSC-derived RGCs.Item Cilia Associated Signaling in Adult Energy Homeostasis(2022-05) Bansal, Ruchi; Berbari, Nicolas F.; Perrin, Benjamin J.; Mastracci, Teresa L.; Baucum, Anthony J.; Dunn, Kenneth W.Primary cilia are solitary cellular appendages that function as signaling centers for cells in adult energy homeostasis. Here in chapter 1, I introduce cilia and how dysfunction of these conserved organelles results in ciliopathies, such as Bardet-Biedl Syndrome (BBS), which present with childhood obesity. Furthermore, conditional loss of primary cilia from neurons in the hypothalamus leads to hyperphagia and obesity in mouse models of ciliopathies. Classically, cilia coordinate signaling often through specific G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) as is the case in both vision and olfaction. In addition, neurons throughout the brain including hypothalamic neurons possess primary cilia whose dysfunction contributes to ciliopathy-associated obesity. How neuronal cilia regulate the signaling of GPCRs remains unclear and many fundamental cell biology questions remain about cilia mediated signaling. For example, how cilia coordinate signaling to influence neuronal activity is unknown. To begin to address some of these cell biology questions around neuronal cilia, chapter 2, describes the development and use of a system for primary neuronal cultures from the hypothalamus. Using this system, we found that activation of the cilia regulated hedgehog pathway, which is critical in development, influenced the ability of neurons to respond to GPCR ligands. This result highlights the role of the developmentally critical hedgehog pathway on terminally differentiated hypothalamic neurons. One challenge facing the cilia field is our ability to assess cilia in large numbers without potential bias. This is especially true in tissues like the brain, where cilia appear to have region-specific characteristics. Work included in Chapter 3 describes the use of a computer-assisted artificial intelligence (Ai) approach to analyze cilia composition and morphology in a less biased and high throughput manner. Cilia length and intensities are important parameters for evaluation of cilia signaling. Evidence suggests that activation of some ciliary GPCRs results in shortening of cilia whereas deviations from normal cilia length in mutant phenotypes affects normal physiological processes such as decreased mucociliary clearance. Therefore, to analyze a large number of cilia, we describe the use of the Ai module from in vitro and in vivo samples in a reproducible manner that minimizes user bias. Using this approach, we identified that Mchr1 expression is significantly stronger in the cilia of paraventricular nucleus than that in the arcuate nucleus of adult mice. Work in Chapter 4 continues to explore the integration between hedgehog pathway and ciliary GPCR signaling in the central nervous system, and its relevance with energy homeostasis. We evaluated the hedgehog ligand in the plasma of mice in acute and long-term metabolic changes and identified that the activity of the ligand changed under altered metabolic conditions. We also developed a genetic mouse model where hedgehog signaling was constitutively active in neuronal cilia. These mice become hyperphagic and obese. These results further emphasize the potential role of the hedgehog signaling pathway in regulation of feeding behavior in adult vertebrates. Overall, results from this work will provide a better understanding of the defects not only underlying ciliopathy-associated obesity but may also reveal more common mechanisms of centrally mediated obesity. In addition, the tools I have developed will help in understanding how neuronal cilia are used for intercellular communications and ultimately how they regulate behaviors like feeding.Item Correction: Maternal deprivation induces alterations in cognitive and cortical function in adulthood(Springer Nature, 2018-07-31) Janetsian-Fritz, Sarine S.; Timme, Nicholas M.; Timm, Maureen M.; McCane, Aqilah M.; Baucum, Anthony J.; O'Donnell, Brian F.; Lapish, Christopher C.; Psychology, School of ScienceThe original version of this Article omitted the author Maureen M. Timm from the Department of Psychology, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, IN, USA.Item Differential Localization of G Protein βγ Subunits(American Chemical Society, 2014-04-15) Betke, Katherine M.; Rose, Kristie L.; Friedman, David B.; Baucum, Anthony J.; Hyde, Karren; Schey, Kevin L.; Hamm, Heidi E.; Department of Biology, School of ScienceG protein βγ subunits play essential roles in regulating cellular signaling cascades, yet little is known about their distribution in tissues or their subcellular localization. While previous studies have suggested specific isoforms may exhibit a wide range of distributions throughout the central nervous system, a thorough investigation of the expression patterns of both Gβ and Gγ isoforms within subcellular fractions has not been conducted. To address this, we applied a targeted proteomics approach known as multiple-reaction monitoring to analyze localization patterns of Gβ and Gγ isoforms in pre- and postsynaptic fractions isolated from cortex, cerebellum, hippocampus, and striatum. Particular Gβ and Gγ subunits were found to exhibit distinct regional and subcellular localization patterns throughout the brain. Significant differences in subcellular localization between pre- and postsynaptic fractions were observed within the striatum for most Gβ and Gγ isoforms, while others exhibited completely unique expression patterns in all four brain regions examined. Such differences are a prerequisite for understanding roles of individual subunits in regulating specific signaling pathways throughout the central nervous system.Item DOC2B enhancement of beta cell function and survival(2018-03-08) Aslamy, Arianne; Thurmond, Debbie C.; Elmendorf, Jeffrey S.; Evans-Molina, Carmella; Baucum, Anthony J.Diabetes mellitus is a complex metabolic disease that currently affects an estimated 422 million people worldwide, with incidence rates rising annually. Type 1 diabetes (T1D) accounts for 5-10% of these cases. Its complications remain a major cause of global deaths. T1D is characterized by autoimmune destruction of β-cell mass. Efforts to preserve and protect β-cell mass in the preclinical stages of T1D are limited by few blood-borne biomarkers of β-cell destruction. In healthy β-cells, insulin secretion requires soluble n-ethylmaleimide-sensitive factor-attachment protein receptor (SNARE) complexes and associated accessory regulatory proteins to promote the docking and fusion of insulin vesicles at the plasma membrane. Two target membrane (t)-SNARE proteins, Syntaxin 1/4 and SNAP25/23, and one vesicle-associated (v)-SNARE protein, VAMP2, constitute the SNARE core complex. SNARE complex assembly is also facilitated by the regulatory protein, Double C2-domain protein β (DOC2B). I hypothesized that DOC2B deficiency may underlie β-cell susceptibility to T1D damage; conversely , overexpression of DOC2B may protect β-cell mass. Indeed, with regard to DOC2B abundance, my studies show reduced levels of DOC2B in platelets and islets of prediabetic rodents and new-onset T1D humans. Remarkably, clinical islet transplantation in T1D humans restores platelet DOC2B levels, indicating a correlation With regard to protection/functional effects, DOC2B deficiency enhances susceptibility to T1D in mice, while overexpression of DOC2B selectively in β-cells protects mice from chemically induced T1D; this correlates with preservation of functional β-cell mass. Mechanistically, overexpression of DOC2B and the DOC2B peptide, C2AB, protects clonal β-cell against cytokine or thapsigargin-induced apoptosis and reduces ER stress; this is dependent on C2AB’s calcium binding capacity. C2AB is sufficient to enhance glucose stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) and SNARE activation in clonal β-cells to the same extent as full-length DOC2B. In summary, these studies identify DOC2B as a potential biomarker and novel therapeutic target for prevention/management of T1D.Item Hedgehog Pathway Activation Alters Ciliary Signaling in Primary Hypothalamic Cultures(Frontiers, 2019-06-12) Bansal, Ruchi; Engle, Staci E.; Antonellis, Patrick J.; Whitehouse, Logan S.; Baucum, Anthony J.; Cummins, Theodore R.; Reiter, Jeremy F.; Berbari, Nicolas F.; Biology, School of SciencePrimary cilia dysfunction has been associated with hyperphagia and obesity in both ciliopathy patients and mouse models of cilia perturbation. Neurons throughout the brain possess these solitary cellular appendages, including in the feeding centers of the hypothalamus. Several cell biology questions associated with primary neuronal cilia signaling are challenging to address in vivo. Here we utilize primary hypothalamic neuronal cultures to study ciliary signaling in relevant cell types. Importantly, these cultures contain neuronal populations critical for appetite and satiety such as pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) and agouti related peptide (AgRP) expressing neurons and are thus useful for studying signaling involved in feeding behavior. Correspondingly, these cultured neurons also display electrophysiological activity and respond to both local and peripheral signals that act on the hypothalamus to influence feeding behaviors, such as leptin and melanin concentrating hormone (MCH). Interestingly, we found that cilia mediated hedgehog signaling, generally associated with developmental processes, can influence ciliary GPCR signaling (Mchr1) in terminally differentiated neurons. Specifically, pharmacological activation of the hedgehog-signaling pathway using the smoothened agonist, SAG, attenuated the ability of neurons to respond to ligands (MCH) of ciliary GPCRs. Understanding how the hedgehog pathway influences cilia GPCR signaling in terminally differentiated neurons could reveal the molecular mechanisms associated with clinical features of ciliopathies, such as hyperphagia-associated obesity.Item Mechanisms of spinophilin-dependent pancreas dysregulation in obesity(American Physiological Society, 2024) Stickel, Kaitlyn C.; Shah, Nikhil R.; Claeboe, Emily T.; Orr, Kara S.; Mosley, Amber L.; Doud, Emma H.; Belecky-Adams, Teri L.; Baucum, Anthony J.; Biology, School of ScienceSpinophilin is an F-actin binding and protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) targeting protein that acts as a scaffold of PP1 to its substrates. Spinophilin knockout (Spino-/-) mice have decreased fat mass, increased lean mass, and improved glucose tolerance, with no difference in feeding behaviors. Although spinophilin is enriched in neurons, its roles in nonneuronal tissues, such as β cells of the pancreatic islets, are unclear. We have corroborated and expanded upon previous studies to determine that Spino-/- mice have decreased weight gain and improved glucose tolerance in two different models of obesity. We have identified multiple putative spinophilin-interacting proteins isolated from intact pancreas and observed increased interactions of spinophilin with exocrine, ribosomal, and cytoskeletal protein classes that normally act to mediate peptide hormone production, processing, and/or release in Leprdb/db and/or high-fat diet-fed (HFF) models of obesity. In addition, we have found that spinophilin interacts with proteins from similar classes in isolated islets, suggesting a role for spinophilin in the pancreatic islet. Consistent with a pancreatic β cell type-specific role for spinophilin, using our recently described conditional spinophilin knockout mice, we found that loss of spinophilin specifically in pancreatic β cells improved glucose tolerance without impacting body weight in chow-fed mice. Our data further support the role of spinophilin in mediating pathophysiological changes in body weight and whole body metabolism associated with obesity. Our data provide the first evidence that pancreatic spinophilin protein interactions are modulated by obesity and that loss of spinophilin specifically in pancreatic β cells impacts whole body glucose tolerance. NEW & NOTEWORTHY: To our knowledge, these data are the first to demonstrate that obesity impacts spinophilin protein interactions in the pancreas and identify spinophilin specifically in pancreatic β cells as a modulator of whole body glucose tolerance.Item Phosphorylation State Modulates the Interaction between Spinophilin and Neurofilament Medium(2015-04-07) Hiday, Andrew C.; Baucum, Anthony J.A histological marker of Parkinson’s disease (PD) is the loss of synapses located on striatal medium spiny neurons (MSNs) as a result of dopaminergic nigral cell depletion. The dendritic spines that give MSNs their name have a well-characterized structure and are the main regions of post-synaptic input. It has been shown that spines have altered functionality and morphology in many neurodegenerative diseases. Spine morphology, and potentially function, is dictated by an array of structural proteins and their associations with other proteins in a region dubbed the post-synaptic density (PSD). Spinophilin and neurofilament medium (NF-M) are two proteins that are enriched in the PSD and have potential implications in PD. Interestingly, preliminary data show that there is a decrease in the NF-M-spinophilin interaction in animal models of PD. Here it is shown that these two proteins interact in brain tissue and when overexpressed in a mammalian cell system. Moreover, we have begun to determine mechanisms that regulate this interaction. It is known that there is a misregulation of protein phosphatases and kinases in many neurodegenerative diseases. Moreover, the phosphorylation state of a protein can regulate its association with other proteins. Therefore, we hypothesize that the phosphorylation state of either protein affects the interaction between spinophilin and NF-M. Furthermore, we have conducted experiments utilizing protein phosphatases and kinases that are known to modulate the phosphorylation state of NF-M and/or spinophilin. Data show that both kinase and phosphatase activity and/or expression modulates the NF-M-spinophilin interaction in heterologous cell lines. Through the use of MS/MS analysis, we have begun to map specific phosphorylation sites that may play a role in regulating this interaction. Currently, we are elucidating the specific effects of these post-translational modifications on regulating the spinophilin-NF-M interaction. These data will enhance our knowledge of spinophilin’s interactions and how these interactions are altered in neurological disorders such as PD.Item Prenatal methadone exposure disrupts behavioral development and alters motor neuron intrinsic properties and local circuitry(eLife Sciences, 2021-03-16) Grecco, Gregory G.; Mork, Briana E.; Huang, Jui-Yen; Metzger, Corinne E.; Haggerty, David L.; Reeves, Kaitlin C.; Gao, Yong; Hoffman, Hunter; Katner, Simon N.; Masters, Andrea R.; Morris, Cameron W.; Newell, Erin A.; Engleman, Eric A.; Baucum, Anthony J.; Kim, Jiuen; Yamamoto, Bryan K.; Allen, Matthew R.; Wu, Yu-Chien; Lu, Hui-Chen; Sheets, Patrick L.; Atwood, Brady K.; Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of MedicineDespite the rising prevalence of methadone treatment in pregnant women with opioid use disorder, the effects of methadone on neurobehavioral development remain unclear. We developed a translational mouse model of prenatal methadone exposure (PME) that resembles the typical pattern of opioid use by pregnant women who first use oxycodone then switch to methadone maintenance pharmacotherapy, and subsequently become pregnant while maintained on methadone. We investigated the effects of PME on physical development, sensorimotor behavior, and motor neuron properties using a multidisciplinary approach of physical, biochemical, and behavioral assessments along with brain slice electrophysiology and in vivo magnetic resonance imaging. Methadone accumulated in the placenta and fetal brain, but methadone levels in offspring dropped rapidly at birth which was associated with symptoms and behaviors consistent with neonatal opioid withdrawal. PME produced substantial impairments in offspring physical growth, activity in an open field, and sensorimotor milestone acquisition. Furthermore, these behavioral alterations were associated with reduced neuronal density in the motor cortex and a disruption in motor neuron intrinsic properties and local circuit connectivity. The present study adds to the limited body of work examining PME by providing a comprehensive, translationally relevant characterization of how PME disrupts offspring physical and neurobehavioral development.Item Prenatal Opioid Exposure Impairs Endocannabinoid and Glutamate Transmission in the Dorsal Striatum(Society for Neuroscience, 2022-04-20) Grecco, Gregory G.; Muñoz, Braulio; Di Prisco, Gonzalo Viana; Doud, Emma H.; Fritz, Brandon M.; Maulucci, Danielle; Gao, Yong; Mosley, Amber L.; Baucum, Anthony J.; Atwood, Brady K.; Pharmacology and Toxicology, School of MedicineThe opioid crisis has contributed to a growing population of children exposed to opioids during fetal development; however, many of the long-term effects of opioid exposure on development are unknown. We previously demonstrated that opioids have deleterious effects on endocannabinoid plasticity at glutamate synapses in the dorsal striatum of adolescent rodents, but it is unclear whether prenatal opioid exposure produces similar neuroadaptations. Using a mouse model of prenatal methadone exposure (PME), we performed proteomics, phosphoproteomics, and patch-clamp electrophysiology in the dorsolateral striatum (DLS) and dorsomedial striatum (DMS) to examine synaptic functioning in adolescent PME offspring. PME impacted the proteome and phosphoproteome in a region- and sex-dependent manner. Many proteins and phosphorylated proteins associated with glutamate transmission were differentially abundant in PME offspring, which was associated with reduced glutamate release in the DLS and altered the rise time of excitatory events in the DMS. Similarly, the intrinsic excitability properties of DMS neurons were significantly affected by PME. Last, pathway analyses revealed an enrichment in retrograde endocannabinoid signaling in the DLS, but not in the DMS, of males. Electrophysiology studies confirmed that endocannabinoid-mediated synaptic depression was impaired in the DLS, but not DMS, of PME-males. These results indicate that PME induces persistent neuroadaptations in the dorsal striatum and could contribute to the aberrant behavioral development described in offspring with prenatal opioid exposure.