- Browse by Author
Browsing by Author "Pierchala, Brian A."
Now showing 1 - 10 of 13
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Analysis of translatomic changes in the Ubqln2P497S model of ALS reveals that motor neurons express muscle-associated genes in non-disease states(Frontiers Media, 2024-11-19) Stansberry, Wesley M.; Fiur, Natalie C.; Robins, Melissa M.; Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineIntroduction: Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a devastating neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressively worsening motor symptoms that lead to eventual fatal paralysis. The number of gene mutations associated with ALS have increased dramatically in recent years, suggesting heterogeneity in the etiology of ALS and the need to develop new models of the disease that encompass these pathologies. In 2011, mutations in the UBQLN2 gene were identified in families with both ALS and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) and have since been linked to ubiquitinated TDP43 inclusion pathology. The involvement of UBQLN2 in ubiquitination and proteasome function suggests an important role in proteostasis, which is reported to be impaired in ALS. Methods: A UBQLN2 mouse model was generated for the P497S mutation and recapitulates some of the motor symptoms of ALS. We utilized ribosomal profiling followed by mRNA sequencing of associated transcripts to characterize gene expression changes of motor neurons in the Ubqln2P497S model and evaluated ALS phenotypes in these animals. Results: At 12 months of age, we observed reduced motor neuron survival and neuromuscular junction denervation in these mice that translated into motor deficits observed in locomotor behavioral trials. The sequencing of motor neuron transcripts revealed that Wnt pathways and muscle-related transcripts were downregulated in Ubqln2P497S mice, while metabolic pathways were upregulated. Discussion: Surprisingly, genes often reported to be muscle-specific, such as Desmin and Acta1, were expressed in motor neurons and were dramatically downregulated in symptomatic Ubqln2P497S mice. The expression of muscle transcripts by motor neurons suggests their potentially supportive role in skeletal muscle maintenance.Item Cell non-autonomous requirement of p75 in the development of geniculate oral sensory neurons(Springer Nature, 2020-12-17) Tang, Tao; Donnelly, Christopher R.; Shah, Amol A.; Bradley, Robert M.; Mistretta, Charlotte M.; Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy and Cell Biology, School of MedicineDuring development of the peripheral taste system, oral sensory neurons of the geniculate ganglion project via the chorda tympani nerve to innervate taste buds in fungiform papillae. Germline deletion of the p75 neurotrophin receptor causes dramatic axon guidance and branching deficits, leading to a loss of geniculate neurons. To determine whether the developmental functions of p75 in geniculate neurons are cell autonomous, we deleted p75 specifically in Phox2b + oral sensory neurons (Phox2b-Cre; p75fx/fx) or in neural crest-derived cells (P0-Cre; p75fx/fx) and examined geniculate neuron development. In germline p75−/− mice half of all geniculate neurons were lost. The proportion of Phox2b + neurons, as compared to Phox2b-pinna-projecting neurons, was not altered, indicating that both populations were affected similarly. Chorda tympani nerve recordings demonstrated that p75−/− mice exhibit profound deficits in responses to taste and tactile stimuli. In contrast to p75−/− mice, there was no loss of geniculate neurons in either Phox2b-Cre; p75fx/fx or P0-Cre; p75fx/fx mice. Electrophysiological analyses demonstrated that Phox2b-Cre; p75fx/fx mice had normal taste and oral tactile responses. There was a modest but significant loss of fungiform taste buds in Phox2b-Cre; p75fx/fx mice, although there was not a loss of chemosensory innervation of the remaining fungiform taste buds. Overall, these data suggest that the developmental functions of p75 are largely cell non-autonomous and require p75 expression in other cell types of the chorda tympani circuit.Item Correction to: Probing the multimodal fungiform papilla: complex peripheral nerve endings of chorda tympani taste and mechanosensitive fibers before and after Hedgehog pathway inhibition(Springer, 2022) Donnelly, Christopher R.; Kumari, Archana; Li, Libo; Vesela, Iva; Bradley, Robert M.; Mistretta, Charlotte M.; Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineThis corrects the article "Probing the multimodal fungiform papilla: complex peripheral nerve endings of chorda tympani taste and mechanosensitive fibers before and after Hedgehog pathway inhibition" in Cell Tissue Res, volume 387 on page 225.Item DLK signaling in axotomized neurons triggers complement activation and loss of upstream synapses(Elsevier, 2024) Asghari Adib, Elham; Shadrach, Jennifer L.; Reilly-Jankowiak, Lauren; Dwivedi, Manish K.; Rogers, Abigail E.; Shahzad, Shameena; Passino, Ryan; Giger, Roman J.; Pierchala, Brian A.; Collins, Catherine A.; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineAxotomized spinal motoneurons (MNs) lose presynaptic inputs following peripheral nerve injury; however, the cellular mechanisms that lead to this form of synapse loss are currently unknown. Here, we delineate a critical role for neuronal kinase dual leucine zipper kinase (DLK)/MAP3K12, which becomes activated in axotomized neurons. Studies with conditional knockout mice indicate that DLK signaling activation in injured MNs triggers the induction of phagocytic microglia and synapse loss. Aspects of the DLK-regulated response include expression of C1q first from the axotomized MN and then later in surrounding microglia, which subsequently phagocytose presynaptic components of upstream synapses. Pharmacological ablation of microglia inhibits the loss of cholinergic C boutons from axotomized MNs. Together, the observations implicate a neuronal mechanism, governed by the DLK, in the induction of inflammation and the removal of synapses.Item EGR4 is critical for cell-fate determination and phenotypic maintenance of geniculate ganglion neurons underlying sweet and umami taste(National Academy of Science, 2023) Banik, Debarghya Dutta; Martin, Louis J.; Tang, Tao; Soboloff, Jonathan; Tourtellotte, Warren G.; Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineThe sense of taste starts with activation of receptor cells in taste buds by chemical stimuli which then communicate this signal via innervating oral sensory neurons to the CNS. The cell bodies of oral sensory neurons reside in the geniculate ganglion (GG) and nodose/petrosal/jugular ganglion. The geniculate ganglion contains two main neuronal populations: BRN3A+ somatosensory neurons that innervate the pinna and PHOX2B+ sensory neurons that innervate the oral cavity. While much is known about the different taste bud cell subtypes, considerably less is known about the molecular identities of PHOX2B+ sensory subpopulations. In the GG, as many as 12 different subpopulations have been predicted from electrophysiological studies, while transcriptional identities exist for only 3 to 6. Importantly, the cell fate pathways that diversify PHOX2B+ oral sensory neurons into these subpopulations are unknown. The transcription factor EGR4 was identified as being highly expressed in GG neurons. EGR4 deletion causes GG oral sensory neurons to lose their expression of PHOX2B and other oral sensory genes and up-regulate BRN3A. This is followed by a loss of chemosensory innervation of taste buds, a loss of type II taste cells responsive to bitter, sweet, and umami stimuli, and a concomitant increase in type I glial-like taste bud cells. These deficits culminate in a loss of nerve responses to sweet and umami taste qualities. Taken together, we identify a critical role of EGR4 in cell fate specification and maintenance of subpopulations of GG neurons, which in turn maintain the appropriate sweet and umami taste receptor cells.Item Identification of a postnatal period of interdependent neurogenesis and apoptosis in peripheral neurons(The Company of Biologists, 2024) Kaminski, Catherine L.; Banik, Debarghya Dutta; Schmitd, Ligia B.; Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineDuring neurogenesis, excessive numbers of neurons are produced in most regions of the central and peripheral nervous systems. Nonessential neurons are eliminated by apoptosis, or programmed cell death. This has been most thoroughly characterized in the peripheral nervous system (PNS) where targets of innervation play a key role in this process. As maturing neurons project axons towards their targets of innervation, they become dependent upon these targets for survival. Survival factors, also called neurotrophic factors, are produced by targets, inhibit apoptosis cascades, and promote further growth and differentiation. Because neurotrophic factors are limited, as is target size, neurons that do not correctly and efficiently innervate targets undergo apoptosis ( Levi-Montalcini, 1987; Davies, 1996). Thus, excessive neurogenesis acts to ensure that sufficient numbers of neurons are produced during development. In the superior cervical ganglion (SCG), this process of neurogenesis and subsequent apoptosis is reported to be complete by postnatal day 3-4 (P3-P4) in mice. Surprisingly, we observed significant numbers of apoptotic neurons out to P14, and neurogenesis was still present at P14 as well. In both the SCG and geniculate ganglion (GG), postnatal neurogenesis was dependent on apoptosis because little or no postnatal neurogenesis was observed in Bax-/- mice, in which apoptosis is eliminated. These results indicate that both neurogenesis and apoptosis continue to occur well after birth in peripheral ganglia, and that neurogenesis depends on apoptosis, suggesting that neurogenesis continues postnatally to replace neurons that are eliminated during synaptic refinement.Item Necroptosis is SARMful to your health(Rockefeller University Press, 2020-08-03) Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy and Cell Biology, School of MedicineNecroptosis is a cell death pathway involved in inflammation and disease. In this issue, Ko et al. (2020. J. Cell Biol.https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.201912047) link SARM1, the executioner of Wallerian degeneration of axons, to necroptosis, revealing a unique form of axonal disassembly likely involved in neurodegenerative disorders.Item Neurotrophic factors in the physiology of motor neurons and their role in the pathobiology and therapeutic approach to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis(Frontiers Media, 2023-08-24) Stansberry, Wesley M.; Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineThe discovery of the neurotrophins and their potent survival and trophic effects led to great enthusiasm about their therapeutic potential to rescue dying neurons in neurodegenerative diseases. The further discovery that brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) and glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) had potent survival-promoting activity on motor neurons led to the proposal for their use in motor neuron diseases such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). In this review we synthesize the literature pertaining to the role of NGF, BDNF, CNTF and GDNF on the development and physiology of spinal motor neurons, as well as the preclinical studies that evaluated their potential for the treatment of ALS. Results from the clinical trials of these molecules will also be described and, with the aid of decades of hindsight, we will discuss what can reasonably be concluded and how this information can inform future clinical development of neurotrophic factors for ALS.Item Oral Sensory Neurons of the Geniculate Ganglion That Express Tyrosine Hydroxylase Comprise a Subpopulation That Contacts Type II and Type III Taste Bud Cells(Society for Neuroscience, 2022-10-13) Tang, Tao; Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy, Cell Biology and Physiology, School of MedicineOral sensory neurons of the geniculate ganglion (GG) innervate taste papillae and buds on the tongue and soft palate. Electrophysiological recordings of these neurons and fibers revealed complexity in the number of unique response profiles observed, suggesting there are several distinct neuronal subtypes. Molecular descriptions of these subpopulations are incomplete. We report here the identification of a subpopulation of GG oral sensory neurons in mice by expression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH). TH-expressing geniculate neurons represent 10–20% of oral sensory neurons and these neurons innervate taste buds in fungiform and anterior foliate taste papillae on the surface of the tongue, as well as taste buds in the soft palate. While 35–50% of taste buds on the tongue are innervated by these TH+ neurons, 100% of soft palate taste buds are innervated. These neurons did not have extragemmal processes outside of taste buds and did not express the mechanosensory neuron-associated gene Ret, suggesting they are chemosensory and not somatosensory neurons. Within taste buds, TH-expressing fibers contacted both Type II and Type III cells, raising the possibility that they are responsive to more than one taste quality. During this analysis we also identified a rare TH+ taste receptor cell type that was found in only 12–25% of taste buds and co-expressed TRPM5, suggesting it was a Type II cell. Taken together, TH-expressing GG oral sensory neurons innervate taste buds preferentially in the soft palate and contact Type II and Type III taste bud receptor cells.Item Plasma membrane localization of the GFL receptor components: a nexus for receptor crosstalk(Springer, 2020-08-07) Donnelly, Christopher R.; Pierchala, Brian A.; Anatomy and Cell Biology, School of MedicineThe glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) family ligands (GFLs) comprise a group of four homologous and potent growth factors that includes GDNF, neurturin (NRTN), artemin (ARTN), and persephin (PSPN). The survival, growth, and mitotic activities of the GFLs are conveyed by a single receptor tyrosine kinase, Ret. The GFLs do not bind directly to Ret in order to activate it, and instead bind with high affinity to glycerophosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored coreceptors called the GDNF family receptor-αs (GFRαs). Several mechanisms have recently been identified that influence the trafficking of Ret and GFRαs in and out of the plasma membrane, thereby affecting their availability for ligand binding, as well as their levels by targeting to degradative pathways. This review describes these mechanisms and their powerful effects on GFL signaling and function. We also describe the recent discovery that p75 and Ret form a signaling complex, also regulated by plasma membrane shuttling, that either enhances GFL survival signals or p75 pro-apoptotic signals, dependent on the cellular context.