Browsing by Subject "Synaptic transmission"
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Item Open Access Age-dependent effects of short-term intermittent fasting and rapamycin treatment in Zebrafish (Danio Rerio) brain(2020-05) Birand, Ergül Dilan ÇelebiWorld populations are rapidly aging, and there is an urgent need to develop interventions that prevent or reverse age-related deterioration of health. To date, several approaches have been developed to extend health span. Among these, non genetic interventions have a higher potential to be utilized in translational studies. Caloric restriction (CR) and its pharmacological mimetic rapamycin, are two applications that have been shown to reliably extend life and health span across species. Despite a growing body of knowledge on how CR and rapamycin show their beneficial effects, their molecular mechanisms in the brain are not completely understood. Furthermore, most studies applied life-long CR, which is not suitable for translational research. To fill this gap, we investigated whether short-term durations of a CR approach intermittent fasting (IF) or rapamycin altered cellular and molecular markers of critical processes in the brain as well as metabolic parameters in the body. To assess how the age of the subjects affect the outcome of the treatments, we included young (6-10 months old) and old (26-31 months) zebrafish, which has recently emerged as a suitable model for gerontological research. Our results demonstrated that IF decreased whole-body glucose and cortisol levels, and increased neural progenitor marker DCAMKL1 in young and old animals. While this proliferation-promoting effect was preceded by suppression of mTOR activity in young, the upregulation of foxm1 and reduced autophagic flux as measured by LC3 II/LC3-I ratio were observed in old animals. Rapamycin, on the other hand, did not alter the metabolic parameters and induced entirely different molecular profiles at young and old ages. The most notable changes in young animals were reduced mTOR activity, LC3-II/LC3-I ratio and expression levels of a global proliferation marker PCNA. In old animals, the marker of activated astrocytes (i.e. GFAP) was decreased, indicating lower neuroinflammation, whereas excitatory-inhibitory balance as measured by PSD-95/Gephyrin ratio was shifted towards a more excitatory state. These results suggested that IF and rapamycin induced distinct metabolic profiles in young and old animals. Furthermore, there was an age dependent reciprocal relationship between proliferation and autophagy, which might be partly due to differential regulation of mTOR activity. Interestingly, rapamycin treatment was more effective in suppressing mTOR activity in young animals, and compared to IF. Nevertheless, these results suggested that rapamycin crosses the blood-brain barrier in zebrafish, and that short-term durations of IF or rapamycin were sufficient to alter the expression levels of key proteins involved in critical mechanisms in the brain.Item Open Access Aging alters the molecular dynamics of synapses in a sexually dimorphic pattern in zebrafish (Danio rerio)(Elsevier, 2017-06) Karoglu, Elif Tugce; Halim, Dilara Ozge; Erkaya, Bahriye; Altaytas, Ferda; Arslan-Ergul, Ayca; Konu, Ozlen; Adams, Michelle M.The zebrafish has become a popular model for studying normal brain aging due to its large fecundity, conserved genome, and available genetic tools; but little data exists about neurobiological age-related alterations. The current study tested the hypothesis of an association between brain aging and synaptic protein loss across males and females. Western blot analysis of synaptophysin (SYP), a presynaptic vesicle protein, and postsynaptic density-95 (PSD-95) and gephyrin (GEP), excitatory and inhibitory postsynaptic receptor-clustering proteins, respectively, was performed in young, middle-aged, and old male and female zebrafish (Danio rerio) brains. Univariate and multivariate analyses demonstrated that PSD-95 significantly increased in aged females and SYP significantly decreased in males, but GEP was stable. Thus, these key synaptic proteins vary across age in a sexually dimorphic manner, which has been observed in other species, and these consequences may represent selective vulnerabilities for aged males and females. These data expand our knowledge of normal aging in zebrafish, as well as further establish this model as an appropriate one for examining human brain aging.Item Open Access Regulation of Homer and group I metabotropic glutamate receptors by nicotine(Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd., 2005) Kane, J. K.; Hwang, Y.; Konu, O.; Loughlin, S. E.; Leslie, F. M.; Li, M. D.The present study focuses on the nicotine-induced modulation of mRNA and protein expression of a number of genes involved in glutamatergic synaptic transmission in rat brain over different time periods of exposure. A subchronic (3 days) but not the chronic (7 or 14 days) administration of nicotine resulted in the up-regulation of Homer2a/b mRNA in the amygdala while in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) no change in expression of either Homer2a/b or Homer1b/c was observed. Although the increase in Homer2a/b mRNA was not translated into the protein level in the amygdala, a slight but significant up-regulation of Homer1b/c protein was observed in the same region at day 3. Both Homer forms were up-regulated at the protein level in the VTA at day 3. In the nucleus accumbens, 14 days of nicotine treatment up-regulated mRNA of Homer2b/c by 68.2% (P < 0.05), while the short form Homer1a gene was down-regulated by 65.0% at day 3 (P < 0.05). In regard to other components of the glutamatergic signalling, we identified an acute and intermittent increase in the mRNA and protein levels of mGluR1 and mGluR5 in the amygdala. In the VTA, however, the effects of nicotine on mGluR mRNA expression were long-lasting but rather specific to mGluR1. Nevertheless, mGluR1 protein levels in the VTA area were up-regulated only at day 3, as in the amygdala. These data provide further evidence for the involvement of nicotine in the glutamatergic neuronal synaptic activity in vivo, suggesting a role for the newly identified Homer proteins in this paradigm.Item Open Access Strain-and region-specific gene expression profiles in mouse brain in response to chronic nicotine treatment(Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, 2008) Wang, J.; Gutala, R.; Hwang, Y. Y.; Kim J. -M.; Konu, O.; Ma, J. Z.; Li, M. D.A pathway-focused complementary DNA microarray and gene ontology analysis were used to investigate gene expression profiles in the amygdala, hippocampus, nucleus accumbens, prefrontal cortex (PFC) and ventral tegmental area of C3H/HeJ and C57BL/6J mice receiving nicotine in drinking water (100 μg/ml in 2% saccharin for 2 weeks). A balanced experimental design and rigorous statistical analysis have led to the identification of 3.5-22.1% and 4.1-14.3% of the 638 sequence-verified genes as significantly modulated in the aforementioned brain regions of the C3H/HeJ and C57BL/6J strains, respectively. Comparisons of differential expression among brain tissues showed that only a small number of genes were altered in multiple brain regions, suggesting presence of a brain region-specific transcriptional response to nicotine. Subsequent principal component analysis and Expression Analysis Systematic Explorer analysis showed significant enrichment of biological processes both in C3H/HeJ and C57BL/6J mice, i.e. cell cycle/proliferation, organogenesis and transmission of nerve impulse. Finally, we verified the observed changes in expression using real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction for six representative genes in the PFC region, providing an independent replication of our microarray results. Together, this report represents the first comprehensive gene expression profiling investigation of the changes caused by nicotine in brain tissues of the two mouse strains known to exhibit differential behavioral and physiological responses to nicotine.