Publications by authors named "Amy Aylsworth"

Modern technologies for preclinical research, including organ-on-a-chip, organoids- and assembloid-based systems, have rapidly emerged as pivotal tools for elucidating disease mechanisms and assessing the efficacy of putative therapeutics. In this context, advanced models of Parkinson's Disease (PD) offer the potential to accelerate drug discovery by enabling effective platforms that recapitulate both physiological and pathological attributes of the environment. Although these systems often aim at replicating the PD-associated loss of dopaminergic (DA) neurons, only a few have modelled the degradation of dopaminergic pathways as a way to mimic the disruption of downstream regulation mechanisms that define the characteristic motor symptoms of the disease.

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Article Synopsis
  • Human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and iPSC-derived neurons (iPSC-Ns) show promise for cell-based therapies in regenerative medicine, but effective cryopreservation is key for their successful use.
  • A study found that N-aryl-D-aldonamides (specifically 2FA), an ice recrystallization inhibitor, improved the viability and recovery of iPSCs after thawing without affecting their pluripotency, while also enhancing the functional activity of iPSC-Ns compared to traditional cryopreservation methods.
  • Optimizing cryopreservation techniques using IRIs could significantly advance the viability and utility of iPSCs and iPSC-Ns, making them more viable for clinical applications and
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The goal of this study was to identify cocktails of drugs able to protect cultured rodent cortical neurons against increasing durations of oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD). As expected, a cocktail composed of an NMDA and AMPA receptor antagonists and a voltage gated Ca channel blocker (MK-801, CNQX and nifedipine, respectively) provided complete neuroprotection against mild OGD. Increasingly longer durations of OGD necessitated increasing the doses of MK-801 and CNQX, until these cocktails ultimately failed to provide neuroprotection against supra-lethal OGD, even at maximal drug concentrations.

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Human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived neurons are of interest for studying neurological disease mechanisms, developing potential therapies and deepening our understanding of the human nervous system. However, compared to an extensive history of practice with primary rodent neuron cultures, human iPSC-neurons still require more robust characterization of expression of neuronal receptors and ion channels and functional and predictive pharmacological responses. In this study, we differentiated human amniotic fluid-derived iPSCs into a mixed population of neurons (AF-iNs).

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Exposing cultured cortical neurons to stimulatory agents - the K channel blocker 4-aminopyridine (4-ap), and the GABA receptor antagonist bicuculline (bic) - for 48 h induces down-regulated synaptic scaling, and preconditions neurons to withstand subsequent otherwise lethal 'stroke-in-a-dish' insults; however, the degree to which usual neuronal function remains is unknown. As a result, multi-electrode array and patch-clamp electrophysiological techniques were employed to characterize hallmarks of spontaneous synaptic activity over a 12-day preconditioning/insult experiment. Spiking frequency increased 8-fold immediately upon 4-ap/bic treatment but declined within the 48 h treatment window to sub-baseline levels that persisted long after washout.

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Synthetic cannabinoids are marketed as legal alternatives to Δ-THC, and are a growing worldwide concern as these drugs are associated with severe adverse effects. Unfortunately, insufficient information regarding the physiological and pharmacological effects of emerging synthetic cannabinoids (ESCs) makes their regulation by government authorities difficult. One strategy used to evade regulation is to distribute isomers of regulated synthetic cannabinoids.

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Activation of cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1) inhibits synaptic transmission in hippocampal neurons. The goal of this study was to evaluate the ability of benchmark and emerging synthetic cannabinoids to suppress neuronal activity in vitro using two complementary techniques, Ca(2+) spiking and multi-electrode arrays (MEAs). Neuron culture and fluorescence imaging conditions were extensively optimized to provide maximum sensitivity for detection of suppression of neural activity by cannabinoids.

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Preconditioning is a well established neuroprotective modality. However, the mechanism and relative efficacy of neuroprotection between diverse preconditioners is poorly defined. Cultured neurons were preconditioned by 4-aminopyridine and bicuculline (4-AP/bic), rendering neurons tolerant to normally lethal (sufficient to kill most neurons) oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) or a chemical OGD-mimic, ouabain/TBOA, by suppression of extracellular glutamate (glutamateex) elevations.

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Neuronal activity in vitro exhibits network bursts characterized by brief periods of increased spike rates. Recent work shows that a subpopulation of neurons reliably predicts the occurrence of network bursts. Here, we examined the role of burst predictors in cultures undergoing an in vitro model of cerebral ischemia.

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Semaphorin 3A (Sema3A) increased significantly in mouse brain following cerebral ischemia. However, the role of Sema3A in stroke brain remains unknown. Our aim was to determine wether Sema3A functions as a vascular permeability factor and contributes to ischemic brain damage.

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CRMP proteins play critical regulatory roles during semaphorin-mediated neurite outgrowth, neuronal differentiation and death. Albeit having a high degree of structure and sequence resemblance to that of liver dihydropyrimidinase, purified rodent brain CRMPs do not hydrolyze dihydropyrimidinase substrates. Here we found that mouse CRMP3 has robust histone H4 deacetylase activity.

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Membrane rafts, rich in sphingolipids and cholesterol, play an important role in neuronal membrane domain-specific signaling events, maintaining synapses and dendritic spines. The purpose of this study is to examine the neuronal response to membrane raft disruption. Membrane rafts of 8 DIV primary neuronal cultures were isolated based on the resistance to Triton X-100 and ability to float in sucrose gradients.

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Microglia are the 'immune cells' of the brain and their activation plays a vital role in the pathogenesis of many neurodegenerative diseases. Activated microglia produce high levels of pro-inflammatory factors, such as TNFα, causing neurotoxicity. Here we show that vimentin played a key role in controlling microglia activation and neurotoxicity during cerebral ischemia.

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This study determined how preconditioned neurons responded to oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) to result in neuroprotection instead of neurotoxicity. Neurons preconditioned using chronically elevated synaptic activity displayed suppressed elevations in extracellular glutamate ([glutamateex ]) and intracellular Ca(2+) (Ca(2+) in ) during OGD. The glutamate uptake inhibitor TBOA induced neurotoxicity, but at a longer OGD duration for preconditioned cultures, suggestive of delayed up-regulation of transporter activity relative to non-preconditioned cultures.

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Neuropilins (NRPs) are receptors for the major chemorepulsive axonal guidance cue semaphorins (Sema). The interaction of Sema3A/NRP1 during development leads to the collapse of growth cones. Here we show that Sema3A also induces death of cultured cortical neurons through NRP1.

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Intracellular calcium influx through NMDA receptors triggers a cascade of deleterious signaling events which lead to neuronal death in neurological conditions such as stroke. However, it is not clear as to the molecular mechanism underlying early damage response from axons and dendrites which are important in maintaining a network essential for the survival of neurons. Here, we examined changes of axons treated with glutamate and showed the appearance of betaIII-tubulin positive varicosities on axons before the appearance of neuronal death.

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Collapsin response mediator proteins (CRMPs) are key modulators of cytoskeletons during neurite outgrowth in response to chemorepulsive guidance molecules. However, their roles in adult injured neurons are not well understood. We previously demonstrated that CRMP3 underwent calcium-dependent N-terminal protein cleavage during excitotoxicity-induced neurite retraction and neuronal death.

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Strategies to provide neuroprotection and to promote regenerative axonal outgrowth in the injured brain are thwarted by the plethora of axon growth inhibitors and the ligand promiscuity of some of their receptors. Especially, new neurons derived from ischemia-stimulated neurogenesis must integrate this multitude of inhibitory molecular cues, generated as a result of cortical damage, into a functional response. More often than not the response is one of growth cone collapse, axonal retraction and neuronal death.

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Collapsin response mediator proteins (CRMPs) are important brain-specific proteins with distinct functions in modulating growth cone collapse and axonal guidance during brain development. Our previous studies have shown that calpain cleaves CRMP3 in the adult mouse brain during cerebral ischemia [S.T.

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