Publications by authors named "Elissa Chesler"

Background: Opioid addiction is a worldwide public health crisis. In the United States, for example, opioids cause more drug overdose deaths than any other substance. Yet, opioid addiction treatments have limited efficacy, meaning that additional treatments are needed.

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Opioid misuse, addiction, and associated overdose deaths remain global public health crises. Despite the tremendous need for pharmacological treatments, current options are limited in number, use, and effectiveness. Fundamental leaps forward in our understanding of the biology driving opioid addiction are needed to guide development of more effective medication-assisted therapies.

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Enhlink is a computational tool for scATAC-seq data analysis, facilitating precise interrogation of enhancer function at the single-cell level. It employs an ensemble approach incorporating technical and biological covariates to infer condition-specific regulatory DNA linkages. Enhlink can integrate multi-omic data for enhanced specificity, when available.

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The goal of systems biology is to gain a network level understanding of how gene interactions influence biological states, and ultimately inform upon human disease. Given the scale and scope of systems biology studies, resource constraints often limit researchers when validating genome-wide phenomena and potentially lead to an incomplete understanding of the underlying mechanisms. Further, prioritization strategies are often biased towards known entities (e.

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Drugs of abuse induce neuroadaptations, including synaptic plasticity, that are critical for transition to addiction, and genes and pathways that regulate these neuroadaptations are potential therapeutic targets. () is an actin-regulating gene that plays an important role in synapse maturation and dendritic arborization and has been implicated in substance abuse and intellectual disability in humans. Here, we mine the KOMP2 data and find that 2 knock-out mice show emotionality phenotypes that are predictive of addiction vulnerability.

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Article Synopsis
  • Research on various inbred mouse strains has advanced our understanding of genetic variants linked to diseases, with a vast array of traits cataloged for public access.* -
  • New mouse models and enhanced genomic data sets help improve trait-variant analysis, although issues like sparse genotypes and data incompatibility remain obstacles.* -
  • The development of GenomeMUSter, a comprehensive data resource, addresses these issues by offering extensive single-nucleotide variant data, facilitating cross-species comparisons and broadening the applications in genetic research related to health and disease.*
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Substance use disorders are heritable disorders characterized by compulsive drug use, the biological mechanisms for which remain largely unknown. Genetic correlations reveal that predisposing drug-naïve phenotypes, including anxiety, depression, novelty preference and sensation seeking, are predictive of drug-use phenotypes, thereby implicating shared genetic mechanisms. High-throughput behavioral screening in knockout (KO) mice allows efficient discovery of the function of genes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers have developed the GenomeMUSter data resource to improve the analysis of genetic variants in laboratory mouse strains, helping to better understand complex diseases.
  • This resource features detailed allelic data for 657 mouse strains at over 106 million segregating sites, which aids in linking various traits to genetic variants.
  • The platform also allows for integration with phenotype databases and supports advanced analyses, such as comparing mouse and human data for conditions like Type 2 Diabetes and substance use disorders, enhancing genetics research in health.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The Mouse Phenome Database is a curated repository that provides detailed information and tools for analyzing attributes of various mouse populations, including 657 mouse strains and community standard ontologies.
  • - It has evolved from focusing on inbred strains to encompassing diverse populations like the Diversity Outbred and Collaborative Cross, and recently includes data from the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium.
  • - The database offers an interactive tool suite for users to perform analyses such as correlation and trait pattern matching, supporting research on phenotypic variation related to health and disease across different lifespans.
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Brain transcriptional variation is a heritable trait that mediates complex behaviors, including addiction. Expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) mapping reveals genomic regions harboring genetic variants that influence transcript abundance. In this study, we profiled transcript abundance in the striatum of 386 Diversity Outbred (J:DO) mice of both sexes using RNA-Seq.

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Substance use disorders (SUDs) are heritable disorders characterized by compulsive drug use, but the biological mechanisms driving addiction remain largely unknown. Genetic correlations reveal that predisposing drug-naïve phenotypes, including anxiety, depression, novelty preference, and sensation seeking, are predictive of drug-use phenotypes, implicating shared genetic mechanisms. Because of this relationship, high-throughput behavioral screening of predictive phenotypes in knockout (KO) mice allows efficient discovery of genes likely to be involved in drug use.

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Brain transcriptional variation is a heritable trait that mediates complex behaviors, including addiction. Expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) mapping reveals genomic regions harboring genetic variants that influence transcript abundance. In this study, we profiled transcript abundance in the striatum of 386 Diversity Outbred (J:DO) mice of both sexes using RNA-Seq.

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Enhancers play a crucial role in regulating gene expression and their functional status can be queried with cell type precision using using single-cell (sc)ATAC-seq. To facilitate analysis of such data, we developed Enhlink, a novel computational approach that leverages single-cell signals to infer linkages between regulatory DNA sequences, such as enhancers and promoters. Enhlink uses an ensemble strategy that integrates cell-level technical covariates to control for batch effects and biological covariates to infer robust condition-specific links and their associated -values.

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Article Synopsis
  • The replicability of findings from mouse and rat studies is crucial, yet often hindered by strict standardization, which can limit the broader applicability of results.
  • Alternative methods that evaluate variability across different labs can provide a better understanding of how results differ in independent settings.
  • In a study involving three labs and 152 results from five separate studies, it was found that a significant number of originally statistically significant results failed to replicate, highlighting the importance of considering genotype-laboratory interactions for improving overall replicability.
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The gut-brain axis is increasingly recognized as an important pathway involved in cocaine use disorder. Microbial products of the murine gut have been shown to affect striatal gene expression, and depletion of the microbiome by antibiotic treatment alters cocaine-induced behavioral sensitization in C57BL/6J male mice. Some reports suggest that cocaine-induced behavioral sensitization is correlated with drug self-administration behavior in mice.

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Existing phenotype ontologies were originally developed to represent phenotypes that manifest as a character state in relation to a wild-type or other reference. However, these do not include the phenotypic trait or attribute categories required for the annotation of genome-wide association studies (GWAS), Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) mappings or any population-focussed measurable trait data. The integration of trait and biological attribute information with an ever increasing body of chemical, environmental and biological data greatly facilitates computational analyses and it is also highly relevant to biomedical and clinical applications.

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Histamine plays pivotal role in normal physiology and dysregulated production of histamine or signaling through histamine receptors (HRH) can promote pathology. Previously, we showed that Bordetella pertussis or pertussis toxin can induce histamine sensitization in laboratory inbred mice and is genetically controlled by Hrh1/HRH1. HRH1 allotypes differ at three amino acid residues with P-V-L and L-M-S, imparting sensitization and resistance respectively.

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Impulsive behavior and impulsivity are heritable phenotypes that are strongly associated with risk for substance use disorders. Identifying the neurogenetic mechanisms that influence impulsivity may also reveal novel biological insights into addiction vulnerability. Our past studies using the BXD and Collaborative Cross (CC) recombinant inbred mouse panels have revealed that behavioral indicators of impulsivity measured in a reversal-learning task are heritable and are genetically correlated with aspects of intravenous cocaine self-administration.

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The gut microbiome is thought to play a critical role in the onset and development of psychiatric disorders, including depression and substance use disorder (SUD). To test the hypothesis that the microbiome affects addiction predisposing behaviors and cocaine intravenous self-administration (IVSA) and to identify specific microbes involved in the relationship, we performed 16S rRNA gene sequencing on feces from 228 diversity outbred mice. Twelve open field measures, two light-dark assay measures, one hole board and novelty place preference measure significantly differed between mice that acquired cocaine IVSA (ACQ) and those that failed to acquire IVSA (FACQ).

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Article Synopsis
  • - The Mouse Phenome Database (MPD) is a comprehensive resource that collects and organizes phenotype and genotype data from mouse studies, supported by the NIH and compliant with FAIR data principles.
  • - MPD features data from over 6000 mouse strains and populations, incorporating various characteristics related to genetics, behavior, morphology, and disease, and provides detailed metadata to enhance data usability.
  • - The database includes analysis tools for users to visualize and aggregate data from different studies, ensuring access to high-quality, reproducible results that are relevant for translational research.
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Article Synopsis
  • Cocaine use and related overdose deaths have dramatically increased in the U.S. over the past decade, yet there are no approved medications for cocaine use disorder (CUD) due to limited understanding of its causes.
  • Genetic factors are known to play a role in CUD risk, but current research has identified very few relevant genes, primarily using studies in mice which lack genetic diversity.
  • A new study used a comprehensive 19-day protocol to measure cocaine-induced behaviors across 51 genetically diverse mouse strains, revealing significant differences in sensitivity and sensitization to cocaine, which can help identify the genetic basis of addiction and aid in future research.
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Rationale: Cocaine use disorder (CUD) is a highly heritable form of substance use disorder, with genetic variation accounting for a substantial proportion of the risk for transitioning from recreational use to a clinically impairing addiction. With repeated exposures to cocaine, psychomotor and incentive sensitization are observed in rodents. These phenomena are thought to model behavioral changes elicited by the drug that contribute to the progression into addiction, but little is known about how genetic variation may moderate these consequences.

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Identifying the genetic determinants of pain is a scientific imperative given the magnitude of the global health burden that pain causes. Here, we report a genetic screen for nociception, performed under the auspices of the International Mouse Phenotyping Consortium. A biased set of 110 single-gene knockout mouse strains was screened for 1 or more nociception and hypersensitivity assays, including chemical nociception (formalin) and mechanical and thermal nociception (von Frey filaments and Hargreaves tests, respectively), with or without an inflammatory agent (complete Freund's adjuvant).

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Background: A strong predictor for the development of alcohol use disorder (AUD) is altered sensitivity to the intoxicating effects of alcohol. Individual differences in the initial sensitivity to alcohol are controlled in part by genetic factors. Mice offer a powerful tool to elucidate the genetic basis of behavioral and physiological traits relevant to AUD, but conventional experimental crosses have only been able to identify large chromosomal regions rather than specific genes.

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