Publications by authors named "Graham H Diering"

Sleep is an essential behavior that supports lifelong brain health and cognition. Neuronal synapses are a major target for restorative sleep function and a locus of dysfunction in response to sleep deprivation (SD). Synapse density is highly dynamic during development, becoming stabilized with maturation to adulthood, suggesting sleep exerts distinct synaptic functions between development and adulthood.

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Lentiviral vector-transduced T-cells were approved by the FDA as gene therapy anti-cancer medications. Little is known about the host genetic variation effects on the safety and efficacy of the lentiviral vector gene delivery system. To narrow this knowledge-gap, we characterized hepatic gene delivery by lentiviral vectors across the Collaborative Cross (CC) mouse genetic reference population.

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  • Sleep disruption and Tau accumulation are linked to cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease, but the relationship between them is not fully understood.
  • In a study using PS19 mice, early-onset hyperarousal and selective sleep disruption were observed, with significant memory decline due to chronic sleep disruption occurring in males.
  • Despite earlier hyperarousal in females, they showed more resilience in cognitive decline compared to males, indicating potential sex-specific differences in the effects of sleep disruption on cognitive health.
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  • Sleep disruption is common in aging and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's, contributing to cognitive decline and AD progression, making better sleep treatments necessary.
  • Current sleep medications can increase the risk of AD, prompting researchers to explore alternatives like the endocannabinoid system and fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) as potential sleep aids.
  • While inhibiting FAAH showed short-term benefits for sleep in a model of Tauopathy, knockout studies indicated that completely disabling FAAH may not be beneficial for overall sleep health or cognitive function.
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  • TRIM9 plays a key role in the development of dendritic filopodia and spines, which are crucial for synapse formation in neurons.
  • It localizes to dendritic structures in the brain and is essential for synaptic responses to the signaling molecule netrin-1.
  • Loss of TRIM9 disrupts the cytoskeleton and alters synaptic receptor composition, impacting neuronal firing rates and undermining synaptic signaling.
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During neuronal development, dynamic filopodia emerge from dendrites and mature into functional dendritic spines during synaptogenesis. Dendritic filopodia and spines respond to extracellular cues, influencing dendritic spine shape and size as well as synaptic function. Previously, the E3 ubiquitin ligase TRIM9 was shown to regulate filopodia in early stages of neuronal development, including netrin-1 dependent axon guidance and branching.

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Sleep is an essential behavior that supports lifelong brain health and cognition. Neuronal synapses are a major target for restorative sleep function and a locus of dysfunction in response to sleep deprivation (SD). Synapse density is highly dynamic during development, becoming stabilized with maturation to adulthood, suggesting sleep exerts distinct synaptic functions between development and adulthood.

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Article Synopsis
  • Sleep disruption is linked to neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's, where impaired synaptic processes may contribute to cognitive decline, particularly through Tau protein aggregation.
  • A study using transgenic mice revealed that PS19 mice experience early loss of sleep during the dark phase, with females showing symptoms earlier than males.
  • Although sleep disruption did not increase Tau pathology in the brain, chronic sleep loss was found to worsen spatial memory decline specifically in male mice.
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Tau-mediated toxicity is associated with cognitive decline and Alzheimer's disease (AD) progression. In particular, tau post-translational modifications (PTMs) are thought to generate aberrant tau species resulting in neuronal dysfunction. Despite being well characterized in postmortem AD brain, it is unclear how caspase-mediated C-terminal tau cleavage promotes neurodegeneration, as few studies have developed the models to dissect this pathogenic mechanism.

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Opioid misuse has dramatically increased over the last few decades resulting in many people suffering from opioid use disorder (OUD). The prevalence of opioid overdose has been driven by the development of new synthetic opioids, increased availability of prescription opioids, and more recently, the COVID-19 pandemic. Coinciding with increases in exposure to opioids, the United States has also observed increases in multiple Narcan (naloxone) administrations as a life-saving measures for respiratory depression, and, thus, consequently, naloxone-precipitated withdrawal.

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Sleep is a conserved and essential process that supports learning and memory. Synapses are a major target of sleep function and a locus of sleep need. Evidence in the literature suggests that the need for sleep has a cellular or microcircuit level basis, and that sleep need can accumulate within localized brain regions as a function of waking activity.

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Neurons express overlapping homeostatic mechanisms to regulate synaptic function and network properties in response to perturbations of neuronal activity. Endocannabinoids (eCBs) are bioactive lipids synthesized in the postsynaptic compartments to regulate synaptic transmission, plasticity, and neuronal excitability primarily through retrograde activation of presynaptic cannabinoid receptor type 1 (CB1). The eCB system is well situated to regulate neuronal network properties and coordinate presynaptic and postsynaptic activity.

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  • Patients with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) experience significant sleep disruptions early in life, which may have lasting developmental effects; researchers investigated this in mice with a SHANK3 gene mutation linked to ASD.
  • They recorded sleep patterns in Shank3 mutated mice and wild-type siblings, exposing them to early life sleep disruption and comparing various behavioral outcomes later in adulthood.
  • Results showed that Shank3 mice slept less and exhibited distinct behavioral changes based on sex and early life sleep disruption, whereas wild-type mice appeared resilient, highlighting potential long-term consequences of sleep issues in genetically vulnerable populations.
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Sleep is an essential behavior that supports brain function and cognition throughout life, in part by acting on neuronal synapses. The synaptic signaling pathways that mediate the restorative benefits of sleep are not fully understood, particularly in the context of development. Endocannabinoids (eCBs) including 2-arachidonyl glycerol (2-AG) and anandamide (AEA), are bioactive lipids that activate cannabinoid receptor, CB1, to regulate synaptic transmission and mediate cognitive functions and many behaviors, including sleep.

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, which encodes the protein tSNARE1, is a high-confidence gene candidate for schizophrenia risk, but nothing is known about its cellular or physiological function. We identified the major gene products of and their cytoplasmic localization and function in endosomal trafficking in cortical neurons. We validated three primary isoforms of expressed in human brain, all of which encode a syntaxin-like Qa SNARE domain.

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Genome-wide association studies linked diacylglycerol kinase eta and iota to mood disorders, including bipolar disorder and schizophrenia, and both genes are expressed throughout the brain. Here, we generated and behaviorally characterized female mice lacking Dgkh alone, Dgki alone, and double Dgkh/Dgki-knockout (dKO) mice. We found that fewer than 30% of newborn pups raised by dKO females survived to weaning, while over 85% of pups survived to weaning when raised by wild-type (WT) females.

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Sleep is an essential physiological behavior that promotes cognitive development and function. Although the switch between sleep/wake cycles is controlled by specific neural circuits, sleep need and the restorative benefits of sleep are likely controlled by cellular mechanisms localized in critical areas of the brain involved in learning and memory including the cortex and hippocampus. However, the molecular basis for the restorative function(s) of sleep that support cognition, or for the homeostatic build-up of sleep need are poorly understood.

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Changes in the properties and postsynaptic abundance of AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs) are major mechanisms underlying various forms of synaptic plasticity, including long-term potentiation (LTP), long-term depression (LTD), and homeostatic scaling. The function and the trafficking of AMPARs to and from synapses is modulated by specific AMPAR GluA1-GluA4 subunits, subunit-specific protein interactors, auxiliary subunits, and posttranslational modifications. Layers of regulation are added to AMPAR tetramers through these different interactions and modifications, increasing the computational power of synapses.

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Memory formation is believed to result from changes in synapse strength and structure. While memories may persist for the lifetime of an organism, the proteins and lipids that make up synapses undergo constant turnover with lifetimes from minutes to days. The molecular basis for memory maintenance may rely on a subset of long-lived proteins (LLPs).

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Learning depends on experience-dependent modification of synaptic efficacy and neuronal connectivity in the brain. We provide direct evidence for physiological roles of the recycling endosome protein GRASP1 in glutamatergic synapse function and animal behavior. Mice lacking GRASP1 showed abnormal excitatory synapse number, synaptic plasticity, and hippocampal-dependent learning and memory due to a failure in learning-induced synaptic AMPAR incorporation.

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Sleep is an essential process that supports learning and memory by acting on synapses through poorly understood molecular mechanisms. Using biochemistry, proteomics, and imaging in mice, we find that during sleep, synapses undergo widespread alterations in composition and signaling, including weakening of synapses through removal and dephosphorylation of synaptic AMPA-type glutamate receptors. These changes are driven by the immediate early gene Homer1a and signaling from group I metabotropic glutamate receptors mGluR1/5.

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Regulation of AMPA receptor (AMPAR) function is a fundamental mechanism controlling synaptic strength during long-term potentiation/depression and homeostatic scaling. AMPAR function and membrane trafficking is controlled by protein-protein interactions, as well as by posttranslational modifications. Phosphorylation of the GluA1 AMPAR subunit at S845 and S831 play especially important roles during synaptic plasticity.

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Bidirectional synaptic plasticity occurs locally at individual synapses during long-term potentiation (LTP) or long-term depression (LTD), or globally during homeostatic scaling. LTP, LTD, and homeostatic scaling alter synaptic strength through changes in postsynaptic AMPA-type glutamate receptors (AMPARs), suggesting the existence of overlapping molecular mechanisms. Phosphorylation controls AMPAR trafficking during LTP/LTD.

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