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Dive into the research topics where A. Brennan is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Brennan.


Neuron | 1995

Neu differentiation factor is a neuron-glia signal and regulates survival, proliferation, and maturation of rat Schwann cell precursors.

Ziping Dong; A. Brennan; Naili Liu; Yosef Yarden; G. Lefkowitz; Rhona Mirsky; Kristjan R. Jessen

We show that beta forms of Neu differentiation factor (NDF), homologous to acetylcholine receptor-inducing activity, glial growth factor, and heregulin, prevent apoptotic death and stimulate DNA synthesis of the E14 Schwann cell precursor, an early cell in the rat Schwann cell lineage. When precursors are exposed to NDF in defined medium, they generate Schwann cells without the requirement for DNA synthesis and with a time course that is similar to that with which Schwann cells appear in embryonic nerves in vivo. Furthermore, a neuronal signal that also mediates precursor survival and maturation is blocked by the extracellular domain of the ErbB4 NDF receptor, a protein that specifically blocks the action of NDFs. These observations provide important evidence that NDF is one of the hitherto elusive neuron-glia signaling molecules long proposed to regulate development in the Schwann cell lineage.


Nature Neuroscience | 2009

NADPH oxidase is the primary source of superoxide induced by NMDA receptor activation

A. Brennan; Sang Won Suh; Seok Joon Won; Purnima Narasimhan; Tiina M. Kauppinen; Hokyou Lee; Ylva Edling; Pak H. Chan; Raymond A. Swanson

Neuronal NMDA receptor (NMDAR) activation leads to the formation of superoxide, which normally acts in cell signaling. With extensive NMDAR activation, the resulting superoxide production leads to neuronal death. It is widely held that NMDA-induced superoxide production originates from the mitochondria, but definitive evidence for this is lacking. We evaluated the role of the cytoplasmic enzyme NADPH oxidase in NMDA-induced superoxide production. Neurons in culture and in mouse hippocampus responded to NMDA with a rapid increase in superoxide production, followed by neuronal death. These events were blocked by the NADPH oxidase inhibitor apocynin and in neurons lacking the p47phox subunit, which is required for NADPH oxidase assembly. Superoxide production was also blocked by inhibiting the hexose monophosphate shunt, which regenerates the NADPH substrate, and by inhibiting protein kinase C zeta, which activates the NADPH oxidase complex. These findings identify NADPH oxidase as the primary source of NMDA-induced superoxide production.


Neuron | 1994

The schwann cell precursor and its fate: A study of cell death and differentiation during gliogenesis in rat embryonic nerves

Kristjan R. Jessen; A. Brennan; L. Morgan; Rhona Mirsky; A. Kent; Y. Hashimoto; Jelena Gavrilovic

We have characterized a cell, the Schwann cell precursor, that represents a distinct intermediate differentiation stage in the process by which Schwann cells are generated from neural crest cells. The Schwann cell precursor shows radical differences from Schwann cells which include death regulation, antigenic phenotype, pattern of cell-cell interaction, migratory behavior, and morphology. In the nerves of the rat hind limb, Schwann cells are irreversibly generated from these during a brief period, essentially embryonic days 15-17. We also provide evidence that the survival of Schwann cell precursors is regulated by neurons and identify basic fibroblast growth factor as a potential key regulator of apoptosis in Schwann cell precursors and of precursor to Schwann cell conversion. These findings have implications for our understanding of gliogenesis in the peripheral nervous system.


Annals of Neurology | 2008

Glucose and NADPH oxidase drive neuronal superoxide formation in stroke

Sang Won Suh; Byung Seop Shin; Hualong Ma; Michaël Van Hoecke; A. Brennan; Midori A. Yenari; Raymond A. Swanson

Hyperglycemia has been recognized for decades to be an exacerbating factor in ischemic stroke, but the mechanism of this effect remains unresolved. Here, we evaluated superoxide production by neuronal nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase as a possible link between glucose metabolism and neuronal death in ischemia‐reperfusion.


Journal of Physiology-paris | 2002

Schwann cells as regulators of nerve development

Rhona Mirsky; Kristjan R. Jessen; A. Brennan; David Parkinson; Ziping Dong; Carola Meier; Eric Parmantier; Durward Lawson

Myelinating and non-myelinating Schwann cells of peripheral nerves are derived from the neural crest via an intermediate cell type, the Schwann cell precursor [K.R. Jessen, A. Brennan, L. Morgan, R. Mirsky, A. Kent, Y. Hashimoto, J. Gavrilovic. The Schwann cell precursor and its fate: a study of cell death and differentiation during gliogenesis in rat embryonic nerves, Neuron 12 (1994) 509-527]. The survival and maturation of Schwann cell precursors is controlled by a neuronally derived signal, beta neuregulin. Other factors, in particular endothelins, regulate the timing of precursor maturation and Schwann cell generation. In turn, signals derived from Schwann cell precursors or Schwann cells regulate neuronal numbers during development, and axonal calibre, distribution of ion channels and neurofilament phosphorylation in myelinated axons. Unlike Schwann cell precursors, Schwann cells in older nerves survive in the absence of axons, indicating that a significant change in survival regulation occurs. This is due primarily to the presence of autocrine growth factor loops in Schwann cells, present from embryo day 18 onwards, that are not functional in Schwann cell precursors. The most important components of the autocrine loop are insulin-like growth factors, platelet derived growth factor-BB and neurotrophin 3, which together with laminin support long-term Schwann cell survival. The paracrine dependence of precursors on axons for survival provides a mechanism for matching precursor cell number to axons in embryonic nerves, while the ability of Schwann cells to survive in the absence of axons is an absolute prerequisite for nerve repair following injury. In addition to providing survival factors to neurones and themselves, and signals that determine axonal architecture, Schwann cells also control the formation of peripheral nerve sheaths. This involves Schwann cell-derived Desert Hedgehog, which directs the transition of mesenchymal cells to form the epithelium-like structure of the perineurium. Schwann cells thus signal not only to themselves but also to the other cellular components within the nerve to act as major regulators of nerve development.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 1997

P0Is Constitutively Expressed in the Rat Neural Crest and Embryonic Nerves and Is Negatively and Positively Regulated by Axons to Generate Non-Myelin-Forming and Myelin-Forming Schwann Cells, Respectively

M.-J. Lee; A. Brennan; A.D. Blanchard; G. Zoidl; Ziping Dong; Arantxa Tabernero; C. Zoidl; M.A.R. Dent; Kristjan R. Jessen; Rhona Mirsky

We show that in the rat, the major gene of PNS myelin, P0, is expressed long before myelination in the neural crest, Schwann cell precursors, and embryonic Schwann cells irrespective of whether they will myelinate or not. This myelin-independent P0 expression is constitutive and likely to serve as a specific marker for the Schwann cell lineage. The much higher P0 expression accompanying myelination is therefore not new gene expression but strong up-regulation of preexisting basal levels. We provide new evidence that the up-regulation to myelination-related levels depends on positive extrinsic signals and therefore does not represent a constitutive phenotype. P0 mRNA is not detectable in mature non-myelin-forming Schwann cells of the sympathetic trunk, but is detectable after transection, indicating that there is a P0-inhibitory signal associated with mature unmyelinated axons. Thus, the regulation of the P0 gene is complex, encompassing extrinsically signaled amplification superimposed on a highly lineage-specific and constitutive basal expression.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2006

NAD(P)H Fluorescence Transients after Synaptic Activity in Brain Slices: Predominant Role of Mitochondrial Function

A. Brennan; John A. Connor; C. William Shuttleworth

Excitatory stimulation in hippocampal slices results in biphasic NAD(P)H fluorescence transients. Previous studies using differing stimulus protocols agreed that the oxidation phase is a consequence of mitochondrial metabolism, but the reduction phase has been attributed to (1) mitochondrial nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH) generation or (2) astrocytic glycolysis triggered by glutamate uptake. In an attempt to reconcile these two views, the present study examined NAD(P)H signals evoked by a wide range of stimulus durations (40 ms to 20secs). A combination of ionotropic glutamate receptor (iGluR) antagonists (6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (CNQX), 2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (APV)) virtually abolished responses to brief stimuli (40 to 200 ms, 50 Hz), but a significant fraction of the signal elicited by extended stimulation (20 secs, 32 Hz) was resistant to CNQX/APV. Glycolysis was inhibited by removal of glucose and addition of 2-deoxyglucose (2DG) (10 mmol/l) or iodoacetic acid (IAA, 1 mmol/l). Pyruvate was provided as an alternative substrate for oxidative phosphorylation and the A1 receptor antagonist 1,3-Dipropyl-8-cyclopentylxanthine (DPCPX) included to prevent decreases in synaptic efficacy. If sufficient pyruvate was supplied, responses to brief and extended stimuli were unaffected by glycolytic inhibition and not significantly reduced by an inhibitor of glucose uptake (3-O-methyl glucose, 3 mmol/l). When timed to arrive at the peak of overshoots generated by extended synaptic stimulation, brief pyruvate applications (10 mmol/l, 2mins) had little effect on evoked NAD(P)H increases. Flavoprotein autofluorescence transients after extended stimuli matched (with inverted sign) NAD(P)H responses. Responses to extended stimuli were not reduced by a nonselective inhibitor of glutamate uptake DL-Threo-β-benzyloxyaspartic acid (TBOA). These results suggest that NAD(P)H transients report mitochondrial dynamics, rather than recruitment of glycolytic metabolism, over a wide range of stimulus intensities.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 1995

Fibroblast growth factors and insulin growth factors combine to promote survival of rat Schwann cell precursors without induction of DNA synthesis.

Jelena Gavrilovic; A. Brennan; Rhona Mirsky; Kristjan R. Jessen

In embryonic rat nerves, we recently identified an early cell in the Schwann cell lineage, the Schwann cell precursor. We found that when these cells were removed from contact with axons they underwent rapid apoptotic death, and that in a proportion of the cells this death could be prevented by basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF, FGF‐2). We now report that 100% of Schwann cell precursors isolated from peripheral nerves of 14‐day‐old‐rat embryos can be rescued by a combination of insulin‐like growth factor (IGF) 1 or 2 in combination with either acidic FGF (aFGF, FGF‐1), bFGF or Kaposis sarcoma FGF (K‐FGF; FGF‐4). The precursors display an absolute requirement for both an IGF and an FGF to achieve maximal survival. Elevation of intracellular levels of cAMP by forskolin does not result in a significant shift in the IGF/FGF dose‐response curves. In contrast, the percentage of precursors rescued by FGF in the presence of insulin is dramatically increased by elevation of cAMP. These growth factor combinations did not stimulate DNA synthesis significantly in Schwann cell precursors. These findings show that cooperation between growth factors is required to suppress cell death in Schwann cell precursors, and suggest that survival and DNA synthesis are regulated by distinct growth factor combinations in these cells. The observations are consistent with the idea that survival regulation by FGFs and IGFs plays an important role in the development of glial cells in early embryonic nerves.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 1997

Helix‐loop‐helix proteins in Schwann cells: A study of regulation and subcellular localization of Ids, REB, and E12/47 during embryonic and postnatal development

Helen J. S. Stewart; G. Zoidl; Moritz J. Rossner; A. Brennan; C. Zoidl; Klaus-Armin Nave; Rhona Mirsky; Kristjan R. Jessen

Although basic helix‐loop‐helix (bHLH) proteins play an important role in transcriptional control in many cell types, the role of HLH proteins in Schwann cells has yet to be assessed. In this study, we have analyzed the expression of the dominant negative HLH genes, Id1 to Id4 and the class A gene REB, during Schwann cell development. We found that mRNA derived from these genes was present in the Schwann cell lineage throughout development including embryonic precursors and mature cells. The mRNA levels were not significantly regulated during development. Nevertheless, by using antibodies against the four different Id proteins, we found clear regulation of some of these genes at the protein level, in particular Id 2, 4, and REB, both in amount and nuclear/cytoplasmic localization. All these proteins are found in the nuclei of Schwann cell precursors but are not seen in nuclei of Schwann cells of newborn nerves. We observed extensive overlap in Id expression, especially in Schwann cell precursors that co‐expressed all four Id proteins and REB. We also showed that Id 1 and 2 were up‐regulated as Schwann cells progressed through the cell cycle. These data indicate that HLH transcription factors act as regulators of Schwann cell development and point to the existence of as yet unidentified cell type–specific bHLH proteins in these cells. J. Neurosci. Res. 50:684–701, 1997. © 1997 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Activation of Neuronal NMDA Receptors Induces Superoxide-Mediated Oxidative Stress in Neighboring Neurons and Astrocytes

Reno C. Reyes; A. Brennan; Yiguo Shen; Ylva Baldwin; Raymond A. Swanson

Excitotoxic neuronal death is mediated in part by NMDA receptor-induced activation of NOX2, an enzyme that produces superoxide and resultant oxidative stress. It is not known, however, whether the superoxide is generated in the intracellular space, producing oxidative stress in the neurons responding to NMDA receptor activation, or in the extracellular space, producing oxidative stress in neighboring cells. We evaluated these alternatives by preparing cortical neuron cultures from p47phox−/− mice, which are unable to form a functional NOX2 complex, and transfecting the cultures at low density with GFP-tagged p47phox to reconstitute NOX2 activity in widely scattered neurons. NMDA exposure did not induce oxidative stress or cell death in the nontransfected, p47-phox−/− cultures, but did produce oxidative stress and neuronal death in neurons surrounding the transfected, NOX2-competent neurons. This cell-to-cell spread of NMDA-induced oxidative injury was blocked by coincubation with either superoxide dismutase or the anion channel blocker 4′-diisothiocyanostilbene-2,2′-disulphonate, confirming superoxide anion as the mediating oxidant. In neurons plated on a preexisting astrocyte layer, NMDA induced oxidative stress in both the neurons and the astrocytes, and this was also prevented by superoxide dismutase. These findings show that activation of NMDA receptors on one neuron can lead to oxidative stress and cell death in neighboring neurons and astrocytes by a process involving the extracellular release of superoxide by NOX2.

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Rhona Mirsky

University College London

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Ziping Dong

University College London

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Eric Parmantier

University College London

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C. Zoidl

University College London

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G. Zoidl

University College London

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John A. Connor

University of New Mexico

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