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Dive into the research topics where A. Kerstin Lindemeyer is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Kerstin Lindemeyer.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2011

Plasticity of GABAA receptors after ethanol pre-exposure in cultured hippocampal neurons.

Yi Shen; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Igor Spigelman; Werner Sieghart; Richard W. Olsen; Jing Liang

Alcohol use causes many physiological changes in brain with behavioral sequelae. We previously observed (J Neurosci 27:12367–12377, 2007) plastic changes in hippocampal slice recordings paralleling behavioral changes in rats treated with a single intoxicating dose of ethanol (EtOH). Here, we were able to reproduce in primary cultured hippocampal neurons many of the effects of in vivo EtOH exposure on GABAA receptors (GABAARs). Cells grown 11 to 15 days in vitro demonstrated GABAAR δ subunit expression and sensitivity to enhancement by short-term exposure to EtOH (60 mM) of GABAAR-mediated tonic current (Itonic) using whole-cell patch-clamp techniques. EtOH gave virtually no enhancement of mIPSCs. Cells pre-exposed to EtOH (60 mM) for 30 min showed, 1 h after EtOH withdrawal, a 50% decrease in basal Itonic magnitude and tolerance to short-term EtOH enhancement of Itonic, followed by reduced basal mIPSC area at 4 h. At 24 h, we saw considerable recovery in mIPSC area and significant potentiation by short-term EtOH; in addition, GABAAR currents exhibited reduced enhancement by benzodiazepines. These changes paralleled significant decreases in cell-surface expression of normally extrasynaptic δ and α4 GABAAR subunits as early as 20 min after EtOH exposure and reduced α5-containing GABAARs at 1 h, followed by a larger reduction of normally synaptic α1 subunit at 4 h, and then by increases in α4γ2-containing cell-surface receptors by 24 h. Measuring internalization of biotinylated GABAARs, we showed for the first time that the EtOH-induced loss of Itonic and cell-surface δ/α4 20 min after withdrawal results from increased receptor endocytosis rather than decreased exocytosis.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2011

Subunit Compensation and Plasticity of Synaptic GABAA Receptors Induced by Ethanol in α4 Subunit Knockout Mice

Asha Suryanarayanan; Jing Liang; Edward M. Meyer; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Dev Chandra; Gregg E. Homanics; Werner Sieghart; Richard W. Olsen; Igor Spigelman

There is considerable evidence that ethanol (EtOH) potentiates γ-aminobutyric acid type A receptor (GABAAR) action, but only GABAARs containing δ subunits appear sensitive to low millimolar EtOH. The α4 and δ subunits co-assemble into GABAARs which are relatively highly expressed at extrasynaptic locations in the dentate gyrus where they mediate tonic inhibition. We previously demonstrated reversible- and time-dependent changes in GABAAR function and subunit composition in rats after single-dose EtOH intoxication. We concluded that early tolerance to EtOH occurs by over-activation and subsequent internalization of EtOH-sensitive extrasynaptic α4βδ-GABAARs. Based on this hypothesis, any highly EtOH-sensitive GABAARs should be subject to internalization following exposure to suitably high EtOH doses. To test this, we studied the GABAARs in mice with a global deletion of the α4 subunit (KO). The dentate granule cells of these mice exhibited greatly reduced tonic currents and greatly reduced potentiation by acutely applied EtOH, whereas synaptic currents showed heightened sensitivity to low EtOH concentrations. The hippocampus of naive KO mice showed reduced δ subunit protein levels, but increased α2, and γ2 levels compared to wild-type (WT) controls, suggesting at least partial compensation by these subunits in synaptic, highly EtOH-sensitive GABAARs of KO mice. In WT mice, cross-linking and Western blot analysis at 1 h after an EtOH challenge (3.5 g/kg, i.p.) revealed increased intracellular fraction of the α1, α4, and δ, but not α2, α5, or γ2 subunits. By contrast, we observed significant internalization of α1, α2, δ, and γ2 subunits after a similar EtOH challenge in KO mice. Synaptic currents from naïve KO mice were more sensitive to potentiation by zolpidem (0.3 μM, requiring α1/α2, inactive at α4/5 GABAARs) than those from naïve WT mice. At 1 h after EtOH, synaptic currents of WT mice were unchanged, whereas those of KO mice were significantly less sensitive to zolpidem, suggesting decreases in functional α1/2βγ GABAARs. These data further support our hypothesis that EtOH intoxication induces GABAAR plasticity via internalization of highly EtOH-sensitive GABAARs.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2014

Plasticity of GABAA receptor-mediated neurotransmission in the nucleus accumbens of alcohol-dependent rats

Jing Liang; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Asha Suryanarayanan; Edward M. Meyer; Vincent N. Marty; S. Omar Ahmad; Xuesi M. Shao; Richard W. Olsen; Igor Spigelman

Chronic alcohol exposure-induced changes in reinforcement mechanisms and motivational state are thought to contribute to the development of cravings and relapse during protracted withdrawal. The nucleus accumbens (NAcc) is a key structure of the mesolimbic dopaminergic reward system and plays an important role in mediating alcohol-seeking behaviors. Here we describe the long-lasting alterations of γ-aminobutyric acid type A receptors (GABA(A)Rs) of medium spiny neurons (MSNs) in the NAcc after chronic intermittent ethanol (CIE) treatment, a rat model of alcohol dependence. CIE treatment and withdrawal (>40 days) produced decreases in the ethanol and Ro15-4513 potentiation of extrasynaptic GABA(A)Rs, which mediate the picrotoxin-sensitive tonic current (I(tonic)), while potentiation of synaptic receptors, which give rise to miniature inhibitory postsynaptic currents (mIPSCs), was increased. Diazepam sensitivity of both I(tonic) and mIPSCs was decreased by CIE treatment. The average magnitude of I(tonic) was unchanged, but mIPSC amplitude and frequency decreased and mIPSC rise time increased after CIE treatment. Rise-time histograms revealed decreased frequency of fast-rising mIPSCs after CIE treatment, consistent with possible decreases in somatic GABAergic synapses in MSNs from CIE rats. However, unbiased stereological analysis of NeuN-stained NAcc neurons did not detect any decreases in NAcc volume, neuronal numbers, or neuronal cell body volume. Western blot analysis of surface subunit levels revealed selective decreases in α1 and δ and increases in α4, α5, and γ2 GABA(A)R subunits after CIE treatment and withdrawal. Similar, but reversible, alterations occurred after a single ethanol dose (5 g/kg). These data reveal CIE-induced long-lasting neuroadaptations in the NAcc GABAergic neurotransmission.


Molecular Pharmacology | 2017

Alpha 2 subunit-containing GABAA receptor subtypes are up-regulated and contribute to alcohol-induced functional plasticity in rat hippocampus

A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Yi Shen; Ferin Yazdani; Xuesi M. Shao; Igor Spigelman; Daryl L. Davies; Richard W. Olsen; Jing Liang

Alcohol (EtOH) intoxication causes changes in the rodent brain γ-aminobutyric acid receptor (GABAAR) subunit composition and function, playing a crucial role in EtOH withdrawal symptoms and dependence. Building evidence indicates that withdrawal from acute EtOH and chronic intermittent EtOH (CIE) results in decreased EtOH-enhanced GABAAR δ subunit-containing extrasynaptic and EtOH-insensitive α1βγ2 subtype synaptic GABAARs but increased synaptic α4βγ2 subtype, and increased EtOH sensitivity of GABAAR miniature postsynaptic currents (mIPSCs) correlated with EtOH dependence. Here we demonstrate that after acute EtOH intoxication and CIE, upregulation of hippocampal α4βγ2 subtypes, as well as increased cell-surface levels of GABAAR α2 and γ1 subunits, along with increased α2β1γ1 GABAAR pentamers in hippocampal slices using cell-surface cross-linking, followed by Western blot and coimmunoprecipitation. One-dose and two-dose acute EtOH treatments produced temporal plastic changes in EtOH-induced anxiolysis or withdrawal anxiety, and the presence or absence of EtOH-sensitive synaptic currents correlated with cell surface peptide levels of both α4 and γ1(new α2) subunits. CIE increased the abundance of novel mIPSC patterns differing in activation/deactivation kinetics, charge transfer, and sensitivity to EtOH. The different mIPSC patterns in CIE could be correlated with upregulated highly EtOH-sensitive α2βγ subtypes and EtOH-sensitive α4βγ2 subtypes. Naïve α4 subunit knockout mice express EtOH-sensitive mIPSCs in hippocampal slices, correlating with upregulated GABAAR α2 (and not α4) subunits. Consistent with α2, β1, and γ1 subunits genetically linked to alcoholism in humans, our findings indicate that these new α2-containing synaptic GABAARs could mediate the maintained anxiolytic response to EtOH in dependent individuals, rat or human, contributing to elevated EtOH consumption.


Experimental Neurology | 2017

Decreased surface expression of the δ subunit of the GABAA receptor contributes to reduced tonic inhibition in dentate granule cells in a mouse model of fragile X syndrome

Nianhui Zhang; Zechun Peng; Xiaoping Tong; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Yliana Cetina; Christine Huang; Richard W. Olsen; Thomas S. Otis; Carolyn R. Houser

While numerous changes in the GABA system have been identified in models of Fragile X Syndrome (FXS), alterations in subunits of the GABAA receptors (GABAARs) that mediate tonic inhibition are particularly intriguing. Considering the key role of tonic inhibition in controlling neuronal excitability, reduced tonic inhibition could contribute to FXS-associated disorders such as hyperactivity, hypersensitivity, and increased seizure susceptibility. The current study has focused on the expression and function of the δ subunit of the GABAAR, a major subunit involved in tonic inhibition, in granule cells of the dentate gyrus in the Fmr1 knockout (KO) mouse model of FXS. Electrophysiological studies of dentate granule cells revealed a marked, nearly four-fold, decrease in tonic inhibition in the Fmr1 KO mice, as well as reduced effects of two δ subunit-preferring pharmacological agents, THIP and DS2, supporting the suggestion that δ subunit-containing GABAARs are compromised in the Fmr1 KO mice. Immunohistochemistry demonstrated a small but statistically significant decrease in δ subunit labeling in the molecular layer of the dentate gyrus in Fmr1 KO mice compared to wildtype (WT) littermates. The discrepancy between the large deficits in GABA-mediated tonic inhibition in granule cells in the Fmr1 KO mice and only modest reductions in immunolabeling of the δ subunit led to studies of surface expression of the δ subunit. Cross-linking experiments followed by Western blot analysis demonstrated a small, non-significant decrease in total δ subunit protein in the hippocampus of Fmr1 KO mice, but a four-fold decrease in surface expression of the δ subunit in these mice. No significant changes were observed in total or surface expression of the α4 subunit protein, a major partner of the δ subunit in the forebrain. Postembedding immunogold labeling for the δ subunit demonstrated a large, three-fold, decrease in the number of symmetric synapses with immunolabeling at perisynaptic locations in Fmr1 KO mice. While α4 immunogold particles were also reduced at perisynaptic locations in the Fmr1 KO mice, the labeling was increased at synaptic sites. Together these findings suggest that, in the dentate gyrus, altered surface expression of the δ subunit, rather than a decrease in δ subunit expression alone, could be limiting δ subunit-mediated tonic inhibition in this model of FXS. Finding ways to increase surface expression of the δ subunit of the GABAAR could be a novel approach to treatment of hyperexcitability-related alterations in FXS.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2012

GluA and GluN receptors regulate the surface density of GluN receptor subunits in cultured neocortical interneurons

Dieter K. Meyer; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Thomas Wilmes; Helga Sobottka; Wolfgang Nörenberg

J. Neurochem. (2012) 121, 597–606.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2012

Stimulation of GluN receptors decreases the surface density of GluN1/GluN2B subunits in cultured neocortical interneurons

Wolfgang Nörenberg; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Thomas Wilmes; Helga Sobottka; Dieter K. Meyer

J. Neurochem. (2012) 121, 587–596.


Neurochemical Research | 2014

Dihydromyricetin ameliorates behavioral deficits and reverses neuropathology of transgenic mouse models of Alzheimer's disease.

Jing Liang; Héctor E. López-Valdés; Hilda Martinez-Coria; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Yi Shen; Xuesi M. Shao; Richard W. Olsen


Biological Research on Addiction#R##N#Comprehensive Addictive Behaviors and Disorders, Volume 2 | 2013

Molecular and Functional Changes in Receptors: GABA and Chronic Alcohol Consumption

Igor Spigelman; Richard W. Olsen; Jing Liang; Asha Suryanarayanan; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Edward M. Meyer; Yi Shen; Rudy Bagnera; Vincent N. Marty


Phytomedicine | 2018

Flavonoids isolated from Tibetan medicines, binding to GABAA receptor and the anticonvulsant activity

Zenggen Liu; A. Kerstin Lindemeyer; Jing Liang; Martin Wallner; Xuesi M. Shao; Yun Shao; Yanduo Tao; Richard W. Olsen

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Jing Liang

University of California

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Igor Spigelman

University of California

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Xuesi M. Shao

University of California

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Rudy Bagnera

University of California

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