Adrian A. Epstein
University of Nebraska Medical Center
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Publication
Featured researches published by Adrian A. Epstein.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011
Prasanta K. Dash; Santhi Gorantla; Howard E. Gendelman; Jaclyn Knibbe; George P. Casale; Edward Makarov; Adrian A. Epstein; Harris A. Gelbard; Michael D. Boska; Larisa Y. Poluektova
Neuronal damage induced by ongoing human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection was investigated in humanized NOD/scid-IL-2Rγcnull mice transplanted at birth with human CD34-positive hematopoietic stem cells. Mice infected at 5 months of age and followed for up to 15 weeks maintained significant plasma viral loads and showed reduced numbers of CD4+ T-cells. Prospective serial proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy tests showed selective reductions in cortical N-acetyl aspartate in infected animals. Diffusion tensor imaging revealed structural changes in cortical gray matter. Postmortem immunofluorescence brain tissue examinations for neuronal and glial markers, captured by multispectral imaging microscopy and quantified by morphometric and fluorescence emission, showed regional reduction of neuronal soma and synaptic architectures. This was evidenced by loss of microtubule-associated protein 2, synaptophysin, and neurofilament antigens. This study is the first, to our knowledge, demonstrating lost neuronal integrity after HIV-1 infection in humanized mice. As such, the model permits studies of the relationships between ongoing viral replication and virus-associated neurodegeneration.
Journal of Chromatography B | 2012
Sai Praneeth R. Bathena; Jiangeng Huang; Adrian A. Epstein; Howard E. Gendelman; Michael D. Boska; Yazen Alnouti
Amino acids and myo-inositol have long been proposed as putative biomarkers for neurodegenerative diseases. Accurate measures and stability have precluded their selective use. To this end, a sensitive liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method based on multiple reaction monitoring was developed to simultaneously quantify glutamine, glutamate, γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA), aspartic acid, N-acetyl aspartic acid, taurine, choline, creatine, phosphocholine and myo-inositol in mouse brain by methanol extractions. Chromatography was performed using a hydrophilic interaction chromatography silica column within in a total run time of 15 min. The validated method is selective, sensitive, accurate, and precise. The method has a limit of quantification ranging from 2.5 to 20 ng/ml for a range of analytes and a dynamic range from 2.5-20 to 500-4000 ng/ml. This LC-MS/MS method was validated for biomarker discovery in models of human neurological disorders.
Nature Communications | 2015
Michael E. Kurczy; Zheng-Jiang Zhu; Julijana Ivanisevic; Adam M. Schuyler; Kush Lalwani; Antonio F. Santidrian; John David; Anand Giddabasappa; Amanda J. Roberts; Hernando J. Olivos; Peter J. O'Brien; Lauren Franco; Matthew W. Fields; Liliana P Paris; Martin Friedlander; Caroline H. Johnson; Adrian A. Epstein; Howard E. Gendelman; Malcolm R. Wood; Brunhilde H. Felding; Gary J. Patti; Mary E. Spilker; Gary Siuzdak
Fluorocarbons are lipophobic and non-polar molecules that exhibit remarkable biocompatibility, with applications in liquid ventilation and synthetic blood. The unique properties of these compounds have also enabled mass spectrometry imaging of tissues where the fluorocarbons act as a Teflon-like coating for nanostructured surfaces to assist in desorption/ionization. Here we report fluorinated gold nanoparticles (f-AuNPs) designed to facilitate nanostructure imaging mass spectrometry. Irradiation of f-AuNPs results in the release of the fluorocarbon ligands providing a driving force for analyte desorption. The f-AuNPs allow for the mass spectrometry analysis of both lipophilic and polar (central carbon) metabolites. An important property of AuNPs is that they also act as contrast agents for X-ray microtomography and electron microscopy, a feature we have exploited by infusing f-AuNPs into tissue via fluorocarbon liquids to facilitate multimodal (molecular and anatomical) imaging.
Journal of Neuroimmune Pharmacology | 2013
Adrian A. Epstein; Prabagaran Narayanasamy; Prasanta K. Dash; Robin High; Sai Praneeth R. Bathena; Santhi Gorantla; Larisa Y. Poluektova; Yazen Alnouti; Howard E. Gendelman; Michael D. Boska
Metabolites are biomarkers for a broad range of central nervous system disorders serving as molecular drivers and byproducts of disease pathobiology. However, despite their importance, routine measures of brain tissue metabolomics are not readily available based on the requirements of rapid tissue preservation. They require preservation by microwave irradiation, rapid freezing or other methods designed to reduce post mortem metabolism. Our research on human immunodeficiency virus type one (HIV-1) infection has highlighted immediate needs to better link histology to neural metabolites. To this end, we investigated such needs in well-studied rodent models. First, the dynamics of brain metabolism during ex vivo tissue preparation was shown by proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy in normal mice. Second, tissue preservation methodologies were assessed using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry and immunohistology to measure metabolites and neural antigens. Third, these methods were applied to two animal models. In the first, immunodeficient mice reconstituted with human peripheral blood lymphocytes then acutely infected with HIV-1. In the second, NOD scid IL2 receptor gamma chain knockout mice were humanized with CD34+ human hematopoietic stem cells and chronically infected with HIV-1. Replicate infected animals were treated with nanoformulated antiretroviral therapy (nanoART). Results from chronic infection showed that microgliosis was associated with increased myoinostitol, choline, phosphocholine concentrations and with decreased creatine concentrations. These changes were partially reversed with nanoART. Metabolite responses were contingent on the animal model. Taken together, these studies integrate brain metabolomics with histopathology towards uncovering putative biomarkers for neuroAIDS.
Chemistry & Biology | 2014
Julijana Ivanisevic; Adrian A. Epstein; Michael E. Kurczy; Paul H. Benton; Winnie Uritboonthai; Howard S. Fox; Michael D. Boska; Howard E. Gendelman; Gary Siuzdak
Historically, studies of brain metabolism have been based on targeted analyses of a limited number of metabolites. Here we present an untargeted mass spectrometry-based metabolomic strategy that has successfully uncovered differences in a broad array of metabolites across anatomical regions of the mouse brain. The NSG immunodeficient mouse model was chosen because of its ability to undergo humanization leading to numerous applications in oncology and infectious disease research. Metabolic phenotyping by hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography and nanostructure imaging mass spectrometry revealed both water-soluble and lipid metabolite patterns across brain regions. Neurochemical differences in metabolic phenotypes were mainly defined by various phospholipids and several intriguing metabolites including carnosine, cholesterol sulfate, lipoamino acids, uric acid, and sialic acid, whose physiological roles in brain metabolism are poorly understood. This study helps define regional homeostasis for the normal mouse brain to give context to the reaction to pathological events.
Aging (Albany NY) | 2016
Julijana Ivanisevic; Kelly L. Stauch; Michael Petrascheck; H. Paul Benton; Adrian A. Epstein; Mingliang Fang; Santhi Gorantla; Minerva Tran; Linh Hoang; Michael E. Kurczy; Michael D. Boska; Howard E. Gendelman; Howard S. Fox; Gary Siuzdak
Brain function is highly dependent upon controlled energy metabolism whose loss heralds cognitive impairments. This is particularly notable in the aged individuals and in age-related neurodegenerative diseases. However, how metabolic homeostasis is disrupted in the aging brain is still poorly understood. Here we performed global, metabolomic and proteomic analyses across different anatomical regions of mouse brain at different stages of its adult lifespan. Interestingly, while severe proteomic imbalance was absent, global-untargeted metabolomics revealed an energy metabolic drift or significant imbalance in core metabolite levels in aged mouse brains. Metabolic imbalance was characterized by compromised cellular energy status (NAD decline, increased AMP/ATP, purine/pyrimidine accumulation) and significantly altered oxidative phosphorylation and nucleotide biosynthesis and degradation. The central energy metabolic drift suggests a failure of the cellular machinery to restore metabostasis (metabolite homeostasis) in the aged brain and therefore an inability to respond properly to external stimuli, likely driving the alterations in signaling activity and thus in neuronal function and communication.
Journal of Neuroimmune Pharmacology | 2013
Aditya N. Bade; Biyun Zhou; Adrian A. Epstein; Santhi Gorantla; Larisa Y. Poluektova; Jiangtao Luo; Howard E. Gendelman; Michael D. Boska; Yutong Liu
Research directed at anatomical, integrative and functional activities of the central nervous system (CNS) can be realized through bioimaging. A wealth of data now demonstrates the utility of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) towards unraveling complex neural connectivity operative in health and disease. A means to improve MRI sensitivity is through contrast agents and notably manganese (Mn2+). The Mn2+ ions enter neurons through voltage-gated calcium channels and unlike other contrast agents such as gadolinium, iron oxide, iron platinum and imaging proteins, provide unique insights into brain physiology. Nonetheless, a critical question that remains is the brain target cells serving as sources for the signal of Mn2+ enhanced MRI (MEMRI). To this end, we investigated MEMRI’s abilities to detect glial (astrocyte and microglia) and neuronal activation signals following treatment with known inflammatory inducing agents. The idea is to distinguish between gliosis (glial activation) and neuronal injury for the MEMRI signal and as such use the agent as a marker for neural activity in inflammatory and degenerative disease. We now demonstrate that glial inflammation facilitates Mn2+ neuronal ion uptake. Glial Mn2+ content was not linked to its activation. MEMRI performed on mice injected intracranially with lipopolysaccharide was associated with increased neuronal activity. These results support the notion that MEMRI reflects neuronal excitotoxicity and impairment that can occur through a range of insults including neuroinflammation. We conclude that the MEMRI signal enhancement is induced by inflammation stimulating neuronal Mn2+ uptake.
Metabolomics | 2015
Julijana Ivanisevic; H. Paul Benton; Duane Rinehart; Adrian A. Epstein; Michael E. Kurczy; Michael D. Boska; Howard E. Gendelman; Gary Siuzdak
Heat maps are a commonly used visualization tool for metabolomic data where the relative abundance of ions detected in each sample is represented with color intensity. A limitation of applying heat maps to global metabolomic data, however, is the large number of ions that have to be displayed and the lack of information provided about important metabolomic parameters such as m/z and retention time. Here we address these challenges by introducing the interactive cluster heat map in the data-processing software XCMS Online. XCMS Online (xcmsonline.scripps.edu) is a cloud-based informatic platform designed to process, statistically evaluate, and visualize mass-spectrometry based metabolomic data. An interactive heat map is provided for all data processed by XCMS Online. The heat map is clickable, allowing users to zoom and explore specific metabolite metadata (EICs, Box-and-whisker plots, mass spectra) that are linked to the METLIN metabolite database. The utility of the XCMS interactive heat map is demonstrated on metabolomic data set generated from different anatomical regions of the mouse brain.
Biology Open | 2015
Jaclyn S. Knibbe-Hollinger; Natasha R. Fields; Tammy R. Chaudoin; Adrian A. Epstein; Edward Makarov; Sidra P. Akhter; Santhi Gorantla; Stephen J. Bonasera; Howard E. Gendelman; Larisa Y. Poluektova
ABSTRACT Humanized mice are frequently utilized in bench to bedside therapeutic tests to combat human infectious, cancerous and degenerative diseases. For the fields of hematology-oncology, regenerative medicine, and infectious diseases, the immune deficient mice have been used commonly in basic research efforts. Obstacles in true translational efforts abound, as the relationship between mouse and human cells in disease pathogenesis and therapeutic studies requires lengthy investigations. The interplay between human immunity and mouse biology proves ever more complicated when aging, irradiation, and human immune reconstitution are considered. All can affect a range of biochemical and behavioral functions. To such ends, we show age- and irradiation-dependent influences for the development of macrocytic hyper chromic anemia, myelodysplasia, blood protein reductions and body composition changes. Humanization contributes to hematologic abnormalities. Home cage behavior revealed day and dark cycle locomotion also influenced by human cell reconstitutions. Significant age-related day-to-day variability in movement, feeding and drinking behaviors were observed. We posit that this data serves to enable researchers to better design translational studies in this rapidly emerging field of mouse humanization.
Archive | 2014
Larisa Y. Poluektova; Adrian A. Epstein; Santhi Gorantla
The HIV-1-associated neurologic disorders were described earlier in HIV-1 pandemia and are now recognized as a complex of pathologic changes related to the HIV-1 infection of brain perivascular and resident cells, such as microglia. At the same time, the significant contribution to the neurocognitive deficit in humans could be related to the secondary events, such as chronic emotional stress, chronic immune activation due to mucosal barriers deficiency, opportunistic viral and bacterial infections, malnutrition, and other factors that could not be excluded or controlled like on experimental laboratory animals. Animals carrying human hemato-lymphoid tissue and chronically infected with HIV-1 could provide valuable information about the pathogenesis of neurocognitive dysfunction and serve as a model for therapeutic development.