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Dive into the research topics where Alipi V. Naydenov is active.

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Featured researches published by Alipi V. Naydenov.


Neuron | 2014

ABHD6 blockade exerts antiepileptic activity in PTZ-induced seizures and in spontaneous seizures in R6/2 mice.

Alipi V. Naydenov; Eric A. Horne; Christine S. Cheah; Katie Swinney; Ku-Lung Hsu; William R. Marrs; Jacqueline L. Blankman; Sarah Tu; Allison E. Cherry; Susan Fung; Andy Wen; Weiwei Li; Michael S. Saporito; Dana E. Selley; Benjamin F. Cravatt; John C. Oakley; Nephi Stella

The serine hydrolase α/β-hydrolase domain 6 (ABHD6) hydrolyzes the most abundant endocannabinoid (eCB) in the brain, 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG), and controls its availability at cannabinoid receptors. We show that ABHD6 inhibition decreases pentylenetetrazole (PTZ)-induced generalized tonic-clonic and myoclonic seizure incidence and severity. This effect is retained in Cnr1(-/-) or Cnr2(-/-) mice, but blocked by addition of a subconvulsive dose of picrotoxin, suggesting the involvement of GABAA receptors. ABHD6 inhibition also blocked spontaneous seizures in R6/2 mice, a genetic model of juvenile Huntingtons disease known to exhibit dysregulated eCB signaling. ABHD6 blockade retained its antiepileptic activity over chronic dosing and was not associated with psychomotor or cognitive effects. While the etiology of seizures in R6/2 mice remains unsolved, involvement of the hippocampus is suggested by interictal epileptic discharges, increased expression of vGLUT1 but not vGAT, and reduced Neuropeptide Y (NPY) expression. We conclude that ABHD6 inhibition may represent a novel antiepileptic strategy.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2014

Genetic rescue of CB1 receptors on medium spiny neurons prevents loss of excitatory striatal synapses but not motor impairment in HD mice

Alipi V. Naydenov; Marja D. Sepers; Katie Swinney; Lynn A. Raymond; Richard D. Palmiter; Nephi Stella

Huntingtons disease (HD) is caused by an expanded polyglutamine repeat in huntingtin protein that disrupts synaptic function in specific neuronal populations and results in characteristic motor, cognitive and affective deficits. Histopathological hallmarks observed in both HD patients and genetic mouse models include the reduced expression of synaptic proteins, reduced medium spiny neuron (MSN) dendritic spine density and decreased frequency of spontaneous excitatory post-synaptic currents (sEPSCs). Early down-regulation of cannabinoid CB1 receptor expression on MSN (CB1(MSN)) is thought to participate in HD pathogenesis. Here we present a cell-specific genetic rescue of CB1(MSN) in R6/2 mice and report that treatment prevents the reduction of excitatory synaptic markers in the striatum (synaptophysin, vGLUT1 and vGLUT2), of dendritic spine density on MSNs and of MSN sEPSCs, but does not prevent motor impairment. We conclude that loss of excitatory striatal synapses in HD mice is controlled by CB1(MSN) and can be uncoupled from the motor phenotype.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Downregulation of cannabinoid receptor 1 from neuropeptide Y interneurons in the basal ganglia of patients with Huntington's disease and mouse models

Eric A. Horne; Jonathan Coy; Katie Swinney; Susan Fung; Allison E. Cherry; William R. Marrs; Alipi V. Naydenov; Yi Hsing Lin; Xiaocui Sun; C. Dirk Keene; Eric Grouzmann; Paul J. Muchowski; Gillian P. Bates; Ken Mackie; Nephi Stella

Cannabinoid receptor 1 (CB1 receptor) controls several neuronal functions, including neurotransmitter release, synaptic plasticity, gene expression and neuronal viability. Downregulation of CB1 expression in the basal ganglia of patients with Huntingtons disease (HD) and animal models represents one of the earliest molecular events induced by mutant huntingtin (mHtt). This early disruption of neuronal CB1 signaling is thought to contribute to HD symptoms and neurodegeneration. Here we determined whether CB1 downregulation measured in patients with HD and mouse models was ubiquitous or restricted to specific striatal neuronal subpopulations. Using unbiased semi‐quantitative immunohistochemistry, we confirmed previous studies showing that CB1 expression is downregulated in medium spiny neurons of the indirect pathway, and found that CB1 is also downregulated in neuropeptide Y (NPY)/neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS)‐expressing interneurons while remaining unchanged in parvalbumin‐ and calretinin‐expressing interneurons. CB1 downregulation in striatal NPY/nNOS‐expressing interneurons occurs in R6/2 mice, HdhQ150/Q150 mice and the caudate nucleus of patients with HD. In R6/2 mice, CB1 downregulation in NPY/nNOS‐expressing interneurons correlates with diffuse expression of mHtt in the soma. This downregulation also occludes the ability of cannabinoid agonists to activate the pro‐survival signaling molecule cAMP response element‐binding protein in NPY/nNOS‐expressing interneurons. Loss of CB1 signaling in NPY/nNOS‐expressing interneurons could contribute to the impairment of basal ganglia functions linked to HD.


Human Mutation | 2013

Two Novel Mutations in ABHD12: Expansion of the Mutation Spectrum in PHARC and Assessment of their Functional Effects

Dong Hui Chen; Alipi V. Naydenov; Jacqueline L. Blankman; Mefford Hc; Marie Y. Davis; Youngmee Sul; A. Samuel Barloon; Emily Bonkowski; John Wolff; Mark Matsushita; Corrine O. Smith; Benjamin F. Cravatt; Ken Mackie; Wendy H. Raskind; Nephi Stella; Bird Td

PHARC (polyneuropathy, hearing loss, ataxia, retinitis pigmentosa, and cataracts) is a recently described autosomal‐recessive neurodegenerative disease caused by mutations in the α−β−hydrolase domain‐containing 12 gene (ABHD12). Only five homozygous ABHD12 mutations have been reported and the pathogenesis of PHARC remains unclear. We evaluated a woman who manifested short stature as well as the typical features of PHARC. Sequence analysis of ABHD12 revealed a novel heterozygous c.1129A>T (p.Lys377*) mutation. Targeted comparative genomic hybridization detected a 59‐kb deletion that encompasses exon 1 of ABHD12 and exons 1–4 of an adjacent gene, GINS1, and includes the promoters of both genes. The heterozygous deletion was also carried by the patients asymptomatic mother. Quantitative reverse transcription‐PCR demonstrated ∼50% decreased expression of ABHD12 RNA in lymphoblastoid cell lines from both individuals. Activity‐based protein profiling of serine hydrolases revealed absence of ABHD12 hydrolase activity in the patient and 50% reduction in her mother. This is the first report of compound heterozygosity in PHARC and the first study to describe how a mutation might affect ABHD12 expression and function. The possible involvement of haploinsufficiency for GINS1, a DNA replication complex protein, in the short stature of the patient and her mother requires further studies.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Modulation of Pilocarpine-Induced Seizures by Cannabinoid Receptor 1

Rebecca L. Kow; Kelly Jiang; Alipi V. Naydenov; Joshua H. Le; Nephi Stella; Neil M. Nathanson

Administration of the muscarinic agonist pilocarpine is commonly used to induce seizures in rodents for the study of epilepsy. Activation of muscarinic receptors has been previously shown to increase the production of endocannabinoids in the brain. Endocannabinoids act at the cannabinoid CB1 receptors to reduce neurotransmitter release and the severity of seizures in several models of epilepsy. In this study, we determined the effect of CB1 receptor activity on the induction in mice of seizures by pilocarpine. We found that decreased activation of the CB1 receptor, either through genetic deletion of the receptor or treatment with a CB1 antagonist, increased pilocarpine seizure severity without modifying seizure-induced cell proliferation and cell death. These results indicate that endocannabinoids act at the CB1 receptor to modulate the severity of pilocarpine-induced seizures. Administration of a CB1 agonist produced characteristic CB1-dependent behavioral responses, but did not affect pilocarpine seizure severity. A possible explanation for the lack of effect of CB1 agonist administration on pilocarpine seizures, despite the effects of CB1 antagonist administration and CB1 gene deletion, is that muscarinic receptor-stimulated endocannabinoid production is acting maximally at CB1 receptors to modulate sensitivity to pilocarpine seizures.


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2016

ST-11: A New Brain-Penetrant Microtubule-Destabilizing Agent with Therapeutic Potential for Glioblastoma Multiforme

Allison E. Cherry; Brian Haas; Alipi V. Naydenov; Susan Fung; Cong Xu; Katie Swinney; Michael Wagenbach; Jennifer P. Freeling; David A. Canton; Jonathan Coy; Eric A. Horne; Barry H. Rickman; Juan Jesus Vicente; John D. Scott; Rodney J. Y. Ho; Denny Liggitt; Linda Wordeman; Nephi Stella

Glioblastoma multiforme is a devastating and intractable type of cancer. Current antineoplastic drugs do not improve the median survival of patients diagnosed with glioblastoma multiforme beyond 14 to 15 months, in part because the blood–brain barrier is generally impermeable to many therapeutic agents. Drugs that target microtubules (MT) have shown remarkable efficacy in a variety of cancers, yet their use as glioblastoma multiforme treatments has also been hindered by the scarcity of brain-penetrant MT-targeting compounds. We have discovered a new alkylindole compound, ST-11, that acts directly on MTs and rapidly attenuates their rate of assembly. Accordingly, ST-11 arrests glioblastoma multiforme cells in prometaphase and triggers apoptosis. In vivo analyses reveal that unlike current antitubulin agents, ST-11 readily crosses the blood–brain barrier. Further investigation in a syngeneic orthotopic mouse model of glioblastoma multiforme shows that ST-11 activates caspase-3 in tumors to reduce tumor volume without overt toxicity. Thus, ST-11 represents the first member of a new class of brain-penetrant antitubulin therapeutic agents. Mol Cancer Ther; 15(9); 2018–29. ©2016 AACR.


PLOS ONE | 2018

The cannabinoid-1 receptor is abundantly expressed in striatal striosomes and striosome-dendron bouquets of the substantia nigra

Margaret I. Davis; Jill R. Crittenden; Austin Y. Feng; David A. Kupferschmidt; Alipi V. Naydenov; Nephi Stella; Ann M. Graybiel; David M. Lovinger

Presynaptic cannabinoid-1 receptors (CB1-R) bind endogenous and exogenous cannabinoids to modulate neurotransmitter release. CB1-Rs are expressed throughout the basal ganglia, including striatum and substantia nigra, where they play a role in learning and control of motivated actions. However, the pattern of CB1-R expression across different striatal compartments, microcircuits and efferent targets, and the contribution of different CB1-R-expressing neurons to this pattern, are unclear. We use a combination of conventional techniques and novel genetic models to evaluate CB1-R expression in striosome (patch) and matrix compartments of the striatum, and in nigral targets of striatal medium spiny projection neurons (MSNs). CB1-R protein and mRNA follow a descending dorsolateral-to-ventromedial intensity gradient in the caudal striatum, with elevated expression in striosomes relative to the surrounding matrix. The lateral predominance of striosome CB1-Rs contrasts with that of the classical striosomal marker, the mu opioid receptor (MOR), which is expressed most prominently in rostromedial striosomes. The dorsolateral-to-ventromedial CB1-R gradient is similar to Drd2 dopamine receptor immunoreactivity and opposite to Substance P. This topology of CB1-R expression is maintained downstream in the globus pallidus and substantia nigra. Dense CB1-R-expressing striatonigral fibers extend dorsally within the substantia nigra pars reticulata, and colocalize with bundles of ventrally extending, striosome-targeted, dendrites of dopamine-containing neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (striosome-dendron bouquets). Within striatum, CB1-Rs colocalize with fluorescently labeled MSN collaterals within the striosomes. Cre recombinase-mediated deletion of CB1-Rs from cortical projection neurons or MSNs, and MSN-selective reintroduction of CB1-Rs in knockout mice, demonstrate that the principal source of CB1-Rs in dorsolateral striosomes is local MSN collaterals. These data suggest a role for CB1-Rs in caudal dorsolateral striosome collaterals and striosome-dendron bouquet projections to lateral substantia nigra, where they are anatomically poised to mediate presynaptic disinhibition of both striosomal MSNs and midbrain dopamine neurons in response to endocannabinoids and cannabinomimetics.


Journal of Clinical Interventional Radiology ISVIR | 2017

Tumor Vascularity Does Not Predict Response to Yttrium-90 Radioembolization for Hepatic Metastases from Colorectal Cancer

Alipi V. Naydenov; William Proctor Harris; Guy E. Johnson; Daniel S. Hippe; Siddharth A. Padia


Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology | 2016

Tumor vascularity does not predict the response of colorectal cancer liver metastases to yttrium-90 radioembolization

Alipi V. Naydenov; William P. Harris; G. Johnson; W. Monsky; Siddharth A. Padia


Neuro-oncology | 2015

ATPS-06BRAIN-PENETRANT ALKYLINDOLE COMPOUNDS PROMOTE APOPTOSIS IN GLIOMA CELLS THROUGH MICROTUBULE DESTABILIZATION

Allison E. Cherry; Brian Haas; Alipi V. Naydenov; Susan Fung; Cong Xu; Katie Swinney; Michael Wagenbach; Jennifer P. Freeling; David A. Canton; Jonathan Coy; Eric A. Horne; Barry H. Rickman; John D. Scott; Rodney J. Y. Ho; Denny Liggitt; Linda Wordeman; Nephi Stella

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Nephi Stella

University of Washington

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Katie Swinney

University of Washington

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Eric A. Horne

University of Washington

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Susan Fung

University of Washington

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Jonathan Coy

University of Washington

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Barry H. Rickman

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Bird Td

University of Washington

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Brian Haas

University of Washington

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