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Dive into the research topics where Amy H. Yang is active.

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Featured researches published by Amy H. Yang.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001

Chromosomal variation in neurons of the developing and adult mammalian nervous system

Stevens K. Rehen; Michael J. McConnell; Dhruv Kaushal; Marcy A. Kingsbury; Amy H. Yang; Jerold Chun

A basic assumption about the normal nervous system is that its neurons possess identical genomes. Here we present direct evidence for genomic variability, manifested as chromosomal aneuploidy, among developing and mature neurons. Analysis of mouse embryonic cerebral cortical neuroblasts in situ detected lagging chromosomes during mitosis, suggesting the normal generation of aneuploidy in these somatic cells. Spectral karyotype analysis identified ≈33% of neuroblasts as aneuploid. Most cells lacked one chromosome, whereas others showed hyperploidy, monosomy, and/or trisomy. The prevalence of aneuploidy was reduced by culturing cortical explants in medium containing fibroblast growth factor 2. Interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization on embryonic cortical cells supported the rate of aneuploidy observed by spectral karyotyping and detected aneuploidy in adult neurons. Our results demonstrate that genomes of developing and adult neurons can be different at the level of whole chromosomes.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Constitutional Aneuploidy in the Normal Human Brain

Stevens K. Rehen; Yun C. Yung; Matthew P. McCreight; Dhruv Kaushal; Amy H. Yang; Beatriz S.V. Almeida; Marcy A. Kingsbury; Kátia M. S. Cabral; Michael J. McConnell; Brigitte Anliker; Marisa Fontanoz; Jerold Chun

The mouse brain contains genetically distinct cells that differ with respect to chromosome number manifested as aneuploidy (Rehen et al., 2001); however, the relevance to humans is not known. Here, using double-label fluorescence in situ hybridization for the autosome chromosome 21 (chromosome 21 point probes combined with chromosome 21 “paint” probes), along with immunocytochemistry and cell sorting, we present evidence for chromosome gain and loss in the human brain. Chromosome 21 aneuploid cells constitute ∼4% of the estimated one trillion cells in the human brain and include non-neuronal cells and postmitotic neurons identified by the neuronspecific nuclear protein marker. In comparison, human interphase lymphocytes present chromosome 21 aneuploidy rates of 0.6%. Together, these data demonstrate that human brain cells (both neurons and non-neuronal cells) can be aneuploid and that the resulting genetic mosaicism is a normal feature of the human CNS.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2005

Aneuploid neurons are functionally active and integrated into brain circuitry

Marcy A. Kingsbury; Beth Friedman; Michael J. McConnell; Stevens Kastrup Rehen; Amy H. Yang; Dhruv Kaushal; Jerold Chun

The existence of aneuploid cells within the mammalian brain has suggested the influence of genetic mosaicism on normal neural circuitry. However, aneuploid cells might instead be glia, nonneural, or dying cells, which are irrelevant to direct neuronal signaling. Combining retrograde labeling with FISH for chromosome-specific loci, distantly labeled aneuploid neurons were observed in expected anatomical projection areas. Coincident labeling for immediate early gene expression indicated that these aneuploid neurons were functionally active. These results demonstrate that functioning neurons with aneuploid genomes form genetically mosaic neural circuitries as part of the normal organization of the mammalian brain.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2002

In vivo roles of lysophospholipid receptors revealed by gene targeting studies in mice

Amy H. Yang; Isao Ishii; Jerold Chun

Lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) and sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P) are extracellular ligands for a family of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), LPA1/2/3 and S1P1/2/3/4/5. Through coupling to multiple classes of G proteins and activating multiple signaling pathways, LPA/S1P receptors have been shown to be integral players for many essential cellular and physiological processes. Generation and analysis of mice deficient in each of LPA1, LPA2, S1P1, S1P2, and S1P3 have provided valuable information on the in vivo roles of these receptors. This review is focussed on expression patterns of each receptor gene in wild-type mice, targeted deletion approaches for generating mutant animals, main phenotypes of receptor-null mice, and alterations in signaling characteristics in receptor-deficient primary cells. Altogether, these data give insights to the importance of LPA/S1P receptors at the cellular and organismal level.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Failed Clearance of Aneuploid Embryonic Neural Progenitor Cells Leads to Excess Aneuploidy in the Atm-Deficient But Not the Trp53-Deficient Adult Cerebral Cortex

Michael J. McConnell; Dhruv Kaushal; Amy H. Yang; Marcy A. Kingsbury; Stevens K. Rehen; Kai Treuner; Robert Helton; Emily G. Annas; Jerold Chun; Carrolee Barlow

Aneuploid neurons populate the normal adult brain, but the cause and the consequence of chromosome abnormalities in the CNS are poorly defined. In the adult cerebral cortex of three genetic mutants, one of which is a mouse model of the human neurodegenerative disease ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T), we observed divergent levels of sex chromosome (XY) aneuploidy. Although both A-T mutated (Atm)- and transformation related protein 53 (Trp53)-dependent mechanisms are thought to clear newly postmitotic neurons with chromosome abnormalities, we found a 38% increase in the prevalence of XY aneuploidy in the adult Atm-/- cerebral cortex and a dramatic 78% decrease in Trp53-/- mutant mice. A similar 43% decrease in adult XY aneuploidy was observed in DNA repair-deficient Xrcc5-/- mutants. Additional investigation found an elevated incidence of aneuploid embryonic neural progenitor cells (NPCs) in all three mutants, but elevated apoptosis, a likely fate of embryonic NPCs with severe chromosome abnormalities, was observed only in Xrcc5-/- mutants. These data lend increasing support to the hypothesis that hereditary mutations such as ATM-deficiency, which render abnormal cells resistant to developmental clearance, can lead to late-manifesting human neurological disorders.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Aneuploid Cells Are Differentially Susceptible to Caspase-Mediated Death during Embryonic Cerebral Cortical Development

Suzanne E. Peterson; Amy H. Yang; Diane M. Bushman; Jurjen W. Westra; Yun C. Yung; Serena Barral; Tetsuji Mutoh; Stevens Kastrup Rehen; Jerold Chun

Neural progenitor cells, neurons, and glia of the normal vertebrate brain are diversely aneuploid, forming mosaics of intermixed aneuploid and euploid cells. The functional significance of neural mosaic aneuploidy is not known; however, the generation of aneuploidy during embryonic neurogenesis, coincident with caspase-dependent programmed cell death (PCD), suggests that a cells karyotype could influence its survival within the CNS. To address this hypothesis, PCD in the mouse embryonic cerebral cortex was attenuated by global pharmacological inhibition of caspases or genetic removal of caspase-3 or caspase-9. The chromosomal repertoire of individual brain cells was then assessed by chromosome counting, spectral karyotyping, fluorescence in situ hybridization, and DNA content flow cytometry. Reducing PCD resulted in markedly enhanced mosaicism that was comprised of increased numbers of cells with the following: (1) numerical aneuploidy (chromosome losses or gains); (2) extreme forms of numerical aneuploidy (>5 chromosomes lost or gained); and (3) rare karyotypes, including those with coincident chromosome loss and gain, or absence of both members of a chromosome pair (nullisomy). Interestingly, mildly aneuploid (<5 chromosomes lost or gained) populations remained comparatively unchanged. These data demonstrate functional non-equivalence of distinguishable aneuploidies on neural cell survival, providing evidence that somatically generated, cell-autonomous genomic alterations have consequences for neural development and possibly other brain functions.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2011

Multiple apoptotic defects in hematopoietic cells from mice lacking lipocalin 24P3

Zhuoming Liu; Amy H. Yang; Zhengqi Wang; Kevin D. Bunting; Gangarao Davuluri; Michael R. Green; Laxminarayana R. Devireddy

The lipocalin mouse 24p3 has been implicated in diverse physiological processes, including apoptosis, iron trafficking, development and innate immunity. Studies from our laboratory as well as others demonstrated the proapoptotic activity of 24p3 in a variety of cultured models. However, a general role for the lipocalin 24p3 in the hematopoietic system has not been tested in vivo. To study the role of 24p3, we derived 24p3 null mice and back-crossed them onto C57BL/6 and 129/SVE backgrounds. Homozygous 24p3−/− mice developed a progressive accumulation of lymphoid, myeloid, and erythroid cells, which was not due to enhanced hematopoiesis because competitive repopulation and recovery from myelosuppression were the same as for wild type. Instead, apoptotic defects were unique to many mature hematopoietic cell types, including neutrophils, cytokine-dependent mast cells, thymocytes, and erythroid cells. Thymocytes isolated from 24p3 null mice also displayed resistance to apoptosis-induced by dexamethasone. Bim response to various apoptotic stimuli was attenuated in 24p3−/− cells, thus explaining their resistance to the ensuing cell death. The results of these studies, in conjunction with those of previous studies, reveal 24p3 as a regulator of the hematopoietic compartment with important roles in normal physiology and disease progression. Interestingly, these functions are limited to relatively mature blood cell compartments.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2002

Marked Perinatal Lethality and Cellular Signaling Deficits in Mice Null for the Two Sphingosine 1-Phosphate (S1P) Receptors, S1P2/LPB2/EDG-5 and S1P3/LPB3/EDG-3

Isao Ishii; Xiaoqin Ye; Beth Friedman; Shuji Kawamura; James J. A. Contos; Marcy A. Kingsbury; Amy H. Yang; Guangfa Zhang; Joan Heller Brown; Jerold Chun


Circulation Research | 2001

Increased Expression and Activity of RhoA Are Associated With Increased DNA Synthesis and Reduced p27Kip1 Expression in the Vasculature of Hypertensive Rats

Tammy M. Seasholtz; Tong Zhang; Michael R. Morissette; Amy L. Howes; Amy H. Yang; Joan Heller Brown


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2003

Chromosome Segregation Defects Contribute to Aneuploidy in Normal Neural Progenitor Cells

Amy H. Yang; Dhruv Kaushal; Stevens K. Rehen; Kristin Kriedt; Marcy A. Kingsbury; Michael J. McConnell; Jerold Chun

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Marcy A. Kingsbury

Indiana University Bloomington

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Stevens K. Rehen

Federal University of Rio de Janeiro

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Beth Friedman

University of California

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Carrolee Barlow

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Isao Ishii

University of California

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Kai Treuner

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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