Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Andreu Viader is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Andreu Viader.


Neuron | 2013

Aberrant Schwann Cell Lipid Metabolism Linked to Mitochondrial Deficits Leads to Axon Degeneration and Neuropathy

Andreu Viader; Yo Sasaki; Sungsu Kim; Amy Strickland; Cayce S. Workman; Kui Yang; Richard W. Gross; Jeffrey Milbrandt

Mitochondrial dysfunction is a common cause of peripheral neuropathy. Much effort has been devoted to examining the role played by neuronal/axonal mitochondria, but how mitochondrial deficits in peripheral nerve glia (Schwann cells [SCs]) contribute to peripheral nerve diseases remains unclear. Here, we investigate a mouse model of peripheral neuropathy secondary to SC mitochondrial dysfunction (Tfam-SCKOs). We show that disruption of SC mitochondria activates a maladaptive integrated stress response (ISR) through the actions of heme-regulated inhibitor (HRI) kinase, and causes a shift in lipid metabolism away from fatty acid synthesis toward oxidation. These alterations in SC lipid metabolism result in depletion of important myelin lipid components as well as in accumulation of acylcarnitines (ACs), an intermediate of fatty acid β-oxidation. Importantly, we show that ACs are released from SCs and induce axonal degeneration. A maladaptive ISR as well as altered SC lipid metabolism are thus underlying pathological mechanisms in mitochondria-related peripheral neuropathies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Sir-two-homolog 2 (Sirt2) modulates peripheral myelination through polarity protein Par-3/atypical protein kinase C (aPKC) signaling

Bogdan Beirowski; Jason A. Gustin; Sean M. Armour; Hiroyasu Yamamoto; Andreu Viader; Brian J. North; Shaday Michan; Robert H. Baloh; Judy P. Golden; Robert E. Schmidt; David A. Sinclair; Johan Auwerx; Jeffrey Milbrandt

The formation of myelin by Schwann cells (SCs) occurs via a series of orchestrated molecular events. We previously used global expression profiling to examine peripheral nerve myelination and identified the NAD+-dependent deacetylase Sir-two-homolog 2 (Sirt2) as a protein likely to be involved in myelination. Here, we show that Sirt2 expression in SCs is correlated with that of structural myelin components during both developmental myelination and remyelination after nerve injury. Transgenic mice lacking or overexpressing Sirt2 specifically in SCs show delays in myelin formation. In SCs, we found that Sirt2 deacetylates Par-3, a master regulator of cell polarity. The deacetylation of Par-3 by Sirt2 decreases the activity of the polarity complex signaling component aPKC, thereby regulating myelin formation. These results demonstrate that Sirt2 controls an essential polarity pathway in SCs during myelin assembly and provide insights into the association between intracellular metabolism and SC plasticity.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Schwann Cell Mitochondrial Metabolism Supports Long-Term Axonal Survival and Peripheral Nerve Function

Andreu Viader; Judith P. Golden; Robert H. Baloh; Robert E. Schmidt; Daniel A. Hunter; Jeffrey Milbrandt

Mitochondrial dysfunction is a common cause of peripheral neuropathies. While the role of neuron and axonal mitochondria in peripheral nerve disease is well appreciated, whether Schwann cell (SC) mitochondrial deficits contribute to peripheral neuropathies is unclear. Here, we examine how SC mitochondrial dysfunction affects axonal survival and contributes to the decline of peripheral nerve function by generating mice with SC-specific mitochondrial deficits. These mice (Tfam-SCKOs) were produced through the tissue-specific deletion of the mitochondrial transcription factor A gene (Tfam), which is essential for mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) transcription and maintenance. Tfam-SCKOs were viable, but as they aged, they developed a progressive peripheral neuropathy characterized by nerve conduction abnormalities as well as extensive muscle denervation. Morphological examination of Tfam-SCKO nerves revealed early preferential loss of small unmyelinated fibers followed by prominent demyelination and degeneration of larger-caliber axons. Tfam-SCKOs displayed sensory and motor deficits consistent with this pathology. Remarkably, the severe mtDNA depletion and respiratory chain abnormalities in Tfam-SCKO mice did not affect SC proliferation or survival. Mitochondrial function in SCs is therefore essential for maintenance of axonal survival and normal peripheral nerve function, suggesting that SC mitochondrial dysfunction contributes to human peripheral neuropathies.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

MicroRNAs Modulate Schwann Cell Response to Nerve Injury by Reinforcing Transcriptional Silencing of Dedifferentiation-Related Genes

Andreu Viader; Li-Wei Chang; Timothy J. Fahrner; Rakesh Nagarajan; Jeffrey Milbrandt

In the peripheral nervous system, Schwann cells (SCs) surrounding damaged axons undergo an injury response that is driven by an intricate transcriptional program and is critical for nerve regeneration. To examine whether these injury-induced changes in SCs are also regulated posttranscriptionally by miRNAs, we performed miRNA expression profiling of mouse sciatic nerve distal segment after crush injury. We also characterized the SC injury response in mice containing SCs with disrupted miRNA processing due to loss of Dicer. We identified 87 miRNAs that were expressed in mouse adult peripheral nerve, 48 of which were dynamically regulated after nerve injury. Most of these injury-regulated SC miRNAs were computationally predicted to inhibit drivers of SC dedifferentiation/proliferation and thereby re-enforce the transcriptional program driving SC remyelination. SCs deficient in miRNAs manifested a delay in the transition between the distinct differentiation states required to support peripheral nerve regeneration. Among the miRNAs expressed in adult mouse SCs, miR-34a and miR-140 were identified as functional regulators of SC dedifferentiation/proliferation and remyelination, respectively. We found that miR-34a interacted with positive regulators of dedifferentiation and proliferation such as Notch1 and Ccnd1 to control cell cycle dynamics in SCs. miR-140 targeted the transcription factor Egr2, a master regulator of myelination, and modulated myelination in DRG/SC cocultures. Together, these results demonstrate that SC miRNAs are important modulators of the SC regenerative response after nerve damage.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

The hereditary spastic paraplegia-related enzyme DDHD2 is a principal brain triglyceride lipase

Jordon M. Inloes; Ku-Lung Hsu; Melissa M. Dix; Andreu Viader; Kim Masuda; Thais Takei; Malcolm R. Wood; Benjamin F. Cravatt

Significance Many rare human genetic disorders are caused by mutations in genes that code for proteins of poorly characterized function. Determining the functions of these proteins is critical for understanding and devising potential treatments for human diseases. In this article, we discover using a combination of mouse genetic models, selective inhibitors, and lipid profiling that the DDHD2 enzyme, mutations of which cause a neurological disease termed complex hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP), acts as a major brain triglyceride hydrolase. Mice lacking DDHD2 have elevated brain triglycerides and lipid droplet accumulation in neurons. We have thus discovered that the brain possesses a specialized pathway for triglyceride metabolism, disruption of which leads to biochemical and cellular changes that may contribute to complex HSP. Complex hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) is a genetic disorder that causes lower limb spasticity and weakness and intellectual disability. Deleterious mutations in the poorly characterized serine hydrolase DDHD2 are a causative basis for recessive complex HSP. DDHD2 exhibits phospholipase activity in vitro, but its endogenous substrates and biochemical functions remain unknown. Here, we report the development of DDHD2−/− mice and a selective, in vivo-active DDHD2 inhibitor and their use in combination with mass spectrometry-based lipidomics to discover that DDHD2 regulates brain triglycerides (triacylglycerols, or TAGs). DDHD2−/− mice show age-dependent TAG elevations in the central nervous system, but not in several peripheral tissues. Large lipid droplets accumulated in DDHD2−/− brains and were localized primarily to the intracellular compartments of neurons. These metabolic changes were accompanied by impairments in motor and cognitive function. Recombinant DDHD2 displays TAG hydrolase activity, and TAGs accumulated in the brains of wild-type mice treated subchronically with a selective DDHD2 inhibitor. These findings, taken together, indicate that the central nervous system possesses a specialized pathway for metabolizing TAGs, disruption of which leads to massive lipid accumulation in neurons and complex HSP syndrome.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Rapid and profound rewiring of brain lipid signaling networks by acute diacylglycerol lipase inhibition

Daisuke Ogasawara; Hui Deng; Andreu Viader; Marc P. Baggelaar; Arjen C. Breman; Hans den Dulk; Adrianus M. C. H. van den Nieuwendijk; Marjolein Soethoudt; Tom van der Wel; Juan Zhou; Herman S. Overkleeft; Manuel Sanchez-Alavez; Simone Mori; William Nguyen; Bruno Conti; Xiaojie Liu; Yao Chen; Qing-song Liu; Benjamin F. Cravatt; Mario van der Stelt

Significance Lipid transmitters, such as endocannabinoid and eicosanoids, play important roles in the nervous system and regulate behaviors that include pain, emotionality, and addiction. Chemical probes that perturb lipid transmitter biosynthesis are needed to understand the functions of these pathways in the nervous system. Here, we describe selective and in vivo active inhibitors of the diacylglycerol lipases DAGLα and DAGLβ, which biosynthesize the endocannabinoid 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG). We show that these inhibitors produce rapid and dramatic changes in a brain lipid signaling network, comprising not only 2-AG, but also eicosanoids and diacylglycerols. These lipid changes are accompanied by impairments in synaptic plasticity and attenuation of neuroinflammatory responses in vivo, underscoring the broad role that DAGLs play in nervous system metabolism and function. Diacylglycerol lipases (DAGLα and DAGLβ) convert diacylglycerol to the endocannabinoid 2-arachidonoylglycerol. Our understanding of DAGL function has been hindered by a lack of chemical probes that can perturb these enzymes in vivo. Here, we report a set of centrally active DAGL inhibitors and a structurally related control probe and their use, in combination with chemical proteomics and lipidomics, to determine the impact of acute DAGL blockade on brain lipid networks in mice. Within 2 h, DAGL inhibition produced a striking reorganization of bioactive lipids, including elevations in DAGs and reductions in endocannabinoids and eicosanoids. We also found that DAGLα is a short half-life protein, and the inactivation of DAGLs disrupts cannabinoid receptor-dependent synaptic plasticity and impairs neuroinflammatory responses, including lipopolysaccharide-induced anapyrexia. These findings illuminate the highly interconnected and dynamic nature of lipid signaling pathways in the brain and the central role that DAGL enzymes play in regulating this network.


Muscle & Nerve | 2013

NERVE ALLOGRAFTS SUPPLEMENTED WITH SCHWANN CELLS OVEREXPRESSING GLIAL-CELL-LINE-DERIVED NEUROTROPHIC FACTOR

Katherine B. Santosa; Nithya J. Jesuraj; Andreu Viader; Matthew R. MacEwan; Piyaraj Newton; Daniel A. Hunter; Susan E. Mackinnon; Philip J. Johnson

We sought to determine whether supplementation of acellular nerve allografts (ANAs) with Schwann cells overexpressing GDNF (G‐SCs) would enhance functional recovery after peripheral nerve injury.


BMC Genomics | 2013

An integrated approach to characterize transcription factor and microRNA regulatory networks involved in Schwann cell response to peripheral nerve injury

Li-Wei Chang; Andreu Viader; Nobish Varghese; Jacqueline E. Payton; Jeffrey Milbrandt; Rakesh Nagarajan

BackgroundThe regenerative response of Schwann cells after peripheral nerve injury is a critical process directly related to the pathophysiology of a number of neurodegenerative diseases. This SC injury response is dependent on an intricate gene regulatory program coordinated by a number of transcription factors and microRNAs, but the interactions among them remain largely unknown. Uncovering the transcriptional and post-transcriptional regulatory networks governing the Schwann cell injury response is a key step towards a better understanding of Schwann cell biology and may help develop novel therapies for related diseases. Performing such comprehensive network analysis requires systematic bioinformatics methods to integrate multiple genomic datasets.ResultsIn this study we present a computational pipeline to infer transcription factor and microRNA regulatory networks. Our approach combined mRNA and microRNA expression profiling data, ChIP-Seq data of transcription factors, and computational transcription factor and microRNA target prediction. Using mRNA and microRNA expression data collected in a Schwann cell injury model, we constructed a regulatory network and studied regulatory pathways involved in Schwann cell response to injury. Furthermore, we analyzed network motifs and obtained insights on cooperative regulation of transcription factors and microRNAs in Schwann cell injury recovery.ConclusionsThis work demonstrates a systematic method for gene regulatory network inference that may be used to gain new information on gene regulation by transcription factors and microRNAs.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Differential Regional and Subtype-Specific Vulnerability of Enteric Neurons to Mitochondrial Dysfunction

Andreu Viader; Elizabeth C. Wright-Jin; Bhupinder P.S. Vohra; Robert O. Heuckeroth; Jeffrey Milbrandt

Mitochondrial dysfunction is a central mediator of disease progression in diverse neurodegenerative diseases that often present with prominent gastrointestinal abnormalities. Gastrointestinal dysfunction in these disorders is related, at least in part, to defects in the enteric nervous system (ENS). The role of mitochondrial deficits in ENS neurodegeneration and their relative contribution to gastrointestinal dysfunction, however, are unclear. To better understand how mitochondrial abnormalities in the ENS influence enteric neurodegeneration and affect intestinal function, we generated mice (Tfam-ENSKOs) with impaired mitochondrial metabolism in enteric neurons and glia through the targeted deletion of the mitochondrial transcription factor A gene (Tfam). Tfam-ENSKO mice were initially viable but, at an early age, they developed severe gastrointestinal motility problems characterized by intestinal pseudo-obstruction resulting in premature death. This gastrointestinal dysfunction was caused by extensive, progressive neurodegeneration of the ENS involving both neurons and glia. Interestingly, mitochondrial defects differentially affected specific subpopulations of enteric neurons and regions of the gastrointestinal tract. Mitochondrial deficiency-related neuronal and glial loss was most prominent in the proximal small intestine, but the first affected neurons, nitrergic inhibitory neurons, had the greatest losses in the distal small intestine. This regional and subtype-specific variability in susceptibility to mitochondrial defects resulted in an imbalance of inhibitory and excitatory neurons that likely accounts for the observed phenotype in Tfam-ENSKO mice. Mitochondrial dysfunction, therefore, is likely to be an important driving force of neurodegeneration in the ENS and contribute to gastrointestinal symptoms in people with neurodegenerative disorders.


eLife | 2016

A chemical proteomic atlas of brain serine hydrolases identifies cell type-specific pathways regulating neuroinflammation

Andreu Viader; Daisuke Ogasawara; Christopher M. Joslyn; Manuel Sanchez-Alavez; Simone Mori; William Nguyen; Bruno Conti; Benjamin F. Cravatt

Metabolic specialization among major brain cell types is central to nervous system function and determined in large part by the cellular distribution of enzymes. Serine hydrolases are a diverse enzyme class that plays fundamental roles in CNS metabolism and signaling. Here, we perform an activity-based proteomic analysis of primary mouse neurons, astrocytes, and microglia to furnish a global portrait of the cellular anatomy of serine hydrolases in the brain. We uncover compelling evidence for the cellular compartmentalization of key chemical transmission pathways, including the functional segregation of endocannabinoid (eCB) biosynthetic enzymes diacylglycerol lipase-alpha (DAGLα) and –beta (DAGLβ) to neurons and microglia, respectively. Disruption of DAGLβ perturbed eCB-eicosanoid crosstalk specifically in microglia and suppressed neuroinflammatory events in vivo independently of broader effects on eCB content. Mapping the cellular distribution of metabolic enzymes thus identifies pathways for regulating specialized inflammatory responses in the brain while avoiding global alterations in CNS function. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.7554/eLife.12345.001

Collaboration


Dive into the Andreu Viader's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeffrey Milbrandt

Washington University in St. Louis

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Qing-song Liu

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Xiaojie Liu

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Daisuke Ogasawara

Scripps Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yao Chen

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Bruno Conti

Scripps Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Casey R. Vickstrom

Medical College of Wisconsin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Simone Mori

Scripps Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge