Angela M. Batman
Virginia Commonwealth University
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Featured researches published by Angela M. Batman.
Genes, Brain and Behavior | 2013
Daniel E. Adkins; Joseph L. McClay; Sarah A. Vunck; Angela M. Batman; Robert E. Vann; Shaunna L. Clark; Renan P. Souza; James J. Crowley; Patrick F. Sullivan; E J C G van den Oord; Patrick M. Beardsley
Behavioral sensitization has been widely studied in animal models and is theorized to reflect neural modifications associated with human psychostimulant addiction. While the mesolimbic dopaminergic pathway is known to play a role, the neurochemical mechanisms underlying behavioral sensitization remain incompletely understood. In this study, we conducted the first metabolomics analysis to globally characterize neurochemical differences associated with behavioral sensitization. Methamphetamine (MA)‐induced sensitization measures were generated by statistically modeling longitudinal activity data for eight inbred strains of mice. Subsequent to behavioral testing, nontargeted liquid and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry profiling was performed on 48 brain samples, yielding 301 metabolite levels per sample after quality control. Association testing between metabolite levels and three primary dimensions of behavioral sensitization (total distance, stereotypy and margin time) showed four robust, significant associations at a stringent metabolome‐wide significance threshold (false discovery rate, FDR <0.05). Results implicated homocarnosine, a dipeptide of GABA and histidine, in total distance sensitization, GABA metabolite 4‐guanidinobutanoate and pantothenate in stereotypy sensitization, and myo‐inositol in margin time sensitization. Secondary analyses indicated that these associations were independent of concurrent MA levels and, with the exception of the myo‐inositol association, suggest a mechanism whereby strain‐based genetic variation produces specific baseline neurochemical differences that substantially influence the magnitude of MA‐induced sensitization. These findings demonstrate the utility of mouse metabolomics for identifying novel biomarkers, and developing more comprehensive neurochemical models, of psychostimulant sensitization.
ChemMedChem | 2009
Prashant S. Kharkar; Angela M. Batman; Juan Zhen; Patrick M. Beardsley; Maarten E. A. Reith; Aloke K. Dutta
A novel series of optically active molecules based on a 4‐(2‐(benzhydryloxy)ethyl)‐1‐((R)‐2‐hydroxy‐2‐phenylethyl)‐piperidin‐3‐ol template were developed. Depending on stereochemistry, the compounds exhibit various degrees of affinity for three dopamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine transporters. These molecules have the potential for treating several neurological disorders such as drug abuse, depression, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2010
Angela M. Batman; Aloke K. Dutta; Maarten E. A. Reith; Patrick M. Beardsley
A successful replacement pharmacotherapy for treating cocaine dependency would likely reduce cocaines abuse, support a low abuse liability, overlap cocaines subjective effects, and have a long duration of action. Inhibitors with varying selectivity at the dopamine transporter (DAT) have approximated these properties. The objective of the present study was to characterize the behavioural effects of an extremely selective DAT inhibitor, (+) trans-4-(2-Benzhydryloxyethyl)-1-(4-fluorobenzyl) piperadin-3-ol (D-84), a 3-hydroxy substituted piperidine derivative of GBR-12935, for its cocaine-like discriminative stimulus effects, its effects on cocaine self-administration, and for its own self-administration. During cocaine discrimination tests, cocaine occasioned the 10 mg/kg cocaine training stimulus with an ED(50) value of 3.13 (1.54-6.34) mg/kg, and reduced response rates with an ED(50) value of 20.39 (7.24-57.44) mg/kg. D-84 incompletely generalized to the cocaine stimulus occasioning a maximal 76% cocaine-lever responding, while reducing response rates with lower potency than cocaine (ED(50)=30.94 (12.34-77.60) mg/kg). Pretreatment with D-84 (9.6-30.4 mg/kg) significantly (P<0.05) reduced cocaine intake at 17.1 mg/kg D-84 when cocaine was self-administered at 0.5 mg/kg/infusion, and at 30.4 mg/kg D-84 when cocaine was self-administered at 0.1, 0.5 .and 1.0 mg/kg/infusion. During self-administration tests with D-84 (0.1-1 mg/kg/infusion), numbers of infusions significantly exceeded vehicle levels at 0.3 mg/kg/infusion. These results show that D-84 pretreatment can decrease cocaine intake especially when high doses of cocaine are being self-administered. This observation, combined with its incomplete generalization to the cocaine discriminative stimulus and its reported long duration of action, provides a profile consistent with a potential replacement therapy for treating cocaine-abusing patients.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2018
Andrew D van der Vaart; Xianfang Meng; M. Scott Bowers; Angela M. Batman; Fazil Aliev; Sean P. Farris; Jennifer S.Hill; Thomas A. Green; Danielle M. Dick; Jennifer T. Wolstenholme; Michael F. Miles
Understanding how ethanol actions on brain signal transduction and gene expression lead to excessive consumption and addiction could identify new treatments for alcohol dependence. We previously identified glycogen synthase kinase 3-beta (Gsk3b) as a member of a highly ethanol-responsive gene network in mouse medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). Gsk3b has been implicated in dendritic function, synaptic plasticity and behavioral responses to other drugs of abuse. Here, we investigate Gsk3b in rodent models of ethanol consumption and as a risk factor for human alcohol dependence. Stereotactic viral vector gene delivery overexpression of Gsk3b in mouse mPFC increased 2-bottle choice ethanol consumption, which was blocked by lithium, a known GSK3B inhibitor. Further, Gsk3b overexpression increased anxiety-like behavior following abstinence from ethanol. Protein or mRNA expression studies following Gsk3b over-expression identified synaptojanin 2, brain-derived neurotrophic factor and the neuropeptide Y Y5 receptor as potential downstream factors altering ethanol behaviors. Rat operant studies showed that selective pharmacologic inhibition of GSK3B with TDZD-8 dose-dependently decreased motivation to self-administer ethanol and sucrose and selectively blocked ethanol relapse-like behavior. In set-based and gene-wise genetic association analysis, a GSK3b-centric gene expression network had significant genetic associations, at a gene and network level, with risk for alcohol dependence in humans. These mutually reinforcing cross-species findings implicate GSK3B in neurobiological mechanisms controlling ethanol consumption, and as both a potential risk factor and therapeutic target for alcohol dependence.
Psychopharmacology | 2005
Sheri D. Grabus; Billy R. Martin; Angela M. Batman; Rachel F. Tyndale; Edward M. Sellers; M. Imad Damaj
Psychopharmacology | 2005
Angela M. Batman; Patrik Munzar; Patrick M. Beardsley
Metabolomics | 2013
Joseph L. McClay; Daniel E. Adkins; Sarah A. Vunck; Angela M. Batman; Robert E. Vann; Shaunna L. Clark; Patrick M. Beardsley; Edwin J. C. G. van den Oord
Journal of Neuroimmune Pharmacology | 2015
Joseph L. McClay; Sarah A. Vunck; Angela M. Batman; James J. Crowley; Robert E. Vann; Patrick M. Beardsley; Edwin J. C. G. van den Oord
Alcohol Research : Current Reviews | 2015
Angela M. Batman; Michael F. Miles
Archive | 2010
Angela M. Batman