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Dive into the research topics where Aniko Marshall is active.

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Featured researches published by Aniko Marshall.


Biological Psychiatry | 2014

Sex differences in corticotropin-releasing factor receptor-1 action within the dorsal raphe nucleus in stress responsivity.

Alexis R. Howerton; Alison V. Roland; Jessica M. Fluharty; Aniko Marshall; Alon Chen; Derek Daniels; Sheryl G. Beck; Tracy L. Bale

BACKGROUND Women are twice as likely as men to suffer from stress-related affective disorders. Corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) is an important link between stress and mood, in part through its signaling in the serotonergic dorsal raphe (DR). Development of CRF receptor-1 (CRFr1) antagonists has been a focus of numerous clinical trials but has not yet been proven efficacious. We hypothesized that sex differences in CRFr1 modulation of DR circuits might be key determinants in predicting therapeutic responses and affective disorder vulnerability. METHODS Male and female mice received DR infusions of the CRFr1 antagonist, NBI 35965, or CRF and were evaluated for stress responsivity. Sex differences in indices of neural activation (cFos) and colocalization of CRFr1 throughout the DR were examined. Whole-cell patch-clamp electrophysiology assessed sex differences in serotonin neuron membrane characteristics and responsivity to CRF. RESULTS Males showed robust behavioral and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis responses to DR infusion of NBI 35965 and CRF, whereas females were minimally responsive. Sex differences were also found for both CRF-induced DR cFos and CRFr1 co-localization throughout the DR. Electrophysiologically, female serotonergic neurons showed blunted membrane excitability and divergent inhibitory postsynaptic current responses to CRF application. CONCLUSIONS These studies demonstrate convincing sex differences in CRFr1 activity in the DR, where blunted female responses to NBI 35965 and CRF suggest unique stress modulation of the DR. These sex differences might underlie affective disorder vulnerability and differential sensitivity to pharmacologic treatments developed to target the CRF system, thereby contributing to a current lack of CRFr1 antagonist efficacy in clinical trials.


Endocrinology | 2013

Activation of Membrane-Associated Estrogen Receptors Decreases Food and Water Intake in Ovariectomized Rats

Jessica Santollo; Aniko Marshall; Derek Daniels

Estradiol (E2) decreases food and water intake in a variety of species, including rats. Available evidence suggests that this is mediated by genomic mechanisms that are most often attributed to nuclear estrogen receptors. More recent studies indicate that membrane-associated estrogen receptors (mERs) also can influence gene expression through the activation of transcription factors, yet it is unclear whether mERs are involved in mediating the hypophagic and antidipsetic effects of E2. In the present experiments, we injected E2 or a membrane-impermeable form of E2 (E2-BSA) into the lateral cerebral ventricle of ovariectomized female rats and evaluated the effect on 23 h food and water intake. First, we found that higher doses of E2 were necessary to reduce water intake than were sufficient to reduce food intake. Analysis of drinking microstructure revealed that the decrease in water intake after E2 treatment was mediated by both a decrease in burst number and burst size. Next, the activation of mERs with E2-BSA decreased both overnight food and water intake and analysis of drinking microstructure indicated that the decreased water intake resulted from a decrease in burst number. Finally, E2-BSA did not condition a taste aversion, suggesting that the inhibitory effects on food and water intake were not secondary to malaise. Together these findings suggest that activation of mERs is sufficient to decrease food and water intake in female rats.


Brain Research | 2012

Evaluating the potential for rostral diffusion in the cerebral ventricles using angiotensin II-induced drinking in rats

Derek Daniels; Aniko Marshall

In spite of evidence to the contrary, concern that substances injected into the fourth ventricle (4V) reach forebrain structures challenges the validity of using these injections to evaluate the role of hindbrain structures. Injection of AngII into the lateral ventricle (LV) increases water intake, but a similar response is not observed after injection into the 4V. This alone suggests the requirement of forebrain structures, but the potential for a counteracting, anti-dipsogenic pressor response to hindbrain AngII allows for lingering concern that this competing effect of AngII, rather than lack of forebrain access, underlies the negative result. Here, we used a double cannulation approach (LV and 4V) to evaluate the effect of the AngII receptor antagonist, losartan, on the drinking response to AngII injected into the LV. Injections of losartan into the LV blocked the dipsogenic response to AngII given 5min later into the LV. There was no effect, however, when losartan was injected into 4V, even when we used a dose of losartan that was 25 times greater than needed when injected into the LV. Collectively, these experiments suggest that concerns about diffusion from hindbrain ventricles to forebrain structures are overstated and can be circumvented using proper dose and timing of injections. Moreover, these data provide additional support to the existing literature showing that forebrain structures are key sites in the stimulation of drinking behavior by AngII.


American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2016

Mouse Slc4a11 expressed in Xenopus oocytes is an ideally selective H+/OH− conductance pathway that is stimulated by rises in intracellular and extracellular pH

Evan J. Myers; Aniko Marshall; Michael L. Jennings; Mark D. Parker

The SLC4A11 gene encodes the bicarbonate-transporter-related protein BTR1, which is mutated in syndromes characterized by vision and hearing loss. Signs of these diseases [congenital hereditary endothelial dystrophy (CHED) and Harboyan syndrome] are evident in mouse models of Slc4a11 disruption. However, the intrinsic activity of Slc4a11 remains controversial, complicating assignment of its (patho)physiological role. Most studies concur that Slc4a11 transports H+ (or the thermodynamically equivalent species OH-) rather than HCO3-, but disparities have arisen as to whether the transport is coupled to another species such as Na+ or NH3/NH4+ Here for the first time, we examine the action of mouse Slc4a11 in Xenopus oocytes. We simultaneously monitor changes in intracellular pH, membrane potential, and conductance as we alter extracellular pH, revealing the electrical and chemical driving forces that underlie the observed ion fluxes. We find that mSlc4a11 is an ideally selective H+/OH- conductive pathway, the action of which is uncoupled from the cotransport of any other ion. We also find that the activity of mSlc4a11 is independently enhanced by both extracellular and intracellular alkalinization, suggesting OH- as the most likely substrate and providing a novel explanation for the apparent NH3-dependence of Slc4a11-mediated currents reported by others. We suggest that the unique properties of Slc4a11 action underlie its value as a pH regulator in corneal endothelial cells.


The Journal of Physiology | 2016

A novel mutant Na+/HCO3− cotransporter NBCe1 in a case of compound-heterozygous inheritance of proximal renal tubular acidosis

Evan J. Myers; Lu Yuan; Melanie A. Felmlee; Yuan Yuan Lin; Yan Jiang; Yu Pei; Ou Wang; Mei Li; Xiao Ping Xing; Aniko Marshall; Wei Bo Xia; Mark D. Parker

The inheritance of two defective alleles of SLC4A4, the gene that encodes the widely‐expressed electrogenic sodium bicarbonate cotransporter NBCe1, results in the bicarbonate‐wasting disease proximal renal tubular acidosis (pRTA). In the present study, we report the first case of compound‐heterozygous inheritance of pRTA (p.Arg510His/p.Gln913Arg) in an individual with low blood pH, blindness and neurological signs that resemble transient ischaemic attacks. We employ fluorescence microscopy on non‐polarized (human embryonic kidney) and polarized (Madin–Darby canine kidney) renal cell lines and electrophysiology on Xenopus oocytes to characterize the mutant transporters (R510H and Q913R). Both mutant transporters exhibit enhanced intracellular retention in renal cells, an observation that probably explains the HCO3− transport deficit in the individual. Both mutants retain a close‐to‐normal per molecule Na+/HCO3− cotransport activity in Xenopus oocytes, suggesting that they are suitable candidates for folding‐correction therapy. However, Q913R expression is uniquely associated with a depolarizing, HCO3− independent, Cl−‐conductance in oocytes that could have pathological consequences if expressed in the cells of patients.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2016

Divergent effects of ERα and ERβ on fluid intake by female rats are not dependent on concomitant changes in AT1R expression or body weight

Jessica Santollo; Aniko Marshall; Kathleen S. Curtis; Robert C. Speth; Stewart D. Clark; Derek Daniels

Estradiol (E2) decreases both water and saline intakes by female rats. The ERα and ERβ subtypes are expressed in areas of the brain that control fluid intake; however, the role that these receptors play in E2s antidipsogenic and antinatriorexigenic effects have not been examined. Accordingly, we tested the hypothesis that activation of ERα and ERβ decreases water and saline intakes by female rats. We found a divergence in E2s inhibitory effect on intake: activation of ERα decreased water intake, whereas activation of ERβ decreased saline intake. E2 decreases expression of the angiotensin II type 1 receptor (AT1R), a receptor with known relevance to water and salt intakes, in multiple areas of the brain where ERα and ERβ are differentially expressed. Therefore, we tested for agonist-induced changes in AT1R mRNA expression by RT-PCR and protein expression by analyzing receptor binding to test the hypothesis that the divergent effects of these ER subtypes are mediated by region-specific changes in AT1R expression. Although we found no changes in AT1R mRNA or binding in areas of the brain known to control fluid intake associated with agonist treatment, the experimental results replicate and extend previous findings that body weight changes mediate alterations in AT1R expression in distinct brain regions. Together, the results reveal selective effects of ER subtypes on ingestive behaviors, advancing our understanding of E2s inhibitory role in the controls of fluid intake by female rats.


The FASEB Journal | 2015

A Novel Missense Mutation In The NBCe1 Gene (SLC4A4) And A Novel Mode Of Inheritance For Proximal Renal Tubular Acidosis (pRTA)

Evan Myers; Lu Yuan; Melanie A. Felmlee; Yuanyuan Lin; Yan Jiang; Yu Pei; Ou Wang; Mei Li; Xiaoping Xing; Aniko Marshall; Weibo Xia; Mark Parker


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2014

Roux-en-Y gastric bypass does not affect daily water intake or the drinking response to dipsogenic stimuli in rats

Aniko Marshall; Jessica Santollo; Caroline Corteville; Thomas A. Lutz; Derek Daniels


Scientific Reports | 2018

The role of disease-linked residue glutamine-913 in support of the structure and function of the human electrogenic sodium/bicarbonate cotransporter NBCe1-A

Evan J. Myers; Aniko Marshall; Mark D. Parker


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017

A novel model of corneal edema in mice with a disrupted endothelial bicarbonate transporter

Mark Parker; Sangita P. Patel; Aniko Marshall; Cheikh Mballo; Emily E Salerno

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Evan J. Myers

State University of New York System

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Mark D. Parker

Case Western Reserve University

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Melanie A. Felmlee

State University of New York System

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Michael L. Jennings

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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Lu Yuan

Peking Union Medical College Hospital

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Mei Li

Peking Union Medical College Hospital

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