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Dive into the research topics where Anna Karpova is active.

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Featured researches published by Anna Karpova.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Involvement of Protein Synthesis and Degradation in Long-Term Potentiation of Schaffer Collateral CA1 Synapses

Anna Karpova; Marina Mikhaylova; Ulrich Thomas; Thomas Knöpfel; Thomas Behnisch

Expression of synaptic plasticity involves the translation of mRNA into protein and, probably, active protein degradation via the proteasome pathway. Here, we report on the rapid activation of synthesis and degradation of a probe protein with the induction of long-term potentiation (LTP) in the hippocampal Schaffer collateral CA1 pathway. The proteasome inhibitor MG132 significantly reduced the field EPSP slope potentiation and LTP maintenance without acutely affecting basal synaptic transmission. To visualize protein dynamics, CA1 pyramidal cells of hippocampal slices were transfected with Semliki Forest virus particles expressing a recombinant RNA. This RNA contained the coding sequence for a degradable green fluorescence protein with a nuclear localization signal (NLS-d1EGFP) followed by a 3′- untranslated region dendritic targeting sequence. NLS-d1EGFP fluorescence remained stable in the low-frequency test stimulation but increased with LTP induction in the cell body and in most dendritic compartments of CA1 neurons. Applying anisomycin, a protein synthesis inhibitor, caused NLS-d1EGFP levels to decline; a proteasome inhibitor MG132 reversed this effect. In the presence of anisomycin, LTP induction accelerated the degradation of NLS-d1EGFP. When both inhibitors were present, NLS-d1EGFP levels remained unaffected by LTP induction. Moreover, LTP-induced acceleration of NLS-d1EGFP synthesis was blocked by rapamycin, which is consistent with the involvement of dendritic mammalian target of rapamycin in LTP-triggered translational activity. Our results clearly demonstrate that LTP induction not only leads to a rapid increase in the rate of protein synthesis but also accelerates protein degradation via the proteasome system.


PLOS Biology | 2008

Caldendrin-Jacob: a protein liaison that couples NMDA receptor signalling to the nucleus.

Daniela C. Dieterich; Anna Karpova; Marina Mikhaylova; Irina Zdobnova; Imbritt König; Marco Landwehr; Martin Kreutz; Karl-Heinz Smalla; Karin Richter; Peter Landgraf; Carsten Reissner; Tobias M. Boeckers; Werner Zuschratter; Christina Spilker; Constanze I. Seidenbecher; Craig C. Garner; Eckart D. Gundelfinger; Michael R. Kreutz

NMDA (N-methyl-D-aspartate) receptors and calcium can exert multiple and very divergent effects within neuronal cells, thereby impacting opposing occurrences such as synaptic plasticity and neuronal degeneration. The neuronal Ca2+ sensor Caldendrin is a postsynaptic density component with high similarity to calmodulin. Jacob, a recently identified Caldendrin binding partner, is a novel protein abundantly expressed in limbic brain and cerebral cortex. Strictly depending upon activation of NMDA-type glutamate receptors, Jacob is recruited to neuronal nuclei, resulting in a rapid stripping of synaptic contacts and in a drastically altered morphology of the dendritic tree. Jacobs nuclear trafficking from distal dendrites crucially requires the classical Importin pathway. Caldendrin binds to Jacobs nuclear localization signal in a Ca2+-dependent manner, thereby controlling Jacobs extranuclear localization by competing with the binding of Importin-α to Jacobs nuclear localization signal. This competition requires sustained synapto-dendritic Ca2+ levels, which presumably cannot be achieved by activation of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors, but are confined to Ca2+ microdomains such as postsynaptic spines. Extrasynaptic NMDA receptors, as opposed to their synaptic counterparts, trigger the cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) shut-off pathway, and cell death. We found that nuclear knockdown of Jacob prevents CREB shut-off after extrasynaptic NMDA receptor activation, whereas its nuclear overexpression induces CREB shut-off without NMDA receptor stimulation. Importantly, nuclear knockdown of Jacob attenuates NMDA-induced loss of synaptic contacts, and neuronal degeneration. This defines a novel mechanism of synapse-to-nucleus communication via a synaptic Ca2+-sensor protein, which links the activity of NMDA receptors to nuclear signalling events involved in modelling synapto-dendritic input and NMDA receptor–induced cellular degeneration.


Cell | 2013

Encoding and Transducing the Synaptic or Extrasynaptic Origin of NMDA Receptor Signals to the Nucleus

Anna Karpova; Marina Mikhaylova; Sujoy Bera; Julia Bär; Pasham Parameshwar Reddy; Thomas Behnisch; Vladan Rankovic; Christina Spilker; Philipp Bethge; Jale Sahin; Rahul Kaushik; Werner Zuschratter; Thilo Kähne; Michael Naumann; Eckart D. Gundelfinger; Michael R. Kreutz

The activation of N-methyl-D-aspartate-receptors (NMDARs) in synapses provides plasticity and cell survival signals, whereas NMDARs residing in the neuronal membrane outside synapses trigger neurodegeneration. At present, it is unclear how these opposing signals are transduced to and discriminated by the nucleus. In this study, we demonstrate that Jacob is a protein messenger that encodes the origin of synaptic versus extrasynaptic NMDAR signals and delivers them to the nucleus. Exclusively synaptic, but not extrasynaptic, NMDAR activation induces phosphorylation of Jacob at serine-180 by ERK1/2. Long-distance trafficking of Jacob from synaptic, but not extrasynaptic, sites depends on ERK activity, and association with fragments of the intermediate filament α-internexin hinders dephosphorylation of the Jacob/ERK complex during nuclear transit. In the nucleus, the phosphorylation state of Jacob determines whether it induces cell death or promotes cell survival and enhances synaptic plasticity.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Nuclear Translocation of Jacob in Hippocampal Neurons after Stimuli Inducing Long-Term Potentiation but Not Long-Term Depression

Thomas Behnisch; Pingan Yuanxiang; Philipp Bethge; Suhel Parvez; Ying Chen; Jin Yu; Anna Karpova; Julietta U. Frey; Marina Mikhaylova; Michael R. Kreutz

BACKGROUND In recent years a number of potential synapto-nuclear protein messengers have been characterized that are thought to be involved in plasticity-related gene expression, and that have the capacity of importin- mediated and activity-dependent nuclear import. However, there is a surprising paucity of data showing the nuclear import of such proteins in cellular models of learning and memory. Only recently it was found that the transcription factor cyclic AMP response element binding protein 2 (CREB2) transits to the nucleus during long-term depression (LTD), but not during long-term potentiation (LTP) of synaptic transmission in hippocampal primary neurons. Jacob is another messenger that couples NMDA-receptor-activity to nuclear gene expression. We therefore aimed to study whether Jacob accumulates in the nucleus in physiological relevant models of activity-dependent synaptic plasticity. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS We have analyzed the dynamics of Jacobs nuclear import following induction of NMDA-receptor dependent LTP or LTD at Schaffer collateral-CA1 synapses in rat hippocampal slices. Using time-lapse imaging of neurons expressing a Jacob-Green-Fluorescent-Protein we found that Jacob rapidly translocates from dendrites to the nucleus already during the tetanization period of LTP, but not after induction of LTD. Immunocytochemical stainings confirmed the nuclear accumulation of endogenous Jacob in comparison to apical dendrites after induction of LTP but not LTD. Complementary findings were obtained after induction of NMDA-receptor dependent chemical LTP and LTD in hippocampal primary neurons. However, in accordance with previous studies, high concentrations of NMDA and glycine as well as specific activation of extrasynaptic NMDA-receptors resembling pathological conditions induce an even more profound increase of nuclear Jacob levels. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE Taken together, these findings suggest that the two major forms of NMDA-receptor dependent synaptic plasticity, LTP and LTD, elicit the transition of different synapto-nuclear messengers albeit in both cases importin-mediated retrograde transport and NMDA-receptor activation is required.


Trends in Neurosciences | 2015

Macromolecular transport in synapse to nucleus communication.

Nicolas Panayotis; Anna Karpova; Michael R. Kreutz; Mike Fainzilber

Local signaling events at synapses or axon terminals must be communicated to the nucleus to elicit transcriptional responses. The lengths of neuronal processes pose a significant challenge for such intracellular communication. This challenge is met by mechanisms ranging from rapid signals encoded in calcium waves to slower macromolecular signaling complexes carried by molecular motors. Here we summarize recent findings on macromolecular signaling from the synapse to the nucleus, in comparison to those employed in injury signaling along axons. A number of common themes emerge, including combinatorial signal encoding by post-translational mechanisms such as differential phosphorylation and proteolysis, and conserved roles for importins in coordinating signaling complexes. Neurons may integrate ionic flux with motor-transported signals as a temporal code for synaptic plasticity signaling.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Dendritic mRNA Targeting of Jacob and N-Methyl-d-aspartate-induced Nuclear Translocation after Calpain-mediated Proteolysis

Stefan Kindler; Daniela C. Dieterich; Janin Schütt; Jale Sahin; Anna Karpova; Marina Mikhaylova; Claudia Schob; Eckart D. Gundelfinger; Hans-Jürgen Kreienkamp; Michael R. Kreutz

Jacob is a recently identified plasticity-related protein that couples N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor activity to nuclear gene expression. An expression analysis by Northern blot and in situ hybridization shows that Jacob is almost exclusively present in brain, in particular in the cortex and the limbic system. Alternative splicing gives rise to multiple mRNA variants, all of which exhibit a prominent dendritic localization in the hippocampus. Functional analysis in primary hippocampal neurons revealed that a predominant cis-acting dendritic targeting element in the 3′-untranslated region of Jacob mRNAs is responsible for dendritic mRNA localization. In the mouse brain, Jacob transcripts are associated with both the fragile X mental retardation protein, a well described trans-acting factor regulating dendritic mRNA targeting and translation, and the kinesin family member 5C motor complex, which is known to mediate dendritic mRNA transport. Jacob is susceptible to rapid protein degradation in a Ca2+- and Calpain-dependent manner, and Calpain-mediated clipping of the myristoylated N terminus of Jacob is required for its nuclear translocation after N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor activation. Our data suggest that local synthesis in dendrites may be necessary to replenish dendritic Jacob pools after truncation of the N-terminal membrane anchor and concomitant translocation of Jacob to the nucleus.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Inhibition of the polyamine system counteracts β-amyloid peptide-induced memory impairment in mice: involvement of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors.

Guilherme Monteiro Gomes; Gerusa D. Dalmolin; Julia Bär; Anna Karpova; Carlos Fernando Mello; Michael R. Kreutz; Maribel Antonello Rubin

In Alzheimers disease (AD), the β-amyloid peptide (Aβ) has been causally linked to synaptic dysfunction and cognitive impairment. Several studies have shown that N-Methyl-D-Aspartate receptors (NMDAR) activation is involved in the detrimental actions of Aβ. Polyamines, like spermidine and spermine, are positive modulators of NMDAR function and it has been shown that their levels are regulated by Aβ. In this study we show here that interruption of NMDAR modulation by polyamines through blockade of its binding site at NMDAR by arcaine (0.02 nmol/site), or inhibition of polyamine synthesis by DFMO (2.7 nmol/site), reverses Aβ25–35-induced memory impairment in mice in a novel object recognition task. Incubation of hippocampal cell cultures with Aβ25–35 (10 µM) significantly increased the nuclear accumulation of Jacob, which is a hallmark of NMDAR activation. The Aβ-induced nuclear translocation of Jacob was blocked upon application of traxoprodil (4 nM), arcaine (4 µM) or DFMO (5 µM), suggesting that activation of the polyamine binding site at NMDAR located probably at extrasynaptic sites might underlie the cognitive deficits of Aβ25–35-treated mice. Extrasynaptic NMDAR activation in primary neurons results in a stripping of synaptic contacts and simplification of neuronal cytoarchitecture. Aβ25–35 application in hippocampal primary cell cultures reduced dendritic spine density and induced alterations on spine morphology. Application of traxoprodil (4 nM), arcaine (4 µM) or DFMO (5 µM) reversed these effects of Aβ25–35. Taken together these data provide evidence that polyamine modulation of extrasynaptic NMDAR signaling might be involved in Aβ pathology.


Brain Structure & Function | 2014

Cellular distribution of the NMDA-receptor activated synapto-nuclear messenger Jacob in the rat brain

Marina Mikhaylova; Anna Karpova; Julia Bär; Philipp Bethge; Pingan Yuanxiang; Ying Chen; Werner Zuschratter; Thomas Behnisch; Michael R. Kreutz

In previous work, we found that the protein messenger Jacob is involved in N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) signaling to the nucleus and cAMP response element-binding protein (CREB) mediated gene expression in hippocampal primary neurons. Particularly, extrasynaptic NMDAR activation drives Jacob efficiently into the nucleus where it then induces gene expression that promotes neurodegeneration. However, the protein also translocates to the nucleus in CA1 neurons after Schaffer collateral long-term potentiation (LTP) but not long-term depression (LTD), suggesting that Jacob might be involved in hippocampal and LTP-dependent learning and memory processes. Not much is known about the cellular and subcellular distribution of the protein in brain. In this paper, we provide an overview of the expression of Jacob in rat brain with special emphasis on the hippocampus. We show that Jacob is abundant in hippocampal pyramidal neurons and interneurons but absent from astrocytes and microglia. Interestingly, we found that Jacob is also present in mossy fiber axons. Double immunofluorescence confocal laser scans with presynaptic markers demonstrate that Jacob is indeed found at excitatory but not inhibitory presynaptic sites. Accordingly, we found no substantial co-localization of Jacob with a postsynaptic marker of inhibitory synapses, gephyrin. In contrast, almost all postsynaptic density protein 95 (PSD-95) positive excitatory postsynaptic sites also exhibited strong Jacob-immunofluorescence. Taken together, these data support a synaptic and nuclear role of Jacob that implicates long-distance NMDAR signaling to the nucleus in excitatory neurons.


PLOS Genetics | 2016

A Jacob/Nsmf Gene Knockout Results in Hippocampal Dysplasia and Impaired BDNF Signaling in Dendritogenesis.

Christina Spilker; Sven Nullmeier; Katarzyna M. Grochowska; Anne Schumacher; Ioana Butnaru; Tamar Macharadze; Guilherme M. Gomes; PingAn Yuanxiang; Gonca Bayraktar; Carolin Rodenstein; Carolin Geiseler; Angela Kolodziej; Jeffrey Lopez-Rojas; Dirk Montag; Frank Angenstein; Julia Bär; Wolfgang D’Hanis; Thomas Roskoden; Marina Mikhaylova; Eike Budinger; Frank W. Ohl; Oliver Stork; Ana Claudia Zenclussen; Anna Karpova; Herbert Schwegler; Michael R. Kreutz

Jacob, the protein encoded by the Nsmf gene, is involved in synapto-nuclear signaling and docks an N-Methyl-D-Aspartate receptor (NMDAR)-derived signalosome to nuclear target sites like the transcription factor cAMP-response-element-binding protein (CREB). Several reports indicate that mutations in NSMF are related to Kallmann syndrome (KS), a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (IHH) associated with anosmia or hyposmia. It has also been reported that a protein knockdown results in migration deficits of Gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) positive neurons from the olfactory bulb to the hypothalamus during early neuronal development. Here we show that mice that are constitutively deficient for the Nsmf gene do not present phenotypic characteristics related to KS. Instead, these mice exhibit hippocampal dysplasia with a reduced number of synapses and simplification of dendrites, reduced hippocampal long-term potentiation (LTP) at CA1 synapses and deficits in hippocampus-dependent learning. Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) activation of CREB-activated gene expression plays a documented role in hippocampal CA1 synapse and dendrite formation. We found that BDNF induces the nuclear translocation of Jacob in an NMDAR-dependent manner in early development, which results in increased phosphorylation of CREB and enhanced CREB-dependent Bdnf gene transcription. Nsmf knockout (ko) mice show reduced hippocampal Bdnf mRNA and protein levels as well as reduced pCREB levels during dendritogenesis. Moreover, BDNF application can rescue the morphological deficits in hippocampal pyramidal neurons devoid of Jacob. Taken together, the data suggest that the absence of Jacob in early development interrupts a positive feedback loop between BDNF signaling, subsequent nuclear import of Jacob, activation of CREB and enhanced Bdnf gene transcription, ultimately leading to hippocampal dysplasia.


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2013

Super-Resolution Microscopy of the Neuronal Calcium-Binding Proteins Calneuron-1 and Caldendrin

Johannes Hradsky; Marina Mikhaylova; Anna Karpova; Michael R. Kreutz; Werner Zuschratter

Calcium (Ca(2+)) signaling in neurons is mediated by plethora of calcium binding proteins with many of them belonging to the Calmodulin family of calcium sensors. Many studies have shown that the subcellular localization of neuronal EF-hand Ca(2+)-sensors is crucial for their cellular function. To overcome the resolution limit of classical fluorescence and confocal microscopy various imaging techniques have been developed recently that improve the resolution by an order of magnitude in all dimensions. This new microscope techniques make co-localization studies of Ca(2+)-binding proteins more reliable and help to get insights into the macromolecular organization of intracellular structures and signaling pathways beyond the diffraction limit of visible light.

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Michael R. Kreutz

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Eckart D. Gundelfinger

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Werner Zuschratter

Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine

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Christina Spilker

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Julia Bär

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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Daniela C. Dieterich

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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Karl-Heinz Smalla

Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology

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