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Dive into the research topics where Art Riddle is active.

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Featured researches published by Art Riddle.


Stroke | 2007

Maturation-Dependent Vulnerability of Perinatal White Matter in Premature Birth

Stephen A. Back; Art Riddle; Melissa M. McClure

Survivors of premature birth have a predilection for perinatal brain injury, especially to periventricular cerebral white matter. Periventricular white matter injury (PWMI) is now the most common cause of brain injury in preterm infants and the leading cause of chronic neurological morbidity. The spectrum of chronic PWMI includes focal cystic necrotic lesions (periventricular leukomalacia) and diffuse myelination disturbances. Recent neuroimaging studies support that the incidence of periventricular leukomalacia is declining, whereas focal or diffuse noncystic injury is emerging as the predominant lesion. In a significant number of infants, PWMI appears to be initiated by perturbations in cerebral blood flow that reflect anatomic and physiological immaturity of the vasculature. Ischemic cerebral white matter is susceptible to pronounced free radical–mediated injury that particularly targets immature stages of the oligodendrocyte lineage. Emerging experimental data supports that pronounced ischemia in the periventricular white matter is necessary but not sufficient to generate the initial injury that leads to PWMI. The developmental predilection for PWMI to occur during prematurity appears to be related to both the timing of appearance and regional distribution of susceptible oligodendrocyte progenitors. Injury to oligodendrocyte progenitors may contribute to the pathogenesis of PWMI by disrupting the maturation of myelin-forming oligodendrocytes. There has been substantial recent progress in the understanding of the cellular and molecular pathogenesis of PWMI. The oligodendrocyte progenitor is a key target for preventive strategies to reduce ischemic cerebral white matter injury in premature infants.


Annals of Neurology | 2012

Arrested preoligodendrocyte maturation contributes to myelination failure in premature infants.

Joshua R. Buser; Jennifer Maire; Art Riddle; Xi Gong; Thuan Nguyen; Kerst Nelson; Ning Ling Luo; Jennifer Ren; Jaime Struve; Larry S. Sherman; Steven P. Miller; Vann Chau; Glenda Hendson; Praveen Ballabh; Marjorie R. Grafe; Stephen A. Back

The major form of magnetic resonance imaging–defined white matter injury (WMI) comprises diffuse lesions where the burden of small necrotic foci (microscopic necrosis) is poorly defined. We hypothesized that myelination failure associated with diffuse WMI involves an aberrant injury response linked to arrested preoligodendrocyte (preOL) maturation in reactive astrocyte‐rich lesions.


Annals of Neurology | 2008

Arrested oligodendrocyte lineage maturation in chronic perinatal white matter injury

Kristen N. Segovia; Melissa M. McClure; Matthew Moravec; Ning Ling Luo; Ying Wan; Xi Gong; Art Riddle; Andrew Craig; Jaime Struve; Larry S. Sherman; Stephen A. Back

Abnormal myelination is a major pathological sequela of chronic periventricular white matter injury in survivors of premature birth. We tested the hypothesis that myelination failure in chronic hypoxia‐ischemia‐induced periventricular white matter injury is related to persistent depletion of the oligodendrocyte (OL) precursor pool required to generate mature myelinating OLs.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Spatial Heterogeneity in Oligodendrocyte Lineage Maturation and Not Cerebral Blood Flow Predicts Fetal Ovine Periventricular White Matter Injury

Art Riddle; Ning Ling Luo; Mario Manese; Douglas J. Beardsley; Lisa Green; Dawn A. Rorvik; Katherine A. Kelly; Clyde H. Barlow; Jeffrey J. Kelly; A. Roger Hohimer; Stephen A. Back

Although periventricular white matter injury (PWMI) is the leading cause of chronic neurological disability and cerebral palsy in survivors of premature birth, the cellular-molecular mechanisms by which ischemia-reperfusion contributes to the pathogenesis of PWMI are not well defined. To define pathophysiologic relationships among ischemia, acute cerebral white matter damage, and vulnerable target populations, we used a global cerebral ischemia-reperfusion model in the instrumented 0.65 gestation fetal sheep. We developed a novel method to make repeated measurements of cerebral blood flow using fluorescently labeled microspheres to resolve the spatial heterogeneity of flow in situ in three-dimensional space. Basal flow in the periventricular white matter (PVWM) was significantly lower than in the cerebral cortex. During global cerebral ischemia induced by carotid occlusion, flow to all regions was reduced by nearly 90%. Ischemia of 30 or 37 min duration generated selective graded injury to frontal and parietal PVWM, two regions of predilection for human PWMI. Injury was proportional to the duration of ischemia and increased markedly with 45 min of ischemia to extensively damage cortical and subcortical gray matter. Surprisingly, the distribution of PVWM damage was not uniform and not explained by heterogeneity in the degree of white matter ischemia. Rather, the extent of white matter damage coincided with the presence of a susceptible population of late oligodendrocyte progenitors. These data support that although ischemia is necessary to generate PWMI, the presence of susceptible populations of oligodendrocyte progenitors underlies regional predilection to injury.


Annals of Neurology | 2012

Isoflurane-induced apoptosis of oligodendrocytes in the neonatal primate brain

Ansgar M. Brambrink; Stephen A. Back; Art Riddle; Xi Gong; Matthew Moravec; Gregory A. Dissen; Catherine E. Creeley; Krikor Dikranian; John W. Olney

Previously we reported that exposure of 6‐day‐old (P6) rhesus macaques to isoflurane for 5 hours triggers a robust neuroapoptosis response in developing brain. We have also observed (unpublished data) that isoflurane causes apoptosis of cellular profiles in the white matter that resemble glia. We analyzed the cellular identity of the apoptotic white matter profiles and determined the magnitude of this cell death response to isoflurane.


Science Translational Medicine | 2013

Prenatal Cerebral Ischemia Disrupts MRI-Defined Cortical Microstructure Through Disturbances in Neuronal Arborization

Justin Dean; Evelyn McClendon; Kelly Hansen; Aryan Azimi-Zonooz; Kevin Chen; Art Riddle; Xi Gong; Elica Sharifnia; Matthew Hagen; Tahir Ahmad; Lindsey A. Leigland; A. Roger Hohimer; Christopher D. Kroenke; Stephen A. Back

Preterm ischemia disrupts MRI-defined maturation of the cerebral cortex by impairing the differentiation of cortical neurons in fetal lambs. Early Start for Better Brains Despite all of the recent advances in medical care for premature newborns, these infants still often experience complications. In particular, cognitive problems and developmental delays are common in this patient population and can be difficult to predict. Now, two sets of authors have obtained new data that approach this problem from different angles using diffusion tensor magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in human infants and newborn lambs. Vinall and coauthors examined 95 premature newborn babies who were born at 24 to 32 weeks of gestation. The authors performed two sets of MRI scans on these infants: one scan was done about 2 months before their due dates and the other scan when they reached full term. The authors also tracked the infants’ growth parameters—weight, length, and head size—as well as data on other factors that could affect brain growth, including the presence of infections or other serious illnesses. A detailed analysis of the MRI scans showed that the development of normal brain structure correlated with postnatal growth (and presumably nutrition) even after accounting for any other illnesses the infants may have experienced early in life. Dean et al. took a different approach to studying premature brain development: they analyzed the brain structures of fetal lambs that had experienced ischemia in utero at a time that corresponded to about two-thirds of full gestation time. The lambs were analyzed both by MRI and by histological analysis of the brain at 1, 2, or 4 weeks after an in utero ischemic event, and these data were compared to those of age-matched animals that did not undergo ischemic episodes. Here, the authors also saw abnormalities in brain development by MRI and correlated them with histological and structural aberrations. The growth impairment seen in the animals’ brains by MRI corresponded to disturbances in the branching of neuronal dendrites and abnormal formation of synapse connections with other neurons. More studies are needed to understand how postnatal growth, nutrition, illness, and prenatal ischemia affect the developing brain to develop methods for preventing any resulting injury. In addition, long-term studies should help to determine how differences in brain anatomy and MRI data translate into developmental and cognitive outcomes. Children who survive preterm birth exhibit persistent unexplained disturbances in cerebral cortical growth with associated cognitive and learning disabilities. The mechanisms underlying these deficits remain elusive. We used ex vivo diffusion magnetic resonance imaging to demonstrate in a preterm large-animal model that cerebral ischemia impairs cortical growth and the normal maturational decline in cortical fractional anisotropy (FA). Analysis of pyramidal neurons revealed that cortical deficits were associated with impaired expansion of the dendritic arbor and reduced synaptic density. Together, these findings suggest a link between abnormal cortical FA and disturbances of neuronal morphological development. To experimentally investigate this possibility, we measured the orientation distribution of dendritic branches and observed that it corresponds with the theoretically predicted pattern of increased anisotropy within cases that exhibited elevated cortical FA after ischemia. We conclude that cortical growth impairments are associated with diffuse disturbances in the dendritic arbor and synapse formation of cortical neurons, which may underlie the cognitive and learning disabilities in survivors of preterm birth. Further, measurement of cortical FA may be useful for noninvasively detecting neurological disorders affecting cortical development.


Annals of Neurology | 2011

Histopathological correlates of magnetic resonance imaging–defined chronic perinatal white matter injury

Art Riddle; Justin Dean; Joshua R. Buser; Xi Gong; Jennifer Maire; Kevin Chen; Tahir Ahmad; Victor Cai; Thuan Nguyen; Christopher D. Kroenke; A. Roger Hohimer; Stephen A. Back

Although magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the optimal imaging modality to define cerebral white‐matter injury (WMI) in preterm survivors, the histopathological features of MRI‐defined chronic lesions are poorly defined. We hypothesized that chronic WMI is related to a combination of delayed oligodendrocyte (OL) lineage cell death and arrested maturation of preoligodendrocytes (preOLs). We determined whether ex vivo MRI can distinguish distinct microglial and astroglial responses related to WMI progression and arrested preOL differentiation.


Science Translational Medicine | 2012

Human Neural Stem Cells Induce Functional Myelination in Mice with Severe Dysmyelination

Nobuko Uchida; Kevin Chen; Monika Dohse; Kelly Hansen; Justin Dean; Joshua R. Buser; Art Riddle; Douglas J. Beardsley; Ying Wan; Xi Gong; Thuan Nguyen; Brian J. Cummings; Aileen J. Anderson; Stanley Tamaki; Ann Tsukamoto; Irving L. Weissman; Steven G. Matsumoto; Larry S. Sherman; Christopher D. Kroenke; Stephen A. Back

Transplanted banked human neural stem cells produce functional myelin detected by MRI in juvenile mice with severe dysmyelination. Bringing Insulation Up to Code Faulty insulation around household wiring is an electric shock and fire hazard; likewise, defects in the insulation around nerve fibers—the myelin sheath—can have destructive effects. Because of myelin’s crucial roles in promoting the rapid transmission of nerve impulses and in axon integrity, mutations that affect myelin formation in the central nervous system cause severe neurological decline. Uchida et al. and Gupta et al. now investigate the use of neural stem cells—which can differentiate into myelin-producing oligodendrocytes—as a potential treatment for such disorders. Previous work showed that transplantation of human oligodendrocyte progenitors into newborn shiverer (Shi) mice, a hypomyelination model, could prolong survival. In the new work, Uchida et al. transplanted human neural stem cells, which had been expanded and banked, into the brains of newborn and juvenile Shi mice. Whereas the newborn mice were asymptomatic, the juvenile mice were already symptomatic and displayed advanced dysmyelination. These transplanted cells preferentially differentiated into oligodendrocytes that generated myelin, which ensheathed axons and improved nerve conduction in both categories of mice. In an open-label phase 1 study, Gupta et al. then tested the safety and efficacy of such cells in four young boys with a severe, fatal form of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD), a rare X-linked condition in which oligodendrocytes cannot myelinate axons. Human neural stem cells were transplanted directly into the brain; the procedure and transplantation were well tolerated. Magnetic resonance imaging techniques, performed before transplant and five times in the following year, were used to assess myelination. The imaging results were consistent with donor cell–derived myelination in the transplantation region in three of the four patients. These results support further study of potential clinical benefits of neural stem cell transplantation in PMD and other dysmyelination disorders. Shiverer-immunodeficient (Shi-id) mice demonstrate defective myelination in the central nervous system (CNS) and significant ataxia by 2 to 3 weeks of life. Expanded, banked human neural stem cells (HuCNS-SCs) were transplanted into three sites in the brains of neonatal or juvenile Shi-id mice, which were asymptomatic or showed advanced hypomyelination, respectively. In both groups of mice, HuCNS-SCs engrafted and underwent preferential differentiation into oligodendrocytes. These oligodendrocytes generated compact myelin with normalized nodal organization, ultrastructure, and axon conduction velocities. Myelination was equivalent in neonatal and juvenile mice by quantitative histopathology and high-field ex vivo magnetic resonance imaging, which, through fractional anisotropy, revealed CNS myelination 5 to 7 weeks after HuCNS-SC transplantation. Transplanted HuCNS-SCs generated functional myelin in the CNS, even in animals with severe symptomatic hypomyelination, suggesting that this strategy may be useful for treating dysmyelinating diseases.


Neurotherapeutics | 2012

The Instrumented Fetal Sheep as a Model of Cerebral White Matter Injury in the Premature Infant

Stephen A. Back; Art Riddle; Justin Dean; A. Roger Hohimer

Despite advances in neonatal intensive care, survivors of premature birth remain highly susceptible to unique patterns of developmental brain injury that manifest as cerebral palsy and cognitive-learning disabilities. The developing brain is particularly susceptible to cerebral white matter injury related to hypoxia-ischemia. Cerebral white matter development in fetal sheep shares many anatomical and physiological similarities with humans. Thus, the fetal sheep has provided unique experimental access to the complex pathophysiological processes that contribute to injury to the human brain during successive periods in development. Recent refinements have resulted in models that replicate major features of acute and chronic human cerebral injury and have provided access to complex clinically relevant studies of cerebral blood flow and neuroimaging that are not feasible in smaller laboratory animals. Here, we focus on emerging insights and methodologies from studies in fetal sheep that have begun to define cellular and vascular factors that contribute to white matter injury. Recent advances include spatially defined measurements of cerebral blood flow in utero, the definition of cellular maturational factors that define the topography of injury and the application of high-field magnetic resonance imaging to define novel neuroimaging signatures for specific types of chronic white matter injury. Despite the higher costs and technical challenges of instrumented preterm fetal sheep models, they provide powerful access to clinically relevant studies that provide a more integrated analysis of the spectrum of insults that appear to contribute to cerebral injury in human preterm infants.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2008

Cerebral blood flow heterogeneity in preterm sheep: lack of physiologic support for vascular boundary zones in fetal cerebral white matter

Melissa M. McClure; Art Riddle; Mario Manese; Ning Ling Luo; Dawn A. Rorvik; Katherine A. Kelly; Clyde H. Barlow; Jeffrey J. Kelly; Kevin Vinecore; Colin T Roberts; A. Roger Hohimer; Stephen A. Back

Periventricular white matter (PVWM) injury is the leading cause of neurologic disability in survivors of prematurity. To address the role of ischemia in PVWM and cerebral cortical injury, we hypothesized that immaturity of spatially distal vascular ‘end zones’ or ‘border zones’ predisposes PVWM to greater decreases in cerebral blood flow (CBF) than more proximal structures. We quantified regional CBF with fluorescently labeled microspheres in 0.65 gestation fetal sheep in histopathologically defined three-dimensional regions by post hoc digital dissection and coregistration algorithms. Basal flow in PVWM was significantly lower than in gyral white matter and cortex, but was equivalent in superficial, middle, and deep PVWM. Absolute and relative CBF (expressed as percentage of basal) did not differ significantly during ischemia or reperfusion between PVWM, gyral white matter, or cortex. Moreover, CBF during ischemia-reperfusion was equivalent in three adjacent PVWM levels and was not consistent with the magnitude of severity of PVWM injury, defined by TUNEL (terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated dUPT nick end labeling) staining. However, the magnitude of ischemia was predicted by the severity of discrete cortical lesions. Hence, unlike cerebral cortex, unique CBF disturbances did not account for the distribution of PVWM injury. Previously defined cellular maturational factors, thus, appear to have a greater influence on PVWM vulnerability to ischemic injury than the presence of immature vascular boundary zones.

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Larry S. Sherman

Oregon National Primate Research Center

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