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Dive into the research topics where Berenice E. Chua is active.

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Featured researches published by Berenice E. Chua.


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2014

Relaxin-3/RXFP3 networks: an emerging target for the treatment of depression and other neuropsychiatric diseases?

Craig M. Smith; Andrew W. Walker; Ihaia T. Hosken; Berenice E. Chua; Cary Zhang; Mouna Haidar; Andrew L. Gundlach

Animal and clinical studies of gene-environment interactions have helped elucidate the mechanisms involved in the pathophysiology of several mental illnesses including anxiety, depression, and schizophrenia; and have led to the discovery of improved treatments. The study of neuropeptides and their receptors is a parallel frontier of neuropsychopharmacology research and has revealed the involvement of several peptide systems in mental illnesses and identified novel targets for their treatment. Relaxin-3 is a newly discovered neuropeptide that binds, and activates the G-protein coupled receptor, RXFP3. Existing anatomical and functional evidence suggests relaxin-3 is an arousal transmitter which is highly responsive to environmental stimuli, particularly neurogenic stressors, and in turn modulates behavioral responses to these stressors and alters key neural processes, including hippocampal theta rhythm and associated learning and memory. Here, we review published experimental data on relaxin-3/RXFP3 systems in rodents, and attempt to highlight aspects that are relevant and/or potentially translatable to the etiology and treatment of major depression and anxiety. Evidence pertinent to autism spectrum and metabolism/eating disorders, or related psychiatric conditions, is also discussed. We also nominate some key experimental studies required to better establish the therapeutic potential of this intriguing neuromodulatory signaling system, including an examination of the impact of RXFP3 agonists and antagonists on the overall activity of distinct or common neural substrates and circuitry that are identified as dysfunctional in these debilitating brain diseases.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2014

Central injection of relaxin-3 receptor (RXFP3) antagonist peptides reduces motivated food seeking and consumption in C57BL/6J mice

Craig M. Smith; Berenice E. Chua; Cary Zhang; Andrew W. Walker; Mouna Haidar; David Hawkes; Fazel Shabanpoor; Mohammad Akhter Hossain; John D. Wade; Andrew L. Gundlach

Behavioural arousal in mammals is regulated by various interacting central monoamine- and peptide-neurotransmitter/receptor systems, which function to maintain awake, alert and active states required for performance of goal-directed activities essential for survival, including food seeking. Existing anatomical and functional evidence suggests the highly-conserved neuropeptide, relaxin-3, which signals via its cognate Gi/o-protein coupled receptor, RXFP3, contributes to behavioural arousal and feeding behaviour in rodents. In studies to investigate this possibility further, adult male C57BL/6J mice were treated with the selective RXFP3 antagonist peptides, R3(B1-22)R/I5(A) and R3(B1-22)R, and motivated food seeking and consumption was assessed as a reflective output of behavioural arousal. Compared to vehicle treatment, intracerebroventricular (icv) injection of RXFP3 antagonists reduced: (i) food anticipatory activity before meal time during food restriction; (ii) consumption of highly palatable food; (iii) consumption of regular chow during the initial dark phase, and; (iv) consumption of regular chow after mild (∼4-h) food deprivation. Effects were not due to sedation and appeared to be specifically mediated via antagonism of relaxin-3/RXFP3 signalling, as RXFP3 antagonist treatment did not alter locomotor activity in wild-type mice or reduce palatable food intake in relaxin-3 deficient (knock-out) mice. Notably, in contrast to similar studies in the rat, icv injection of RXFP3 agonists and infusion into the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus did not increase food consumption in mice, suggesting species differences in relaxin-3/RXFP3-related signalling networks. Together, our data provide evidence that endogenous relaxin-3/RXFP3 signalling promotes motivated food seeking and consumption, and in light of the established biological and translational importance of other arousal systems, relaxin-3/RXFP3 networks warrant further experimental investigation.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Relaxin-3 Receptor (RXFP3) Signalling Mediates Stress-Related Alcohol Preference in Mice

Andrew W. Walker; Craig M. Smith; Berenice E. Chua; Elena Krstew; Cary Zhang; Andrew L. Gundlach; Andrew J. Lawrence

Stressful life events are causally linked with alcohol use disorders (AUDs), providing support for a hypothesis that alcohol consumption is aimed at stress reduction. We have previously shown that expression of relaxin-3 mRNA in rat brain correlates with alcohol intake and that central antagonism of relaxin-3 receptors (RXFP3) prevents stress-induced reinstatement of alcohol-seeking. Therefore the objectives of these studies were to investigate the impact of Rxfp3 gene deletion in C57BL/6J mice on baseline and stress-related alcohol consumption. Male wild-type (WT) and Rxfp3 knockout (KO) (C57/B6JRXFP3TM1/DGen) littermate mice were tested for baseline saccharin and alcohol consumption and preference over water in a continuous access two-bottle free-choice paradigm. Another cohort of mice was subjected to repeated restraint followed by swim stress to examine stress-related alcohol preference. Hepatic alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenase activity was assessed in mice following chronic alcohol intake and in naive controls. WT and Rxfp3 KO mice had similar baseline saccharin and alcohol preference, and hepatic alcohol processing. However, Rxfp3 KO mice displayed a stress-induced reduction in alcohol preference that was not observed in WT littermates. Notably, this phenotype, once established, persisted for at least six weeks after cessation of stress exposure. These findings suggest that in mice, relaxin-3/RXFP3 signalling is involved in maintaining high alcohol preference during and after stress, but does not appear to strongly regulate the primary reinforcing effects of alcohol.


Experimental Physiology | 2015

Involvement of central relaxin‐3 signalling in sodium (salt) appetite

Craig M. Smith; Lesley L. Walker; Berenice E. Chua; Michael J. McKinley; Andrew L. Gundlach; D. A. Denton; Andrew J. Lawrence

What is the central question of this study? Sodium appetite is controlled by conserved neuronal transmitter–receptor systems. Here, we tested the contribution made by relaxin family peptide 3 receptor (RXFP3), the cognate G‐protein‐coupled receptor for the neuropeptide relaxin‐3. What is the main finding and its importance? Intracerebroventricular infusion of an RXFP3 antagonist reduced in a dose‐dependent manner the volume of 0.3 m NaCl consumed by sodium‐depleted C57Bl/6J (wild‐type) mice. This effect was absent in sodium‐depleted Rxfp3 knockout mice, and RXFP3 antagonist infusion did not alter water consumption in wild‐type mice subjected to multiple thirst tests, indicating both the pharmacological and the physiological specificity of observed effects. Our findings identify endogenous relaxin‐3–RXFP3 signalling as a modulator of sodium appetite.


Frontiers in chemistry | 2013

Synthesis of fluorescent analogs of relaxin family peptides and their preliminary in vitro and in vivo characterization

Linda Jiaying Chan; Craig M. Smith; Berenice E. Chua; Feng Lin; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Frances Separovic; Andrew L. Gundlach; Mohammed Akhter Hossain; John D. Wade

Relaxin, a heterodimeric polypeptide hormone, is a key regulator of collagen metabolism and multiple vascular control pathways in humans and rodents. Its actions are mediated via its cognate G-protein-coupled receptor, RXFP1 although it also “pharmacologically” activates RXFP2, the receptor for the related, insulin-like peptide 3 (INSL3), which has specific actions on reproduction and bone metabolism. Therefore, experimental tools to facilitate insights into the distinct biological actions of relaxin and INSL3 are required, particularly for studies of tissues containing both RXFP1 and RXFP2. Here, we chemically functionalized human (H2) relaxin, the RXFP1-selective relaxin analog H2:A(4-24)(F23A), and INSL3 to accommodate a fluorophore without marked reduction in binding or activation propensity. Chemical synthesis of the two chains for each peptide was followed by sequential regioselective formation of their three disulfide bonds. Click chemistry conjugation of Cy5.5 at the B-chain N-terminus, with conservation of the disulfide bonds, yielded analogs displaying appropriate selective binding affinity and ability to activate RXFP1 and/or RXFP2 in vitro. The in vivo biological activity of Cy5.5-H2 relaxin and Cy5.5-H2:A(4-24)(F23A) was confirmed in mice, as acute intracerebroventricular (icv) infusion of these peptides (but not Cy5.5-INSL3) stimulated water drinking, an established behavioral response elicited by central RXFP1 activation. The central distribution of Cy5.5-conjugated peptides was examined in mice killed 30 min after infusion, revealing higher fluorescence within brain tissue near-adjacent to the cerebral ventricle walls relative to deeper brain areas. Production of fluorophore-conjugated relaxin family peptides will facilitate future pharmacological studies to probe the function of H2 relaxin/RXFP1 and INSL3/RXFP2 signaling in vivo while tracking their distribution following central or peripheral administration.


Italian journal of anatomy and embryology | 2013

Viral-mediated delivery of an RXFP3 agonist into brain promotes arousal in mice

Craig M. Smith; Anna Blasiak; Despina E. Ganella; Berenice E. Chua; Sharon Layfield; Ross A. D. Bathgate; Andrew L. Gundlach

Anatomical and functional studies of central relaxin-3/RXFP3 systems suggest they constitute an ascending arousal network. For example, relaxin-3 knockout mice display circadian hypoactivity compared to wild type littermate controls. In studies to explore the effect of chronic RXFP3 activation on behaviour, we engineered a lentiviral construct to constitutively secrete the RXFP3 agonist, R3/I5, and express a green fluorescent protein (GFP) marker in transduced cells. Intracerebroventricular injection of the lenti-R3/I5-GFP virus (-10(power)8 genomic copies in 2 microl) in adult C57BL/6J mice resulted in GFP expression within cells of the ventricle walls and choroid plexus over a period of 1-4 weeks, suggesting likely chronic R3/I5 secretion and RXFP3 activation in brain regions proximal to the ventricular system. Subsequent testing in automated locomotor cells on day 8 and 9 post-injection revealed that lenti-R3/I5-GFP treated mice displayed prolonged, elevated locomotor activity (-18% higher over the last 15 min on day 8, and over the entire 30 min test on day 9) compared to mice injected with a control lenti-GFP virus, which habituated normally to the novel environment (n = 18/12 respectively, p < 0.05). These findings are consistent with an earlier report of increased activity scores in rats acutely injected centrally with R3/I5, and further suggest a role for relaxin-3/RXFP3 signalling in promoting behavioural arousal.


Italian journal of anatomy and embryology | 2013

Pharmacological activation of RXFP3 is not orexigenic in C57BL/6J mice.

Craig M. Smith; Ihaia T. Hosken; Natalie L. Downer; Berenice E. Chua; Mohammad Akhter Hossain; John D. Wade; Andrew L. Gundlach

The neuropeptide relaxin-3 and its cognate G-protein-coupled receptor, RXFP3, have been implicated in the control of feeding behaviour in rats. For example, relaxin-3-positive projections and RXFP3 are present within hypothalamic feeding circuits, and icv injection of human relaxin-3 (-0.2 to 1.0 nmol) robustly increases feeding behaviour in satiated rats. To explore whether this action is conserved in other experimental species, the present study examined feeding behaviour in C57BL/6J mice following RXFP3 modulation, as mice display near identical regional distribution patterns of relaxin-3/RXFP3, and relaxin-3/RXFP3 signalling has been shown to modulate behavioural arousal in both species. Central injection of the RXFP3 agonists R3/I5 or H3 relaxin (0.5 nmol, icv) did not alter chow consumption in satiated mice relative to vehicle controls, during the 60 min after treatment. Furthermore, relaxin-3 knockout mice displayed similar basal 24-h chow consumption and 1-h palatable food consumption to wildtype littermate controls; although further studies involving acute pharmacological antagonism of RXFP3 in WT mice are required to eliminate the likelihood of compensation in these life-long relaxin-3 deficient mice. Taken together, these findings are in contrast to the potent orexigenic effects of RXFP3 activation observed in rats, and may reflect differential RXFP3 expression within hypothalamic neuron populations in the rat and mouse, or differences in signalling upstream or downstream of relaxin-3/RXFP3 networks in these two species.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2015

Central relaxin-3 receptor (RXFP3) activation reduces elevated, but not basal, anxiety-like behaviour in C57BL/6J mice

Cary Zhang; Berenice E. Chua; Annie Yang; Fazel Shabanpoor; Mohammad Akhter Hossain; John D. Wade; Craig M. Smith; Andrew L. Gundlach


Neurochemical Research | 2016

Sensitivity to Chronic Methamphetamine Administration and Withdrawal in Mice with Relaxin-3/RXFP3 Deficiency.

Mouna Haidar; Monica Lam; Berenice E. Chua; Craig M. Smith; Andrew L. Gundlach


Italian journal of anatomy and embryology | 2013

Potential hypothalamic targets of relaxin-3 innervation: a perspective.

Craig M. Smith; Berenice E. Chua; Andrew W. Walker; Andrew L. Gundlach

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Andrew L. Gundlach

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Andrew W. Walker

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Cary Zhang

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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John D. Wade

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Andrew J. Lawrence

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Ihaia T. Hosken

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Mohammad Akhter Hossain

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Mouna Haidar

Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health

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Elena Krstew

University of Melbourne

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