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Dive into the research topics where Beth Friedman is active.

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Featured researches published by Beth Friedman.


Neuron | 1990

NT-3, BDNF, and NGF in the developing rat nervous system: parallel as well as reciprocal patterns of expression.

Peter C. Maisonpierre; Leonardo Belluscio; Beth Friedman; Ralph F. Alderson; Stanley J. Wiegand; Mark E. Furth; Ronald M. Lindsay; George D. Yancopoulos

To obtain insight into the site and stage specificity of nerve growth factor (NGF), brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), and neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) action in vivo, we compared the expression patterns of the genes for these three related neurotrophic factors as well as for the NGF receptor in developing and adult rats. Initial embryonic expression of these related neurotrophic factors approximately coincides with the onset of neurogenesis. However, the levels at which the three factors are expressed at this time and throughout the developing nervous system are dramatically different. NT-3 is by far the most highly expressed in immature regions of the CNS in which proliferation, migration, and differentiation of neuronal precursors is ongoing. NT-3 expression dramatically decreases with maturation of these regions. By contrast, BDNF expression is low in developing regions of the CNS and increases as these regions mature. NGF expression varies during the development of discrete CNS regions, but not in any consistent manner compared with NT-3 and BDNF. Despite the dramatic variations, NT-3, BDNF, and NGF do share one striking similarity--high level expression in the adult hippocampus. Our observations are consistent with the idea that NT-3, BDNF, and NGF have paralleled as well as reciprocal roles in vivo.


Neuron | 1992

The neurotrophins BDNF, NT-3, and NGF display distinct patterns of retrograde axonal transport in peripheral and central neurons

Peter S. DiStefano; Beth Friedman; Czeslaw Radziejewski; Charles Alexander; Patricia Boland; Christine M. Schick; Ronald M. Lindsay; Stanley J. Wiegand

The pattern of retrograde axonal transport of the target-derived neurotrophic molecule, nerve growth factor (NGF), correlates with its trophic actions in adult neurons. We have determined that the NGF-related neurotrophins, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and neurotrophin-3 (NT-3), are also retrogradely transported by distinct populations of peripheral and central nervous system neurons in the adult. All three 125I-labeled neurotrophins are retrogradely transported to sites previously shown to contain neurotrophin-responsive neurons as assessed in vitro, such as dorsal root ganglion and basal forebrain neurons. The patterns of transport also indicate the existence of neuronal populations that selectively transport NT-3 and/or BDNF, but not NGF, such as spinal cord motor neurons, neurons in the entorhinal cortex, thalamus, and neurons within the hippocampus itself. Our observations suggest that neurotrophins are transported by overlapping as well as distinct populations of neurons when injected into a given target field. Retrograde transport may thus be predictive of neuronal types selectively responsive to either BDNF or NT-3 in the adult, as first demonstrated for NGF.


Neuron | 1993

The α component of the CNTF receptor is required for signaling and defines potential CNTF targets in the adult and during development

Nancy Y. Ip; Joyce McClain; Nestor X. Barrezueta; Thomas H. Aldrich; Li Pan; Yanping Li; Stanley J. Wiegand; Beth Friedman; Samuel Davis; George D. Yancopoulos

We recently proposed that ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) shares two receptor components with a generally acting cytokine, leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), but that CNTF also requires a third receptor component (CNTFR alpha) that is mostly restricted to the nervous system in its expression. Here we demonstrate that a transfected CNTFR alpha gene is sufficient to confer CNTF responsiveness upon hemopoietic cells normally responsive only to LIF, providing evidence that CNTFR alpha is a required receptor component that uniquely characterizes CNTF-responding cells. Consistent with this notion, CNTFR alpha expression could be localized to neurons within all known peripheral targets of CNTF. CNTFR alpha was also widely expressed within neurons of the CNS, suggesting that CNTF has broader CNS actions than previously appreciated. However, in vivo localization of CNTFR alpha, as well as of CNTF itself, is consistent with a particularly important role for CNTF in motor function as well as during neuropoiesis.


Cell | 1995

Mice lacking the CNTF receptor, unlike mice lacking CNTF, exhibit profound motor neuron deficits at birth

Thomas M. DeChiara; Richard Vejsada; William Poueymirou; Ann Acheson; Chitra Suri; Joanne C. Conover; Beth Friedman; Joyce McClain; Li Pan; Neil Stahl; Nancy Y. Ip; Ann C. Kato; George D. Yancopoulos

Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) supports motor neuron survival in vitro and in mouse models of motor neuron degeneration and was considered a candidate for the muscle-derived neurotrophic activity that regulates motor neuron survival during development. However, CNTF expression is very low in the embryo, and CNTF gene mutations in mice or human do not result in notable abnormalities of the developing nervous system. We have generated and directly compared mice containing null mutations in the genes encoding CNTF or its receptor (CNTFR alpha). Unlike mice lacking CNTF, mice lacking CNTFR alpha die perinatally and display severe motor neuron deficits. Thus, CNTFR alpha is critical for the developing nervous system, most likely by serving as a receptor for a second, developmentally important, CNTF-like ligand.


Neuron | 1992

Regulation of ciliary neurotrophic factor expression in myelin-related Schwann cells in vivo

Beth Friedman; Steven S. Scherer; John S. Rudge; Maureen E. Helgren; Donna Morrisey; Joyce McClain; Da-yuan Wang; Stanley J. Wiegand; Mark E. Furth; Ronald M. Lindsay; Nancy Y. Ip

Adult rat sciatic nerve is known to express high levels of ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) mRNA and protein. Here we examine the cellular localization of CNTF protein and mRNA in peripheral nerve and the regulation of CNTF expression by peripheral axons. In intact nerve, CNTF immunoreactivity is found predominantly in the cytoplasm of myelin-related Schwann cells. After axotomy, CNTF immunoreactivity and mRNA levels fall dramatically and do not recover unless axons regenerate. This behavior is similar to the pattern of myelin gene expression in these nerves. We conclude that the expression of CNTF in Schwann cells depends on axon-Schwann cell interactions.


Restorative Neurology and Neuroscience | 1991

The neurotrophin family of NGF-related neurotrophic factors

Ronald M. Lindsay; R.F. Alderson; Beth Friedman; Carolyn Hyman; Nancy Y. Ip; Mark E. Furth; Peter C. Maisonpierre; Stephen P. Squinto; George D. Yancopoulos

The recent molecular cloning of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and neurotrophin-3 (NT-3) has established the existence of an NGF-related family of neurotrophic factors - the neurotrophins. Purification and recombinant production of BDNF and NT-3 has allowed the initiation or extension of in vitro studies of the neuronal specificity of each of these factors. We have found that NT-3, like NGF and BDNF, promotes survival and neurite outgrowth from certain populations of sensory neurons. There appear to be both distinct and overlapping specificities of the 3 neurotrophins towards peripheral neurons - sympathetic neurons and subpopulations of neural crest and neural placode-derived sensory neurons. Using cultures of central nervous system neurons, we have recently established that BDNF: (i) promotes the survival and phenotypic differentiation of rat septal cholinergic neurons, a property consistent with the discovery of high levels of BDNF mRNA expression within the hippocampus; (ii) promotes the survival of rat nigral dopaminergic neurons and furthermore protects these neurons from two dopaminergic neurotoxins, 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) and MPTP. Thus the neurotrophic effects of these factors towards peripheral neurons and neuronal populations known to degenerate in two of the major human neurodegenerative diseases - Alzheimers and Parkinsons disease - provokes the question of whether neurotrophic factors may have therapeutic potential in halting the progression and ameliorating the symptoms of devastating neurological disorders of the CNS or PNS, or improving regeneration of neurons of CNS or PNS after traumatic injury.


Neuroreport | 1997

Trauma-induced striatal CNTF and BDNF mRNA in hemiparkinsonian rats.

Robert J. Plunkett; Nancy Y. Ip; Hideo Asada; Beth Friedman; Li Pan; Paul A. Kaseloo; Margaret M. Parfitt

SURGICAL implantation of tissues into the brain causes trauma to the region receiving the graft. This study shows that real or simulated striatal trauma in hemiparkinsonian rats leads to increased expression of two trophic factor mRNAs: ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). The baseline expression of BDNF mRNA was also markedly lower in dopamine-depleted striatum than in normal striatum in non-traumatized (control) hemiparkinsonian rats. Striatal CNTF message was relatively symmetrical in the non-traumatized (control) hemiparkinsonian rats. Host production of these and other trophic factors may play important roles in the response to tissue grafting, to enhance graft survival and as a stimulus to regenerative collateral axonal sprouting.


Nature | 1995

Neuronal deficits, not involving motor neurons, in mice lacking BDNF and/or NT4

Joanne C. Conover; Jeffery T. Erickson; David M. Katz; L. M. Bianchi; William Poueymirou; Joyce McClain; Li Pan; Maureen E. Helgren; Nancy Y. Ip; Patricia Boland; Beth Friedman; Stanley J. Wiegand; Richard Vejsada; Ann C. Kato; Thomas M. DeChiara; George D. Yancopoulos


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1995

BDNF and NT-4/5 exert neurotrophic influences on injured adult spinal motor neurons

Beth Friedman; David Kleinfeld; Nancy Y. Ip; Valerie M. K. Verge; Ronald Moulton; Patricia Boland; Elizabeth Zlotchenko; Ronald M. Lindsay; Liming Liu


The Neuroscientist | 1995

Review : Axons, Schwann Cells, and Neurotrophic Factors:

Beth Friedman; Vivien Wong; Ronald M. Lindsay

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Nancy Y. Ip

Hong Kong University of Science and Technology

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