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Featured researches published by Christine A. Denny.


Neuron | 2014

Hippocampal Memory Traces Are Differentially Modulated by Experience, Time, and Adult Neurogenesis

Christine A. Denny; Mazen A. Kheirbek; Eva L. Alba; Kenji F. Tanaka; Rebecca A. Brachman; Kimberly B. Laughman; Nicole K. Tomm; Gergely F. Turi; Attila Losonczy; René Hen

Memory traces are believed to be ensembles of cells used to store memories. To visualize memory traces, we created a transgenic line that allows for the comparison between cells activated during encoding and expression of a memory. Mice re-exposed to a fear-inducing context froze more and had a greater percentage of reactivated cells in the dentate gyrus (DG) and CA3 than mice exposed to a novel context. Over time, these differences disappeared, in keeping with the observation that memories become generalized. Optogenetically silencing DG or CA3 cells that were recruited during encoding of a fear-inducing context prevented expression of the corresponding memory. Mice with reduced neurogenesis displayed less contextual memory and less reactivation in CA3 but, surprisingly, normal reactivation in the DG. These studies suggest that distinct memory traces are located in the DG and in CA3 but that the strength of the memory is related to reactivation in CA3.


Cell | 2013

Maternal and Offspring Pools of Osteocalcin Influence Brain Development and Functions

Franck Oury; Lori Khrimian; Christine A. Denny; Antoine Gardin; Alexandre Chamouni; Nick Goeden; Yung-yu Huang; Hojoon Lee; Prashanth Srinivas; Xiao-Bing Gao; Shigetomo Suyama; Thomas Langer; J. John Mann; Tamas L. Horvath; Alexandre Bonnin; Gerard Karsenty

The powerful regulation of bone mass exerted by the brain suggests the existence of bone-derived signals modulating this regulation or other functions of the brain. We show here that the osteoblast-derived hormone osteocalcin crosses the blood-brain barrier, binds to neurons of the brainstem, midbrain, and hippocampus, enhances the synthesis of monoamine neurotransmitters, inhibits GABA synthesis, prevents anxiety and depression, and favors learning and memory independently of its metabolic functions. In addition to these postnatal functions, maternal osteocalcin crosses the placenta during pregnancy and prevents neuronal apoptosis before embryos synthesize this hormone. As a result, the severity of the neuroanatomical defects and learning and memory deficits of Osteocalcin(-/-) mice is determined by the maternal genotype, and delivering osteocalcin to pregnant Osteocalcin(-/-) mothers rescues these abnormalities in their Osteocalcin(-/-) progeny. This study reveals that the skeleton via osteocalcin influences cognition and contributes to the maternal influence on fetal brain development.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2010

Arrest of Adult Hippocampal Neurogenesis in Mice Impairs Single- But Not Multiple-Trial Contextual Fear Conditioning

Michael R. Drew; Christine A. Denny; René Hen

The role of adult hippocampal neurogenesis in contextual fear conditioning (CFC) is debated. Several studies demonstrated that blocking adult hippocampal neurogenesis in rodents impairs CFC, while several other studies failed to observe an impairment. We sought to determine whether different CFC methods vary in their sensitivity to the arrest of adult neurogenesis. Adult neurogenesis was arrested in mice using low-dose, targeted x-irradiation, and the effects of irradiation were assayed in conditioning procedures that varied in the use of a discrete conditioned stimulus, the number of trials administered, and the final level of conditioning produced. We demonstrate that irradiation impairs CFC in mice when a single-trial CFC procedure is used but not when multiple-trial procedures are used, regardless of the final level of contextual fear produced. In addition, we show that the irradiation-induced deficit in single-trial CFC can be rescued by providing preexposure to the conditioning context. These results indicate that adult hippocampal neurogenesis is required for CFC in mice only when brief training is provided.


Neuron | 2008

AN ANIMAL MODEL OF A BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTION FOR DEPRESSION

Daniela D. Pollak; Francisco J. Monje; Lee Zuckerman; Christine A. Denny; Michael R. Drew; Eric R. Kandel

Although conditioned inhibition of fear (or learned safety) is a learning process critical for preventing chronic stress, a predisposing factor for depression and other psychopathologies, little is known about its functional purposes or molecular mechanisms. To obtain better insight into learned safety, we investigated its behavioral and molecular characteristics and found that it acts as a behavioral antidepressant in two animal models. Learned safety promotes the survival of newborn cells in the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus, while its antidepressant effect is abolished in mice with ablated hippocampal neurogenesis. Learned safety also increases the expression of BDNF in the hippocampus and leads to downregulation of genes involved in the dopaminergic and neuropeptidergic but not the serotonergic system in the basolateral amygdala. These data suggest that learned safety is an animal model of a behavioral antidepressant that shares some neuronal hallmarks of pharmacological antidepressants but is mediated by different molecular pathways.


Hippocampus | 2012

4- to 6-Week-Old Adult-Born Hippocampal Neurons Influence Novelty-Evoked Exploration and Contextual Fear Conditioning

Christine A. Denny; Nesha S. Burghardt; Daniel M. Schachter; René Hen; Michael R. Drew

To explore the role of adult hippocampal neurogenesis in novelty processing, we assessed novel object recognition (NOR) in mice after neurogenesis was arrested using focal x‐irradiation of the hippocampus, or a reversible, genetic method in which glial fibrillary acidic protein‐positive neural progenitor cells are ablated with ganciclovir. Arresting neurogenesis did not alter general activity or object investigation during four exposures with two constant objects. However, when a novel object replaced a constant object, mice with neurogenesis arrested by either ablation method showed increased exploration of the novel object when compared with control mice. The increased novel object exploration did not manifest until 4–6 weeks after x‐irradiation or 6 weeks following a genetic ablation, indicating that exploration of the novel object is increased specifically by the elimination of 4‐ to 6‐week‐old adult born neurons. The increased novel object exploration was also observed in older mice, which exhibited a marked reduction in neurogenesis relative to young mice. Mice with neurogenesis arrested by either ablation method were also impaired in one‐trial contextual fear conditioning (CFC) at 6 weeks but not at 4 weeks following ablation, further supporting the idea that 4‐ to 6‐week‐old adult born neurons are necessary for specific forms of hippocampal‐dependent learning, and suggesting that the NOR and CFC effects have a common underlying mechanism. These data suggest that the transient enhancement of plasticity observed in young adult‐born neurons contributes to cognitive functions.


Nature | 2014

The participation of cortical amygdala in innate, odour-driven behaviour

Cory M. Root; Christine A. Denny; René Hen; Richard Axel

Innate behaviours are observed in naive animals without prior learning or experience, suggesting that the neural circuits that mediate these behaviours are genetically determined and stereotyped. The neural circuits that convey olfactory information from the sense organ to the cortical and subcortical olfactory centres have been anatomically defined, but the specific pathways responsible for innate responses to volatile odours have not been identified. Here we devise genetic strategies that demonstrate that a stereotyped neural circuit that transmits information from the olfactory bulb to cortical amygdala is necessary for innate aversive and appetitive behaviours. Moreover, we use the promoter of the activity-dependent gene arc to express the photosensitive ion channel, channelrhodopsin, in neurons of the cortical amygdala activated by odours that elicit innate behaviours. Optical activation of these neurons leads to appropriate behaviours that recapitulate the responses to innate odours. These data indicate that the cortical amygdala plays a critical role in generating innate odour-driven behaviours but do not preclude its participation in learned olfactory behaviours.


Biological Psychiatry | 2016

Ketamine as a Prophylactic Against Stress-Induced Depressive-like Behavior

Rebecca A. Brachman; Josephine C. McGowan; Jennifer N. Perusini; Sean C. Lim; Thu Ha Pham; Charlène Faye; Alain M. Gardier; Indira Mendez-David; Denis J. David; René Hen; Christine A. Denny

BACKGROUND Stress exposure is one of the greatest risk factors for psychiatric illnesses like major depressive disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder. However, not all individuals exposed to stress develop affective disorders. Stress resilience, the ability to experience stress without developing persistent psychopathology, varies from individual to individual. Enhancing stress resilience in at-risk populations could potentially protect against stress-induced psychiatric disorders. Despite this fact, no resilience-enhancing pharmaceuticals have been identified. METHODS Using a chronic social defeat (SD) stress model, learned helplessness (LH), and a chronic corticosterone (CORT) model in mice, we tested if ketamine could protect against depressive-like behavior. Mice were administered a single dose of saline or ketamine and then 1 week later were subjected to 2 weeks of SD, LH training, or 3 weeks of CORT. RESULTS SD robustly and reliably induced depressive-like behavior in control mice. Mice treated with prophylactic ketamine were protected against the deleterious effects of SD in the forced swim test and in the dominant interaction test. We confirmed these effects in LH and the CORT model. In the LH model, latency to escape was increased following training, and this effect was prevented by ketamine. In the CORT model, a single dose of ketamine blocked stress-induced behavior in the forced swim test, novelty suppressed feeding paradigm, and the sucrose splash test. CONCLUSIONS These data show that ketamine can induce persistent stress resilience and, therefore, may be useful in protecting against stress-induced disorders.


Hippocampus | 2016

Activation of local inhibitory circuits in the dentate gyrus by adult‐born neurons

Liam J. Drew; Mazen A. Kheirbek; Victor M. Luna; Christine A. Denny; Megan A. Cloidt; Melody V. Wu; Swati Jain; Helen E. Scharfman; René Hen

Robust incorporation of new principal cells into pre‐existing circuitry in the adult mammalian brain is unique to the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG). We asked if adult‐born granule cells (GCs) might act to regulate processing within the DG by modulating the substantially more abundant mature GCs. Optogenetic stimulation of a cohort of young adult‐born GCs (0 to 7 weeks post‐mitosis) revealed that these cells activate local GABAergic interneurons to evoke strong inhibitory input to mature GCs. Natural manipulation of neurogenesis by aging—to decrease it—and housing in an enriched environment—to increase it—strongly affected the levels of inhibition. We also demonstrated that elevating activity in adult‐born GCs in awake behaving animals reduced the overall number of mature GCs activated by exploration. These data suggest that inhibitory modulation of mature GCs may be an important function of adult‐born hippocampal neurons.


Experimental Neurology | 2015

Suppression of adult neurogenesis increases the acute effects of kainic acid.

Sloka S. Iyengar; John J. LaFrancois; Daniel Friedman; Liam J. Drew; Christine A. Denny; Nesha S. Burghardt; Melody V. Wu; Jenny Hsieh; René Hen; Helen E. Scharfman

Adult neurogenesis, the generation of new neurons in the adult brain, occurs in the hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) and the olfactory bulb (OB) of all mammals, but the functions of these new neurons are not entirely clear. Originally, adult-born neurons were considered to have excitatory effects on the DG network, but recent studies suggest a net inhibitory effect. Therefore, we hypothesized that selective removal of newborn neurons would lead to increased susceptibility to the effects of a convulsant. This hypothesis was tested by evaluating the response to the chemoconvulsant kainic acid (KA) in mice with reduced adult neurogenesis, produced either by focal X-irradiation of the DG, or by pharmacogenetic deletion of dividing radial glial precursors. In the first 4 hrs after KA administration, when mice have the most robust seizures, mice with reduced adult neurogenesis had more severe convulsive seizures, exhibited either as a decreased latency to the first convulsive seizure, greater number of convulsive seizures, or longer convulsive seizures. Nonconvulsive seizures did not appear to change or they decreased. Four-21 hrs after KA injection, mice with reduced adult neurogenesis showed more interictal spikes (IIS) and delayed seizures than controls. Effects were greater when the anticonvulsant ethosuximide was injected 30 min prior to KA administration; ethosuximide allows forebrain seizure activity to be more easily examined in mice by suppressing seizures dominated by the brainstem. These data support the hypothesis that reduction of adult-born neurons increases the susceptibility of the brain to effects of KA.


Science | 2017

Pcdhαc2 is required for axonal tiling and assembly of serotonergic circuitries in mice

Weisheng V. Chen; Chiamaka L. Nwakeze; Christine A. Denny; Sean O’Keeffe; Michael A. Rieger; George Mountoufaris; Amy Kirner; Joseph D. Dougherty; René Hen; Qiang Wu; Tom Maniatis

Pattern formation in the brain Neurons in the developing brain cooperate to build circuits. Mountoufaris et al. found that ∼50 variable protocadherin genes support a combinatorial identity code that allows millions of olfactory neuron axons to sort into ∼2000 glomeruli. Sharing olfactory receptors drives axons to one glomerulus, and protocadherin diversity allows the multiple axons to touch each other as they converge. On the other hand, Chen et al. found that a single C-type protocadherin underlies the tiled distribution of serotonergic neurons throughout the central nervous system. These neurons, which share protocadherin identity, enervate broad swaths evenly without touching neighboring neurons. Science, this issue p. 411, p. 406 A protocadherin isoform mediates repulsion between serotonergic axon terminals to allow their tiled arrangements in target fields. Serotonergic neurons project their axons pervasively throughout the brain and innervate various target fields in a space-filling manner, leading to tiled arrangements of their axon terminals to allow optimal allocation of serotonin among target neurons. Here we show that conditional deletion of the mouse protocadherin α (Pcdhα) gene cluster in serotonergic neurons disrupts local axonal tiling and global assembly of serotonergic circuitries and results in depression-like behaviors. Genetic dissection and expression profiling revealed that this role is specifically mediated by Pcdhαc2, which is the only Pcdhα isoform expressed in serotonergic neurons. We conclude that, in contrast to neurite self-avoidance, which requires single-cell identity mediated by Pcdh diversity, a single cell-type identity mediated by the common C-type Pcdh isoform is required for axonal tiling and assembly of serotonergic circuitries.

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Michael R. Drew

University of Texas at Austin

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Charlène Faye

Université Paris-Saclay

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Denis J. David

Université Paris-Saclay

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Thu Ha Pham

Université Paris-Saclay

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