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Dive into the research topics where Christine M. Bergeon Burns is active.

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Featured researches published by Christine M. Bergeon Burns.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2016

Differential Effects of Stress on Microglial Cell Activation in Male and Female Medial Prefrontal Cortex

Justin L. Bollinger; Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Cara L. Wellman

Susceptibility to stress-linked psychological disorders, including post-traumatic stress disorder and depression, differs between men and women. Dysfunction of medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) has been implicated in many of these disorders. Chronic stress affects mPFC in a sex-dependent manner, differentially remodeling dendritic morphology and disrupting prefrontally mediated behaviors in males and females. Chronic restraint stress induces microglial activation, reflected in altered microglial morphology and immune factor expression, in mPFC in male rats. Unstressed females exhibit increased microglial ramification in several brain regions compared to males, suggesting both heightened basal activation and a potential for sex-dependent effects of stress on microglial activation. Therefore, we assessed microglial density and ramification in the prelimbic region of mPFC, and immune-associated genes in dorsal mPFC in male and female rats following acute or chronic restraint stress. Control rats were left unstressed. On the final day of restraint, brains were collected for either qPCR or visualization of microglia using Iba-1 immunohistochemistry. Microglia in mPFC were classified as ramified, primed, reactive, or amoeboid, and counted stereologically. Expression of microglia-associated genes (MHCII, CD40, IL6, CX3CL1, and CX3CR1) was also assessed using qPCR. Unstressed females showed a greater proportion of primed to ramified microglia relative to males, alongside heightened CX3CL1-CX3CR1 expression. Acute and chronic restraint stress reduced the proportion of primed to ramified microglia and microglial CD40 expression in females, but did not significantly alter microglial activation in males. This sex difference in microglial activation could contribute to the differential effects of stress on mPFC structure and function in males versus females.


Hormones and Behavior | 2014

Examining sources of variation in HPG axis function among individuals and populations of the dark-eyed junco

Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Kimberly A. Rosvall; Thomas P. Hahn; Gregory E. Demas; Ellen D. Ketterson

Gonadal steroids are important mediators of traits relevant to fitness, and thus may be targets of selection. However, more knowledge is needed about sources of variation along the endocrine axes that may contribute to functional variation in steroid levels. In a controlled captive environment, we studied males of two closely related subspecies of the dark-eyed junco (Junco hyemalis) that differ in testosterone-related phenotype, asking whether they also differ in testosterone (T), and assessing the contribution of the sequential links of the hypothalamic-pituitary-gonadal axis. When males of both subspecies were challenged with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), they were similar in circulating luteinizing hormone (LH) and T responses. When challenged with exogenous LH, they again produced levels of T similar to one another, and to the levels produced in response to GnRH. However, the smaller, less ornamented, and less aggressive subspecies had greater abundance of mRNA for LH receptor in the testes and for androgen receptor in the rostral hypothalamus, suggesting potential differences in regulatory feedback. We suggest that circulating hormone levels may be less prone to evolutionary change than the responsiveness of individual hormone targets. Among individuals, T titers were highly repeatable whether males were challenged with GnRH or with LH, but LH produced in response to GnRH did not covary with T produced in response to LH. Testis mass, but not LH receptor transcript abundance, predicted individual variation in T responses. These data implicate the gonad, but not the pituitary, as an important source of individual variation in T production.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2013

Sources of variation in HPG axis reactivity and individually consistent elevation of sex steroids in a female songbird

Kimberly A. Rosvall; Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Thomas P. Hahn; Ellen D. Ketterson

Understanding sources of individual differences in steroid hormone production has important implications for the evolution of reproductive and social behaviors. In females in particular, little is known about the mechanistic sources of these individual differences, despite established linkages between sex steroids and a variety of fitness-related traits. Using captive female dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis) from two subspecies, we asked how variation in different components of the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis related to variation in testosterone production among females, and we compared females to males in multiple components of the HPG axis. We demonstrated consistent individual differences in testosterone elevation in response to challenges with luteinizing hormone (LH) and gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). These hormone challenges led to more LH production but less testosterone production in females than males, and the sexes differed in some but not all measures of sensitivity to hormones along the HPG axis. Similar to findings in males, variation in testosterone production among females was not related to variation in LH production, gonadal LH-receptor mRNA abundance, or hypothalamic abundance of androgen receptor mRNA or aromatase mRNA. Rather, the primary source of individual variation in circulating steroids appears to the gonad, a conclusion further supported by positive correlations between testosterone and estradiol production. Unlike males, females did not differ by subspecies in any of the endocrine parameters that we assessed, suggesting some degree of independent evolution between the two sexes. Our results highlight the sources of physiological variation that may underlie the evolution of hormone-mediated phenotypes in females.


Hormones and Behavior | 2016

Divergence along the gonadal steroidogenic pathway: Implications for hormone-mediated phenotypic evolution

Kimberly A. Rosvall; Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Sonya P. Jayaratna; Ellen D. Ketterson

Across a range of taxa, hormones regulate suites of traits that influence survival and reproductive success; however, the mechanisms by which hormone-mediated traits evolve are still unclear. We hypothesized that phenotypic divergence might follow from differential regulation of genes encoding key steps in hormone biosynthesis and thus the rate of hormone production. We tested this hypothesis in relation to the steroid hormone testosterone by comparing two subspecies of junco (Junco hyemalis) in the wild and in captivity. These subspecies have diverged over the last 10-15kyears in multiple testosterone-mediated traits, including aggression, ornamentation, and body size. We show that variation in gonadal gene expression along the steroid biosynthetic pathway predicts phenotypic divergence within and among subspecies, and that the more androgenized subspecies exhibits a more prolonged time-course of elevated testosterone following exogenous stimulation. Our results point to specific genes that fulfill key conditions for phenotypic evolution because they vary functionally in their expression among individuals and between populations, and they map onto population variation in phenotype in a common garden. Our findings therefore build an important bridge between hormones, genes, and phenotypic evolution.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2011

Response to Exogenous Kisspeptin Varies According to Sex and Reproductive Condition in Siberian Hamsters (Phodopus sungorus)

Timothy J. Greives; Kimberly L. P. Long; Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Gregory E. Demas

Most animals experience marked changes in reproductive status across development that are regulated by changes in the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis. The upstream mechanisms regulating this axis remain less well understood. The neuropeptide kisspeptin serves as a positive regulator of reproduction; the precise actions of kisspeptin on the HPG axis in animals of differing developmental and seasonal reproductive states, however, remain unresolved. Further, sex differences in response to kisspeptin have not been fully explored. In Experiment 1, we investigated whether sensitivity to a broad range of kisspeptin doses differed in adult male and female Siberian hamsters held on reproductively inhibitory or stimulatory photoperiods. In Experiment 2, we asked whether the response to kisspeptin differed across stages of reproductive development. Males and females displayed elevated luteinizing hormone (LH) in response to kisspeptin; however, the sexes differed in this response, with males showing greater LH responses to kisspeptin than females. Hamsters responded to kisspeptin across all stages of reproductive development, although the magnitude of this response differed between animals of differental ages and between the sexes. Males showed significant increases in LH at an earlier developmental age than females; females also showed blunted LH responses during early adulthood whereas males remained relatively constant in their response to kisspeptin. These findings suggest that reproductively active and inactive hamsters are responsive to kisspeptin, but that the sexes differ in their responsiveness. Collectively, these data provide further insight into the basic actions of kisspeptin in the regulation of reproduction and provide a potential mechanism for the regulation of differential reproductive responses between the sexes.


Integrative and Comparative Biology | 2016

Gonads and the evolution of hormonal phenotypes

Kimberly A. Rosvall; Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Sonya P. Jayaratna; Emma K. Dossey; Ellen D. Ketterson

Hormones are dynamic signaling molecules that influence gene activity and phenotype, and they are thus thought to play a central role in phenotypic evolution. In vertebrates, many fitness-related traits are mediated by the hormone testosterone (T), but the mechanisms by which T levels evolve are unclear. Here, we summarize a series of studies that advance our understanding of these mechanisms by comparing males from two subspecies of dark-eyed junco (Junco hyemalis) that differ in aggression, body size, and ornamentation. We first review our research demonstrating population differences in the time-course of T production, as well as findings that point to the gonad as a major source of this variation. In a common garden, the subspecies do not differ in pituitary output of luteinizing hormone, but males from the more androgenized subspecies have greater gonadal gene expression for specific steroidogenic enzymes, and they may be less sensitive to feedback along the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal (HPG) axis. Furthermore, we present new data from a common garden study demonstrating that the populations do not differ in gonadal sensitivity to gonadotropin-inhibitory hormone (i.e., GnIH receptor mRNA abundance), but the more androgenized subspecies expresses less gonadal mRNA for glucocorticoid receptor and mineralocorticoid receptor, suggesting altered cross-talk between the hypothalamo-pituitary-gonadal and -adrenal axes as another mechanism by which these subspecies have diverged in T production. These findings highlight the diversity of mechanisms that may generate functional variation in T and influence hormone-mediated phenotypic evolution.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2017

Lipid signaling and fat storage in the dark-eyed junco

Jacqueline M. Ho; Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Nikki M. Rendon; Kimberly A. Rosvall; Heather B. Bradshaw; Ellen D. Ketterson; Gregory E. Demas

Seasonal hyperphagia and fattening promote survivorship in migratory and wintering birds, but reduced adiposity may be more advantageous during the breeding season. Factors such as photoperiod, temperature, and food predictability are known environmental determinants of fat storage, but the underlying neuroendocrine mechanisms are less clear. Endocannabinoids and other lipid signaling molecules regulate multiple aspects of energy balance including appetite and lipid metabolism. However, these functions have been established primarily in mammals; thus the role of lipid signals in avian fat storage remains largely undefined. Here we examined relationships between endocannabinoid signaling and individual variation in fat storage in captive white-winged juncos (Junco hyemalis aikeni) following a transition to long-day photoperiods. We report that levels of the endocannabinoid 2-arachidonoylglycerol (2-AG), but not anandamide (AEA), in furcular and abdominal fat depots correlate negatively with fat mass. Hindbrain mRNA expression of CB1 endocannabinoid receptors also correlates negatively with levels of fat, demonstrating that fatter animals experience less central and peripheral endocannabinoid signaling when in breeding condition. Concentrations of the anorexigenic lipid, oleoylethanolamide (OEA), also inversely relate to adiposity. These findings demonstrate unique and significant relationships between adiposity and lipid signaling molecules in the brain and periphery, thereby suggesting a potential role for lipid signals in mediating adaptive levels of fat storage.


Behavioral Ecology | 2011

Intraspecific preen oil odor preferences in dark-eyed juncos (Junco hyemalis)

Danielle J. Whittaker; Kaitlin M. Richmond; Allison K. Miller; Ryan P. Kiley; Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Jonathan W. Atwell; Ellen D. Ketterson


Behavioral Ecology | 2013

Testosterone production, sexually dimorphic morphology, and digit ratio in the dark-eyed junco

Kristal E. Cain; Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Ellen D. Ketterson


Archive | 2013

cDNA synthesis protocol

Christine M. Bergeon Burns; Kimberly A. Rosvall

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Ellen D. Ketterson

Indiana University Bloomington

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Gregory E. Demas

Indiana University Bloomington

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Thomas P. Hahn

University of California

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Kristal E. Cain

Australian National University

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Cara L. Wellman

Indiana University Bloomington

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Heather B. Bradshaw

Indiana University Bloomington

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Jacqueline M. Ho

Indiana University Bloomington

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