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Dive into the research topics where Diane M. Brooks is active.

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Featured researches published by Diane M. Brooks.


Toxicologic Pathology | 2008

Long-term Air Pollution Exposure Is Associated with Neuroinflammation, an Altered Innate Immune Response, Disruption of the Blood-Brain Barrier, Ultrafine Particulate Deposition, and Accumulation of Amyloid β-42 and α-Synuclein in Children and Young Adults

Lilian Calderón-Garcidueñas; Anna C. Solt; Carlos Henríquez-Roldán; Ricardo Torres-Jardón; Bryan Nuse; Lou Herritt; Rafael Villarreal-Calderon; Norma Osnaya; Ida Stone; Raquel Garcia; Diane M. Brooks; Angélica González-Maciel; Rafael Reynoso-Robles; Ricardo Delgado-Chávez; William Reed

Air pollution is a serious environmental problem. We investigated whether residency in cities with high air pollution is associated with neuroinflammation/neurodegeneration in healthy children and young adults who died suddenly. We measured mRNA cyclooxygenase-2, interleukin-1β, and CD14 in target brain regions from low (n = 12) or highly exposed residents (n = 35) aged 25.1 ± 1.5 years. Upregulation of cyclooxygenase-2, interleukin-1β, and CD14 in olfactory bulb, frontal cortex, substantia nigrae and vagus nerves; disruption of the blood-brain barrier; endothelial activation, oxidative stress, and inflammatory cell trafficking were seen in highly exposed subjects. Amyloid β42 (Aβ42) immunoreactivity was observed in 58.8% of apolipoprotein E (APOE) 3/3 < 25 y, and 100% of the APOE 4 subjects, whereas α-synuclein was seen in 23.5% of < 25 y subjects. Particulate material (PM) was seen in olfactory bulb neurons, and PM < 100 nm were observed in intraluminal erythrocytes from lung, frontal, and trigeminal ganglia capillaries. Exposure to air pollution causes neuroinflammation, an altered brain innate immune response, and accumulation of Aβ42 and α-synuclein starting in childhood. Exposure to air pollution should be considered a risk factor for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, and carriers of the APOE 4 allele could have a higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease if they reside in a polluted environment.


Brain and Cognition | 2008

Air Pollution, Cognitive Deficits and Brain Abnormalities: A Pilot Study with Children and Dogs.

Lilian Calderón-Garcidueñas; Antonieta Mora-Tiscareño; Esperanza Ontiveros; Gilberto Gómez-Garza; Gerardo Barragán-Mejía; James M. Broadway; Susan Chapman; Gildardo Valencia-Salazar; Valerie Jewells; Robert R. Maronpot; Carlos Henríquez-Roldán; Beatriz Pérez-Guillé; Ricardo Torres-Jardón; Lou Herrit; Diane M. Brooks; Norma Osnaya-Brizuela; Maria E. Monroy; Angélica González-Maciel; Rafael Reynoso-Robles; Rafael Villarreal-Calderon; Anna C. Solt; Randall W. Engle

Exposure to air pollution is associated with neuroinflammation in healthy children and dogs in Mexico City. Comparative studies were carried out in healthy children and young dogs similarly exposed to ambient pollution in Mexico City. Children from Mexico City (n: 55) and a low polluted city (n:18) underwent psychometric testing and brain magnetic resonance imaging MRI. Seven healthy young dogs with similar exposure to Mexico City air pollution had brain MRI, measurement of mRNA abundance of two inflammatory genes cyclooxygenase-2, and interleukin 1 beta in target brain areas, and histopathological evaluation of brain tissue. Children with no known risk factors for neurological or cognitive disorders residing in a polluted urban environment exhibited significant deficits in a combination of fluid and crystallized cognition tasks. Fifty-six percent of Mexico City children tested showed prefrontal white matter hyperintense lesions and similar lesions were observed in dogs (57%). Exposed dogs had frontal lesions with vascular subcortical pathology associated with neuroinflammation, enlarged Virchow-Robin spaces, gliosis, and ultrafine particulate matter deposition. Based on the MRI findings, the prefrontal cortex was a target anatomical region in Mexico City children and its damage could have contributed to their cognitive dysfunction. The present work presents a groundbreaking, interdisciplinary methodology for addressing relationships between environmental pollution, structural brain alterations by MRI, and cognitive deficits/delays in healthy children.


Experimental and Toxicologic Pathology | 2010

Urban air pollution: Influences on olfactory function and pathology in exposed children and young adults

Lilian Calderón-Garcidueñas; Maricela Franco-Lira; Carlos Henríquez-Roldán; Norma Osnaya; Angélica González-Maciel; Rafael Reynoso-Robles; Rodolfo Villarreal-Calderon; Lou Herritt; Diane M. Brooks; Sheyla Keefe; Juan Palacios-Moreno; Ricardo Torres-Jardón; Humberto Medina-Cortina; Ricardo Delgado-Chávez; Mario Aiello-Mora; Robert R. Maronpot; Richard L. Doty

Mexico City (MC) residents are exposed to severe air pollution and exhibit olfactory bulb inflammation. We compared the olfactory function of individuals living under conditions of extreme air pollution to that of controls from a relatively clean environment and explore associations between olfaction scores, apolipoprotein E (APOE) status, and pollution exposure. The olfactory bulbs (OBs) of 35 MC and 9 controls 20.8+/-8.5 years were assessed by light and electron microscopy. The University of Pennsylvania Smell Identification Test (UPSIT) was administered to 62 MC/25 controls 21.2+/-2.7 years. MC subjects had significantly lower UPSIT scores: 34.24+/-0.42 versus controls 35.76+/-0.40, p=0.03. Olfaction deficits were present in 35.5% MC and 12% of controls. MC APOE epsilon 4 carriers failed 2.4+/-0.54 items in the 10-item smell identification scale from the UPSIT related to Alzheimers disease, while APOE 2/3 and 3/3 subjects failed 1.36+/-0.16 items, p=0.01. MC residents exhibited OB endothelial hyperplasia, neuronal accumulation of particles (2/35), and immunoreactivity to beta amyloid betaA(42) (29/35) and/or alpha-synuclein (4/35) in neurons, glial cells and/or blood vessels. Ultrafine particles were present in OBs endothelial cytoplasm and basement membranes. Control OBs were unremarkable. Air pollution exposure is associated with olfactory dysfunction and OB pathology, APOE 4 may confer greater susceptibility to such abnormalities, and ultrafine particles could play a key role in the OB pathology. This study contributes to our understanding of the influences of air pollution on olfaction and its potential contribution to neurodegeneration.


International Journal of Developmental Neuroscience | 2011

Air pollution is associated with brainstem auditory nuclei pathology and delayed brainstem auditory evoked potentials

Lilian Calderón-Garcidueñas; Amedeo D’Angiulli; Randy J. Kulesza; Ricardo Torres-Jardón; Norma Osnaya; Lina Romero; Sheyla Keefe; Lou Herritt; Diane M. Brooks; José Avila-Ramírez; Ricardo Delgado-Chávez; Humberto Medina-Cortina; Luis Oscar González-González

We assessed brainstem inflammation in children exposed to air pollutants by comparing brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) and blood inflammatory markers in children age 96.3 ± 8.5 months from highly polluted (n = 34) versus a low polluted city (n = 17). The brainstems of nine children with accidental deaths were also examined. Children from the highly polluted environment had significant delays in wave III (t(50) = 17.038; p < 0.0001) and wave V (t(50) = 19.730; p < 0.0001) but no delay in wave I (p = 0.548). They also had significantly longer latencies than controls for interwave intervals I–III, III–V, and I–V (all t(50) > 7.501; p < 0.0001), consisting with delayed central conduction time of brainstem neural transmission. Highly exposed children showed significant evidence of inflammatory markers and their auditory and vestibular nuclei accumulated α synuclein and/or β amyloid1–42. Medial superior olive neurons, critically involved in BAEPs, displayed significant pathology. Childrens exposure to urban air pollution increases their risk for auditory and vestibular impairment.


Journal of Trauma-injury Infection and Critical Care | 2012

Treatment with low-dose methamphetamine improves behavioral and cognitive function after severe traumatic brain injury

Thomas F. Rau; Aakriti S. Kothiwal; Annela R. Rova; Diane M. Brooks; David J. Poulsen

BACKGROUND Methamphetamine increases the release and blocks the reuptake of dopamine. The moderate activation of dopamine receptors may elicit neuroprotective effects. We have recently demonstrated that low doses of methamphetamine reduce neuronal loss after ischemic injury. On the basis of this finding, we hypothesized that methamphetamine could also prevent neuronal loss and improve functional behavior after severe traumatic brain injury (TBI). METHODS The rat lateral fluid percussion injury model was used to generate severe TBI. Three hours after injury, animals were treated with saline or methamphetamine. Neurological severity scores and foot fault assessments were used to determine whether treatment enhanced recovery after injury. The potential for methamphetamine treatment to improve cognitive function was assessed using the Morris water maze. Forty-eight hours after injury, paraffin-embedded brain sections were TUNEL stained to measure apoptotic cell death. Sections were also stained with antibody to doublecortin to quantify immature neurons within the dentate gyrus. RESULTS Treatment with low-dose methamphetamine significantly reduced both behavioral and cognitive dysfunction after severe TBI. Methamphetamine-treated animals scored significantly lower on neurological severity scores and had significantly less foot faults after TBI compared with saline-treated control rats. Furthermore, methamphetamine treatment restored learning and memory function to near normal ability after TBI. At 48 hours after injury, apoptotic cell death within the hippocampus was significantly reduced, and the presence of immature neurons was significantly increased in methamphetamine-treated rats compared with saline-treated controls. CONCLUSION Treatment with low-dose methamphetamine after severe TBI elicits a robust neuroprotective response resulting in significant improvements in behavioral and cognitive functions.


Neuropharmacology | 2011

Low dose methamphetamine mediates neuroprotection through a PI3K-AKT pathway

Thomas F. Rau; Aakriti S. Kothiwal; Li Zhang; Sarah V. Ulatowski; Saskia M. Jacobson; Diane M. Brooks; Fernando Cardozo-Pelaez; Michael Chopp; David J. Poulsen

High doses of methamphetamine induce the excessive release of dopamine resulting in neurotoxicity. However, moderate activation of dopamine receptors can promote neuroprotection. Therefore, we used in vitro and in vivo models of stroke to test the hypothesis that low doses of methamphetamine could induce neuroprotection. We demonstrate that methamphetamine does induce a robust, dose-dependent, neuroprotective response in rat organotypic hippocampal slice cultures exposed to oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD). A similar dose dependant neuroprotective effect was observed in rats that received an embolic middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO). Significant improvements in behavioral outcomes were observed in rats when methamphetamine administration delayed for up to 12 h after MCAO. Methamphetamine-mediated neuroprotection was significantly reduced in slice cultures by the addition of D1 and D2 dopamine receptor antagonist. Treatment of slice cultures with methamphetamine resulted in the dopamine-mediated activation of AKT in a PI3K dependant manner. A similar increase in phosphorylated AKT was observed in the striatum, cortex and hippocampus of methamphetamine treated rats following MCAO. Methamphetamine-mediated neuroprotection was lost in rats when PI3K activity was blocked by wortmannin. Finally, methamphetamine treatment decreased both cleaved caspase 3 levels in slice cultures following OGD and TUNEL staining within the striatum and cortex in rats following transient MCAO. These data indicate that methamphetamine can mediate neuroprotection through activation of a dopamine/PI3K/AKT-signaling pathway.


Glia | 2006

Lipopolysaccharide‐activated SHP‐1‐deficient motheaten microglia release increased nitric oxide, TNF‐α, and IL‐1β

Jie Zhao; Diane M. Brooks; Diana I. Lurie

Accumulating evidence suggests a deleterious role for activated microglia in facilitating neuronal death by producing neurocytotoxic substances during injury, infection, or neurodegenerative diseases. After cochlear ablation, abnormal microglial activation accompanied by increased neuronal loss within the auditory brainstem occurs in motheaten (me/me) mice deficient in the protein tyrosine phosphatase SHP‐1. To determine whether abnormally activated microglia contribute to neuronal death in me/me mice, primary microglial cultures from me/me and wild‐type mouse cortices were stimulated by the bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to evaluate the secretion of the neurotoxic mediators nitric oxide (NO), tumor necrosis factor‐α (TNF‐α), and interleukin‐1β (IL‐1β). Me/me microglia release significantly greater amounts of all three mediators compared with wild‐type microglia. However, the increased release of these compounds in microglia lacking SHP‐1 does not appear to occur through activation of extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (ERK), p38 kinase subgroups of mitogen‐activated protein (MAP) kinases, or increases in NF‐κB‐inducing kinase (NIK). These results suggest that abnormal microglial activation and release of neurotoxic compounds may potentiate neuronal death in deafferented cells and can thus potentiate neurodegeneration in the me/me brainstem. Our data also indicate that SHP‐1 is engaged in signaling pathways in LPS‐activated microglia, but not through regulation of the ERK and p38 MAP kinases.


Experimental and Toxicologic Pathology | 2012

Urban Air Pollution Produces Up-Regulation of Myocardial Inflammatory Genes and Dark Chocolate Provides Cardioprotection

Rodolfo Villarreal-Calderon; William Reed; Juan Palacios-Moreno; Sheyla Keefe; Lou Herritt; Diane M. Brooks; Ricardo Torres-Jardón; Lilian Calderón-Garcidueñas

Air pollution is a serious environmental problem. Elderly subjects show increased cardiac morbidity and mortality associated with air pollution exposure. Mexico City (MC) residents are chronically exposed to high concentrations of fine particulate matter (PM(2.5)) and PM-associated lipopolysaccharides (PM-LPS). To test the hypothesis that chronic exposure to urban pollution produces myocardial inflammation, female Balb-c mice age 4 weeks were exposed for 16 months to two distinctly different polluted areas within MC: southwest (SW) and northwest (NW). SW mice were given either no treatment or chocolate 2g/9.5 mg polyphenols/3 times per week. Results were compared to mice kept in clean air. Key inflammatory mediator genes: cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), interleukin-1β (IL-1β), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α), and the LPS receptor CD14 (cluster of differentiation antigen 14) were measured by real-time polymerase chain reaction. Also explored were target NFκB (nuclear factor κB), oxidative stress and antioxidant defense genes. TNF-α, IL-6, and COX-2 were significantly increased in both NW and SWMC mice (p=0.0001). CD14 was up-regulated in SW mice in keeping with the high exposures to particulate matter associated endotoxin. Chocolate administration resulted in a significant down-regulation of TNF-α (p<0.0001), IL-6 (p=0.01), and IL-1β (p=0.02). The up-regulation of antioxidant enzymes and the down-regulation of potent oxidases, toll-like receptors, and pro-apoptotic signaling genes completed the protective profile. Exposure to air pollution produces up-regulation of inflammatory myocardial genes and endotoxin plays a key role in the inflammatory response. Regular consumption of dark chocolate may reduce myocardial inflammation and have cardioprotective properties in the setting of air pollution exposures.


Brain Research | 2003

Focal cerebral ischemia upregulates SHP-1 in reactive astrocytes in juvenile mice.

Celine A. Wishcamper; Diane M. Brooks; J. Douglas Coffin; Diana I. Lurie

The role of the tyrosine phosphatase SHP-1 in the hematopoietic system has been well studied; however, its role in the central nervous system (CNS) response to injury is not well understood. Previous studies in our laboratory have demonstrated increased immunoreactivity for SHP-1 in a subset of reactive astrocytes that do not appear to enter the cell cycle following deafferentation of the chicken auditory brainstem. In order to determine whether mammalian astrocytes also upregulate SHP-1 immunoreactivity following CNS injury, a mouse model of focal cerebral ischemia was utilized to study SHP-1 expression. The brains of 3-week-old mice were analyzed at four time points following permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO): 1, 3, 7, and 14 days. Our results demonstrate consistent infarct volumes within surgical groups, and infarct volumes decrease as a function of time from 1 day (maximum infarct volume) to 14 days (minimum infarct volume) post-MCAO. In addition, SHP-1 protein levels are upregulated following cerebral ischemia and this increase peaks at 7 days post-MCAO. Analysis of confocal images further reveals that immunoreactivity for SHP-1 occurs predominantly in GFAP+ reactive astrocytes, although a small percentage of F4-80+ microglia are also double labeled for SHP-1 at early times post-MCAO. These SHP-1+ reactive astrocytes do not appear to enter the cell cycle (as defined by PCNA immunoreactivity), confirming our previous studies in the avian auditory brainstem. These results suggest that SHP-1 plays an important role in the regulation of glial activation and proliferation in the ischemic CNS.


Neurotoxicology | 2010

Chronic low-level Pb exposure during development decreases the expression of the voltage dependent anion channel in auditory neurons of the brainstem

John M. Prins; Diane M. Brooks; Charles M. Thompson; Diana I. Lurie

Lead (Pb) exposure is a risk factor for neurological dysfunction. How Pb produces these behavioral deficits is unknown, but Pb exposure during development is associated with auditory temporal processing deficits in both humans and animals. Pb disrupts cellular energy metabolism and efficient energy production is crucial for auditory neurons to maintain high rates of synaptic activity. The voltage-dependent anion channel (VDAC) is involved in the regulation of mitochondrial physiology and is a critical component in controlling mitochondrial energy production. We have previously demonstrated that VDAC is an in vitro target for Pb, therefore, VDAC may represent a potential target for Pb in the auditory system. In order to determine whether Pb alters VDAC expression in central auditory neurons, CBA/CaJ mice (n=3-5/group) were exposed to 0.01mM, or 0.1mM Pb acetate during development via drinking water. At P21, immunohistochemistry reveals a significant decrease for VDAC in neurons of the Medial Nucleus of the Trapezoid Body. Western blot analysis confirms that Pb results in a significant decrease for VDAC. Decreases in VDAC expression could lead to an upregulation of other cellular energy producing systems as a compensatory mechanism, and a Pb-induced increase in brain type creatine kinase is observed in auditory regions of the brainstem. In addition, comparative proteomic analysis shows that several proteins of the glycolytic pathway, the phosphocreatine circuit, and oxidative phosphorylation are also upregulated in response to developmental Pb exposure. Thus, Pb-induced decreases in VDAC could have a significant effect on the function of auditory neurons.

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Ricardo Torres-Jardón

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Norma Osnaya

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Ricardo Delgado-Chávez

Universidad del Valle de México

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