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Featured researches published by Dianer Yang.


Genes & Development | 2013

Gsx2 controls region-specific activation of neural stem cells and injury-induced neurogenesis in the adult subventricular zone

Alejandro López-Juárez; Jennifer Howard; Kristy Ullom; Lindsey Howard; Andrew W. Grande; Andrea Pardo; Ronald R. Waclaw; Yu Yo Sun; Dianer Yang; Chia Yi Kuan; Kenneth S. Campbell; Masato Nakafuku

Neural stem cells (NSCs) reside in widespread regions along the lateral ventricle and generate diverse olfactory bulb (OB) interneuron subtypes in the adult mouse brain. Molecular mechanisms underlying their regional diversity, however, are not well understood. Here we show that the homeodomain transcription factor Gsx2 plays a crucial role in the region-specific control of adult NSCs in both persistent and injury-induced neurogenesis. In the intact brain, Gsx2 is expressed in a regionally restricted subset of NSCs and promotes the activation and lineage progression of stem cells, thereby controlling the production of selective OB neuron subtypes. Moreover, Gsx2 is ectopically induced in damaged brains outside its normal expression domains and is required for injury-induced neurogenesis in the subventricular zone (SVZ). These results demonstrate that mobilization of adult NSCs is controlled in a region-specific manner and that distinct mechanisms operate in continuous and injury-induced neurogenesis in the adult brain.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2011

Ex Vivo Diffusion Tensor Imaging and Neuropathological Correlation in a Murine Model of Hypoxia–Ischemia-Induced Thrombotic Stroke

Ahmed Shereen; Niza Nemkul; Dianer Yang; Faisal Adhami; R. Scott Dunn; Missy Hazen; Masato Nakafuku; Gang Ning; Diana M. Lindquist; Chia-Yi Kuan

Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is a powerful method to visualize white matter, but its use in patients with acute stroke remains limited because of the lack of corresponding histologic information. In this study, we addressed this issue using a hypoxia–ischemia (HI)-induced thrombotic model of stroke in adult mice. At 6, 15, and 24 hours after injury, animals were divided into three groups for (1) in vivo T2- and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging, followed by histochemistry, (2) ex vivo DTI and electron microscopy, and (3) additional biochemical or immunochemical assays. The temporal changes of diffusion anisotropy and histopathology were compared in the fimbria, internal capsule, and external capsule. We found that HI caused a rapid reduction of axial and radial diffusivities in all three axonal bundles. A large decrease in fractional anisotropy, but not in axial diffusivity per se, was associated with structural breakdown of axons. Furthermore, the decrease in radial diffusivity correlated with swelling of myelin sheaths and compression of the axoplasma. The gray matter of the hippocampus also exhibited a high level of diffusion anisotropy, and its reduction signified dendritic degeneration. Taken together, these results suggest that cross-evaluation of multiple DTI parameters may provide a fuller picture of axonal and dendritic injury in acute ischemic stroke.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Therapeutic Administration of Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1 Prevents Hypoxic–Ischemic Brain Injury in Newborns

Dianer Yang; Niza Nemkul; Ahmed Shereen; Alice Jone; R. Scott Dunn; Daniel A. Lawrence; Diana M. Lindquist; Chia Yi Kuan

Disruption of the integrity of the blood–brain barrier (BBB) is an important mechanism of cerebrovascular diseases, including neonatal cerebral hypoxia–ischemia (HI). Although both tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA) and matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9) can produce BBB damage, their relationship in neonatal cerebral HI is unclear. Here we use a rodent model to test whether the plasminogen activator (PA) system is critical for MMP-9 activation and HI-induced brain injury in newborns. To test this hypothesis, we examined the therapeutic effect of intracerebroventricular injection of plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1) in rat pups subjected to unilateral carotid artery occlusion and systemic hypoxia. We found that the injection of PAI-1 greatly reduced the activity of both tPA and urokinase-type plasminogen activator after HI. It also blocked HI-induced MMP-9 activation and BBB permeability at 24 h of recovery. Furthermore, magnetic resonance imaging and histological analysis showed the PAI-1 treatment reduced brain edema, axonal degeneration, and cortical cell death at 24–48 h of recovery. Finally, the PAI-1 therapy provided a dose-dependent decrease of brain tissue loss at 7 d of recovery, with the therapeutic window at 4 h after the HI insult. Together, these results suggest that the brain PA system plays a pivotal role in neonatal cerebral HI and may be a promising therapeutic target in infants suffering hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

Blocking Lymphocyte Trafficking with FTY720 Prevents Inflammation-Sensitized Hypoxic–Ischemic Brain Injury in Newborns

Dianer Yang; Yu Yo Sun; Siddhartha Kumar Bhaumik; Yikun Li; Jessica M. Baumann; Xiaoyi Lin; Yujin Zhang; Shang Hsuan Lin; R. Scott Dunn; Chia Yang Liu; Feng Shiun Shie; Yi-Hsuan Lee; Marsha Wills-Karp; Claire A. Chougnet; Suhas G. Kallapur; Ian P. Lewkowich; Diana M. Lindquist; Kaja Murali-Krishna; Chia Yi Kuan

Intrauterine infection (chorioamnionitis) aggravates neonatal hypoxic–ischemic (HI) brain injury, but the mechanisms linking systemic inflammation to the CNS damage remain uncertain. Here we report evidence for brain influx of T-helper 17 (TH17)-like lymphocytes to coordinate neuroinflammatory responses in lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-sensitized HI injury in neonates. We found that both infants with histological chorioamnionitis and rat pups challenged by LPS/HI have elevated expression of the interleukin-23 (IL-23) receptor, a marker of early TH17 lymphocytes, in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells. Post-LPS/HI administration of FTY720 (fingolimod), a sphingosine-1-phosphate receptor agonist that blocks lymphocyte trafficking, mitigated the influx of leukocytes through the choroid plexus and acute induction of nuclear factor-κB signaling in the brain. Subsequently, the FTY720 treatment led to attenuated blood–brain barrier damage, fewer cluster of differentiation 4-positive, IL-17A-positive T-cells in the brain, less proinflammatory cytokine, and better preservation of growth and white matter functions. The FTY720 treatment also provided dose-dependent reduction of brain atrophy, rescuing >90% of LPS/HI-induced brain tissue loss. Interestingly, FTY720 neither opposed pure-HI brain injury nor directly inhibited microglia in both in vivo and in vitro models, highlighting its unique mechanism against inflammation-sensitized HI injury. Together, these results suggest that the dual hit of systemic inflammation and neonatal HI injury triggers early onset of the TH17/IL-17-mediated immunity, which causes severe brain destruction but responds remarkably to the therapeutic blockade of lymphocyte trafficking.


Cerebral Cortex | 2013

Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1 Mitigates Brain Injury in a Rat Model of Infection-Sensitized Neonatal Hypoxia–Ischemia

Dianer Yang; Yu Yo Sun; Niza Nemkul; Jessica M. Baumann; Ahmed Shereen; R. Scott Dunn; Marsha Wills-Karp; Daniel A. Lawrence; Diana M. Lindquist; Chia Yi Kuan

Intrauterine infection exacerbates neonatal hypoxic-ischemic (HI) brain injury and impairs the development of cerebral cortex. Here we used low-dose lipopolysaccharide (LPS) pre-exposure followed by unilateral cerebral HI insult in 7-day-old rats to study the pathogenic mechanisms. We found that LPS pre-exposure blocked the HI-induced proteolytic activity of tissue-type plasminogen activator (tPA), but significantly enhanced NF-κB signaling, microglia activation, and the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines in newborn brains. Remarkably, these pathogenic responses were all blocked by intracerebroventricular injection of a stable-mutant form of plasminogen activator protein-1 called CPAI. Similarly, LPS pre-exposure amplified, while CPAI therapy mitigated HI-induced blood-brain-barrier damage and the brain tissue loss with a therapeutic window at 4 h after the LPS/HI insult. The CPAI also blocks microglia activation following a brain injection of LPS, which requires the contribution by tPA, but not the urinary-type plasminogen activator (uPA), as shown by experiments in tPA-null and uPA-null mice. These results implicate the nonproteolytic tPA activity in LPS/HI-induced brain damage and microglia activation. Finally, the CPAI treatment protects near-normal motor and white matter development despite neonatal LPS/HI insult. Together, because CPAI blocks both proteolytic and nonproteolytic tPA neurotoxicity, it is a promising therapeutics of neonatal HI injury either with or without infection.


Science Translational Medicine | 2013

Overexpression of Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor in the Germinal Matrix Induces Neurovascular Proteases and Intraventricular Hemorrhage

Dianer Yang; Jessica M. Baumann; Yu-Yo Sun; Mianzhi Tang; Richard Scott Dunn; Ann L. Akeson; Steven G. Kernie; Suhas G. Kallapur; Diana M. Lindquist; Eric J. Huang; Stanley Steven Potter; Hung-Chi Liang; Chia-Yi Kuan

A transgenic mouse model implicates specific neurovascular proteases in the pathogenesis of intracranial hemorrhage in preterm infants. The Trouble with VEGF Neonatology has made numerous advances in recent decades, and premature infants now have higher chances of survival than ever before. Despite all this progress, neonatal intraventricular hemorrhage (IVH) remains a dreaded complication of premature birth and all too often leads to lifelong neurological complications or even death. It is typically attributed to a constellation of causes associated with prematurity, such as vascular fragility, hypoxia, and infections, but its mechanism is not yet understood. In this study, Yang and coauthors implicated vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and neurovascular proteases in the pathogenesis of neonatal IVH. IVH in premature infants typically occurs in a vascular part of the brain called the germinal matrix. Yang and colleagues developed two mouse models that were engineered to have a tetracycline-controlled switch to regulate the expression of VEGF in the germinal matrix. One of these models continuously produces VEGF in the germinal matrix unless a tetracycline-like drug is present, whereas the other turns on VEGF production in the presence of tetracyclines. With these models, the authors showed that increased VEGF in the germinal matrix could cause cerebral hemorrhage similar to what is seen in humans. These detrimental effects of VEGF appeared to be not associated with vasculogenesis, but instead attributable to activation of neurovascular proteases. Prenatal glucocorticoid treatment interfered with the activation of these proteases and thus prevented the hemorrhage, again simulating the situation seen in human infants. The mouse models relying on tetracycline-controlled VEGF release are an elegant approach to simulating the process of IVH and appear to closely represent the pathological process. It may not be possible to determine the molecular mechanism for this disease directly in human patients or to confirm how similar it is to the mechanism seen in the mice. However, a true test of the mouse models’ usefulness will be their contribution to therapeutic development, and future work should determine whether inhibition of VEGF-stimulated neurovascular proteases is a viable route for preventing or treating IVH in premature infants. Intracranial hemorrhage in preterm neonates may result in neonatal mortality and functional disabilities, but its pathogenic mechanisms are poorly defined and better therapies are needed. We used a tetracycline-regulated transgenic system to test whether the induction of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) in the germinal matrix leads to intracranial hemorrhage. This genetic strategy initially induced a dense network of loosely adjoined endothelial cells and pericytes near lateral ventricles, similar to the immature vascular rete in human fetal brains. Yet, this rich vascular network transformed into low-vasculature patches correlated with hemorrhage and caspase-3 activation near birth. Gene expression and biochemical analyses suggested that downstream mediators of VEGF in this network include transcriptional factors ETS1 and HIF2α (hypoxia-inducible factor 2α), components of the PDGFβ (platelet-derived growth factor β) and TGFβ (transforming growth factor–β) receptor signaling pathways, matrix metalloproteinase-9 (MMP-9), and cathepsins. Prenatal administration of glucocorticoids markedly reduced mortality and cerebral hemorrhage in mutant animals, as in human neonates. This protective effect was not due to blocking vasculogenesis, but was instead associated with inhibition of neurovascular proteases, notably MMP-9, cathepsin B, and caspase-3. Collectively, these results support a causative role of VEGF in perinatal cerebral hemorrhage and implicate its downstream proteases as potential therapeutic targets.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Synergy of Combined tPA-Edaravone Therapy in Experimental Thrombotic Stroke

Yu Yo Sun; Yury M. Morozov; Dianer Yang; Yikun Li; R. Scott Dunn; Pasko Rakic; Pak H. Chan; Koji Abe; Diana M. Lindquist; Chia Yi Kuan

Edaravone, a potent antioxidant, may improve thrombolytic therapy because it benefits ischemic stroke patients on its own and mitigates adverse effects of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) in preclinical models. However, whether the combined tPA-edaravone therapy is more effective in reducing infarct size than singular treatment is uncertain. Here we investigated this issue using a transient hypoxia-ischemia (tHI)-induced thrombotic stroke model, in which adult C57BL/6 mice were subjected to reversible ligation of the unilateral common carotid artery plus inhalation of 7.5% oxygen for 30 min. While unilateral occlusion of the common carotid artery suppressed cerebral blood flow transiently, the addition of hypoxia triggered reperfusion deficits, endogenous thrombosis, and attenuated tPA activity, leading up to infarction. We compared the outcomes of vehicle-controls, edaravone treatment, tPA treatment at 0.5, 1, or 4 h post-tHI, and combined tPA-edaravone therapies with mortality rate and infarct size as the primary end-points. The best treatment was further compared with vehicle-controls in behavioral, biochemical, and diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) analyses. We found that application of tPA at 0.5 or 1 h – but not at 4 h post-tHI – significantly decreased infarct size and showed synergistic (p<0.05) or additive benefits with the adjuvant edaravone treatment, respectively. The acute tPA-edaravone treatment conferred >50% reduction of mortality, ∼80% decline in infarct size, and strong white-matter protection. It also improved vascular reperfusion and decreased oxidative stress, inflammatory cytokines, and matrix metalloproteinase activities. In conclusion, edaravone synergizes with acute tPA treatment in experimental thrombotic stroke, suggesting that clinical application of the combined tPA-edaravone therapy merits investigation.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2012

Mannitol-facilitated perfusion staining with 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) for detection of experimental cerebral infarction and biochemical analysis

Yu-Yo Sun; Dianer Yang; Chia-Yi Kuan

A simple method to quantify cerebral infarction has great value for mechanistic and therapeutic studies in experimental stroke research. Immersion staining of unfixed brain slices with 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) is a popular method to determine cerebral infarction in preclinical studies. However, it is often difficult to apply immersion TTC-labeling to severely injured or soft newborn brains in rodents. Here we report an in vivo TTC perfusion-labeling method based on osmotic opening of blood-brain-barrier with mannitol-pretreatment. This new method delineates cortical infarction correlated with the boundary of morphological cell injury, differentiates the induction or subcellular redistribution of apoptosis-related factors between viable and damaged areas, and easily determines the size of cerebral infarction in both adult and newborn mice. Using this method, we confirmed that administration of lipopolysaccharide 72 h before hypoxia-ischemia increases the damage in neonatal mouse brains, in contrast to its effect of protective preconditioning in adults. These results demonstrate a fast and inexpensive method that simplifies the task of quantifying cerebral infarction in small or severely injured brains and assists biochemical analysis of experimental cerebral ischemia.


Stroke | 2013

Taming Neonatal Hypoxic–Ischemic Brain Injury by Intranasal Delivery of Plasminogen Activator Inhibitor-1

Dianer Yang; Yu Yo Sun; Xiaoyi Lin; Jessica M. Baumann; Mark Warnock; Daniel A. Lawrence; Chia Yi Kuan

Background and Purpose— Plasminogen activator inhibitor-I (PAI-1), a ≈50-kDa serine protease inhibitor, markedly reduces the extravascular toxicity of tissue-type plasminogen activator in experimental hypoxic–ischemic (HI) brain injury of newborns. However, the current treatment with PAI-1 requires intracerebroventricle injection to cross the blood–brain barrier, which is an invasive procedure of limited clinical potential. Thus, we tested whether intranasal administration of PAI-1 can bypass blood–brain barrier and mitigate neonatal HI brain injury. Methods— Rat pups were subjected to HI, with or without lipopolysaccharide pre-exposure, followed by intranasal delivery of a stable-mutant form of PAI-1 (CPAI). Results— Immunoblotting showed that CPAI sequentially entered the olfactory bulbs and cerebral cortex after intranasal delivery and reduced ≈75% of brain atrophy in HI or lipopolysaccharide-sensitized HI injury. Mechanistically, CPAI attenuated HI-induced plasminogen activators and lipopolysaccharide/HI-induced nuclear factor-&kgr;B signaling, neuroinflammation, and blood–brain barrier permeability. Conclusions— Intranasal delivery of CPAI is an effective treatment of experimental HI brain injury of newborns. Clinical application of this experimental therapy merits further investigation.


Stroke | 2012

Abstract 3440: A Mouse Model of Germinal Matrix Hemorrhage based on Interactions between Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) and Pericellular Proteases

Dianer Yang; Chia-Yi Kuan; Jessica M. Baumann; Hung-Chi Liang

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Diana M. Lindquist

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Chia-Yi Kuan

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Jessica M. Baumann

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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R. Scott Dunn

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Ahmed Shereen

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Niza Nemkul

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Yu-Yo Sun

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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