Dipendra K. Aryal
Duke University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Dipendra K. Aryal.
Nature | 2016
Aashish Manglik; Henry Lin; Dipendra K. Aryal; John D. McCorvy; Daniela Dengler; Gregory Corder; Anat Levit; Ralf C. Kling; Viachaslau Bernat; Harald Hübner; Xi-Ping Huang; Maria F. Sassano; Patrick M. Giguère; Stefan Löber; Da Duan; Grégory Scherrer; Brian K. Kobilka; Peter Gmeiner; Bryan L. Roth; Brian K. Shoichet
Morphine is an alkaloid from the opium poppy used to treat pain. The potentially lethal side effects of morphine and related opioids—which include fatal respiratory depression—are thought to be mediated by μ-opioid-receptor (μOR) signalling through the β-arrestin pathway or by actions at other receptors. Conversely, G-protein μOR signalling is thought to confer analgesia. Here we computationally dock over 3 million molecules against the μOR structure and identify new scaffolds unrelated to known opioids. Structure-based optimization yields PZM21—a potent Gi activator with exceptional selectivity for μOR and minimal β-arrestin-2 recruitment. Unlike morphine, PZM21 is more efficacious for the affective component of analgesia versus the reflexive component and is devoid of both respiratory depression and morphine-like reinforcing activity in mice at equi-analgesic doses. PZM21 thus serves as both a probe to disentangle μOR signalling and a therapeutic lead that is devoid of many of the side effects of current opioids.
Nature Neuroscience | 2015
Il Hwan Kim; Mark A. Rossi; Dipendra K. Aryal; Bence Rácz; Nam Soo Kim; Akiyoshi Uezu; Fan Wang; William C. Wetsel; Richard J. Weinberg; Henry H. Yin; Scott H. Soderling
Psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders may arise from anomalies in long-range neuronal connectivity downstream of pathologies in dendritic spines. However, the mechanisms that may link spine pathology to circuit abnormalities relevant to atypical behavior remain unknown. Using a mouse model to conditionally disrupt a critical regulator of the dendritic spine cytoskeleton, the actin-related protein 2/3 complex (Arp2/3), we report here a molecular mechanism that unexpectedly reveals the inter-relationship of progressive spine pruning, elevated frontal cortical excitation of pyramidal neurons and striatal hyperdopaminergia in a cortical-to-midbrain circuit abnormality. The main symptomatic manifestations of this circuit abnormality are psychomotor agitation and stereotypical behaviors, which are relieved by antipsychotics. Moreover, this antipsychotic-responsive locomotion can be mimicked in wild-type mice by optogenetic activation of this circuit. Collectively these results reveal molecular and neural-circuit mechanisms, illustrating how diverse pathologies may converge to drive behaviors relevant to psychiatric disorders.
Neuron | 2013
Elizabeth K. Ruzzo; José-Mario Capo-Chichi; Bruria Ben-Zeev; David Chitayat; Hanqian Mao; Andrea L. Pappas; Yuki Hitomi; Yi-Fan Lu; Xiaodi Yao; Fadi F. Hamdan; Kimberly Pelak; Haike Reznik-Wolf; Ifat Bar-Joseph; Danit Oz-Levi; Dorit Lev; Tally Lerman-Sagie; Esther Leshinsky-Silver; Yair Anikster; Edna Ben-Asher; Tsviya Olender; Laurence Colleaux; Jean-Claude Décarie; Susan Blaser; Brenda Banwell; Rasesh B. Joshi; Xiao-Ping He; Lysanne Patry; Rachel Silver; Mohammad Safiqul Islam; Abul Hasnat
We analyzed four families that presented with a similar condition characterized by congenital microcephaly, intellectual disability, progressive cerebral atrophy, and intractable seizures. We show that recessive mutations in the ASNS gene are responsible for this syndrome. Two of the identified missense mutations dramatically reduce ASNS protein abundance, suggesting that the mutations cause loss of function. Hypomorphic Asns mutant mice have structural brain abnormalities, including enlarged ventricles and reduced cortical thickness, and show deficits in learning and memory mimicking aspects of the patient phenotype. ASNS encodes asparagine synthetase, which catalyzes the synthesis of asparagine from glutamine and aspartate. The neurological impairment resulting from ASNS deficiency may be explained by asparagine depletion in the brain or by accumulation of aspartate/glutamate leading to enhanced excitability and neuronal damage. Our study thus indicates that asparagine synthesis is essential for the development and function of the brain but not for that of other organs.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2016
Daniel J. Urban; Hu Zhu; Catherine A. Marcinkiewcz; Michael Michaelides; Hidehiro Oshibuchi; Darren Rhea; Dipendra K. Aryal; Martilias S. Farrell; Emily G. Lowery-Gionta; Reid H.J. Olsen; William C. Wetsel; Thomas L. Kash; Yasmin L. Hurd; Laurence H. Tecott; Bryan L. Roth
Elucidating how the brain’s serotonergic network mediates diverse behavioral actions over both relatively short (minutes–hours) and long period of time (days–weeks) remains a major challenge for neuroscience. Our relative ignorance is largely due to the lack of technologies with robustness, reversibility, and spatio-temporal control. Recently, we have demonstrated that our chemogenetic approach (eg, Designer Receptors Exclusively Activated by Designer Drugs (DREADDs)) provides a reliable and robust tool for controlling genetically defined neural populations. Here we show how short- and long-term activation of dorsal raphe nucleus (DRN) serotonergic neurons induces robust behavioral responses. We found that both short- and long-term activation of DRN serotonergic neurons induce antidepressant-like behavioral responses. However, only short-term activation induces anxiogenic-like behaviors. In parallel, these behavioral phenotypes were associated with a metabolic map of whole brain network activity via a recently developed non-invasive imaging technology DREAMM (DREADD Associated Metabolic Mapping). Our findings reveal a previously unappreciated brain network elicited by selective activation of DRN serotonin neurons and illuminate potential therapeutic and adverse effects of drugs targeting DRN neurons.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016
Pavle Matak; Andrija Matak; Sarah Moustafa; Dipendra K. Aryal; Eric J. Benner; William C. Wetsel; Nancy C. Andrews
Significance The brain requires iron for mitochondrial respiration and synthesis of myelin, neurotransmitters, and monoamine oxidases. Iron accumulates in distinct parts of the brain in patients with neurodegenerative diseases, and some have proposed that neurons die because they contain too much iron. Neuronal iron handling is not well understood. We focused on dopaminergic neurons, affected in Parkinson’s disease, and manipulated molecules involve in iron uptake and release. We showed that loss of ferroportin, which exports cellular iron, had no apparent effect. In contrast, loss of transferrin receptor, involved in iron uptake, caused neuronal iron deficiency and neurodegeneration with features similar to Parkinson’s disease. We propose that neuronal iron deficiency may contribute to neurodegeneration in human disease. Disrupted brain iron homeostasis is a common feature of neurodegenerative disease. To begin to understand how neuronal iron handling might be involved, we focused on dopaminergic neurons and asked how inactivation of transport proteins affected iron homeostasis in vivo in mice. Loss of the cellular iron exporter, ferroportin, had no apparent consequences. However, loss of transferrin receptor 1, involved in iron uptake, caused neuronal iron deficiency, age-progressive degeneration of a subset of dopaminergic neurons, and motor deficits. There was gradual depletion of dopaminergic projections in the striatum followed by death of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra. Damaged mitochondria accumulated, and gene expression signatures indicated attempted axonal regeneration, a metabolic switch to glycolysis, oxidative stress, and the unfolded protein response. We demonstrate that loss of transferrin receptor 1, but not loss of ferroportin, can cause neurodegeneration in a subset of dopaminergic neurons in mice.
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2012
Ashley N. Hutchinson; Jie V. Deng; Dipendra K. Aryal; William C. Wetsel; Anne E. West
Systemic administration of amphetamine (AMPH) induces phosphorylation of MeCP2 at Ser421 (pMeCP2) in select populations of neurons in the mesolimbocortical brain regions. Because AMPH simultaneously activates multiple monoamine neurotransmitter systems, here we examined the ability of dopamine (DA), serotonin (5-HT), and norepinephrine (NE) to induce pMeCP2. Selective blockade of the DA transporter (DAT) or the 5-HT transporter (SERT), but not the NE transporter (NET), was sufficient to induce pMeCP2 in the CNS. DAT blockade induced pMeCP2 in the prelimbic cortex (PLC) and nucleus accumbens (NAc), whereas SERT blockade induced pMeCP2 only in the NAc. Administration of selective DA and 5-HT receptor agonists was also sufficient to induce pMeCP2; however, the specific combination of DA and 5-HT receptors activated determined the regional- and cell-type specificity of pMeCP2 induction. The D1-class DA receptor agonist SKF81297 induced pMeCP2 widely; however, coadministration of the D2-class agonist quinpirole restricted the induction of pMeCP2 to GABAergic interneurons of the NAc. Intra-striatal injection of the adenylate cyclase activator forskolin was sufficient to induce pMeCP2 in medium-spiny neurons, suggesting that the combinatorial regulation of cAMP by different classes of DA and 5-HT receptors may contribute to the cell-type specificity of pMeCP2 induction. Consistent with the regulation of pMeCP2 by multiple monoamine neurotransmitters, genetic disruption of any single monoamine transporter in DAT-, SERT-, and NET-knockout mice failed to eliminate AMPH-induced pMeCP2 in the NAc. Together, these studies indicate that combinatorial signaling through DA and 5-HT receptors can regulate the brain region- and cell-type specific pMeCP2 in the CNS.
Molecular Psychiatry | 2015
Y Cheng; Ramona M. Rodriguiz; Saravana R. K. Murthy; Vladimir V. Senatorov; E Thouennon; Niamh X. Cawley; Dipendra K. Aryal; S Ahn; B Lecka-Czernik; William C. Wetsel; Y P Loh
Major depressive disorder is often linked to stress. Although short-term stress is without effect in mice, prolonged stress leads to depressive-like behavior, indicating that an allostatic mechanism exists in this difference. Here we demonstrate that mice after short-term (1 h per day for 7 days) chronic restraint stress (CRS), do not display depressive-like behavior. Analysis of the hippocampus of these mice showed increased levels of neurotrophic factor-α1 (NF-α1; also known as carboxypeptidase E, CPE), concomitant with enhanced fibroblast growth factor 2 (FGF2) expression, and an increase in neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus. In contrast, after prolonged (6 h per day for 21 days) CRS, mice show decreased hippocampal NF-α1 and FGF2 levels and depressive-like responses. In NF-α1-knockout mice, hippocampal FGF2 levels and neurogenesis are reduced. These mice exhibit depressive-like behavior that is reversed by FGF2 administration. Indeed, studies in cultured hippocampal neurons reveal that NF-α1 treatment directly upregulates FGF2 expression through extracellular signal-regulated kinase-Sp1 signaling. Thus, during short-term CRS, hippocampal NF-α1 expression is upregulated and has a key role in preventing the onset of depressive-like behavior through enhanced FGF2-mediated neurogenesis. To evaluate the therapeutic potential of this pathway, we examined, rosiglitazone (Rosi), a PPARγ agonist, which has been shown to have antidepressant activity in rodents and humans. Rosi upregulates FGF2 expression in a NF-α1-dependent manner in hippocampal neurons. Mice fed Rosi show increased hippocampal NF-α1 levels and neurogenesis compared with controls, thereby indicating the antidepressant action of this drug. Development of drugs that activate the NF-α1/FGF2/neurogenesis pathway can offer a new approach to depression therapy.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013
Ivone Gomes; Dipendra K. Aryal; Jonathan H. Wardman; Achla Gupta; Khatuna Gagnidze; Ramona M. Rodriguiz; Sanjai Kumar; William C. Wetsel; John E. Pintar; Lloyd D. Fricker; Lakshmi A. Devi
Significance The mechanism by which vertebrate animals control their body weight is a complex process involving a variety of molecules that regulate feeding and metabolism. Some of these molecules are neuropeptides that bind to specific receptors in feeding centers of the brain. One of the most abundant peptides in brain, LENSSPQAPARRLLPP (named BigLEN), has been proposed to function as a neuropeptide involved in regulating body weight, but the receptor through which this peptide acts had not been identified. We screened candidate receptors and found one, G protein-coupled receptor 171 (GPR171), that is activated by BigLEN. Additional studies showed that the BigLEN–GPR171 system plays an important role in regulating feeding and metabolism in mice. Thus, GPR171 is a potential target for developing antiobesity drugs. Multiple peptide systems, including neuropeptide Y, leptin, ghrelin, and others, are involved with the control of food intake and body weight. The peptide LENSSPQAPARRLLPP (BigLEN) has been proposed to act through an unknown receptor to regulate body weight. In the present study, we used a combination of ligand-binding and receptor-activity assays to characterize a Gαi/o protein-coupled receptor activated by BigLEN in the mouse hypothalamus and Neuro2A cells. We then selected orphan G protein-coupled receptors expressed in the hypothalamus and Neuro2A cells and tested each for activation by BigLEN. G protein-coupled receptor 171 (GPR171) is activated by BigLEN, but not by the C terminally truncated peptide LittleLEN. The four C-terminal amino acids of BigLEN are sufficient to bind and activate GPR171. Overexpression of GPR171 leads to an increase, and knockdown leads to a decrease, in binding and signaling by BigLEN and the C-terminal peptide. In the hypothalamus GPR171 expression complements the expression of BigLEN, and its level and activity are elevated in mice lacking BigLEN. In mice, shRNA-mediated knockdown of hypothalamic GPR171 leads to a decrease in BigLEN signaling and results in changes in food intake and metabolism. The combination of GPR171 shRNA together with neutralization of BigLEN peptide by antibody absorption nearly eliminates acute feeding in food-deprived mice. Taken together, these results demonstrate that GPR171 is the BigLEN receptor and that the BigLEN–GPR171 system plays an important role in regulating responses associated with feeding and metabolism in mice.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2013
Eric D. Gaier; Megan B. Miller; Martina Ralle; Dipendra K. Aryal; William C. Wetsel; Richard E. Mains; Betty A. Eipper
Copper (Cu), an essential trace element present throughout the mammalian nervous system, is crucial for normal synaptic function. Neuronal handling of Cu is poorly understood. We studied the localization and expression of Atp7a, the major intracellular Cu transporter in the brain, and its relation to peptidylglycine α‐amidating monooxygenase (PAM), an essential cuproenzyme and regulator of Cu homeostasis in neuroendocrine cells. Based on biochemical fractionation and immunostaining of dissociated neurons, Atp7a was enriched in post‐synaptic vesicular fractions. Cu followed a similar pattern, with ~ 20% of total Cu in synaptosomes. A mouse model heterozygous for the Pam gene (PAM+/−) was selectively Cu deficient in the amygdala. As in cortex and hippocampus, Atp7a and PAM expression overlap in the amygdala, with highest expression in interneurons. Messenger RNA levels of Atox‐1 and Atp7a, which deliver Cu to the secretory pathway, were reduced in the amygdala but not in the hippocampus in PAM+/− mice, GABAB receptor mRNA levels were similarly affected. Consistent with Cu deficiency, dopamine β‐monooxygenase function was impaired as evidenced by elevated dopamine metabolites in the amygdala, but not in the hippocampus, of PAM+/− mice. These alterations in Cu delivery to the secretory pathway in the PAM+/− amygdala may contribute to the physiological and behavioral deficits observed.
Genes, Brain and Behavior | 2017
Yada Akkhawattanangkul; Panchanan Maiti; Yi Xue; Dipendra K. Aryal; William C. Wetsel; David Hamilton; Stephen C. Fowler; Michael P. McDonald
Parkinsons disease is a debilitating neurodegenerative condition for which there is no cure. Converging evidence implicates gangliosides in the pathogenesis of several neurodegenerative diseases, suggesting a potential new class of therapeutic targets. We have shown that interventions that simultaneously increase the neuroprotective GM1 ganglioside and decrease the pro‐apoptotic GD3 ganglioside – such as inhibition of GD3 synthase (GD3S) or administration of sialidase – are neuroprotective in vitro and in a number of preclinical models. In this study, we investigated the effects of GD3S deletion on parkinsonism induced by 1‐methyl‐4phenyl‐1,2,3,6‐tetrahydropyridine (MPTP). MPTP was administered to GD3S−/− mice or controls using a subchronic regimen consisting of three series of low‐dose injections (11 mg/kg/day × 5 days each, 3 weeks apart), and motor function was assessed after each. The typical battery of tests used to assess parkinsonism failed to detect deficits in MPTP‐treated mice. More sensitive measures – such as the force‐plate actimeter and treadmill gait parameters – detected subtle effects of MPTP, some of which were absent in mice lacking GD3S. In wild‐type mice, MPTP destroyed 53% of the tyrosine‐hydroxylase (TH)‐positive neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) and reduced striatal dopamine 60.7%. In contrast, lesion size was only 22.5% in GD3S−/− mice and striatal dopamine was reduced by 37.2%. Stereological counts of Nissl‐positive SNc neurons that did not express TH suggest that neuroprotection was complete but TH expression was suppressed in some cells. These results show that inhibition of GD3S has neuroprotective properties in the MPTP model and may warrant further investigation as a therapeutic target.