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Dive into the research topics where Douglas Barker is active.

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Featured researches published by Douglas Barker.


PLOS ONE | 2013

A Selective HDAC 1/2 Inhibitor Modulates Chromatin and Gene Expression in Brain and Alters Mouse Behavior in Two Mood-Related Tests

Frederick A. Schroeder; Michael C. Lewis; Daniel M. Fass; Florence F. Wagner; Yan-Ling Zhang; Krista M. Hennig; Jennifer Gale; Wen-Ning Zhao; Surya A. Reis; Douglas Barker; Erin Berry-Scott; Sung Won Kim; Elizabeth L. Clore; Jacob M. Hooker; Edward B. Holson; Stephen J. Haggarty; Tracey L. Petryshen

Psychiatric diseases, including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and major depression, are projected to lead global disease burden within the next decade. Pharmacotherapy, the primary – albeit often ineffective – treatment method, has remained largely unchanged over the past 50 years, highlighting the need for novel target discovery and improved mechanism-based treatments. Here, we examined in wild type mice the impact of chronic, systemic treatment with Compound 60 (Cpd-60), a slow-binding, benzamide-based inhibitor of the class I histone deacetylase (HDAC) family members, HDAC1 and HDAC2, in mood-related behavioral assays responsive to clinically effective drugs. Cpd-60 treatment for one week was associated with attenuated locomotor activity following acute amphetamine challenge. Further, treated mice demonstrated decreased immobility in the forced swim test. These changes are consistent with established effects of clinical mood stabilizers and antidepressants, respectively. Whole-genome expression profiling of specific brain regions (prefrontal cortex, nucleus accumbens, hippocampus) from mice treated with Cpd-60 identified gene expression changes, including a small subset of transcripts that significantly overlapped those previously reported in lithium-treated mice. HDAC inhibition in brain was confirmed by increased histone acetylation both globally and, using chromatin immunoprecipitation, at the promoter regions of upregulated transcripts, a finding consistent with in vivo engagement of HDAC targets. In contrast, treatment with suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA), a non-selective fast-binding, hydroxamic acid HDAC 1/2/3/6 inhibitor, was sufficient to increase histone acetylation in brain, but did not alter mood-related behaviors and had dissimilar transcriptional regulatory effects compared to Cpd-60. These results provide evidence that selective inhibition of HDAC1 and HDAC2 in brain may provide an epigenetic-based target for developing improved treatments for mood disorders and other brain disorders with altered chromatin-mediated neuroplasticity.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2015

Characterization of bipolar disorder patient-specific induced pluripotent stem cells from a family reveals neurodevelopmental and mRNA expression abnormalities

Jon M. Madison; Fen Zhou; A Nigam; A Hussain; Douglas Barker; Ralda Nehme; K van der Ven; J Hsu; Pavlina Wolf; M Fleishman; Colm O'Dushlaine; Samuel A. Rose; K D Chambert; Frank H. Lau; Tim Ahfeldt; E H Rueckert; Steven D. Sheridan; Daniel M. Fass; James Nemesh; Thomas E. Mullen; Laurence Daheron; Steven A. McCarroll; Pamela Sklar; Roy H. Perlis; Stephen J. Haggarty

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a common neuropsychiatric disorder characterized by chronic recurrent episodes of depression and mania. Despite evidence for high heritability of BD, little is known about its underlying pathophysiology. To develop new tools for investigating the molecular and cellular basis of BD, we applied a family-based paradigm to derive and characterize a set of 12 induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) lines from a quartet consisting of two BD-affected brothers and their two unaffected parents. Initially, no significant phenotypic differences were observed between iPSCs derived from the different family members. However, upon directed neural differentiation, we observed that CXCR4 (CXC chemokine receptor-4) expressing central nervous system (CNS) neural progenitor cells (NPCs) from both BD patients compared with their unaffected parents exhibited multiple phenotypic differences at the level of neurogenesis and expression of genes critical for neuroplasticity, including WNT pathway components and ion channel subunits. Treatment of the CXCR4+ NPCs with a pharmacological inhibitor of glycogen synthase kinase 3, a known regulator of WNT signaling, was found to rescue a progenitor proliferation deficit in the BD patient NPCs. Taken together, these studies provide new cellular tools for dissecting the pathophysiology of BD and evidence for dysregulation of key pathways involved in neurodevelopment and neuroplasticity. Future generation of additional iPSCs following a family-based paradigm for modeling complex neuropsychiatric disorders in conjunction with in-depth phenotyping holds promise for providing insights into the pathophysiological substrates of BD and is likely to inform the development of targeted therapeutics for its treatment and ideally prevention.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2013

Cis-Acting Regulation of Brain-Specific ANK3 Gene Expression by a Genetic Variant Associated with Bipolar Disorder

E H Rueckert; Douglas Barker; Douglas M. Ruderfer; Sarah E. Bergen; Colm O'Dushlaine; Catherine J. Luce; Steven D. Sheridan; Kraig M. Theriault; K D Chambert; Jennifer L. Moran; S Purcell; Jon M. Madison; Stephen J. Haggarty; Pamela Sklar

Several genome-wide association studies for bipolar disorder (BD) have found a strong association of the Ankyrin 3 (ANK3) gene. This association spans numerous linked single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in an ∼250-kb genomic region overlapping ANK3. The associated region encompasses predicted regulatory elements as well as two of the six validated alternative first exons, which encode distinct protein domains at the N-terminus of the protein also known as Ankyrin-G. Using RNA ligase-mediated rapid amplification of cDNA ends to identify novel transcripts in conjunction with a highly sensitive, exon-specific multiplexed mRNA expression assay, we detected differential regulation of distinct ANK3 transcription start sites and coupling of specific 5′ ends with 3′ mRNA splicing events in postmortem human brain and human stem cell-derived neural progenitors and neurons. Furthermore, allelic variation at the BD-associated SNP rs1938526 correlated with a significant difference in cerebellar expression of a brain-specific ANK3 transcript. These findings suggest a brain-specific cis-regulatory transcriptional effect of ANK3 that may be relevant to BD pathophysiology.


Translational Psychiatry | 2015

Analysis of exome sequence in 604 trios for recessive genotypes in schizophrenia.

Elliott Rees; George Kirov; James Tynan Rhys Walters; Alexander Richards; Daniel P. Howrigan; David H. Kavanagh; Andrew Pocklington; Menachem Fromer; Douglas M. Ruderfer; Lyudmila Georgieva; Noa Carrera; Padhraig Gormley; Priit Palta; H. J. Williams; Sarah Dwyer; Jessica S. Johnson; Panos Roussos; Douglas Barker; Eric Banks; Vihra Milanova; Samuel A. Rose; K D Chambert; Milind Mahajan; Edward M. Scolnick; Jennifer L. Moran; Ming T. Tsuang; Stephen J. Glatt; Wei J. Chen; H-G Hwu; Stephen V. Faraone

Genetic associations involving both rare and common alleles have been reported for schizophrenia but there have been no systematic scans for rare recessive genotypes using fully phased trio data. Here, we use exome sequencing in 604 schizophrenia proband–parent trios to investigate the role of recessive (homozygous or compound heterozygous) nonsynonymous genotypes in the disorder. The burden of recessive genotypes was not significantly increased in probands at either a genome-wide level or in any individual gene after adjustment for multiple testing. At a system level, probands had an excess of nonsynonymous compound heterozygous genotypes (minor allele frequency, MAF ⩽1%) in voltage-gated sodium channels (VGSCs; eight in probands and none in parents, P=1.5 × 10−4). Previous findings of multiple de novo loss-of-function mutations in this gene family, particularly SCN2A, in autism and intellectual disability provide biological and genetic plausibility for this finding. Pointing further to the involvement of VGSCs in schizophrenia, we found that these genes were enriched for nonsynonymous mutations (MAF ⩽0.1%) in cases genotyped using an exome array, (5585 schizophrenia cases and 8103 controls), and that in the trios data, synaptic proteins interacting with VGSCs were also enriched for both compound heterozygosity (P=0.018) and de novo mutations (P=0.04). However, we were unable to replicate the specific association with compound heterozygosity at VGSCs in an independent sample of Taiwanese schizophrenia trios (N=614). We conclude that recessive genotypes do not appear to make a substantial contribution to schizophrenia at a genome-wide level. Although multiple lines of evidence, including several from this study, suggest that rare mutations in VGSCs contribute to the disorder, in the absence of replication of the original findings regarding compound heterozygosity, this conclusion requires evaluation in a larger sample of trios.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2015

Noncoding RNAs connect genetic risk factors to the neurodevelopmental basis of bipolar disorder

S. Bavamian; Nikolaos Mellios; Jasmin Lalonde; Daniel M. Fass; Jennifer X. Wang; Steven D. Sheridan; Jon M. Madison; Fen Zhou; E H Rueckert; Douglas Barker; Roy H. Perlis; Mriganka Sur; Stephen J. Haggarty

Noncoding RNAs connect genetic risk factors to the neurodevelopmental basis of bipolar disorder


Neuropharmacology | 2013

Crebinostat: a novel cognitive enhancer that inhibits histone deacetylase activity and modulates chromatin-mediated neuroplasticity.

Daniel M. Fass; Surya A. Reis; Balaram Ghosh; Krista M. Hennig; Nadine F. Joseph; Wen-Ning Zhao; Thomas J.F. Nieland; Ji-Song Guan; Chelsea E. Groves Kuhnle; Weiping Tang; Douglas Barker; Ralph Mazitschek; Stuart L. Schreiber; Li-Huei Tsai; Stephen J. Haggarty


Archive | 2011

Identification of Small-Molecule Inhibitors of Trypansoma cruzi Infection - Probe 1

Leigh C. Carmody; Andrew Germain; Douglas Barker; Cristina Galan-Rodriguez; Esther Bettiol; Ana Rodriguez; Lawrence MacPherson; Michelle Palmer; Stuart L. Schreiber


PMC | 2015

Dysregulation of miR-34a links neuronal development to genetic risk factors for bipolar disorder

Fen Zhou; S. Bavamian; Nikolaos Mellios; Jasmin Lalonde; Daniel M. Fass; Jennifer X. Wang; Steven D. Sheridan; Jon M. Madison; E H Rueckert; Douglas Barker; Roy H. Perlis; Mriganka Sur; Stephen J. Haggarty


PLOS ONE | 2013

Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) of nucleus accumbens from Cpd-60 treated mice.

Frederick A. Schroeder; Michael C. Lewis; Daniel M. Fass; Florence F. Wagner; Yan-Ling Zhang; Krista M. Hennig; Jennifer Gale; Wen-Ning Zhao; Surya A. Reis; Douglas Barker; Erin Berry-Scott; Sung Won Kim; Elizabeth L. Clore; Jacob M. Hooker; Edward B. Holson; Stephen J. Haggarty; Tracey L. Petryshen


PMC | 2012

Crebinostat: A novel cognitive enhancer that inhibits histone deacetylase activity and modulates chromatin-mediated neuroplasticity

Daniel M. Fass; Surya A. Reis; Balaram Ghosh; Krista M. Hennig; Nadine F. Joseph; Wen-Ning Zhao; Thomas J.F. Nieland; Ji-Song Guan; Chelsea E. Groves Kuhnle; Weiping Tang; Douglas Barker; Ralph Mazitschek; Stuart L. Schreiber; Li-Huei Tsai; Stephen J. Haggarty

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Stuart L Schreiber

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Leigh C Carmody

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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