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Dive into the research topics where George Jurjus is active.

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Featured researches published by George Jurjus.


Biological Psychiatry | 2004

Cellular changes in the postmortem hippocampus in major depression

Craig A. Stockmeier; Gouri J. Mahajan; Lisa Konick; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Herbert Y. Meltzer; H.B.M. Uylings; Lee Friedman; Grazyna Rajkowska

BACKGROUND Imaging studies report that hippocampal volume is decreased in major depressive disorder (MDD). A cellular basis for reduced hippocampal volume in MDD has not been identified. METHODS Sections of right hippocampus were collected in 19 subjects with MDD and 21 normal control subjects. The density of pyramidal neurons, dentate granule cell neurons, glia, and the size of the neuronal somal area were measured in systematic, randomly placed three-dimensional optical disector counting boxes. RESULTS In MDD, cryostat-cut hippocampal sections shrink in depth a significant 18% greater amount than in control subjects. The density of granule cells and glia in the dentate gyrus and pyramidal neurons and glia in all cornv ammonis (CA)/hippocampal subfields is significantly increased by 30%-35% in MDD. The average soma size of pyramidal neurons is significantly decreased in MDD. CONCLUSION In MDD, the packing density of glia, pyramidal neurons, and granule cell neurons is significantly increased in all hippocampal subfields and the dentate gyrus, and pyramidal neuron soma size is significantly decreased as well. It is suggested that a significant reduction in neuropil in MDD may account for decreased hippocampal volume detected by neuroimaging. In addition, differential shrinkage of frozen sections of the hippocampus suggests differential water content in hippocampus in MDD.


Biological Psychiatry | 2002

Glia pathology in the prefrontal cortex in alcohol dependence with and without depressive symptoms

Jose Javier Miguel-Hidalgo; Jinrong Wei; Michael E. Andrew; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Craig A. Stockmeier; Grazyna Rajkowska

BACKGROUND Reductions in glial density and enlargement of glial nuclei have been reported in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) in mood disorders. In alcohol dependence, often comorbid with depression, it is unclear whether there are changes in the density and size of glial cells in the dlPFC. METHODS The packing density and size of Nissl-stained glial cell nuclei were analyzed postmortem in the cortical layers of the dlPFC from 21 control and 17 alcohol-dependent (Alc) subjects without Wernicke or Korsakoff syndromes. Eight Alc subjects had depressive symptoms. The density of glial cells was measured with a three-dimensional cell counting method, and the areal fraction of glial fibrillary acidic protein immunoreactivity (GFAP) was also determined. RESULTS Glial density was reduced by 11-14% in layers V and VI and in all layers combined in the Alc group. The size of glial nuclei was decreased by 3.2% in Alc subjects. The Alc subjects with depressive symptoms showed the lowest values of density and size. There was no difference in GFAP immunoreactivity, although the lowest values were in the Alc group. CONCLUSIONS Alcohol dependence is characterized by decreases in both density and size of glia in the dlPFC. Glial pathology may be more severe in Alc subjects with depressive symptoms.


The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2013

Altered expression of synapse and glutamate related genes in post-mortem hippocampus of depressed subjects.

Vanja Duric; Mounira Banasr; Craig A. Stockmeier; Arthur A. Simen; Samuel S. Newton; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Lesa Dieter; Ronald S. Duman

Major depressive disorder (MDD) has been linked to changes in function and activity of the hippocampus, one of the central limbic regions involved in regulation of emotions and mood. The exact cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying hippocampal plasticity in response to stress are yet to be fully characterized. In this study, we examined the genetic profile of micro-dissected subfields of post-mortem hippocampus from subjects diagnosed with MDD and comparison subjects matched for sex, race and age. Gene expression profiles of the dentate gyrus and CA1 were assessed by 48K human HEEBO whole genome microarrays and a subgroup of identified genes was confirmed by real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). Pathway analysis revealed altered expression of several gene families, including cytoskeletal proteins involved in rearrangement of neuronal processes. Based on this and evidence of hippocampal neuronal atrophy in MDD, we focused on the expression of cytoskeletal, synaptic and glutamate receptor genes. Our findings demonstrate significant dysregulation of synaptic function/structure related genes SNAP25, DLG2 (SAP93), and MAP1A, and 2-amino-3-(5-methyl-3-oxo-1,2-oxazol-4-yl)propanoic acid receptor subunit genes GLUR1 and GLUR3. Several of these human target genes were similarly dysregulated in a rat model of chronic unpredictable stress and the effects reversed by antidepressant treatment. Together, these studies provide new evidence that disruption of synaptic and glutamatergic signalling pathways contribute to the pathophysiology underlying MDD and provide interesting targets for novel therapeutic interventions.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Gene expression profiling in postmortem prefrontal cortex of major depressive disorder.

Hyo Jung Kang; David H. Adams; Arthur A. Simen; Birgitte B. Simen; Grazyna Rajkowska; Craig A. Stockmeier; James C. Overholser; Herbert Y. Meltzer; George Jurjus; Lisa Konick; Samuel S. Newton; Ronald S. Duman

Investigations of the molecular mechanisms underlying major depressive disorder (MDD) have been hampered by the complexity of brain tissue and sensitivity of gene expression profiling approaches. To address these issues, we used discrete microdissections of postmortem dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) (area 9) and an oligonucleotide (60mer) microarray hybridization procedure that increases sensitivity without RNA amplification. Mixed-effects statistical methods were used to rigorously control for medication usage in the subset of medicated depressed subjects. These analyses yielded a rich profile of dysregulated genes. Two of the most highly dysregulated genes of interest were stresscopin, a neuropeptide involved in stress responses, and Forkhead box D3 (FOXD3), a transcription factor. Secondary cell-based analysis demonstrated that stresscopin and FoxD3 are increased in neurons of DLPFC gray matter of MDD subjects. These findings identify abnormal gene expression in a discrete region of MDD subjects and contribute to further elucidation of the molecular alterations of this complex mood disorder.


Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2013

Hippocampal volume and total cell numbers in major depressive disorder

Justin A. Cobb; Joy Simpson; Gouri J. Mahajan; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Lesa Dieter; Nicole Herbst; Warren L. May; Grazyna Rajkowska; Craig A. Stockmeier

Neuroimaging consistently reveals smaller hippocampal volume in recurrent or chronic major depressive disorder (MDD). The underlying cellular correlates of the smaller volume are not clearly known. Postmortem tissues from 17 pairs of depressed and control subjects were obtained at autopsy, and informant-based retrospective psychiatric assessment was performed. Formalin-fixed left temporal lobes were sectioned (40 μm), stained for Nissl substance, and every 60th section selected throughout the entire hippocampus. Total volume of the hippocampal formation was calculated, and total numbers of pyramidal neurons (in hippocampal fields CA1, CA2/3, hilus), dentate gyrus (DG) granule cells, and glial cells were estimated stereologically. While hippocampal volume in all MDD subjects was not significantly smaller versus control subjects, in recurrent/chronic MDD, total volume decreased with duration of depressive illness (r = -0.696, p < 0.026). There was no significant difference between MDD and controls in total number or density of pyramidal neurons/granule cells or glial cells in CA1, CA2/3, hilus, or DG. However, CA1 pyramidal neuron density increased with duration of illness in recurrent/chronic MDD (r = 0.840, p < 0.002). Granule cell (r = 0.971, p < 0.002) and glial cell numbers (r = 0.980, p < 0.001) increased with age in those taking antidepressant medication (n = 6). Increasing DG granule cell and glial cell numbers with age in antidepressant-treated subjects may reflect proliferative effects of antidepressant medications. Decreasing total volume and increasing CA1 pyramidal neuron density with duration of illness in recurrent/chronic MDD lends support to the neuropil hypothesis of MDD.


The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2009

Gender-specific decrease in NUDR and 5-HT1A receptor proteins in the prefrontal cortex of subjects with major depressive disorder.

Bernadeta Szewczyk; Paul R. Albert; Ariel M. Burns; Margaret Czesak; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Herbert Y. Meltzer; Lisa Konick; Lesa Dieter; Nicole Herbst; Warren L. May; Grazyna Rajkowska; Craig A. Stockmeier; Mark C. Austin

A variety of studies have documented alterations in 5-HT1A receptor binding sites in the brain of subjects with major depressive disorder (MDD). The recently identified transcription factor, nuclear deformed epidermal autoregulatory factor (NUDR/Deaf-1) has been shown to function as a transcriptional modulator of the human 5-HT1A receptor gene. The present study was undertaken to document the regional and cellular localization of NUDR in the human prefrontal cortex and to examine the levels of NUDR and 5-HT1A receptor protein in prefrontal cortex of female and male depressed and control subjects. NUDR immunoreactivity was present in neurons and glia across cortical layers and was co-localized with 5-HT1A receptor immunoreactive neurons. NUDR immunoreactivity as measured by Western blot was significantly decreased in the prefrontal cortex of female depressed subjects (42%, p=0.02) and unchanged in male depressed subjects relative to gender-matched control subjects. Similarly, 5-HT1A receptor protein level was significantly reduced in the prefrontal cortex of female depressed subjects (46%, p=0.03) and unchanged in male depressed subjects compared to gender-matched control subjects. Reduced protein expression of NUDR in the prefrontal cortex of female subjects with MDD may reflect a functional alteration in this transcription factor, which may contribute to the decrease in 5-HT1A receptors observed in the same female subjects with MDD. In addition, the gender-specific alterations in cortical NUDR and 5-HT1A receptor proteins could represent an underlying biological mechanism associated with the higher incidence of depression in women.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2011

The reduction of R1, a novel repressor protein for monoamine oxidase A, in major depressive disorder.

Shakevia Johnson; Craig A. Stockmeier; Jeffrey H. Meyer; Mark C. Austin; Paul R. Albert; Junming Wang; Warren L. May; Grazyna Rajkowska; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Lesa Dieter; Chandra Johnson; Donald B. Sittman; Xiao-Ming Ou

The novel transcriptional repressor protein, R1 (JPO2/CDCA7L/RAM2), inhibits monoamine oxidase A (MAO A) gene expression and influences cell proliferation and survival. MAO A is implicated in several neuropsychiatric illnesses and highly elevated in major depressive disorder (MDD); however, whether R1 is involved in these disorders is unknown. This study evaluates the role of R1 in depressed subjects either untreated or treated with antidepressant drugs. R1 protein levels were determined in the postmortem prefrontal cortex of 18 untreated MDD subjects and 12 medicated MDD subjects compared with 18 matched psychiatrically normal control subjects. Western blot analysis showed that R1 was significantly decreased by 37.5% (p<0.005) in untreated MDD subjects. The R1 level in medicated MDD subjects was also significantly lower (by 30%; p<0.05) compared with control subjects, but was not significantly different compared with untreated MDD subjects. Interestingly, the reduction in R1 was significantly correlated with an increase (approximately 40%; p<0.05) in MAO A protein levels within the MDD groups compared with controls. Consistent with the change in MAO A protein expression, the MAO A catalytic activity was significantly greater in both MDD groups compared with controls. These results suggest that reduced R1 may lead to elevated MAO A levels in untreated and treated MDD subjects; moreover, the reduction of R1 has been implicated in apoptotic cell death and apoptosis has also been observed in the brains of MDD subjects. Therefore, modulation of R1 levels may provide a new therapeutic target in the development of more effective strategies to treat MDD.


Biological Psychiatry | 2010

A Novel Role for Glyceraldehyde-3-Phosphate Dehydrogenase and Monoamine Oxidase B Cascade in Ethanol-Induced Cellular Damage

Xiao Ming Ou; Craig A. Stockmeier; Herbert Y. Meltzer; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Lesa Dieter; Kevin Chen; Deyin Lu; Chandra Johnson; Moussa B. H. Youdim; Mark C. Austin; Jia Luo; Akira Sawa; Warren L. May; Jean C. Shih

BACKGROUND Alcoholism is a major psychiatric condition at least partly associated with ethanol (EtOH)-induced cell damage. Although brain cell loss has been reported in subjects with alcoholism, the molecular mechanism is unclear. Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and monoamine oxidase B (MAO B) reportedly play a role in cellular dysfunction under stressful conditions and might contribute to EtOH-induced cell damage. METHODS Expression of GAPDH and MAO B protein was studied in human glioblastoma and neuroblastoma cell lines exposed to physiological concentrations of EtOH. Expression of these proteins was also examined in the prefrontal cortex from human subjects with alcohol dependence and in rats fed with an EtOH diet. Coimmunoprecipitation, subcellular fractionation, and luciferase assay were used to address nuclear GAPDH-mediated MAO B activation. To test the effects of inactivation, RNA interference and pharmacological intervention were used, and cell damage was assessed by terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TdT)-mediated dUTP Nick End Labeling (TUNEL) and hydrogen peroxide measurements. RESULTS Ethanol significantly increases levels of GAPDH, especially nuclear GAPDH, and MAO B in neuronal cells as well as in human and rat brains. Nuclear GAPDH interacts with the transcriptional activator, transforming growth factor-beta-inducible early gene 2 (TIEG2), and augments TIEG2-mediated MAO B transactivation, which results in cell damage in neuronal cells exposed to EtOH. Knockdown expression of GAPDH or treatment with MAO B inhibitors selegiline (deprenyl) and rasagiline (Azilect) can block this cascade. CONCLUSIONS Ethanol-elicited nuclear GAPDH augments TIEG2-mediated MAO B, which might play a role in brain damage in subjects with alcoholism. Compounds that block this cascade are potential candidates for therapeutic strategies.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Quantitative Analysis of Focused A-To-I RNA Editing Sites by Ultra-High-Throughput Sequencing in Psychiatric Disorders

Hu Zhu; Daniel J. Urban; Jared Blashka; Matthew T. McPheeters; Wesley K. Kroeze; Piotr A. Mieczkowski; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Lesa Dieter; Gouri J. Mahajan; Grazyna Rajkowska; Zefeng Wang; Patrick F. Sullivan; Craig A. Stockmeier; Bryan L. Roth

A-to-I RNA editing is a post-transcriptional modification of single nucleotides in RNA by adenosine deamination, which thereby diversifies the gene products encoded in the genome. Thousands of potential RNA editing sites have been identified by recent studies (e.g. see Li et al, Science 2009); however, only a handful of these sites have been independently confirmed. Here, we systematically and quantitatively examined 109 putative coding region A-to-I RNA editing sites in three sets of normal human brain samples by ultra-high-throughput sequencing (uHTS). Forty of 109 putative sites, including 25 previously confirmed sites, were validated as truly edited in our brain samples, suggesting an overestimation of A-to-I RNA editing in these putative sites by Li et al (2009). To evaluate RNA editing in human disease, we analyzed 29 of the confirmed sites in subjects with major depressive disorder and schizophrenia using uHTS. In striking contrast to many prior studies, we did not find significant alterations in the frequency of RNA editing at any of the editing sites in samples from these patients, including within the 5HT2C serotonin receptor (HTR2C). Our results indicate that uHTS is a fast, quantitative and high-throughput method to assess RNA editing in human physiology and disease and that many prior studies of RNA editing may overestimate both the extent and disease-related variability of RNA editing at the sites we examined in the human brain.


Schizophrenia Research | 1994

Schizophrenia-like psychosis and cerebellar degeneration.

George Jurjus; Kenneth M. Weiss; George E. Jaskiw

Neuroimaging studies have suggested an association between a variety of structural brain abnormalities and schizophrenia, including lateral and third ventricular enlargement, cortical atrophy, medial temporal lobe and cerebellar vermian atrophy (Sharif et al., 1993; Weinberger et al., 1979). This latter finding, however, did not receive much attention from researchers, and the cerebellum has rarely been viewed as a potential site of pathology relevant to schizophrenia. In this case study we present a patient with cerebellar degeneration and schizophrenia-like psychosis and discuss the possible relationship between these two conditions.

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Craig A. Stockmeier

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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James C. Overholser

Case Western Reserve University

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Grazyna Rajkowska

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Lesa Dieter

Case Western Reserve University

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George E. Jaskiw

United States Department of Veterans Affairs

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Gouri J. Mahajan

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Lisa Konick

Case Western Reserve University

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P. Eric Konicki

Case Western Reserve University

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Warren L. May

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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