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Dive into the research topics where Georgia Balsevich is active.

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Featured researches published by Georgia Balsevich.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2015

Selective inhibitors of the FK506-binding protein 51 by induced fit

Steffen Gaali; Alexander Kirschner; Serena Cuboni; Jakob Hartmann; Christian Kozany; Georgia Balsevich; Christian Namendorf; Paula Fernandez-Vizarra; Claudia Sippel; Anthony S. Zannas; Rika Draenert; Elisabeth B. Binder; Osborne F. X. Almeida; Gerd Rühter; Manfred Uhr; Mathias V. Schmidt; Chadi Touma; Andreas Bracher; Felix Hausch

The FK506-binding protein 51 (FKBP51, encoded by the FKBP5 gene) is an established risk factor for stress-related psychiatric disorders such as major depression. Drug discovery for FKBP51 has been hampered by the inability to pharmacologically differentiate against the structurally similar but functional opposing homolog FKBP52, and all known FKBP ligands are unselective. Here, we report the discovery of the potent and highly selective inhibitors of FKBP51, SAFit1 and SAFit2. This new class of ligands achieves selectivity for FKBP51 by an induced-fit mechanism that is much less favorable for FKBP52. By using these ligands, we demonstrate that selective inhibition of FKBP51 enhances neurite elongation in neuronal cultures and improves neuroendocrine feedback and stress-coping behavior in mice. Our findings provide the structural and functional basis for the development of mechanistically new antidepressants.


Neuron | 2015

Genetic Differences in the Immediate Transcriptome Response to Stress Predict Risk-Related Brain Function and Psychiatric Disorders

Janine Arloth; Ryan Bogdan; Peter Weber; Goar Frishman; Andreas Menke; Klaus V. Wagner; Georgia Balsevich; Mathias V. Schmidt; Nazanin Karbalai; Darina Czamara; Andre Altmann; Dietrich Trümbach; Wolfgang Wurst; Divya Mehta; Manfred Uhr; Torsten Klengel; Caitlin E. Carey; Emily Drabant Conley; Andreas Ruepp; Bertram Müller-Myhsok; Ahmad R. Hariri; Elisabeth B. Binder

Summary Depression risk is exacerbated by genetic factors and stress exposure; however, the biological mechanisms through which these factors interact to confer depression risk are poorly understood. One putative biological mechanism implicates variability in the ability of cortisol, released in response to stress, to trigger a cascade of adaptive genomic and non-genomic processes through glucocorticoid receptor (GR) activation. Here, we demonstrate that common genetic variants in long-range enhancer elements modulate the immediate transcriptional response to GR activation in human blood cells. These functional genetic variants increase risk for depression and co-heritable psychiatric disorders. Moreover, these risk variants are associated with inappropriate amygdala reactivity, a transdiagnostic psychiatric endophenotype and an important stress hormone response trigger. Network modeling and animal experiments suggest that these genetic differences in GR-induced transcriptional activation may mediate the risk for depression and other psychiatric disorders by altering a network of functionally related stress-sensitive genes in blood and brain. Video Abstract


Journal of Endocrinology | 2014

Interplay between diet-induced obesity and chronic stress in mice: potential role of FKBP51

Georgia Balsevich; Andrés Uribe; Klaus V. Wagner; Jakob Hartmann; Sara Santarelli; Christiana Labermaier; Mathias V. Schmidt

While it is known that stress promotes obesity, the effects of stress within an obesogenic context are not so clear and molecular targets at the interface remain elusive. The FK506-binding protein 51 (FKBP51, gene: Fkbp5) has been identified as a target gene implicated in the development of stress-related psychiatric disorders and is a possible candidate for involvement in stress and metabolic regulation. The aims of the current study are to investigate the interaction between chronic stress and an obesogenic context and to additionally examine whether FKBP51 is involved in this interaction. For this purpose, male C57BL/6 mice were exposed to a high-fat diet for 8 weeks before being challenged with chronic social defeat stress. Herein, we demonstrate that chronic stress induces hypophagia and weight loss, ultimately improving features arising from an obesogenic context, including glucose tolerance and levels of insulin and leptin. We show that Fkbp5 expression is responsive to diet and stress in the hypothalamus and hippocampus respectively. Furthermore, under basal conditions, higher levels of hypothalamic Fkbp5 expression were related to increased body weight gain. Our data indicate that Fkbp5 may represent a novel target in metabolic regulation.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2017

An adverse early life environment can enhance stress resilience in adulthood

Sara Santarelli; Christoph A. Zimmermann; Georgia Kalideris; Sylvie L. Lesuis; Janine Arloth; Andrés Uribe; Carine Dournes; Georgia Balsevich; Jakob Hartmann; Mercè Masana; Elisabeth B. Binder; Dietmar Spengler; Mathias V. Schmidt

Chronic stress is a major risk factor for depression. Interestingly, not all individuals develop psychopathology after chronic stress exposure. In contrast to the prevailing view that stress effects are cumulative and increase stress vulnerability throughout life, the match/mismatch hypothesis of psychiatric disorders. The match/mismatch hypothesis proposes that individuals who experience moderate levels of early life psychosocial stress can acquire resilience to renewed stress exposure later in life. Here, we have tested this hypothesis by comparing the developmental effects of 2 opposite early life conditions, when followed by 2 opposite adult environments. Male Balb/c mice were exposed to either adverse early life conditions (limited nesting and bedding material) or a supportive rearing environment (early handling). At adulthood, the animals of each group were either housed with an ovariectomized female (supportive environment) or underwent chronic social defeat stress (socially adverse environment) for 3 weeks. At the end of the adult manipulations, all of the animals were returned to standard housing conditions. Then, we compared the neuroendocrine, behavioral and molecular effects of the interaction between early and adult environment. Our study shows that early life adversity does not necessarily result in increased vulnerability to stress. Specific endophenotypes, like hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activity, anxiety-related behavior and glucocorticoid receptor expression levels in the hippocampus were not significantly altered when adversity is experienced during early life and in adulthood, and are mainly affected by either early life or adult life adversity alone. Overall our data support the notion that being raised in a stressful environment prepares the offspring to better cope with a challenging adult environment and emphasize the role of early life experiences in shaping adult responsiveness to stress.


Obesity Facts | 2014

Developmental ORIgins of Healthy and Unhealthy AgeiNg: The Role of Maternal Obesity - Introduction to DORIAN

Megan C. Holmes; Mathias V. Schmidt; Francesca Cirulli; Maria Angela Guzzardi; Alessandra Berry; Georgia Balsevich; Maria Grazia Andreassi; Jan-Jaap Wesselink; Tiziana Liistro; Paulino Gómez-Puertas; Johan G. Eriksson; Jonathan R. Seckl

Europe has the highest proportion of elderly people in the world. Cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, sarcopenia and cognitive decline frequently coexist in the same aged individual, sharing common early risk factors and being mutually reinforcing. Among conditions which may contribute to establish early risk factors, this review focuses on maternal obesity, since the epidemic of obesity involves an ever growing number of women of reproductive age and children, calling for appropriate studies to understand the consequences of maternal obesity on the offsprings health and for developing effective measures and policies to improve peoples health before their conception and birth. Though the current knowledge suggests that the long-term impact of maternal obesity on the offsprings health may be substantial, the outcomes of maternal obesity over the lifespan have not been quantified, and the molecular changes induced by maternal obesity remain poorly characterized. We hypothesize that maternal insulin resistance and reduced placental glucocorticoid catabolism, leading to oxidative stress, may damage the DNA, either in its structure (telomere shortening) or in its function (via epigenetic changes), resulting in altered gene expression/repair, disease during life, and pathological ageing. This review illustrates the background to the EU-FP7-HEALTH-DORIAN project.


Stress | 2016

SLC6A15, a novel stress vulnerability candidate, modulates anxiety and depressive-like behavior: involvement of the glutamatergic system

Sara Santarelli; Klaus V. Wagner; Christiana Labermaier; Andrés Uribe; Carine Dournes; Georgia Balsevich; Jakob Hartmann; Mercè Masana; Florian Holsboer; Alon Chen; Marianne B. Müller; Mathias V. Schmidt

Abstract Major depression is a multifactorial disease, involving both environmental and genetic risk factors. Recently, SLC6A15 – a neutral amino acid transporter mainly expressed in neurons – was proposed as a new candidate gene for major depression and stress vulnerability. Risk allele carriers for a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in a SLC6A15 regulatory region display altered hippocampal volume, glutamate levels, and hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis activity, all markers associated with major depression. Despite this genetic link between SLC6A15 and depression, its functional role with regard to the development and maintenance of depressive disorder is still unclear. The aim of the current study was therefore to characterize the role of mouse slc6a15 in modulating brain function and behavior, especially in relation to stress as a key risk factor for the development of mood disorders. We investigated the effects of slc6a15 manipulation using two mouse models, a conventional slc6a15 knock-out mouse line (SLC-KO) and a virus-mediated hippocampal slc6a15 overexpression (SLC-OE) model. Mice were tested under basal conditions and following chronic social stress. We found that SLC-KO animals displayed a similar behavioral profile to wild-type littermates (SLC-WT) under basal conditions. Interestingly, following chronic social stress SLC-KO animals showed lower levels of anxiety- and depressive-like behavior compared to stressed WT littermates. In support of these findings, SLC-OE animals displayed increased anxiety-like behavior already under basal condition. We also provide evidence that GluR1 expression in the dentate gyrus, but not GluR2 or NR1, are regulated by slc6a15 expression, and may contribute to the difference in stress responsiveness observed between SLC-KO and SLC-WT animals. Taken together, our data demonstrate that slc6a15 plays a role in modulating emotional behavior, possibly mediated by its impact on glutamatergic neurotransmission.


Neuroendocrinology | 2016

Prenatal Exposure to Maternal Obesity Alters Anxiety and Stress Coping Behaviors in Aged Mice.

Georgia Balsevich; Valentin Baumann; Andrés Uribe; Alon Chen; Mathias V. Schmidt

Background: There is growing evidence that maternal obesity and prenatal exposure to a high-fat diet program fetal development to regulate the physiology and behavior of the offspring in adulthood. Yet the extent to which the maternal dietary environment contributes to adult disease vulnerability remains unclear. In the current study we tested whether prenatal exposure to maternal obesity increases the offsprings vulnerability to stress-related psychiatric disorders. Methods: We used a mouse model of maternal diet-induced obesity to investigate whether maternal obesity affects the response to adult chronic stress exposure in young adult (3-month-old) and aged adult (12-month-old) offspring. Results: Long-lasting, delayed impairments to anxiety-like behaviors and stress coping strategies resulted on account of prenatal exposure to maternal obesity. Although maternal obesity did not change the offsprings behavioral response to chronic stress per se, we demonstrate that the behavioral outcomes induced by prenatal exposure to maternal obesity parallel the deleterious effects of adult chronic stress exposure in aged male mice. We found that the glucocorticoid receptor (GR, Nr3c1) is upregulated in various hypothalamic nuclei on account of maternal obesity. In addition, gene expression of a known regulator of the GR, FKBP51, is increased specifically within the paraventricular nucleus. Conclusions: These findings indicate that maternal obesity parallels the deleterious effects of adult chronic stress exposure, and furthermore identifies GR/FKBP51 signaling as a novel candidate pathway regulated by maternal obesity.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2018

Anxiety Associated Increased CpG Methylation in the Promoter of Asb1 : A Translational Approach Evidenced by Epidemiological and Clinical Studies and a Murine Model

Rebecca T. Emeny; Jens Baumert; Anthony S. Zannas; Sonja Kunze; Simone Wahl; Stella Iurato; Janine Arloth; Georgia Balsevich; Mathias V. Schmidt; Peter Weber; Anja Kretschmer; Liliane Pfeiffer; Johannes Kruse; Konstantin Strauch; Michael Roden; Christian Herder; Wolfgang Koenig; Christian Gieger; Melanie Waldenberger; Annette Peters; Elisabeth B. Binder; Karl-Heinz Ladwig

Epigenetic regulation in anxiety is suggested, but evidence from large studies is needed. We conducted an epigenome-wide association study (EWAS) on anxiety in a population-based cohort and validated our finding in a clinical cohort as well as a murine model. In the KORA cohort, participants (n=1522, age 32–72 years) were administered the Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) instrument, whole blood DNA methylation was measured (Illumina 450K BeadChip), and circulating levels of hs-CRP and IL-18 were assessed in the association between anxiety and methylation. DNA methylation was measured using the same instrument in a study of patients with anxiety disorders recruited at the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry (MPIP, 131 non-medicated cases and 169 controls). To expand our mechanistic understanding, these findings were reverse translated in a mouse model of acute social defeat stress. In the KORA study, participants were classified according to mild, moderate, or severe levels of anxiety (29.4%/6.0%/1.5%, respectively). Severe anxiety was associated with 48.5% increased methylation at a single CpG site (cg12701571) located in the promoter of the gene encoding Asb1 (β-coefficient=0.56 standard error (SE)=0.10, p (Bonferroni)=0.005), a protein hypothetically involved in regulation of cytokine signaling. An interaction between IL-18 and severe anxiety with methylation of this CpG cite showed a tendency towards significance in the total population (p=0.083) and a significant interaction among women (p=0.014). Methylation of the same CpG was positively associated with Panic and Agoraphobia scale (PAS) scores (β=0.005, SE=0.002, p=0.021, n=131) among cases in the MPIP study. In a murine model of acute social defeat stress, Asb1 gene expression was significantly upregulated in a tissue-specific manner (p=0.006), which correlated with upregulation of the neuroimmunomodulating cytokine interleukin 1 beta. Our findings suggest epigenetic regulation of the stress-responsive Asb1 gene in anxiety-related phenotypes. Further studies are necessary to elucidate the causal direction of this association and the potential role of Asb1-mediated immune dysregulation in anxiety disorders.


Nature Communications | 2017

Stress-responsive FKBP51 regulates AKT2-AS160 signaling and metabolic function

Georgia Balsevich; Alexander S. Häusl; Carola W. Meyer; Stoyo Karamihalev; Xixi Feng; Max Pöhlmann; Carine Dournes; Andrés Uribe-Marino; Sara Santarelli; Christiana Labermaier; Kathrin Hafner; Tianqi Mao; Michaela Breitsamer; Marily Theodoropoulou; Christian Namendorf; Manfred Uhr; Marcelo Paez-Pereda; Gerhard Winter; Felix Hausch; Alon Chen; Matthias H. Tschoep; Theo Rein; Nils C. Gassen; Mathias V. Schmidt

The co-chaperone FKBP5 is a stress-responsive protein-regulating stress reactivity, and its genetic variants are associated with T2D related traits and other stress-related disorders. Here we show that FKBP51 plays a role in energy and glucose homeostasis. Fkbp5 knockout (51KO) mice are protected from high-fat diet-induced weight gain, show improved glucose tolerance and increased insulin signaling in skeletal muscle. Chronic treatment with a novel FKBP51 antagonist, SAFit2, recapitulates the effects of FKBP51 deletion on both body weight regulation and glucose tolerance. Using shorter SAFit2 treatment, we show that glucose tolerance improvement precedes the reduction in body weight. Mechanistically, we identify a novel association between FKBP51 and AS160, a substrate of AKT2 that is involved in glucose uptake. FKBP51 antagonism increases the phosphorylation of AS160, increases glucose transporter 4 expression at the plasma membrane, and ultimately enhances glucose uptake in skeletal myotubes. We propose FKBP51 as a mediator between stress and T2D development, and potential target for therapeutic approaches.Stress is recognized as risk factor for the development of type 2 diabetes. Here Balsevich et al. show that the stress responsive co-chaperone FKBP5 regulates glucose metabolism in mice by modulating AS160 phosphorylation, glucose transporter expression and muscle glucose uptake.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2015

High-fat diet during pregnancy acts as a stressor increasing maternal glucocorticoids’ signaling to the fetus and disrupting maternal behavior in a mouse model

Veronica Bellisario; Pamela Panetta; Georgia Balsevich; Valentin Baumann; June Noble; Carla Raggi; Alessandra Berry; Jonathan R. Seckl; Mathias V. Schmidt; Megan C. Holmes; Francesca Cirulli

Furthermore, positive associations between growth trajectory throughout the first 5 years of life and childhood cognitive ability were observed, in spite of the fact that rapid infancy growth increases the risk to develop obesity, diabetes and hypertension, conditions associated with increased risk to develop cognitive impairment, dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. This lecturewill illustrate the above concepts andwill also show recent data on the early on-set of the relationship between obesity and brain insulin sensitivity and development.

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