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Dive into the research topics where Gerard J. O'Sullivan is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerard J. O'Sullivan.


Neuroscience | 2007

Phenotypic characterization of spatial cognition and social behavior in mice with 'knockout' of the schizophrenia risk gene neuregulin 1.

Colm M.P. O'Tuathaigh; Daniela Babovic; Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Jeremiah J. Clifford; Orna Tighe; David T. Croke; Richard P. Harvey; John L. Waddington

Neuregulin-1 (NRG1) has been identified as a candidate susceptibility gene for schizophrenia. In the present study the functional role of the NRG1 gene, as it relates to cognitive and social processes known to be disrupted in schizophrenia, was assessed in mice with heterozygous deletion of transmembrane (TM)-domain NRG1 in comparison with wildtypes (WT). Social affiliative behavior was assessed using the sociability and preference for social novelty paradigm, in terms of time spent in: (i) a chamber containing an unfamiliar conspecific vs. an empty chamber (sociability), or (ii) a chamber containing an unfamiliar conspecific vs. a chamber containing a familiar conspecific (preference for social novelty). Social dominance and aggressive behavior were examined in the resident-intruder paradigm. Spatial learning and memory were assessed using the Barnes maze paradigm, while spatial working memory was measured using the continuous variant of the spontaneous alternation task. Barnes maze data revealed intact spatial learning in NRG1 mutants, with elevated baseline latency to enter the escape hole in male NRG1 mutants reflecting an increase in activity level. Similarly, although a greater number of overall arm entries were found, spontaneous alternation was unaffected in NRG1 mice. Social affiliation data revealed NRG1 mutants to evidence a specific loss of WT preference for spending time with an unfamiliar as opposed to a familiar conspecific. This suggests that NRG1 mutants show a selective impairment in response to social novelty. While spatial learning and working memory processes appear intact, heterozygous deletion of TM-domain NRG1 was associated with disruption to social novelty behavior. These data inform at a novel phenotypic level on the functional role of this gene in the context of its association with risk for schizophrenia.


Psychopharmacology | 2005

Phenotypic studies on dopamine receptor subtype and associated signal transduction mutants: insights and challenges from 10 years at the psychopharmacology–molecular biology interface

John L. Waddington; Colm M.P. O'Tuathaigh; Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Katsunori Tomiyama; Noriaki Koshikawa; David T. Croke

BackgroundMutants with targeted gene deletion (‘knockout’) or insertion (transgenic) of D1, D2, D3, D4 and D5 dopamine (DA) receptor subtypes are complemented by an increasing variety of double knockout and transgenic-‘knockout’ models, together with knockout of critical components of DA receptor signalling cascades such as Gαolf[Gγ7], adenylyl cyclase type 5, PKA [RIIβ] and DARPP-32. However, it is increasingly recognised that these molecular techniques have a number of inherent limitations. Furthermore, there are poorly understood methodological factors that contribute to inconsistent phenotypic findings between laboratories.ObjectiveThis review seeks to document the impact of DA receptor subtype and related transduction mutants on our understanding of the behavioural roles of these entities, primarily at the level of unconditioned psychomotor behaviour.MethodsIt includes ethologically based and orofacial movement studies in our own laboratories, since these are the only studies to systematically compare each of the D1, D2, D3, D4 and D5 receptor and DARPP-32 signal transduction ‘knockouts’.DiscussionThere is a particular emphasis on identifying methodological factors that might influence phenotypic effects and account for inconsistencies. The findings are offered empirically to (1) specify the extent of phenotypic diversity among individual DA receptor subtypes and transduction components and (2) indicate relationships between D1, D2, D3, D4 and D5 receptor subtype proteins, associated Gαi/Gαs/Gαolf[Gγ7]–adenylyl cyclase type 5–PKA [RIIβ]–DARPP-32 signalling cascades and behaviour. The findings are also offered heuristically as a base for such phenotypic comparisons at additional levels of behaviour so that a yet more complete phenotypic profile might emerge.


Neuroscience | 2008

Phenotypic characterization of cognition and social behavior in mice with heterozygous versus homozygous deletion of catechol-O-methyltransferase

Daniela Babovic; Colm M.P. O'Tuathaigh; A.M. O'Connor; Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Orna Tighe; David T. Croke; Maria Karayiorgou; Joseph A. Gogos; David Cotter; John L. Waddington

Catechol-O-methyltransferase is an important enzyme in the metabolism of dopamine and an important regulator of aspects of dopamine-dependent working memory in prefrontal cortex that are disturbed in schizophrenia. This study investigated the phenotype of mice with heterozygous deletion vs. homozygous knockout of the catechol-O-methyltransferase gene across paradigms that access processes relevant for psychotic illness. Homozygotes evidenced improved performance in spontaneous alternation, an index of immediate spatial working memory; this effect appeared more substantive in males and was reflected in performance in aspects of the Barnes maze, an index of spatial learning/memory. Heterozygotes evidenced impaired performance in object recognition, an index of recognition memory; this effect was evident for both sexes at a retention interval of 5 min but appeared more enduring in males. There were no material effects for either genotype in relation to sociability or social novelty preference. While homozygous catechol-O-methyltransferase deletion results in improvement in spatial learning/working memory with little effect on social behavior, heterozygous deletion results in impairment of recognition memory. We have reported recently, using similar methods, that mice with deletion of the schizophrenia risk gene neuregulin-1 evidence disruption to social behavior, with little effect on spatial learning/working memory. The data suggest that catechol-O-methyltransferase and neuregulin-1 may influence, respectively, primarily cognitive and social endophenotypes of the overall schizophrenia syndrome.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Schizophrenia-related endophenotypes in heterozygous neuregulin-1 'knockout' mice.

Colm M.P. O'Tuathaigh; Michael K. Harte; Colleen O'Leary; Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Christoph W. Blau; Donna Lai; Richard P. Harvey; Orna Tighe; Andrew J. Fagan; Christian Kerskens; Gavin P. Reynolds; John L. Waddington

Neuregulin‐1 (NRG1) has been shown to play a role in glutamatergic neurotransmission and is a risk gene for schizophrenia, in which there is evidence for hypoglutamatergic function. Sensitivity to the behavioural effects of the psychotomimetic N‐methyl‐d‐aspartate receptor antagonists MK‐801 and phencyclidine (PCP) was examined in mutant mice with heterozygous deletion of NRG1. Social behaviour (sociability, social novelty preference and dyadic interaction), together with exploratory activity, was assessed following acute or subchronic administration of MK‐801 (0.1 and 0.2 mg/kg) or PCP (5 mg/kg). In untreated NRG1 mutants, levels of glutamate, N‐acetylaspartate and GABA were determined using high‐performance liquid chromatography and regional brain volumes were assessed using magnetic resonance imaging at 7T. NRG1 mutants, particularly males, displayed decreased responsivity to the locomotor‐activating effects of acute PCP. Subchronic MK‐801 and PCP disrupted sociability and social novelty preference in mutants and wildtypes and reversed the increase in both exploratory activity and social dominance‐related behaviours observed in vehicle‐treated mutants. No phenotypic differences were demonstrated in N‐acetylaspartate, glutamate or GABA levels. The total ventricular and olfactory bulb volume was decreased in mutants. These data indicate a subtle role for NRG1 in modulating several schizophrenia‐relevant processes including the effects of psychotomimetic N‐methyl‐d‐aspartate receptor antagonists.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2007

Exploratory and habituation phenotype of heterozygous and homozygous COMT knockout mice.

Daniela Babovic; Colm M.P. O'Tuathaigh; Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Jeremiah J. Clifford; Orna Tighe; David T. Croke; Maria Karayiorgou; Joseph A. Gogos; David Cotter; John L. Waddington

Catechol-O-methyltransferase (COMT) inactivates dopamine in prefrontal cortex and is associated clinically with a schizophrenia endophenotype. Using an ethologically based approach, the phenotype of mice with heterozygous COMT deletion was characterised by decreased rearing with increased sifting and chewing. Heterozygous COMT deletion is associated with a distinctive phenotype. This differs from that which we have reported previously for heterozygous deletion of the schizophrenia risk gene neuregulin-1.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Convulsant Doses of a Dopamine D1 Receptor Agonist Result in Erk-Dependent Increases in Zif268 and Arc/Arg3.1 Expression in Mouse Dentate Gyrus

Giuseppe Gangarossa; Manuela Di Benedetto; Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Mark Dunleavy; Cristina Alcacer; Alessandra Bonito-Oliva; David C. Henshall; John L. Waddington; Emmanuel Valjent; Gilberto Fisone

Activation of dopamine D1 receptors (D1Rs) has been shown to induce epileptiform activity. We studied the molecular changes occurring in the hippocampus in response to the administration of the D1-type receptor agonist, SKF 81297. SKF 81297 at 2.5 and 5.0 mg/kg induced behavioural seizures. Electrophysiological recordings in the dentate gyrus revealed the presence of epileptiform discharges peaking at 30–45 min post-injection and declining by 60 min. Seizures were prevented by the D1-type receptor antagonist, SCH 23390, or the cannabinoid CB1 receptor agonist, CP 55,940. The effect of SKF 81297 was accompanied by increased phosphorylation of the extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases 1 and 2 (ERK), in the granule cells of the dentate gyrus. This effect was also observed in response to administration of other D1-type receptor agonists, such as SKF83822 and SKF83959. In addition, SKF 81297 increased the phosphorylation of the ribosomal protein S6 and histone H3, two downstream targets of ERK. These effects were prevented by genetic inactivation of D1Rs, or by pharmacological inhibition of ERK. SKF 81297 was also able to enhance the levels of Zif268 and Arc/Arg3.1, two immediate early genes involved in transcriptional regulation and synaptic plasticity. These changes may be involved in forms of activity-dependent plasticity linked to the manifestation of seizures and to the ability of dopamine to affect learning and memory.


The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology | 2009

Enhanced latent inhibition in dopamine receptor-deficient mice is sex-specific for the D1 but not D2 receptor subtype: implications for antipsychotic drug action

Cecilie Bay-Richter; Colm M.P. O'Tuathaigh; Gerard J. O'Sullivan; David M. Heery; John L. Waddington; Paula M. Moran

Latent inhibition (LI) is reduced learning to a stimulus that has previously been experienced without consequence. It is an important model of abnormal allocation of salience to irrelevant information in patients with schizophrenia. In rodents LI is abolished by psychotomimetic drugs and in experimental conditions where LI is low in controls, its expression is enhanced by antipsychotic drugs with activity at dopamine (DA) receptors. It is however unclear what the independent contributions of DA receptor subtypes are to these effects. This study therefore examined LI in congenic DA D1 and D2 receptor knockout (D1 KO and D2 KO) mice. Conditioned suppression of drinking was used as the measure of learning in the LI procedure. Both male and female DA D2 KO mice showed clear enhancement of LI reproducing antipsychotic drug effects in the model. Unexpectedly, enhancement was also seen in D1 KO female mice but not in D1 KO male mice. This sex-specific pattern was not replicated in locomotor or motor coordination tasks nor in the effect of DA KOs on baseline learning in control groups indicating some specificity of the effect to LI. These data suggest that the dopaminergic mechanism underlying LI potentiation and possibly antipsychotic action may differ between the sexes, being mediated by D2 receptors in males but by both D1 and D2 receptors in females. These data suggest that the DA D1 receptor may prove an important target for understanding sex differences in the mechanisms of action of antipsychotic drugs and in the aetiology of aberrant salience allocation in schizophrenia.


Neuropharmacology | 2008

Dopamine D1 vs D5 receptor-dependent induction of seizures in relation to DARPP-32, ERK1/2 and GluR1-AMPA signalling.

Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Mark Dunleavy; Kerstin Håkansson; Mario Clementi; Anthony Kinsella; David T. Croke; John Drago; Allen A. Fienberg; Paul Greengard; David R. Sibley; Gilberto Fisone; David C. Henshall; John L. Waddington

Recent reports have shown that the selective dopamine D(1)-like agonist SKF 83822 [which stimulates adenylate cyclase, but not phospholipase C] induces prominent behavioral seizures in mice, whereas its benzazepine congener SKF 83959 [which stimulates phospholipase C, but not adenylate cyclase] does not. To investigate the relative involvement of D(1) vs D(5) receptors in mediating seizures, ethological behavioral topography and cortical EEGs were recorded in D(1), D(5) and DARPP-32 knockout mice in response to a convulsant dose of SKF 83822. SKF 83822-induced behavioral and EEG seizures were gene dose-dependently abolished in D(1) knockouts. In both heterozygous and homozygous D(5) knockouts, the latency to first seizure was significantly increased and total EEG seizures were reduced relative to wild-types. The majority (60%) of homozygous DARPP-32 knockouts did not have seizures; of those having seizures (40%), the latency to first seizure was significantly increased and the number of high amplitude, high frequency polyspike EEG events was reduced. In addition, immunoblotting was performed to investigate downstream intracellular signalling mechanisms at D(1)-like receptors following challenge with SKF 83822 and SKF 83959. In wild-types administered SKF 83822, levels of ERK1/2 and GluR1 AMPA receptor phosphorylation increased two-fold in both the striatum and hippocampus; in striatal slices DARPP-32 phosphorylation at Thr34 increased five-fold relative to vehicle-treated controls. These findings indicate that D(1), and to a lesser extent D(5), receptor coupling to DARPP-32, ERK1/2 and glutamatergic signalling is involved in mediating the convulsant effects of SKF 83822.


Drug Discovery Today: Technologies | 2006

Potential and limitations of genetic manipulation in animals

Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Colm M. P. O’Tuathaigh; Jeremiah J. Clifford; Gillian O’Meara; David T. Croke; John L. Waddington

Over the last decade, sequencing and characterisation of the mouse genome has been accompanied by unparalleled advances in functional genomics. In the context of drug action, we analyse the strengths and limitations of classical mutagenesis and gene targeting techniques, as well as alternative approaches such as chemical mutagenesis, gene trap, recombineering, transposon-mediated mutagenesis, chromosomal engineering, viral transgenesis and RNA interference. This review also focuses on the emerging importance of genetic manipulation in other species and related logistical issues of experimental work using mutants.:


Journal of Receptors and Signal Transduction | 2004

D1-Like Dopamine Receptor-Mediated Function in Congenic Mutants with D1 vs. D5 Receptor “Knockout”

Gerard J. O'Sullivan; Jeremiah J. Clifford; Katsunori Tomiyama; Noriaki Koshikawa; John Drago; David R. Sibley; David T. Croke; John L. Waddington

Current understanding of the functional roles of individual dopamine D1-like [D1, D5] and D2-like [D2L/S, D3, D4] receptor subtypes remains incomplete. In particular, the lack of pharmacological agonists and antagonists able to distinguish between D1 and D5 receptors means that any differential roles in the regulation of behavior are poorly understood. Mutant mice with targeted gene deletion (“knockout”) of individual dopamine receptor subtypes offer an important alternative approach to resolving these functional roles. In congenic D1 mutants examined ethologically, progressive increases in specific topographies of behavior over wildtypes were considerably greater than those in D1 mutants on a mixed genetic background; D1 knockout appears to influence the neuronal substrate(s) of habituation to disrupt sculpture of the changing topography of behavior from initial exploration through to quiescence. Similarly, the D1 receptor appears to regulate specific topographies of orofacial movement in the mouse as these are “sculpted” in a time-dependent manner. Although the well-recognized role of the D1-like family in regulating several aspects of behavioral topography has been assumed to involve primarily D1 receptors, this presumption may require modification to accommodate a subtle but not negligible role for their D5 counterparts as evidenced in the phenotype of congenic D5 mutants.

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John L. Waddington

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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David T. Croke

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Orna Tighe

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Anthony Kinsella

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Richard P. Harvey

Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute

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Jeremiah J. Clifford

Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland

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Donna Lai

Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute

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