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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.


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.


Neuroscience | 2016

Density of GFAP-immunoreactive astrocytes is decreased in left hippocampi in major depressive disorder.

J.A. Cobb; K. O’Neill; J. Milner; Gouri J. Mahajan; T.J. Lawrence; Warren L. May; Jose Javier Miguel-Hidalgo; Grazyna Rajkowska; Craig A. Stockmeier

Neuroimaging and postmortem studies of subjects with major depressive disorder (MDD) reveal smaller hippocampal volume with lengthening duration of illness. Pathology in astrocytes may contribute significantly to this reduced volume and to the involvement of the hippocampus in MDD. Postmortem hippocampal tissues were collected from 17 subjects with MDD and 17 psychiatrically-normal control subjects. Sections from the body of the hippocampus were immunostained for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), a marker of intermediate filament protein expressed in astrocytes. The density of GFAP-immunoreactive astrocytes was measured in the hippocampus using 3-dimensional cell counting. Hippocampal subfields were also assessed for GFAP-immunoreactive area fraction. In CA1, there was a significant positive correlation between age and either density or area fraction in MDD. The density of astrocytes in the hilus, but not CA1 or CA2/3, was significantly decreased only in depressed subjects not taking an antidepressant drug, but not for depressed subjects taking an antidepressant drug. The area fraction of GFAP-immunoreactivity was significantly decreased in the dentate gyrus in women but not men with depression. In CA2/3, the area fraction of GFAP-immunoreactivity was inversely correlated with the duration of depression in suicide victims. Astrocyte contributions to neuronal function in the hilus may be compromised in depressed subjects not taking antidepressant medication. Due to the cross-sectional nature of the present study of postmortem brain tissue, it remains to be determined whether antidepressant drug treatment prevented a decrease in GFAP-immunoreactive astrocyte density or restored cell density to normal levels.


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.


Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2015

Oligodendrocyte morphometry and expression of myelin – Related mRNA in ventral prefrontal white matter in major depressive disorder

Grazyna Rajkowska; Gouri J. Mahajan; Dorota Maciag; Monica Sathyanesan; Abiye H. Iyo; Mohadetheh Moulana; Patrick B. Kyle; William L. Woolverton; Jose Javier Miguel-Hidalgo; Craig A. Stockmeier; Samuel S. Newton

White matter disturbance in the ventral prefrontal cortex (vPFC) in major depressive disorder (MDD) has been noted with diffusion tensor imaging (DTI). However, the cellular and molecular pathology of prefrontal white matter in MDD and potential influence of antidepressant medications is not fully understood. Oligodendrocyte morphometry and myelin-related mRNA and protein expression was examined in the white matter of the vPFC in MDD. Sections of deep and gyral white matter from the vPFC were collected from 20 subjects with MDD and 16 control subjects. Density and size of CNPase-immunoreactive (-IR) oligodendrocytes were estimated using 3-dimensional cell counting. While neither density nor soma size of oligodendrocytes was significantly affected in deep white matter, soma size was significantly decreased in the gyral white matter in MDD. In rhesus monkeys treated chronically with fluoxetine there was no significant effect on oligodendrocyte morphometry. Using quantitative RT-PCR to measure oligodendrocyte-related mRNA for CNPase, PLP1, MBP, MOG, MOBP, Olig1 and Olig2, in MDD there was a significantly reduced expression of PLP1 mRNA (which positively correlated with smaller sizes) and increased expression of mRNA for CNPase, OLIG1 and MOG. The expression of CNPase protein was significantly decreased in MDD. Altered expression of four myelin genes and CNPase protein suggests a mechanism for the degeneration of cortical axons and dysfunctional maturation of oligodendrocytes in MDD. The change in oligodendrocyte morphology in gyral white matter may parallel altered axonal integrity as revealed by DTI.


Brain Structure & Function | 2016

Basolateral amygdala volume and cell numbers in major depressive disorder: a postmortem stereological study

Marisa J. Rubinow; Gouri J. Mahajan; Warren L. May; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Lesa Dieter; Nicole Herbst; David C. Steffens; Jose Javier Miguel-Hidalgo; Grazyna Rajkowska; Craig A. Stockmeier

Functional imaging studies consistently report abnormal amygdala activity in major depressive disorder (MDD). Neuroanatomical correlates are less clear: imaging studies have produced mixed results on amygdala volume, and postmortem neuroanatomic studies have only examined cell densities in portions of the amygdala or its subregions in MDD. Here, we present a stereological analysis of the volume of, and the total number of, neurons, glia, and neurovascular (pericyte and endothelial) cells in the basolateral amygdala in MDD. Postmortem tissues from 13 subjects with MDD and 10 controls were examined. Sections (~15/subject) taken throughout the rostral–caudal extent of the basolateral amygdala (BLA) were stained for Nissl substance and utilized for stereological estimation of volume and cell numbers. Results indicate that depressed subjects had a larger lateral nucleus than controls and a greater number of total BLA neurovascular cells than controls. There were no differences in the number or density of neurons or glia between depressed and control subjects. These findings present a more detailed picture of BLA cellular anatomy in depression than has previously been available. Further studies are needed to determine whether the greater number of neurovascular cells in depressed subjects may be related to increased amygdala activity in depression.


Bipolar Disorders | 2016

Differential effect of lithium on cell number in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex in adult mice: a stereological study.

Grazyna Rajkowska; Gerard Clarke; Gouri J. Mahajan; Camilla Mm Licht; Henri J. J. M. Van De Werd; Peter Yuan; Craig A. Stockmeier; Husseini K. Manji; H.B.M. Uylings

Neuroimaging studies have revealed lithium‐related increases in the volume of gray matter in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) and hippocampus. Postmortem human studies have reported alterations in neuronal and glial cell density and size in the PFC of lithium‐treated subjects. Rodents treated with lithium exhibit cell proliferation in the dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus. However, it is not known whether hippocampal and PFC volume are also increased in these animals or whether cell number in the PFC is altered.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2013

Testosterone enhances tubuloglomerular feedback by increasing superoxide production in the macula densa

Yiling Fu; Yan Lu; Eddie Y. Liu; Xiaolong Zhu; Gouri J. Mahajan; Deyin Lu; Richard J. Roman; Ruisheng Liu

Males have higher prevalence of hypertension and renal injury than females, which may be attributed in part to androgen-mediated effects on renal hemodynamics. Tubuloglomerular feedback (TGF) is an important mechanism in control of renal microcirculation. The present study examines the role of testosterone in the regulation of TGF responses. TGF was measured by micropuncture (change of stop-flow pressure, ΔPsf) in castrated Sprague-Dawley rats. The addition of testosterone (10(-7) mol/l) into the lumen increased the ΔPsf from 10.1 ± 1.2 to 12.2 ± 1.2 mmHg. To determine whether androgen receptors (AR) are involved, mRNA of AR was measured in the macula dense cells isolated by laser capture microdissection from kidneys, and a macula densa-like cell line (MMDD1). AR mRNA was expressed in the macula densa of rats and in MMDD1 cells. We next examined the effects of the AR blocker, flutamide (10(-5) mol/l) on the TGF response. The addition of flutamide blocked the effects of testosterone on TGF. The addition of Tempol (10(-4) mol/l) or polyethylene glycol-superoxide dismutase (100 U/ml) to scavenge superoxide blocked the effect of testosterone to augment TGF. We then applied apocynin to inhibit NAD(P)H oxidase and oxypurinol to inhibit xanthine oxidase and found the testosterone-induced augmentation of TGF was blocked. In additional experiments in MMDD1 cells, we found that testosterone increased O2(-) generation. Apocynin or oxypurinol blocked the testosterone-induced increases of O2(-), while blockade of COX-2 with NS-398 had no effect. These findings suggest that testosterone enhances TGF response by stimulating O2(-) production in macula densa via an AR-dependent pathway.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2017

Altered neuro-inflammatory gene expression in hippocampus in major depressive disorder

Gouri J. Mahajan; Eric Vallender; Michael R. Garrett; Lavanya Challagundla; James C. Overholser; George Jurjus; Lesa Dieter; Maryam Syed; Damian G. Romero; Hamed Benghuzzi; Craig A. Stockmeier

&NA; Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) is a common psychiatric disorder for which available medications are often not effective. The high prevalence of MDD and modest response to existing therapies compels efforts to better understand and treat the disorder. Decreased hippocampal volume with increasing duration of depression suggests altered gene expression or even a decrease in neurogenesis. Tissue punches from the dentate gyrus were collected postmortem from 23 subjects with MDD and 23 psychiatrically‐normal control subjects. Total RNA was isolated and whole transcriptome paired‐end RNA‐sequencing was performed using an Illumina NextSeq 500. For each sample, raw RNA‐seq reads were aligned to the Ensembl GRCh38 human reference genome. Analysis revealed 30 genes differentially expressed in MDD compared to controls (FDR < 0.05). Down‐regulated genes included several with inflammatory function (ISG15, IFI44L, IFI6, NR4A1/Nur‐77) and GABBR1 while up‐regulated genes included several with cytokine function (CCL2/MCP‐1), inhibitors of angiogenesis (ADM, ADAMTS9), and the KANSL1 gene, a histone acetyltransferase. Similar analyses of specific subsets of MDD subjects (suicide vs. non‐suicide, single vs. multiple episodes) yielded similar, though not identical, results. Enrichment analysis identified an over‐representation of inflammatory and neurogenesis‐related (ERK/MAPK) signaling pathways significantly altered in the hippocampal dentate gyrus in MDD. Together, these data implicate neuro‐inflammation as playing a crucial role in MDD. These findings support continued efforts to identify adjunctive approaches towards the treatment of MDD with drugs including anti‐inflammatory and neuroprotective properties. HighlightsIn MDD, 30 genes are differentially expressed in dentate gyrus compared to controls.MDD is associated with changes in genes with neuro‐inflammatory and angiogenesis functions.Inflammatory and neurogenesis‐related signaling pathways are altered in MDD.Anti‐inflammatory treatments may be an adjunctive therapeutic approach to MDD.


Neuroscience | 2017

Length of axons expressing the serotonin transporter in orbitofrontal cortex is lower with age in depression

Grazyna Rajkowska; Gouri J. Mahajan; Beata Legutko; Lavanya Challagundla; Michael Griswold; Paul R. Albert; Mireille Daigle; Jose Javier Miguel-Hidalgo; Mark C. Austin; Randy D. Blakely; David C. Steffens; Craig A. Stockmeier

Studies of major depressive disorder (MDD) in postmortem brain tissue report enhanced binding to inhibitory serotonin-1A autoreceptors in midbrain dorsal raphe and reductions in length of axons expressing the serotonin transporter (SERT) in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. The length density of axons expressing SERT in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) was determined in 18 subjects with MDD and 17 age-matched control subjects. A monoclonal antibody was used to immunohistochemically label the SERT in fixed sections of OFC. The 3-dimensional length density of SERT-immunoreactive (ir) axons in layer VI of OFC was estimated. The age of subjects with MDD was negatively correlated with SERT axon length (r=-0.77, p<0.0005). The significant effect of age persisted when removing four depressed subjects with an antidepressant medication present at the time of death, or when removing nine depressed subjects that had a recent prescription for an antidepressant medication. Neither gender, tissue pH, postmortem interval, 5-HTTLPR genotype, time in fixative, nor death by suicide had a significant effect on axon length. The age-related decrease in SERT-ir axon length in MDD may reflect pathology of ascending axons passing through deep white matter hyperintensities. Greater length of axons expressing SERT in younger subjects with MDD may result in a significant deficit in serotonin availability in OFC.

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Craig A. Stockmeier

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Grazyna Rajkowska

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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George Jurjus

Case Western Reserve University

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James C. Overholser

Case Western Reserve University

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Lesa Dieter

Case Western Reserve University

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Jose Javier Miguel-Hidalgo

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Lavanya Challagundla

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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Warren L. May

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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David C. Steffens

University of Connecticut Health Center

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Eric Vallender

University of Mississippi Medical Center

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