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Dive into the research topics where Grahame J. Kidd is active.

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Featured researches published by Grahame J. Kidd.


Nature Neuroscience | 2006

Control of microglial neurotoxicity by the fractalkine receptor

Astrid E. Cardona; Erik P. Pioro; Margaret E. Sasse; Volodymyr Kostenko; Sandra M. Cardona; Ineke M. Dijkstra; De Ren Huang; Grahame J. Kidd; Stephen M. Dombrowski; Ranjan Dutta; Jar Chi Lee; Donald N. Cook; Steffen Jung; Sergio A. Lira; Dan R. Littman; Richard M. Ransohoff

Microglia, the resident inflammatory cells of the CNS, are the only CNS cells that express the fractalkine receptor (CX3CR1). Using three different in vivo models, we show that CX3CR1 deficiency dysregulates microglial responses, resulting in neurotoxicity. Following peripheral lipopolysaccharide injections, Cx3cr1−/− mice showed cell-autonomous microglial neurotoxicity. In a toxic model of Parkinson disease and a transgenic model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Cx3cr1−/− mice showed more extensive neuronal cell loss than Cx3cr1+ littermate controls. Augmenting CX3CR1 signaling may protect against microglial neurotoxicity, whereas CNS penetration by pharmaceutical CX3CR1 antagonists could increase neuronal vulnerability.


Nature Reviews Immunology | 2003

Three or more routes for leukocyte migration into the central nervous system.

Richard M. Ransohoff; Pia Kivisäkk; Grahame J. Kidd

Leukocyte migration into and through tissues is fundamental to normal physiology, immunopathology and host defence. Leukocyte entry into the central nervous system (CNS) is restricted, in part, because of the blood–brain barrier (BBB). During the past decade, crucial components that are involved in the process of leukocyte migration have been identified and progress has been made in understanding the mechanisms of neuroinflammatory reactions. In this review, present knowledge of the trafficking determinants that guide the migration of leukocytes is superimposed onto the vascular and compartmental anatomy of the CNS. We discuss three distinct routes for leukocytes to enter the CNS and consider how different populations of leukocytes use trafficking signals to gain entry.


Annals of Neurology | 2000

Neurological disability correlates with spinal cord axonal loss and reduced N‐acetyl aspartate in chronic multiple sclerosis patients

Carl Bjartmar; Grahame J. Kidd; Sverre Mørk; Richard A. Rudick; Bruce D. Trapp

Axonal degeneration has been proposed as a cause of irreversible neurological disability in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. The purpose of this study was to quantify axonal loss in spinal cord lesions from 5 paralyzed (Expanded Disability Status Scale score ≥7.5) MS patients and to determine if axonal number or volume correlated with levels of the neuronal marker N‐acetyl aspartate (NAA). Axonal loss in MS lesions ranged from 45 to 84% and averaged 68%. NAA levels were significantly reduced (>50%) in cross sections of spinal cords containing MS lesions. Reduced NAA correlated with reduced axonal numbers within lesion areas. In addition, NAA levels per axonal volume were significantly reduced in demyelinated axons (42%) and in myelinated axons in normal‐appearing white matter (30%). The data support axonal loss as a major cause of irreversible neurological disability in paralyzed MS patients and indicate that reduced NAA as measured by magnetic resonance spectroscopy can reflect axonal loss and reduced NAA levels in demyelinated and myelinated axons. Ann Neurol 2000;48:893–901


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2014

Differential roles of microglia and monocytes in the inflamed central nervous system

Ryo Yamasaki; Haiyan Lu; Oleg Butovsky; Nobuhiko Ohno; Anna M. Rietsch; Ron Cialic; Pauline M. Wu; Camille E. Doykan; Jessica Lin; Anne C. Cotleur; Grahame J. Kidd; Musab M. Zorlu; Nathan Sun; Weiwei Hu; LiPing Liu; Jar Chi Lee; Sarah E. Taylor; Lindsey Uehlein; Debra Dixon; Jinyu Gu; Crina M. Floruta; Min Zhu; Israel F. Charo; Howard L. Weiner; Richard M. Ransohoff

Phagocytic monocyte-derived macrophages associate with the nodes of Ranvier and initiate demyelination while microglia clear debris and display a suppressed metabolic gene signature in EAE.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2002

Proteolipid Promoter Activity Distinguishes Two Populations of NG2-Positive Cells throughout Neonatal Cortical Development

Barbara S. Mallon; H. Elizabeth Shick; Grahame J. Kidd; Wendy B. Macklin

Transgenic mice expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) driven by the mouse myelin proteolipid protein (PLP) gene promoter have been developed to investigate cells in the oligodendrocyte lineage. Transgene expression is consistent with the developmental expression of PLP, with cells at all stages of oligodendrocyte differentiation clearly visualized. These animals were analyzed to establish the time course of oligodendrocyte progenitor migration, proliferation, and differentiation in neonatal cortex. In these animals, two populations of NG2 proteoglycan-positive oligodendrocyte progenitor cells were identified that exist in postnatal subventricular zone and cortex. These two populations are distinguished by the presence or absence of PLP gene expression. Thus, PLP gene expression defines a subpopulation of NG2-positive cells from very early postnatal ages, which migrates toward the pial surface and proliferates in situ. EGFP+/NG2+ cells are present in the cortex from postnatal day 1, and they remain in the cortex as undifferentiated oligodendrocyte progenitors for up to 3 weeks before myelination begins. These data could be explained by the presence of an important inhibitor of oligodendrocyte differentiation in the cortex during this period, which is downregulated in a region-specific manner to allow myelination. On the other hand, it is possible that oligodendrocyte progenitor cells remain undifferentiated in cortex until an essential signal is produced in situ to induce differentiation.


Neurology | 2001

Axonal loss in normal-appearing white matter in a patient with acute MS

Carl Bjartmar; R. P. Kinkel; Grahame J. Kidd; Richard A. Rudick; Bruce D. Trapp

Background: Brain imaging studies detect abnormalities in normal-appearing white matter in patients with MS. Objective: To investigate the histopathologic basis for these changes in autopsy tissue from a patient with MS with 9 months’ disease duration and a terminal brain stem lesion. Methods: The brain stem and spinal cord were analyzed ultrastructurally and immunocytochemically for axons, myelin, and activated microglia/macrophages. Results: Pathologic findings were consistent with a terminal inflammatory demyelinated lesion at the cervicomedullary junction. The ventral spinal cord column, containing descending tracts, exhibited 22% axonal loss at segment C7, but grossly normal immunostaining for myelin. Confocal and electron microscopy revealed myelin sheaths without axonal content and initial stages of myelin degradation by activated microglia/macrophages among intact myelinated axons. Axonal number and appearance was normal in ascending sensory tracts. Conclusions: These studies confirm axonal degeneration in the absence of myelin loss as one histopathologic correlate to abnormal MR findings in patients with MS.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008

Constitutively Active Akt Induces Enhanced Myelination in the CNS

Ana I. Flores; S. Priyadarshini Narayanan; Emily N. Morse; H. Elizabeth Shick; Xinghua Yin; Grahame J. Kidd; Robin L. Avila; Daniel A. Kirschner; Wendy B. Macklin

The serine/threonine kinase Akt regulates multiple cellular functions. The current studies identify a new role for Akt in CNS myelination. In earlier studies on cultured oligodendrocytes, we showed that neuregulin signals through phosphatidylinositol-3′-OH kinase and Akt to enhance survival of oligodendrocytes. However, when transgenic animals were generated that overexpressed constitutively active Akt in oligodendrocytes and their progenitor cells, no enhanced survival of oligodendrocytes or progenitors was found. No alteration in the proliferation or death of progenitors was noted. In contrast, the major impact of Akt overexpression in oligodendrocytes was enhanced myelination. Most interestingly, oligodendrocytes in these mice continued actively myelinating throughout life. Thus, expression of constitutively active Akt in oligodendrocytes and their progenitor cells generated no more oligodendrocytes, but dramatically more myelin. The increased myelination continued as these mice aged, resulting in enlarged optic nerves and white matter areas. In older animals with enlarged white matter areas, the density of oligodendrocytes was reduced, but because of the increased area, the total number of oligodendrocytes remained comparable with wild-type controls. Interestingly, in these animals, overexpression of Akt in Schwann cells did not impact myelination. Thus, in vivo, constitutively active Akt enhances CNS myelination but not PNS myelination and has no impact developmentally on oligodendrocyte number. Understanding the unique aspects of Akt signal transduction in oligodendrocytes that lead to myelination rather than uncontrolled proliferation of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells may have important implications for understanding remyelination in the adult nervous system.


Glia | 2007

Evidence for synaptic stripping by cortical microglia

Bruce D. Trapp; Jerome Wujek; Gerson A. Criste; Walid Jalabi; Xinghua Yin; Grahame J. Kidd; Stephen A. Stohlman; Richard M. Ransohoff

Recent studies have described significant demyelination and microglial activation in the cerebral cortex of brains from multiple sclerosis patients. To date, however, experimental models of cortical demyelination or cortical inflammation have not been extensively studied. In this report we describe focal cortical inflammation induced by stereotaxic injection of killed bacteria (BCG), followed 1 month later by subcutaneous injection of the same antigen, a protocol that overcomes the immune privilege of the cortex. Intracerebral BCG injection produced focal microglial activation at the injection site (termed acute lesion). Ten days after peripheral challenge (termed immune‐mediated lesion), larger areas and higher densities of activated microglia were found near the injection site. In both paradigms, activated microglia and/or their processes closely apposed neuronal perikarya and apical dendrites. In the immune‐mediated lesions, ∼45% of the axosomatic synapses was displaced by activated microglia. Upon activation, therefore, cortical microglial migrate to and strip synapses from neuronal perikarya. Since neuronal pathology was not a feature of either the acute or immune‐mediated lesion, synaptic stripping by activated microglia may have neuroprotective consequences.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Lipopolysaccharide-Induced Microglial Activation and Neuroprotection against Experimental Brain Injury Is Independent of Hematogenous TLR4

Zhihong Chen; Walid Jalabi; Karl B. Shpargel; Kenneth T. Farabaugh; Ranjan Dutta; Xinghua Yin; Grahame J. Kidd; Cornelia C. Bergmann; Stephen A. Stohlman; Bruce D. Trapp

Intraperitoneal injection of the Gram-negative bacterial endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) elicits a rapid innate immune response. While this systemic inflammatory response can be destructive, tolerable low doses of LPS render the brain transiently resistant to subsequent injuries. However, the mechanism by which microglia respond to LPS stimulation and participate in subsequent neuroprotection has not been documented. In this study, we first established a novel LPS treatment paradigm where mice were injected intraperitoneally with 1.0 mg/kg LPS for four consecutive days to globally activate CNS microglia. By using a reciprocal bone marrow transplantation procedure between wild-type and Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) mutant mice, we demonstrated that the presence of LPS receptor (TLR4) is not required on hematogenous immune cells but is required on cells that are not replaced by bone marrow transplantation, such as vascular endothelia and microglia, to transduce microglial activation and neuroprotection. Furthermore, we showed that activated microglia physically ensheathe cortical projection neurons, which have reduced axosomatic inhibitory synapses from the neuronal perikarya. In line with previous reports that inhibitory synapse reduction protects neurons from degeneration and injury, we show here that neuronal cell death and lesion volumes are significantly reduced in LPS-treated animals following experimental brain injury. Together, our results suggest that activated microglia participate in neuroprotection and that this neuroprotection is likely achieved through reduction of inhibitory axosomatic synapses. The therapeutic significance of these findings rests not only in identifying neuroprotective functions of microglia, but also in establishing the CNS location of TLR4 activation.


The FASEB Journal | 2008

Genetic deletion of BACE1 in mice affects remyelination of sciatic nerves

Xiangyou Hu; Wanxia He; Claudiu Diaconu; Xiaoying Tang; Grahame J. Kidd; Wendy B. Macklin; Bruce D. Trapp; Riqiang Yan

BACE1 is a promising therapeutic and preventive target for Alzheimers disease because it is essential for amyloid deposition. However, the recent demonstration of BACE1 in modulating developmental myelination in both peripheral and central nervous systems raises a concern of its effect on myelin maintenance or remyelination, and inhibition of these processes will potentially be detrimental to the BACE1 inhibitor users who are susceptible to myelination diseases such as adult peripheral nerve injury or multiple sclerosis. In this report, we investigated the role of BACE1 during peripheral nerve remyelination in wildtype (WT) and BACE1‐null mice. We show here that genetic deletion of BACE1 affects sciatic nerve remyelination. The impaired remyelination appears to stem from the loss of neuregulin‐1 cleavage by BACE1. To demonstrate a direct cleavage of neuregulin‐1 by BACE1, we have identified a BACE1 cleavage site that turns out be highly conserved among neuregulin‐1 paralogues. Moreover, we show that neuregulin‐1 family member neuregulin‐3 is also cleavable by BACE1. We hypothesize that the BACE1‐cleaved extracellular domain of axonal neuregulin‐1, perhaps neuregulin‐3 as well, binds to Schwann cell ErbB receptors, which in turn regulate remyelination. Pharmacological inhibition of BACE1 should be carefully monitored to avoid alteration of signaling pathway that regulates remyelination.—Hu, X., He, W., Diaconu, C., Tang, X., Kidd, G. J., Macklin, W. B., Trapp, B. D., Yan, R. Genetic deletion of BACE1 in mice affects remyelination of sciatic nerves. FASEB J. 22, 2970–2980 (2008)

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Amir Avishai

Case Western Reserve University

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Wendy B. Macklin

University of Colorado Denver

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