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Dive into the research topics where Grant R. Gordon is active.

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Featured researches published by Grant R. Gordon.


Nature Neuroscience | 2005

Norepinephrine triggers release of glial ATP to increase postsynaptic efficacy

Grant R. Gordon; Dinara V. Baimoukhametova; Sarah A. Hewitt; W. R. A. Kosala J. S. Rajapaksha; Thomas E. Fisher; Jaideep S. Bains

Glial cells actively participate in synaptic transmission. They clear molecules from the synaptic cleft, receive signals from neurons and, in turn, release molecules that can modulate signaling between neuronal elements. Whether glial-derived transmitters can contribute to enduring changes in postsynaptic efficacy, however, remains to be established. In rat hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus, we demonstrate an increase in the amplitude of miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents in response to norepinephrine that requires the release of ATP from glial cells. The increase in quantal efficacy, which likely results from an insertion of AMPA receptors, is secondary to the activation of P2X7 receptors, an increase in postsynaptic calcium and the activation of phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. The gliotransmitter ATP, therefore, contributes directly to the regulation of postsynaptic efficacy at glutamatergic synapses in the CNS.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Tonic Local Brain Blood Flow Control by Astrocytes Independent of Phasic Neurovascular Coupling.

Rosenegger Dg; Tran Ch; Wamsteeker Cusulin Ji; Grant R. Gordon

According to the current model of neurovascular coupling, blood flow is controlled regionally through phasic changes in the activity of neurons and astrocytes that signal to alter arteriole diameter. Absent in this model, however, is how brain blood flow is tonically regulated independent of regional changes in activity. This is important because a large fraction of brain blood flow is required to maintain basal metabolic needs. Using two-photon fluorescence imaging combined with patch-clamp in acute rat brain slices of sensory-motor cortex, we demonstrate that reducing resting Ca2+ in astrocytes with intracellular BAPTA causes vasoconstriction in adjacent arterioles. BAPTA-induced vasoconstriction was eliminated by a general COX blocker and the effect is mimicked by a COX-1, but not COX-2, antagonist, suggesting that astrocytes provide tonic, steady-state vasodilation by releasing prostaglandin messengers. Tonic vasodilation was insensitive to TTX, as well as a variety of synaptic and extrasynaptic receptor antagonists, indicating that the phenomenon operates largely independent of neural activity. Using in vivo two-photon fluorescence imaging of the barrel cortex in fully awake mice, we reveal that acute COX-1 inhibition reduces resting arteriole diameter but fails to affect vasodilation in response to vibrissae stimulation. Our findings demonstrate that astrocytes provide tonic regulation of arterioles using resting intracellular Ca2+ in a manner that is independent of phasic, neuronal-evoked vasodilation. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The brain requires both phasic and tonic regulation of its blood supply to service energy needs over various temporal windows. While many mechanisms have been described for phasic blood flow regulation, how the brain accomplishes tonic control is largely unknown. Here we describe a way in which astrocytes contribute to the management of basal brain blood flow by providing steady-state vasodilation to arterioles via resting astrocyte Ca2+ and the continuous release of prostaglandin messengers. This phenomenon may be important for understanding the declines in basal brain blood flow that occur in aging and dementia, as well as for the interpretation of fMRI data.


Experimental Gerontology | 2017

Impaired neurovascular coupling in aging and Alzheimer's disease: Contribution of astrocyte dysfunction and endothelial impairment to cognitive decline

Stefano Tarantini; Cam Ha T. Tran; Grant R. Gordon; Zoltan Ungvari; Anna Csiszar

The importance of (micro)vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia (VCID) in aging cannot be overemphasized, and the pathogenesis and prevention of age-related cerebromicrovascular pathologies are a subject of intensive research. In particular, aging impairs the increase in cerebral blood flow triggered by neural activation (termed neurovascular coupling or functional hyperemia), a critical mechanism that matches oxygen and nutrient delivery with the increased demands in active brain regions. From epidemiological, clinical and experimental studies the picture emerges of a complex functional impairment of cerebral microvessels and astrocytes, which likely contribute to neurovascular dysfunction and cognitive decline in aging and in age-related neurodegenerative diseases. This overview discusses age-related alterations in neurovascular coupling responses responsible for impaired functional hyperemia. The mechanisms and consequences of astrocyte dysfunction (including potential alteration of astrocytic endfeet calcium signaling, dysregulation of eicosanoid gliotransmitters and astrocyte energetics) and functional impairment of the microvascular endothelium are explored. Age-related mechanisms (cellular oxidative stress, senescence, circulating IGF-1 deficiency) impairing the function of cells of the neurovascular unit are discussed and the evidence for the causal role of neurovascular uncoupling in cognitive decline is critically examined.


PLOS ONE | 2014

A High Performance, Cost-Effective, Open-Source Microscope for Scanning Two-Photon Microscopy that Is Modular and Readily Adaptable

David Rosenegger; Cam Ha T. Tran; Jeffery LeDue; Ning Zhou; Grant R. Gordon

Two-photon laser scanning microscopy has revolutionized the ability to delineate cellular and physiological function in acutely isolated tissue and in vivo. However, there exist barriers for many laboratories to acquire two-photon microscopes. Additionally, if owned, typical systems are difficult to modify to rapidly evolving methodologies. A potential solution to these problems is to enable scientists to build their own high-performance and adaptable system by overcoming a resource insufficiency. Here we present a detailed hardware resource and protocol for building an upright, highly modular and adaptable two-photon laser scanning fluorescence microscope that can be used for in vitro or in vivo applications. The microscope is comprised of high-end componentry on a skeleton of off-the-shelf compatible opto-mechanical parts. The dedicated design enabled imaging depths close to 1 mm into mouse brain tissue and a signal-to-noise ratio that exceeded all commercial two-photon systems tested. In addition to a detailed parts list, instructions for assembly, testing and troubleshooting, our plan includes complete three dimensional computer models that greatly reduce the knowledge base required for the non-expert user. This open-source resource lowers barriers in order to equip more laboratories with high-performance two-photon imaging and to help progress our understanding of the cellular and physiological function of living systems.


Microcirculation | 2015

A slow or modulatory role of astrocytes in neurovascular coupling.

David Rosenegger; Grant R. Gordon

Astrocytes are thought to play an important role in NVC, a process that allows the brain to locally control blood flow in response to changes in activity. However, there is an ongoing debate as to when, and under what conditions astrocyte activity is required. In the following review we set forth the hypotheses that astrocytes: (i) act to modulate but not initiate functional hyperemia and (ii) help set the basal tone state of the brain microvasculature by the tonic release of vaso‐active messengers. Through these actions astrocytes could help match metabolic demand with supply over a spectrum of activity timescales.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2015

Acute two-photon imaging of the neurovascular unit in the cortex of active mice

Cam Ha T. Tran; Grant R. Gordon

In vivo two-photon scanning fluorescence imaging is a powerful technique to observe physiological processes from the millimeter to the micron scale in the intact animal. In neuroscience research, a common approach is to install an acute cranial window and head bar to explore neocortical function under anesthesia before inflammation peaks from the surgery. However, there are few detailed acute protocols for head-restrained and fully awake animal imaging of the neurovascular unit during activity. This is because acutely performed awake experiments are typically untenable when the animal is naïve to the imaging apparatus. Here we detail a method that achieves acute, deep-tissue two-photon imaging of neocortical astrocytes and microvasculature in behaving mice. A week prior to experimentation, implantation of the head bar alone allows mice to train for head-immobilization on an easy-to-learn air-supported ball treadmill. Following just two brief familiarization sessions to the treadmill on separate days, an acute cranial window can subsequently be installed for immediate imaging. We demonstrate how running and whisking data can be captured simultaneously with two-photon fluorescence signals with acceptable movement artifacts during active motion. We also show possible applications of this technique by (1) monitoring dynamic changes to microvascular diameter and red blood cells in response to vibrissa sensory stimulation, (2) examining responses of the cerebral microcirculation to the systemic delivery of pharmacological agents using a tail artery cannula during awake imaging, and (3) measuring Ca(2+) signals from synthetic and genetically encoded Ca(2+) indicators in astrocytes. This method will facilitate acute two-photon fluorescence imaging in awake, active mice and help link cellular events within the neurovascular unit to behavior.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2015

Arteriole Dilation to Synaptic Activation that is Sub-Threshold to Astrocyte Endfoot Ca2+ Transients

Ádám Institoris; David Rosenegger; Grant R. Gordon

Ca2+-dependent pathways in neurons and astrocyte endfeet initiate changes in arteriole diameter to regulate local brain blood flow. Whether there exists a threshold of synaptic activity in which arteriole diameter is controlled independent of astrocyte endfeet Ca2+ remains unclear. We used two-photon fluorescence microscopy to examine synaptically evoked synthetic or genetic Ca2+ indicator signals around penetrating arterioles in acute slices of the rat neocortex. We discovered a threshold below which vasodilation occurred in the absence of endfeet Ca2+ signals but with consistent neuronal Ca2+ transients, suggesting endfoot Ca2+ is not necessary for activity-dependent vasodilation under subtle degrees of brain activation.


The Journal of Physiology | 2006

Can homeostatic circuits learn and remember

Grant R. Gordon; Jaideep S. Bains

Alterations in synaptic strength are thought to represent the cellular basis of learning and memory. While such processes appear to be fundamental to all synapses, until recently there has been a relative dearth of information regarding synaptic ‘memory’ processes in autonomic circuits. Here we examine recent advances in our understanding of plasticity at glutamatergic synapses onto magnocellular neurosecretory cells in the hypothalamus, paying particular attention to the contributions of noradrenaline in coding long‐lasting pre‐ and postsynaptic changes in efficacy. We also highlight recent work demonstrating that glial cells play a crucial role in the induction of long‐term potentiation. Based on the work reviewed here, we have a clearer picture of the synaptic and cellular mechanisms that allow autonomic pathways to learn and remember.


Microcirculation | 2015

Astrocyte and Microvascular Imaging in Awake Animals Using Two‐Photon Microscopy

Cam Ha T. Tran; Grant R. Gordon

Neurovascular coupling is an important control mechanism in CBF regulation. New insights into the integrated relationship between synaptic activity, astrocytes Ca2+, and cerebral blood vessels using two‐photon fluorescence imaging are slowly emerging. Here, we provide a brief overview of the current understandings and controversies regarding astrocytes in activity‐dependent vasodilation. We highlight the key advantages and disadvantages of the in vitro and in vivo methodologies used to study this topic. In particular, we emphasize some of the drawbacks of acute brain slices as well as the confounding effects of anesthesia in in vivo preparations. To overcome these limitations, we discuss an emerging and important trend in imaging cell Ca2+ and blood flow control in awake and behaving animals. This new approach may help resolve existing controversies on astrocyte control of arteriole diameter by providing a more physiologically relevant preparation to study CBF regulation.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2017

Steady-state free Ca2+ in astrocytes is decreased by experience and impacts arteriole tone

Eslam M.F. Mehina; Ciaran Murphy-Royal; Grant R. Gordon

Astrocytes can control basal synaptic strength and arteriole tone via their resting Ca2+ activity. However, whether resting astrocyte Ca2+ can adjust to a new steady-state level, with an impact on surrounding brain cells, remains unknown. Using two-photon Ca2+ imaging in male rat acute brain slices of the somatosensory neocortex, we found that theta burst neural activity produced an unexpected long-lasting reduction in astrocyte free Ca2+ in the soma and endfeet. The drop in intracellular Ca2+ was attenuated by antagonists targeting multiple ionotropic and metabotropic glutamate receptors, and intracellular cascades involved Ca2+ stores and nitric oxide. The reduction in astrocyte endfoot Ca2+ was coincident with an increase in arteriole tone, and both the Ca2+ drop and the tone change were prevented by an NMDA receptor antagonist. Astrocyte patch-clamp experiments verified that the glutamate receptors in question were located on astrocytes and that Ca2+ changes within astrocytes were responsible for the long-lasting change in arteriole diameter caused by theta burst neural activity. In astrocytes from animals that lived in an enriched environment, we measured a relatively lower resting Ca2+ level that occluded any further drop in Ca2+ in response to theta burst activity. These data suggest that electrically evoked patterns of neural activity or natural experience can adjust steady-state resting astrocyte Ca2+ and that the effect has an impact on basal arteriole diameter. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The field of astrocyte-neuron and astrocyte-arteriole interactions is currently in a state of refinement. Experimental evidence ex vivo suggests that direct manipulation of astrocyte-free Ca2+ regulates synaptic signaling and local blood flow control; however, in vivo experiments fail to link synaptically evoked astrocyte Ca2+ transients and immediate changes to various astrocyte-mediated processes. To clarify this discrepancy, we examined a different aspect of astrocyte Ca2+: the resting, steady-state free Ca2+ of astrocytes, its modulation, and its potential role in the tonic regulation of surrounding brain cells. We found that ex vivo or in vivo neural activity induced a long-lasting reduction in resting free astrocyte Ca2+ and that this phenomenon changed arteriole tone.

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Jeffery LeDue

University of British Columbia

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