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Featured researches published by Hani Houshyar.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Chronic stress and obesity: A new view of “comfort food”

Mary F. Dallman; Norman C. Pecoraro; Susan F. Akana; Susanne E. la Fleur; Francisca Gomez; Hani Houshyar; M. E. Bell; Seema Bhatnagar; Kevin D. Laugero; Sotara Manalo

The effects of adrenal corticosteroids on subsequent adrenocorticotropin secretion are complex. Acutely (within hours), glucocorticoids (GCs) directly inhibit further activity in the hypothalamo–pituitary–adrenal axis, but the chronic actions (across days) of these steroids on brain are directly excitatory. Chronically high concentrations of GCs act in three ways that are functionally congruent. (i) GCs increase the expression of corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) mRNA in the central nucleus of the amygdala, a critical node in the emotional brain. CRF enables recruitment of a chronic stress-response network. (ii) GCs increase the salience of pleasurable or compulsive activities (ingesting sucrose, fat, and drugs, or wheel-running). This motivates ingestion of “comfort food.” (iii) GCs act systemically to increase abdominal fat depots. This allows an increased signal of abdominal energy stores to inhibit catecholamines in the brainstem and CRF expression in hypothalamic neurons regulating adrenocorticotropin. Chronic stress, together with high GC concentrations, usually decreases body weight gain in rats; by contrast, in stressed or depressed humans chronic stress induces either increased comfort food intake and body weight gain or decreased intake and body weight loss. Comfort food ingestion that produces abdominal obesity, decreases CRF mRNA in the hypothalamus of rats. Depressed people who overeat have decreased cerebrospinal CRF, catecholamine concentrations, and hypothalamo–pituitary–adrenal activity. We propose that people eat comfort food in an attempt to reduce the activity in the chronic stress-response network with its attendant anxiety. These mechanisms, determined in rats, may explain some of the epidemic of obesity occurring in our society.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2004

Chronic Stress-Induced Effects of Corticosterone on Brain: Direct and Indirect

Mary F. Dallman; Susan F. Akana; Alison M. Strack; K S Scribner; Norman C. Pecoraro; S. E. La Fleur; Hani Houshyar; Francisca Gomez

Abstract: Acutely, glucocorticoids act to inhibit stress‐induced corticotrophin‐releasing factor (CRF) and adrenocorticotrophic hormone (ACTH) secretion through their actions in brain and anterior pituitary (canonical feedback). With chronic stress, glucocorticoid feedback inhibition of ACTH secretion changes markedly. Chronically stressed rats characteristically exhibit facilitated ACTH responses to acute, novel stressors. Moreover, in adrenalectomized rats in which corticosterone was replaced, steroid concentrations in the higher range are required for facilitation of ACTH responses to occur after chronic stress or diabetes. Infusion of corticosterone intracerebroventricularly into adrenalectomized rats increases basal ACTH, tends to increase CRF, and allows facilitation of ACTH responses to repeated restraint. Therefore, with chronic stressors, corticosterone seems to act in brain in an excitatory rather than an inhibitory fashion. We believe, under conditions of chronic stress, that there is an indirect glucocorticoid feedback that is mediated through the effects of the steroid ± insulin on metabolism. Increased energy stores feedback on brain to inhibit hypothalamic CRF and decrease the expression of dopamine‐β‐hydroxylase in the locus coeruleus. These changes would be expected to decrease the level of discomfort and anxiety induced by chronic stress. Moreover, central neural actions of glucocorticoids abet the peripheral effects of the steroids by increasing the salience and ingestion of pleasurable foods.


Molecular Systems Biology | 2014

Systems analysis of eleven rodent disease models reveals an inflammatome signature and key drivers.

I-Ming Wang; Bin Zhang; Xia Yang; Jun Zhu; Serguei Stepaniants; Chunsheng Zhang; Qingying Meng; Mette A. Peters; Yudong He; Chester Ni; Deborah Slipetz; Michael A. Crackower; Hani Houshyar; Christopher M. Tan; Ernest Asante-Appiah; Gary P. O'Neill; Mingjuan Jane Luo; Rolf Thieringer; Jeffrey Yuan; Chi-Sung Chiu; Pek Yee Lum; John Lamb; Yves Boie; Hilary A. Wilkinson; Eric E. Schadt; Hongyue Dai; Christopher J. Roberts

Common inflammatome gene signatures as well as disease‐specific signatures were identified by analyzing 12 expression profiling data sets derived from 9 different tissues isolated from 11 rodent inflammatory disease models. The inflammatome signature significantly overlaps with known drug targets and co‐expressed gene modules linked to metabolic disorders and cancer. A large proportion of genes in this signature are tightly connected in tissue‐specific Bayesian networks (BNs) built from multiple independent mouse and human cohorts. Both the inflammatome signature and the corresponding consensus BNs are highly enriched for immune response‐related genes supported as causal for adiposity, adipokine, diabetes, aortic lesion, bone, muscle, and cholesterol traits, suggesting the causal nature of the inflammatome for a variety of diseases. Integration of this inflammatome signature with the BNs uncovered 151 key drivers that appeared to be more biologically important than the non‐drivers in terms of their impact on disease phenotypes. The identification of this inflammatome signature, its network architecture, and key drivers not only highlights the shared etiology but also pinpoints potential targets for intervention of various common diseases.


Immunity | 2014

Immunoglobulin E signal inhibition during allergen ingestion leads to reversal of established food allergy and induction of regulatory T cells.

Oliver T. Burton; Magali Noval Rivas; Joseph S. Zhou; Stephanie L. Logsdon; Alanna R. Darling; Kyle J. Koleoglou; Axel Roers; Hani Houshyar; Michael A. Crackower; Talal A. Chatila; Hans C. Oettgen

Immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibodies are known for triggering immediate hypersensitivity reactions such as food anaphylaxis. In this study, we tested whether they might additionally function to amplify nascent antibody and T helper 2 (Th2) cell-mediated responses to ingested proteins and whether blocking IgE would modify sensitization. By using mice harboring a disinhibited form of the IL-4 receptor, we developed an adjuvant-free model of peanut allergy. Mast cells and IgE were required for induction of antibody and Th2-cell-mediated responses to peanut ingestion and they impaired regulatory T (Treg) cell induction. Mast-cell-targeted genetic deletion of the FcεRI signaling kinase Syk or Syk blockade also prevented peanut sensitization. In mice with established allergy, Syk blockade facilitated desensitization and induction of Treg cells, which suppressed allergy when transferred to naive recipients. Our study suggests a key role for IgE in driving Th2 cell and IgE responses while suppressing Treg cells in food allergy.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2003

Intermittent Morphine Administration Induces Dependence and is a Chronic Stressor in Rats

Hani Houshyar; Francisca Gomez; Sotara Manalo; Aditi Bhargava; Mary F. Dallman

Although constant treatment with morphine (implanted pellets) does not activate the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal (HPA) axis, intermittent injections of morphine may constitute a chronic stressor in rats. To test this hypothesis, we compared the effects of morphine in escalating doses (10–40 mg/kg, s.c.) or saline injected twice daily for 4 days on energy balance, hormones, HPA responses to novel restraint and central corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) mRNA 12 h and 8 days after the last morphine injection in adult male Sprague–Dawley rats. Weight gain stopped at the onset of morphine, weight loss was marked 36 h postmorphine; thereafter, body weight gain paralleled saline controls. At 12 h, insulin, leptin, and testosterone concentrations were reduced but normalized by 8 days. Restraint and tail nicks caused facilitated ACTH responses at 12 h, under-responsiveness at 8 days. CRF mRNA, measured only at 12 h, was increased in the paraventricular (PVN) and Barringtons nuclei (BAR), decreased in the bed nuclei of the stria terminalis (BNST) and unchanged in the amygdala (CeA) in morphine-treated rats. After stress, CRF mRNA increased in PVN in both groups, increased in BAR and decreased in BNST in saline but not morphine groups, and was unchanged in CeA in both groups. Results from all variables characterize intermittent morphine injections as a chronic stressor. In contrast to constant treatment, injected morphine probably allows some withdrawal during each 12 h interval, causing repeated stress. Drug addicts treat themselves intermittently, and stress causes relapse after withdrawal. Thus, intermittent morphine, itself, may promote relapse.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Time-Dependent Alterations in mRNA Expression of Brain Neuropeptides Regulating Energy Balance and Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Adrenal Activity after Withdrawal from Intermittent Morphine Treatment

Hani Houshyar; Sotara Manalo; Mary F. Dallman

Chronic stressors alter brain function and may leave traces after their relief. We used intermittent morphine treatment to examine the relationships between stress-induced changes in energy balance and hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) activity and the recovery thereafter. We studied the effects of morphine injections on energy balance, hormones and fat stores, brain neuropeptide expression, and the ACTH and corticosterone responses to restraint 12 hr after the final injection and 8 d later during recovery. Weight gain, food intake, and caloric efficiency decreased at morphine onset, and these were maintained throughout the morphine injections. At 12 hr, fat stores, leptin, insulin, and testosterone concentrations were reduced. Subsequently, body weight gain and food intake increased and caloric efficiency was above control during the final days. By the eighth recovery day, fat stores and peripheral hormones were no longer depressed. At 12 hr, an over-response of CRF mRNA to restraint occurred in the hypothalamus, similar to the facilitated ACTH and corticosterone responses. On day 8, the hypothalamic CRF mRNA response to restraint was still facilitated, opposite to inhibited ACTH responses. Hypothalamic CRF mRNA correlated highly with mesenteric fat weight in morphine-treated rats. We conclude that there is a prolonged recovery from chronic stressors involving interrelated changes in energy balance and HPA activity. Nonetheless, 8 d after withdrawal from morphine, rats still display facilitated central stress responses, similar to the HPA symptoms described in posttraumatic stress disorder patients. Repeated partial withdrawal associated with intermittent morphine treatment, compounded by complete withdrawal associated with termination of the treatment, is likely required for these metabolic and HPA derangements.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2008

Adenovirus IL-13-induced airway disease in mice: a corticosteroid-resistant model of severe asthma.

Alex G. Therien; Virginie Bernier; Sean Weicker; Paul Tawa; Jean-Pierre Falgueyret; Marie-Claude Mathieu; Jeanne Honsberger; Véronique Pomerleau; Annette Robichaud; Rino Stocco; Lynn Dufresne; Hani Houshyar; Josiane Lafleur; Gary P. O'Neill; Deborah Slipetz; Christopher M. Tan

Interleukin 13 (IL-13) is considered to be a key driver of the development of airway allergic inflammation and remodeling leading to airway hyperresponsiveness (AHR). How precisely IL-13 leads to the development of airway inflammation, AHR, and mucus production is not fully understood. In order to identify key mediators downstream of IL-13, we administered adenovirus IL-13 to specifically induce IL-13-dependent inflammation in the lungs of mice. This approach was shown to induce cardinal features of lung disease, specifically airway inflammation, elevated cytokines, AHR, and mucus secretion. Notably, the model is resistant to corticosteroid treatment and is characterized by marked neutrophilia, two hallmarks of more severe forms of asthma. To identify IL-13-dependent mediators, we performed a limited-scale two-dimensional SDS-PAGE proteomic analysis and identified proteins significantly modulated in this model. Intriguingly, several identified proteins were unique to this model, whereas others correlated with those modulated in a mouse ovalbumin-induced pulmonary inflammation model. We corroborated this approach by illustrating that proteomic analysis can identify known pathways/mediators downstream of IL-13. Thus, we have characterized a murine adenovirus IL-13 lung model that recapitulates specific disease traits observed in human asthma, and have exploited this model to identify effectors downstream of IL-13. Collectively, these findings will enable a broader appreciation of IL-13 and its impact on disease pathways in the lung.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Hepatic vagotomy alters limbic and hypothalamic neuropeptide responses to insulin-dependent diabetes and voluntary lard ingestion

Susanne E. la Fleur; Sotara Manalo; Monica Roy; Hani Houshyar; Mary F. Dallman

Hypothalamic anorexigenic [corticotropin‐releasing factor (CRF) and proopiomelanocortin] peptides decrease and the orexigen, neuropeptide Y, increases with diabetic hyperphagia. However, when diabetic rats are allowed to eat lard (saturated fat) as well as chow, both caloric intake and hypothalamic peptides normalize. These neuropeptide responses to lard require an intact hepatic vagus [ la Fleur et al. (2003)Diabetes, 52, 2321–2330]. Here, we delineate temporal interactions after lard consumption ± hepatic vagotomy (HV) between feeding and brain neuropeptide expression in insulin‐dependent diabetic rats. CRF‐mRNA was reduced in the paraventricular nuclei (PVN) by 6 h after presentation of lard, before caloric intake increased in HV‐diabetic rats, and did not increase at 30 or 36 h, as it did in shamHV‐diabetic rats eating lard. CRF‐mRNA was increased in the bed nuclei of the stria terminalis of HV‐diabetic rats compared with shamHV‐diabetic rats only when caloric intake was high at 30 or 36 h. At 36 h, shamHV‐diabetic rats eating chow had increased CRF‐mRNA in the central amygdala but diabetic rats eating lard had decreased CRF‐mRNA, whereas HV‐diabetic rats eating chow or lard had normal CRF‐mRNA in the central amygdala. We conclude that eating lard restores peptide expression to normal in the hypothalamus of diabetic rats, and because decreased CRF‐mRNA in the PVN precedes the increase in caloric intake in HV‐diabetic rats eating lard, that the loss of a hepatic vagal signal to PVN may be responsible for increased intake; moreover, CRF‐mRNA in limbic structures is also sensitive to both HV and lard ingestion in diabetic rats.


American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology | 2013

Inhibition of Spleen Tyrosine Kinase Attenuates Allergen-Mediated Airway Constriction

Lily Y. Moy; Yanlin Jia; Michael Caniga; Gissela Lieber; Malgorzata Gil; Xiomara Fernandez; Erich Sirkowski; Richard Miller; Jessica P. Alexander; Hyun-Hee Lee; John D. Shin; J. Michael Ellis; Hongmin Chen; Alan Wilhelm; Hongshi Yu; Stella H. Vincent; Richard W. Chapman; Nancy Kelly; Emily Hickey; William M. Abraham; Alan B. Northrup; Thomas F. Miller; Hani Houshyar; Michael A. Crackower

Spleen tyrosine kinase (SYK) is a key activator of signaling pathways downstream of multiple surface receptors implicated in asthma. SYK function has been extensively studied in mast cells downstream of the high-affinity IgE receptor, FcεR1. Preclinical studies have demonstrated a role for SYK in models of allergic inflammation, but a role in airway constriction has not been demonstrated. Here, we have used a potent and selective pharmacological inhibitor of SYK to determine the role of SYK in allergen-mediated inflammation and airway constriction in preclinical models. Attenuation of allergic airway responses was evaluated in a rat passive anaphylaxis model and rat and sheep inhaled allergen challenge models, as well as an ex vivo model of allergen-mediated airway constriction in rats and cynomolgus monkeys. Pharmacological inhibition of SYK dose-dependently blocked IgE-mediated tracheal plasma extravasation in rats. In a rat ovalbumin-sensitized airway challenge model, oral dosing with an SYK inhibitor led to a dose-dependent reduction in lung inflammatory cells. Ex vivo analysis of allergen-induced airway constriction in ovalbumin-sensitized brown Norway rats showed a complete attenuation with treatment of a SYK inhibitor, as well as a complete block of allergen-induced serotonin release. Similarly, allergen-mediated airway constriction was attenuated in ex vivo studies from nonhuman primate lungs. Intravenous administration of an SYK inhibitor attenuated both early- and late-phase allergen-induced increases in airway resistance in an Ascaris-sensitive sheep allergen challenge model. These data support a key role for SYK signaling in mediating allergic airway responses.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Overcoming mutagenicity and ion channel activity: optimization of selective spleen tyrosine kinase inhibitors.

J. Michael Ellis; Michael D. Altman; Alan S. Bass; John W. Butcher; Alan Byford; Anthony Donofrio; Sheila M. Galloway; Andrew M. Haidle; James P. Jewell; Nancy Kelly; Erica Leccese; Sandra Lee; Matthew L. Maddess; J. Richard Miller; Lily Y. Moy; Ekundayo Osimboni; Ryan D. Otte; M. Vijay Reddy; Kerrie Spencer; Binyuan Sun; Stella H. Vincent; Gwendolyn J. Ward; Grace H. C. Woo; Chiming Yang; Hani Houshyar; Alan B. Northrup

Development of a series of highly kinome-selective spleen tyrosine kinase (Syk) inhibitors with favorable druglike properties is described. Early leads were discovered through X-ray crystallographic analysis, and a systematic survey of cores within a selected chemical space focused on ligand binding efficiency. Attenuation of hERG ion channel activity inherent within the initial chemotype was guided through modulation of physicochemical properties including log D, PSA, and pKa. PSA proved most effective for prospective compound design. Further profiling of an advanced compound revealed bacterial mutagenicity in the Ames test using TA97a Salmonella strain, and subsequent study demonstrated that this mutagenicity was pervasive throughout the series. Identification of intercalation as a likely mechanism for the mutagenicity-enabled modification of the core scaffold. Implementation of a DNA binding assay as a prescreen and models in DNA allowed resolution of the mutagenicity risk, affording molecules with favorable potency, selectivity, pharmacokinetic, and off-target profiles.

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Susan F. Akana

University of California

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Sotara Manalo

University of California

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