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Dive into the research topics where Jana Drgonová is active.

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Featured researches published by Jana Drgonová.


Science | 1996

Rho1p, a yeast protein at the interface between cell polarization and morphogenesis

Jana Drgonová; Tomas Drgon; Kazuma Tanaka; Roman Kollár; Guang Chao Chen; Richard Ford; Clarence S.M. Chan; Yoshimi Takai; Enrico Cabib

The enzyme that catalyzes the synthesis of the major structural component of the yeast cell wall, β(1→3)-D-glucan synthase (also known as 1,3-β-glucan synthase), requires a guanosine triphosphate (GTP) binding protein for activity. The GTP binding protein was identified as Rho1p. The rho1 mutants were defective in GTP stimulation of glucan synthase, and the defect was corrected by addition of purified or recombinant Rho1p. A protein missing in purified preparations from a rho1 strain was identified as Rho1p. Rho1p also regulates protein kinase C, which controls a mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade. Experiments with a dominant positive PKC1 gene showed that the two effects of Rho1p are independent of each other. The colocalization of Rho1p with actin patches at the site of bud emergence and the role of Rho1p in cell wall synthesis emphasize the importance of Rho1p in polarized growth and morphogenesis.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2003

Reduced Behavioral Effects of Cocaine in Heterozygous Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor (BDNF) Knockout Mice

F. Scott Hall; Jana Drgonová; Michelle Goeb; George R. Uhl

Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) affects the development of brain neurotransmitter systems, including dopamine and serotonin systems that are important for cocaines rewarding and locomotor stimulatory properties. Human genomic markers within or near the BDNF locus have been linked to or associated with substance abuse. Post-mortem human brain specimens reveal individual differences in the levels of BDNF mRNA and in mRNA splicing patterns. To assess the effects of lifelong alterations in the levels of BDNF expression on a measure of psychostimulant reward, we have compared locomotor stimulant and rewarding effects of cocaine in heterozygous BDNF knockout mice with effects in their wild-type littermates. Heterozygous BDNF knockout mice displayed less locomotion during habituation and less locomotion after cocaine injections. Cocaine-conditioned place preferences were reduced in the BDNF heterozygotes. These mice displayed no significant difference from saline control values at a dose of 10 mg/kg s.c. cocaine, although they exhibited cocaine-induced preference at a 20 mg/kg dose. These data confirm important roles for BDNF in psychostimulant actions, presumably via neurotrophic effects on dopamine and serotonin systems. Furthermore, these data support suggestions that differences in human BDNF expression may underlie associations between markers near the human BDNF gene locus and drug addiction.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Involvement of the Neutral Amino Acid Transporter SLC6A15 and Leucine in Obesity-Related Phenotypes

Jana Drgonová; Josefin A. Jacobsson; Joan C. Han; Jack A. Yanovski; Robert Fredriksson; Claude Marcus; Helgi B. Schiöth; George R. Uhl

Brain pathways, including those in hypothalamus and nucleus of the solitary tract, influence food intake, nutrient preferences, metabolism and development of obesity in ways that often differ between males and females. Branched chain amino acids, including leucine, can suppress food intake, alter metabolism and change vulnerability to obesity. The SLC6A15 (v7-3) gene encodes a sodium-dependent transporter of leucine and other branched chain amino acids that is expressed by neurons in hypothalamus and nucleus of the solitary tract. We now report that SLC6A15 knockout attenuates leucines abilities to reduce both: a) intake of normal chow and b) weight gain produced by access to a high fat diet in gender-selective fashions. We identify SNPs in the human SLC6A15 that are associated with body mass index and insulin resistance in males. These observations in mice and humans support a novel, gender-selective role for brain amino acid compartmentalization mediated by SLC6A15 in diet and obesity-associated phenotypes.


Molecular Medicine | 2016

Cadherin 13: Human cis-Regulation and Selectively Altered Addiction Phenotypes and Cerebral Cortical Dopamine in Knockout Mice

Jana Drgonová; Donna Walther; G. Luke Hartstein; Mohammad O. Bukhari; Michael H. Baumann; Jonathan L. Katz; F. Scott Hall; Elizabeth R. Arnold; Shaun M. Flax; Anthony L. Riley; Olga Rivero; Klaus-Peter Lesch; Juan C. Troncoso; Barbara Ranscht; George R. Uhl

The Cadherin 13 (CDH13) gene encodes a cell adhesion molecule likely to influence development and connections of brain circuits that modulate addiction, locomotion and cognition, including those that involve midbrain dopamine neurons. Human CDH13 mRNA expression differs by more than 80% in postmortem cerebral cortical samples from individuals with different CDH13 genotypes, supporting examination of mice with altered CDH13 expression as models for common human variation at this locus. Constitutive CDH13 knockout mice display evidence for changed cocaine reward: shifted dose response relationship in tests of cocaine-conditioned place preference using doses that do not alter cocaine-conditioned taste aversion. Reduced adult CDH13 expression in conditional knockouts also alters cocaine reward in ways that correlate with individual differences in cortical CDH13 mRNA levels. In control and comparison behavioral assessments, knockout mice display modestly quicker acquisition of rotarod and water maze tasks, with a trend toward faster acquisition of 5-choice serial reaction time tasks that otherwise displayed no genotype-related differences. They display significant differences in locomotion in some settings, with larger effects in males. In assessments of brain changes that might contribute to these behavioral differences, there are selective alterations of dopamine levels, dopamine/metabolite ratios, dopaminergic fiber densities and mRNA encoding the activity dependent transcription factor npas4 in cerebral cortex of knockout mice. These novel data and previously reported human associations of CDH13 variants with addiction, individual differences in responses to stimulant administration and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) phenotypes suggest that levels of CDH13 expression, through mechanisms likely to include effects on mesocortical dopamine, influence stimulant reward and may contribute modestly to cognitive and locomotor phenotypes relevant to ADHD.


Molecular Medicine | 2015

Mouse Model for Protein Tyrosine Phosphatase D (PTPRD) Associations with Restless Leg Syndrome or Willis-Ekbom Disease and Addiction: Reduced Expression Alters Locomotion, Sleep Behaviors and Cocaine-Conditioned Place Preference

Jana Drgonová; Donna Walther; Katherine J Wang; G. Luke Hartstein; Bryson Lochte; Juan C. Troncoso; Noriko Uetani; Yoichiro Iwakura; George R. Uhl

The receptor type protein tyrosine phosphatase D (PTPRD) gene encodes a cell adhesion molecule likely to influence development and connections of addiction-, locomotion- and sleep-related brain circuits in which it is expressed. The PTPRD gene harbors genome-wide association signals in studies of restless leg syndrome (Willis-Ekbom disease (WED)/restless leg syndrome (RLS); p < 10−8) and addiction-related phenotypes (clusters of nearby single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with 10−2 > p > 10−8 associations in several reports). We now report work that seeks (a) association between PTPRD genotypes and expression of its mRNA in postmortem human brains and (b) RLS-related, addiction-related and comparison behavioral phenotypes in hetero- and homozygous PTPRD knockout mice. We identify associations between PTPRD SNPs and levels of PTPRD mRNA in human brain samples that support validity of mouse models with altered PTPRD expression. Knockouts display less behaviorally defined sleep at the end of their active periods. Heterozygotes move more despite motor weakness/impersistence. Heterozygotes display shifted dose-response relationships for cocaine reward. They display greater preference for places paired with 5 mg/kg cocaine and less preference for places paired with 10 or 20 mg/kg. The combined data provide support for roles for common, level-of-expression PTPRD variation in locomotor, sleep and drug reward phenotypes relevant to RLS and addiction. Taken together, mouse and human results identify PTPRD as a novel therapeutic target for RLS and addiction phenotypes.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2014

Cell Adhesion Molecules: Druggable Targets for Modulating the Connectome and Brain Disorders?

George R. Uhl; Jana Drgonová

Cell Adhesion Molecules: Druggable Targets for Modulating the Connectome and Brain Disorders?


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007

Effect of Biotic and Abiotic Factors on In Vitro Proliferation, Encystment, and Excystment of Pfiesteria piscicida

Keiko Saito; Tomas Drgon; Danara N. Krupatkina; Jana Drgonová; Daniel E. Terlizzi; Natalia Mercer; Gerardo R. Vasta

ABSTRACT Pfiesteria spp. are mixotrophic armored dinoflagellates populating the Atlantic coastal waters of the United States. They have been a focus of intense research due to their reported association with several fish mortality events. We have now used a clonal culture of Pfiesteria piscicida and several new environmental isolates to describe growth characteristics, feeding, and factors contributing to the encystment and germination of the organism in both laboratory and environmental samples. We also discuss applied methods of detection of the different morphological forms of Pfiesteria in environmental samples. In summary, Pfiesteria, when grown with its algal prey, Rhodomonas sp., presents a typical growth curve with lag, exponential, and stationary phases, followed by encystment. The doubling time in exponential phase is about 12 h. The profiles of proliferation under a standard light cycle and in the dark were similar, although the peak cell densities were markedly lower when cells were grown in the dark. The addition of urea, chicken manure, and soil extracts did not enhance Pfiesteria proliferation, but crude unfiltered spent aquarium water did. Under conditions of food deprivation or cold (4°C), Pfiesteria readily formed harvestable cysts that were further analyzed by PCR and scanning electron microscopy. The germination of Pfiesteria cysts in environmental sediment was enhanced by the presence of live fish: dinospores could be detected 13 to 15 days earlier and reached 5- to 10-times-higher peak cell densities with live fish than with artificial seawater or f/2 medium alone. The addition of ammonia, urea, nitrate, phosphate, or surprisingly, spent fish aquarium water had no effect.


Archive | 1997

Architecture of the yeast cell wall

Roman Kollár; Bruce B. Reinhold; Eva Petráková; Hsiang J. Yeh; Gilbert Ashwell; Jana Drgonová


Annual Review of Biochemistry | 1998

Role of Small G Proteins in Yeast Cell Polarization and Wall Biosynthesis

Enrico Cabib; Jana Drgonová; Tomas Drgon


Biochemical Society Transactions | 1997

The yeast cell wall, a dynamic structure engaged in growth and morphogenesis.

Enrico Cabib; Tomas Drgon; Jana Drgonová; Richard Ford; Roman Kollár

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Tomas Drgon

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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Enrico Cabib

National Institutes of Health

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George R. Uhl

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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Roman Kollár

National Institutes of Health

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Donna Walther

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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F. Scott Hall

National Institute on Drug Abuse

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G. Luke Hartstein

National Institutes of Health

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Juan C. Troncoso

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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Richard Ford

National Institutes of Health

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