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Dive into the research topics where Jeffrey H. Goodman is active.

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Featured researches published by Jeffrey H. Goodman.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 1996

Basal expression and induction of glutamate decarboxylase GABA in excitatory granule cells of the rat and monkey hippocampal dentate gyrus

Robert S. Sloviter; Marc A. Dichter; Tara L. Rachinsky; Evelyn Dean; Jeffrey H. Goodman; Anne L. Sollas; David L. Martin

The excitatory, glutamatergic granule cells of the hippocampal dentate gyrus are presumed to play central roles in normal learning and memory, and in the genesis of spontaneous seizure discharges that originate within the temporal lobe. In localizing the two GABA producing forms of glutamate decarboxylase (GAD65 and GAD67) in the normal hippocampus as a prelude to experimental epilepsy studies, we unexpectedly discovered that, in addition to its presence in hippocampal nonprincipal cells, GAD67‐like immunoreactivity (LI) was present in the excitatory axons (the mossy fibers) of normal dentate granule cells of rats, mice, and the monkey Macaca nemestrina. Using improved immunocytochemical methods, we were also able to detect GABA‐LI in normal granule cell somata and processes. Conversely, GAD65‐LI was undetectable in normal granule cells.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 1996

Apoptosis and necrosis induced in different hippocampal neuron populations by repetitive perforant path stimulation in the rat.

Robert S. Sloviter; Evelyn Dean; Anne L. Sollas; Jeffrey H. Goodman

Patients experiencing spontaneous seizures of temporal lobe origin often exhibit a shrunken hippocampus, which results from the loss of dentate granule cells, hilar neurons, and hippocampal pyramidal cells. Although experimental attempts to replicate the human pattern of hippocampal sclerosis in animals indicate that prolonged seizures cause prominent injury to dentate hilar neurons and hippocampal pyramidal cells, dentate granule cells of animals are generally regarded as relatively resistant to seizure‐induced injury. By evaluating pathology shortly after hippocampal seizure discharges were induced electrically, we discovered that some granule cells are highly vulnerable to prolonged excitation and that they exhibit acute degenerative features distinct from those of other vulnerable cell populations.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2005

Neuropeptide Y stimulates neuronal precursor proliferation in the post-natal and adult dentate gyrus

Owain W. Howell; Kharen L. Doyle; Jeffrey H. Goodman; Helen E. Scharfman; Herbert Herzog; Ashley K. Pringle; Annette G. Beck-Sickinger; William Peter Gray

Adult dentate neurogenesis is important for certain types of hippocampal‐dependent learning and also appears to be important for the maintenance of normal mood and the behavioural effects of antidepressants. Neuropeptideu2003Y (NPY), a peptide neurotransmitter released by interneurons in the dentate gyrus, has important effects on mood, anxiety‐related behaviour and learning and memory. We report that adult NPY receptor knock‐out mice have significantly reduced cell proliferation and significantly fewer immature doublecortin‐positive neurons in the dentate gyrus. We also show that the neuroproliferative effect of NPY is dentate specific, is Y1‐receptor mediated and involves extracellular signal‐regulated kinase (ERK)1/2 activation. NPY did not exhibit any effect on cell survival in vitro but constitutive loss of the Y1 receptor in vivo resulted in greater survival of newly generated neurons and an unchanged total number of dentate granule cells. These results show that NPY stimulates neuronal precursor proliferation in the dentate gyrus and suggest that NPY‐releasing interneurons may modulate dentate neurogenesis.


Experimental Neurology | 2002

Spontaneous limbic seizures after intrahippocampal infusion of brain-derived neurotrophic factor

Helen E. Scharfman; Jeffrey H. Goodman; Anne L. Sollas; Susan D. Croll

The results of several studies have contributed to the hypothesis that BDNF promotes seizure activity, particularly in adult hippocampus. To test this hypothesis, BDNF, vehicle (phosphate-buffered saline, PBS), or albumin was infused directly into the hippocampus for 2 weeks using osmotic minipumps. Rats were examined behaviorally, electrophysiologically, and anatomically. An additional group was tested for sensitivity to the convulsant pilocarpine. Spontaneous behavioral seizures were observed in BDNF-infused rats (8/32; 25%) but not in controls (0/20; 0%). In a subset of six animals (three BDNF, three albumin), blind electrophysiological analysis of scalp recordings contralateral to the infused hippocampus demonstrated abnormalities in all BDNF rats; but not controls. Neuronal loss in BDNF-treated rats was not detected relative to PBS- or albumin-treated animals, but immunocytochemical markers showed a pattern of expression in BDNF-treated rats that was similar to rats with experimentally induced seizures. Thus, BDNF-infused rats had increased expression of NPY in hilar neurons of the dentate gyrus relative to control rats. NPY and BDNF expression was increased in the mossy fiber axons of dentate gyrus granule cells relative to controls. The increase in NPY and BDNF expression in BDNF-treated rats was bilateral and occurred throughout the septotemporal axis of the hippocampus. Mossy fiber sprouting occurred in five BDNF-treated rats but no controls. In another group of infused rats that was tested for seizure sensitivity to the convulsant pilocarpine, BDNF-infused rats had a shorter latency to status epilepticus than PBS-infused rats. In addition, the progression from normal behavior to severe seizures was faster in BDNF-treated rats. These data support the hypothesis that intrahippocampal BDNF infusion can facilitate, and potentially initiate, seizure activity in adult hippocampus.


Epilepsia | 2005

Preemptive Low-frequency Stimulation Decreases the Incidence of Amygdala-kindled Seizures

Jeffrey H. Goodman; Russell E. Berger; Thomas K. Tcheng

Summary:u2002 Purpose: The use of electrical stimulation as a therapy for epilepsy is currently being studied in experimental animals and in patients with epilepsy. This study examined the effect of preemptive, low‐frequency, 1‐Hz sine wave stimulation (LFS) on the incidence of amygdala‐kindled seizures in the rat.


Neuroscience | 2002

Spontaneous recurrent seizures after pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus activate calbindin-immunoreactive hilar cells of the rat dentate gyrus

Helen E. Scharfman; A.L Sollas; Jeffrey H. Goodman

Although it is now established that neurogenesis of dentate gyrus granule cells increases after experimental seizures, little is currently known about the function of the new granule cells. One question is whether they become integrated into the network around them. Recent experiments that focused on the newly born granule cells in the hilus showed that indeed the new cells appear to become synchronized with host hippocampal neurons [Scharfman et al. (2000) J. Neurosci. 20, 6144-6158]. To address this issue further, we asked whether the new hilar granule cells were active during spontaneous limbic seizures that follow status epilepticus induced by pilocarpine injection. Thus, we perfused rats after spontaneous seizures and stained sections using antibodies to c-fos, a marker of neural activity, and calbindin, a marker of the newly born hilar granule cells [Scharfman et al. (2000) J. Neurosci. 20, 6144-6158]. We asked whether calbindin-immunoreactive hilar neurons were also c-fos-immunoreactive.C-fos was highly expressed in calbindin-immunoreactive hilar neurons. Approximately 23% of hilar cells that expressed c-fos were double-labeled for calbindin. In addition, other types of hilar neurons, i.e. those expressing parvalbumin or neuropeptide Y, also expressed c-fos. Yet other hippocampal neurons, including granule cells and pyramidal cells, had weak expression of c-fos at the latency after the seizure that hilar neuron expression occurred. In controls, there was very little c-fos or calbindin expression in the hilus.These results indicate that calbindin-immunoreactive hilar cells are activated by spontaneous seizures. Based on the evidence that many of these cells are likely to be newly born, the data indicate that new cells can become functionally integrated into limbic circuits involved in recurrent seizure generation. Furthermore, they appear to do so in a manner similar to many neighboring hilar neurons, apparently assimilating into the local environment. Finally, the results show that a number of hilar cell types are activated during chronic recurrent seizures in the pilocarpine model, a surprising result given that many hilar neurons are thought to be damaged soon after pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 2004

Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor (VEGF) in Seizures: A Double-Edged Sword

Susan D. Croll; Jeffrey H. Goodman; Helen E. Scharfman

Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) is a vascular growth factor which induces angiogenesis (the development of new blood vessels), vascular permeability, and inflammation. In brain, receptors for VEGF have been localized to vascular endothelium, neurons, and glia. VEGF is upregulated after hypoxic injury to the brain, which can occur during cerebral ischemia or high-altitude edema, and has been implicated in the blood-brain barrier breakdown associated with these conditions. Given its recently-described role as an inflammatory mediator, VEGF could also contribute to the inflammatory responses observed in cerebral ischemia. After seizures, blood-brain barrier breakdown and inflammation is also observed in brain, albeit on a lower scale than that observed after stroke. Recent evidence has suggested a role for inflammation in seizure disorders. We have described striking increases in VEGF protein in both neurons and glia after pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus in the brain. Increases in VEGF could contribute to the blood-brain barrier breakdown and inflammation observed after seizures. However, VEGF has also been shown to be neuroprotective across several experimental paradigms, and hence could potentially protect vulnerable cells from damage associated with seizures. Therefore, the role of VEGF after seizures could be either protective or destructive. Although only further research will determine the exact nature of VEGFs role after seizures, preliminary data indicate that VEGF plays a protective role after seizures.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2002

Structural and Functional Asymmetry in the Normal and Epileptic Rat Dentate Gyrus

Helen E. Scharfman; Anne L. Sollas; Karen L. Smith; Meyer B. Jackson; Jeffrey H. Goodman

The rat dentate gyrus is usually described as relatively homogeneous. Here, we present anatomic and physiological data which demonstrate that there are striking differences between the supra‐ and infrapyramidal blades after status epilepticus and recurrent seizures. These differences appear to be an accentuation of a subtle asymmetry present in normal rats. In both pilocarpine and kainic acid models, there was greater mossy fiber sprouting in the infrapyramidal blade. This occurred primarily in the middle third of the hippocampus. Asymmetric sprouting was evident both with Timm stain as well as antisera to brain‐derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) or neuropeptide Y (NPY). In addition, surviving NPY‐immunoreactive hilar neurons were distributed preferentially in the suprapyramidal region of the hilus. Extracellular recordings from infrapyramidal sites in hippocampal slices of pilocarpine‐treated rats showed larger population spikes and weaker paired‐pulse inhibition in response to perforant path stimulation relative to suprapyramidal recordings. A single stimulus could evoke burst discharges in infrapyramidal granule cells but not suprapyramidal blade neurons. BDNF exposure led to spontaneous epileptiform discharges that were larger in amplitude and longer lasting in the infrapyramidal blade. Stimulation of the infrapyramidal molecular layer evoked larger responses in area CA3 than suprapyramidal stimulation. In slices from the temporal pole, in which anatomic evidence of asymmetry waned, there was little evidence of physiological asymmetry either. Of interest, some normal rats also showed signs of greater evoked responses in the infrapyramidal blade, and this could be detected with both microelectrode recording and optical imaging techniques. Although there were no signs of hyperexcitability in normal rats, the data suggest that there is some asymmetry in the normal dentate gyrus and this asymmetry is enhanced by seizures. Taken together, the results suggest that supra‐ and infrapyramidal blades of the dentate gyrus could have different circuit functions and that the infrapyramidal blade may play a greater role in activating the hippocampus. J. Comp. Neurol. 454:424–439, 2002.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1999

Actions of Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor in Slices from Rats with Spontaneous Seizures and Mossy Fiber Sprouting in the Dentate Gyrus

Helen E. Scharfman; Jeffrey H. Goodman; Anne L. Sollas

This study examined the acute actions of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in the rat dentate gyrus after seizures, because previous studies have shown that BDNF has acute effects on dentate granule cell synaptic transmission, and other studies have demonstrated that BDNF expression increases in granule cells after seizures. Pilocarpine-treated rats were studied because they not only have seizures and increased BDNF expression in granule cells, but they also have reorganization of granule cell “mossy fiber” axons. This reorganization, referred to as “sprouting,” involves collaterals that grow into novel areas, i.e., the inner molecular layer, where granule cell and interneuron dendrites are located. Thus, this animal model allowed us to address the effects of BDNF in the dentate gyrus after seizures, as well as the actions of BDNF on mossy fiber transmission after reorganization. In slices with sprouting, BDNF bath application enhanced responses recorded in the inner molecular layer to mossy fiber stimulation. Spontaneous bursts of granule cells occurred, and these were apparently generated at the site of the sprouted axon plexus. These effects were not accompanied by major changes in perforant path-evoked responses or paired-pulse inhibition, occurred only after prolonged (30–60 min) exposure to BDNF, and were blocked by K252a. The results suggest a preferential action of BDNF at mossy fiber synapses, even after substantial changes in the dentate gyrus network. Moreover, the results suggest that activation of trkB receptors could contribute to the hyperexcitability observed in animals with sprouting. Because human granule cells also express increased BDNF mRNA after seizures, and sprouting can occur in temporal lobe epileptics, the results may have implications for understanding temporal lobe epilepsy.


Neuroscience | 2001

Survival of dentate hilar mossy cells after pilocarpine-induced seizures and their synchronized burst discharges with area CA3 pyramidal cells

Helen E. Scharfman; K.L Smith; Jeffrey H. Goodman; A.L Sollas

The clinical and basic literature suggest that hilar cells of the dentate gyrus are damaged after seizures, particularly prolonged and repetitive seizures. Of the cell types within the hilus, it appears that the mossy cell is one of the most vulnerable. Nevertheless, hilar neurons which resemble mossy cells appear in some published reports of animal models of epilepsy, and in some cases of human temporal lobe epilepsy. Therefore, mossy cells may not always be killed after severe, repeated seizures. However, mossy cell survival in these studies was not completely clear because the methods did allow discrimination between mossy cells and other hilar cell types. Furthermore, whether surviving mossy cells might have altered physiology after seizures was not examined. Therefore, intracellular recording and intracellular dye injection were used to characterize hilar cells in hippocampal slices from pilocarpine-treated rats that had status epilepticus and recurrent seizures (epileptic rats). For comparison, mossy cells were also recorded from age-matched, saline-injected controls, and pilocarpine-treated rats that failed to develop status epilepticus. Numerous hilar cells with the morphology, axon projection, and membrane properties of mossy cells were recorded in all three experimental groups. Thus, mossy cells can survive severe seizures, and those that survive retain many of their normal characteristics. However, mossy cells from epileptic tissue were distinct from mossy cells of control rats in that they generated spontaneous and evoked epileptiform burst discharges. Area CA3 pyramidal cells also exhibited spontaneous and evoked bursts. Simultaneous intracellular recordings from mossy cells and pyramidal cells demonstrated that their burst discharges were synchronized, with pyramidal cell discharges typically beginning first. From these data we suggest that hilar mossy cells can survive status epilepticus and chronic seizures. The fact that mossy cells have epileptiform bursts, and that they are synchronized with area CA3, suggest a previously unappreciated substrate for hyperexcitability in this animal model.

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Helen E. Scharfman

New York State Department of Health

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Anne L. Sollas

New York State Department of Health

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Russell E. Berger

New York State Department of Health

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Evelyn Dean

New York State Department of Health

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Meyer B. Jackson

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Neil J. Maclusky

New York State Department of Health

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Thomas C. Mercurio

New York State Department of Health

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A. Elkady

City University of New York

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