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Dive into the research topics where Jen Q. Pan is active.

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Featured researches published by Jen Q. Pan.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2011

AKT Kinase Activity Is Required for Lithium to Modulate Mood-Related Behaviors in Mice

Jen Q. Pan; Michael C. Lewis; Josh K Ketterman; Elizabeth L. Clore; Misha M. Riley; Keenan R Richards; Erin Berry-Scott; Xiulin Liu; Florence F. Wagner; Edward B. Holson; Rachael L. Neve; Travis L. Biechele; Randall T. Moon; Edward M. Scolnick; Tracey L. Petryshen; Stephen J. Haggarty

Bipolar disorder (BP) is a debilitating psychiatric disorder, affecting ∼2% of the worldwide population, for which the etiological basis, pathogenesis, and neurocircuitry remain poorly understood. Individuals with BP suffer from recurrent episodes of mania and depression, which are commonly treated with the mood stabilizer lithium. However, nearly half of BP patients do not respond adequately to lithium therapy and the clinically relevant mechanisms of lithium for mood stabilization remain elusive. Here, we modeled lithium responsiveness using cellular assays of glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK-3) signaling and mood-related behavioral assays in inbred strains of mice that differ in their response to lithium. We found that activating AKT through phosphosrylation of a key regulatory site (Thr308) was associated with lithium response—activation of signaling pathways downstream of GSK-3 in cells and attenuation of mood-related behaviors in mice—and this response was attenuated by selective and direct inhibition of AKT kinase activity. Conversely, the expression of constitutively active AKT1 in both the cellular and behavioral assays conferred lithium sensitivity. In contrast, selective and direct GSK-3 inhibition by the ATP-competitive inhibitor CHIR99021 bypassed the requirement for AKT activation and modulated behavior in both lithium-responsive and non-responsive mouse strains. These results distinguish the mechanism of action of lithium from direct GSK-3 inhibition both in vivo and in vitro, and highlight the therapeutic potential for selective GSK-3 inhibitors in BP treatment.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2015

Functional implications of a psychiatric risk variant within CACNA1C in induced human neurons.

Takao Yoshimizu; Jen Q. Pan; Alison E. Mungenast; Jon M. Madison; Susan Su; Josh Ketterman; Dost Öngür; Donna L. McPhie; Bruce M. Cohen; Roy H. Perlis; Li-Huei Tsai

Psychiatric disorders have clear heritable risk. Several large-scale genome-wide association studies have revealed a strong association between susceptibility for psychiatric disorders, including bipolar disease, schizophrenia and major depression, and a haplotype located in an intronic region of the L-type voltage-gated calcium channel (VGCC) subunit gene CACNA1C (peak associated SNP rs1006737), making it one of the most replicable and consistent associations in psychiatric genetics. In the current study, we used induced human neurons to reveal a functional phenotype associated with this psychiatric risk variant. We generated induced human neurons, or iN cells, from more than 20 individuals harboring homozygous risk genotypes, heterozygous or homozygous non-risk genotypes at the rs1006737 locus. Using these iNs, we performed electrophysiology and quantitative PCR experiments that demonstrated increased L-type VGCC current density as well as increased mRNA expression of CACNA1C in iNs homozygous for the risk genotype, compared with non-risk genotypes. These studies demonstrate that the risk genotype at rs1006737 is associated with significant functional alterations in human iNs, and may direct future efforts at developing novel therapeutics for the treatment of psychiatric disease.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2016

Inhibitors of Glycogen Synthase Kinase 3 with Exquisite Kinome-Wide Selectivity and Their Functional Effects.

Florence F. Wagner; Joshua A. Bishop; Jennifer Gale; Xi Shi; Michelle Walk; Joshua Ketterman; Debasis Patnaik; Doug Barker; Deepika Walpita; Arthur J. Campbell; Shannon Nguyen; Michael C. Lewis; Linda Ross; Michel Weiwer; W. Frank An; Andrew Germain; Partha Nag; Shailesh R Metkar; Taner Kaya; Sivaraman Dandapani; David E. Olson; Anne-Laure Barbe; Fanny Lazzaro; Joshua R. Sacher; Jaime H. Cheah; David Fei; Jose R. Perez; Benito Munoz; Michelle Palmer; Kimberly Stegmaier

The mood stabilizer lithium, the first-line treatment for bipolar disorder, is hypothesized to exert its effects through direct inhibition of glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3) and indirectly by increasing GSK3s inhibitory serine phosphorylation. GSK3 comprises two highly similar paralogs, GSK3α and GSK3β, which are key regulatory kinases in the canonical Wnt pathway. GSK3 stands as a nodal target within this pathway and is an attractive therapeutic target for multiple indications. Despite being an active field of research for the past 20 years, many GSK3 inhibitors demonstrate either poor to moderate selectivity versus the broader human kinome or physicochemical properties unsuitable for use in in vitro systems or in vivo models. A nonconventional analysis of data from a GSK3β inhibitor high-throughput screening campaign, which excluded known GSK3 inhibitor chemotypes, led to the discovery of a novel pyrazolo-tetrahydroquinolinone scaffold with unparalleled kinome-wide selectivity for the GSK3 kinases. Taking advantage of an uncommon tridentate interaction with the hinge region of GSK3, we developed highly selective and potent GSK3 inhibitors, BRD1652 and BRD0209, which demonstrated in vivo efficacy in a dopaminergic signaling paradigm modeling mood-related disorders. These new chemical probes open the way for exclusive analyses of the function of GSK3 kinases in multiple signaling pathways involved in many prevalent disorders.


Scientific Reports | 2016

A rare schizophrenia risk variant of CACNA1I disrupts CaV3.3 channel activity

A. Andrade; J. Hope; Andrew S. Allen; V. Yorgan; D. Lipscombe; Jen Q. Pan

CACNA1I is a candidate schizophrenia risk gene. It encodes the pore-forming human CaV3.3 α1 subunit, a subtype of voltage-gated calcium channel that contributes to T-type currents. Recently, two de novo missense variations, T797M and R1346H, of hCaV3.3 were identified in individuals with schizophrenia. Here we show that R1346H, but not T797M, is associated with lower hCaV3.3 protein levels, reduced glycosylation, and lower membrane surface levels of hCaV3.3 when expressed in human cell lines compared to wild-type. Consistent with our biochemical analyses, whole-cell hCaV3.3 currents in cells expressing the R1346H variant were ~50% of those in cells expressing WT hCaV3.3, and neither R1346H nor T797M altered channel biophysical properties. Employing the NEURON simulation environment, we found that reducing hCaV3.3 current densities by 22% or more eliminates rebound bursting in model thalamic reticular nucleus (TRN) neurons. Our analyses suggest that a single copy of Chr22: 39665939G > A CACNA1I has the capacity to disrupt CaV3.3 channel-dependent functions, including rebound bursting in TRN neurons, with potential implications for schizophrenia pathophysiology.


ACS Chemical Biology | 2018

Functionally biased D2R antagonists: Targeting the β-arrestin pathway to improve antipsychotic treatment

Michel Weiwer; Qihong Xu; Jennifer Gale; Michael C. Lewis; Arthur J. Campbell; Frederick A. Schroeder; Genevieve C. Van de Bittner; Michelle Walk; Aldo Amaya; Ping Su; Luka D̵ordevic; Joshua Sacher; Adam Skepner; David Fei; Kelly Dennehy; Shannon Nguyen; Patrick W. Faloon; Jose R. Perez; Jeffrey R. Cottrell; Fang Liu; Michelle Palmer; Jen Q. Pan; Jacob M. Hooker; Yan-Ling Zhang; Edward M. Scolnick; Florence F. Wagner; Edward B. Holson

Schizophrenia is a severe neuropsychiatric disease that lacks completely effective and safe therapies. As a polygenic disorder, genetic studies have only started to shed light on its complex etiology. To date, the positive symptoms of schizophrenia are well-managed by antipsychotic drugs, which primarily target the dopamine D2 receptor (D2R). However, these antipsychotics are often accompanied by severe side effects, including motoric symptoms. At D2R, antipsychotic drugs antagonize both G-protein dependent (Gαi/o) signaling and G-protein independent (β-arrestin) signaling. However, the relevant contributions of the distinct D2R signaling pathways to antipsychotic efficacy and on-target side effects (motoric) are still incompletely understood. Recent evidence from mouse genetic and pharmacological studies point to β-arrestin signaling as the major driver of antipsychotic efficacy and suggest that a β-arrestin biased D2R antagonist could achieve an additional level of selectivity at D2R, increasing the therapeutic index of next generation antipsychotics. Here, we characterize BRD5814, a highly brain penetrant β-arrestin biased D2R antagonist. BRD5814 demonstrated good target engagement via PET imaging, achieving efficacy in an amphetamine-induced hyperlocomotion mouse model with strongly reduced motoric side effects in a rotarod performance test. This proof of concept study opens the possibility for the development of a new generation of pathway selective antipsychotics at D2R with reduced side effect profiles for the treatment of schizophrenia.


Archive | 2018

Developing High-Throughput Assays to Analyze and Screen Electrophysiological Phenotypes

Jen Q. Pan; David Baez-Nieto; Andrew S. Allen; Hao-Ran Wang; Jeffrey R. Cottrell

Ion channels represent nearly a quarter of all targets that currently available medications modulate, and their dysfunction underlies increasing number of human diseases. Functional analysis of ion channels have traditionally been a bottleneck in large-scale analyses. Recent technological breakthroughs in automated planar electrophysiology have democratized the technique to enable high-throughput patch clamping at scale. In this chapter, we describe the methodology to perform a phenotypic screen on voltage-gated calcium channels across many different genetic coding variations and against small-molecule modulators. We first describe the procedures to establish inducible heterologous ion channel expression in HEK293 cells, where each cell incorporates one copy of a target protein cDNA-a step that is critical for producing stable and consistent expression of ion channels. We then describe the experimental and analytical methods for analyzing the function of ion channels using high-throughput planar electrophysiology.


Archive | 2014

Discovery of Potent and Highly Selective Inhibitors of GSK3b

W. Frank An; Andrew Germain; Joshua A. Bishop; Partha Nag; Shailesh R Metkar; Joshua Ketterman; Michelle Walk; Michel Weiwer; Xiulin Liu; Debasis Patnaik; Yan-Ling Zhang; Jennifer Gale; Wendy Zhao; Taner Kaya; Doug Barker; Florence F. Wagner; Ed B. Holson; Sivaraman Dandapani; José Luis Gutiérrez Pérez; Benito Munoz; Michelle Palmer; Jen Q. Pan; Stephen J. Haggarty; Stuart L Schreiber


Science Translational Medicine | 2018

Exploiting an Asp-Glu "switch" in glycogen synthase kinase 3 to design paralog-selective inhibitors for use in acute myeloid leukemia.

Florence F. Wagner; Lina Benajiba; Arthur J. Campbell; Michel Weiwer; Joshua R. Sacher; Jennifer Gale; Linda Ross; Alexandre Puissant; Gabriela Alexe; Amy Saur Conway; Morgan Back; Yana Pikman; Ilene Galinsky; Daniel J. DeAngelo; Richard Stone; Taner Kaya; Xi Shi; Matthew B. Robers; Thomas Machleidt; Jennifer Wilkinson; Olivier Hermine; Andrew L. Kung; Adam J. Stein; Damodharan Lakshminarasimhan; Michael T. Hemann; Edward M. Scolnick; Yan-Ling Zhang; Jen Q. Pan; Kimberly Stegmaier; Edward B. Holson


PMC | 2014

Functional implications of a psychiatric risk variant within CACNA1C in induced human neurons

Takao Yoshimizu; Jen Q. Pan; Alison E. Mungenast; Jon M. Madison; Susan C. Su; Joshua Ketterman; Dost Öngür; Donna L. McPhie; Bruce M. Cohen; Roy H. Perlis; Li-Huei Tsai


Archive | 2014

Figure 3, Dose-dependent Activity of the Probe (ML320) in Target (GSK3b, left) and Anti- Target (CDK5, right)

W. Frank An; Andrew Germain; Joshua A. Bishop; Partha Nag; Shailesh R Metkar; Joshua Ketterman; Michelle Walk; Michel Weiwer; Xiulin Liu; Debasis Patnaik; Yan-Ling Zhang; Jennifer Gale; Wendy Zhao; Taner Kaya; Doug Barker; Florence F. Wagner; Ed B. Holson; Sivaraman Dandapani; José Luis Gutiérrez Pérez; Benito Munoz; Michelle Palmer; Jen Q. Pan; Stephen J. Haggarty; Stuart L Schreiber

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Debasis Patnaik

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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