Kimberly M. Christian
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
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Publication
Featured researches published by Kimberly M. Christian.
Cell Stem Cell | 2016
Hengli Tang; Christy Hammack; Sarah C. Ogden; Zhexing Wen; Xuyu Qian; Yujing Li; Bing Yao; Jaehoon Shin; Feiran Zhang; Emily M. Lee; Kimberly M. Christian; Ruth Didier; Peng Jin; Hongjun Song; Guo Li Ming
The suspected link between infection by Zika virus (ZIKV), a re-emerging flavivirus, and microcephaly is an urgent global health concern. The direct target cells of ZIKV in the developing human fetus are not clear. Here we show that a strain of the ZIKV, MR766, serially passaged in monkey and mosquito cells efficiently infects human neural progenitor cells (hNPCs) derived from induced pluripotent stem cells. Infected hNPCs further release infectious ZIKV particles. Importantly, ZIKV infection increases cell death and dysregulates cell-cycle progression, resulting in attenuated hNPC growth. Global gene expression analysis of infected hNPCs reveals transcriptional dysregulation, notably of cell-cycle-related pathways. Our results identify hNPCs as a direct ZIKV target. In addition, we establish a tractable experimental model system to investigate the impact and mechanism of ZIKV on human brain development and provide a platform to screen therapeutic compounds.
Cell | 2016
Xuyu Qian; Ha Nam Nguyen; Mingxi M. Song; Christopher Hadiono; Sarah C. Ogden; Christy Hammack; Bing Yao; Gregory R. Hamersky; Fadi Jacob; Chun Zhong; Ki Jun Yoon; William Jeang; Li Lin; Yujing Li; Jai Thakor; Daniel A. Berg; Ce Zhang; Eunchai Kang; Michael Chickering; David Nauen; Cheng Ying Ho; Zhexing Wen; Kimberly M. Christian; Pei Yong Shi; Brady J. Maher; Hao Wu; Peng Jin; Hengli Tang; Hongjun Song; Guo Li Ming
Cerebral organoids, three-dimensional cultures that model organogenesis, provide a new platform to investigate human brain development. High cost, variability, and tissue heterogeneity limit their broad applications. Here, we developed a miniaturized spinning bioreactor (SpinΩ) to generate forebrain-specific organoids from human iPSCs. These organoids recapitulate key features of human cortical development, including progenitor zone organization, neurogenesis, gene expression, and, notably, a distinct human-specific outer radial glia cell layer. We also developed protocols for midbrain and hypothalamic organoids. Finally, we employed the forebrain organoid platform to model Zika virus (ZIKV) exposure. Quantitative analyses revealed preferential, productive infection of neural progenitors with either African or Asian ZIKV strains. ZIKV infection leads to increased cell death and reduced proliferation, resulting in decreased neuronal cell-layer volume resembling microcephaly. Together, our brain-region-specific organoids and SpinΩ provide an accessible and versatile platform for modeling human brain development and disease and for compound testing, including potential ZIKV antiviral drugs.
Nature | 2012
Juan Song; Chun Zhong; Michael A. Bonaguidi; Gerald J. Sun; Derek Y Hsu Y Hsu; Yan Gu; Konstantinos Meletis; Z. Josh Huang; Shaoyu Ge; Grigori Enikolopov; Karl Deisseroth; Bernhard Lüscher; Kimberly M. Christian; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song
Adult neurogenesis arises from neural stem cells within specialized niches. Neuronal activity and experience, presumably acting on this local niche, regulate multiple stages of adult neurogenesis, from neural progenitor proliferation to new neuron maturation, synaptic integration and survival. It is unknown whether local neuronal circuitry has a direct impact on adult neural stem cells. Here we show that, in the adult mouse hippocampus, nestin-expressing radial glia-like quiescent neural stem cells (RGLs) respond tonically to the neurotransmitter γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) by means of γ2-subunit-containing GABAA receptors. Clonal analysis of individual RGLs revealed a rapid exit from quiescence and enhanced symmetrical self-renewal after conditional deletion of γ2. RGLs are in close proximity to terminals expressing 67-kDa glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD67) of parvalbumin-expressing (PV+) interneurons and respond tonically to GABA released from these neurons. Functionally, optogenetic control of the activity of dentate PV+ interneurons, but not that of somatostatin-expressing or vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP)-expressing interneurons, can dictate the RGL choice between quiescence and activation. Furthermore, PV+ interneuron activation restores RGL quiescence after social isolation, an experience that induces RGL activation and symmetrical division. Our study identifies a niche cell–signal–receptor trio and a local circuitry mechanism that control the activation and self-renewal mode of quiescent adult neural stem cells in response to neuronal activity and experience.
Nature | 2014
Zhexing Wen; Ha Nam Nguyen; Ziyuan Guo; Matthew A. Lalli; Xinyuan Wang; Yijing Su; Nam Shik Kim; Ki Jun Yoon; Jaehoon Shin; Ce Zhang; Georgia Makri; David Nauen; Huimei Yu; Elmer Guzman; Cheng Hsuan Chiang; Nadine Yoritomo; Kozo Kaibuchi; Jizhong Zou; Kimberly M. Christian; Linzhao Cheng; Christopher A. Ross; Russell L. Margolis; Gong Chen; Kenneth S. Kosik; Hongjun Song; Guo Li Ming
Dysregulated neurodevelopment with altered structural and functional connectivity is believed to underlie many neuropsychiatric disorders, and ‘a disease of synapses’ is the major hypothesis for the biological basis of schizophrenia. Although this hypothesis has gained indirect support from human post-mortem brain analyses and genetic studies, little is known about the pathophysiology of synapses in patient neurons and how susceptibility genes for mental disorders could lead to synaptic deficits in humans. Genetics of most psychiatric disorders are extremely complex due to multiple susceptibility variants with low penetrance and variable phenotypes. Rare, multiply affected, large families in which a single genetic locus is probably responsible for conferring susceptibility have proven invaluable for the study of complex disorders. Here we generated induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells from four members of a family in which a frameshift mutation of disrupted in schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) co-segregated with major psychiatric disorders and we further produced different isogenic iPS cell lines via gene editing. We showed that mutant DISC1 causes synaptic vesicle release deficits in iPS-cell-derived forebrain neurons. Mutant DISC1 depletes wild-type DISC1 protein and, furthermore, dysregulates expression of many genes related to synapses and psychiatric disorders in human forebrain neurons. Our study reveals that a psychiatric disorder relevant mutation causes synapse deficits and transcriptional dysregulation in human neurons and our findings provide new insight into the molecular and synaptic etiopathology of psychiatric disorders.
Cell Stem Cell | 2015
Jaehoon Shin; Daniel A. Berg; Yunhua Zhu; Joseph Y. Shin; Juan Song; Michael A. Bonaguidi; Grigori Enikolopov; David Nauen; Kimberly M. Christian; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song
Somatic stem cells contribute to tissue ontogenesis, homeostasis, and regeneration through sequential processes. Systematic molecular analysis of stem cell behavior is challenging because classic approaches cannot resolve cellular heterogeneity or capture developmental dynamics. Here we provide a comprehensive resource of single-cell transcriptomes of adult hippocampal quiescent neural stem cells (qNSCs) and their immediate progeny. We further developed Waterfall, a bioinformatic pipeline, to statistically quantify singe-cell gene expression along a de novo reconstructed continuous developmental trajectory. Our study reveals molecular signatures of adult qNSCs, characterized by active niche signaling integration and low protein translation capacity. Our analyses further delineate molecular cascades underlying qNSC activation and neurogenesis initiation, exemplified by decreased extrinsic signaling capacity, primed translational machinery, and regulatory switches in transcription factors, metabolism, and energy sources. Our study reveals the molecular continuum underlying adult neurogenesis and illustrates how Waterfall can be used for single-cell omics analyses of various continuous biological processes.
Nature Medicine | 2016
Miao Xu; Emily M. Lee; Zhexing Wen; Yichen Cheng; Wei Kai Huang; Xuyu Qian; Julia Tcw; Jennifer Kouznetsova; Sarah C. Ogden; Christy Hammack; Fadi Jacob; Ha Nam Nguyen; Misha Itkin; Catherine Hanna; Paul Shinn; Chase Allen; Samuel G. Michael; Anton Simeonov; Wenwei Huang; Kimberly M. Christian; Alison Goate; Kristen J. Brennand; Ruili Huang; Menghang Xia; Guo Li Ming; Wei Zheng; Hongjun Song; Hengli Tang
In response to the current global health emergency posed by the Zika virus (ZIKV) outbreak and its link to microcephaly and other neurological conditions, we performed a drug repurposing screen of ∼6,000 compounds that included approved drugs, clinical trial drug candidates and pharmacologically active compounds; we identified compounds that either inhibit ZIKV infection or suppress infection-induced caspase-3 activity in different neural cells. A pan-caspase inhibitor, emricasan, inhibited ZIKV-induced increases in caspase-3 activity and protected human cortical neural progenitors in both monolayer and three-dimensional organoid cultures. Ten structurally unrelated inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinases inhibited ZIKV replication. Niclosamide, a category B anthelmintic drug approved by the US Food and Drug Administration, also inhibited ZIKV replication. Finally, combination treatments using one compound from each category (neuroprotective and antiviral) further increased protection of human neural progenitors and astrocytes from ZIKV-induced cell death. Our results demonstrate the efficacy of this screening strategy and identify lead compounds for anti-ZIKV drug development.
Cell | 2012
Ju Young Kim; Cindy Y. Liu; Fengyu Zhang; Xin Duan; Zhexing Wen; Juan Song; Emer L. Feighery; Bai Lu; Dan Rujescu; David St. Clair; Kimberly M. Christian; Joseph H. Callicott; Daniel R. Weinberger; Hongjun Song; Guo Li Ming
How extrinsic stimuli and intrinsic factors interact to regulate continuous neurogenesis in the postnatal mammalian brain is unknown. Here we show that regulation of dendritic development of newborn neurons by Disrupted-in-Schizophrenia 1 (DISC1) during adult hippocampal neurogenesis requires neurotransmitter GABA-induced, NKCC1-dependent depolarization through a convergence onto the AKT-mTOR pathway. In contrast, DISC1 fails to modulate early-postnatal hippocampal neurogenesis when conversion of GABA-induced depolarization to hyperpolarization is accelerated. Extending the period of GABA-induced depolarization or maternal deprivation stress restores DISC1-dependent dendritic regulation through mTOR pathway during early-postnatal hippocampal neurogenesis. Furthermore, DISC1 and NKCC1 interact epistatically to affect risk for schizophrenia in two independent case control studies. Our study uncovers an interplay between intrinsic DISC1 and extrinsic GABA signaling, two schizophrenia susceptibility pathways, in controlling neurogenesis and suggests critical roles of developmental tempo and experience in manifesting the impact of susceptibility genes on neuronal development and risk for mental disorders.
Nature Neuroscience | 2013
Juan Song; Jiaqi Sun; Jonathan Moss; Zhexing Wen; Gerald J. Sun; Derek Y Hsu Y Hsu; Chun Zhong; Heydar Davoudi; Kimberly M. Christian; Nicolas Toni; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song
Using immunohistology, electron microscopy, electrophysiology and optogenetics, we found that proliferating adult mouse hippocampal neural precursors received immature GABAergic synaptic inputs from parvalbumin-expressing interneurons. Recently shown to suppress adult quiescent neural stem cell activation, parvalbumin interneuron activation promoted newborn neuronal progeny survival and development. Our results suggest a niche mechanism involving parvalbumin interneurons that couples local circuit activity to the diametric regulation of two critical early phases of adult hippocampal neurogenesis.
Cell Stem Cell | 2013
Mi Hyeon Jang; Michael A. Bonaguidi; Yasuji Kitabatake; Jiaqi Sun; Juan Song; Eunchai Kang; Heechul Jun; Chun Zhong; Yijing Su; Junjie U. Guo; Marie Xun Wang; Kurt A. Sailor; Ju Young Kim; Yuan Gao; Kimberly M. Christian; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song
Adult neurogenesis, the process of generating mature neurons from adult neural stem cells, proceeds concurrently with ongoing neuronal circuit activity and is modulated by various physiological and pathological stimuli. The niche mechanism underlying the activity-dependent regulation of the sequential steps of adult neurogenesis remains largely unknown. Here, we report that neuronal activity decreases the expression of secreted frizzled-related protein 3 (sFRP3), a naturally secreted Wnt inhibitor highly expressed by adult dentate gyrus granule neurons. Sfrp3 deletion activates quiescent radial neural stem cells and promotes newborn neuron maturation, dendritic growth, and dendritic spine formation in the adult mouse hippocampus. Furthermore, sfrp3 reduction is essential for activity-induced adult neural progenitor proliferation and the acceleration of new neuron development. Our study identifies sFRP3 as an inhibitory niche factor from local mature dentate granule neurons that regulates multiple phases of adult hippocampal neurogenesis and suggests an interesting activity-dependent mechanism governing adult neurogenesis via the acute release of tonic inhibition.
Developmental Neurobiology | 2012
Juan Song; Kimberly M. Christian; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song
The adult hippocampus is one of the primary neural structures involved in memory formation. In addition to synapse‐specific modifications thought to encode information at the subcellular level, changes in the intrahippocampal neuro‐populational activity and dynamics at the circuit‐level may contribute substantively to the functional capacity of this region. Within the hippocampus, the dentate gyrus has the potential to make a preferential contribution to neural circuit modification owing to the continuous addition of new granule cell population. The integration of newborn neurons into pre‐existing circuitry is hypothesized to deliver a unique processing capacity, as opposed to merely replacing dying granule cells. Recent studies have begun to assess the impact of hippocampal neurogenesis by examining the extent to which adult‐born neurons participate in hippocampal networks, including when newborn neurons become engaged in ongoing network activity and how they modulate circuit dynamics via their unique intrinsic physiological properties. Understanding the contributions of adult neurogenesis to hippocampal function will provide new insight into the fundamental aspects of brain plasticity, which can be used to guide therapeutic interventions to replaceneural populations damaged by disease or injury.