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Dive into the research topics where Kristen J. Brennand is active.

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Featured researches published by Kristen J. Brennand.


Nature | 2011

Modelling schizophrenia using human induced pluripotent stem cells

Kristen J. Brennand; Anthony Simone; Jessica Jou; Chelsea Gelboin-Burkhart; Ngoc Tran; Sarah Sangar; Yan Li; Yangling Mu; Gong Chen; Diana Yu; Shane McCarthy; Jonathan Sebat; Fred H. Gage

Schizophrenia (SCZD) is a debilitating neurological disorder with a world-wide prevalence of 1%; there is a strong genetic component, with an estimated heritability of 80–85%. Although post-mortem studies have revealed reduced brain volume, cell size, spine density and abnormal neural distribution in the prefrontal cortex and hippocampus of SCZD brain tissue and neuropharmacological studies have implicated dopaminergic, glutamatergic and GABAergic activity in SCZD, the cell types affected in SCZD and the molecular mechanisms underlying the disease state remain unclear. To elucidate the cellular and molecular defects of SCZD, we directly reprogrammed fibroblasts from SCZD patients into human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) and subsequently differentiated these disorder-specific hiPSCs into neurons (Supplementary Fig. 1). SCZD hiPSC neurons showed diminished neuronal connectivity in conjunction with decreased neurite number, PSD95-protein levels and glutamate receptor expression. Gene expression profiles of SCZD hiPSC neurons identified altered expression of many components of the cyclic AMP and WNT signalling pathways. Key cellular and molecular elements of the SCZD phenotype were ameliorated following treatment of SCZD hiPSC neurons with the antipsychotic loxapine. To date, hiPSC neuronal pathology has only been demonstrated in diseases characterized by both the loss of function of a single gene product and rapid disease progression in early childhood. We now report hiPSC neuronal phenotypes and gene expression changes associated with SCZD, a complex genetic psychiatric disorder.


Science | 2013

Mosaic Copy Number Variation in Human Neurons

Michael J. McConnell; Michael R. Lindberg; Kristen J. Brennand; Julia C. Piper; Thierry Voet; Chris Cowing-Zitron; Svetlana Shumilina; Roger S. Lasken; Joris Vermeesch; Ira M. Hall; Fred H. Gage

Not All Neurons Are Alike As life proceeds, many cells acquire individualized mutations. In the immune system, genome rearrangements generate useful antibody diversity. McConnell et al. (p. 632; see the Perspective by Macosko and McCarroll) now show that human neurons also diversify. Neurons taken from postmortem human frontal cortex tissue and neurons derived from induced pluripotent stem cell differentiation in vitro showed surprising diversity in individual cell genomes. Up to 41% of the frontal cortex neurons had copy number variations—no two alike—with deletions more common than duplications. Single-cell genomics reveals that individual adult human neurons acquire diverse individual genomes. [Also see Perspective by Macosko and McCarroll] We used single-cell genomic approaches to map DNA copy number variation (CNV) in neurons obtained from human induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) lines and postmortem human brains. We identified aneuploid neurons, as well as numerous subchromosomal CNVs in euploid neurons. Neurotypic hiPSC-derived neurons had larger CNVs than fibroblasts, and several large deletions were found in hiPSC-derived neurons but not in matched neural progenitor cells. Single-cell sequencing of endogenous human frontal cortex neurons revealed that 13 to 41% of neurons have at least one megabase-scale de novo CNV, that deletions are twice as common as duplications, and that a subset of neurons have highly aberrant genomes marked by multiple alterations. Our results show that mosaic CNV is abundant in human neurons.


Nature Medicine | 2016

Identification of small-molecule inhibitors of Zika virus infection and induced neural cell death via a drug repurposing screen

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.


Molecular Psychiatry | 2015

Phenotypic differences in hiPSC NPCs derived from patients with schizophrenia.

Kristen J. Brennand; Jeffrey N. Savas; Yongsung Kim; Ngoc Tran; Anthony Simone; Kazue Hashimoto-Torii; Kristin G. Beaumont; H. J. Kim; Aaron Topol; Ian Ladran; M. Abdelrahim; B. Matikainen-Ankney; Shih Hui Chao; Milan Mrksich; Pasko Rakic; Gang Fang; Bin Zhang; John R. Yates; Fred H. Gage

Consistent with recent reports indicating that neurons differentiated in vitro from human-induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs) are immature relative to those in the human brain, gene expression comparisons of our hiPSC-derived neurons to the Allen BrainSpan Atlas indicate that they most resemble fetal brain tissue. This finding suggests that, rather than modeling the late features of schizophrenia (SZ), hiPSC-based models may be better suited for the study of disease predisposition. We now report that a significant fraction of the gene signature of SZ hiPSC-derived neurons is conserved in SZ hiPSC neural progenitor cells (NPCs). We used two independent discovery-based approaches—microarray gene expression and stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture (SILAC) quantitative proteomic mass spectrometry analyses—to identify cellular phenotypes in SZ hiPSC NPCs from four SZ patients. From our findings that SZ hiPSC NPCs show abnormal gene expression and protein levels related to cytoskeletal remodeling and oxidative stress, we predicted, and subsequently observed, aberrant migration and increased oxidative stress in SZ hiPSC NPCs. These reproducible NPC phenotypes were identified through scalable assays that can be applied to expanded cohorts of SZ patients, making them a potentially valuable tool with which to study the developmental mechanisms contributing to SZ.


Nature | 2015

Differential responses to lithium in hyperexcitable neurons from patients with bipolar disorder

Jerome Mertens; Qiu-Wen Wang; Yongsung Kim; Diana X. Yu; Son Pham; Bo Yang; Yi Zheng; Kenneth E. Diffenderfer; Jian Zhang; Sheila Soltani; Tameji Eames; Simon T. Schafer; Leah Boyer; Maria C. Marchetto; John I. Nurnberger; Joseph R. Calabrese; Ketil J. Oedegaard; Michael McCarthy; Peter P. Zandi; Martin Alda; Caroline M. Nievergelt; Shuangli Mi; Kristen J. Brennand; John R. Kelsoe; Fred H. Gage; Jun Yao

Bipolar disorder is a complex neuropsychiatric disorder that is characterized by intermittent episodes of mania and depression; without treatment, 15% of patients commit suicide. Hence, it has been ranked by the World Health Organization as a top disorder of morbidity and lost productivity. Previous neuropathological studies have revealed a series of alterations in the brains of patients with bipolar disorder or animal models, such as reduced glial cell number in the prefrontal cortex of patients, upregulated activities of the protein kinase A and C pathways and changes in neurotransmission. However, the roles and causation of these changes in bipolar disorder have been too complex to exactly determine the pathology of the disease. Furthermore, although some patients show remarkable improvement with lithium treatment for yet unknown reasons, others are refractory to lithium treatment. Therefore, developing an accurate and powerful biological model for bipolar disorder has been a challenge. The introduction of induced pluripotent stem-cell (iPSC) technology has provided a new approach. Here we have developed an iPSC model for human bipolar disorder and investigated the cellular phenotypes of hippocampal dentate gyrus-like neurons derived from iPSCs of patients with bipolar disorder. Guided by RNA sequencing expression profiling, we have detected mitochondrial abnormalities in young neurons from patients with bipolar disorder by using mitochondrial assays; in addition, using both patch-clamp recording and somatic Ca2+ imaging, we have observed hyperactive action-potential firing. This hyperexcitability phenotype of young neurons in bipolar disorder was selectively reversed by lithium treatment only in neurons derived from patients who also responded to lithium treatment. Therefore, hyperexcitability is one early endophenotype of bipolar disorder, and our model of iPSCs in this disease might be useful in developing new therapies and drugs aimed at its clinical treatment.


Nature Neuroscience | 2016

Gene expression elucidates functional impact of polygenic risk for schizophrenia.

Menachem Fromer; Panos Roussos; Solveig K. Sieberts; Jessica S. Johnson; David H. Kavanagh; Thanneer M. Perumal; Douglas M. Ruderfer; Edwin C. Oh; Aaron Topol; Hardik Shah; Lambertus Klei; Robin Kramer; Dalila Pinto; Zeynep H. Gümüş; A. Ercument Cicek; Kristen Dang; Andrew Browne; Cong Lu; Lu Xie; Ben Readhead; Eli A. Stahl; Jianqiu Xiao; Mahsa Parvizi; Tymor Hamamsy; John F. Fullard; Ying-Chih Wang; Milind Mahajan; Jonathan Derry; Joel T. Dudley; Scott E. Hemby

Over 100 genetic loci harbor schizophrenia-associated variants, yet how these variants confer liability is uncertain. The CommonMind Consortium sequenced RNA from dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of people with schizophrenia (N = 258) and control subjects (N = 279), creating a resource of gene expression and its genetic regulation. Using this resource, ∼20% of schizophrenia loci have variants that could contribute to altered gene expression and liability. In five loci, only a single gene was involved: FURIN, TSNARE1, CNTN4, CLCN3 or SNAP91. Altering expression of FURIN, TSNARE1 or CNTN4 changed neurodevelopment in zebrafish; knockdown of FURIN in human neural progenitor cells yielded abnormal migration. Of 693 genes showing significant case-versus-control differential expression, their fold changes were ≤ 1.33, and an independent cohort yielded similar results. Gene co-expression implicates a network relevant for schizophrenia. Our findings show that schizophrenia is polygenic and highlight the utility of this resource for mechanistic interpretations of genetic liability for brain diseases.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2011

Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and neurological disease modeling: progress and promises

Maria C. Marchetto; Kristen J. Brennand; Leah Boyer; Fred H. Gage

The systematic generation of neurons from patients with neurological disorders can provide important insights into disease pathology, progression and mechanism. This review will discuss recent progress in modeling neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental diseases using induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) and highlight some of the current challenges in the field. Combined with other technologies previously used to study brain disease, iPSC modeling has the promise to influence modern medicine on several fronts: early diagnosis, drug development and effective treatment.


Stem cell reports | 2014

Modeling Hippocampal Neurogenesis Using Human Pluripotent Stem Cells

Diana Xuan Yu; Francesco Paolo Di Giorgio; Jun Yao; Maria C. Marchetto; Kristen J. Brennand; Rebecca Wright; Arianna Mei; Lauren Mchenry; David Lisuk; Jaeson Michael Grasmick; Pedro Silberman; Giovanna Silberman; Roberto Jappelli; Fred H. Gage

Summary The availability of human pluripotent stem cells (hPSCs) offers the opportunity to generate lineage-specific cells to investigate mechanisms of human diseases specific to brain regions. Here, we report a differentiation paradigm for hPSCs that enriches for hippocampal dentate gyrus (DG) granule neurons. This differentiation paradigm recapitulates the expression patterns of key developmental genes during hippocampal neurogenesis, exhibits characteristics of neuronal network maturation, and produces PROX1+ neurons that functionally integrate into the DG. Because hippocampal neurogenesis has been implicated in schizophrenia (SCZD), we applied our protocol to SCZD patient-derived human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSCs). We found deficits in the generation of DG granule neurons from SCZD hiPSC-derived hippocampal NPCs with lowered levels of NEUROD1, PROX1, and TBR1, reduced neuronal activity, and reduced levels of spontaneous neurotransmitter release. Our approach offers important insights into the neurodevelopmental aspects of SCZD and may be a promising tool for drug screening and personalized medicine.


Cell Reports | 2014

A Role for Noncoding Variation in Schizophrenia

Panos Roussos; Amanda C. Mitchell; Georgios Voloudakis; John F. Fullard; Venu Pothula; Jonathan Tsang; Eli A. Stahl; Anastasios Georgakopoulos; Douglas M. Ruderfer; Alexander Charney; Yukinori Okada; Katherine A. Siminovitch; Jane Worthington; Leonid Padyukov; Lars Klareskog; Peter K. Gregersen; Robert M. Plenge; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Menachem Fromer; Shaun Purcell; Kristen J. Brennand; Nikolaos K. Robakis; Eric E. Schadt; Schahram Akbarian; Pamela Sklar

A large portion of common variant loci associated with genetic risk for schizophrenia reside within noncoding sequence of unknown function. Here, we demonstrate promoter and enhancer enrichment in schizophrenia variants associated with expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL). The enrichment is greater when functional annotations derived from the human brain are used relative to peripheral tissues. Regulatory trait concordance analysis ranked genes within schizophrenia genome-wide significant loci for a potential functional role, based on colocalization of a risk SNP, eQTL, and regulatory element sequence. We identified potential physical interactions of noncontiguous proximal and distal regulatory elements. This was verified in prefrontal cortex and -induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons for the L-type calcium channel (CACNA1C) risk locus. Our findings point to a functional link between schizophrenia-associated noncoding SNPs and 3D genome architecture associated with chromosomal loopings and transcriptional regulation in the brain.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2011

Investigating synapse formation and function using human pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons

Jieun Kim; Matthew L. O'Sullivan; Christopher Sanchez; Minju Hwang; Mason A. Israel; Kristen J. Brennand; Thomas J. Deerinck; Lawrence S.B. Goldstein; Fred H. Gage; Mark H. Ellisman; Anirvan Ghosh

A major goal of stem-cell research is to identify conditions that reliably regulate their differentiation into specific cell types. This goal is particularly important for human stem cells if they are to be used for in vivo transplantation or as a platform for drug development. Here we describe the establishment of procedures to direct the differentiation of human embryonic stem cells and human induced pluripotent stem cells into forebrain neurons that are capable of forming synaptic connections. In addition, HEK293T cells expressing Neuroligin (NLGN) 3 and NLGN4, but not those containing autism-associated mutations, are able to induce presynaptic differentiation in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons. We show that a mutant NLGN4 containing an in-frame deletion is unable to localize correctly to the cell surface when overexpressed and fails to enhance synapse formation in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons. These findings establish human pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons as a viable model for the study of synaptic differentiation and function under normal and disorder-associated conditions.

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Fred H. Gage

Salk Institute for Biological Studies

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Brigham J. Hartley

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Ngoc Tran

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Aaron Topol

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Schahram Akbarian

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Erin Flaherty

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Gabriel E. Hoffman

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Ian Ladran

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Judith L. Rapoport

National Institutes of Health

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Pamela Sklar

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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