Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Kurt A. Sailor is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Kurt A. Sailor.


Nature | 2006

GABA regulates synaptic integration of newly generated neurons in the adult brain

Shaoyu Ge; Eyleen L. K. Goh; Kurt A. Sailor; Yasuji Kitabatake; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song

Adult neurogenesis, the birth and integration of new neurons from adult neural stem cells, is a striking form of structural plasticity and highlights the regenerative capacity of the adult mammalian brain. Accumulating evidence suggests that neuronal activity regulates adult neurogenesis and that new neurons contribute to specific brain functions. The mechanism that regulates the integration of newly generated neurons into the pre-existing functional circuitry in the adult brain is unknown. Here we show that newborn granule cells in the dentate gyrus of the adult hippocampus are tonically activated by ambient GABA (γ-aminobutyric acid) before being sequentially innervated by GABA- and glutamate-mediated synaptic inputs. GABA, the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the adult brain, initially exerts an excitatory action on newborn neurons owing to their high cytoplasmic chloride ion content. Conversion of GABA-induced depolarization (excitation) into hyperpolarization (inhibition) in newborn neurons leads to marked defects in their synapse formation and dendritic development in vivo. Our study identifies an essential role for GABA in the synaptic integration of newly generated neurons in the adult brain, and suggests an unexpected mechanism for activity-dependent regulation of adult neurogenesis, in which newborn neurons may sense neuronal network activity through tonic and phasic GABA activation.


Science Translational Medicine | 2012

A Dense Poly(Ethylene Glycol) Coating Improves Penetration of Large Polymeric Nanoparticles Within Brain Tissue

Elizabeth Nance; Graeme F. Woodworth; Kurt A. Sailor; Ting Yu Shih; Qingguo Xu; Ganesh Swaminathan; Dennis Xiang; Charles G. Eberhart; Justin Hanes

Nanoparticles densely coated with poly(ethylene glycol) rapidly penetrate within mouse, rat, and human brain parenchyma. Brain-Penetrating Particles It was once thought that particles larger than 60 nm would be stuck in the brain extracellular space (ECS), unable to penetrate further. This has been a particularly bothersome rule of thumb for the design of drug delivery systems that rely on larger particles or viruses to carry therapeutics. Now, Nance and colleagues have challenged this hypothesis by exploring particles that are >60 nm, discovering that large particles, with the right coating, can indeed diffuse throughout the ECS of both rat and human brains. The authors first coated fluorescent polystyrene particles with a dense layer of the bio-inert polymer poly(ethylene glycol) (commonly known as PEG) or with a carboxyl moiety (COOH). Using a multiple-particle tracking method, the authors reported that 114-nm PEG-coated particles penetrated ex vivo human brain tissue with ease, whereas similarly sized COOH-coated particles were stopped in their tracks. Nance et al. attributed this difference to the dense, near-neutral PEG coating, claiming that it allows the particles to experience the brain ECS more as a fluid than an impermeable solid. The importance of the PEG coating was further confirmed in living mice, where real-time video microscopy revealed that the 100-nm PEG-coated particles penetrated farther into the mouse brain than the 100-nm COOH-coated ones. With a brain ECS pore size cutoff >100 nm, many doors can be opened in nanomedicine. Larger particles permit the inclusion of higher quantities of drug, which can be distributed for longer periods of time to more areas within the brain. Nance and colleagues preliminarily demonstrated such drug delivery capabilities using paclitaxel-loaded, 85-nm biodegradable nanoparticles, showing that only particles with the PEG coating could diffuse rapidly throughout rat brain tissue ex vivo. Although these densely coated particles may make drug delivery more efficient, they have yet to be tested in a disease model to confirm efficacy over conventional nanoparticles. Although currently limited to direct infusion into the brain, for eventual use in humans, it is hoped that they may be administered systemically for treating diseases with an impaired blood-brain barrier. Prevailing opinion suggests that only substances up to 64 nm in diameter can move at appreciable rates through the brain extracellular space (ECS). This size range is large enough to allow diffusion of signaling molecules, nutrients, and metabolic waste products, but too small to allow efficient penetration of most particulate drug delivery systems and viruses carrying therapeutic genes, thereby limiting effectiveness of many potential therapies. We analyzed the movements of nanoparticles of various diameters and surface coatings within fresh human and rat brain tissue ex vivo and mouse brain in vivo. Nanoparticles as large as 114 nm in diameter diffused within the human and rat brain, but only if they were densely coated with poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG). Using these minimally adhesive PEG-coated particles, we estimated that human brain tissue ECS has some pores larger than 200 nm and that more than one-quarter of all pores are ≥100 nm. These findings were confirmed in vivo in mice, where 40- and 100-nm, but not 200-nm, nanoparticles spread rapidly within brain tissue, only if densely coated with PEG. Similar results were observed in rat brain tissue with paclitaxel-loaded biodegradable nanoparticles of similar size (85 nm) and surface properties. The ability to achieve brain penetration with larger nanoparticles is expected to allow more uniform, longer-lasting, and effective delivery of drugs within the brain, and may find use in the treatment of brain tumors, stroke, neuroinflammation, and other brain diseases where the blood-brain barrier is compromised or where local delivery strategies are feasible.


The Journal of Physiology | 2008

Synaptic integration and plasticity of new neurons in the adult hippocampus

Shaoyu Ge; Kurt A. Sailor; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song

Adult neurogenesis, a developmental process encompassing the birth of new neurons from adult neural stem cells and their integration into the existing neuronal circuitry, highlights the plasticity and regenerative capacity of the adult mammalian brain. Substantial evidence suggests essential roles of newborn neurons in specific brain functions; yet it remains unclear how these new neurons make their unique contribution. Recently, a series of studies have delineated the basic steps of the adult neurogenesis process and shown that many of the distinct steps are dynamically regulated by the activity of the existing circuitry. Here we review recent findings on the synaptic integration and plasticity of newborn neurons in the adult hippocampus, including the basic biological process, unique characteristics, critical periods, and activity‐dependent regulation by the neurotransmitters GABA and glutamate. We propose that adult neurogenesis represents not merely a replacement mechanism for lost neurons, but also an ongoing developmental process in the adult brain that offers an expanded capacity for plasticity for shaping the existing circuitry in response to experience throughout life.


Nature Neuroscience | 2010

Chordin-induced lineage plasticity of adult SVZ neuroblasts after demyelination

Beata Jablonska; Adan Aguirre; Matthew Raymond; Gábor Szabó; Yasuji Kitabatake; Kurt A. Sailor; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song; Vittorio Gallo

The mechanisms that regulate the developmental potential of adult neural progenitor populations under physiological and pathological conditions remain poorly defined. Glutamic acid decarboxylase 65 (GAD65)- and Doublecortin (Dcx)-expressing cells constitute major progenitor populations in the adult mouse subventricular zone (SVZ). Under normal physiological conditions, SVZ-derived GAD65-positive and Dcx-positive cells expressed the transcription factor Pax6 and migrated along the rostral migratory stream to the olfactory bulb to generate interneurons. After lysolecithin-induced demyelination of corpus callosum, however, these cells altered their molecular and cellular properties and migratory path. Demyelination upregulated chordin in the SVZ, which redirected GAD65-positive and Dcx-positive progenitors from neuronal to glial fates, generating new oligodendrocytes in the corpus callosum. Our findings suggest that the lineage plasticity of SVZ progenitor cells could be a potential therapeutic strategy for diseased or injured brain.


Nature Neuroscience | 2005

XTRPC1-dependent chemotropic guidance of neuronal growth cones

Sangwoo Shim; Eyleen L. Goh; Shaoyu Ge; Kurt A. Sailor; Joseph P. Yuan; H. Llewelyn Roderick; Martin D. Bootman; Paul F. Worley; Hongjun Song; Guo Li Ming

Calcium arising through release from intracellular stores and from influx across the plasma membrane is essential for signalling by specific guidance cues and by factors that inhibit axon regeneration. The mediators of calcium influx in these cases are largely unknown. Transient receptor potential channels (TRPCs) belong to a superfamily of Ca2+-permeable, receptor-operated channels that have important roles in sensing and responding to changes in the local environment. Here we report that XTRPC1, a Xenopus homolog of mammalian TRPC1, is required for proper growth cone turning responses of Xenopus spinal neurons to microscopic gradients of netrin-1, brain-derived neurotrophic factor and myelin-associated glycoprotein, but not to semaphorin 3A. Furthermore, XTRPC1 is required for midline guidance of axons of commissural interneurons in the developing Xenopus spinal cord. Thus, members of the TRPC family may serve as a key mediator for the Ca2+ influx that regulates axon guidance during development and inhibits axon regeneration in adulthood.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Development of hippocampal mossy fiber synaptic outputs by new neurons in the adult brain

Regina L. Faulkner; Mi Hyeon Jang; Xiao Bo Liu; Xin Duan; Kurt A. Sailor; Ju Young Kim; Shaoyu Ge; Edward G. Jones; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song; Hwai Jong Cheng

New neurons are continuously generated in restricted regions of the adult mammalian brain. Although these adult-born neurons have been shown to receive synaptic inputs, little is known about their synaptic outputs. Using retrovirus-mediated birth-dating and labeling in combination with serial section electron microscopic reconstruction, we report that mossy fiber en passant boutons of adult-born dentate granule cells form initial synaptic contacts with CA3 pyramidal cells within 2 weeks after their birth and reach morphologic maturity within 8 weeks in the adult hippocampus. Knockdown of Disrupted-in-Schizophrenia-1 (DISC1) in newborn granule cells leads to defects in axonal targeting and development of synaptic outputs in the adult brain. Together with previous reports of synaptic inputs, these results demonstrate that adult-born neurons are fully integrated into the existing neuronal circuitry. Our results also indicate a role for DISC1 in presynaptic development and may have implications for the etiology of schizophrenia and related mental disorders.


Cell Stem Cell | 2013

Secreted frizzled-related protein 3 regulates activity-dependent adult hippocampal neurogenesis

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.


Neuron | 2011

Interaction between FEZ1 and DISC1 in Regulation of Neuronal Development and Risk for Schizophrenia

Eunchai Kang; Katherine E. Burdick; Ju Young Kim; Xin Duan; Junjie U. Guo; Kurt A. Sailor; Dhong Eun Jung; Sundar Ganesan; Sungkyung Choi; Dennis Pradhan; Bai Lu; Dimitrios Avramopoulos; Kimberly M. Christian; Anil K. Malhotra; Hongjun Song; Guo Li Ming

Disrupted-in Schizophrenia 1 (DISC1), a susceptibility gene for major mental disorders, encodes a scaffold protein that has a multifaceted impact on neuronal development. How DISC1 regulates different aspects of neuronal development is not well understood. Here, we show that Fasciculation and Elongation Protein Zeta-1 (FEZ1) interacts with DISC1 to synergistically regulate dendritic growth of newborn neurons in the adult mouse hippocampus, and that this pathway complements a parallel DISC1-NDEL1 interaction that regulates cell positioning and morphogenesis of newborn neurons. Furthermore, genetic association analysis of two independent cohorts of schizophrenia patients and healthy controls reveals an epistatic interaction between FEZ1 and DISC1, but not between FEZ1 and NDEL1, for risk of schizophrenia. Our findings support a model in which DISC1 regulates distinct aspects of neuronal development through its interaction with different intracellular partners and such epistasis may contribute to increased risk for schizophrenia.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Seamless Reconstruction of Intact Adult-Born Neurons by Serial End-Block Imaging Reveals Complex Axonal Guidance and Development in the Adult Hippocampus

Gerald J. Sun; Kurt A. Sailor; Qasim A. Mahmood; Nikhil Chavali; Kimberly M. Christian; Hongjun Song; Guo Li Ming

In the adult mammalian hippocampus, newborn dentate granule cells are continuously integrated into the existing circuitry and contribute to specific brain functions. Little is known about the axonal development of these newborn neurons in the adult brain due to technological challenges that have prohibited large-scale reconstruction of long, thin, and complex axonal processes within the mature nervous system. Here, using a new serial end-block imaging (SEBI) technique, we seamlessly reconstructed axonal and dendritic processes of intact individual retrovirus-labeled newborn granule cells at different developmental stages in the young adult mouse hippocampus. We found that adult-born dentate granule cells exhibit tortuous, yet highly stereotyped, axonal projections to CA3 hippocampal subregions. Primary axonal projections of cohorts of new neurons born around the same time organize into laminar patterns with staggered terminations that stack along the septo-temporal hippocampal axis. Analysis of individual newborn neuron development further defined an initial phase of rapid axonal and dendritic growth within 21 d after newborn neuron birth, followed by minimal growth of primary axonal and whole dendritic processes through the last time point examined at 77 d. Our results suggest that axonal development and targeting is a highly orchestrated, precise process in the adult brain. These findings demonstrate a striking regenerative capacity of the mature CNS to support long-distance growth and guidance of neuronal axons. Our SEBI approach can be broadly applied for analysis of intact, complex neuronal projections in limitless tissue volume.


Stem Cells | 2012

Subventricular Zone Localized Irradiation Affects the Generation of Proliferating Neural Precursor Cells and the Migration of Neuroblasts

Pragathi Achanta; Vivian Capilla-Gonzalez; David Purger; Juvenal Reyes; Kurt A. Sailor; Hongjun Song; Jose Manuel Garcia-Verdugo; Oscar Gonzalez-Perez; Eric W. Ford; Alfredo Quiñones-Hinojosa

Radiation therapy is a part of the standard treatment for brain tumor patients, often resulting in irreversible neuropsychological deficits. These deficits may be due to permanent damage to the neural stem cell (NSC) niche, damage to local neural progenitors, or neurotoxicity. Using a computed tomography‐guided localized radiation technique, we studied the effects of radiation on NSC proliferation and neuroblast migration in the mouse brain. Localized irradiation of the subventricular zone (SVZ) eliminated the proliferating neural precursor cells and migrating neuroblasts. After irradiation, type B cells in the SVZ lacked the ability to generate migrating neuroblasts. Neuroblasts from the unirradiated posterior SVZ did not follow their normal migratory path through the irradiated anterior SVZ. Our results indicate that the migrating neuroblasts were not replenished, despite the presence of type B cells in the SVZ post‐irradiation. This study provides novel insights into the effects of localized SVZ radiation on neurogenesis and cell migration that may potentially lead to the development of new radiotherapy strategies to minimize damage to NSCs and neuroblast migration. STEM CELLS2012;30:2548–2560

Collaboration


Dive into the Kurt A. Sailor's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hongjun Song

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Guo Li Ming

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Shaoyu Ge

Stony Brook University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ju Young Kim

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kimberly M. Christian

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eunchai Kang

Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge