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Dive into the research topics where Pamela J. Kennedy is active.

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Featured researches published by Pamela J. Kennedy.


Science | 2010

Cell type-specific loss of BDNF signaling mimics optogenetic control of cocaine reward.

Mary Kay Lobo; Herbert E. Covington; Dipesh Chaudhury; Allyson K. Friedman; HaoSheng Sun; Diane Damez-Werno; David M. Dietz; Samir Zaman; Ja Wook Koo; Pamela J. Kennedy; Ezekiell Mouzon; Murtaza Mogri; Rachael L. Neve; Karl Deisseroth; Ming-Hu Han; Eric J. Nestler

BDNF, Dopamine, and Cocaine Reward The nucleus accumbens plays a crucial role in mediating the rewarding effects of drugs of abuse. Different subpopulations of nucleus accumbens projection neurons exhibit balanced but antagonistic influences on their downstream outputs and behaviors. However, their roles in regulating reward behaviors remains unclear. Lobo et al. (p. 385) evaluated the roles of the two subtypes of nucleus accumbens projection neurons, those expressing dopamine D1 versus D2 receptors, in cocaine reward. Deleting TrkB, the receptor for brain-derived neurotrophic factor, selectively in each cell type, and selectively controlling the firing of each cell type using optogenetic techniques allowed for confirmation that D1- and D2-containing neurons produced opposite effects on cocaine reward. Selective manipulation of neuron subtypes produces opposite effects on behavioral responses to cocaine. The nucleus accumbens is a key mediator of cocaine reward, but the distinct roles of the two subpopulations of nucleus accumbens projection neurons, those expressing dopamine D1 versus D2 receptors, are poorly understood. We show that deletion of TrkB, the brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) receptor, selectively from D1+ or D2+ neurons oppositely affects cocaine reward. Because loss of TrkB in D2+ neurons increases their neuronal excitability, we next used optogenetic tools to control selectively the firing rate of D1+ and D2+ nucleus accumbens neurons and studied consequent effects on cocaine reward. Activation of D2+ neurons, mimicking the loss of TrkB, suppresses cocaine reward, with opposite effects induced by activation of D1+ neurons. These results provide insight into the molecular control of D1+ and D2+ neuronal activity as well as the circuit-level contribution of these cell types to cocaine reward.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2013

Epigenetics of the Depressed Brain: Role of Histone Acetylation and Methylation

HaoSheng Sun; Pamela J. Kennedy; Eric J. Nestler

Major depressive disorder is a chronic, remitting syndrome involving widely distributed circuits in the brain. Stable alterations in gene expression that contribute to structural and functional changes in multiple brain regions are implicated in the heterogeneity and pathogenesis of the illness. Epigenetic events that alter chromatin structure to regulate programs of gene expression have been associated with depression-related behavior, antidepressant action, and resistance to depression or ‘resilience’ in animal models, with increasing evidence for similar mechanisms occurring in postmortem brains of depressed humans. In this review, we discuss recent advances in our understanding of epigenetic contributions to depression, in particular the role of histone acetylation and methylation, which are revealing novel mechanistic insight into the syndrome that may aid in the development of novel targets for depression treatment.


Nature Neuroscience | 2012

HDAC2 regulates atypical antipsychotic responses through the modulation of mGlu2 promoter activity.

Mitsumasa Kurita; Terrell Holloway; Aintzane García-Bea; Alexey Kozlenkov; Allyson K. Friedman; José L. Moreno; Mitra Heshmati; Sam A. Golden; Pamela J. Kennedy; Nagahide Takahashi; David M. Dietz; Giuseppe Mocci; Ane M. Gabilondo; James B. Hanks; Adrienne Umali; Luis F. Callado; Amelia L. Gallitano; Rachael L. Neve; Li Shen; Joseph D. Buxbaum; Ming-Hu Han; Eric J. Nestler; J. Javier Meana; Scott J. Russo; Javier González-Maeso

Histone deacetylases (HDACs) compact chromatin structure and repress gene transcription. In schizophrenia, clinical studies demonstrate that HDAC inhibitors are efficacious when given in combination with atypical antipsychotics. However, the molecular mechanism that integrates a better response to antipsychotics with changes in chromatin structure remains unknown. Here we found that chronic atypical antipsychotics downregulated the transcription of metabotropic glutamate 2 receptor (mGlu2, also known as Grm2), an effect that was associated with decreased histone acetylation at its promoter in mouse and human frontal cortex. This epigenetic change occurred in concert with a serotonin 5-HT2A receptor–dependent upregulation and increased binding of HDAC2 to the mGlu2 promoter. Virally mediated overexpression of HDAC2 in frontal cortex decreased mGlu2 transcription and its electrophysiological properties, thereby increasing psychosis-like behavior. Conversely, HDAC inhibitors prevented the repressive histone modifications induced at the mGlu2 promoter by atypical antipsychotics, and augmented their therapeutic-like effects. These observations support the view of HDAC2 as a promising new target for schizophrenia treatment.


Nature Medicine | 2013

Epigenetic regulation of RAC1 induces synaptic remodeling in stress disorders and depression

Sam A. Golden; Daniel J. Christoffel; Mitra Heshmati; Georgia E. Hodes; Jane Magida; Keithara Davis; Michael E. Cahill; Caroline Dias; Efrain Ribeiro; Jessica L. Ables; Pamela J. Kennedy; Alfred J. Robison; Javier González-Maeso; Rachael L. Neve; Gustavo Turecki; Subroto Ghose; Carol A. Tamminga; Scott J. Russo

Depression induces structural and functional synaptic plasticity in brain reward circuits, although the mechanisms promoting these changes and their relevance to behavioral outcomes are unknown. Transcriptional profiling of the nucleus accumbens (NAc) for Rho GTPase–related genes, which are known regulators of synaptic structure, revealed a sustained reduction in RAS-related C3 botulinum toxin substrate 1 (Rac1) expression after chronic social defeat stress. This was associated with a repressive chromatin state surrounding the proximal promoter of Rac1. Inhibition of class 1 histone deacetylases (HDACs) with MS-275 rescued both the decrease in Rac1 transcription after social defeat stress and depression-related behavior, such as social avoidance. We found a similar repressive chromatin state surrounding the RAC1 promoter in the NAc of subjects with depression, which corresponded with reduced RAC1 transcription. Viral-mediated reduction of Rac1 expression or inhibition of Rac1 activity in the NAc increases social defeat–induced social avoidance and anhedonia in mice. Chronic social defeat stress induces the formation of stubby excitatory spines through a Rac1-dependent mechanism involving the redistribution of synaptic cofilin, an actin-severing protein downstream of Rac1. Overexpression of constitutively active Rac1 in the NAc of mice after chronic social defeat stress reverses depression-related behaviors and prunes stubby spines. Taken together, our data identify epigenetic regulation of RAC1 in the NAc as a disease mechanism in depression and reveal a functional role for Rac1 in rodents in regulating stress-related behaviors.Depression involves plasticity of brain reward neurons, although the mechanisms and behavioral relevance are unknown. Transcriptional profiling of nucleus accumbens (NAc) for RhoGTPase related genes, known regulators of synaptic structure, following chronic social defeat stress, revealed a long-term reduction in Rac1 transcription. This was marked by a repressive chromatin state surrounding its proximal promoter. Inhibition of class 1 HDACs with MS-275 rescued both decreased Rac1 transcription and social avoidance behavior. A similar repressive chromatin state was found surrounding the Rac1 promoter in human postmortem NAc from depressed subjects, which corresponded with reduced Rac1 transcription. We show Rac1 is necessary and sufficient for social avoidance and anhedonia, and the formation of stubby excitatory spines by redistributing synaptic cofilin, an actin severing protein downstream of Rac1. Our data identifies epigenetic regulation of Rac1 in NAc as a bona fide disease mechanism in depression and reveals a functional role in regulating stress-related behaviors.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Retrieving Memories via Internal Context Requires the Hippocampus

Pamela J. Kennedy; Matthew L. Shapiro

Episodic memory encodes the unique contexts of events so that people can remember the details of an experience when cued by only a subset of event features (Tulving, 1972). In humans, the hippocampus is crucial for this kind of memory (Scoville and Milner, 1957; Vargha-Khadem et al., 1997). The present study tested whether the hippocampus was required for nonspatial, context-dependent memory retrieval in rats that were trained in a constant external environment to approach different nonspatial goal objects depending on their current internal motivational state (hunger or thirst). The rats learned to reliably approach the correct goal and thus used internal context to guide associative memory retrieval. Both fornix transection and selective neurotoxic hippocampal lesions severely impaired memory performance, but cue and motivational discrimination, as well as stimulus-reward associations, were preserved. The findings suggest that the hippocampus is required for using internal contextual information for flexible associative memory retrieval.


Nature Neuroscience | 2013

Class I HDAC inhibition blocks cocaine-induced plasticity by targeted changes in histone methylation

Pamela J. Kennedy; Jian Feng; Alfred J. Robison; Ian Maze; Ana Badimon; Ezekiell Mouzon; Dipesh Chaudhury; Diane Damez-Werno; Stephen J. Haggarty; Ming-Hu Han; Rhonda Bassel-Duby; Eric N. Olson; Eric J. Nestler

Induction of histone acetylation in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key brain reward region, promotes cocaine-induced alterations in gene expression. Histone deacetylases (HDACs) tightly regulate the acetylation of histone tails, but little is known about the functional specificity of different HDAC isoforms in the development and maintenance of cocaine-induced plasticity, and previous studies of HDAC inhibitors report conflicting effects on cocaine-elicited behavioral adaptations. Here we demonstrate that specific and prolonged blockade of HDAC1 in NAc of mice increased global levels of histone acetylation, but also induced repressive histone methylation and antagonized cocaine-induced changes in behavior, an effect mediated in part through a chromatin-mediated suppression of GABAA receptor subunit expression and inhibitory tone on NAc neurons. Our findings suggest a new mechanism by which prolonged and selective HDAC inhibition can alter behavioral and molecular adaptations to cocaine and inform the development of therapeutics for cocaine addiction.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

A Novel Role of the WNT-Dishevelled-GSK3β Signaling Cascade in the Mouse Nucleus Accumbens in a Social Defeat Model of Depression

Matthew Wilkinson; Caroline Dias; Jane Magida; Michelle S. Mazei-Robison; Mary Kay Lobo; Pamela J. Kennedy; David M. Dietz; Herbert E. Covington; Scott J. Russo; Rachael L. Neve; Subroto Ghose; Carol A. Tamminga; Eric J. Nestler

Based on earlier gene expression and chromatin array data, we identified the protein, dishevelled (DVL)-2, as being regulated in the nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key brain reward region, in the mouse social defeat model of depression. Here, we validate these findings by showing that DVL2 mRNA and protein levels are downregulated in NAc of mice susceptible to social defeat stress, effects not seen in resilient mice. Other DVL isoforms, DVL1 and DVL3, show similar patterns of regulation. Downregulation of DVL was also demonstrated in the NAc of depressed humans examined postmortem. Interestingly, several members of the WNT (Wingless)-DVL signaling cascade, including phospho-GSK3β (glycogen synthase kinase-3β), also show significant downregulation in the NAc of susceptible, but not resilient, mice, demonstrating concerted regulation of this pathway in the NAc due to social defeat stress. By using viral-mediated gene transfer to overexpress a dominant-negative mutant of DVL in NAc, or by using a pharmacological inhibitor of DVL administered into this brain region, we show that blockade of DVL function renders mice more susceptible to social defeat stress and promotes depression-like behavior in other assays. Similar prodepression-like effects were induced upon overexpressing GSK3β in the NAc, while overexpressing a dominant-negative mutant of GSK3β promoted resilience to social defeat stress. These findings are consistent with the knowledge that downregulation of DVL and phospho-GSK3β reflects an increase in GSK3β activity. These studies reveal a novel role for the DVL-GSK3β signaling pathway, acting within the brains reward circuitry, in regulating susceptibility to chronic stress.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Motivational states activate distinct hippocampal representations to guide goal-directed behaviors

Pamela J. Kennedy; Matthew L. Shapiro

Adaptive behaviors are guided by motivation and memory. Motivational states specify goals, and memory can inform motivated behavior by providing detailed records of past experiences when goals were obtained. These 2 fundamental processes interact to guide animals to biologically relevant targets, but the neuronal mechanisms that integrate them remain unknown. To investigate these mechanisms, we recorded unit activity from the same population of hippocampal neurons as rats performed identical tasks while either food or water deprived. We compared the influence of motivational state (hunger and thirst), memory demand, and spatial behavior in 2 tasks: hippocampus-dependent contextual memory retrieval and hippocampus-independent random foraging. We found that: (i) hippocampal coding was most strongly influenced by motivational state during contextual memory retrieval, when motivational cues were required to select among remembered, goal-directed actions in the same places; (ii) the same neuronal populations were relatively unaffected by motivational state during random foraging, when hunger and thirst were incidental to behavior, and signals derived from deprivation states thus informed, but did not determine, hippocampal coding; and (iii) “prospective coding” in the contextual retrieval task was not influenced by allocentric spatial trajectory, but rather by the animals deprivation state and the associated, non-spatial target, suggesting that hippocampal coding includes a wide range of predictive associations. The results show that beyond coding spatiotemporal context, hippocampal representations encode the relationships between internal states, the external environment, and action to provide a mechanism by which motivation and memory are coordinated to guide behavior.


Nature Neuroscience | 2015

Role of Tet1 and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine in cocaine action

Jian Feng; Ningyi Shao; Keith E. Szulwach; Vincent Vialou; Jimmy Huynh; Chun Zhong; Thuc Le; Deveroux Ferguson; Michael E. Cahill; Yujing Li; Ja Wook Koo; Efrain Ribeiro; Benoit Labonté; Benjamin M. Laitman; David Estey; Victoria Stockman; Pamela J. Kennedy; Thomas Couroussé; Isaac Mensah; Gustavo Turecki; Kym F. Faull; Guo Li Ming; Hongjun Song; Guoping Fan; Patrizia Casaccia; Li Shen; Peng Jin; Eric J. Nestler

Ten-eleven translocation (TET) enzymes mediate the conversion of 5-methylcytosine (5mC) to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), which is enriched in brain, and its ultimate DNA demethylation. However, the influence of TET and 5hmC on gene transcription in brain remains elusive. We found that ten-eleven translocation protein 1 (TET1) was downregulated in mouse nucleus accumbens (NAc), a key brain reward structure, by repeated cocaine administration, which enhanced behavioral responses to cocaine. We then identified 5hmC induction in putative enhancers and coding regions of genes that have pivotal roles in drug addiction. Such induction of 5hmC, which occurred similarly following TET1 knockdown alone, correlated with increased expression of these genes as well as with their alternative splicing in response to cocaine administration. In addition, 5hmC alterations at certain loci persisted for at least 1 month after cocaine exposure. Together, these reveal a previously unknown epigenetic mechanism of cocaine action and provide new insight into how 5hmC regulates transcription in brain in vivo.


Genome Biology | 2014

Chronic cocaine-regulated epigenomic changes in mouse nucleus accumbens.

Jian Feng; Matthew Wilkinson; Xiaochuan Liu; Immanuel Purushothaman; Deveroux Ferguson; Vincent Vialou; Ian Maze; Ningyi Shao; Pamela J. Kennedy; JaWook W. Koo; Caroline Dias; Benjamin M. Laitman; Victoria Stockman; Quincey LaPlant; Michael E. Cahill; Eric J. Nestler; Li Shen

BackgroundIncreasing evidence supports a role for altered gene expression in mediating the lasting effects of cocaine on the brain, and recent work has demonstrated the involvement of chromatin modifications in these alterations. However, all such studies to date have been restricted by their reliance on microarray technologies that have intrinsic limitations.ResultsWe use next generation sequencing methods, RNA-seq and ChIP-seq for RNA polymerase II and several histone methylation marks, to obtain a more complete view of cocaine-induced changes in gene expression and associated adaptations in numerous modes of chromatin regulation in the mouse nucleus accumbens, a key brain reward region. We demonstrate an unexpectedly large number of pre-mRNA splicing alterations in response to repeated cocaine treatment. In addition, we identify combinations of chromatin changes, or signatures, that correlate with cocaine-dependent regulation of gene expression, including those involving pre-mRNA alternative splicing. Through bioinformatic prediction and biological validation, we identify one particular splicing factor, A2BP1(Rbfox1/Fox-1), which is enriched at genes that display certain chromatin signatures and contributes to drug-induced behavioral abnormalities. Together, this delineation of the cocaine-induced epigenome in the nucleus accumbens reveals several novel modes of regulation by which cocaine alters the brain.ConclusionsWe establish combinatorial chromatin and transcriptional profiles in mouse nucleus accumbens after repeated cocaine treatment. These results serve as an important resource for the field and provide a template for the analysis of other systems to reveal new transcriptional and epigenetic mechanisms of neuronal regulation.

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Eric J. Nestler

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Rachael L. Neve

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Li Shen

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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HaoSheng Sun

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Vincent Vialou

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Caroline Dias

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Ian Maze

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Jian Feng

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Carol A. Tamminga

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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