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Dive into the research topics where Raymond J. Galante is active.

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Featured researches published by Raymond J. Galante.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2005

Sleep deprivation induces the unfolded protein response in mouse cerebral cortex

Nirinjini Naidoo; William Giang; Raymond J. Galante; Allan I. Pack

Little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying sleep. We show the induction of key regulatory proteins in a cellular protective pathway, the unfolded protein response (UPR), following 6 h of induced wakefulness. Using C57/B6 male mice maintained on a 12:12 light/dark cycle, we examined, in cerebral cortex, the effect of different durations of prolonged wakefulness (0, 3, 6, 9 and 12 h) from the beginning of the lights‐on inactivity period, on the protein expression of BiP/GRP78, a chaperone and classical UPR marker. BiP/GRP78 expression is increased with increasing durations of sleep deprivation (6, 9 and 12 h). There is no change in BiP/GRP78 levels in handling control experiments carried out during the lights‐off period. PERK, the transmembrane kinase responsible for attenuating protein synthesis, which is negatively regulated by binding to BiP/GRP78, is activated by dissociation from BiP/GRP78 and by autophosphorylation. There is phosphorylation of the elongation initiation factor 2α and alteration in ribosomal function. These changes are first observed after 6 h of induced wakefulness. Thus, prolonging wakefulness beyond a certain duration induces the UPR indicating a physiological limit to wakefulness.


The Journal of Physiology | 1996

Role of chloride‐mediated inhibition in respiratory rhythmogenesis in an in vitro brainstem of tadpole, Rana catesbeiana.

Raymond J. Galante; Leszek Kubin; Alfred P. Fishman; Allan I. Pack

1. The isolated brainstem of larval Rana catesbeiana maintained in vitro generates neural bursts that correspond to the lung and gill ventilatory activity generated in the intact specimen. To investigate the role of chloride channel‐dependent inhibitory mechanisms mediated by GABA(A) and/or glycine receptors on fictive lung and gill ventilation, we superfused the isolated brainstems with agonists, antagonists (bicuculline and/or strychnine) or a chloride‐free solution while recording multi‐unit activity from the facial motor nucleus. 2. Superfusion with the agonists (GABA or glycine) produced differential effects on frequency, amplitude and duration of the neural bursts related to lung and gill ventilation. At a GABA or glycine concentration of 1.0 mM, fictive gill bursts were abolished while fictive lung bursts persisted, albeit with reduced amplitude and frequency. 3. At the lowest concentrations used (1.0‐2.5 microM), the GABA(A) receptor antagonist bicuculline produced an increase in the frequency of lung bursts. At higher concentrations (5.0‐2.0 microM) bicuculline produced non‐specific excitatory effects. The glycine antagonist strychnine, at concentrations lower than 5.0 microM, caused a progressive decrease in the frequency and amplitude of the gill bursts and eventually abolished the rhythmic activity. At higher concentrations (7.5 microM), non‐specific excitatory effects occurred. Superfusion with bicuculline (10 microM) and strychnine (5 microM) combined abolished the neural output for gill ventilation but increased the frequency, amplitude and duration of lung bursts. 4. Superfusion with Cl(‐)‐free solution also abolished the rhythmic neural bursts associated with gill ventilation, while it significantly increased the amplitude (228 +/‐ 51%; P < 0.05) (mean +/‐ S.E.M.) and duration of the lung bursts (3.5 +/‐ 0.1 to 35.3 +/‐ 3.7 s; P < 0.05) and improved the regularity of their occurrence. 5. We conclude that different neural systems generate rhythmic activity for lung and gill ventilation. Chloride‐mediated inhibition may be essential for generation of neural bursts associated with gill ventilation. In contrast, the burst associated with lung ventilation can be generated in the absence of Cl(‐)‐mediated inhibition although the latter plays a role in shaping the normal lung burst.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2003

Enzymes of adenosine metabolism in the brain: diurnal rhythm and the effect of sleep deprivation.

Miroslaw Mackiewicz; Elena V. Nikonova; John E. Zimmerman; Raymond J. Galante; Lin Zhang; Jacqueline Cater; Jonathan D. Geiger; Allan I. Pack

Adenosine plays a role in promoting sleep, an effect that is thought to be mediated in the basal forebrain. Adenosine levels vary in this region with prolonged wakefulness in a unique way. The basis for this is unknown. We examined, in rats, the activity of the major metabolic enzymes for adenosine – adenosine deaminase, adenosine kinase, ecto‐ and cytosolic 5′‐nucleotidase – in sleep/wake regulatory regions as well as cerebral cortex, and how the activity varies across the day and with sleep deprivation. There were robust spatial differences for the activity of adenosine deaminase, adenosine kinase, and cytosolic and ecto‐5′‐nucleotidase. However, the basal forebrain was not different from other sleep/wake regulatory regions apart from the tuberomammillary nucleus. All adenosine metabolic enzymes exhibited diurnal variations in their activity, albeit not in all brain regions. Activity of adenosine deaminase increased during the active period in the ventrolateral pre‐optic area but decreased significantly in the basal forebrain. Enzymatic activity of adenosine kinase and cytosolic‐5′‐nucleotidase was higher during the active period in all brain regions tested. However, the activity of ecto‐5′‐nucleotidase was augmented during the active period only in the cerebral cortex. This diurnal variation may play a role in the regulation of adenosine in relationship to sleep and wakefulness across the day. In contrast, we found no changes specifically with sleep deprivation in the activity of any enzyme in any brain region. Thus, changes in adenosine with sleep deprivation are not a consequence of alterations in adenosine enzyme activity.


Journal of Neuroscience Methods | 2010

Characterization of the bout durations of sleep and wakefulness

Blakeley B. McShane; Raymond J. Galante; Shane T. Jensen; Nirinjini Naidoo; Allan I. Pack; Abraham J. Wyner

STUDY OBJECTIVES (a) Develop a new statistical approach to describe the microarchitecture of wakefulness and sleep in mice; (b) evaluate differences among inbred strains in this microarchitecture; (c) compare results when data are scored in 4-s versus 10-s epochs. DESIGN Studies in male mice of four inbred strains: AJ, C57BL/6, DBA and PWD. EEG/EMG were recorded for 24h and scored independently in 4-s and 10-s epochs. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS Distribution of bout durations of wakefulness, NREM and REM sleep in mice has two distinct components, i.e., short and longer bouts. This is described as a spike (short bouts) and slab (longer bouts) distribution, a particular type of mixture model. The distribution in any state depends on the state the mouse is transitioning from and can be characterized by three parameters: the number of such bouts conditional on the previous state, the size of the spike, and the average length of the slab. While conventional statistics such as time spent in state, average bout duration, and number of bouts show some differences between inbred strains, this new statistical approach reveals more major differences. The major difference between strains is their ability to sustain long bouts of NREM sleep or wakefulness. Scoring mouse sleep/wake in 4-s epochs offered little new information when using conventional metrics but did when evaluating the microarchitecture based on this new approach. CONCLUSIONS Standard statistical approaches do not adequately characterize the microarchitecture of mouse behavioral state. Approaches based on a spike-and-slab provide a quantitative description.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Role of Homer Proteins in the Maintenance of Sleep-Wake States

Nirinjini Naidoo; Megan Ferber; Raymond J. Galante; Blake McShane; Jia Hua Hu; John E. Zimmerman; Greg Maislin; Jacqui Cater; Abraham J. Wyner; Paul F. Worley; Allan I. Pack

Sleep is an evolutionarily conserved process that is linked to diurnal cycles and normal daytime wakefulness. Healthy sleep and wakefulness are integral to a healthy lifestyle; this occurs when an organism is able to maintain long bouts of both sleep and wake. Homer proteins, which function as adaptors for group 1 metabotropic glutamate receptors, have been implicated in genetic studies of sleep in both Drosophila and mouse. Drosophila express a single Homer gene product that is upregulated during sleep. By contrast, vertebrates express Homer as both constitutive and immediate early gene (H1a) forms, and H1a is up-regulated during wakefulness. Genetic deletion of Homer in Drosophila results in fragmented sleep and in failure to sustain long bouts of sleep, even under increased sleep drive. However, deletion of Homer1a in mouse results in failure to sustain long bouts of wakefulness. Further evidence for the role of Homer1a in the maintenance of wake comes from the CREB alpha delta mutant mouse, which displays a reduced wake phenotype similar to the Homer1a knockout and fails to up-regulate Homer1a upon sleep loss. Homer1a is a gene whose expression is induced by CREB. Sustained behaviors of the sleep/wake cycle are created by molecular pathways that are distinct from those for arousal or short bouts, and implicate an evolutionarily-conserved role for Homer in sustaining these behaviors.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2003

Glycogen in the brain of Drosophila melanogaster: diurnal rhythm and the effect of rest deprivation.

John E. Zimmerman; Miroslaw Mackiewicz; Raymond J. Galante; Lin Zhang; Jacqueline Cater; Christine Zoh; Wendy Rizzo; Allan I. Pack

One function of sleep is thought to be the restoration of energy stores in the brain depleted during wakefulness. One such energy store found in mammalian brains is glycogen. Many of the genes involved in glycogen regulation in mammals have also been found in Drosophila melanogaster and rest behavior in Drosophila has recently been shown to have the characteristics of sleep. We therefore examined, in the fly, variation in the glycogen contents of the brain, the whole head and the body throughout the rest/activity cycle and after rest deprivation. Glycogen in the brain varies significantly throughout the day (p = 0.001) and is highest during rest and lowest while flies are active. Glycogen levels in the whole head and body do not show diurnal variation. Brain glycogen drops significantly when flies are rest deprived for 3 h (p = 0.034) but no significant differences are observed after 6 h of rest deprivation. In contrast, glycogen is significantly depleted in the body after both 3 and 6 h of rest deprivation (p < 0.0001 and p < 0.0001, respectively). Glycogen in the fly brain changes in relationship to rest and activity and demonstrates a biphasic response to rest deprivation similar to that observed in mammalian astrocytes in culture.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Aging in mice reduces the ability to sustain sleep/wake states.

Mathieu E. Wimmer; Justin Rising; Raymond J. Galante; Abraham J. Wyner; Allan I. Pack; Ted Abel

One of the most significant problems facing older individuals is difficulty staying asleep at night and awake during the day. Understanding the mechanisms by which the regulation of sleep/wake goes awry with age is a critical step in identifying novel therapeutic strategies to improve quality of life for the elderly. We measured wake, non-rapid eye movement (NREM) and rapid-eye movement (REM) sleep in young (2–4 months-old) and aged (22–24 months-old) C57BL6/NIA mice. We used both conventional measures (i.e., bout number and bout duration) and an innovative spike-and-slab statistical approach to characterize age-related fragmentation of sleep/wake. The short (spike) and long (slab) components of the spike-and-slab mixture model capture the distribution of bouts for each behavioral state in mice. Using this novel analytical approach, we found that aged animals are less able to sustain long episodes of wakefulness or NREM sleep. Additionally, spectral analysis of EEG recordings revealed that aging slows theta peak frequency, a correlate of arousal. These combined analyses provide a window into the mechanisms underlying the destabilization of long periods of sleep and wake and reduced vigilance that develop with aging.


Genes, Brain and Behavior | 2012

Running‐induced anxiety is dependent on increases in hippocampal neurogenesis

Jennifer L. Onksen; Lisa A. Briand; Raymond J. Galante; Allan I. Pack; Julie A. Blendy

Exercise, specifically voluntary wheel running, is a potent stimulator of hippocampal neurogenesis in adult mice. In addition, exercise induces behavioral changes in numerous measures of anxiety in rodents. However, the physiological underpinnings of these changes are poorly understood. To investigate the role of neurogenesis in exercise‐mediated anxiety, we examined the cellular and behavioral effects of voluntary wheel running in mice with a reduction in hippocampal neurogenesis, achieved through conditional deletion of ataxia telangiectasia‐mutated and rad‐3‐related protein (ATR), a cell cycle checkpoint kinase necessary for normal levels of neurogenesis. Following hippocampal microinjection of an adeno‐associated virus expressing Cre recombinase to delete ATR, mice were exposed to 4 weeks of voluntary wheel running and subsequently evaluated for anxiety‐like behavior. Wheel running resulted in increased cell proliferation and neurogenesis, as measured by bromodeoxyuridine and doublecortin, respectively. Wheel running also resulted in heightened anxiety in the novelty‐induced hypophagia, open field and light–dark box tests. However, both the neurogenic and anxiogenic effects of wheel running were attenuated following hippocampal ATR deletion, suggesting that increased neurogenesis is an important mediator of exercise‐induced anxiety.


Sleep | 2012

Assessing REM Sleep in Mice Using Video Data

Blakeley B. McShane; Raymond J. Galante; Michael Biber; Shane T. Jensen; Abraham J. Wyner; Allan I. Pack

STUDY OBJECTIVES Assessment of sleep and its substages in mice currently requires implantation of chronic electrodes for measurement of electroencephalogram (EEG) and electromyogram (EMG). This is not ideal for high-throughput screening. To address this deficiency, we present a novel method based on digital video analysis. This methodology extends previous approaches that estimate sleep and wakefulness without EEG/EMG in order to now discriminate rapid eye movement (REM) from non-REM (NREM) sleep. DESIGN Studies were conducted in 8 male C57BL/6J mice. EEG/EMG were recorded for 24 hours and manually scored in 10-second epochs. Mouse behavior was continuously recorded by digital video at 10 frames/second. Six variables were extracted from the video for each 10-second epoch (i.e., intraepoch mean of velocity, aspect ratio, and area of the mouse and intraepoch standard deviation of the same variables) and used as inputs for our model. MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS We focus on estimating features of REM (i.e., time spent in REM, number of bouts, and median bout length) as well as time spent in NREM and WAKE. We also consider the models epoch-by-epoch scoring performance relative to several alternative approaches. Our model provides good estimates of these features across the day both when averaged across mice and in individual mice, but the epoch-by-epoch agreement is not as good. CONCLUSIONS There are subtle changes in the area and shape (i.e., aspect ratio) of the mouse as it transitions from NREM to REM, likely due to the atonia of REM, thus allowing our methodology to discriminate these two states. Although REM is relatively rare, our methodology can detect it and assess the amount of REM sleep.


Aging Cell | 2014

Aging and sleep deprivation induce the unfolded protein response in the pancreas: implications for metabolism.

Nirinjini Naidoo; James G. Davis; Jingxu Zhu; Maya Yabumoto; Kristan Singletary; Marishka K. Brown; Raymond J. Galante; Beamon Agarwal; Joseph A. Baur

Sleep disruption has detrimental effects on glucose metabolism through pathways that remain poorly defined. Although numerous studies have examined the consequences of sleep deprivation (SD) in the brain, few have directly tested its effects on peripheral organs. We examined several tissues in mice for induction of the unfolded protein response (UPR) following acute SD. In young animals, we found a robust induction of BiP in the pancreas, indicating an active UPR. At baseline, pancreata from aged animals exhibited a marked increase in a pro‐apoptotic transcription factor, CHOP, that was amplified by SD, whereas BiP induction was not observed, suggesting a maladaptive response to cellular stress with age. Acute SD increased plasma glucose levels in both young and old animals. However, this change was not overtly related to stress in the pancreatic beta cells, as plasma insulin levels were not lower following acute SD. Accordingly, animals subjected to acute SD remained tolerant to a glucose challenge. In a chronic SD experiment, young mice were found to be sensitized to insulin and have improved glycemic control, whereas aged animals became hyperglycemic and failed to maintain appropriate plasma insulin concentrations. Our results show that both age and SD cooperate to induce the UPR in pancreatic tissue. While changes in insulin secretion are unlikely to play a major role in the acute effects of SD, CHOP induction in pancreatic tissues suggests that chronic SD may contribute to the loss or dysfunction of endocrine cells and that these effects may be exacerbated by normal aging.

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Allan I. Pack

University of Pennsylvania

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Brendan T. Keenan

University of Pennsylvania

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Greg Maislin

University of Pennsylvania

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Nirinjini Naidoo

University of Pennsylvania

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Diane C. Lim

University of Pennsylvania

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Jacqueline Cater

University of Pennsylvania

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Lin Zhang

University of Pennsylvania

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Daniel C. Brady

University of Pennsylvania

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Emily Y. Kim

University of Pennsylvania

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