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Dive into the research topics where Ronald S. Oosting is active.

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Featured researches published by Ronald S. Oosting.


Nature Neuroscience | 2010

Dnmt3a regulates emotional behavior and spine plasticity in the nucleus accumbens

Quincey LaPlant; Vincent Vialou; Herbert E. Covington; Dani Dumitriu; Jian Feng; Brandon L. Warren; Ian Maze; David M. Dietz; Emily L. Watts; Sergio D. Iñiguez; Ja Wook Koo; Ezekiell Mouzon; William Renthal; Fiona Hollis; Hui Wang; Michele A. Noonan; Yanhua Ren; Amelia J. Eisch; Carlos A. Bolaños; Mohamed Kabbaj; Guanghua Xiao; Rachael L. Neve; Yasmin L. Hurd; Ronald S. Oosting; Gouping Fan; John H. Morrison; Eric J. Nestler

Despite abundant expression of DNA methyltransferases (Dnmts) in brain, the regulation and behavioral role of DNA methylation remain poorly understood. We found that Dnmt3a expression was regulated in mouse nucleus accumbens (NAc) by chronic cocaine use and chronic social defeat stress. Moreover, NAc-specific manipulations that block DNA methylation potentiated cocaine reward and exerted antidepressant-like effects, whereas NAc-specific Dnmt3a overexpression attenuated cocaine reward and was pro-depressant. On a cellular level, we found that chronic cocaine use selectively increased thin dendritic spines on NAc neurons and that DNA methylation was both necessary and sufficient to mediate these effects. These data establish the importance of Dnmt3a in the NAc in regulating cellular and behavioral plasticity to emotional stimuli.


Biological Psychiatry | 2011

Paternal Transmission of Stress-Induced Pathologies

David M. Dietz; Quincey LaPlant; Emily L. Watts; Georgia E. Hodes; Scott J. Russo; Jian Feng; Ronald S. Oosting; Vincent Vialou; Eric J. Nestler

BACKGROUND There has been recent interest in the possibility that epigenetic mechanisms might contribute to the transgenerational transmission of stress-induced vulnerability. Here, we focused on possible paternal transmission with the social defeat stress paradigm. METHODS Adult male mice exposed to chronic social defeat stress or control nondefeated mice were bred with normal female mice, and their offspring were assessed behaviorally for depressive- and anxiety-like measures. Plasma levels of corticosterone and vascular endothelial growth factor were also assayed. To directly assess the role of epigenetic mechanisms, we used in vitro fertilization (IVF); behavioral assessments were conducted on offspring of mice from IVF-control and IVF-defeated fathers. RESULTS We show that both male and female offspring from defeated fathers exhibit increased measures of several depression- and anxiety-like behaviors. The male offspring of defeated fathers also display increased baseline plasma levels of corticosterone and decreased levels of vascular endothelial growth factor. However, most of these behavioral changes were not observed when offspring were generated through IVF. CONCLUSIONS These results suggest that, although behavioral adaptations that occur after chronic social defeat stress can be transmitted from the father to his male and female F1 progeny, only very subtle changes might be transmitted epigenetically under the conditions tested.


Pharmaceutical Research | 2007

Cellular Uptake of Cationic Polymer-DNA Complexes Via Caveolae Plays a Pivotal Role in Gene Transfection in COS-7 Cells

M. A. E. M. van der Aa; U. S. Huth; S. Y. Häfele; R. Schubert; Ronald S. Oosting; Enrico Mastrobattista; Wim E. Hennink; R. Peschka-Süss; Gerben A. Koning; Daan J.A. Crommelin

PurposeKnowledge about the uptake mechanism and subsequent intracellular routing of non-viral gene delivery systems is important for the development of more efficient carriers. In this study we compared two established cationic polymers pDMAEMA and PEI with regard to their transfection efficiency and mechanism of cellular uptake.Materials and MethodsThe effects of several inhibitors of particular cellular uptake routes on the uptake of polyplexes and subsequent gene expression in COS-7 cells were investigated using FACS and transfection. Moreover, cellular localization of fluorescently labeled polyplexes was assessed by spectral fluorescence microscopy.ResultsBoth pDMAEMA- and PEI-complexed DNA showed colocalization with fluorescently-labeled transferrin and cholera toxin after internalization by COS-7 cells, which indicates uptake via the clathrin- and caveolae-dependent pathways. Blocking either routes of uptake with specific inhibitors only resulted in a marginal decrease in polyplex uptake, which may suggest that uptake routes of polyplexes are interchangeable. Despite the marginal effect of inhibitors on polyplex internalization, blocking the caveolae-mediated uptake route resulted in an almost complete loss of polyplex-mediated gene expression, whereas gene expression was not negatively affected by blocking the clathrin-dependent route of uptake.ConclusionsThese results show the importance of caveolae-mediated uptake for successful gene expression and have implications for the rational design of non-viral gene delivery systems.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2003

Stress-induced hyperthermia and anxiety: pharmacological validation.

Berend Olivier; Theo J.J. Zethof; Tommy Pattij; Meg van Boogaert; Christina Leahy; Ronald S. Oosting; Arjan Bouwknecht; Jan G. Veening; Jan van der Gugten; Lucianne Groenink

When mammals, including man, are confronted with a stressful event, their core body temperature rises, stress-induced hyperthermia. In mice, the stress-induced hyperthermia procedure has been developed to measure antistress or anxiolytic-like effects of psychoactive drugs. Group-housed and singly housed versions of the stress-induced hyperthermia generate comparable results. Because the number of animals needed to perform an experiment is much lower in the singly housed versus the group-housed procedure, the former is the test of choice for pharmacological testing. A typical stress-induced hyperthermia test starts with an injection 60 min before the first rectal temperature measurement (T(1)), followed by a second temperature measurement (T(2)) 10-15 min later. The difference DeltaT (=T(2)-T(1)) is the stress-induced hyperthermia. The procedure also measures the intrinsic activity of drugs on the basal body temperature and DeltaT is relatively independent from the intrinsic temperature effects of drugs. Anxiolytic drugs (benzodiazepines, 5-HT(1A) receptor agonists, alcohol) reduce DeltaT suggestive of anxiolytic-like effects. Because the parameter measured for anxiety in the stress-induced hyperthermia procedure is not dependent on locomotor activity, like in almost all other anxiety tests, the stress-induced hyperthermia procedure is an attractive addition to tests in the anxiety field. Because the stress-induced hyperthermia is also present with a comparable pharmacological profile in females, this procedure has a wide species and gender validity. The procedure was applied in various genetically modified mice [5-HT(1A) and 5-HT(1B) receptor knockout (KO) mice and corticotropin-releasing hormone overexpressing (CRH-OE) mice] to study phenotypic influences of the various mutations on aspects of anxiety. The stress-induced hyperthermia test in singly housed male and female mice appears a useful and extremely simple test to measure effects of drugs on certain aspects of anxiety or to help to determine phenotypic differences in mutant mice.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2006

Spontaneously hypertensive rats do not predict symptoms of attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder

Filip S. van den Bergh; Emilie Bloemarts; Johnny S.W. Chan; Lucianne Groenink; Berend Olivier; Ronald S. Oosting

The validity of the Spontaneously Hypertensive rat (SHR) as a model for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is explored by comparing the SHR with Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) and Wistar rats in a number of different tests. In the open field, SHR are hyperactive compared to both Wistar and WKY, but only at specific ages. At those ages, methylphenidate (1mg/kg) did not attenuate hyperactivity. Subsequently, a dose response study of methylphenidate (0.1-10mg/kg) was conducted in the Differential Reinforcement of Low-rate responding (DRL)-72s and five-choice serial reaction time tests (5-CSRTT). Compared to WKY but not Wistar rats, SHR performed worse on the DRL-72s. Performance was not improved by methylphenidate (0.1-1.0mg/kg). In the 5-CSRTT, attentional performance was similar for all rat strains, but Wistar rats made more impulsive responses than both the SHR and the WKY. Methylphenidate only attenuated impulsivity in Wistar rats. Because SHR do not consistently display symptoms of ADHD across the different tests, and methylphenidate effects were observed in both WKY and Wistar rats, but not in SHR, we conclude that SHR is not a representative animal model for ADHD.


Pharmaceutical Research | 2006

The Nuclear Pore Complex: The Gateway to Successful Nonviral Gene Delivery

Marieke A. E. M. van der Aa; Enrico Mastrobattista; Ronald S. Oosting; Wim E. Hennink; Gerben A. Koning; Daan J.A. Crommelin

One of the limiting steps in the efficiency of nonviral gene delivery is transport of genetic material across the nuclear membrane. Trafficking of nuclear proteins from the cytoplasm into the nucleus occurs via the nuclear pore complex and is mediated by nuclear localization signals and their nuclear receptors. Several strategies employing this transport mechanism have been designed and explored to improve nonviral gene delivery. In this article, we review the mechanism of nuclear import through the nuclear pore complex and the strategies used to facilitate nuclear import of exogenous DNA and improve gene expression.


Genes, Brain and Behavior | 2006

Mouse strain differences in autonomic responses to stress

M. J. V. Van Bogaert; Lucianne Groenink; Ronald S. Oosting; Koen G.C. Westphal; J. van der Gugten; Berend Olivier

In humans, anxiety disorders are often accompanied by an overactive autonomic nervous system, reflected in increased body temperature (BT) and heart rate (HR). In rodents, comparable effects are found after exposure to stress. These autonomic parameters can give important information on stress and anxiety responses in mice. In the present experiments, stress reactivity of three frequently used mouse strains [129 Sv/Ev, Swiss Webster (SW) and C57 BL/6] was assessed using their autonomic stress responses. BT, HR and activity were telemetrically measured. Undisturbed circadian rhythms already showed clear differences between the mouse strains. Hereafter, autonomic responses to stressors with increasing intensity were measured. Strain differences were found in magnitude and duration of the stress responses, especially after high‐intensity stressors. Generally, C57BL/6 mice showed the largest autonomic response, SW the lowest and the 129Sv/Ev the intermediate response. Interestingly, the observed ranking in autonomic stress response does not match the behavioral stress responsivity of these strains. Finally, sensitivity to the anxiolytic diazepam (0, 1, 2, 4 and 8 mg/kg) was tested using the stress‐induced hyperthermia paradigm. Pharmacological sensitivity to diazepam differed between the strains with the 129Sv/Ev being most sensitive. These studies show that simultaneous measurement of behavioral and autonomic parameters under stressful conditions contributes considerably to a better interpretation of anxiety and stress levels in mice.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2008

Translational aspects of pharmacological research into anxiety disorders: The stress-induced hyperthermia (SIH) paradigm

Christiaan H. Vinkers; Meg J.V. van Bogaert; Marianne Klanker; S. Mechiel Korte; Ronald S. Oosting; Taleen Hanania; Seth C. Hopkins; Berend Olivier; Lucianne Groenink

In anxiety research, the search for models with sufficient clinical predictive validity to support the translation of animal studies on anxiolytic drugs to clinical research is often challenging. This review describes the stress-induced hyperthermia (SIH) paradigm, a model that studies the activation of the autonomic nervous system in response to stress by measuring body temperature. The reproducible and robust SIH response, combined with ease of testing, make the SIH paradigm very suitable for drug screening. We will review the current knowledge on the neurobiology of the SIH response, discuss the role of GABA(A) and serotonin (5-HT) pharmacology, as well as how the SIH response relates to infectious fever. Furthermore, we will present novel data on the SIH response variance across different mice and their sensitivity to anxiolytic drugs. The SIH response is an autonomic stress response that can be successfully studied at the level of its physiology, pharmacology, neurobiology and genetics and possesses excellent animal-to-human translational properties.


Journal of Gene Medicine | 2005

An NLS peptide covalently linked to linear DNA does not enhance transfection efficiency of cationic polymer based gene delivery systems.

M. A. E. M. van der Aa; Gerben A. Koning; C. d'Oliveira; Ronald S. Oosting; K.J. Wilschut; Wim E. Hennink; Daan J.A. Crommelin

Transfection with non‐viral gene delivery vectors, such as cationic polymers, generally results in low transgene expression in vivo. This is likely due to poor cytoplasmic transport and intra‐nuclear DNA delivery.


Journal of Controlled Release | 2011

How to screen non-viral gene delivery systems in vitro?

Ethlinn V.B. van Gaal; Roel van Eijk; Ronald S. Oosting; Robbert J. Kok; Wim E. Hennink; Daan J.A. Crommelin; Enrico Mastrobattista

Screening of new gene delivery candidates regarding transfection efficiency and toxicity is usually performed by reading out transgene expression levels relative to a reference formulation after in vitro transfection. However, over the years and among different laboratories, this screening has been performed in a variety of cell lines, using a variety of conditions and read-out systems, and by comparison to a variety of reference formulations. This makes a direct comparison of results difficult, if not impossible. Reaching a consensus would enable placing new results into context of previous findings and estimate the overall contribution to the improvement of non-viral gene delivery. In this paper we illustrate the sensitivity of transfection outcomes on testing conditions chosen, and propose a screening protocol with the aim of standardization within the field.

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