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Dive into the research topics where Sara B. Glickstein is active.

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Featured researches published by Sara B. Glickstein.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2006

Inducible nitric oxide synthase contributes to gender differences in ischemic brain injury

Eun-Mi Park; Sunghee Cho; Kelly Frys; Sara B. Glickstein; Ping Zhou; Josef Anrather; Margaret Elizabeth Ross; Costantino Iadecola

Estrogens have antiinflammatory actions and protect the brain from ischemic injury. Cerebral ischemia is accompanied by an inflammatory reaction that contributes to the tissue damage, an effect mediated in part by toxic amounts of nitric oxide (NO) produced by the inducible isoform of NO synthase (iNOS). Therefore, estrogens may protect the female brain by modulating postischemic iNOS expression. To test this hypothesis, we studied whether iNOS plays a role in the mechanisms of the reduced susceptibility to ischemic injury observed in female mice. The middle cerebral artery was occluded for 20 mins using an intraluminal filament in C57BI/6 mice, and infarct volume was assessed 3 days later in cresyl violet-stained sections. Infarcts were 53% smaller in female mice than in males (P < 0.05), a reduction abolished by ovariectomy (OVX) and reinstated by estrogen replacement. In normal female mice, postischemic iNOS mRNA was lower than in males (P < 0.05). Ovariectomy increased iNOS mRNA after ischemia and estrogen replacement blocked this effect. Furthermore, the iNOS inhibitor aminoguanidine reduced infarct volume in male, but not in female, mice. Similarly, male iNOS-null mice had smaller infarcts than wild-type mice, but female iNOS nulls were not protected. Ovariectomy and OVX with estrogen replacement did not affect infarct volume in iNOS-null female mice. The findings suggest that the neuroprotection conferred by estrogens is, in part, related to attenuation of iNOS expression. Such attenuation could result from the potent antiinflammatory effects of estrogens that downregulate iNOS expression via transcriptional or posttranscriptional mechanisms.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Cyclin D2 Is Critical for Intermediate Progenitor Cell Proliferation in the Embryonic Cortex

Sara B. Glickstein; Julie A. Monaghan; Hajira B. Koeller; Tiffanie K. Jones; M. Elizabeth Ross

Expression of cyclins D1 (cD1) and D2 (cD2) in ventricular zone and subventricular zone (SVZ), respectively, suggests that a switch to cD2 could be a requisite step in the generation of cortical intermediate progenitor cells (IPCs). However, direct evidence is lacking. Here, cD1 or cD2 was seen to colabel subsets of Pax6-expressing radial glial cells (RGCs), whereas only cD2 colabeled with Tbr2. Loss of IPCs in cD2−/− embryonic cortex and analysis of expression patterns in mutant embryos lacking cD2 or Tbr2 indicate that cD2 is used as progenitors transition from RGCs to IPCs and is important for the expansion of the IPC pool. This was further supported by the laminar thinning, microcephaly, and selective reduction in the cortical SVZ population in the cD2−/−cortex. Cell cycle dynamics between embryonic day 14–16 in knock-out lines showed preserved parameters in cD1 mutants that induced cD2 expression, but absence of cD2 was not compensated by cD1. Loss of cD2 was associated with reduced proliferation and enhanced cell cycle exit in embryonic cortical progenitors, indicating a crucial role of cD2 for the support of cortical IPC divisions. In addition, knock-out of cD2, but not cD1, affected both G1-phase and also S-phase duration, implicating the importance of these phases for division cycles that expand the progenitor pool. That cD2 was the predominant D-cyclin expressed in the human SVZ at 19–20 weeks gestation indicated the evolutionary importance of cD2 in larger mammals for whom expansive intermediate progenitor divisions are thought to enable generation of larger, convoluted, cerebral cortices.


Development | 2007

Selective cortical interneuron and GABA deficits in cyclin D2-null mice

Sara B. Glickstein; Holly Moore; Bozena Slowinska; Joelle Racchumi; Minah Suh; Nao Chuhma; M. Elizabeth Ross

In contrast to cyclin D1 nulls (cD1-/-), mice without cyclin D2 (cD2-/-) lack cerebellar stellate interneurons; the reason for this is unknown. In the present study in cortex, we found a disproportionate loss of parvalbumin (PV) interneurons in cD2-/- mice. This selective reduction in PV subtypes was associated with reduced frequency of GABA-mediated inhibitory postsynaptic currents in pyramidal neurons, as measured by voltage-clamp recordings, and increased cortical sharp activity in the EEGs of awake-behaving cD2-/- mice. Cell cycle regulation was examined in the medial ganglionic eminence (MGE), the major source of PV interneurons in mouse brain, and differences between cD2-/- and cD1-/- suggested that cD2 promotes subventricular zone (SVZ) divisions, exerting a stronger inhibitory influence on the p27 Cdk-inhibitor (Cdkn1b) to delay cell cycle exit of progenitors. We propose that cD2 promotes transit-amplifying divisions in the SVZ and that these ensure proper output of at least a subset of PV interneurons.


Pharmacology & Therapeutics | 2001

Dopamine receptor functions: lessions from knockout mice

Sara B. Glickstein; Claudia Schmauss

In the past few years, a number of laboratories have used gene targeting via homologous recombination to generate mice deficient for key molecules involved in dopaminergic (DAergic) transmission. This tremendous effort has resulted in the successful generation and characterization of mice deficient for the neurotransmitter DA, the main terminator of DAergic neurotransmission (the DA transporter), and all five subtypes of DA receptors. This review summarizes the results from studies of the various DA receptor knockout mice and of mice deficient in proteins that mediate DA receptor signaling. It focuses on a comparison of the locomotor phenotypes and responses to drugs of abuse (psychostimulants), and reviews the results of anatomic studies examining the morphological and neurochemical differentiation of the striatum in these mutants. Moreover, an overview of recently published results highlighting the physiological relevance of the interaction between different DA receptors and between DA receptors and other neurotransmitter receptors in the modulation of behavioral and molecular responses to DAergic stimulation is presented. Finally, in view of the recently discovered heteroligomeric assemblies of neurotransmitter receptors that involve DA receptor subtypes, the potential value of knockout mice as a tool for testing the in vivo significance of these heteroligomeric receptors is discussed.


Brain Research | 1998

Visceral afferent pathways to the thalamus and olfactory tubercle: behavioral implications

David A. Ruggiero; Sabeen Anwar; Jinah Kim; Sara B. Glickstein

The goal of this study was to support the hypothesis that visceral signals may integrate and influence behavior by way of direct pathways from the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) to the olfactory tubercle and the midline/intralaminar thalamus. An anterograde tracer, biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) was iontophoresed bilaterally into the caudal NTS to optimize terminal labeling. NTS-cortical projections traversed both limbs of the diagonal bands providing heavy innervation, and terminated lightly within layer 3 of the olfactory tubercle. NTS-thalamic projections terminated within anterior and, as previously shown, posterior divisions of nucleus paraventricularis thalami and avoided the adjoining mediodorsal thalamic nucleus. Heretofore unrecognized projections were traced to the parafascicular and reuniens thalamic nuclei, and the peripeduncular nucleus. Control experiments identified the nucleus gracilis as the principal source of ascending projections to ventroposterior lateral, posterior and intralaminar thalamic nuclei. Our data corroborate the supposition that olfactory signals may integrate with visceral stimuli in the striatal compartment of olfactory tubercle. NTS projections encompass thalamic nuclei that project topographically to the prefrontal cortex, hippocampus and ventral (limbic) striatum, regions activated by visceral stimulation. Structural data support the idea that compartments of the non-discriminative thalamus may contribute to perception and behavioral responses to visceral stimulation.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 1998

Cerebellar stimulation reduces inducible nitric oxide synthase expression and protects brain from ischemia

Elena Galea; Eugene V. Golanov; Douglas L. Feinstein; Keith Kobylarz; Sara B. Glickstein; Donald J. Reis

A focal infarction produced by occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCAO) in spontaneously hypertensive rats induced expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) mRNA, measured by competitive reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. The mRNA appeared simultaneously in the ischemic core and penumbra at 8 h, peaked between 14 and 24 h, and disappeared by 48 h. At 24 h, inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS)-like immunoreactivity was present in the endothelium of cerebral microvessels and in scattered cells, probably representing leukocytes or activated microglia. Electrical stimulation of the cerebellar fastigial nucleus (FN) for 1 h, 48 h before MCAO, reduced infarct volumes by 45% by decreasing cellular death in the ischemic penumbra. It also reduced by >90% the expression of iNOS mRNA and protein in the penumbra, but not core, and decreased by 44% the iNOS enzyme activity. We conclude that excitation of neuronal networks represented in the cerebellum elicits a conditioned central neurogenic neuroprotection associated with the downregulation of iNOS mRNA and protein. This neuroimmune interaction may, by blocking the expression of iNOS, contribute to neuroprotection.A focal infarction produced by occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (MCAO) in spontaneously hypertensive rats induced expression of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) mRNA, measured by competitive reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. The mRNA appeared simultaneously in the ischemic core and penumbra at 8 h, peaked between 14 and 24 h, and disappeared by 48 h. At 24 h, inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS)-like immunoreactivity was present in the endothelium of cerebral microvessels and in scattered cells, probably representing leukocytes or activated microglia. Electrical stimulation of the cerebellar fastigial nucleus (FN) for 1 h, 48 h before MCAO, reduced infarct volumes by 45% by decreasing cellular death in the ischemic penumbra. It also reduced by >90% the expression of iNOS mRNA and protein in the penumbra, but not core, and decreased by 44% the iNOS enzyme activity. We conclude that excitation of neuronal networks represented in the cerebellum elicits a conditioned central neurogenic neuroprotection associated with the downregulation of iNOS mRNA and protein. This neuroimmune interaction may, by blocking the expression of iNOS, contribute to neuroprotection.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Interneuron precursor transplants in adult hippocampus reverse psychosis-relevant features in a mouse model of hippocampal disinhibition

Ahmed I. Gilani; Muhammad O. Chohan; Melis Inan; Scott A. Schobel; Nashid H. Chaudhury; Samuel Paskewitz; Nao Chuhma; Sara B. Glickstein; Robert J. Merker; Qing Xu; Scott A. Small; Stewart A. Anderson; Margaret Elizabeth Ross; Holly Moore

Significance Hippocampal hyperactivity predicts psychosis and may disrupt aspects of cognition in schizophrenia. Here, we use interneuron precursor transplants in mice lacking cyclin D2 (Ccnd2) to test links between hippocampal GABAergic interneurons and psychosis-relevant phenotypes. Ccnd2-null mice show parvalbumin interneuron deficits and increased in vivo hippocampal excitatory neuron spiking and metabolic activity. This hippocampal disinhibition is associated with cognitive deficits and excess dopamine activity. Transplanting interneuron progenitors derived from the embryonic medial ganglionic eminence into adult hippocampus mitigates these abnormalities. This study thus provides a paradigm for elucidating mechanisms by which limbic cortical interneuron hypofunction may contribute to cognitive deficits and dopamine dysregulation in psychosis. The sustained efficacy of the transplants supports a rationale for targeting hippocampal GABA interneurons with novel therapies for psychosis. GABAergic interneuron hypofunction is hypothesized to underlie hippocampal dysfunction in schizophrenia. Here, we use the cyclin D2 knockout (Ccnd2−/−) mouse model to test potential links between hippocampal interneuron deficits and psychosis-relevant neurobehavioral phenotypes. Ccnd2−/− mice show cortical PV+ interneuron reductions, prominently in hippocampus, associated with deficits in synaptic inhibition, increased in vivo spike activity of projection neurons, and increased in vivo basal metabolic activity (assessed with fMRI) in hippocampus. Ccnd2−/− mice show several neurophysiological and behavioral phenotypes that would be predicted to be produced by hippocampal disinhibition, including increased ventral tegmental area dopamine neuron population activity, behavioral hyperresponsiveness to amphetamine, and impairments in hippocampus-dependent cognition. Remarkably, transplantation of cells from the embryonic medial ganglionic eminence (the major origin of cerebral cortical interneurons) into the adult Ccnd2−/− caudoventral hippocampus reverses these psychosis-relevant phenotypes. Surviving neurons from these transplants are 97% GABAergic and widely distributed within the hippocampus. Up to 6 mo after the transplants, in vivo hippocampal metabolic activity is lowered, context-dependent learning and memory is improved, and dopamine neuron activity and the behavioral response to amphetamine are normalized. These findings establish functional links between hippocampal GABA interneuron deficits and psychosis-relevant dopaminergic and cognitive phenotypes, and support a rationale for targeting limbic cortical interneuron function in the prevention and treatment of schizophrenia.


Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry | 2015

Family Nurture Intervention in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit improves social-relatedness, attention, and neurodevelopment of preterm infants at 18 months in a randomized controlled trial

Martha G. Welch; Morgan R. Firestein; Judy Austin; Amie Ashley Hane; Raymond I. Stark; Myron A. Hofer; Marianne Garland; Sara B. Glickstein; Susan A. Brunelli; Robert J. Ludwig; Michael M. Myers

BACKGROUND Preterm infants are at high risk for adverse neurodevelopmental and behavioral outcomes. Family Nurture Intervention (FNI) in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) is designed to counteract adverse effects of separation of mothers and their preterm infants. Here, we evaluate effects of FNI on neurobehavioral outcomes. METHODS Data were collected at 18 months corrected age from preterm infants. Infants were assigned at birth to FNI or standard care (SC). Bayley Scales of Infant Development III (Bayley-III) were assessed for 76 infants (SC, n = 31; FNI, n = 45); the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) for 57 infants (SC, n = 31; FNI, n = 26); and the Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers (M-CHAT) was obtained for 59 infants (SC, n = 33; FNI, n = 26). RESULTS Family Nurture Intervention significantly improved Bayley-III cognitive (p = .039) and language (p = .008) scores for infants whose scores were greater than 85. FNI infants had fewer attention problems on the CBCL (p < .02). FNI improved total M-CHAT scores (p < .02). Seventy-six percent of SC infants failed at least one of the M-CHAT items, compared to 27% of FNI infants (p < .001). In addition, 36% of SC infants versus 0% of FNI infants failed at least one social-relatedness M-CHAT item (p < .001). CONCLUSIONS Family Nurture Intervention is the first NICU intervention to show significant improvements in preterm infants across multiple domains of neurodevelopment, social-relatedness, and attention problems. These gains suggest that an intervention that facilitates emotional interactions between mothers and infants in the NICU may be key to altering developmental trajectories of preterm infants.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 1998

Stimulation of cerebellar fastigial nucleus inhibits interleukin-1β-induced cerebrovascular inflammation

Elena Galea; Sara B. Glickstein; Douglas L. Feinstein; Eugene V. Golanov; Donald J. Reis

Electrical stimulation of the cerebellar fastigial nucleus (FN) in rat protects the brain against ischemia. We studied whether FN could reduce the cerebrovascular inflammation as a mechanism of protection. FN or dentate nucleus (sham controls) was electrically stimulated for 1 h, and 72 h later rats were either injected with interleukin (IL)-1β into the striata or processed to analyze inflammatory responses in isolated brain microvessels. In striata, IL-1β induced a recruitment of leukocytes that was reduced by 50% by FN stimulation. In isolated microvessels, IL-1β induced the transient and dose-dependent upregulation of the mRNAs encoding for the inducible nitric oxide synthase (NOS-2), intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1), and inhibitory κB-α (IκB-α), an inhibitor of nuclear factor-κB. FN stimulation decreased the upregulation of NOS-2 and ICAM-1 mRNAs, whereas it increased IκB-α mRNA expression. Dentate nucleus stimulation did not mimic the FN actions. These findings suggest that FN stimulation may render brain microvessels refractory to IL-1β by overproduction of IκB-α and support the hypothesis that alteration of microvascular inflammation may contribute to the central neurogenic neuroprotection elicited from the FN.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2008

Electrical stimulation of cerebellar fastigial nucleus protects rat brain, in vitro, from staurosporine‐induced apoptosis

Ping Zhou; Liping Qian; Sara B. Glickstein; Eugene V. Golanov; Virginia M. Pickel; Donald J. Reis

Electrical stimulation of the cerebellar fastigial nucleus (FN) elicits a prolonged (∼10 days) and substantial (50–80%) protection against ischemic and excitotoxic injuries. The mechanism(s) of protection are unknown. We investigated whether FN stimulation directly protects brain cells against apoptotic cell death in an in vitro rat brain slice culture model. Rats were electrically stimulated in FN or, as control, the cerebellar dentate nucleus (DN). Coronal slices through the forebrain were explanted, exposed to staurosporine, harvested, and analyzed for caspase‐3 activity by a fluorescence assay. FN, but not DN, stimulation significantly reduced staurosporine‐induced caspase‐3 activity by 39 ± 7% at 3 h, 31 ± 3% at 6 h and 26 ± 4% at 10 h of incubation. Immunocytochemistry revealed FN‐specific reductions in activated caspase‐3 mainly in glial‐like cells throughout the forebrain. FN stimulation also results in a 56.5% reduction in cytochrome c release upon staurosporine incubation. We conclude that neuroprotection elicited from FN stimulation can directly modify the sensitivity of brain cells to apoptotic stimuli and thereby suppress staurosporine induced apoptosis in adult rat brain slices. This model indicates that neuroprotection can be studied in vitro and provides new insight into the potential role of glial cells in ischemic protection of neurons induced by FN stimulation.

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Martha G. Welch

Columbia University Medical Center

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Robert J. Ludwig

Columbia University Medical Center

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Eugene V. Golanov

The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research

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Benjamin Y. Klein

Columbia University Medical Center

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