Shilpa D. Kadam
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
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Featured researches published by Shilpa D. Kadam.
Brain Research | 2008
Shilpa D. Kadam; J.D. Mulholland; John W. McDonald; Anne M. Comi
Stroke in the neonatal brain is an important cause of neurologic morbidity. To characterize the dynamics of neural progenitor cell proliferation and maturation after survival delays in the neonatal brain following ischemia, we utilized unilateral carotid ligation alone to produce infarcts in postnatal day 12 CD1 mice. We investigated the neurogenesis derived from the sub-ventricular zone and the sub-granular zone of the dentate gyrus subsequent to injury. Newly produced cells were labeled by bromodeoxyuridine at approximately 1 week (P18-20) after the insult by 5 i.p. injections (each 50 mg/kg). Subsequent migration and differentiation of the newborn cells was investigated at postnatal day 40 by immunohistochemistry for molecular neuronal and glial cell-lineage markers and BrdU incorporation. Cresyl violet stain demonstrated massive loss of neurons in the ipsilateral septal hippocampus in the CA3 and CA1 regions associated with atrophy. Total counts of new cells were significantly lowered not only in the ipsilateral injured but also the contralateral uninjured hippocampi and correlated with the lesion induced atrophy. Bilateral percent neuronal commitments in the dentate gyri however, were not significantly different from control. New cell densities in the neocortex and striatum increased bilaterally after neonatal stroke. The predominantly non-neuronal commitment of the SVZ-derived new cells was similar to the percentage of non-neuronal commitment in controls. In conclusion, neurogenesis occurring at 1 week after neonatal ischemia in the model maintained cell-lineage commitment patterns similar to sham controls. However, the total number of hippocampal SGZ-derived new neurons was reduced bilaterally; in contrast, the SVZ-derived neurogenesis was amplified.
Behavioural Brain Research | 2009
Shilpa D. Kadam; Justin D. Mulholland; Dani R. Smith; Michael V. Johnston; Anne M. Comi
Stroke in term neonates remains a significant cause of long-term neurological morbidity. This study was designed to assess the relationships between ischemic stroke induced by permanent unilateral carotid ligation in P12 CD1 mice and the structural and functional outcomes in the young mice as a consequence. After P12 ischemic strokes, mice were behaviorally tested using accelerated rotorod, spontaneous alternation on a T-maze, open-field, and cylinder tests between P33 and P39. Brain injury was scored by histology at P40 with cresyl violet-stained coronal sections and computerized quantification of the ischemic injury. The ligation-injured mice were not different from controls on cylinder testing for asymmetric use of their forelimb, or on rotorod measures. In the spontaneous alternation task, however, injured mice demonstrated significantly lower rates of alternation indicating a deficit in working memory. Open-field testing repeated on two consecutive days revealed that the ligated mice were less active than the controls and that they failed to habituate to the open field environment between sessions indicating a learning deficit. Overall, our results demonstrate that ischemia induced by our neonatal stroke model produces behavioral deficits that are consistent with the brain injury.
Stroke | 2010
Lavinia Alberi; Zhikai Chi; Shilpa D. Kadam; Justin D. Mulholland; Valina L. Dawson; Nicholas Gaiano; Anne M. Comi
Background and Purpose— Notch receptors (1–4) are membrane proteins that, on ligand stilumation, release their cytoplasmic domains to serve as transcription factors. Notch-2 promotes proliferation both during development and cancer, but its role in response to ischemic injury is less well understood. The purpose of this study was to understand whether Notch-2 is induced after neonatal stroke and to investigate its functional relevance. Methods— P12 CD1 mice were subjected to permanent unilateral (right-sided) double ligation of the common carotid artery. Results— Neonatal ischemia induces a progressive brain injury with prolonged apoptosis and Notch-2 up-regulation. Notch-2 expression was induced shortly after injury in hippocampal areas with elevated c-fos activation and increased cell death. Long-term induction of Notch-2 also occurred in CA1 and CA3 in and around areas of cell death, and had a distinct pattern of expression as compared to Notch-1. In vitro oxygen glucose deprivation treatment showed a similar increase in Notch-2 in apoptotic cells. In vitro gain of function experiments, using an active form of Notch-2, show that Notch-2 induction is neurotoxic to a comparable extent as oxygen glucose deprivation treatment. Conclusions— These results suggest that Notch-2 up-regulation after neonatal ischemia is detrimental to neuronal survival.
Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2015
Seok Kyu Kang; Geoffrey J. Markowitz; Shin Tae Kim; Michael V. Johnston; Shilpa D. Kadam
Ischemia in the immature brain is an important cause of neonatal seizures. Temporal evolution of acquired neonatal seizures and their response to anticonvulsants are of great interest, given the unreliability of the clinical correlates and poor efficacy of first-line anti-seizure drugs. The expression and function of the electroneutral chloride co-transporters KCC2 and NKCC1 influence the anti-seizure efficacy of GABAA-agonists. To investigate ischemia-induced seizure susceptibility and efficacy of the GABAA-agonist phenobarbital (PB), with NKCC1 antagonist bumetanide (BTN) as an adjunct treatment, we utilized permanent unilateral carotid-ligation to produce acute ischemic-seizures in post-natal day 7, 10, and 12 CD1 mice. Immediate post-ligation video-electroencephalograms (EEGs) quantitatively evaluated baseline and post-treatment seizure burdens. Brains were examined for stroke-injury and western blot analyses to evaluate the expression of KCC2 and NKCC1. Severity of acute ischemic seizures post-ligation was highest at P7. PB was an efficacious anti-seizure agent at P10 and P12, but not at P7. BTN failed as an adjunct, at all ages tested and significantly blunted PB-efficacy at P10. Significant acute post-ischemic downregulation of KCC2 was detected at all ages. At P7, males displayed higher age-dependent seizure susceptibility, associated with a significant developmental lag in their KCC2 expression. This study established a novel neonatal mouse model of PB-resistant seizures that demonstrates age/sex-dependent susceptibility. The age-dependent profile of KCC2 expression and its post-insult downregulation may underlie the PB-resistance reported in this model. Blocking NKCC1 with low-dose BTN following PB treatment failed to improve PB-efficacy.
Epilepsy & Behavior | 2010
Shilpa D. Kadam; C.L. Smith-Hicks; Dani R. Smith; P.F. Worley; Anne M. Comi
Stroke in the developing brain is an important cause of chronic neurological morbidities including neurobehavioral dysfunction and epilepsy. Here, we describe a mouse model of neonatal stroke resulting from unilateral carotid ligation that results in acute seizures, long-term hyperactivity, spontaneous lateralized circling behavior, impaired cognitive function, and epilepsy. Exploration-dependent induction of the immediate early gene Arc (activity-regulated cytoskeleton associated protein) in hippocampal neurons was examined in the general population of neurons versus neurons that were generated approximately 1 week after the ischemic insult and labeled with bromodeoxyuridine. Although Arc was inducible in a network-specific manner after severe neonatal stroke, it was impaired, not only in the ipsilateral injured but also in the contralateral uninjured hippocampi when examined 6 months after the neonatal stroke. Severity of both the stroke injury and the acquired poststroke epilepsy negatively correlated with Arc induction and new neuron integration into functional circuits in the injured hippocampi.
Frontiers in Pediatrics | 2015
Seok Kyu Kang; Shilpa D. Kadam
Neonatal period is the most vulnerable time for the occurrence of seizures, and neonatal seizures often pose a clinical challenge both for their acute management and frequency of associated long-term co-morbidities. Etiologies of neonatal seizures are known to play a primary role in the anti-epileptic drug responsiveness and the long-term sequelae. Recent studies have suggested that burden of acute recurrent seizures in neonates may also impact chronic outcomes independent of the etiology. However, not many studies, either clinical or pre-clinical, have addressed the long-term outcomes of neonatal seizures in an etiology-specific manner. In this review, we briefly review the available clinical and pre-clinical research for long-term outcomes following neonatal seizures. As the most frequent cause of acquired neonatal seizures, we focus on the studies evaluating long-term effects of HIE-seizures with the goal to evaluate (1) what parameters evaluated during acute stages of neonatal seizures can reliably be used to predict long-term outcomes? and (2) what available clinical and pre-clinical data are available help determine importance of etiology vs. seizure burdens in long-term sequelae.
Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2009
Shilpa D. Kadam; Justin D. Mulholland; John W. McDonald; Anne M. Comi
Stroke in the neonatal brain is an understudied cause of neurologic morbidity. Recently we have characterized a new immature mouse model of stroke utilizing unilateral carotid ligation alone to produce infarcts and acute seizures in postnatal day 12 (P12) CD‐1 mice. In this study, the amount of poststroke neural progenitor proliferation was examined in the subgranular (SGZ) of the dentate gyrus and the subventricular zone (SVZ) 7, 14, and 21days after ischemia (DAI). A single IP injection (50 mg/kg) of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) given 2 hr before perfusion fixation labeled newborn cells. Early cell phenotypes were quantified by colabeling with GFAP, nestin, and DCX. Control mice revealed an age‐dependent decrease in neural proliferation, with an ∼50% drop in BrdU‐labeled cell counts at P33 compared with P19 both in the SGZ and in the SVZ. Significant reduction in the amount of neural proliferation in the ipsilateral injured SGZ of ligated mice correlated with both the severity of the stroke‐injury and the acute seizure scores. Similar correlations were not detected contralaterally. Contralateral SGZ neural proliferation was initially lowered at 7 DAI but normalized by 21 DAI. In both injured and control brains, ∼90% of newborn SGZ cells colabeled with nestin, ∼30% colabeled with GFAP, and a few colabeled with DCX. In contrast, poststroke SVZ cell proliferation was enhanced ipsi‐ more than contralaterally at 7 DAI. In the SVZ, the enhanced neural proliferation normalized to control levels by P33. In conclusion, the neural cell proliferation was differentially altered in the SGZ vs. SVZ after neonatal stroke.
Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience | 2014
Michael V. Johnston; Simon Ammanuel; Cliona O'Driscoll; Amy W. Wozniak; Sakkubai Naidu; Shilpa D. Kadam
Mutations in the X-linked gene encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein 2 (Mecp2) cause most cases of Rett syndrome (RTT). Currently there is no cure for RTT. Abnormal EEGs are found in 100% of RTT cases and are associated with severe sleep dysfunction, the cause of which is not well understood. Mice deficient in MeCP2 protein have been studied and characterized for their neuropathological and behavioral deficits to better understand RTT. With the goal to study the non-ictal EEG correlates in symptomatic Mecp2 KO mice (Mecp2tm1.1Bird/y), and determine novel EEG biomarkers of their reported progressive neurodegeneration, we used 24 h video-EEG/EMG with synchronous in-vivo cortical glutamate biosensor in the frontal cortex. We scored the EEG for activity states and spectral analysis was performed to evaluate correlations to the synchronous extracellular glutamate fluctuations underlying Mecp2 inactivation as compared to WT. Significant alterations in sleep structure due to dark cycle-specific long wake states and poor quality of slow-wave sleep were associated with a significant increase in glutamate loads per activity cycle. The dynamics of the activity-state-dependent physiological rise and fall of glutamate indicative of glutamate homeostasis were significantly altered in the KO mice. Colorimetric quantitation of absolute glutamate levels in frontal cortex also indicated the presence of significantly higher levels in KO. This study for the first time found evidence of uncompensated sleep deprivation-like EEG biomarkers that were associated with glutamate homeostatic dysfunction in the Mecp2 KO mice.
Archives of Dermatological Research | 2012
Shilpa D. Kadam; Marjan Gucek; Robert N. Cole; Paul A. Watkins; Anne M. Comi
Sturge–Weber syndrome (SWS) is defined by vascular malformations of the face, eye and brain and an underlying somatic mutation has been hypothesized. We employed isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification (iTRAQ-8plex)-based liquid chromatography interfaced with tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) approach to identify differentially expressed proteins between port-wine-derived and normal skin-derived fibroblasts of four individuals with SWS. Proteins were identified that were significantly up- or down-regulated (i.e., ratios >1.2 or <0.8) in two or three pairs of samples (nxa0=xa031/972 quantified proteins) and their associated p values reported. Ingenuity pathway analysis (IPA) tool showed that the up-regulated proteins were associated with pathways that enhance cell proliferation; down-regulated proteins were associated with suppression of cell proliferation. The significant toxicologic list pathway in all four observations was oxidative stress mediated by Nrf2. This proteomics study highlights oxidative stress also consistent with a possible mutation in the RASA1 gene or pathway in SWS.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2015
S. K. Kang; Michael V. Johnston; Shilpa D. Kadam
Neonatal seizures are commonly associated with hypoxic–ischemic encephalopathy. Phenobarbital (PB) resistance is common and poses a serious challenge in clinical management. Using a newly characterized neonatal mouse model of ischemic seizures, this study investigated a novel strategy for rescuing PB resistance. A small‐molecule TrkB antagonist, ANA12, used to selectively and transiently block post‐ischemic BDNF‐TrkB signaling in vivo, determined whether rescuing TrkB‐mediated post‐ischemic degradation of the K+–Cl− co‐transporter (KCC2) rescued PB‐resistant seizures. The anti‐seizure efficacy of ANA12 + PB was quantified by (i) electrographic seizure burden using acute continuous video‐electroencephalograms and (ii) post‐treatment expression levels of KCC2 and NKCC1 using Western blot analysis in postnatal day (P)7 and P10 CD1 pups with unilateral carotid ligation. ANA12 significantly rescued PB‐resistant seizures at P7 and improved PB efficacy at P10. A single dose of ANA12 + PB prevented the post‐ischemic degradation of KCC2 for up to 24 h. As anticipated, ANA12 by itself had no anti‐seizure properties and was unable to prevent KCC2 degradation at 24 h without follow‐on PB. This indicates that unsubdued seizures can independently lead to KCC2 degradation via non‐TrkB‐dependent pathways. This study, for the first time as a proof‐of‐concept, reports the potential therapeutic value of KCC2 modulation for the management of PB‐resistant seizures in neonates. Future investigations are required to establish the mechanistic link between ANA12 and the prevention of KCC2 degradation.