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Dive into the research topics where Tinmarla F. Oo is active.

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Featured researches published by Tinmarla F. Oo.


Nature Neuroscience | 2009

Mutant LRRK2R1441G BAC transgenic mice recapitulate cardinal features of Parkinson's disease

Yanping Li; Wencheng Liu; Tinmarla F. Oo; Lei Wang; Yi Tang; Vernice Jackson-Lewis; Chun Zhou; Kindiya Geghman; Mikhail B. Bogdanov; Serge Przedborski; M. Flint Beal; Robert E. Burke; Chenjian Li

Mutations in leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) are the most common genetic cause of Parkinsons disease. We created a LRRK2 transgenic mouse model that recapitulates cardinal features of the disease: an age-dependent and levodopa-responsive slowness of movement associated with diminished dopamine release and axonal pathology of nigrostriatal dopaminergic projection. These mice provide a valid model of Parkinsons disease and are a resource for the investigation of pathogenesis and therapeutics.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2005

CHOP/GADD153 is a mediator of apoptotic death in substantia nigra dopamine neurons in an in vivo neurotoxin model of parkinsonism.

Robert M. Silva; Vincent Ries; Tinmarla F. Oo; Olga Yarygina; Vernice Jackson-Lewis; Elizabeth J. Ryu; Phoebe D. Lu; Stefan J. Marciniak; David Ron; Serge Przedborski; Nikolai Kholodilov; Lloyd A. Greene; Robert E. Burke

There is increasing evidence that neuron death in neurodegenerative diseases, such as Parkinsons disease, is due to the activation of programmed cell death. However, the upstream mediators of cell death remain largely unknown. One approach to the identification of upstream mediators is to perform gene expression analysis in disease models. Such analyses, performed in tissue culture models induced by neurotoxins, have identified up‐regulation of CHOP/GADD153, a transcription factor implicated in apoptosis due to endoplasmic reticulum stress or oxidative injury. To evaluate the disease‐related significance of these findings, we have examined the expression of CHOP/GADD153 in neurotoxin models of parkinsonism in living animals. Nuclear expression of CHOP protein is observed in developmental and adult models of dopamine neuron death induced by intrastriatal injection of 6‐hydroxydopamine (6OHDA) and in models induced by 1‐methyl‐4‐phenyl‐1,2,3,6‐tetrahydropyridine (MPTP). CHOP is a mediator of neuron death in the adult 60HDA model because a null mutation results in a reduction in apoptosis. In the chronic MPTP model, however, while CHOP is robustly expressed, the null mutation does not protect from the loss of neurons. We conclude that the role of CHOP depends on the nature of the toxic stimulus. For 6OHDA, an oxidative metabolite of dopamine, it is a mediator of apoptotic death.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Akt Suppresses Retrograde Degeneration of Dopaminergic Axons by Inhibition of Macroautophagy

Hsiao Chun Cheng; Sang Ryong Kim; Tinmarla F. Oo; Tatyana Kareva; Olga Yarygina; Margarita Rzhetskaya; Chuansong Wang; Matthew J. During; Zsolt Talloczy; Keiji Tanaka; Masaaki Komatsu; Kazuto Kobayashi; Hideyuki Okano; Nikolai Kholodilov; Robert E. Burke

Axon degeneration is a hallmark of neurodegenerative diseases, including Alzheimers disease and Parkinsons disease. Such degeneration is not a passive event but rather an active process mediated by mechanisms that are distinct from the canonical pathways of programmed cell death that mediate destruction of the cell soma. Little is known of the diverse mechanisms involved, particularly those of retrograde axon degeneration. We have previously observed in living animal models of degeneration in the nigrostriatal projection that a constitutively active form of the kinase, myristoylated Akt (Myr-Akt), demonstrates an ability to suppress programmed cell death and preserve the soma of dopamine neurons. Here, we show in both neurotoxin and physical injury (axotomy) models that Myr-Akt is also able to preserve dopaminergic axons due to suppression of acute retrograde axon degeneration. This cellular phenotype is associated with increased mammalian target of rapamycin (mTor) activity and can be recapitulated by a constitutively active form of the small GTPase Rheb, an upstream activator of mTor. Axon degeneration in these models is accompanied by the occurrence of macroautophagy, which is suppressed by Myr-Akt. Conditional deletion of the essential autophagy mediator Atg7 in adult mice also achieves striking axon protection in these acute models of retrograde degeneration. The protection afforded by both Myr-Akt and Atg7 deletion is robust and lasting, because it is still observed as protection of both axons and dopaminergic striatal innervation weeks after injury. We conclude that acute retrograde axon degeneration is regulated by Akt/Rheb/mTor signaling pathways.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2002

Activation of Caspase-3 in Developmental Models of Programmed Cell Death in Neurons of the Substantia Nigra

Beom S. Jeon; Nikolai Kholodilov; Tinmarla F. Oo; Sang‐Yun Kim; Kevin J. Tomaselli; Anu Srinivasan; Leonidas Stefanis; Robert E. Burke

Abstract: Programmed cell death has been proposed to play a role in the death of neurons in acute and chronic degenerative neurologic disease. There is now evidence that the caspases, a family of cysteine proteases, mediate programmed cell death in various cells. In neurons, caspase‐3 (CPP32/Yama/apopain), in particular, has been proposed to play a role. We examined the expression of caspase‐3 in three models of programmed cell death affecting neurons of the substantia nigra in the rat: natural developmental neuron death and induced developmental death following either striatal target injury with quinolinic acid or dopamine terminal lesion with intrastriatal injection of 6‐hydroxydopamine. Using an antibody to the large (p17) subunit of activated caspase‐3, we have found that activated enzyme is expressed in apoptotic profiles in all models. Increased p17 immunostaining correlated with increased enzyme activity. The sub‐cellular distribution of activated caspase‐3 differed among the models: In natural cell death and the target injury model, it was strictly nuclear, whereas in the toxin model, it was also cytoplasmic. We conclude that p17 immunostaining is a useful marker for programmed cell death in neurons of the substantia nigra.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 1999

Expression of c-fos, c-jun, and N-terminal kinase (JNK) in a Development Model of Induced Apoptotic Death in Neurons of the Substantia Nigra

Tinmarla F. Oo; Claire Henchcliffe; Daylon James; Robert E. Burke

Abstract : The transcription factors c‐fos and c‐jun have been proposed to play a role in the initiation of programmed cell death in neurons. We have shown that programmed cell death, with the morphology of apoptosis, occurs in dopamine neurons of the substantia nigra (SN) during normal postnatal development and that this death event can be induced by early striatal target injury. We have investigated the relationship between c‐fos and c‐jun protein expression and induced death in neurons of the SN. Although c‐fos is induced, it is unlikely to play a role in cell death, because its expression is not well correlated with apoptotic death either temporally or at a cellular level. Expression of c‐jun, however, is both temporally and regionally correlated with induction of death, and, at a cellular level, it colocalizes with apoptotic morphology. The increased expression of c‐jun is likely to be functionally significant, because it is associated with increased c‐jun expression. JNK expression also colocalizes with apoptotic morphology. We conclude that c‐jun is likely to play a role in the initiation of apoptotic cell death in these neurons.


Annals of Neurology | 2011

Dopaminergic pathway reconstruction by Akt/Rheb-induced axon regeneration.

Sang Ryong Kim; Xiqun Chen; Tinmarla F. Oo; Tatyana Kareva; Olga Yarygina; Chuansong Wang; Matthew J. During; Nikolai Kholodilov; Robert E. Burke

A prevailing concept in neuroscience has been that the adult mammalian central nervous system is incapable of restorative axon regeneration. Recent evidence, however, has suggested that reactivation of intrinsic cellular programs regulated by protein kinase B (Akt)/mammalian target of rapamycin (mTor) signaling may restore this ability.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Regulation of the development of mesencephalic dopaminergic systems by the selective expression of glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor in their targets

Nikolai Kholodilov; Olga Yarygina; Tinmarla F. Oo; Hui Zhang; David Sulzer; William T. Dauer; Robert E. Burke

Glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) has been shown to protect and restore dopamine (DA) neurons in injury models and is being evaluated for the treatment of Parkinsons disease. Nevertheless, little is known of its physiological role. We have shown that GDNF suppresses apoptosis in DA neurons of the substantia nigra (SN) postnatally both in vitro and during their first phase of natural cell death in vivo. Furthermore, intrastriatal injection of neutralizing antibodies augments cell death, suggesting that endogenous GDNF plays a role as a target-derived factor. Such a role would predict that overexpression of GDNF in striatum would increase the surviving number of SN DA neurons. To test this hypothesis, we used the tetracycline-dependent transcription activator (tTA)/tTA-responsive promoter system to create mice that overexpress GDNF selectively in the striatum, cortex, and hippocampus. These mice demonstrate an increased number of SN DA neurons after the first phase of natural cell death. However, this increase does not persist into adulthood. As adults, these mice also do not have increased dopaminergic innervation of the striatum. They do, however, demonstrate increased numbers of ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons and increased innervation of the cortex. This morphologic phenotype is associated with an increased locomotor response to amphetamine. We conclude that striatal GDNF is necessary and sufficient to regulate the number of SN DA neurons surviving the first phase of natural cell death, but it is not sufficient to increase their final adult number. GDNF in VTA targets, however, is sufficient to regulate the adult number of DA neurons.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2008

JNK2 and JNK3 combined are essential for apoptosis in dopamine neurons of the substantia nigra, but are not required for axon degeneration.

Vincent Ries; Robert M. Silva; Tinmarla F. Oo; Hsiao-Chun Cheng; Margarita Rzhetskaya; Nikolai Kholodilov; Richard A. Flavell; Chia-Yi Kuan; Pasko Rakic; Robert E. Burke

Activation of c‐jun N‐terminal kinase (JNK) by the mitogen‐activated protein kinase cascade has been shown to play an important role in the death of dopamine neurons of the substantia nigra, one of the principal neuronal populations affected in Parkinson’s disease. However, it has remained unknown whether the JNK2 and JNK3 isoforms, either singly or in combination, are essential for apoptotic death, and, if so, the mechanisms involved. In addition, it has been unclear whether they play a role in axonal degeneration of these neurons in disease models. To address these issues we have examined the effect of single and double jnk2 and jnk3 null mutations on apoptosis in a highly destructive neurotoxin model, that induced by intrastriatal 6‐hydroxydopamine. We find that homozygous jnk2/3 double null mutations result in a complete abrogation of apoptosis and a prolonged survival of the entire population of dopamine neurons. In spite of this complete protection at the cell soma level, there was no protection of axons. These studies provide a striking demonstration of the distinctiveness of the mechanisms that mediate cell soma and axon degeneration, and they illustrate the need to identify and target pathways of axon degeneration in the development of neuroprotective therapeutics.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2001

Expression of cyclin‐dependent kinase 5 and its activator p35 in models of induced apoptotic death in neurons of the substantia nigra in vivo

Michael Neystat; Margarita Rzhetskaya; Tinmarla F. Oo; Nikolai Kholodilov; Olga Yarygina; Alexandria Wilson; Bassem F. El-Khodor; Robert E. Burke

Cyclin‐dependent kinase 5 is predominantly expressed in postmitotic neurons and plays a role in neurite elongation during development. It has also been postulated to play a role in apoptosis in a variety of cells, including neurons, but little is known about the generality and functional significance of cdk5 expression in neuronal apoptosis in living brain. We have therefore examined its expression and that of its known activators, p35, p39 and p67, in models of induced apoptosis in neurons of the substantia nigra. We find that cdk5 is expressed in apoptotic profiles following intrastriatal injection of 6‐hydroxydopamine and axotomy. It is expressed exclusively in profiles which are in late morphologic stages of apoptosis. In these late stages, derivation of the profiles from neurons, and localization of expression to the nucleus, can be demonstrated by co‐labeling with a neuron‐specific nuclear marker, NeuN. In another model of induced apoptotic death in nigra, produced by developmental striatal lesion, kinase activity increases in parallel with cell death. While mRNAs for all three cdk5 activators are expressed in nigra during development, only p35 protein is expressed in apoptotic profiles. We conclude that cdk5/p35 expression is a general feature of apoptotic neuron death in substantia nigra neurons in vivo.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2005

Anatomical Basis of Glial Cell Line-Derived Neurotrophic Factor Expression in the Striatum and Related Basal Ganglia during Postnatal Development of the Rat

Tinmarla F. Oo; Vincent Ries; Jinwhan Cho; Nikolai Kholodilov; Robert E. Burke

There is increasing evidence that glial cell line‐derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) plays a role as a limiting, striatal target‐derived neurotrophic factor for dopamine neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) by regulating the magnitude of the first phase of postnatal natural cell death which occurs in these neurons. While it has been shown that GDNF mRNA is relatively abundant in postnatal striatum, the cellular basis of its expression has been unknown. We therefore used nonradioactive in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry to examine the cellular basis of GDNF mRNA and protein expression, respectively, in postnatal striatum and related structures. We found that GDNF mRNA is expressed within medium‐sized striatal neurons. Expression in glia was not observed. At the protein level, regionally, GDNF expression in striatum was observed in striosomal patches, as previously described. At a cellular level a few neurons were observed, but they do not account for the striosomal pattern. This pattern is predominantly due to GDNF‐positive neuropil. Some of this neuropil arises from tyrosine hydroxylase‐positive nigro‐striatal dopaminergic afferents. Astrocytic processes do not appear to contribute to the striosomal pattern. GDNF‐positive fibers are identified not only within intrinsic striatal neuropil, but also in fibers within the major striatal efferent targets: the globus pallidus, the entopeduncular nucleus, and the SN pars reticulata. We conclude that during normal postnatal development, medium‐sized neurons are the principal source of GDNF within the striatum. J. Comp. Neurol. 484:57–67, 2005.

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Leonidas Stefanis

Columbia University Medical Center

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