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Dive into the research topics where Vladimir Kepe is active.

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Featured researches published by Vladimir Kepe.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2002

Localization of neurofibrillary tangles and beta-amyloid plaques in the brains of living patients with Alzheimer disease.

Kooresh Shoghi-Jadid; Gary W. Small; Eric D. Agdeppa; Vladimir Kepe; Linda M. Ercoli; Prabha Siddarth; Stephen L. Read; Nagichettiar Satyamurthy; Andrej Petrič; Sung-Cheng Huang; Jorge R. Barrio

The authors used 2-(1-(6-[(2-[18F]fluoroethyl)(methyl)amino]-2-naphthyl)ethylidene)malononitrile ([18F]FDDNP), a hydrophobic radiofluorinated derivative of 2-(1-[6-(dimethylamino)-2-naphthyl]ethylidene)malononitrile (DDNP), in conjunction with positron emission tomography to determine the localization and load of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and beta-amyloid senile plaques (APs) in the brains of living Alzheimer disease (AD) patients. Previous work illustrated the in vitro binding characteristics of [18F]FDDNP to synthetic beta-amyloid(1-40) fibrils and to NFTs and APs in human AD brain specimens. In the present study, greater accumulation and slower clearance was observed in AP- and NFT-dense brain areas and correlated with lower memory performance scores. The relative residence time of the probe in brain regions affected by AD was significantly greater in patients with AD (n=9) than in control subjects (n=7; p=0.0007). This noninvasive technique for monitoring AP and NFT development is expected to facilitate diagnostic assessment of patients with AD and assist in response-monitoring during experimental treatments.


Neuroscience | 2003

In vitro detection of (S)-naproxen and ibuprofen binding to plaques in the Alzheimer’s brain using the positron emission tomography molecular imaging probe 2-(1-{6-[(2-[18F]fluoroethyl)(methyl)amino]-2-naphthyl}ethylidene)malononitrile

Eric D. Agdeppa; Vladimir Kepe; A Petri; Nagichettiar Satyamurthy; Jie Liu; S.C. Huang; Gary W. Small; Gregory M. Cole; Jorge R. Barrio

Epidemiological studies have suggested that the chronic use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) reduces the relative risk of Alzheimers disease (AD). The possible neuroprotection by NSAIDs in AD is generally attributed to anti-inflammatory activity. An additional mode of drug action may involve anti-aggregation of beta-amyloid (Abeta) peptides by commonly used NSAIDs. We utilized in vitro competition assays, autoradiography, and fluorescence microscopy with AD brain specimens to demonstrate concentration-dependent decreases in the binding of the in vivo molecular imaging probe, 2-(1-[6-[(2-[(18)F]fluoroethyl)(methyl)amino]-2-naphthyl]ethylidene)malononitrile ([(18)F]FDDNP), against (S)-naproxen and (R)- and (S)-ibuprofen (but not diclofenac) to Abeta fibrils and ex vivo Abeta senile plaques. Conversely, in vitro amyloid dyes Congo Red and Thioflavine T were demonstrated in the same experiments not to bind to the FDDNP binding site. FDDNP and the NSAIDs that share the same binding site also exhibit anti-aggregation effects on Abeta peptides, suggesting that the shared binding site on Abeta fibrils and plaques may be a site of anti-aggregation drug action. Our results indicate for the first time the binding of select NSAIDs to plaques, specifically to the binding site of the molecular imaging probe [(18)F]FDDNP. Our understanding of the molecular requirements of FDDNP binding may help in the optimization of the Abeta anti-aggregation potency of experimental drugs. [(18)F]FDDNP has been used to image plaques in vivo with positron emission tomography (PET), and investigations into the influence of Abeta anti-aggregation on the risk-reduction effects of NSAIDs on AD could utilize [(18)F]FDDNP and PET in determining the occupancy rate of NSAIDs and experimental drugs in plaques in the living brain of AD patients.


American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry | 2013

PET Scanning of Brain Tau in Retired National Football League Players: Preliminary Findings

Gary W. Small; Vladimir Kepe; Prabha Siddarth; Linda M. Ercoli; David A. Merrill; Natacha Donoghue; Susan Y. Bookheimer; Jacqueline Martinez; Bennet I. Omalu; Julian E. Bailes; Jorge R. Barrio

OBJECTIVE Mild traumatic brain injury due to contact sports may cause chronic behavioral, mood, and cognitive disturbances associated with pathological deposition of tau protein found at brain autopsy. To explore whether brain tau deposits can be detected in living retired players, we used positron emission tomography (PET) scans after intravenous injections of 2-(1-{6-[(2-[F-18]fluoroethyl)(methyl)amino]-2-naphthyl}ethylidene)malononitrile (FDDNP). METHODS Five retired National Football League players (age range: 45 to 73 years) with histories of mood and cognitive symptoms received neuropsychiatric evaluations and FDDNP-PET. PET signals in subcortical (caudate, putamen, thalamus, subthalamus, midbrain, cerebellar white matter) and cortical (amygdala, frontal, parietal, posterior cingulate, medial and lateral temporal) regions were compared with those of five male controls of comparable age, education, and body mass index. RESULTS FDDNP signals were higher in players compared with controls in all subcortical regions and the amygdala, areas that produce tau deposits following trauma. CONCLUSIONS The small sample size and lack of autopsy confirmation warrant larger, more definitive studies, but if future research confirms these initial findings, FDDNP-PET may offer a means for premorbid identification of neurodegeneration in contact-sports athletes.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

A transgenic Alzheimer rat with plaques, tau pathology, behavioral impairment, oligomeric aβ, and frank neuronal loss.

Robert M. Cohen; Kavon Rezai-Zadeh; Tara M. Weitz; Altan Rentsendorj; David Gate; Inna Spivak; Yasmin Bholat; Vitaly Vasilevko; Charles G. Glabe; Joshua J. Breunig; Pasko Rakic; Hayk Davtyan; Michael G. Agadjanyan; Vladimir Kepe; Jorge R. Barrio; Serguei Bannykh; Christine A. Szekely; Robert N. Pechnick; Terrence Town

Alzheimers disease (AD) is hallmarked by amyloid plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, and widespread cortical neuronal loss (Selkoe, 2001). The “amyloid cascade hypothesis” posits that cerebral amyloid sets neurotoxic events into motion that precipitate Alzheimer dementia (Hardy and Allsop, 1991). Yet, faithful recapitulation of all AD features in widely used transgenic (Tg) mice engineered to overproduce Aβ peptides has been elusive. We have developed a Tg rat model (line TgF344-AD) expressing mutant human amyloid precursor protein (APPsw) and presenilin 1 (PS1ΔE9) genes, each independent causes of early-onset familial AD. TgF344-AD rats manifest age-dependent cerebral amyloidosis that precedes tauopathy, gliosis, apoptotic loss of neurons in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus, and cognitive disturbance. These results demonstrate progressive neurodegeneration of the Alzheimer type in these animals. The TgF344-AD rat fills a critical need for a next-generation animal model to enable basic and translational AD research.


Lancet Neurology | 2008

Current and future uses of neuroimaging for cognitively impaired patients

Gary W. Small; Susan Y. Bookheimer; Paul M. Thompson; Greg M. Cole; S.C. Huang; Vladimir Kepe; Jorge R. Barrio

Technological advances have led to greater use of both structural and functional brain imaging to assist with the diagnosis of dementia for the increasing numbers of people with cognitive decline as they age. In current clinical practice, structural imaging (CT or MRI) is used to identify space-occupying lesions and stroke. Functional methods, such as PET scanning of glucose metabolism, could be used to differentiate Alzheimers disease from frontotemporal dementia, which helps to guide clinicians in symptomatic treatment strategies. New neuroimaging methods that are currently being developed can measure specific neurotransmitter systems, amyloid plaque and tau tangle concentrations, and neuronal integrity and connectivity. Successful co-development of neuroimaging surrogate markers and preventive treatments might eventually lead to so-called brain-check scans for determining risk of cognitive decline, so that physicians can administer disease-modifying medications, vaccines, or other interventions to avoid future cognitive losses and to delay onset of disease.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2010

Plaque and tangle imaging and cognition in normal aging and Alzheimer's disease

Meredith N. Braskie; Andrea D. Klunder; Kiralee M. Hayashi; Hillary Protas; Vladimir Kepe; Karen J. Miller; S.C. Huang; Jorge R. Barrio; Linda M. Ercoli; Prabha Siddarth; Nagichettiar Satyamurthy; Jie Liu; Arthur W. Toga; Susan Y. Bookheimer; Gary W. Small; Paul M. Thompson

Amyloid plaques and tau neurofibrillary tangles, the pathological hallmarks of Alzheimers disease (AD), begin accumulating in the healthy human brain decades before clinical dementia symptoms can be detected. There is great interest in how this pathology spreads in the living brain and its association with cognitive deterioration. Using MRI-derived cortical surface models and four-dimensional animation techniques, we related cognitive ability to positron emission tomography (PET) signal from 2-(1-{6-[(2-[F-18]fluoroethyl)(methyl)amino]-2-naphthyl}ethylidene)malononitrile ([(18)F]FDDNP), a molecular imaging probe for plaques and tangles. We examined this relationship at each cortical surface point in 23 older adults (10 cognitively intact, 6 with amnestic mild cognitive impairment, 7 with AD). [(18)F]FDDNP-PET signal was highly correlated with cognitive performance, even in cognitively intact subjects. Animations of [(18)F]FDDNP signal growth with decreased cognition across all subjects (http://www.loni.ucla.edu/ approximately thompson/FDDNP/video.html) mirrored the classic Braak and Braak trajectory in lateral temporal, parietal, and frontal cortices. Regions in which cognitive performance was significantly correlated with [(18)F]FDDNP signal include those that deteriorate earliest in AD, suggesting the potential utility of [(18)F]FDDNP for early diagnosis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

In vivo characterization of chronic traumatic encephalopathy using (F-18)FDDNP PET brain imaging

Jorge R. Barrio; Gary W. Small; Koon-Pong Wong; Sung-Cheng Huang; Jie Liu; David A. Merrill; Christopher C. Giza; Robert P. Fitzsimmons; Bennet I. Omalu; Julian E. Bailes; Vladimir Kepe

Significance Mild traumatic brain injuries are frequent events in the general population and are associated with a severe neurodegenerative disease, chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). This disease is characterized by abnormal accumulation of protein aggregates, primarily tau proteins, which accumulate in brain areas responsible for mood, fear, stress, and cognition. There is no definitive clinical diagnosis of CTE at the present time, and this new work shows how a tau-sensitive brain imaging agent, [F-18]FDDNP, may be able to detect the disease in living people with varying degrees of symptoms. Early detection would facilitate the most effective management strategies and provide a baseline to measure the effectiveness of treatments. Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is an acquired primary tauopathy with a variety of cognitive, behavioral, and motor symptoms linked to cumulative brain damage sustained from single, episodic, or repetitive traumatic brain injury (TBI). No definitive clinical diagnosis for this condition exists. In this work, we used [F-18]FDDNP PET to detect brain patterns of neuropathology distribution in retired professional American football players with suspected CTE (n = 14) and compared results with those of cognitively intact controls (n = 28) and patients with Alzheimer’s dementia (AD) (n = 24), a disease that has been cognitively associated with CTE. [F-18]FDDNP PET imaging results in the retired players suggested the presence of neuropathological patterns consistent with models of concussion wherein brainstem white matter tracts undergo early axonal damage and cumulative axonal injuries along subcortical, limbic, and cortical brain circuitries supporting mood, emotions, and behavior. This deposition pattern is distinctively different from the progressive pattern of neuropathology [paired helical filament (PHF)-tau and amyloid-β] in AD, which typically begins in the medial temporal lobe progressing along the cortical default mode network, with no or minimal involvement of subcortical structures. This particular [F-18]FDDNP PET imaging pattern in cases of suspected CTE also is primarily consistent with PHF-tau distribution observed at autopsy in subjects with a history of mild TBI and autopsy-confirmed diagnosis of CTE.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2013

PET Imaging of Neuropathology in Tauopathies: Progressive Supranuclear Palsy

Vladimir Kepe; Adam L. Boxer; Sung-Cheng Huang; Jie Liu; Frederick C. Thiede; John C. Mazziotta; Mario F. Mendez; Natacha Donoghue; Gary W. Small; Jorge R. Barrio

OBJECTIVE Currently [18F]FDDNP is the only PET imaging probe with the ability to visualize hyperphosphorylated tau fibrillar aggregates in living subjects. In this work, we evaluate in vivo [18F]FDDNP labeling of brain neuropathology, primarily tau fibrillar aggregates, in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), a human tauopathy usually lacking amyloid-β deposits. METHODS Fifteen patients with PSP received [18F]FDDNP PET scanning. [18F]FDDNP distribution volume ratios, in reference to cerebellar gray matter, were determined for cortical and subcortical areas and compared with those of patients with Parkinsons disease with short disease duration, and age-matched control subjects without neurodegenerative disorders. RESULTS [18F]FDDNP binding was present in subcortical areas (e.g., striatum, thalamus, subthalamic region, midbrain, and cerebellar white matter) regardless of disease severity, with progressive subcortical and cortical involvement as disease severity increased. Brain patterns of [18F]FDDNP binding were entirely consistent with the known pathology distribution for PSP. High midbrain and subthalamic region [18F]FDDNP binding was distinctive for PSP subjects and separated them from controls and patients with Parkinsons disease. CONCLUSIONS These results provide evidence that [18F]FDDNP is a sensitive in vivo PET imaging probe to map and quantify the dynamic regional localization of tau fibrillar aggregates in PSP. Furthermore, [18F]FDDNP PET may provide a tool to detect changes in tau pathology distribution either associated with disease progression or as a treatment biomarker for future tau-specific therapies. Patterns of [18F]FDDNP binding may also be useful in diagnosis early in disease presentation when clinical distinction among neurodegenerative disorders is often difficult.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 2009

Influence of Cognitive Status, Age, and APOE-4 Genetic Risk on Brain FDDNP Positron-Emission Tomography Imaging in Persons Without Dementia

Gary W. Small; Prabha Siddarth; Alison C. Burggren; Vladimir Kepe; Linda M. Ercoli; Karen J. Miller; Helen Lavretsky; Paul M. Thompson; Greg M. Cole; S.C. Huang; Michael E. Phelps; Susan Y. Bookheimer; Jorge R. Barrio

CONTEXT Amyloid senile plaques and tau neurofibrillary tangles are neuropathological hallmarks of Alzheimer disease that accumulate in the brains of people without dementia years before they develop dementia. Positron emission tomography (PET) scans after intravenous injections of 2-(1-{6-[(2-[F-18]fluoroethyl)(methyl)amino]-2-naphthyl}ethylidene)malononitrile (FDDNP), which binds to plaques and tangles in vitro, demonstrate increased cerebral binding in patients with Alzheimer disease compared with cognitively intact controls. Here we investigated whether known risk factors for Alzheimer disease and dementia are associated with FDDNP-PET binding. OBJECTIVE To determine if impaired cognitive status, older age, apolipoprotein E-4 (APOE-4) genetic risk for Alzheimer disease, family history of dementia, and less education are associated with increased regional cerebral FDDNP-PET binding. DESIGN Cross-sectional clinical study. SETTING A university research institute. PARTICIPANTS Volunteer sample of 76 middle-aged and older persons without dementia (mean age, 67 years) including 36 with mild cognitive impairment. Of the 72 subjects with genetic data, 34 were APOE-4 carriers. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The FDDNP-PET signal in brain regions of interest, including medial and lateral temporal, posterior cingulate, parietal, and frontal. RESULTS For all regions studied, cognitive status was associated with increased FDDNP binding (P < .02 to .005). Older age was associated with increased lateral temporal FDDNP binding. Carriers of APOE-4 demonstrated higher frontal FDDNP binding than noncarriers. In the mild cognitive impairment group, age was associated with increased medial and lateral temporal FDDNP binding, and APOE-4 carriers had higher medial temporal binding than noncarriers. CONCLUSIONS Impaired cognitive status, older age, and APOE-4 carrier status are associated with increased brain FDDNP-PET binding in persons without dementia, consistent with previous clinical and postmortem studies associating these risk factors with amyloid plaque and tau tangle accumulation. Stratifying subject groups according to APOE-4 carrier status, age, and cognitive status may therefore be an informative strategy in future clinical trials using FDDNP-PET.


Journal of Molecular Neuroscience | 2002

In vivo brain imaging of tangle burden in humans.

Gary W. Small; Eric D. Agdeppa; Vladimir Kepe; Nagichettiar Satyamurthy; Sung-Cheng Huang; Jorge R. Barrio

Cerebral neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) accumulate in a predictable sequence decades before the clinical symptoms of Alzheimer’s disease emerge, and the degree of tangle degeneration correlates with the severity of cognitive impairment. A valid in vivo marker of tangle burden, therefore, would be useful for presymptomatic and symptomatic disease detection and treatment monitoring. Recent advances using positron emission tomography (PET) indicate the feasibility of in vivo imaging that provides a combined signal of both neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques. Such results are encouraging that a tangle-specific marker will be found; however, several methodological issues first need to be addressed, including scanner spatial resolution in the relatively small brain regions where tangles accumulate. NFT-specific imaging probes will need to be lipophilic in order to cross the blood-brain barrier and neuronal membranes and have a high binding affinity to NFTs with minimal nonspecific binding, which would result in a high signal-to-background ratio in PET images.

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Jie Liu

University of California

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S.C. Huang

University of California

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Koon-Pong Wong

University of California

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Paul M. Thompson

University of Southern California

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