Wayne G. Brake
Concordia University
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Featured researches published by Wayne G. Brake.
Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2002
Michael J. Meaney; Wayne G. Brake; Alain Gratton
Repeated periods of maternal separation in the early life of rats decreased dopamine transporter expression and significantly increased dopamine responses to stress, and behavioral responses to either stress or cocaine. As adults, maternal separation animals showed increased sensitivity to the effects of cocaine on locomotor activity and greater sensitivity to stress-induced sensitization to the effects of amphetamine on locomotor activity. These findings raise the possibility that in addition to effects on stress reactivity, early life events might dispose individuals to illness in later life through effects on very specific neurotransmitter systems.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Chenjian Li; Wayne G. Brake; Russell D. Romeo; John C. Dunlop; Marisa Gordon; Rodica Buzescu; Ana Maria Magarinos; Patrick B. Allen; Paul Greengard; Victoria N. Luine; Bruce S. McEwen
Estrogen (E) treatment induces axospinous synapses in rat hippocampus in vivo and in cultured hippocampal neurons in vitro. To better explore the molecular mechanisms underlying this phenomenon, we have established a mouse model for E action in the hippocampus by using Golgi impregnation to examine hippocampal dendritic spine morphology, radioimmunocytochemistry (RICC) and silver-enhanced immunocytochemistry to examine expression levels of synaptic protein markers, and hippocampal-dependent object-placement memory as a behavioral readout for the actions of E. In ovariectomized mice of several strains and F1 hybrids, the total dendritic spine density on neurons in the CA1 region was not enhanced by E treatment, a finding that differs from that in the female rat. E treatment of ovariectomized C57BL/6J mice, however, caused an increase in the number of spines with mushroom shapes. By RICC and silver-enhanced immunocytochemistry, we found that the immunoreactivity of postsynaptic markers (PSD95 and spinophilin) and a presynaptic marker (syntaxin) were enhanced by E treatment throughout all fields of the dorsal hippocampus. In the object-placement tests, E treatment enhanced performance of object placement, a spatial episodic memory task. Taken together, the morphology and RICC results suggest a previously uncharacterized role of E in synaptic structural plasticity that may be interpreted as a facilitation of the spine-maturation process and may be associated with enhancement of hippocampal-dependent memory.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2004
Wayne G. Brake; Tie-Yuan Zhang; Josie Diorio; Michael J. Meaney; Alain Gratton
While many experiment with drugs, relatively few individuals develop a true addiction. We hypothesized that, in rats, such individual differences in the actions of addictive drugs might be determined by postnatal rearing conditions. To test this idea, we investigated whether stimulant‐ and stress‐induced activation of nucleus accumbens dopamine transmission and dopamine‐dependent behaviours might differ among adults rats that had been either repeatedly subjected to prolonged maternal separation or a brief handling procedure or left undisturbed (non‐handled) during the first 14 days of life. We found that, in comparison with their handled counterparts, maternally separated and non‐handled animals are hyperactive when placed in a novel setting, display a dose‐dependent higher sensitivity to cocaine‐induced locomotor activity and respond to a mild stressor (tail‐pinch) with significantly greater increases in nucleus accumbens dopamine levels. In addition, maternally separated animals were found to sensitize to the locomotor stimulant action of amphetamine when repeatedly stressed under conditions that failed to sensitize handled and non‐handled animals. Finally, quantitative receptor autoradiography revealed a lower density of nucleus accumbens‐core and striatal dopamine transporter sites in maternally separated animals. Interestingly, we also found greatly reduced D3 dopamine receptor binding and mRNA levels in the nucleus accumbens‐shell of handled animals. Together, these findings provide compelling evidence that disruptions in early postnatal rearing conditions can lead to profound and lasting changes in the responsiveness of mesocorticolimbic dopamine neurons to stress and psychostimulants, and suggest a neurobiological basis for individual differences in vulnerability to compulsive drug taking.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001
Bruce S. McEwen; Keith T. Akama; Stephen E. Alves; Wayne G. Brake; Karen Bulloch; Susan J. Lee; Chenjian Li; Genevieve Yuen; Teresa A. Milner
Estrogens (E) and progestins regulate synaptogenesis in the CA1 region of the dorsal hippocampus during the estrous cycle of the female rat, and the functional consequences include changes in neurotransmission and memory. Synapse formation has been demonstrated by using the Golgi technique, dye filling of cells, electron microscopy, and radioimmunocytochemistry. N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor activation is required, and inhibitory interneurons play a pivotal role as they express nuclear estrogen receptor alpha (ERα) and show E-induced decreases of GABAergic activity. Although global decreases in inhibitory tone may be important, a more local role for E in CA1 neurons seems likely. The rat hippocampus expresses both ERα and ERβ mRNA. At the light microscopic level, autoradiography shows cell nuclear [3H]estrogen and [125I]estrogen uptake according to a distribution that primarily reflects the localization of ERα-immunoreactive interneurons in the hippocampus. However, recent ultrastructural studies have revealed extranuclear ERα immunoreactivity (IR) within select dendritic spines on hippocampal principal cells, axon terminals, and glial processes, localizations that would not be detectable by using standard light microscopic methods. Based on recent studies showing that both types of ER are expressed in a form that activates second messenger systems, these findings support a testable model in which local, non-genomic regulation by estrogen participates along with genomic actions of estrogens in the regulation of synapse formation.
Hormones and Behavior | 2003
Russell D. Romeo; Astrid Mueller; Helene M Sisti; Sonoko Ogawa; Bruce S. McEwen; Wayne G. Brake
This study investigated the effects of maternal separation in C57BL/6 male and female mice during infancy on later adult fear and anxiety behaviors. Additionally, we observed the maternal behavior of the dams to examine aspects of maternal care that may be modulated by daily bouts of separation. In males, mice that experienced maternal separation during the neonatal period displayed significantly higher levels of anxiety and fear behavior, as measured by the open field test and elevated plus maze, compared to control, standard facility reared males. In females, however, maternal separation reduced anxiety and fear behavior in the open field test, but only when the females were in the diestrous phase of their estrous cycle. The 30-min daily observation of the dams revealed that the separation did not significantly alter the frequency of the maternal care provided by the dam at the time point measured. These results indicate that the emotionality of adult male and female mice can be modulated by maternal separation. However, this effect is dependent on the sex of the offspring and the phase of the estrous cycle of the female.
Brain and Language | 1992
John F. Connolly; Natalie A. Phillips; Sherry H. Stewart; Wayne G. Brake
This experiment was concerned with the effects of phonologically correct masking on the electrophysiological responses to terminal words of spoken sentences differing in contextual constraint. Two event-related potential (ERP) components, the N400 and N200, were recorded to the terminal words of high and low constraint sentences in four conditions. In the Control condition, subjects (Ss) simply attended to the sentences with no explicit task instructions. In the Semantic condition, Ss were required to listen to the stimuli in order to make semantic judgements about the terminal word of each sentence. The Control+Masking condition was identical to the Control condition except for the simultaneous presentation of a masking stimulus. The Semantic+Masking condition had Ss listening to sentences in the presence of masking with the task of making semantic judgements about the terminal word of each sentence. ERPs were recorded from Fz, Cz, Pz, T3, and T4 in 10 subjects. Amplitudes of both the N200 and the N400 were sensitive to contextual constraint with larger responses elicited by the terminal words of low constraint sentences. In addition to demonstrating the co-occurrence of the N200 and N400, this experiment highlighted a functional separation between the two components. Masking had no statistically significant effect on N200 latency but N400 latency was delayed in the masked conditions relative to those in the unmasked conditions. It is proposed that the N200 and N400 are manifestations of two different processes; the N200 reflects the acoustic/phonological processing of the terminal word while the N400 reflects the cognitive/linguistic processing. The relationship between the N200 recorded in this experiment and the discrimination N200 is discussed.
Neuroscience | 2000
Wayne G. Brake; Gonzalo Flores; Darlene D. Francis; Michael J. Meaney; Lalit K. Srivastava; Alain Gratton
The medial prefrontal cortex modulates the nucleus accumbens dopamine response to stress and has been implicated in feedback regulation of hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis activation by stress. Here we report on the effects of bilateral neonatal (postnatal day 7) ibotenate-induced lesions to the medial prefrontal cortex on nucleus accumbens dopamine and neuroendocrine function in adult rats. Voltammetry was used to monitor the dopamine response to each of five, once-daily exposures to tail-pinch stress whereas alterations in neuroendocrine function were determined from the plasma corticosterone response to a single 20-min episode of restraint stress. Potential lesion-induced deficits in sensory-motor gating were assessed by measuring prepulse inhibition of the acoustic startle response before and after repeated stress. Our data show that each daily stress episode elicited larger and longer-lasting dopamine increases in prefrontal cortex-lesioned animals than in sham-lesioned controls. Furthermore, greater stress-induced elevations in plasma corticosterone were seen in lesioned animals than in their sham-lesioned counterparts. However, while repeated stress potentiated startle responses in animals of both groups, there was no effect of lesion on the amplitude or on prepulse inhibition of the startle response.Together, these findings indicate that neonatal prefrontal cortex damage can lead to changes in mesolimbic dopamine and neuroendocrine function during adulthood. They also add to a growing body of experimental and clinical evidence implicating abnormal prefrontal cortex neuronal development in the pathophysiology of schizophrenia and other disorders linked to central dopamine dysfunction.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Jason D. Gray; Michael Punsoni; Nora E. Tabori; Jay T. Melton; Victoria Fanslow; Mary J. Ward; Bojana Zupan; David Menzer; Jackson Rice; Carrie T. Drake; Russell D. Romeo; Wayne G. Brake; Annelyn Torres-Reveron; Teresa A. Milner
Thousands of children receive methylphenidate (MPH; Ritalin) for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), yet the long-term neurochemical consequences of MPH treatment are unknown. To mimic clinical Ritalin treatment in children, male rats were injected with MPH (5 mg/kg) or vehicle twice daily from postnatal day 7 (PND7)–PND35. At the end of administration (PND35) or in adulthood (PND135), brain sections from littermate pairs were immunocytochemically labeled for neurotransmitters and cytological markers in 16 regions implicated in MPH effects and/or ADHD etiology. At PND35, the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of rats given MPH showed 55% greater immunoreactivity (-ir) for the catecholamine marker tyrosine hydroxylase (TH), 60% more Nissl-stained cells, and 40% less norepinephrine transporter (NET)-ir density. In hippocampal dentate gyrus, MPH-receiving rats showed a 51% decrease in NET-ir density and a 61% expanded distribution of the new-cell marker PSA-NCAM (polysialylated form of neural cell adhesion molecule). In medial striatum, TH-ir decreased by 21%, and in hypothalamus neuropeptide Y-ir increased by 10% in MPH-exposed rats. At PND135, MPH-exposed rats exhibited decreased anxiety in the elevated plus-maze and a trend for decreased TH-ir in the mPFC. Neither PND35 nor PND135 rats showed major structural differences with MPH exposure. These findings suggest that developmental exposure to high therapeutic doses of MPH has short-term effects on select neurotransmitters in brain regions involved in motivated behaviors, cognition, appetite, and stress. Although the observed neuroanatomical changes largely resolve with time, chronic modulation of young brains with MPH may exert effects on brain neurochemistry that modify some behaviors even in adulthood.
Schizophrenia Research | 2009
Moogeh Baharnoori; Wayne G. Brake; Lalit K. Srivastava
The neural mechanisms by which maternal infections increase the risk for schizophrenia are poorly understood; however, animal models using maternal administration of immune activators suggest a role for cytokine imbalance in maternal/fetal compartments. As cytokines can potentially affect multiple aspects of neuronal development and the neuropathology of schizophrenia is believed to involve subtle temporo-limbic neurodevelopmental alterations, we investigated morphological development of the pyramidal neurons of the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and hippocampus in rats that were prenatally challenged with the immune activator lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats were administered with LPS (at E15- E16) or saline. The brains of offspring were processed for Golgi-Cox staining at postnatal days 10, 35 and 60. Dendritic length, branching, spine density and structure were quantified using Neurolucida software. At all ages, dendritic arbor was significantly reduced in mPFC and CA1 neurons of LPS-treated animals. Dendritic length was significantly reduced in the mPFC neurons of LPS group at P10 and 35 but returned to control values at P60. Opposite pattern was observed in CA1 region of LPS animals (normal values at P10 and 35, but a reduction at P60). LPS treatment significantly altered the structure of CA1 dendritic spines at P10. Spine density was found to be significantly lower only in layer V mPFC of P60 LPS rats. The study provides the first evidence that prenatal exposure to an immune activator dynamically affects spatio-temporal development of pyramidal neurons in mPFC and hippocampal that can potentially lead to aberrant neuronal connectivity and functions of these structures.
Brain Research | 1999
Wayne G. Brake; Ron M. Sullivan; Gonzalo Flores; Lalit K. Srivastava; Alain Gratton
Neonatal damage to the ventral hippocampus (VH) can lead, during adulthood, to behaviours that are believed to reflect enhanced mesocorticolimbic dopamine (DA) transmission. In the present study, the effects of neonatal excitotoxic lesions to the VH on spontaneous locomotor activity and stress-elicited increases in extracellular nucleus accumbens (NAcc) DA levels were examined in adult rats. Male pups received, on postnatal day 7, bilateral injections of either an ibotenic acid solution (lesioned) or vehicle (sham-lesioned) into the VH. At 3-4 months of age, animals were assessed during five daily sessions for changes in spontaneous locomotor activity associated with habituation to a novel environment. Voltammetry was used in separate groups of sham- and VH-lesioned animals to monitor the NAcc DA response to each of five once-daily exposures to tail-pinch stress. The results indicate that while VH-lesioned animals seem to habituate to novelty, they remain hyperactive relative to sham-lesioned controls. In contrast, however, stress consistently elicited in VH-lesioned animals smaller and shorter-lasting increases in NAcc DA than in sham-lesioned controls. These data suggest that neonatal excitotoxic damage to VH leads to changes in DA function that persist into adulthood. The blunted response to stress seen in VH-lesioned animals indicates that one consequence of such damage is a functional hyporeactivity in meso-NAcc DA neurons. The fact that these animals are spontaneously more active suggests compensatory changes in DA function that are efferent to DA terminals in NAcc.