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Dive into the research topics where Yan-You Huang is active.

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Featured researches published by Yan-You Huang.


Neuron | 1998

Tissue Plasminogen Activator Contributes to the Late Phase of LTP and to Synaptic Growth in the Hippocampal Mossy Fiber Pathway

Danny Baranes; Doron Lederfein; Yan-You Huang; Mary Chen; Craig H. Bailey; Eric R. Kandel

The expression of tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is increased during activity-dependent forms of synaptic plasticity. We have found that inhibitors of tPA inhibit the late phase of long-term potentiation (L-LTP) induced by either forskolin or tetanic stimulation in the hippocampal mossy fiber and Schaffer collateral pathways. Moreover, application of tPA enhances L-LTP induced by a single tetanus. Exposure of granule cells in culture to forskolin results in secretion of tPA, elongation of mossy fiber axons, and formation of new, active presynaptic varicosities contiguous to dendritic clusters of the glutamate receptor R1. These structural changes are blocked by tPA inhibitors and induced by application of tPA. Thus, tPA may be critically involved in the production of L-LTP and specifically in synaptic growth.


Science Translational Medicine | 2011

Molecular Mechanism for a Gateway Drug: Epigenetic Changes Initiated by Nicotine Prime Gene Expression by Cocaine

Amir Levine; Yan-You Huang; Bettina Drisaldi; Edmund A. Griffin; Daniela D. Pollak; Shiqin Xu; Deqi Yin; Christine Schaffran; Denise B. Kandel; Eric R. Kandel

The finding that nicotine enhances the brain’s response to cocaine may explain how smoking acts as a gateway drug for this addictive stimulant. Another Reason to Shun Cigarettes Illicit drugs sap the strength of the human population. Yet, our efforts to control their use, through law enforcement or medicine, are weak and largely ineffectual. Most drugs of abuse act on the reward centers of the brain, setting up positive incentive cycles that lead to addiction. These mechanistic insights have not yet yielded treatments that curtail drug use, but new research has delivered some potentially practical knowledge. Levine et al. now show that nicotine alters the brain to make it more susceptible to cocaine’s addicting effects, and suggest that interfering with this reprogramming may rein in cocaine abuse. The authors pretreated mice with nicotine to mimic the effects of smoking and detected an increase in the behavioral and neuronal activity responses that mice typically exhibit when given cocaine, relative to animals that had not been pretreated. In contrast, cocaine did not have the reciprocal effect on nicotine responses. So, how does nicotine engineer this cocaine supersensitivity? By taking a close look at histone proteins—which package DNA as chromatin—in the reward centers of the brain (the striatum), the authors found that certain histones were hyperacetylated, a state that results in augmented gene expression, consistent with the exaggerated response to cocaine. Encouraging, but preliminary at this point, is the idea that activators of histone deacetylases, which decrease histone acetylation, might counteract the effect of nicotine and perhaps other stimuli that prime the response to cocaine. Confining the action of these putative drugs to the striatum would enhance their chances of achieving selective efficacy and low toxicity, although the tools for targeting these agents are not yet available. An epidemiological analysis described in the paper by Levine et al. reinforces the urgency of translating these results: Most cocaine addicts began using the drug after they started smoking cigarettes, as would be expected if the mechanism operative in mice is mimicked in humans. Cocaine abusers are often administered nicotine replacement therapy to help curb their smoking habits; if the authors’ findings hold up in humans, nicotine replacement therapy might actually exacerbate the patient’s cocaine addiction, a highly undesirable side effect. Finally, using cocaine while smoking increases the risk of becoming dependent on the drug: another healthy reason not to smoke. In human populations, cigarettes and alcohol generally serve as gateway drugs, which people use first before progressing to marijuana, cocaine, or other illicit substances. To understand the biological basis of the gateway sequence of drug use, we developed an animal model in mice and used it to study the effects of nicotine on subsequent responses to cocaine. We found that pretreatment of mice with nicotine increased the response to cocaine, as assessed by addiction-related behaviors and synaptic plasticity in the striatum, a brain region critical for addiction-related reward. Locomotor sensitization was increased by 98%, conditioned place preference was increased by 78%, and cocaine-induced reduction in long-term potentiation (LTP) was enhanced by 24%. The responses to cocaine were altered only when nicotine was administered first, and nicotine and cocaine were then administered concurrently. Reversing the order of drug administration was ineffective; cocaine had no effect on nicotine-induced behaviors and synaptic plasticity. Nicotine primed the response to cocaine by enhancing its ability to induce transcriptional activation of the FosB gene through inhibition of histone deacetylase, which caused global histone acetylation in the striatum. We tested this conclusion further and found that a histone deacetylase inhibitor simulated the actions of nicotine by priming the response to cocaine and enhancing FosB gene expression and LTP depression in the nucleus accumbens. Conversely, in a genetic mouse model characterized by reduced histone acetylation, the effects of cocaine on LTP were diminished. We achieved a similar effect by infusing a low dose of theophylline, an activator of histone deacetylase, into the nucleus accumbens. These results from mice prompted an analysis of epidemiological data, which indicated that most cocaine users initiate cocaine use after the onset of smoking and while actively still smoking, and that initiating cocaine use after smoking increases the risk of becoming dependent on cocaine, consistent with our data from mice. If our findings in mice apply to humans, a decrease in smoking rates in young people would be expected to lead to a decrease in cocaine addiction.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

5-Hydroxytryptamine Induces a Protein Kinase A/Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase-Mediated and Macromolecular Synthesis-Dependent Late Phase of Long-Term Potentiation in the Amygdala

Yan-You Huang; Eric R. Kandel

The amygdala is a critical site for the acquisition of learned fear memory in mammals, and the formation and long-term maintenance of fear memories are thought to be associated with changes of synaptic strength in the amygdala. Here we report that serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT), a modulatory neurotransmitter known to be linked to learned fearful and emotional behavior, has dual effects on excitatory synaptic transmission in the basolateral amygdala. There is an early depression of synaptic transmission lasting 30–50 min, mediated by 5-HT1A, and a late, long-lasting facilitation lasting >5 h in slice recordings, mediated by the 5-HT4 receptor. 5-HT late phase long-term potentiation (L-LTP) is blocked by inhibitors of either protein kinase A (PKA) and/or mitogen-activated kinase (MAPK) and requires new protein synthesis and gene transcription. Moreover, the 5-HT-induced L-LTP in neurons of amygdala is blocked by the actin inhibitor cytochalasin D, suggesting that 5-HT stimulates a cytoskeletal rearrangement. These results show, for the first time, that 5-HT can produce long-lasting facilitation of synaptic transmission in the amygdala and provides evidence for the possible synaptic role of 5-HT in long-term memory for learned fear.


Neuron | 2015

The Persistence of Hippocampal-Based Memory Requires Protein Synthesis Mediated by the Prion-like Protein CPEB3

Luana Fioriti; Cory Myers; Yan-You Huang; Xiang Li; Joseph S. Stephan; Pierre Trifilieff; Luca Colnaghi; Stylianos Kosmidis; Bettina Drisaldi; Elias Pavlopoulos; Eric R. Kandel

Consolidation of long-term memories depends on de novo protein synthesis. Several translational regulators have been identified, and their contribution to the formation of memory has been assessed in the mouse hippocampus. None of them, however, has been implicated in the persistence of memory. Although persistence is a key feature of long-term memory, how this occurs, despite the rapid turnover of its molecular substrates, is poorly understood. Here we find that both memory storage and its underlying synaptic plasticity are mediated by the increase in level and in the aggregation of the prion-like translational regulator CPEB3 (cytoplasmic polyadenylation element-binding protein). Genetic ablation of CPEB3 impairs the maintenance of both hippocampal long-term potentiation and hippocampus-dependent spatial memory. We propose a model whereby persistence of long-term memory results from the assembly of CPEB3 into aggregates. These aggregates serve as functional prions and regulate local protein synthesis necessary for the maintenance of long-term memory.


Learning & Memory | 2008

Chronic nicotine exposure induces a long-lasting and pathway-specific facilitation of LTP in the amygdala

Yan-You Huang; Eric R. Kandel; Amir Levine

Nicotine, in the form of tobacco, is the most commonly used drug of abuse. In addition to its rewarding properties, nicotine also affects many cognitive and emotional processes that involve several brain regions, including hippocampus and amygdala. Long-term changes in synaptic strength in these brain regions after drug exposure may be importantly correlated with behavioral changes induced by nicotine. Here, we study the effect of chronic oral administration of nicotine on the long-term synaptic potentiation in the amygdala, a key structure for emotional memory. We find that oral administration of nicotine for 7 d produces a significant enhancement of LTP in the amygdala. This facilitation is pathway specific: Nicotine selectively facilitates LTP in the cortical-lateral amygdala pathway, but not the thalamic-lateral and the lateral-basolateral synaptic pathway. The synaptic facilitation induced by a 7-d exposure to nicotine is long-lasting, it persists for 72 h after cessation of nicotine but decays 8 d after its cessation. In contrast, a shorter exposure of nicotine (24 h) induces only a short-lasting facilitation of synaptic plasticity that dissipates 24 and 72 h after cessation of nicotine. The facilitation of LTP in the amygdala after exposure to nicotine is mediated by removal of GABAergic inhibition, is dependent on the activation NMDA receptors, and can be prevented by blocking either alpha7 or beta2 nACh receptors. Our results indicate that chronic exposure to nicotine can promote the induction of long-lasting modifications of synapses in a specific pathway in the amygdala. These changes in synaptic plasticity may contribute to the complex neural adaptations and behaviors caused by nicotine.


Learning & Memory | 2014

D1/D5 receptors and histone deacetylation mediate the Gateway Effect of LTP in hippocampal dentate gyrus

Yan-You Huang; Amir Levine; Denise B. Kandel; Deqi Yin; Luca Colnaghi; Bettina Drisaldi; Eric R. Kandel

The dentate gyrus (DG) of the hippocampus is critical for spatial memory and is also thought to be involved in the formation of drug-related associative memory. Here, we attempt to test an aspect of the Gateway Hypothesis, by studying the effect of consecutive exposure to nicotine and cocaine on long-term synaptic potentiation (LTP) in the DG. We find that a single injection of cocaine does not alter LTP. However, pretreatment with nicotine followed by a single injection of cocaine causes a substantial enhancement of LTP. This priming effect of nicotine is unidirectional: There is no enhancement of LTP if cocaine is administrated prior to nicotine. The facilitation induced by nicotine and cocaine can be blocked by oral administration of the dopamine D1/D5 receptor antagonist (SKF 83566) and enhanced by the D1/D5 agonist (SKF 38393). Application of the histone deacetylation inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA) simulates the priming effect of nicotine on cocaine. By contrast, the priming effect of nicotine on cocaine is blocked in genetically modified mice that are haploinsufficient for the CREB-binding protein (CBP) and possess only one functional CBP allele and therefore exhibit a reduction in histone acetylation. These results demonstrate that the DG of the hippocampus is an important brain region contributing to the priming effect of nicotine on cocaine. Moreover, both activation of dopamine-D1 receptor/PKA signaling pathway and histone deacetylation/CBP mediated transcription are required for the nicotine priming effect in the DG.


Learning & Memory | 1994

Recruitment of long-lasting and protein kinase A-dependent long-term potentiation in the CA1 region of hippocampus requires repeated tetanization.

Yan-You Huang; Eric R. Kandel


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2000

Both Protein Kinase A and Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase Are Required in the Amygdala for the Macromolecular Synthesis-Dependent Late Phase of Long-Term Potentiation

Yan-You Huang; Kelsey C. Martin; Eric R. Kandel


Learning & Memory | 1996

Long-lasting forms of synaptic potentiation in the mammalian hippocampus.

Yan-You Huang; Peter V. Nguyen; Ted Abel; Eric R. Kandel


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Genetic evidence for the bidirectional modulation of synaptic plasticity in the prefrontal cortex by D1 receptors

Yan-You Huang; Eleanor H. Simpson; Christoph Kellendonk; Eric R. Kandel

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Deqi Yin

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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