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Dive into the research topics where Yvonne Couch is active.

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Featured researches published by Yvonne Couch.


Neuroscience Research | 2011

Alpha-synuclein release by neurons activates the inflammatory response in a microglial cell line

Lydia Alvarez-Erviti; Yvonne Couch; Jill C. Richardson; J. Mark Cooper; Matthew J.A. Wood

The neurodegenerative process in Parkinsons disease (PD) is accompanied by the presence of a neuroinflammatory response, which has been suggested as one of the principal components involved in PD progression. In this report we assessed the inflammatory potential of alpha-synuclein, a protein central to PD pathogenesis, released by neurons on the mouse microglia cell line BV-2. BV-2 cells were treated with conditioned medium isolated from normal SH-SY5Y cells and clones that over-express WT or mutant A53T alpha-synuclein. Conditioned medium isolated from over-expressing clones induced the transcription and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines. Treatment of SH-SY5Y alpha-synuclein over-expressing cells with MPP+, the active metabolite of the neurotoxin MPTP, increased the inflammatory response in BV-2 cells. In contrast, the direct exposure of BV-2 cells to MPP+ failed to induce an inflammatory response. These results support the hypothesis that WT and A53T alpha-synuclein has an important role in the initiation and maintenance of inflammation in PD, through the activation of a pro-inflammatory response in microglial cells.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2013

Microglial activation, increased TNF and SERT expression in the prefrontal cortex define stress-altered behaviour in mice susceptible to anhedonia

Yvonne Couch; Daniel C. Anthony; O.V. Dolgov; Alexander Revischin; Barry Festoff; Ana Isabel Santos; Harry W.M. Steinbusch; Tatyana Strekalova

A chronic stress paradigm comprising exposure to predation, tail suspension and restraint induces a depressive syndrome in C57BL/6J mice that occurs in some, but not all, animals. Here, we sought to extend our behavioural studies to investigate how susceptibility (sucrose preference<65%) or resilience (sucrose preference>65%) to stress-induced anhedonia affects the 5HT system and the expression of inflammation-related genes. All chronically stressed animals, displayed increased level of anxiety, but susceptible mice exhibited an increased propensity to float in the forced swim test and demonstrate hyperactivity under stressful lighting conditions. These changes were not present in resilient or acutely stressed animals. Compared to resilient animals, susceptible mice showed elevated expression of tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF) and the 5-HT transporter (SERT) in the pre-frontal area. Enhanced expression of 5HT(2A) and COX-1 in the pre-frontal area was observed in all stressed animals. In turn, indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) was significantly unregulated in the raphe of susceptible animals. At the cellular level, increased numbers of Iba-1-positive microglial cells were also present in the prefrontal area of susceptible animals compared to resilient animals. Consequently, the susceptible animals display a unique molecular profile when compared to resilient, but anxious, animals. Unexpectedly, this altered profile provides a rationale for exploring anti-inflammatory, and possibly, TNF-targeted therapy for major depression.


Cell | 2013

The CRTC1-SIK1 Pathway Regulates Entrainment of the Circadian Clock

Aarti Jagannath; Rachel Butler; Sofia I.H. Godinho; Yvonne Couch; Laurence A. Brown; Sridhar R. Vasudevan; Kevin C. Flanagan; Daniel C. Anthony; Grant C. Churchill; Matthew J.A. Wood; Guido Steiner; Martin Ebeling; Markus Hossbach; Joseph G. Wettstein; Giles E. Duffield; Silvia Gatti; Mark W. Hankins; Russell G. Foster; Stuart N. Peirson

Summary Retinal photoreceptors entrain the circadian system to the solar day. This photic resetting involves cAMP response element binding protein (CREB)-mediated upregulation of Per genes within individual cells of the suprachiasmatic nuclei (SCN). Our detailed understanding of this pathway is poor, and it remains unclear why entrainment to a new time zone takes several days. By analyzing the light-regulated transcriptome of the SCN, we have identified a key role for salt inducible kinase 1 (SIK1) and CREB-regulated transcription coactivator 1 (CRTC1) in clock re-setting. An entrainment stimulus causes CRTC1 to coactivate CREB, inducing the expression of Per1 and Sik1. SIK1 then inhibits further shifts of the clock by phosphorylation and deactivation of CRTC1. Knockdown of Sik1 within the SCN results in increased behavioral phase shifts and rapid re-entrainment following experimental jet lag. Thus SIK1 provides negative feedback, acting to suppress the effects of light on the clock. This pathway provides a potential target for the regulation of circadian rhythms.


Behavioral and Brain Functions | 2011

Update in the methodology of the chronic stress paradigm: internal control matters

Tatyana Strekalova; Yvonne Couch; N. Kholod; Marco Boyks; Dmitry Malin; Pierre Leprince; Harry M. W. Steinbusch

To date, the reliability of induction of a depressive-like state using chronic stress models is confronted by many methodological limitations. We believe that the modifications to the stress paradigm in mice proposed herein allow some of these limitations to be overcome. Here, we discuss a variant of the standard stress paradigm, which results in anhedonia. This anhedonic state was defined by a decrease in sucrose preference that was not exhibited by all animals. As such, we propose the use of non-anhedonic, stressed mice as an internal control in experimental mouse models of depression. The application of an internal control for the effects of stress, along with optimized behavioural testing, can enable the analysis of biological correlates of stress-induced anhedonia versus the consequences of stress alone in a chronic-stress depression model. This is illustrated, for instance, by distinct physiological and molecular profiles in anhedonic and non-anhedonic groups subjected to stress. These results argue for the use of a subgroup of individuals who are negative for the induction of a depressive phenotype during experimental paradigms of depression as an internal control, for more refined modeling of this disorder in animals.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2016

Prebiotic administration normalizes lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced anxiety and cortical 5-HT2A receptor and IL1-β levels in male mice

H M Savignac; Yvonne Couch; M Stratford; David M. Bannerman; G Tzortzis; Daniel C. Anthony; Burnet Pwj.

Highlights • The ingestion of BGOS attenuated post-inflammatory anxiety in mice.• BGOS prevented the LPS-mediated increase in cortical IL-1β levels.• BGOS prevented the LPS-mediated increase in cortical 5-HT2A receptor levels.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2012

The systemic response to brain injury and disease

Daniel C. Anthony; Yvonne Couch; Patrick Losey; Matthew C. Evans

The idea that the brain is immunologically privileged and displays an atypical leukocyte recruitment profile following injury has influenced our ideas about how signals might be carried between brain and the periphery. For many, this has encouraged a cerebrocentric view of immunological responses to CNS injury, with little reference to the potential contribution from other organs. However, it is clear that bidirectional pathways between the brain and the peripheral immune system are important in the pathogenesis of CNS disease. In recent years, we have begun to understand the signals that are carried to the periphery and discovered new functions for known chemokines, made by the liver in response to brain injury, as important regulators of the CNS inflammatory response.


Experimental Neurology | 2014

The systemic response to CNS injury.

Daniel C. Anthony; Yvonne Couch

Inflammation within the brain or spinal cord has the capacity to damage neurons and is known to contribute to long-term disability in a spectrum of central nervous system (CNS) pathologies. However, there is a more profound increase in the recruitment of potentially damaging populations of leukocytes to the spinal cord than to the brain after equivalent injuries. Increased levels of inflammatory cytokines and chemokines in the spinal cord underpin this dissimilarity after injury, which also appears to be very sensitive to processes that operate within organs distant from the primary injury site such as the liver, lung and spleen. Indeed, CNS injury per se can generate profound changes in gene expression and the cellularity of these organs, which, as a consequence, gives rise to secondary organ damage. Our understanding of the local inflammatory processes that can damage neurons is becoming clearer, but our understanding of how the peripheral immune system coordinates the response to CNS injury and how any concomitant infections or injury might impact on the outcome of CNS injury is not so well developed. It is clear that the orientation of the response to peripheral challenges, be it a pro- or anti-inflammatory effect, appears to be dependent on the nature and timing of events. Here, the importance of the inter-relationship between inflammation in the CNS and the consequent inflammatory response in peripheral tissues is highlighted.


Cell | 2015

The Regulatory Factor ZFHX3 Modifies Circadian Function in SCN via an AT Motif-Driven Axis.

Michael J. Parsons; Marco Brancaccio; Siddharth Sethi; Elizabeth S. Maywood; Rahul Satija; Jessica K. Edwards; Aarti Jagannath; Yvonne Couch; Mattéa J. Finelli; Nicola J. Smyllie; Christopher T. Esapa; Rachel Butler; Alun R. Barnard; Johanna E. Chesham; Shoko Saito; Greg Joynson; Sara Wells; Russell G. Foster; Peter L. Oliver; Michelle Simon; Ann-Marie Mallon; Michael H. Hastings; Patrick M. Nolan

Summary We identified a dominant missense mutation in the SCN transcription factor Zfhx3, termed short circuit (Zfhx3Sci), which accelerates circadian locomotor rhythms in mice. ZFHX3 regulates transcription via direct interaction with predicted AT motifs in target genes. The mutant protein has a decreased ability to activate consensus AT motifs in vitro. Using RNA sequencing, we found minimal effects on core clock genes in Zfhx3Sci/+ SCN, whereas the expression of neuropeptides critical for SCN intercellular signaling was significantly disturbed. Moreover, mutant ZFHX3 had a decreased ability to activate AT motifs in the promoters of these neuropeptide genes. Lentiviral transduction of SCN slices showed that the ZFHX3-mediated activation of AT motifs is circadian, with decreased amplitude and robustness of these oscillations in Zfhx3Sci/+ SCN slices. In conclusion, by cloning Zfhx3Sci, we have uncovered a circadian transcriptional axis that determines the period and robustness of behavioral and SCN molecular rhythms.


Brain | 2017

Neuroprotection in stroke: the importance of collaboration and reproducibility

Ain A Neuhaus; Yvonne Couch; Gina Hadley; Alastair M. Buchan

Acute ischaemic stroke accounts for 6.5 million deaths per year, and by 2030 will result in the annual loss of over 200 million disability-adjusted life years globally. There have been considerable recent advances in the gold standard of acute ischaemic stroke treatment, some aspects of which-aspirin to prevent recurrence, and treating patients in specialized stroke wards-are widely applicable. Recanalization of the occluded artery through thrombolysis and/or endovascular thrombectomy is restricted to only a small proportion of patients, due to contra-indications and the costs associated with establishing the infrastructure to deliver these treatments. The use of neuroprotective agents in stroke has been a notable failure of translation from medical research into clinical practice. Yet, with the advent of endovascular thrombectomy and the ability to investigate patients in much greater detail through advanced imaging modalities, neuroprotective agents can and should be re-examined as adjunct therapies to recanalization. In parallel, this requires appropriate planning on behalf of the preclinical stroke research community: there is a need to reinvestigate these therapies in a more collaborative manner, to enhance reproducibility through reduced attrition, improved reporting, and adopting an approach to target validation that more closely mimics clinical trials. This review will describe some of the novel strategies being used in stroke research, and focus on a few key examples of neuroprotective agents that are showing newfound promise in preclinical models of stroke therapy. Our primary aim is to give an overview of some of the challenges faced by preclinical stroke research, and suggest potential ways to improve translational success.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2016

The transient intraluminal filament middle cerebral artery occlusion model as a model of endovascular thrombectomy in stroke

Brad A. Sutherland; Ain A Neuhaus; Yvonne Couch; Joyce S. Balami; Gabriele C. DeLuca; Gina Hadley; Scarlett L. Harris; Adam N Grey; Alastair M. Buchan

The clinical relevance of the transient intraluminal filament model of middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) has been questioned due to distinct cerebral blood flow profiles upon reperfusion between tMCAO (abrupt reperfusion) and alteplase treatment (gradual reperfusion), resulting in differing pathophysiologies. Positive results from recent endovascular thrombectomy trials, where the occluding clot is mechanically removed, could revolutionize stroke treatment. The rapid cerebral blood flow restoration in both tMCAO and endovascular thrombectomy provides clinical relevance for this pre-clinical model. Any future clinical trials of neuroprotective agents as adjuncts to endovascular thrombectomy should consider tMCAO as the model of choice to determine pre-clinical efficacy.

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