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Dive into the research topics where Zachary A. Miller is active.

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Featured researches published by Zachary A. Miller.


Annals of Neurology | 2015

Tau, amyloid, and hypometabolism in a patient with posterior cortical atrophy.

Rik Ossenkoppele; Daniel Schonhaut; Suzanne L. Baker; James P. O'Neil; Mustafa Janabi; Pia Ghosh; Miguel Santos; Zachary A. Miller; Brianne M. Bettcher; Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini; Bruce L. Miller; William J. Jagust; Gil D. Rabinovici

Determining the relative contribution of amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles to brain dysfunction in Alzheimer disease is critical for therapeutic approaches, but until recently could only be assessed at autopsy. We report a patient with posterior cortical atrophy (visual variant of Alzheimer disease) who was studied using the novel tau tracer [18F]AV‐1451 in conjunction with [11C]Pittsburgh compound B (PIB; amyloid) and [18F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography. Whereas [11C]PIB bound throughout association neocortex, [18F]AV‐1451 was selectively retained in posterior brain regions that were affected clinically and showed markedly reduced [18F]FDG uptake. This provides preliminary in vivo evidence that tau is more closely linked to hypometabolism and symptomatology than amyloid. Ann Neurol 2014.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2013

TDP-43 frontotemporal lobar degeneration and autoimmune disease

Zachary A. Miller; Katherine P. Rankin; Neill R. Graff-Radford; Leonel T. Takada; Virginia E. Sturm; Clare M. Cleveland; Lindsey A. Criswell; Philipp A. Jaeger; Trisha Stan; Kristin Heggeli; Sandy Chan Hsu; Anna Karydas; Baber Khan; Lea T. Grinberg; Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini; Adam L. Boxer; Howard J. Rosen; Joel H. Kramer; Giovanni Coppola; Daniel H. Geschwind; Rosa Rademakers; William W. Seeley; Tony Wyss-Coray; Bruce L. Miller

Background The aetiology and pathogenesis of non-genetic forms of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is unknown and even with the genetic forms of FTD, pathogenesis remains elusive. Given the association between systemic inflammation and other neurodegenerative processes, links between autoimmunity and FTD need to be explored. Objective To describe the prevalence of systemic autoimmune disease in semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA), a clinical cohort, and in progranulin (PGRN) mutation carriers compared with neurologically healthy normal controls (NC) and Alzheimers disease (AD) as dementia controls. Design Case control. Setting Academic medical centres. Participants 129 svPPA, 39 PGRN, 186 NC and 158 AD patients underwent chart review for autoimmune conditions. A large subset of svPPA, PGRN and NC cohorts underwent serum analysis for tumour necrosis factor α (TNF-α) levels. Outcome measures χ2 Comparison of autoimmune prevalence and follow-up logistic regression. Results There was a significantly increased risk of autoimmune disorders clustered around inflammatory arthritides, cutaneous disorders and gastrointestinal conditions in the svPPA and PGRN cohorts. Elevated TNF-α levels were observed in svPPA and PGRN compared with NC. Conclusions svPPA and PGRN are associated with increased prevalence of specific and related autoimmune diseases compared with NC and AD. These findings suggest a unique pattern of systemic inflammation in svPPA and PGRN and open new research avenues for understanding and treating disorders associated with underlying transactive response DNA-binding protein 43 aggregation.


JAMA Neurology | 2016

Association Between Genetic Traits for Immune-Mediated Diseases and Alzheimer Disease

Jennifer S. Yokoyama; Yunpeng Wang; Andrew J. Schork; Wesley K. Thompson; Celeste M. Karch; Carlos Cruchaga; Linda K. McEvoy; Aree Witoelar; Chi-Hua Chen; Dominic Holland; James B. Brewer; Andre Franke; William P. Dillon; David M. Wilson; Pratik Mukherjee; Christopher P. Hess; Zachary A. Miller; Luke W. Bonham; Jeffrey Shen; Gil D. Rabinovici; Howard J. Rosen; Bruce L. Miller; Bradley T. Hyman; Gerard D. Schellenberg; Tom H. Karlsen; Ole A. Andreassen; Anders M. Dale; Rahul S. Desikan

IMPORTANCE Late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD), the most common form of dementia, places a large burden on families and society. Although epidemiological and clinical evidence suggests a relationship between inflammation and AD, their relationship is not well understood and could have implications for treatment and prevention strategies. OBJECTIVE To determine whether a subset of genes involved with increased risk of inflammation are also associated with increased risk for AD. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS In a genetic epidemiology study conducted in July 2015, we systematically investigated genetic overlap between AD (International Genomics of Alzheimers Project stage 1) and Crohn disease, ulcerative colitis, rheumatoid arthritis, type 1 diabetes, celiac disease, and psoriasis using summary data from genome-wide association studies at multiple academic clinical research centers. P values and odds ratios from genome-wide association studies of more than 100 000 individuals were from previous comparisons of patients vs respective control cohorts. Diagnosis for each disorder was previously established for the parent study using consensus criteria. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES The primary outcome was the pleiotropic (conjunction) false discovery rate P value. Follow-up for candidate variants included neuritic plaque and neurofibrillary tangle pathology; longitudinal Alzheimers Disease Assessment Scale cognitive subscale scores as a measure of cognitive dysfunction (Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative); and gene expression in AD vs control brains (Gene Expression Omnibus data). RESULTS Eight single-nucleotide polymorphisms (false discovery rate P < .05) were associated with both AD and immune-mediated diseases. Of these, rs2516049 (closest gene HLA-DRB5; conjunction false discovery rate P = .04 for AD and psoriasis, 5.37 × 10-5 for AD, and 6.03 × 10-15 for psoriasis) and rs12570088 (closest gene IPMK; conjunction false discovery rate P = .009 for AD and Crohn disease, P = 5.73 × 10-6 for AD, and 6.57 × 10-5 for Crohn disease) demonstrated the same direction of allelic effect between AD and the immune-mediated diseases. Both rs2516049 and rs12570088 were significantly associated with neurofibrillary tangle pathology (P = .01352 and .03151, respectively); rs2516049 additionally correlated with longitudinal decline on Alzheimers Disease Assessment Scale cognitive subscale scores (β [SE], 0.405 [0.190]; P = .03). Regarding gene expression, HLA-DRA and IPMK transcript expression was significantly altered in AD brains compared with control brains (HLA-DRA: β [SE], 0.155 [0.024]; P = 1.97 × 10-10; IPMK: β [SE], -0.096 [0.013]; P = 7.57 × 10-13). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE Our findings demonstrate genetic overlap between AD and immune-mediated diseases and suggest that immune system processes influence AD pathogenesis and progression.


Brain | 2013

Handedness and language learning disability differentially distribute in progressive aphasia variants

Zachary A. Miller; Maria Luisa Mandelli; Katherine P. Rankin; Maya L. Henry; Miranda Babiak; Darvis T. Frazier; Iryna Lobach; Brianne M. Bettcher; Teresa Q. Wu; Gil D. Rabinovici; Neill R. Graff-Radford; Bruce L. Miller; Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini

Primary progressive aphasia is a neurodegenerative clinical syndrome that presents in adulthood with an isolated, progressive language disorder. Three main clinical/anatomical variants have been described, each associated with distinctive pathology. A high frequency of neurodevelopmental learning disability in primary progressive aphasia has been reported. Because the disorder is heterogeneous with different patterns of cognitive, anatomical and biological involvement, we sought to identify whether learning disability had a predilection for one or more of the primary progressive aphasia subtypes. We screened the University of California San Francisco Memory and Aging Centers primary progressive aphasia cohort (n = 198) for history of language-related learning disability as well as hand preference, which has associations with learning disability. The study included logopenic (n = 48), non-fluent (n = 54) and semantic (n = 96) variant primary progressive aphasias. We investigated whether the presence of learning disability or non-right-handedness was associated with differential effects on demographic, neuropsychological and neuroimaging features of primary progressive aphasia. We showed that a high frequency of learning disability was present only in the logopenic group (χ(2) = 15.17, P < 0.001) and (χ(2) = 11.51, P < 0.001) compared with semantic and non-fluent populations. In this group, learning disability was associated with earlier onset of disease, more isolated language symptoms, and more focal pattern of left posterior temporoparietal atrophy. Non-right-handedness was instead over-represented in the semantic group, at nearly twice the prevalence of the general population (χ(2) = 6.34, P = 0.01). Within semantic variant primary progressive aphasia the right-handed and non-right-handed cohorts appeared homogeneous on imaging, cognitive profile, and structural analysis of brain symmetry. Lastly, the non-fluent group showed no increase in learning disability or non-right-handedness. Logopenic variant primary progressive aphasia and developmental dyslexia both manifest with phonological disturbances and posterior temporal involvement. Learning disability might confer vulnerability of this network to early-onset, focal Alzheimers pathology. Left-handedness has been described as a proxy for atypical brain hemispheric lateralization. As non-right-handedness was increased only in the semantic group, anomalous lateralization mechanisms might instead be related to frontotemporal lobar degeneration with abnormal TARDBP. Taken together, this study suggests that neurodevelopmental signatures impart differential trajectories towards neurodegenerative disease.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2015

Divergent CSF τ alterations in two common tauopathies: Alzheimer's disease and progressive supranuclear palsy

D Wagshal; S Sankaranarayanan; Guss; Tracey Hall; F Berisha; Iryna Lobach; Anna Karydas; L Voltarelli; Carole Scherling; Hilary W. Heuer; Maria Carmela Tartaglia; Zachary A. Miller; Giovanni Coppola; Michael K. Ahlijanian; H Soares; Joel H. Kramer; Gil D. Rabinovici; Howie Rosen; Bruce L. Miller; Jere E. Meredith; Adam L. Boxer

Background Elevated CSF τ is considered a biomarker of neuronal injury in newly developed Alzheimers disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) criteria. However, previous studies have failed to detect alterations of τ species in other primary tauopathies. We assessed CSF τ protein abnormalities in AD, a tauopathy with prominent Aβ pathology, and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), a primary tauopathy characterised by deposition of four microtubule-binding repeat (4R) τ with minimal Aβ pathology. Methods 26 normal control (NC), 37 AD, and 24 patients with PSP participated in the study. AD and PSP were matched for severity using the clinical dementia rating sum of boxes (CDR-sb) scores. The INNO BIA AlzBio3 multiplex immunoassay was used to measure CSF Aβ, total τ, and ptau181. Additional, novel ELISAs targeting different N-terminal and central τ epitopes were developed to examine CSF τ components and to investigate interactions between diagnostic group, demographics and genetic variables. Results PSP had lower CSF N-terminal and C-terminal τ concentrations than NC and AD measured with the novel τ ELISAs and the standard AlzBio3 τ and ptau assays. AD had higher total τ and ptau levels than NC and PSP. There was a gender by diagnosis interaction in AD and PSP for most τ species, with lower concentrations for male compared to female patients. Conclusions CSF τ fragment concentrations are different in PSP compared with AD despite the presence of severe τ pathology and neuronal injury in both disorders. CSF τ concentration likely reflects multiple factors in addition to the degree of neuronal injury.


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2013

Inhibitors of the Immunoproteasome: Current Status and Future Directions

Zachary A. Miller; Lin Ao; Kyung Bo Kim; Wooin Lee

The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS) plays a vital role in maintaining protein homeostasis and regulating numerous cellular processes. The proteasome, a multi-protease complex, is the key component of the UPS and has been validated as a therapeutic target by the FDAs approval of bortezomib and carfilzomib. These proteasome inhibitor drugs have substantially improved outcomes in patients with hematological malignancies and are currently being investigated for other types of cancer as well as several other diseases. These approved proteasome inhibitors target the catalytic activity of both the constitutive proteasome and the immunoproteasome indiscriminately, and their inhibitory effects on the constitutive proteasome in normal cells are believed to contribute to unwanted side effects. In addition, selective immunoproteasome inhibition has been proposed to have unique effects on other diseases, including those involving aberrant immune function. Initially recognized for its role in the adaptive immune response, the immunoproteasome is often upregulated in disease states such as inflammatory diseases and cancer, suggesting functions beyond antigen presentation. In an effort to explore the immunoproteasome as a potential therapeutic target in these diseases, the development of immunoproteasome-specific inhibitors has become the focus of recent studies. Owing to considerable efforts by both academic and industry groups, immunoproteasome-selective inhibitors have now been identified and tested against several disease models. These inhibitors also provide a valuable set of chemical tools for investigating the biological function of the immunoproteasome. In this review, we will focus on the recent efforts towards the development of immunoproteasome-selective inhibitors.


Annals of Neurology | 2017

Typical and atypical pathology in primary progressive aphasia variants

Edoardo G. Spinelli; Maria Luisa Mandelli; Zachary A. Miller; Miguel A. Santos-Santos; Stephen M. Wilson; Federica Agosta; Lea T. Grinberg; Eric J. Huang; John Q. Trojanowski; Marita Meyer; Maya L. Henry; Giancarlo Comi; Gil D. Rabinovici; Howard J. Rosen; Massimo Filippi; Bruce L. Miller; William W. Seeley; Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini

To characterize in vivo signatures of pathological diagnosis in a large cohort of patients with primary progressive aphasia (PPA) variants defined by current diagnostic classification.


NeuroImage: Clinical | 2015

Longitudinal gray matter contraction in three variants of primary progressive aphasia: A tenser-based morphometry study

Simona M. Brambati; Serena Amici; Caroline A. Racine; John Neuhaus; Zachary A. Miller; Jenny Ogar; Nina F. Dronkers; Bruce L. Miller; Howard J. Rosen; Maria Luisa Gorno-Tempini

The present study investigated the pattern of longitudinal changes in cognition and anatomy in three variants of primary progressive aphasia (PPA). Eight patients with the non-fluent variant of PPA (nfvPPA), 13 patients with the semantic variant (svPPA), seven patients with the logopenic variant (lvPPA), and 29 age-matched, neurologically healthy controls were included in the study. All participants underwent longitudinal MRI, neuropsychological and language testing at baseline and at a 1-year follow-up. Tenser-based morphometry (TBM) was applied to T1-weighted MRI images in order to map the progression of gray and white matter atrophy over a 1-year period. Results showed that each patient group was characterized by a specific pattern of cognitive and anatomical changes. Specifically, nfvPPA patients showed gray matter atrophy progression in the left frontal and subcortical areas as well as a decline in motor speech and executive functions; svPPA patients presented atrophy progression in the medial and lateral temporal lobe and decline in semantic memory abilities; and lvPPA patients showed atrophy progression in lateral/posterior temporal and medial parietal regions with a decline in memory, sentence repetition and calculations. In addition, in all three variants, the white matter fibers underlying the abovementioned cortical areas underwent significant volume contraction over a 1-year period. Overall, these results indicate that the three PPA variants present distinct patterns of neuroanatomical contraction, which reflect their clinical and cognitive progression.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2015

Proteasome inhibitors with pyrazole scaffolds from structure-based virtual screening.

Zachary A. Miller; Keun Sik Kim; Do Min Lee; Vinod Kasam; Si Eun Baek; Yan Yan Zhang; Lin Ao; Kimberly Cornish Carmony; Na Ra Lee; Shou Zhou; Qingquan Zhao; Yujin Jang; Hyun Young Jeong; Chang-Guo Zhan; Wooin Lee; Dong Eun Kim; Kyung Bo Kim

We performed a virtual screen of ∼340 000 small molecules against the active site of proteasomes followed by in vitro assays and subsequent optimization, yielding a proteasome inhibitor with pyrazole scaffold. The pyrazole-scaffold compound displayed excellent metabolic stability and was highly effective in suppressing solid tumor growth in vivo. Furthermore, the effectiveness of this compound was not negatively impacted by resistance to bortezomib or carfilzomib.


Acta neuropathologica communications | 2016

Rare TREM2 variants associated with Alzheimer’s disease display reduced cell surface expression

Daniel W. Sirkis; Luke W. Bonham; Renan E. Aparicio; Ethan G. Geier; Eliana Marisa Ramos; Qing Wang; Anna Karydas; Zachary A. Miller; Bruce L. Miller; Giovanni Coppola; Jennifer S. Yokoyama

Rare variation in TREM2 has been associated with greater risk for Alzheimer’s disease (AD). TREM2 encodes a cell surface receptor expressed on microglia and related cells, and the R47H variant associated with AD appears to affect the ability of TREM2 to bind extracellular ligands. In addition, other rare TREM2 mutations causing early-onset neurodegeneration are thought to impair cell surface expression. Using a sequence kernel association (SKAT) analysis in two independent AD cohorts, we found significant enrichment of rare TREM2 variants not previously characterized at the protein level. Heterologous expression of the identified variants showed that novel variants S31F and R47C displayed significantly reduced cell surface expression. In addition, we identified rare variant R136Q in a patient with language-predominant AD that also showed impaired surface expression. The results suggest rare TREM2 variants enriched in AD may be associated with altered TREM2 function and that AD risk may be conferred, in part, from altered TREM2 surface expression.

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Adam L. Boxer

University of California

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Joel H. Kramer

University of California

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Anna Karydas

University of California

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