Immediate-Early Genes in the Central Nervous System

Immediate-Early Genes in the Central Nervous System
Author: T.R. Tölle
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 171
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3642795625

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Immediate-early genes are believed to be involved in the neuron's ability to con vert short-term synaptic stimulation into long-lasting responses and thus contribute to the adaptive alterations involved in neuronal plasticity. Cellular immediate-early genes share a close structural homology with some viral oncogenes. Recent advances in cellular biology have identified the activation and deactivation of immediate-early genes as molecular mechanisms to control regulated and deregulated growth, cellular differentiation and development. In this view immediate-early genes may function as third messengers in a stimulus transcription cascade transferring extracellular information into changes in target gene transcription, thereby changing the phenotype of neurons. Immediate-Early Genes in the Central Nervous System provides a comprehensive up-to-date overview of current methodology in the research of immediate-early genes and includes a wide range of neurobiological topics, such as regeneration, memory formation, epilepsia and nociception. The contributors to this book have been selected from among the leading experts in their field of research. T.R. TOLLE J. SCHADRACK W. ZIEGLGANSBERGER Contents Immediate-early genes -how immmediate and why early? G./. Evan .............................................. . Immediate-early gene activation as a window on mechanism in the nervous system S.P. Hunt, L.A. McNaughton, R. Jenkins, and W. Wisden. . . . . . . . . .. . . . 18 of immediate-early genes during Differential expression synaptic plasticity, seizures and brain injury suggests specific functions for these molecules in brain neurons M. Dragunow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . 35 . . . . . . . . . .

Immediate Early Genes and Inducible Transcription Factors in Mapping of the Central Nervous System Function and Dysfunction

Immediate Early Genes and Inducible Transcription Factors in Mapping of the Central Nervous System Function and Dysfunction
Author: L. Kaczmarek
Publisher: Gulf Professional Publishing
Total Pages: 391
Release: 2002-07-01
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 0080534465

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That molecular neurobiology has become a dominant part of neuroscience research can be credited to the discovery of inducible gene expression in the brain and spinal cord. This volume deals with genes, whose expression patterns in the vertebrate central nervous system were the first to be revealed and then the most extensively investigated over the last 15 years. Immediate early genes (IEG) and their protein products, especially those acting as regulators of transcription (inducible transcription factors, ITF) have proven to be very valuable tools in functional neuroanatomy and neurophysiology, as they are rapidly and transiently induced in specific neurons in response to various modes of stimulation. Thus, they have been used to map neuronal populations selectively responsive to a variety of conditions, such as sensory and learning experience, electrical stimulation of specific circuits, seizures, and neurodegeneration. This single volume, written by the most prominent authors in the field, brings together for the first time information about the most widely studied IEG/ITF in a whole variety of phenomena of neuronal activation. It starts with a critical appraisal of the technologies employed for the studies on gene, protein, and transcription factor activity in the nervous system. Several chapters present exhaustive examples of expression patterns of the ITF in "vocal" avian brain, mammalian brain sensory regions, areas involved in regulation of circadian rhythms, and the spinal cord. The next parts cover functional and regular aspects of individual IEG/ITF expression: c-fos in learning and memory, c-jun and others in neuropathology and neuronal stress responses, Elk-1, egr family, and CREB in neuronal plasticity and learning. This volume will be useful as a major reference on this topic. Furthermore, it attempts to unravel the seemingly overwhelming complexity of the phenomena of gene expression in the central nervous system.

Immediate Early Genes in Sensory Processing, Cognitive Performance and Neurological Disorders

Immediate Early Genes in Sensory Processing, Cognitive Performance and Neurological Disorders
Author: Raphael Pinaud
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2014-09-18
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 9781489987433

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This book provides a compilation of the most up-to-date literature on the topic of immediate early genes (IEGs). It reviews and details experiments and theories that challenge the reader to expand their view on how IEG research is currently being used to advance our understanding of static and active brain circuits. In addition, the book explores roles of IEGs in clinical neuropathology.

Gene Expression in the Central Nervous System

Gene Expression in the Central Nervous System
Author: Albert C. H. Yu
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 359
Release: 1995
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 0444818529

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Gene expression is an active ongoing process that maintains a functional CNS, as proteins are being made on a continual basis. Processes such as learning and memory, nerve cell repair and regeneration and its response to stress are critically dependent on gene expression. This volume highlights the role of gene expression in normal CNS function, and presents many research methods at the cutting edge of neuroscience, which will provide insight into therapeutic approaches through which the control of gene expression may be used in the treatment of many nervous system diseases.

Involvement of the Immediate Early Genes NGFI-A and Arc in Enriched Environment-induced Plasticity in the Central Nervous System

Involvement of the Immediate Early Genes NGFI-A and Arc in Enriched Environment-induced Plasticity in the Central Nervous System
Author: Raphael Ribeiro Pinaud
Publisher:
Total Pages: 242
Release: 2001
Genre:
ISBN:

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The phenomenon of neural plasticity has been postulated to reflect changes in central nervous system circuitry in order to optimize the collection and/or interpretation of environmental information. The expression of immediate early genes (EEGs) is the first genomic response to environmental cues for change. Many EEGs act as transcription factors, in which case they could regulate the genetic mechanisms involved in more stable changes. Generally, long-term changes in circuit performance are mediated by proteins that result from the expression of late genes. The IEGs, nerve growth factor induced gene-A (NGFI-A) and activity regulated cytoskeletal protein (Arc) are currently under investigation as candidate-plasticity genes. NGFI-A is a nuclear protein that serves as a transcription factor for the Synapsins, a family of genes that has been strongly implicated as markers for neural plasticity. Arc has been hypothesized to mediate locally executed dendritic reconfigurations in response to changes in activity levels. In the present thesis, the response profiles for both these IEGs, along with the late genes growth associated protein-43 (GAP-43) and synapsin I, were evaluated for their role in mediating neural plasticity.

Genetic Mechanisms Regulating the Spatiotemporal Modulation of Proliferation Rate and Mode in Neural Progenitors and Daughter Cells during Embryonic CNS Development

Genetic Mechanisms Regulating the Spatiotemporal Modulation of Proliferation Rate and Mode in Neural Progenitors and Daughter Cells during Embryonic CNS Development
Author: Behzad Yaghmaeian Salmani
Publisher: Linköping University Electronic Press
Total Pages: 63
Release: 2018-05-09
Genre:
ISBN: 9176852776

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The central nervous system (CNS) is a hallmark feature of animals with a bilateral symmetry: bilateria and can be sub-divided into the brain and nerve cord. One of the prominent properties of the CNS across bilateria is the discernible expansion of its anterior part (brain) compared with the posterior one (nerve cord). This evolutionarily conserved feature could be attributed to four major developmental agencies: First, the existence of more anterior progenitors. Second, anterior progenitors are more proliferative. Third, anterior daughter cells, generated by the progenitors, are more proliferative. Forth, fewer cells are removed by programmed cell death (PCD) anteriorly. My thesis has addressed these issues, and uncovered both biological principles and genetic regulatory networks that promote these A-P differences. I have used the Drosophila and mouse embryonic CNSs as model systems. Regarding the 1st issue, while the brain indeed contains more progenitors, my studies demonstrate that this only partly explains the anterior expansion. Indeed, with regard to the 2nd issue, my studies, on both the Drosophila and mouse CNS, demonstrate that anterior progenitors divide more extensively. Concerning the 3rd issue, in Drosophila we identified a gradient of daughter proliferation along the AP axis of the developing CNS with brain daughter cells being more proliferative. Specifically, in the brain, progenitors divide to generate a series of daughter cells that divide once (Type I), to generate two neurons or glia. In contrast, in the nerve cord, progenitors switch during later stages, from first generating dividing daughters to subsequently generating daughters that directly differentiate (Type 0). Hence, nerve cord progenitors undergo a programmed Type I->0 proliferation switch. In the Drosophila posterior CNS, this switch occurs earlier and is more prevalent, contributing to the generation of smaller lineages in the posterior regions. Similar to Drosophila, in the mouse brain we also found that progenitor and daughter cell proliferation was elevated and extended into later developmental stages, when compared to the spinal cord. DNA-labeling experiments revealed faster cycling cells in the brain when compared to the nerve cord, in both Drosophila and mouse. In both Drosophila and mouse, we found that the suppression of progenitor and daughter proliferation in the nerve cord is controlled by the Hox homeotic gene family. Hence, the absence of Hox gene expression in the brain provides a logical explanation for the extended progenitor proliferation and lack of Type I->0 switch. The repression of Hox genes in the brain is mediated by the histonemodifying Polycomb Group complex (PcG), which thereby is responsible for the anterior expansion. With respect to the 4th issue, we found no effect of PCD on anterior expansion in Drosophila, while this cannot be asserted for the mouse embryonic neurodevelopment as there are no genetic tools to abolish PCD effectively in mammals. Taken together, the studies presented in this thesis identified global and evolutionarily-conserved genetic programs that promote anterior CNS expansion, and pave the way for understanding the evolution of size along the anterior-posterior CNS axis.

Understanding Regulation of Immediate-early Gene Transcription in the Brain

Understanding Regulation of Immediate-early Gene Transcription in the Brain
Author: Carissa Janette Dunn
Publisher:
Total Pages: 152
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

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Recent neurodevelopmental and cognitive studies have described dysregulated expression of immediate early genes (IEGs) as a phenotype and suggest that it may underlie the etiology of increasingly common brain disorders such as Autism and Schizophrenia. Transcription induced by neuronal activity involves the coordinated action of many different processes and factors acting at the membrane, in the cytoplasm, and in the nucleus. At the chromatin level, one of these factors is the histone variant H2A.Z. While this variant has known roles in memory consolidation and cerebellar development, it has been reported as both a transcriptional activator and repressor. As such, its contribution to transcriptional regulation remains elusive. The work presented here provides evidence supporting distinct roles of H2A.Z hypervariants, H2A.Z.1 and H2A.Z.2, in transcriptional regulation of IEGs and demonstrates a regulatory mechanisms in which the incorporation of H2A.Z.2, not H2A.Z.1, in nucleosomes near the transcription start sites (TSS) of rapid IEGs is required for pausing of RNA Polymerase II (Pol II). At the cell-signaling level, activity-induced transcription is regulated by multiple calcium-dependent signaling cascades. It has been reported that the Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathway is indispensable for rapid IEG transcription. However, much remains unclear about the involvement of other calcium-dependent signaling cascades in regulating expression of these genes. This study reports evidence supporting the idea that MAPK and Calcineurin (CaN) signaling pathways are both necessary for optimal expression of most rapid IEGs in response to neuronal activity. However, the extent to which each pathway contributes to expression varies from gene to gene. This study demonstrates variation in the contributions of individual factors (H2A.Z hypervariants) and processes (calcium-induced signaling pathways) to transcriptional regulation. The work herein highlights a need for regulatory mechanisms governing IEG expression to be investigated further at the individual gene level.