Selected Grantee Publications
Stat3 Mediates Fyn Kinase-Driven Dopaminergic Neurodegeneration and Microglia Activation
Siddiqui et al., Disease Models & Mechanisms. 2024.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39641161
The FYN gene is a risk locus for Alzheimer’s disease and several other neurodegenerative disorders. FYN encodes Fyn kinase, and previous studies have shown that Fyn signaling in dopaminergic neurons and microglia plays a role during neurodegeneration. This study investigated Fyn signaling using zebrafish that express a constitutively active Fyn Y531F mutant in neural cells. Activated neural Fyn signaling in the mutant animals resulted in dopaminergic neuron loss and induced inflammatory cytokine expression when compared with controls. Transcriptomic and chemical inhibition analyses revealed that Fyn-driven changes were dependent on the Stat3 and NF-κB signaling pathways, which work synergistically to activate neuronal inflammation and degeneration. This study provides insight into the mechanisms underlying neurodegeneration, identifying Stat3 as a novel effector of Fyn signaling and a potential translational target. Supported by ORIP (R24OD020166).
Promoting Validation and Cross-Phylogenetic Integration in Model Organism Research
Cheng et al., Disease Models & Mechanisms. 2022.
https://www.doi.org/10.1242/dmm.049600
Model organisms are essential for biomedical research and therapeutic development, but translation of such research to the clinic is low. The authors summarized discussions from an NIH virtual workshop series, titled “Validation of Animal Models and Tools for Biomedical Research,” held from 2020 to 2021. They described challenges and opportunities for developing and integrating tools and resources and provided suggestions for improving the rigor, validation, reproducibility, and translatability of model organism research. Supported by ORIP (R01OD011116, R24OD031447, R03OD030597, R24OD018559, R24OD017870, R24OD026591, R24OD022005, U42OD026645, U42OD012210, U54OD030165, UM1OD023221, P51OD011107), NIAMS, NIDDK, NIGMS, NHGRI, and NINDS.