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Amira Latif‐Hernandez

Stanford Medicine

Publishes on Alzheimer's disease research and treatments, Neuroinflammation and Neurodegeneration Mechanisms, Neuroscience and Neuropharmacology Research. 19 papers and 1k citations.

19Publications
1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Restoring hippocampal glucose metabolism rescues cognition across Alzheimer’s disease pathologies
Cited by 193Open Access

Impaired cerebral glucose metabolism is a pathologic feature of Alzheimer's disease (AD), with recent proteomic studies highlighting disrupted glial metabolism in AD. We report that inhibition of indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase 1 (IDO1), which metabolizes tryptophan to kynurenine (KYN), rescues hippocampal memory function in mouse preclinical models of AD by restoring astrocyte metabolism. Activation of astrocytic IDO1 by amyloid β and tau oligomers increases KYN and suppresses glycolysis in an aryl hydrocarbon receptor-dependent manner. In amyloid and tau models, IDO1 inhibition improves hippocampal glucose metabolism and rescues hippocampal long-term potentiation in a monocarboxylate transporter-dependent manner. In astrocytic and neuronal cocultures from AD subjects, IDO1 inhibition improved astrocytic production of lactate and uptake by neurons. Thus, IDO1 inhibitors presently developed for cancer might be repurposed for treatment of AD.

The two faces of synaptic failure in AppNL-G-F knock-in mice
Amira Latif‐Hernandez, Victor Sabanov, Tariq Ahmed et al.|Alzheimer s Research & Therapy|2020
Cited by 71Open Access

Abstract Background Intensive basic and preclinical research into Alzheimer’s disease (AD) has yielded important new findings, but they could not yet been translated into effective therapies. One of the reasons is the lack of animal models that sufficiently reproduce the complexity of human AD and the response of human brain circuits to novel treatment approaches. As a step in overcoming these limitations, new App knock-in models have been developed that avoid transgenic APP overexpression and its associated side effects. These mice are proposed to serve as valuable models to examine Aß-related pathology in “preclinical AD.” Methods Since AD as the most common form of dementia progresses into synaptic failure as a major cause of cognitive deficits, the detailed characterization of synaptic dysfunction in these new models is essential. Here, we addressed this by extracellular and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings in App NL-G-F mice compared to App NL animals which served as controls. Results We found a beginning synaptic impairment (LTP deficit) at 3–4 months in the prefrontal cortex of App NL-G-F mice that is further aggravated and extended to the hippocampus at 6–8 months. Measurements of miniature EPSCs and IPSCs point to a marked increase in excitatory and inhibitory presynaptic activity, the latter accompanied by a moderate increase in postsynaptic inhibitory function. Conclusions Our data reveal a marked impairment of primarily postsynaptic processes at the level of synaptic plasticity but the dominance of a presumably compensatory presynaptic upregulation at the level of elementary miniature synaptic function.

Quinolinic acid injection in mouse medial prefrontal cortex affects reversal learning abilities, cortical connectivity and hippocampal synaptic plasticity
Amira Latif‐Hernandez, Disha Shah, Tariq Ahmed et al.|Scientific Reports|2016
Cited by 62Open Access

Abstract Intracerebral injection of the excitotoxic, endogenous tryptophan metabolite, quinolinic acid (QA), constitutes a chemical model of neurodegenerative brain disease. Complementary techniques were combined to examine the consequences of QA injection into medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of C57BL6 mice. In accordance with the NMDAR-mediated synapto- and neurotoxic action of QA, we found an initial increase in excitability and an augmentation of hippocampal long-term potentiation, converting within two weeks into a reduction and impairment, respectively, of these processes. QA-induced mPFC excitotoxicity impaired behavioral flexibility in a reversal variant of the hidden-platform Morris water maze (MWM), whereas regular, extended MWM training was unaffected. QA-induced mPFC damage specifically affected the spatial-cognitive strategies that mice use to locate the platform during reversal learning. These behavioral and cognitive defects coincided with changes in cortical functional connectivity (FC) and hippocampal neuroplasticity. FC between various cortical regions was assessed by resting-state fMRI (rsfMRI) methodology, and mice that had received QA injection into mPFC showed increased FC between various cortical regions. mPFC and hippocampus (HC) are anatomically as well as functionally linked as part of a cortical network that controls higher-order cognitive functions. Together, these observations demonstrate the central functional importance of rodent mPFC as well as the validity of QA-induced mPFC damage as a preclinical rodent model of the early stages of neurodegeneration.