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Tara DeSilva Laboratory

❮Neurosciences Tara DeSilva Laboratory
  • Tara DeSilva Laboratory
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Principal Investigator

Tara DeSilva Headshot

Tara DeSilva, PhD

Associate Staff
Vice Chair, Neurosciences
Associate Professor, Molecular Medicine, CCLCM-CWRU
Email: [email protected]
Location: Cleveland Clinic Main Campus

Research

The Tara DeSilva lab studies demylelinating diseases, like multiple sclerosis, and how to protect the central nervous system.


Biography

Coming soon.


Education & Professional Highlights

Appointed
2016

Education & Fellowships

Medical Education - University of Pennsylvania
Biological Chemistry
Philadelphia, PA USA
2000

Graduate School - University of Pennsylvania
Biological Chemistry
Philadelphia, PA USA
1997

Undergraduate - Albright College
Biochemistry
Reading, PA USA
1990

Research

Research

The major hallmark of demyelinating diseases such as multiple sclerosis (MS), transverse myelitis, and neuromyelitis optica (NMO) is immune cell infiltration into the central nervous system (CNS; i.e., brain, spinal cord and optic nerve), resulting in myelin destruction. Myelin is the insulation around nerve fibers (i.e., axons) that is important for the conduction of nerve impulses. Demyelination of the neuronal axon not only slows propagation of nerve impulses, but causes axonal injury, resulting in motor and vision impairments, bowel/bladder dysfunction, pain sensation, and cognitive decline. New early-stage myelin cells appear at lesion sites in demyelinating diseases, but fail to reform myelin as they would during normal development. The DeSilva lab focuses on three major areas of research:

1)    Blocking immune cell infiltration into the CNS

2)    Protecting the CNS during the onslaught of immune cell infiltration

3)    Promoting regeneration of myelin in the CNS

Demyelinating Diseases

The most common form of MS is relapsing–remitting (RRMS), whereby exacerbations of symptoms are followed by a period of remission. A relapse is defined as a clinical event involving the onset of neurological symptoms caused by inflammation in the CNS. NMO has a similar relapsing-remitting disease progression; however, lesions are selective to the optic nerve and spinal cord and are relatively absent in the brain, unlike MS. Transverse myelitis is an acute inflammatory event selective to the spinal cord and in many cases patients are paralyzed within several hours or days. Some patients recover partially, but many patients with severe attacks have major disabilities. In some cases, transverse myelitis may present as a first relapse to develop later into MS or NMO. 

Protecting the CNS

Disease-modifying therapies for MS are effective at reducing relapses, but do not eliminate them and have not been proven to slow disease progression. Therefore, therapeutic strategies to protect the CNS have clinical relevance. Using pharmacological and genetic approaches, the DeSilva lab has shown that excessive glutamate release from the system Xc- transporter expressed in microglia and macrophages causes excitotoxic damage to myelin in models of autoimmune neuroinflammation. To better understand the mechanisms driving glutamate release and its potential human clinical applications, the DeSilva lab is selectively and inducibly deleting the system Xc- transporter and its target proteins in cells of the peripheral and CNS in models of autoimmune neuroinflammation.

Blocking Immune Cell Infiltration into the CNS

While it appears that excitotoxic mechanisms play an important role in autoimmune demyelination, recent data from the DeSilva laboratory also provide evidence that glutamate contributes to immune cell infiltration into the CNS. The DeSilva lab has shown that pharmacological blockade or genetic deletion of system Xc- attenuated T cell infiltration into the CNS. Infiltration of primed T cells into the CNS is thought to initiate pathogenesis of demyelinating diseases. Furthermore, immune cells express many glutamate receptors and transporters necessary for glutamate regulation, corroborating evidence that glutamate contributes to immune cell trafficking into the CNS. The goal of this project is to understand the role of glutamate in immune cell migration and blood-brain barrier permeability in autoimmune demyelination.

Activity-Dependent Myelination and Regeneration in the CNS

The cells that form myelin are called oligodendrocytes, which are generated from oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs). Under normal conditions, OPCs mature into myelinating oligodendrocytes that ensheath nerve fibers, allowing for proper signal conduction. In pathological conditions, such as in demyelinating diseases, OPCs fail to form myelin as they normally would during development. Research in the DeSilva lab focuses on signaling factors between nerve fibers and early stage myelin-producing cells that are necessary to initiate myelination, with a special focus on the neurotransmitter glutamate. Glutamate is the primary excitatory neurotransmitter of the CNS. The DeSilva lab has shown that activity-dependent glutamate release from neurons is a necessary factor to promote myelination during development. This process may be perturbed in autoimmune neuroinflammation, where the DeSilva lab has shown that excessive glutamate release occurs through the system Xc- transporter triggering a glutamate imbalance. This work suggests that glutamate signaling must be properly activated in demyelinating diseases in order for new early stage myelin-producing cells to initiate remyelination.

Our Team

Our Team

Publications

Selected Publications

View publications for Tara DeSilva, PhD
(Disclaimer: This search is powered by PubMed, a service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. PubMed is a third-party website with no affiliation with Cleveland Clinic.)


Irfan M, Evonuk KS, DeSilva TM. (2021) Microglia phagocytose oligodendrocyte progenitor cells and synapses during early postnatal development: implications for white versus gray matter maturation. FEBS J. 2021 Sep 8. doi: 10.1111/febs.16190. PMID: 34496137

Nemes-Baran AD, DeSilva TM. (2021) Quantification of microglial contact and engulfment of oligodendrocyte progenitor cells in the rodent brain. STAR Protoc. 2(2):100403. PMID: 33855305; PMCID: PMC8025152

Browne K, Zhang E, Sullivan JK, Evonuk KS, DeSilva TM, Jorgensen TN. (2021) Lupus-prone B6.Nba2 male and female mice display anti-DWEYS reactivity and a neuropsychiatric phenotype. Brain Behav Immun. Feb 17:S0889-1591(21)00052-0. PMID: 33607233

Nemes-Baran AD, White DR, DeSilva TM. (2020) Fractalkine-Dependent Microglial Pruning of Viable Oligodendrocyte Progenitor Cells Regulates Myelination. Cell Rep. 32(7):108047. PMID: 32814050; PMCID: PMC7478853

Evonuk KS, Doyle RE, Moseley CE, Thornell IM, Adler K, Bingaman AM, Bevensee MO, Weaver CT, Min B, DeSilva TM. (2020) Reduction of AMPA receptor activity on mature oligodendrocytes attenuates loss of myelinated axons in autoimmune neuroinflammation. Sci Adv. 6(2):eaax5936. PMID: 31934627; PMCID: PMC6949032

Do J, Kim D, Kim S, Valentin-Torres A, Dvorina N, Jang E, Nagarajavel V, DeSilva TM, Li X, Ting AH, Vignali DAA, Stohlman SA, Baldwin WM 3rd, Min B. (2017) Treg-specific IL-27Rα deletion uncovers a key role for IL-27 in Treg function to control autoimmunity. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 114(38):10190-10195. PMID: 28874534; PMCID: PMC5617261

Evonuk KS, Moseley CE, Doyle RE, Weaver CT, DeSilva TM. (2017) Determining Immune System Suppression versus CNS Protection for Pharmacological Interventions in Autoimmune Demyelination. J Vis Exp. (115). PMID: 27685467; PMCID: PMC5092010

Evonuk KS, Prabhu SD, Young ME, DeSilva TM. (2016) Myocardial ischemia/reperfusion impairs neurogenesis and hippocampal-dependent learning and memory. Brain Behav Immun. 61:266-273. PMID: 27600185

Cala CM, Moseley CE, Steele C, Dowdy SM, Cutter GR, Ness JM, DeSilva TM. (2016) T cell cytokine signatures: Biomarkers in pediatric multiple sclerosis. J Neuroimmunol. 297:1-8. PMID: 27397070; PMCID: PMC4940981

Watson JA, Bhattacharyya BJ, Vaden JH, Wilson JA, Icyuz M, Howard AD, Phillips E, DeSilva TM, Siegal GP, Bean AJ, King GD, Phillips SE, Miller RJ, Wilson SM. (2015) Motor and Sensory Deficits in the teetering Mice Result from Mutation of the ESCRT Component HGS. PLoS Genet. 11(6):e1005290. PMID: 26115514; PMCID: PMC4482608

Evonuk KS, Baker BJ, Doyle RE, Moseley CE, Sestero CM, Johnston BP, De Sarno P, Tang A, Gembitsky I, Hewett SJ, Weaver CT, Raman C, DeSilva TM. (2015) Inhibition of System Xc(-) Transporter Attenuates Autoimmune Inflammatory Demyelination. J Immunol. 195(2):450-63. PMID: 26071560; PMCID: PMC4490999

Haynes RL, DeSilva TM, Li J. (2012) Mechanisms of perinatal brain injury. Neurol Res Int. 2012:157858. PMID: 22848819; PMCID: PMC3403495

DeSilva TM, Borenstein NS, Volpe JJ, Kinney HC, Rosenberg PA. (2012) Expression of EAAT2 in neurons and protoplasmic astrocytes during human cortical development. J Comp Neurol. 520(17):3912-32. PMID: 22522966; PMCID: PMC3781602

Moehle MS, Webber PJ, Tse T, Sukar N, Standaert DG, DeSilva TM, Cowell RM, West AB. (2012) LRRK2 inhibition attenuates microglial inflammatory responses. J Neurosci. 32(5):1602-11. PMID: 22302802; PMCID: PMC3532034

DeSilva TM, Kabakov AY, Goldhoff PE, Volpe JJ, Rosenberg PA. (2009) Regulation of glutamate transport in developing rat oligodendrocytes. J Neurosci. 29(24):7898-908. PMID: 19535601; PMCID: PMC2926807

Gerstner B, Lee J, DeSilva TM, Jensen FE, Volpe JJ, Rosenberg PA. (2009) 17beta-estradiol protects against hypoxic/ischemic white matter damage in the neonatal rat brain. J Neurosci Res. 87(9):2078-86. PMID: 19224575; PMCID: PMC2770176

DeSilva TM, Billiards SS, Borenstein NS, Trachtenberg FL, Volpe JJ, Kinney HC, Rosenberg PA. (2008) Glutamate transporter EAAT2 expression is up-regulated in reactive astrocytes in human periventricular leukomalacia. J Comp Neurol. 508(2):238-48. PMID: 18314905; PMCID: PMC2911955

Bassan M, Liu H, Madsen KL, Armsen W, Zhou J, DeSilva T, Chen W, Paradise A, Brasch MA, Staudinger J, Gether U, Irwin N, Rosenberg PA. Interaction between the glutamate transporter GLT1b and the synaptic PDZ domain protein PICK1. Eur J Neurosci. 27(1):66-82. PMID: 18184314; PMCID: PMC4341970

Gerstner B, DeSilva TM, Genz K, Armstrong A, Brehmer F, Neve RL, Felderhoff-Mueser U, Volpe JJ, Rosenberg PA. (2008) Hyperoxia causes maturation-dependent cell death in the developing white matter. J Neurosci. 28(5):1236-45. PMID: 18234901; PMCID: PMC4305399

DeSilva TM, Kinney HC, Borenstein NS, Trachtenberg FL, Irwin N, Volpe JJ, Rosenberg PA. (2007) The glutamate transporter EAAT2 is transiently expressed in developing human cerebral white matter. J Comp Neurol. 501(6):879-90. PMID: 17311320

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Research News

Research News

...
Researchers explore protecting the brain in relapsing remitting MS by blocking excess glutamate

Dr. Tara DeSilva’s lab found new drug targets to protect the brain through researching neurodegeneration in models of multiple sclerosis.



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