Dr. Igor Ponomarev - Faculty Page
                                                  
Overview of research interests:
My broad interests lie at the intersection of genetics, genomics and neuroscience. My current research focuses on the interplay between genetic, epigenetic and environmental causes in controlling brain gene expression and behavior in Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD). My lab studies chromatin (epigenomic) and gene expression (transcriptomic) profiles in brain cells and tissues using next generation sequencing and applies systems approaches to data analysis to provide an integrated view of brain changes associated with AUD-related neuroplasticity and neuropathology. An important component of this effort is discovering and prioritizing molecular targets for medication development to prevent and/or treat AUD and other CNS disorders. My collaborators and I validate functional significance of the most promising targets using a combination of approaches that include reverse genetics, behavioral pharmacology, and drug repurposing.
Molecular mechanisms of cellular plasticity in models of AUD.
One goal of these studies is to understand how large-scale molecular signals are integrated to impact cellular functions and downstream alcohol-related behaviors. A second goal is to identify and prioritize alcohol-related molecular targets for medication development for AUD. To accomplish these goals, my lab uses genome-wide molecular profiles (e.g. RNA-Seq and ATAC-Seq) and tools of systems biology, such as gene networks and knowledge bases and develops strategies for data integration within and across genomic data sets, which enables a holistic view of brain responses to perturbations, such as alcohol. For example, we pioneered the usage of gene co-expression network analysis in the alcohol field to study coordinated molecular responses to alcohol in animal models [1] and postmortem human brain [2]. In this 2012 study, we used gene co-expression networks and a novel integration strategy to characterize gene expression changes in alcoholic brain at a systems level. This integrative analysis of the transcriptome allowed us to make mechanistic predictions about the upstream epigenetic control as well as downstream cellular physiology and we validated several of these predictions experimentally.
The 2012 study established a foundation for my current and future research on the role
                           of epigenetic (epigenomic) mechanisms in AUD. We extended this work in two important
                           directions: 1) epigenetic control of alcohol-related gene expression in human postmortem
                           brain and 2) the effects of epigenetic drugs on alcohol-related behaviors in animal
                           models. The premise of this line of research is that epigenomic states represent long-lasting
                           attributes of cellular identity, including patterns of past gene expression, current
                           gene expression, and potential experience-dependent responses, which, in the context
                           of AUD, may explain how chronic alcohol establishes persistent changes in brain plasticity
                           underlying compulsive drug use, craving, and relapse.
Studying cell type – specific molecular profiles is critical for understanding the
                           roles of individual neuronal and glial populations in CNS plasticity and pathology.
                           My lab was among the first to combine gene expression profiles from complex brain
                           tissues with cell type – specific transcriptomes from publications and online databases,
                           such as Allen Brain Atlas (), to define cellular identity of transcripts changed by perturbations. These analyses
                           helped generate focused hypotheses about the role of specific cell types in drug-,
                           mutation- or stress-induced perturbations [2, 3, 4]. Recently, my lab utilized two
                           novel procedures (INTACT and ATAC-Seq) to obtain epigenomic profiles from specific
                           neuronal populations and we are currently using these approaches to study cell type-specific
                           epigenetic mechanisms in AUD models.
Another line of research in my lab is the role of neuroimmune signaling in promoting excessive alcohol drinking and transitioning to alcohol abuse and AUD. Our early studies implicated the neuroimmune signaling in regulation of alcohol consumption. Follow-up studies corroborated this finding, showing that effects of alcohol are associated with immune activation and pro-inflammatory signaling [2]. Genetic deletion (knockout) of some of the immune genes nominated by gene expression studies reduced ethanol consumption and preference and provided behavioral validation for genomic experiments [5]. Furthermore, administration of small pro-inflammatory molecules, such as LPS and Poly(I:C) increase ethanol consumption in mice, indicating that enhancement of immune signaling is associated with increased drinking as suggested in humans. We lack understanding of how changes in neuroimmune pathways are integrated into neuronal networks that mediate the transition from normal (social) drinking to excessive alcohol consumption. We are currently conducting experiments (supported by NIH, R01) to address this question. The results of these studies will advance our understanding of the role of neuroimmune signaling in the transition to AUD and will be widely applicable to brain disorders with pro-inflammatory phenotypes
 Selected References
1. Mulligan MK, Rhodes JS, Crabbe JC, Mayfield RD, Harris RA and Ponomarev I (2011)
                           Molecular profiles of drinking alcohol to intoxication in C57BL/6J mice. Alcoholism:
                           Clinical & Experimental Research, 35:659-670.
2. Ponomarev I, Wang S, Zhang L, Harris RA and Mayfield RD (2012) Gene coexpression
                           networks in human brain identify epigenetic modifications in alcohol dependence. The
                           Journal of Neuroscience, 32:1884-1897.
3. Ponomarev I, Maiya R, Harnett MT, Schafer GL, Ryabinin AE, Blednov YA, Morikawa
                           H, Boehm II SL, Homanics GE, Berman A, Lodowski KH, Bergeson SE and Harris RA (2006).
                           Transcriptional signatures of cellular plasticity in mice lacking the alpha 1 subunit
                           of GABAA receptors. The Journal of Neuroscience, 26:5673-5683.
4. Ponomarev I, Rau V, Eger 2nd EI, Harris RA and Fanselow MS (2010) Amygdala transcriptome
                           and cellular mechanisms underlying stress-enhanced fear learning in a rat model of
                           posttraumatic stress disorder. Neuropsychopharmacology, 35:1402-1411.
5. Blednov YA, Ponomarev I, Geil C, Bergeson S, Koob GF and Harris RA (2012) Neuroimmune
                           regulation of alcohol consumption: behavioral validation of genes obtained from genomic
                           studies. Addiction Biology, 17:108-120.
Complete List of Published Work in My Bibliography: 
Current funding:      
NIH, R03AA028370 - Effects of chronic alcohol consumption on the synaptic translatome
NIH, R01AA027096- The Neuroimmune model of excessive alcohol consumption: Transition
                        to Alcohol Use Disorder
