Shanaz M. Tejani-Butt, PhD
 |
Shanaz M. Tejani-Butt
BS, MS (Bombay); PhD (Medical College of Virginia)
Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology
Associate Dean, College of Graduate Studies
Email: s.tejani@usp.edu
|
Education:
Ph.D, pharmaceutical chemistry, Medical College of Virginia
M.S., organic chemistry, University of Bombay
B.S., chemistry, University of Bombay
Expertise:
Neuropharmacology, neuroimmunology, affective disorder, alcohol and substance abuse, neuroendocrinology.
Background:
Dr. Tejani-Butt has conducted numerous research projects that have focused on the general area of Neuropsychopharmacology and include, among others: Role of Central Monoaminergic Systems in Psychiatric Disorders, Thyroid Axis Hormones, Animal Models of Depressive Behavior, Role of Immune Function in Psychiatric Disorders, Neurodegenerative Diseases and Substance Abuse. She is currently working on two interrelated projects: (1) her laboratory is probing the link between depressive behavior and diminished brain supplies of norepinephrine, dopamine and serotonin. Her hypothesis says that, since low levels of norepinephrine, dopamine and serotonin lead to depressive episodes, treatment with antidepressant drugs that target these chemicals should not only decrease depressive behavior but also "normalize" levels of these neurotransmitters in the brain. This project has direct application to human depression because it provides an animal model for studying stress induced behavioral depression and its reversal by antidepressant drug treatments. (2) her laboratory is also investigating the effects of stress and alcohol on behavioral and central parameters in order to determine the mechanism by which depressive behavior modulates alcohol dependency. (3) her more recent efforts have been to develop an animal model of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and determine the neural mechanisms involved in this disorder.
In 1992, her laboratory at University of Pennsylvania’s Department of Psychiatry developed a radioactive compound, 3H-Nisoxetine, which helps to study the role of norepinephrine transporter sites in psychiatric diseases and neurodegenerative maladies such as Alzheimer’s disease in which norepinephrine is implicated. She has published extensively in peer reviewed publications, including Brain Research, Synapse, Biological Psychiatry, Neuroendocrinology, Molecular Brain Research and Journal of Pharmacology and experimental Therapeutics.
Dr. Tejani-Butt teaches courses in central nervous system physiology, central nervous system pharmacology, advanced pharmacology, endocrine physiology, endocrine pharmacology and drug-receptor interactions. She is a member of many national and local organizations, including the Society for Neuroscience, Women in Neuroscience, American Chemical Society, The Endocrine Society and the Mid-Atlantic Pharmacology Society
Research Interests
Unlocking the Mysteries of Depressive Illness
Exposure to stressful life events has been long associated with increased alcohol use in humans, and psychological stress is a common risk factor for both depression and alcohol abuse. Alterations in reward and motivational processes at the psychological, behavioral and the neurochemical levels may represent the defining characteristics of both depression and drug and alcohol dependency.
The Wistar-Kyoto rat strain shows greater "depressive" behavior, consumes greater amounts of alcohol and produces more stress related ulcers than other rat strains. Our laboratory has reported on several behavioral and neurochemical differences in this rat strain that may be linked to altered dopamine and/or norepinephrine transmission. Her research has expanded into understanding the role of other neurotransmitters such as glutamate and Gaba in depression, alcohol abuse, and stress related disorders. More recently, our laboratory has been investigating whether the Wistar-Kyoto rat is a good model in which to study sleep disturbances that are associated with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and the noradrenergic mechanisms that are implicated with this disorder.
Publications
Yaroslavsky I & Tejani-Butt S.M.: Effects of stress-alcohol interactions on dopamine-2 receptor sites in Wistar-Kyoto rats. Pharmacol, Biochem and Behav., 2009, in press.
Lei Y, Yaroslavsky I & Tejani-Butt S.M.: Strain differences in the distribution of N-Methyl-D-Aspartate and Gamma aminobutyric acid-A receptors in rat brain. Life Sci., 2009, in press.
Novick A, Yaroslavsky I & Tejani-Butt S.M.: Strain Differences in the Distribution of Dopamine Type-1 Receptors in Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) and Wistar Rats. Life Sci., 83, 74-78, 2008.
Yaroslavsky I, Colleti M, Jiao X & Tejani-Butt S.M.: Strain Differences in the distribution of dopamine (DA2 and DA3) receptor sites in rat brain. Life Sci., 79, 772-776, 2006.
Jiao X, Pare, W & Tejani-Butt S.M.: Alcohol Consumption alters dopamine transporter sites in Wistar-Kyoto rat brain. Brain Res., 175-182, 2006.
Jiao X, Pare, W & Tejani-Butt S.M.: Antidepressant drug induced alterations in dopamine transporter sites in rat brain. Prog. Neuro-Psychopharmacol. & Biol. Psychiat, 30, 30-41, 2006.
Tejani-Butt S. M, Kluczynski J & Pare W.: Strain dependent modification of behavior following antidepressant treatment. Prog. Neuro-Psychopharmacol. & Biol. Psychiat., 27, 7-14, 2003.
Jiao X, Pare, W & Tejani-Butt S.M.: Strain differences in the distribution of dopamine transporters in rat brain.
Prog. Neuro-Psychopharmacol. & Biol. Psychiat., 27, 913-191, 2003.
Pare W & Tejani-Butt S. M.: Chapter: Depression: Behavior and Brain: Insights from an Animal Model. Russian Academy of Medical Sciences, 2004.
Pare W, Tejani-Butt S.M., & Kluczynski J.: The emergence test: Effects of psychotropic drugs on neophobic disposition in Wistar-Kyoto and Sprague-Dawley rats. Prog. Neuro-Psychopharmacol. & Biol. Psychiat., 25, 1615-1628, 2001.
Zafar H.M., Shelat S, Redei E, & Tejani-Butt S.M.: Fetal alcohol exposure alters serotonin transporter sites in rat brain. Brain Res., 856, 184-192, 2000.