Contact
About Zachary Weil
https://medicine.hsc.wvu.edu/neuroscience/faculty-labs/zachary-weil-phd/
Positions
Associate Professor
- Organization:
- West Virginia University School of Medicine
- Department:
- Department of Neuroscience
- Classification:
- Faculty
Education
- PhD, Neuroscience, Ohio State University
Publications
Relevant Publications:
- Weil Z.M, White B., Whitehead B., and Karelina K. (in preparation). The role of the stress system in recovery after traumatic brain injury: A tribute to Bruce S. McEwen.
- Oliverio R., Fitzgerald J., Velazquez-Cruz R., Whitehead B., Karelina K., and Weil Z.M. (submitted). Ovarian steroids mediate sex differences in alcohol reward after brain injury in mice.
- Weil Z.M, Karelina K., Whitehead, B., Velazquez-Cruz R., Oliverio R., Pinti M., Nwafor D.C., Nicholson S., Fitzgerald J.A., Hollander J., Brown C.M., Zhang N., Devries A.C., 2021. Mild traumatic brain injury increases vulnerability to cerebral ischemia in mice. Experimental Neurology 342: 113765
- Karelina K., Schneiderman K., Shah S., Fitzgerald J., Velazquez Cruz R., Oliverio R., Whitehead B., Yang J., and Weil Z.M., 2021. Moderate intensity treadmill exercise increases survival of newborn hippocampal neurons and improves neurobehavioral outcomes following traumatic brain injury. Journal of Neurotrauma 38:1858-1869.
- Oliverio R., Karelina K., and Weil Z.M., 2020. Sex, Drugs, and TBI: The role of sex in substance abuse related to traumatic brain injuries. Frontiers in Neurology: 11:1185.
- Weil Z.M., Fonken L.K., Melendez-Fernandez O.H., Zhang, N., Devries A.C., and Nelson R.J., 2020. Dim Light at night exacerbates stroke outcome. European Journal of Neuroscience: 52:4139-4146.
- Corrigan J.D., Hagemeyer A.N., Weil Z.M., Sullivan L., Shi J., Bogner J., Yang J., 2020. Is Pediatric Traumatic Brain Injury Associated with Adult Alcohol Misuse? Journal of Neurotrauma. 37:1637–1644.
- Lee A., Sun Y., Lin T., Song, NJ., Mason ML., Leung JH., Kowdley D., Brunetti A., Wall J., Fitzgerald J., Baer L.A., Stanford K.I., Ortega-Anaya J., Gomes-Dias L., Needleman B., Noria S., Weil Z.M., Blakeslee J.J., Jimenez-Flores R., Parquette J.R., Ziouzenkova O., 2020. Amino acid-based compound activates atypical PKC and leptin receptor pathways to improve glycemia and anxiety like behavior in diabetic mice. Biomaterials. 239: 119839.
- Weil ZM, Karelina K, 2019. Lifelong consequences of brain injuries during development: From risk to resilience. Front Neuroendocrinol. 2019 Oct;55:100793.
- Weil ZM, Karelina K, Corrigan JD, 2019. Does pediatric traumatic brain injury cause adult alcohol misuse: Combining preclinical and epidemiological approaches. Exp Neurol. 2019 Jul;317:284-290.
- Weil ZM, Karelina K & Corrigan JD, 2019. Does childhood injury cause alcohol misuse: combining preclinical and epidemiological research? Experimental Neurology, 317: 284-290.
- Weil ZM, Corrigan JD & Karelina K, 2018. Alcohol use disorders and traumatic brain injury.Alcohol Research: Current Reviews, in press.
- Borniger JC, Ungerleider K, Zhang N, Karelina K, Magalang UJ & Weil ZM, 2018. Repetitive brain injury of juvenile mice impairs environmental enrichment-induced modulation of REM sleep in adulthood.Neuroscience, 375: 74-83.
- Karelina K, Nicholson S & Weil ZM, 2018. Minocycline blocks traumatic brain injury induced alcohol consumption and nucleus accumbens inflammation in adolescent male mice. Brain Behavior and Immunity, 69: 532-539.
- Karelina K, Gaier KR, Weil ZM, 2017. Traumatic brain injuries during development disrupt dopaminergic signaling. Experimental Neurology, 297: 110-117.
- Weil ZM & Karelina K, 2017. Traumatic brain injuries during development: implications for alcohol abuse. Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience, 11:135. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2017.00135.
- Karelina K, Gaier KR, Prabhu M, Wenger V, Corrigan TED & Weil ZM, 2017. Binge ethanol in adulthood exacerbates negative outcomes following juvenile traumatic brain injury. Brain, Behavior and Immunity, 60: 304-311.
- Weil ZM, Corrigan JD & Karelina K, 2016. Alcohol abuse after traumatic brain injury: experimental and clinical evidence.Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews, 62: 89-99.
- Karelina K, Sarac B, Freeman L, Gaier KR and Weil ZM, 2016. Traumatic brain injury and obesity induce persistent central insulin resistance. European Journal of Neuroscience, 43(8): 1034-1043.
- Weil ZM, Karelina K, Gaier KR, Corrigan TED & Corrigan J, 2016. Juvenile traumatic brain injury increases alcohol consumption and reward in female mice. Journal of Neurotrauma, 33(9): 895-903.
- Karelina K & Weil ZM, 2015. Neuroenergetics of traumatic brain injury. Concussion, 1(2):CNC9. doi: 10.2217/cnc.15.9.
- Weil ZM, Gaier K, Karelina K, 2014. Injury timing alters metabolic, functional and inflammatory outcomes following repeated mild traumatic brain injury. Neurobiology of Disease, 70: 108-116.
Research Program
Neuroscience
Research Interests
The Weil Lab in the Department of Neuroscience at West Virginia University and the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute is focused on understanding the basic biology and long term consequences of traumatic brain injuries (TBI). Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a serious public health issue costing Americans over 75 billion dollars annually in health care costs and lost productivity. One prominent feature of TBI is that injuries make future injuries more likely and more devastating. Our lab is interested in understanding the molecular and biochemical basis of this phenomenon.
Dr. Weil is an Associate Professor in the Department of Neuroscience at the West Virginia University School of Medicine and the Rockefeller Neuroscience Institute. From 2010-2019 Dr. Weil was on the faculty of the Department of Neuroscience at the Ohio State University Medical Center. Dr. Weil earned his BS in psychology from the Ohio State University in 2004, and a PhD in neuroscience from OSU in 2008 with Dr. Randy Nelson. Dr. Weil then completed a postdoctoral fellowship in Behavioral Neuroscience at Rockefeller University with Drs. Donald Pfaff and Bruce McEwen from 2008-2010.
Projects
Neurometabolic dysfunction after head injury.
Traumatic brain injuries can result in long term disability, loss of quality of life and tremendous suffering for both injured individuals and their loved ones. Although head injuries are complex and can be caused in many different ways there are a few consistent features. For instance, traumatic brain injury is itself a major risk factor for suffering a subsequent head injury. Further repeated head injuries particularly if they are close together in time can produce much greater long-term damage and disability. Thus, traumatic brain injuries seem to open a window of vulnerability to greater damage from subsequent injuries. Unfortunately, we do not fully understand this process nor do we have good tools to measure when the increased risk has subsided.
One major project in our lab is to investigate how dysfunction in brain energy signaling can mediate this window of vulnerability. For cells in the brain to survive a head injury takes a tremendous amount of energy and they have to expend this energy during a short period of time after injury when other physiological systems may also be damaged. After injury, brain cells rapidly increase their energy use for a few hours to days and then enter a prolonged period of metabolic depression where their energy use is greatly depressed. We have shown that repeating injuries during the period of metabolic depression produces much worse outcomes and prolongs the period of metabolic dysfunction. Additionally, we have demonstrated that insulin receptor signaling, a key anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective signaling pathway that also increases energy utilization is disrupted by traumatic brain injury. Here is a recent review from our lab on this work. We are currently working on the molecular mediators of this metabolic dysfunction and trying to determine whether neurometabolic dysfunction could provide clues as to when it is safe for athletes to return to play.
Vulnerability to stroke after head injury.
Several recent studies have reported that traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an independent risk factor for subsequent stroke. Potential links between TBI and stroke have been postulated, but only explored epidemiologically so no causative factor has been established, though there is mounting evidence that impairments in vascular function and coagulation abnormalities may be involved. Clearly central to the vulnerability to cerebral ischemia is the cerebral vasculature. A very large percentage of individuals with a history of TBI exhibit postmortem evidence of damage to both large and small vessels. The CNS is highly dependent on the coordination among multiple cell types that form the neurovascular unit (endothelial cells, mural cells and glia) for the activity-dependent delivery of oxygen and glucose and the removal of waste products. Moreover, damage to the vessels has the potential to induce inflammatory events, intravascular coagulation and microthrombi that can reduce tissue oxygenation and contribute to vasogenic edema as well as narrowing the vascular lumen. A reduction in vascular reactivity associated with narrowing vascular lumen size and coagulopathies is likely to greatly increase the risk of stroke and potentially impair the ability of the vasculature to reperfuse after stroke leading to much greater tissue loss and functional deficits.
Recently, we reported that mice that had previously experienced a TBI had a nearly four-fold increase in lesion volume, greater edema in the ischemic hemisphere and functional impairments after MCAO. TBI also significantly upregulated neuroinflammation in both the ischemic cortex and striatum compared to mice that underwent ischemia without a history of TBI. This was associated with vascular dysfunction and the accumulation of serum proteins and poor reperfusion blood flow.
Traumatic brain injury and alcohol.
Traumatic brain injuries are closely related to alcohol use since a very large percentage of brain injuries occur when individuals are intoxicated. However, there is also human epidemiological evidence, which we recently reviewed, that brain injuries early in life could increase the vulnerability to alcohol abuse later in life. We have developed an animal model of early life injury and have shown that this greatly increases alcohol drinking behavior later in life. Further, this increase in alcohol drinking is related to greater inflammatory responses and is associated with impairments in dopaminergic signaling. We have also shown that binge-like drinking behavior after early brain injuries greatly exacerbates the toxic effects of alcohol on brain and behavior. We are currently working to understand sex differences in this response and the role of neuroimmune function in mediating the increase in drinking behavior.