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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Bulfone is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Bulfone.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Pax6, Tbr2, and Tbr1 Are Expressed Sequentially by Radial Glia, Intermediate Progenitor Cells, and Postmitotic Neurons in Developing Neocortex

Chris Englund; Andy Fink; Charmaine Lau; Diane Pham; Ray A. M. Daza; Alessandro Bulfone; Tom Kowalczyk; Robert F. Hevner

The developing neocortex contains two types of progenitor cells for glutamatergic, pyramidal-projection neurons. The first type, radial glia, produce neurons and glia, divide at the ventricular surface, and express Pax6, a homeodomain transcription factor. The second type, intermediate progenitor cells, are derived from radial glia, produce only neurons, and divide away from the ventricular surface. Here we show that the transition from radial glia to intermediate progenitor cell is associated with upregulation of Tbr2, a T-domain transcription factor, and downregulation of Pax6. Accordingly, Tbr2 expression in progenitor compartments (the subventricular zone and ventricular zone) rises and falls with cortical plate neurogenesis. The subsequent transition from intermediate progenitor cell to postmitotic neuron is marked by downregulation of Tbr2 and upregulation of Tbr1, another T-domain transcription factor. These findings delineate the transcription factor sequence Pax6 → Tbr2 → Tbr1 in the differentiation of radial glia → intermediate progenitor cell → postmitotic projection neuron. This transcription factor sequence is modified in preplate neurons, in which Tbr2 is transiently coexpressed with Tbr1, and in the direct differentiation pathway from radial glia → postmitotic projection neuron, in which Tbr2 is expressed briefly or not at all.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2000

Pallial and subpallial derivatives in the embryonic chick and mouse telencephalon, traced by the expression of the genes Dlx-2, Emx-1, Nkx-2.1, Pax-6, and Tbr-1

Luis Puelles; Ellen Kuwana; Eduardo Puelles; Alessandro Bulfone; Kenji Shimamura; Jerry Keleher; Susan Smiga; John L.R. Rubenstein

Pallial and subpallial morphological subdivisions of the developing chicken telencephalon were examined by means of gene markers, compared with their expression pattern in the mouse. Nested expression domains of the genes Dlx‐2 and Nkx‐2.1, plus Pax‐6‐expressing migrated cells, are characteristic for the mouse subpallium. The genes Pax‐6, Tbr‐1, and Emx‐1 are expressed in the pallium. The pallio‐subpallial boundary lies at the interface between the Tbr‐1 and Dlx‐2 expression domains. Differences in the expression topography of Tbr‐1 and Emx‐1 suggest the existence of a novel “ventral pallium” subdivision, which is an Emx‐1‐negative pallial territory intercalated between the striatum and the lateral pallium. Its derivatives in the mouse belong to the claustroamygdaloid complex. Chicken genes homologous to these mouse genes are expressed in topologically comparable patterns during development. The avian subpallium, called “paleostriatum,” shows nested Dlx‐2 and Nkx‐2.1 domains and migrated Pax‐6‐positive neurons; the avian pallium expresses Pax‐6, Tbr‐1, and Emx‐1 and also contains a distinct Emx‐1‐negative ventral pallium, formed by the massive domain confusingly called “neostriatum.” These expression patterns extend into the septum and the archistriatum, as they do into the mouse septum and amygdala, suggesting that the concepts of pallium and subpallium can be extended to these areas. The similarity of such molecular profiles in the mouse and chicken pallium and subpallium points to common sets of causal determinants. These may underlie similar histogenetic specification processes and field homologies, including some comparable connectivity patterns. J. Comp. Neurol. 424:409–438, 2000.


Neuron | 2001

Tbr1 Regulates Differentiation of the Preplate and Layer 6

Robert F. Hevner; Limin Shi; Nicholas J. Justice; Yi-Ping Hsueh; Morgan Sheng; Susan Smiga; Alessandro Bulfone; André M. Goffinet; Anthony T. Campagnoni; John L.R. Rubenstein

During corticogenesis, early-born neurons of the preplate and layer 6 are important for guiding subsequent neuronal migrations and axonal projections. Tbr1 is a putative transcription factor that is highly expressed in glutamatergic early-born cortical neurons. In Tbr1-deficient mice, these early-born neurons had molecular and functional defects. Cajal-Retzius cells expressed decreased levels of Reelin, resulting in a reeler-like cortical migration disorder. Impaired subplate differentiation was associated with ectopic projection of thalamocortical fibers into the basal telencephalon. Layer 6 defects contributed to errors in the thalamocortical, corticothalamic, and callosal projections. These results show that Tbr1 is a common genetic determinant for the differentiation of early-born glutamatergic neocortical neurons and provide insights into the functions of these neurons as regulators of cortical development.


Neuron | 1997

Mutations of the homeobox genes Dlx-1 and Dlx-2 disrupt the striatal subventricular zone and differentiation of late born striatal neurons.

Stewart A. Anderson; Mengsheng Qiu; Alessandro Bulfone; David D. Eisenstat; Juanito J. Meneses; Roger A. Pedersen; John L.R. Rubenstein

The striatum has a central role in many neurobiological processes, yet little is known about the molecular control of its development. Inroads to this subject have been made, due to the discovery of transcription factors, such as the Dlx genes, whose expression patterns suggest that they have a role in striatal development. We report that mice lacking both Dlx-1 and Dlx-2 have a time-dependent block in striatal differentiation. In these mutants, early born neurons migrate into a striatum-like region, which is enriched for markers of the striosome (patch) compartment. However, later born neurons accumulate within the proliferative zone. Several lines of evidence suggest that mutations in Dlx-1 and Dlx-2 produce abnormalities in the development of the striatal subventricular zone and in the differentiation of striatal matrix neurons.


Neuron | 1995

T-Brain-1: A homolog of Brachyury whose expression defines molecularly distinct domains within the cerebral cortex

Alessandro Bulfone; Susan Smiga; Kenji Shimamura; Andrew C. Peterson; Luis Puelles; John L.R. Rubenstein

The mechanisms that regulate regional specification and evolution of the cerebral cortex are obscure. To this end, we have identified and characterized a novel murine and human gene encoding a putative transcription factor related to the Brachyury (T) gene that is expressed only in postmitotic cells. T-brain-1 (Tbr-1) mRNA is largely restricted to the cerebral cortex, where during embryogenesis it distinguishes domains that we propose may give rise to paleocortex, limbic cortex, and neocortex. Tbr-1 and Id-2 expression in the neocortex have discontinuities that define molecularly distinct neocortical areas. Tbr-1 expression is analyzed in the context of the prosomeric model. Topological maps are proposed for the organization of the dorsal telencephalon.


Nature Medicine | 2013

Coexpression of CD49b and LAG-3 identifies human and mouse T regulatory type 1 cells

Nicola Gagliani; Chiara Francesca Magnani; Samuel Huber; Monica E. Gianolini; Mauro Pala; Paula Licona-Limón; Binggege Guo; De’Broski R. Herbert; Alessandro Bulfone; Filippo Trentini; Clelia Di Serio; Rosa Bacchetta; Marco Andreani; Leonie Brockmann; Silvia Gregori; Richard A. Flavell; Maria Grazia Roncarolo

CD4+ type 1 T regulatory (Tr1) cells are induced in the periphery and have a pivotal role in promoting and maintaining tolerance. The absence of surface markers that uniquely identify Tr1 cells has limited their study and clinical applications. By gene expression profiling of human Tr1 cell clones, we identified the surface markers CD49b and lymphocyte activation gene 3 (LAG-3) as being stably and selectively coexpressed on mouse and human Tr1 cells. We showed the specificity of these markers in mouse models of intestinal inflammation and helminth infection and in the peripheral blood of healthy volunteers. The coexpression of CD49b and LAG-3 enables the isolation of highly suppressive human Tr1 cells from in vitro anergized cultures and allows the tracking of Tr1 cells in the peripheral blood of subjects who developed tolerance after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. The use of these markers makes it feasible to track Tr1 cells in vivo and purify Tr1 cells for cell therapy to induce or restore tolerance in subjects with immune-mediated diseases.


Neuron | 1998

An Olfactory Sensory Map Develops in the Absence of Normal Projection Neurons or GABAergic Interneurons

Alessandro Bulfone; Fan Wang; Robert F. Hevner; Stewart A. Anderson; Tyler Cutforth; Sandy Chen; Juanito J. Meneses; Roger A. Pedersen; Richard Axel; John L.R. Rubenstein

Olfactory sensory neurons expressing a given odorant receptor project to two topographically fixed glomeruli in the olfactory bulb. We have examined the contribution of different cell types in the olfactory bulb to the establishment of this topographic map. Mice with a homozygous deficiency in Tbr-1 lack most projection neurons, whereas mice with a homozygous deficiency in Dlx-1 and Dlx-2 lack most GABAergic interneurons. Mice bearing a P2-IRES-tau-lacZ allele and deficient in either Tbr-1 or Dlx-1/Dlx-2 reveal the convergence of axons to one medial and one lateral site at positions analogous to those observed in wild-type mice. These observations suggest that the establishment of a topographic map is not dependent upon cues provided by, or synapse formation with, the major neuronal cell types in the olfactory bulb.


Neuron | 2000

Defective Neurogenesis in Citron Kinase Knockout Mice by Altered Cytokinesis and Massive Apoptosis

Ferdinando Di Cunto; Sara Imarisio; Emilio Hirsch; Vania Broccoli; Alessandro Bulfone; Antonio Migheli; Cristiana Atzori; Emilia Turco; Roberta Triolo; Gian Paolo Dotto; Lorenzo Silengo; Fiorella Altruda

Citron-kinase (Citron-K) has been proposed by in vitro studies as a crucial effector of Rho in regulation of cytokinesis. To further investigate in vivo its biologic functions, we have inactivated Citron-K gene in mice by homologous recombination. Citron-K-/- mice grow at slower rates, are severely ataxic, and die before adulthood as a consequence of fatal seizures. Their brains display defective neurogenesis, with depletion of specific neuronal populations. These abnormalities arise during development of the central nervous system due to altered cytokinesis and massive apoptosis. Our results indicate that Citron-K is essential for cytokinesis in vivo but only in specific neuronal precursors. Moreover, they suggest a novel molecular mechanism for a subset of human malformative syndromes of the CNS.


Mechanisms of Development | 1993

The mouse Dlx-2 (Tes-1) gene is expressed in spatially restricted domains of the forebrain, face and limbs in midgestation mouse embryos.

Alessandro Bulfone; Hee-Joong Kim; Luis Puelles; Matthew H. Porteus; Joseph F. Grippo; John L.R. Rubenstein

The pattern of RNA expression of the murine Dlx-2 (Tes-1) homeobox gene is described in embryos ranging in age from E8.5 through E11.5. Dlx-2 is a vertebrate homologue of the Drosophila Distal-less (Dll) gene. Dll expression in the Drosophila embryo is principally limited to the primordia of the brain, head and limbs. Dlx-2 is also expressed principally in the primordia of the forebrain, head and limbs. Within these regions it is expressed in spatially restricted domains. These include two discontinuous regions of the forebrain (basal telencephalon and ventral diencephalon), the branchial arches, facial ectoderm, cranial ganglia and limb ectoderm. Several mouse and human disorders have phenotypes which potentially are the result of mutations in the Dlx genes.


Neuron | 1991

Isolation and characterization of a novel cDNA clone encoding a homeodomain that is developmentally regulated in the ventral forebrain

Matthew H. Porteus; Alessandro Bulfone; Roland D. Ciaranello; John L.R. Rubenstein

A complementary DNA, Tes-1, of a novel homeodomain protein has been cloned, and its pattern of expression has been characterized. It is a structural homolog of Distal-less, a homeodomain-encoding gene in D. melanogaster. Its expression is developmentally regulated and is limited to structures in the head. Within the central nervous system of the midgestation mouse embryo, it is expressed exclusively in the ventral forebrain. It is likely that Tes-1 plays a regulatory role in the development of this complex neural structure.

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Andrea Ballabio

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Sandro Banfi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Mauro Pala

National Cancer Research Institute

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Lucia Sergi Sergi

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Salvador Martinez

Spanish National Research Council

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