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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Viegi is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Viegi.


Science | 2008

The antidepressant fluoxetine restores plasticity in the adult visual cortex.

José Fernando Maya Vetencourt; Alessandro Sale; Alessandro Viegi; Laura Baroncelli; Roberto De Pasquale; Olivia F. O'Leary; Eero Castrén; Lamberto Maffei

We investigated whether fluoxetine, a widely prescribed medication for treatment of depression, restores neuronal plasticity in the adult visual system of the rat. We found that chronic administration of fluoxetine reinstates ocular dominance plasticity in adulthood and promotes the recovery of visual functions in adult amblyopic animals, as tested electrophysiologically and behaviorally. These effects were accompanied by reduced intracortical inhibition and increased expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in the visual cortex. Cortical administration of diazepam prevented the effects induced by fluoxetine, indicating that the reduction of intracortical inhibition promotes visual cortical plasticity in the adult. Our results suggest a potential clinical application for fluoxetine in amblyopia as well as new mechanisms for the therapeutic effects of antidepressants and for the pathophysiology of mood disorders.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Reducing Intracortical Inhibition in the Adult Visual Cortex Promotes Ocular Dominance Plasticity

Alexey Harauzov; Maria Spolidoro; Graziella DiCristo; Roberto De Pasquale; Laura Cancedda; Tommaso Pizzorusso; Alessandro Viegi; Nicoletta Berardi; Lamberto Maffei

Experience-dependent plasticity in the cortex is often higher during short critical periods in postnatal development. The mechanisms limiting adult cortical plasticity are still unclear. Maturation of intracortical GABAergic inhibition is suggested to be crucial for the closure of the critical period for ocular dominance (OD) plasticity in the visual cortex. We find that reduction of GABAergic transmission in the adult rat visual cortex partially reactivates OD plasticity in response to monocular deprivation (MD). This is accompanied by an enhancement of activity-dependent potentiation of synaptic efficacy but not of activity-dependent depression. We also found a decrease in the expression of chondroitin sulfate proteoglycans in the visual cortex of MD animals with reduced inhibition, after the reactivation of OD plasticity. Thus, intracortical inhibition is a crucial limiting factor for the induction of experience-dependent plasticity in the adult visual cortex.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Acceleration of Visual System Development by Environmental Enrichment

Laura Cancedda; Elena Putignano; Alessandro Sale; Alessandro Viegi; Nicoletta Berardi; Lamberto Maffei

Thus far, the developmental plasticity of the visual system has been studied by altering or reducing visual experience. Here, we investigated whether a complex sensory-motor stimulation, provided by rearing animals in an enriched environment, affects visual system development. We found that raising mice in this condition causes an earlier eye opening, a precocious development of visual acuity, and an accelerated decline of white matter-induced long-term potentiation. These effects are accompanied by a precocious cAMP response element-mediated gene expression and a significant increase of BDNF protein and GAD65/67 expression in enriched pups. In addition, we showed that enriched pups experienced higher levels of licking behavior provided by adult females. Thus, rearing mice from birth in an enriched environment leads to a conspicuous acceleration of visual system development as ascertained at behavioral, electrophysiological, and molecular level.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Massage Accelerates Brain Development and the Maturation of Visual Function

Andrea Guzzetta; Sara Baldini; Ada Bancale; Laura Baroncelli; Francesca Ciucci; Paolo Ghirri; Elena Putignano; Alessandro Sale; Alessandro Viegi; Nicoletta Berardi; Antonio Boldrini; Giovanni Cioni; Lamberto Maffei

Environmental enrichment (EE) was shown recently to accelerate brain development in rodents. Increased levels of maternal care, and particularly tactile stimulation through licking and grooming, may represent a key component in the early phases of EE. We hypothesized that enriching the environment in terms of body massage may thus accelerate brain development in infants. We explored the effects of body massage in preterm infants and found that massage accelerates the maturation of electroencephalographic activity and of visual function, in particular visual acuity. In massaged infants, we found higher levels of blood IGF-1. Massage accelerated the maturation of visual function also in rat pups and increased the level of IGF-1 in the cortex. Antagonizing IGF-1 action by means of systemic injections of the IGF-1 antagonist JB1 blocked the effects of massage in rat pups. These results demonstrate that massage has an influence on brain development and in particular on visual development and suggest that its effects are mediated by specific endogenous factors such as IGF-1.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 1998

Nerve growth factor and brain-derived neurotrophic factor increase neurotransmitter release in the rat visual cortex.

Roberta Sala; Alessandro Viegi; Francesco Rossi; Tommaso Pizzorusso; Giambattista Bonanno; Maurizio Raiteri; Lamberto Maffei

A number of experiments have shown that neurotrophins are involved in the development and plasticity of the visual cortex (Bonhoeffer, T., Curr. Op. Neurobiol., 6, 119 1996). A possible mechanism underlying these effects is the neurotrophin modulation of synaptic transmission. We investigated whether nerve growth factor (NGF) and brain‐derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) can modulate the release of neurotransmitter in the rat visual cortex at the peak of the critical period for plasticity (P23). The release of glutamate, acetylcholine and gamma‐aminobutyric acid (GABA) from visual cortical synaptosomes was analysed in continuous perfusion conditions. We found that NGF enhances the depolarization‐evoked release of glutamate (≈ 90%) and acetylcholine (≈ 35%) but not that of GABA. By contrast, BDNF enhances the depolarization‐evoked release of all three neurotransmitters investigated (≈ 30%). BDNF and NGF were ineffective on basal release of neurotransmitters. The effect of NGF was not blocked by cholinergic antagonists atropine and mecamylamine. NGF and BDNF potentiation of transmitter release was strongly but not completely blocked by K252a, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor. The role of TrkA and p75NTR receptors was investigated in NGF‐induced potentiation of glutamate release. Block of NGF binding to p75NTR using specific blocking antibodies (REX‐IgG) slightly but significantly reduced the effect of NGF. Activation of TrkA in isolation by RTA‐IgG, an antibody that specifically activates TrkA, was less effective than activation of both receptors by NGF. These results show that neurotrophin action on neurotransmitter release was mostly mediated by Trk receptors with p75NTR having a little but significant positive role. Antigen blot analysis showed the presence of TrkA, TrkB and p75NTR receptors in the visual cortex.


Experimental Neurology | 2010

Experience-dependent reactivation of ocular dominance plasticity in the adult visual cortex

Laura Baroncelli; Alessandro Sale; Alessandro Viegi; José Fernando Maya Vetencourt; Roberto De Pasquale; Sara Baldini; Lamberto Maffei

A crucial issue in neurobiology is to understand the main mechanisms restricting neural plasticity to brief windows of early postnatal life. The visual system is one of the paradigmatic models for studying experience-dependent plasticity. The closure of one eye (monocular deprivation, MD) causes a marked ocular dominance (OD) shift of neurons in the primary visual cortex only during the critical period. Here, we report that environmental enrichment (EE), a condition of increased sensory-motor stimulation, reactivates OD plasticity in the adult visual cortex, as assessed with both visual evoked potentials and single-unit recordings. This effect is accompanied by a marked increase in cerebral serotonin (5-HT) levels. Blocking 5-HT enhancement in the visual cortex of EE rats completely prevents the OD shift induced by MD. We also found that EE leads to a reduced intracortical GABAergic inhibition and an increased BDNF expression and that the modulation of these molecular factors is neutralized by cortical infusion of the 5-HT synthesis inhibitor pCPA. Our results show that EE rejuvenates the adult visual cortex and that 5-HT is a crucial factor in this process, triggering a cascade of molecular events that allow the reinstatement of neural plasticity. The non-invasive nature of EE makes this paradigm particularly eligible for clinical application.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Antiepileptic Effects of Botulinum Neurotoxin E

Laura Costantin; Yuri Bozzi; Cristina Richichi; Alessandro Viegi; Flavia Antonucci; Marcella Funicello; Marco Gobbi; Tiziana Mennini; Ornella Rossetto; Cesare Montecucco; Lamberto Maffei; Annamaria Vezzani; Matteo Caleo

Experimental studies suggest that the delivery of antiepileptic agents into the seizure focus might be of potential utility for the treatment of focal-onset epilepsies. Botulinum neurotoxin E (BoNT/E) causes a prolonged inhibition of neurotransmitter release after its specific cleavage of the synaptic protein synaptosomal-associated protein of 25 kDa (SNAP-25). Here, we show that BoNT/E injected into the rat hippocampus inhibits glutamate release and blocks spike activity of pyramidal neurons. BoNT/E effects persist for at least 3 weeks, as determined by immunodetection of cleaved SNAP-25 and loss of intact SNAP-25. The delivery of BoNT/E to the rat hippocampus dramatically reduces both focal and generalized kainic acid-induced seizures as documented by behavioral and electrographic analysis. BoNT/E treatment also prevents neuronal loss and long-term cognitive deficits associated with kainic acid seizures. Moreover, BoNT/E-injected rats require 50% more electrical stimulations to reach stage 5 of kindling, thus indicating a delayed epileptogenesis. We conclude that BoNT/E delivery to the hippocampus is both antiictal and antiepileptogenic in experimental models of epilepsy.


The FASEB Journal | 2007

Retinal functional development is sensitive to environmental enrichment: a role for BDNF

Silvia Landi; Alessandro Sale; Nicoletta Berardi; Alessandro Viegi; Lamberto Maffei; Maria Cristina Cenni

Retina has long been considered less plastic than cortex or hippocampus, the very sites of experience‐dependent plasticity. Now, we show that retinal development is responsive to the experience provided by an enriched environment (EE): the maturation of retinal acuity, which is a sensitive index of retinal circuitry development, is strongly accelerated in EE rats. This effect is present also in rats exposed to EE up to P10, that is before eye opening, suggesting that factors sufficient to trigger retinal acuity development are affected by EE during the first days of life. Brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) is precociously expressed in the ganglion cell layer of EE with respect to non‐EE rats and reduction of BDNF expression in EE animals counteracts EE effects on retinal acuity. Thus, EE controls the development of retinal circuitry, and this action depends on retinal BDNF expression. Landi, S., Sale, A., Berardi, N., Viegi, A., Maffei, L., Cenni, M. C. Retinal functional development is sensitive to environmental enrichment: a role for BDNF. FASEB J. 21, 130–139 (2007)


Nature Communications | 2011

Food restriction enhances visual cortex plasticity in adulthood.

Maria Spolidoro; Laura Baroncelli; Elena Putignano; José Fernando Maya-Vetencourt; Alessandro Viegi; Lamberto Maffei

Neural circuits display a heightened sensitivity to external stimuli during well-established windows in early postnatal life. After the end of these critical periods, brain plasticity dramatically wanes. The visual system is one of the paradigmatic models for studying experience-dependent plasticity. Here we show that food restriction can be used as a strategy to restore plasticity in the adult visual cortex of rats. A short period of food restriction in adulthood is able both to reinstate ocular dominance plasticity and promote recovery from amblyopia. These effects are accompanied by a reduction of intracortical inhibition without modulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor expression or extracellular matrix structure. Our results suggest that food restriction could be investigated as a potential way of modulating plasticity.


Neural Plasticity | 2012

IGF-1 Restores Visual Cortex Plasticity in Adult Life by Reducing Local GABA Levels

José Fernando Maya-Vetencourt; Laura Baroncelli; Alessandro Viegi; Ettore Tiraboschi; Eero Castrén; Antonino Cattaneo; Lamberto Maffei

The central nervous system architecture is markedly modified by sensory experience during early life, but a decline of plasticity occurs with age. Recent studies have challenged this dogma providing evidence that both pharmacological treatments and paradigms based on the manipulation of environmental stimulation levels can be successfully employed as strategies for enhancing plasticity in the adult nervous system. Insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) is a peptide implicated in prenatal and postnatal phases of brain development such as neurogenesis, neuronal differentiation, synaptogenesis, and experience-dependent plasticity. Here, using the visual system as a paradigmatic model, we report that IGF-1 reactivates neural plasticity in the adult brain. Exogenous administration of IGF-1 in the adult visual cortex, indeed, restores the susceptibility of cortical neurons to monocular deprivation and promotes the recovery of normal visual functions in adult amblyopic animals. These effects were accompanied by a marked reduction of intracortical GABA levels. Moreover, we show that a transitory increase of IGF-1 expression is associated to the plasticity reinstatement induced by environmental enrichment (EE) and that blocking IGF-1 action by means of the IGF-1 receptor antagonist JB1 prevents EE effects on plasticity processes.

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Lamberto Maffei

National Research Council

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Antonino Cattaneo

International School for Advanced Studies

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Mariantonietta Calvello

International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology

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Simona Capsoni

International School for Advanced Studies

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Alessandro Sale

National Research Council

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Francesca Malerba

Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa

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Giovanni Meli

International School for Advanced Studies

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