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Featured researches published by Alessia Melani.


Stroke | 1999

Striatal Outflow of Adenosine, Excitatory Amino Acids, γ-Aminobutyric Acid, and Taurine in Awake Freely Moving Rats After Middle Cerebral Artery Occlusion Correlations With Neurological Deficit and Histopathological Damage

Alessia Melani; Leonardo Pantoni; Claudia Corsi; Loria Bianchi; Angela Monopoli; Rosalia Bertorelli; Giancarlo Pepeu; Felicita Pedata

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE While a number of studies have investigated transmitter outflow in anesthetized animals after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) performed by craniectomy, studies have never been performed after MCAO induced by intraluminal filament. In addition, it has been reported that after MCAO, infarct volume correlates with functional outcome and with transmitter outflow, although there are no studies that demonstrate a direct correlation between transmitter outflow and functional outcome. The purpose of the present study was to assess excitatory amino acids, gamma-aminobutyric acid, taurine, and adenosine outflow in awake rats after intraluminal MCAO and to determine whether, in the same animal, outflow was correlated with neurological outcome and histological damage. METHODS Vertical microdialysis probes were placed in the striatum of male Wistar rats. After 24 hours, permanent MCAO was induced by the intraluminal suture technique. The transmitter concentrations in the dialysate were determined by high-performance liquid chromatography. Twenty-four hours after MCAO, neurological deficit and histological outcome were evaluated. RESULTS All transmitters significantly increased after MCAO. Twenty-four hours after MCAO, the rats showed a severe sensorimotor deficit and massive ischemic damage in the striatum and in the cortex (9+/-2% and 25+/-6% of hemispheric volume, respectively). Significant correlations were found between the efflux of all transmitters, neurological score, and striatal infarct volume. CONCLUSIONS In this study, for the first time, amino acid and adenosine extracellular concentrations during MCAO by the intraluminal suture technique were determined in awake and freely moving rats, and a significant correlation was found between transmitter outflow and neurological deficit. The evaluation of neurological deficit, histological damage, and transmitter outflow in the same animal may represent a useful approach for studying neuroprotective properties of new drugs/agents against focal ischemia.Background and Purpose—While a number of studies have investigated transmitter outflow in anesthetized animals after middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) performed by craniectomy, studies have never been performed after MCAO induced by intraluminal filament. In addition, it has been reported that after MCAO, infarct volume correlates with functional outcome and with transmitter outflow, although there are no studies that demonstrate a direct correlation between transmitter outflow and functional outcome. The purpose of the present study was to assess excitatory amino acids, γ-aminobutyric acid, taurine, and adenosine outflow in awake rats after intraluminal MCAO and to determine whether, in the same animal, outflow was correlated with neurological outcome and histological damage. Methods—Vertical microdialysis probes were placed in the striatum of male Wistar rats. After 24 hours, permanent MCAO was induced by the intraluminal suture technique. The transmitter concentrations in the dialysate were deter...


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2006

P2X7 receptor modulation on microglial cells and reduction of brain infarct caused by middle cerebral artery occlusion in rat.

Alessia Melani; Susanna Amadio; Marco Gianfriddo; Maria G. Vannucchi; Cinzia Volonté; Giorgio Bernardi; Felicita Pedata; Giuseppe Sancesario

Adenosine 5′-triphosphate outflow increases after an ischemic insult in the brain and may induce the expression of P2X7 receptors in resting microglia, determining its modification into an activated state. To assess the effects of P2X7 receptor blockade in preventing microglia activation and ameliorating brain damage and neurological impairment, we delivered the P2 unselective antagonist Reactive Blue 2 to rats after middle cerebral artery occlusion. In sham-operated animals, devoid of brain damage, double immunofluorescence verified the absence of P2X7 immunoreactivity on resting microglia, astrocytes, and neurons, identified, respectively, by OX-42, glial fibrillary acid protein, and neuronal nuclei (NeuN) immunoreactivity. After ischemia, vehicle-treated rats showed monolateral sensorimotor deficit and tissue damage in striatum and frontoparietal cortex. Moreover, P2X7 immunoreactivity was de novo expressed on activated microglia in infarcted and surrounding areas, as well as on a reactive form of microglia, resting in shape but P2X7 immunoreactive, present in ipsi- and contralateral cingulate and medial frontal cortex. Reactive Blue 2 improved sensorimotor deficit and restricted the volume of infarction, without preventing the expression of P2X7, but inducing it in the microglia of contralateral frontal and parietal cortex and striatum, which had lost reciprocal connections with the remote infarct area. De novo expression of P2X7 occurred in both activated and reactive microglia, suggesting their differentiated roles in the area of infarct and in remote regions. Reactive Blue 2 reduced ischemic brain damage, likely blocking the function of activated microglia in the infarct area, but in the remote brain regions promoted the expression of P2X7 on reactive microglia, developing defense and reparative processes.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2006

Adenosine Extracellular Brain Concentrations and Role of A2A Receptors in Ischemia

Felicita Pedata; Claudia Corsi; Alessia Melani; Francesca Bordoni; Serena Latini

Abstract: Various experimental approaches have been used to determine the concentration of adenosine in extracellular brain fluid. The cortical cup technique or the microdialysis technique, when adenosine concentrations are evaluated 24 hours after implantation of the microdialysis probe, are able to measure adenosine in the nM range under normoxic conditions and in the μM range under ischemia. In vitro estimation of adenosine show that it can reach 30 μM at the receptor level during ischemia, a concentration able to stimulate all adenosine receptor subtypes so far identified. Although the protective role of A1 receptors in ischemia seems consistent, the protective role of A2A receptors appears to be controversial. Both A2A agonists and antagonists have been shown to be neuroprotective in various in vivo ischemia models. Although A2A agonists may be protective, mainly through peripherally mediated effects, A2A antagonists may be protective through local brain mediated effects. It is possible that A2A receptors are tonically activated following a prolonged increase of adenosine concentration, such as occurs during ischemia. A2A receptor activation desensitizes A1 receptors and reduces A1 mediated effects. Under these conditions A2A receptor antagonists may be protective by potentiating all the neuroprotective A1 mediated effects, including decreased neurotoxicity due to reduced ischemia induced glutamate outflow.


Brain Research | 2003

The selective A2A receptor antagonist SCH 58261 reduces striatal transmitter outflow, turning behavior and ischemic brain damage induced by permanent focal ischemia in the rat.

Alessia Melani; Leonardo Pantoni; Francesca Bordoni; Marco Gianfriddo; Loria Bianchi; Maria Giuliana Vannucchi; Rosalia Bertorelli; Angela Monopoli; Felicita Pedata

Adenosine A(2A) receptor antagonists have been proved protective in different ischemia models. In this study we verified if the protective effect of the selective A(2A) antagonist, SCH 58261, could be attributed to the reduction of the excitatory amino acid outflow induced by cerebral focal ischemia. A vertical microdialysis probe was inserted into the striatum of male Wistar rats and, after 24 h, permanent right intraluminal middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAo) was induced. Soon after waking, rats showed a definite contralateral turning behavior, which persisted up to 7 h after MCAo. During 4 h after MCAo, glutamate, aspartate, GABA, adenosine and taurine outflow increased. SCH 58261 (0.01 mg/kg, i.p.), administered 5 min after MCAo, suppressed turning behavior and significantly reduced the outflow of glutamate, aspartate, GABA and adenosine. At 24 h after MCAo, the rats showed severe sensorimotor deficit and damage in both the striatum and cortex. SCH 58261 significantly reduced cortical damage but did not protect against the sensorimotor deficit. The protective effect of SCH 58261 against turning behavior and increased outflow of excitatory amino acids in the first hours after MCAo suggests the potential utility of selective adenosine A(2A) antagonists when administered in the first hours after ischemia. Furthermore, this study, for the first time, proposes that turning behavior after permanent intraluminal MCAo, be used as a precocious index of neurological deficit and neuronal damage.


Psychopharmacology | 1999

Adenosine and memory storage: effect of A(1) and A(2) receptor antagonists.

Silvia Kopf; Alessia Melani; Felicita Pedata; Giancarlo Pepeu

Abstract Rationale: Caffeine is a non-selective A1/A2 adenosine receptor antagonist which is known to improve cognitive performance in humans. This effect of caffeine has been attributed to its antagonism of adenosine receptors. Objective: The present study was devised to identify the role of A1 and A2A adenosine receptors in the facilitation of memory consolidation in mice performing a passive avoidance task. Methods: Adult albino Swiss male mice were used. The mice were trained in a step-through inhibitory avoidance task in which they were punished by a foot-shock (0.4 mA, 5 Hz, for 3 s) delivered through the grid floor. Caffeine (0.1, 0.3, 1.0 and 3.0 mg/kg), SCH 58261 (0.1, 0.3, 1.0 and 3.0 mg/kg) and DPCPX (0.1, 0.3, 1.0 and 3.0 mg/kg) were injected IP immediately or 180 min after training. The retention test was performed 24 h after training. Results: Caffeine and the selective A2A adenosine receptor antagonist SCH 58261 facilitated retention when administered immediately after training, but not when administered 180 min later. The dose response was a bell-shaped curve. Conversely, post-training administration of the selective A1 adenosine receptor antagonist DPCPX did not affect retention. Caffeine and SCH 58261 had no effect in mice not given the foot-shock on the training trial, a finding indicating that the drug’s effect on retention was specific. Conclusions: These results suggest that A2A but not A1 adenosine receptors are involved in memory retention and consolidation.


Neuroreport | 1999

Striatal A2A adenosine receptors differentially regulate spontaneous and K+-evoked glutamate release in vivo in young and aged rats

Claudia Corsi; Alessia Melani; Loria Bianchi; Giancarlo Pepeu; Felicita Pedata

The effect of the adenosine A2A receptor agonist CGS 21680 on glutamate and aspartate release was investigated in the striatum of young and old rats by microdialysis experiments. CGS 21680 (10 microM) significantly increased glutamate and aspartate spontaneous outflow in young but not in old rats. On the contrary, CGS 21680 induced the same decrease in K+-evoked glutamate outflow in both young and aged rats. A lower dose of CGS 21680 (1 microM) failed to modify either spontaneous or K+-evoked outflow. It is suggested that the opposite effects of the A2A agonist on excitatory amino acid outflow may be respectively mediated by striatal A2A adenosine receptors located on glutamatergic terminals and on the striatal indirect output pathway.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2007

Differential glutamate-dependent and glutamate-independent adenosine A1 receptor-mediated modulation of dopamine release in different striatal compartments

Janusz Borycz; M. Fátima Pereira; Alessia Melani; Ricardo J. Rodrigues; Attila Köfalvi; Leigh V. Panlilio; Felicita Pedata; Steven R. Goldberg; Rodrigo A. Cunha; Sergi Ferré

Adenosine and dopamine are two important modulators of glutamatergic neurotransmission in the striatum. However, conflicting reports exist about the role of adenosine and adenosine receptors in the modulation of striatal dopamine release. It has been previously suggested that adenosine A1 receptors localized in glutamatergic nerve terminals indirectly modulate dopamine release, by their ability to modulate glutamate release. In the present study, using in vivo microdialysis, we provide evidence for the existence of a significant glutamate‐independent tonic modulation of dopamine release in most of the analyzed striatal compartments. In the dorsal, but not in the ventral, part of the shell of the nucleus accumbens (NAc), blockade of A1 receptors by local perfusion with the selective A1 receptor antagonist 8‐cyclopentyl‐1,3‐dimethyl‐xanthine or by systemic administration of the non‐selective adenosine antagonist caffeine induced a glutamate‐dependent release of dopamine. On the contrary, A1 receptor blockade induced a glutamate‐independent dopamine release in the core of the NAc and the nucleus caudate–putamen. Furthermore, using immunocytochemical and functional studies in rat striatal synaptosomes, we demonstrate that a fraction of striatal dopaminergic terminals contains adenosine A1 receptors, which directly inhibit dopamine release independently of glutamatergic transmission.


Brain Research | 2006

The selective A2A receptor antagonist SCH 58261 protects from neurological deficit, brain damage and activation of p38 MAPK in rat focal cerebral ischemia

Alessia Melani; Marco Gianfriddo; Maria Giuliana Vannucchi; Sara Cipriani; Pier Giovanni Baraldi; Maria Grazia Giovannini; Felicita Pedata

We investigated the protective effect of subchronic treatment of the A2A receptor antagonist, SCH 58261 (0.01 mg/kg, i.p.), administered 5 min, 6 h and 15 h after permanent right middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAo). Twenty-four hours after ischemia, an extensive pallid area, evaluated by cresyl violet staining, is evident in the vascular territories supplied by the MCA, the striatum and the sensory motor cortex. The pallid area reflects the extent of necrotic neurons. Soon after waking, rats showed a definite contralateral turning behavior which was significantly reduced by SCH 58261 treatment. Twenty-four hours after MCAo, SCH 58261 significantly improved the neurological deficit and reduced ischemic damage in the striatum and cortex. Phospho-p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), evaluated by Western Blot, increased by 500% in the ischemic striatum 24 h after MCAo. SCH 58261 treatment significantly reduced phospho-p38 MAPK by 70%. Microglia was immunostained using the OX-42 antibody. Phospho-p38 MAPK and OX-42-immunoreactive cells are localized in the ventral striatum and frontoparietal cortex. Furthermore, both OX-42 and phospho-p38 MAPK-immunoreactive cells have overlapping morphological features, typical of reactive microglia. SCH 58261 reduced phospho-p38 MAPK immunoreactivity in the striatum and in the cortex without changing the microglial cell morphology. These results indicate that the protective effect of the adenosine antagonist SCH 58261 during ischemia is not due to reduced microglial activation but involves inhibition of phospho-p38 MAPK and suggest that treatment with the A2A antagonist from the first hour to several hours after ischemia may be a useful therapeutic approach in cerebral ischemia.


Neuroreport | 2000

Striatal A2A adenosine receptor antagonism differentially modifies striatal glutamate outflow in vivo in young and aged rats.

Claudia Corsi; Alessia Melani; Loria Bianchi; Felicita Pedata

The effect of the adenosine A2A receptor antagonist SCH 58261 on glutamate release was investigated in the striatum of young and old rats by microdialysis experiments. SCH 58261 (50 nM) significantly decreased the spontaneous and K+-evoked glutamate outflow in young rats. In aged rats, spontaneous glutamate outflow was significantly reduced in comparison to young rats and SCH 58261 significantly increased spontaneous and K+-evoked glutamate outflow. It is suggested that the opposite effects of the A2A antagonist on glutamate outflow in young and aged rats can be respectively attributed to blockade of striatal A2A adenosine receptors located on glutamatergic terminals and on the striatal indirect output pathway.


Brain | 2009

Selective adenosine A2a receptor antagonism reduces JNK activation in oligodendrocytes after cerebral ischaemia

Alessia Melani; Sara Cipriani; Maria Giuliana Vannucchi; Daniele Nosi; Chiara Donati; Paola Bruni; Maria Grazia Giovannini; Felicita Pedata

Adenosine is a potent biological mediator, the concentration of which increases dramatically following brain ischaemia. During ischaemia, adenosine is in a concentration range (muM) that stimulates all four adenosine receptor subtypes (A(1), A(2A), A(2B) and A(3)). In recent years, evidence has indicated that the A(2A) receptor subtype is of critical importance in stroke. We have previously shown that 24 h after medial cerebral artery occlusion (MCAo), A(2A) receptors up-regulate on neurons and microglia of ischaemic striatum and cortex and that subchronically administered adenosine A(2A) receptor antagonists protect against brain damage and neurological deficit and reduce activation of p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) in microglial cells. The mechanisms by which A(2A) receptors are noxious during ischaemia still remain elusive. The objective of the present study was to investigate whether the adenosine A(2A) antagonist SCH58261 affects JNK and MEK1/ERK MAPK activation. A further aim was to investigate cell types expressing activated JNK and MEK1/ERK MAPK after ischaemia. We hereby report that the selective adenosine A(2A) receptor antagonist, SCH58261, administered subchronically (0.01 mg/kg i.p) 5 min, 6 and 20 h after MCAo in male Wistar rats, reduced JNK MAPK activation (immunoblot analysis: phospho-JNK54 isoform by 81% and phospho-JNK46 isoform by 60%) in the ischaemic striatum. Twenty-four hours after MCAo, the Olig2 transcription factor of oligodendroglial progenitor cells and mature oligodendrocytes was highly expressed in cell bodies in the ischaemic striatum. Immunofluorescence staining showed that JNK MAPK is maximally expressed in Olig2-stained oligodendrocytes and in a few NeuN stained neurons. Striatal cell fractioning into nuclear and extra-nuclear fractions demonstrated the presence of Olig2 transcription factor and JNK MAPK in both fractions. The A(2A) antagonist reduced striatal Olig 2 transcription factor (immunoblot analysis: by 55%) and prevented myelin disorganization, assessed by myelin-associated glycoprotein staining. Twenty-four hours after MCAo, ERK1/2 MAPK was highly activated in the ischaemic striatum, mostly in microglia, while it was reduced in the ischaemic cortex. The A(2A) antagonist did not affect activation of the ERK1/2 pathway. The efficacy of A(2A) receptor antagonism in reducing activation of JNK MAPK in oligodendrocytes suggests a mechanism of protection consisting of scarring oligodendrocyte inhibitory molecules that can hinder myelin reconstitution and neuron functionality.

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