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Dive into the research topics where Alexandre Ceroni is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandre Ceroni.


Experimental Physiology | 2009

Chronic absence of baroreceptor inputs prevents training-induced cardiovascular adjustments in normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats.

Alexandre Ceroni; Laiali J. Chaar; Rafael L. Bombein; Lisete C. Michelini

We investigate whether arterial baroreceptors mediate the training‐induced blood pressure fall and resting bradycardia in hypertensive (SHR) and normotensive rats (WKY). Male SHR and WKY rats, submitted to sino‐aortic denervation (SAD) or sham surgery (SHAM group), were allocated to training (T; 55% of maximal exercise capacity) or sedentary (S) protocols for 3 months. Rats were instrumented with arterial and venous catheters for haemodynamic measurements at rest (power spectral analysis) and baroreceptor testing. Kidney and skeletal muscles were processed for morphometric analysis of arterioles. Elevated mean arterial pressure (MAP) and heart rate (HR) in SHAM SHRS were accompanied by increased sympathetic variability and arteriolar wall/lumen ratio [+3.4‐fold on low‐frequency (LF) power and +70%, respectively, versus WKYS, P < 0.05]. Training caused significant HR (∼9% in WKY and SHR) and MAP reductions (−8% in the SHR), simultaneously with improvement of baroreceptor reflex control of HR (SHR and WKY), LF reduction (with a positive correlation between LF power and MAP levels in the SHR) and normalization of wall/lumen ratio of the skeletal muscle arterioles (SHR only). In contrast, SAD increased pressure variability in both strains of rats, causing reductions in MAP (−13%) and arteriolar wall/lumen ratio (−35%) only in the SHRS. Training effects were completely blocked by SAD in both strains; in addition, after SAD the resting MAP and HR and the wall/lumen ratio of skeletal muscle arterioles were higher in SHRT versus SHRS and similar to those of SHAM SHRS. The lack of training‐induced effects in the chronic absence of baroreceptor inputs strongly suggests that baroreceptor signalling plays a decisive role in driving beneficial training‐induced cardiovascular adjustments.


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2011

Afferent signaling drives oxytocinergic preautonomic neurons and mediates training-induced plasticity

Marina T. Cavalleri; Katia Burgi; J. C. Cruz; Maria T. Jordão; Alexandre Ceroni; Lisete C. Michelini

We showed previously that oxytocinergic (OTergic) projections from the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) to the dorsal brain stem mediate training-induced heart rate (HR) adjustments and that beneficial effects of training are blocked by sinoaortic denervation (SAD; Exp Physiol 94: 630-640; 1103-1113, 2009). We sought now to determine the combined effect of training and SAD on PVN OTergic neurons in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and Wistar-Kyoto (WKY) rats. Rats underwent SAD or sham surgery and were trained (55% of maximal capacity) or kept sedentary for 3 mo. After hemodynamic measurements were taken at rest, rats were deeply anesthetized. Fresh brains were frozen and sliced to isolate the PVN; samples were processed for OT expression (real-time PCR) and fixed brains were processed for OT immunofluorescence. In sham rats, training improved treadmill performance and increased the gain of baroreflex control of HR. Training reduced resting HR (-8%) in both groups, with a fall in blood pressure (-10%) only in SHR rats. These changes were accompanied by marked increases in PVN OT mRNA expression (3.9- and 2.2-fold in WKY and SHR rats, respectively) and peptide density in PVN OTergic neurons (2.6-fold in both groups), with significant correlations between OT content and training-induced resting bradycardia. SAD abolished PVN OT mRNA expression and markedly reduced PVN OT density in WKY and SHR. Training had no effect on HR, PVN OT mRNA, or OT content following SAD. The chronic absence of inputs from baroreceptors and chemoreceptors uncovers the pivotal role of afferent signaling in driving both the plasticity and activity of PVN OTergic neurons, as well as the beneficial effects of training on cardiovascular control.


Experimental Physiology | 2013

Peripheral chemoreceptors mediate training‐induced plasticity in paraventricular nucleus pre‐autonomic oxytocinergic neurons

Josiane C. Cruz; Marina T. Cavalleri; Alexandre Ceroni; Lisete C. Michelini

•  What is the central question of this study? This study addresses the role of carotid chemoreceptors in mediating exercise training‐induced plasticity in the paraventricular nucleus and changes in heart rate and blood pressure in normotensive and hypertensive rats. •  What is the main finding and its importance? The present data show that peripheral chemoreceptor afferent signalling is crucial to drive the plasticity/activity of paraventricular nucleus oxytocinergic pre‐autonomic neurons, thus mediating training‐induced resting bradycardia in normotensive and hypertensive rats and pressure reduction in hypertensive animals.


Clinical and Experimental Pharmacology and Physiology | 2010

Ace gene dosage influences the development of renovascular hypertension

Alexandre Ceroni; Edson D. Moreira; Cristiano Mostarda; Gustavo J. J. Silva; Eduardo M. Krieger; M.C. Irigoyen

1. Clinical and experimental evidence highlights the importance of the renin–angiotensin system in renovascular hypertension. Furthermore, genetic factors affecting angiotensin‐converting enzyme (ACE) could influence the development of renovascular hypertension.


The Journal of Physiology | 2016

Exercise training preserves vagal preganglionic neurones and restores parasympathetic tonus in heart failure

Marcelo H. A. Ichige; Carla Raquel dos Santos; Camila Paixão Jordão; Alexandre Ceroni; Carlos Eduardo Negrão; Lisete C. Michelini

Heart Failure (HF) is accompanied by reduced ventricular function, activation of compensatory neurohormonal mechanisms and marked autonomic dysfunction characterized by exaggerated sympathoexcitation and reduced parasympathetic activity. With 6 weeks of exercise training, HF‐related loss of choline acetyltransferase (ChAT)‐positive vagal preganglionic neurones is avoided, restoring the parasympathetic tonus to the heart, and the immunoreactivity of dopamine β‐hydroxylase‐positive premotor neurones that drive sympathetic outflow to the heart is reduced. Training‐induced correction of autonomic dysfunction occurs even with the persistence of abnormal ventricular function. Strong positive correlation between improved parasympathetic tonus to the heart and increased ChAT immunoreactivity in vagal preganglionic neurones after training indicates this is a crucial mechanism to restore autonomic function in heart failure.


Frontiers in Physiology | 2017

Maintenance of Blood-Brain Barrier Integrity in Hypertension: A Novel Benefit of Exercise Training for Autonomic Control

Leila Buttler; Maria T. Jordão; Matheus G. Fragas; Adriana Ruggeri; Alexandre Ceroni; Lisete C. Michelini

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a complex multicellular structure acting as selective barrier controlling the transport of substances between these compartments. Accumulating evidence has shown that chronic hypertension is accompanied by BBB dysfunction, deficient local perfusion and plasma angiotensin II (Ang II) access into the parenchyma of brain areas related to autonomic circulatory control. Knowing that spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) exhibit deficient autonomic control and brain Ang II hyperactivity and that exercise training is highly effective in correcting both, we hypothesized that training, by reducing Ang II content, could improve BBB function within autonomic brain areas of the SHR. After confirming the absence of BBB lesion in the pre-hypertensive SHR, but marked fluorescein isothiocyanate dextran (FITC, 10 kD) leakage into the brain parenchyma of the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN), nucleus of the solitary tract, and rostral ventrolateral medulla during the established phase of hypertension, adult SHR, and age-matched WKY were submitted to a treadmill training (T) or kept sedentary (S) for 8 weeks. The robust FITC leakage within autonomic areas of the SHR-S was largely reduced and almost normalized since the 2nd week of training (T2). BBB leakage reduction occurred simultaneously and showed strong correlations with both decreased LF/HF ratio to the heart and reduced vasomotor sympathetic activity (power spectral analysis), these effects preceding the appearance of resting bradycardia (T4) and partial pressure fall (T8). In other groups of SHR-T simultaneously infused with icv Ang II or saline (osmotic mini-pumps connected to a lateral ventricle cannula) we proved that decreased local availability of this peptide and reduced microglia activation (IBA1 staining) are crucial mechanisms conditioning the restoration of BBB integrity. Our data also revealed that Ang II-induced BBB lesion was faster within the PVN (T2), suggesting the prominent role of this nucleus in driven hypertension-induced deficits. These original set of data suggest that reduced local Ang II content (and decreased activation of its downstream pathways) is an essential and early-activated mechanism to maintain BBB integrity in trained SHR and uncovers a novel beneficial effect of exercise training to improve autonomic control even in the presence of hypertension.


Physiology & Behavior | 2012

Baroreceptor-mediated activation of sympathetic nerve activity to salivary glands

Alexandre Ceroni; Tadachika Koganezawa; Lisete C. Michelini; Ubiratan Fabres Machado; Vagner R. Antunes

Salivary gland function is regulated by both the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems. Previously we showed that the basal sympathetic outflow to the salivary glands (SNA(SG)) was higher in hypertensive compared to normotensive rats and that diabetes reduced SNA(SG) discharge at both strains. In the present study we sought to investigate how SNA(SG) might be modulated by acute changes in the arterial pressure and whether baroreceptors play a functional role upon this modulation. To this end, we measured blood pressure and SNA(SG) discharge in Wistar-Kyoto rats (WKY-intact) and in WKY submitted to sinoaortic denervation (WKY-SAD). We made the following three major observations: (i) in WKY-intact rats, baroreceptor loading in response to intravenous infusion of the phenylephrine evoked an increase in SNA(SG) spike frequency (81%, p<0.01) accompanying the increase mean arterial pressure (ΔMAP: +77 ± 14 mmHg); (ii) baroreceptor unloading with sodium nitroprusside infusion elicited a decrease in SNA(SG) spike frequency (17%, p<0.01) in parallel with the fall in arterial blood pressure (ΔMAP: -30 ± 3 mmHg) in WKY-intact rats; iii) in the WKY-SAD rats, phenylephrine-evoked rises in the arterial pressure (ΔMAP: +56 ± 6 mmHg) failed to produce significant changes in the SNA(SG) spike frequency. Taken together, these data show that SNA(SG) increases in parallel with pharmacological-induced pressor response in a baroreceptor dependent way in anaesthetised rats. Considering the key role of SNA(SG) in salivary secretion, this mechanism, which differs from the classic cardiac baroreflex feedback loop, strongly suggests that baroreceptor signalling plays a decisive role in the regulation of salivary gland function.


Circulation | 2015

Downregulation of the Vascular Renin-Angiotensin System by Aerobic Training – Focus on the Balance Between Vasoconstrictor and Vasodilator Axes –

Sebastião D. Silva; Thais T. Zampieri; Adriana Ruggeri; Alexandre Ceroni; Danielle S. Aragão; Fernanda Barrinha Fernandes; Dulce Elena Casarini; Lisete C. Michelini


Hypertension | 2015

Abstract 034: Opposite Effects of Hypertension and Training on Blood Brain Barrier Integrity in Autonomic Areas of the Spontaneously Hypertensive Rat

Lisete C. Michelini; Maria T. Jordão; Alexandre Ceroni; Leila Buttler


Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic and Clinical | 2015

Low-intensity aerobic training (T) blocks age-induced decrease of cardiac vagal preganglionic neurons in Spontaneously Hypertensive rats (SHR)

Adriana Ruggeri; Santos Cr; Pinheiro Rho; Aguiar Spo; Alexandre Ceroni; Lisete C. Michelini

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Katia Burgi

University of São Paulo

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J. C. Cruz

Federal University of Paraíba

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Leila Buttler

University of São Paulo

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