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Dive into the research topics where Alfredo D. Vitullo is active.

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Featured researches published by Alfredo D. Vitullo.


Human Reproduction | 2008

The developing human ovary: immunohistochemical analysis of germ-cell-specific VASA protein, BCL-2/BAX expression balance and apoptosis

Mirta S. Albamonte; Miguel A. Willis; María Itatí Albamonte; Federico Jensen; María B. Espinosa; Alfredo D. Vitullo

BACKGROUND Germ cell number during ovarian organogenesis is regulated through programmed cell death. We investigated the expression of germ-cell-specific VASA protein, apoptosis-related proteins BAX and BCL-2 and DNA fragmentation in developing human ovaries from gestation week 12 to term. METHODS Human fetal ovaries from 13 women undergoing spontaneous abortion were fixed, paraffin-embedded and processed for immunohistochemistry to analyse temporal and cellular localization of VASA, BCL-2 and BAX, and to detect apoptosis by TUNEL assay. RESULTS VASA showed a differential pattern of expression throughout the differentiation and proliferative phase and prophase I to finally associate with Balbianis body in primordial and primary follicles. BCL-2 was detected from week 12 to 17 and became undetectable thereafter. Strong BAX signal was detected in oogonia and oocytes from week 12 to term. Low levels (<or=10%) of TUNEL positive germ cells were detectable throughout gestation with a higher incidence (around 20%) at 18-20 weeks. CONCLUSIONS VASA was specifically expressed in germ cells and displayed a stage-specific intracellular localization enabling one to follow oogenesis throughout gestation. Apoptosis-inhibiting BCL-2 was associated with the germ cell proliferative phase and prophase I, whereas BAX remained positive throughout gestation. The highest incidence of apoptotic germ cells was coincident with the lack of detectable BCL-2 protein, and when primordial follicle formation became widespread.


Journal of Mammalogy | 1986

Cytogenetics of south American akodont rodents (Cricetidae): new karyotypes and chromosomal banding patterns of Argentinian and Uruguayan forms

Alfredo D. Vitullo; Maria Susana Merani; Osvaldo A. Reig; Adriana E. Kajon; Orlando Scaglia; María B. Espinosa; Antonio Perez-Zapata

Cytogenetic analysis was performed in Akodon (Akodon) puer (= Akodon coenosus ) , Akodon azarae bibianae, Akodon ( Hypsimys ) budini, Bolomys temchuki elioi, Bolomys temchuki liciae, Oxymycterus rufus rufus, Oxymycterus ruf us platensis , and Oxymycterus paramensis . Diploid numbers, chromosomal morphology, and lengths and banding patterns (G and C) were determined for each taxon. Chromosomal number and gross morphology are also described in topotypical specimens of Akodon ( Akodon ) arenicola (= Akodon ( Akodon ) azarae azarae ) and Oxymycterus nasutus . A 2n = 34 karyotype, similar to one previously reported as Akodon coenosus , was confirmed in Akodon puer. A. budini showed a 2n = 38 karyotype peculiar within the genus as regards chromosomal morphology and C bands. A. a. bibianae has a 2n = 38 karyotype closely related with that of A. a. azarae . The two subspecies of B. temchuki , which differ strikingly in fur color, showed an identical 2n = 34 karyotype, which was quite similar in diploid number, chromosomal morphology, and banding patterns to that reported for B. lasiurus , but was different in the morphology of the Y and in G and C bands when compared with B. obscurus from the south of Buenos Aires Province. The three species of Oxymycterus , which markedly differ in morphometric character states, showed an identical 2n = 54 karyotype, and no banding differences were observed between O. rufus and O. paramensis .


Biology of Reproduction | 2008

The Ovary of the Gestating South American Plains Vizcacha (Lagostomus maximus): Suppressed Apoptosis and Corpora Lutea Persistence

Federico Jensen; Miguel A. Willis; Noelia P. Leopardo; María B. Espinosa; Alfredo D. Vitullo

Abstract The South American plains vizcacha, Lagostomus maximus, displays an exceptional ovulation rate of up to 800 eggs per cycle, the highest rate recorded for a mammal. Massive polyovulation arises from the overexpression of the apoptosis-inhibiting BCL2 gene leading to a suppression of apoptotic pathways responsible for follicular atresia in mammals. We analyzed the ovarian histology, ovarian apoptosis, and apoptosis-related protein expression with special emphasis in corpora lutea throughout the 5-mo-long gestation period, at parturition day and early postpartum, in L. maximus. Corpora lutea were abundant throughout gestation with no sign of structural regression even at the end of gestation. Both immunohistochemistry and Western blot analysis showed strong signals for apoptosis-inhibiting BCL2 protein, whereas the proapoptotic BAX protein was just detected in isolated luteal cells in gestating females and postpartum females. Apoptosis-associated DNA fragmentation detected by TUNEL was very scarce and occasional and correlated with BAX detection in luteal cells. Marked expression of progesterone and α-estrogen receptors in luteal cells was found at early, mid-, and late gestation as well as at parturition day and early postpartum samples. Additionally, serum level of progesterone increased markedly to reach maximal values at late gestation and decreasing at parturition to levels found at early gestation, suggesting that corpora lutea remained functional throughout gestation. These results point out that the unusual ovarian environment of L. maximus in which germ cell demise is abolished through antiapoptotic BCL2 gene overexpression also preserves structural integrity and functionality of corpora lutea during the whole gestation. Overexpression of antiapoptotic BCL2 gene may represent a strategy for an essential need of ovary and corpora lutea in order to maintain pregnancy until term.


Human Reproduction | 2013

The infant and pubertal human ovary: Balbiani's body-associated VASA expression, immunohistochemical detection of apoptosis-related BCL2 and BAX proteins, and DNA fragmentation

María Itatí Albamonte; Mirta S. Albamonte; Inés Stella; Luis Zuccardi; Alfredo D. Vitullo

STUDY QUESTION How do apoptosis-related BCL2 and BAX genes, known to regulate death or survival of germ cells in fetal and adult life, and germ-cell-specific VASA protein behave from birth to puberty in the human ovary? SUMMARY ANSWER In resting primordial follicles in both infant and pubertal ovaries, BCL2 family members and germ-cell-specific VASA behave as in fetal life. After birth, once follicles leave the resting reserve to enter the growing follicular pool, detection of apoptosis-related genes moves from the germ cell to granulosa cells and VASA expression is lost. WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY In the human ovary, around 85% of the 7 × 10⁶ potential oocytes produced at mid-gestation are lost before birth, an extra 10% before puberty, and loss continues throughout reproductive life until germinal exhaustion of the ovary. Oocyte loss is mainly driven through a balanced expression of BCL2 gene family members. Apoptosis-inducing BAX gene shows a sustained expression throughout fetal and adult life, whereas apoptosis-inhibiting BCL2 is detectable during the proliferative stage of primordial germ cells and oogonia in the fetal ovary and proliferation of granulosa cells in growing follicles in the adult ovary. The germ-cell marker VASA is detectable in the fetal ovary from early oogenesis and is conspicuously expressed in primordial follicles, where in late pregnancy it is associated with the Balbianis vitelline space. VASA expression is not detectable in the adult ovary. STUDY DESIGN, SIZE, DURATION This is a qualitative analysis involving infant/pubertal paraffin-embedded human ovaries screened for apoptosis-related proteins, DNA fragmentation and germ-cell identity. PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS, SETTING, METHODS Ovaries from 13 patients ranging in age from 4 to 16 years, undergoing gynaecological surgical procedures due to benign pathology, were studied. Tissues were fixed in 10% formalin, paraffin-embedded and processed for immunohistochemistry to screen the temporal and cellular localization of germ-cell-specific VASA protein and BCL2 and BAX apoptosis-related proteins. In addition, a terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated deoxiuridinetriphosphate nick-end labelling (TUNEL) assay was performed to detect DNA fragmentation. General histology and tissue integrity were assessed by haematoxylin-eosin staining. MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE VASA showed a differential pattern of expression; in the resting primordial follicle reserve in infant and pubertal ovaries, it was associated with the Balbianis body space in the germ cell. VASA remained detectable in primary follicles leaving the resting reserve, but once follicles entered the growing pool it became undetectable. This pattern of VASA expression is the same as in the fetal ovary. BAX was expressed both in the resting primordial reserve and in the pool of growing follicles, whereas BCL2 was detected only in granulosa cells in antral follicles in the growing pool. Apoptosis-related protein expression moved from the germ cell to the somatic stratum when primordial follicles left the resting reserve to enter the pool of growing follicles, irrespective of female age. Most TUNEL-positive cells were detected in the granulosa cells of antral follicles. No TUNEL-positive cells were found in resting primordial follicles. LIMITATIONS, REASONS FOR CAUTION The study was limited by the qualitative nature of the immuno-histochemical analysis and the TUNEL assay. The results neither quantify the levels of germ-cell death nor exclude other concurrent cell death mechanisms that could act in the regulation of female germ-cell number. WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDING This study provides missing knowledge about apoptosis and germ-cell-specific VASA expression in the human ovary between birth and puberty and the participation of BCL2 and BAX genes in the balance between death and survival throughout female germ-line development. Intracellular localization of VASA in resting follicles emerges as a possible marker with prognostic value that needs further investigation, especially in infant patients entering ovarian cryo-preservation programmes. This knowledge will be valuable in optimizing the rescue and clinical use of germ cells to restore fertility in women. STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTEREST(S) No external funding was obtained for this study. The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.


Reproduction | 2011

The developing ovary of the South American plains vizcacha, Lagostomus maximus (Mammalia, Rodentia): massive proliferation with no sign of apoptosis-mediated germ cell attrition

Noelia P. Leopardo; Federico Jensen; Miguel A. Willis; María B. Espinosa; Alfredo D. Vitullo

Apoptosis-dependent massive germ cell death is considered a constitutive trait of the developing mammalian ovary that eliminates 65-85% of the germinal tissue depending on the species. After birth and during adult lifetime, apoptotic activity moves from the germ cell proper to the somatic compartment, decimating germ cells through follicular atresia until the oocyte reserve is exhausted. In contrast, the South American rodent Lagostomus maximus shows suppressed apoptosis-dependent follicular atresia in the adult ovary, with continuous folliculogenesis and massive polyovulation, which finally exhausts the oocyte pool. The absence of follicular atresia in adult L. maximus might arise from a failure to move apoptosis from the germinal stratum to the somatic compartment after birth or being a constitutive trait of the ovarian tissue with no massive germ cell degeneration in the developing ovary. We tested these possibilities by analysing oogenesis, expression of germ cell-specific VASA protein, apoptotic proteins BCL2 and BAX, and DNA fragmentation by TUNEL assay in the developing ovary of L. maximus. Immunolabelling for VASA revealed a massive and widespread colonisation of the ovary and proliferation of germ cells organised in nests that disappeared at late development when folliculogenesis began. No sign of germ cell attrition was found at any time point. BCL2 remained positive throughout oogenesis, whereas BAX was slightly detected in early development. TUNEL assay was conspicuously negative throughout the development. These results advocate for an unrestricted proliferation of germ cells, without apoptosis-driven elimination, as a constitutive trait of L. maximus ovary as opposed to what is normally found in the developing mammalian ovary.


Journal of Molecular Histology | 2011

Histological characterization of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) in the hypothalamus of the South American plains vizcacha (Lagostomus maximus)

Verónica Berta Dorfman; Nicolás Fraunhoffer; Pablo Ignacio Felipe Inserra; César Fabián Loidl; Alfredo D. Vitullo

In contrast to most mammalian species, females of the South American plains vizcacha, Lagostomus maximus, show an extensive suppression of apoptosis-dependent follicular atresia, continuous folliculogenesis, and massive polyovulation. These unusual reproductive features pinpoint to an eventual peculiar modulation of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal-gonadal axis through its main regulator, the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). We explored the hypothalamic histological landscape and cellular and subcellular localization of GnRH in adult non-pregnant L. maximus females. Comparison to brain atlases from mouse, rat, guinea pig and chinchilla enabled us to histologically define and locate the preoptic area (POA), the ventromedial nucleus, the median eminence (ME), and the arcuate nucleus (Arc) of the hypothalamus in vizcacha’s brain. Specific immunolocalization of GnRH was detected in soma of neurons at medial POA (MPA), ventrolateral preoptic nucleus, septohypothalamic nucleus (SHy) and Arc, and in beaded fibers of MPA, SHy, ventromedial hypothalamic nucleus, anterior hypothalamic area and ME. Electron microscopy examination revealed GnRH associated to cytoplasmic vesicles of the ME and POA neurons, organized both in core and non-core vesicles within varicosities, and in neurosecretory vesicles within the myelinated axons of the MPA. Besides the peculiar and unusual features of folliculogenesis and ovulation in the vizcacha, these results show that hypothalamus histology and GnRH immune-detection and localization are comparable to those found in other mammals. This fact leads to the possibility that specific regulatory mechanisms should be in action to maintain continuous folliculogenesis and massive polyovulation.


Journal of General Virology | 1988

Is Vertical Transmission Sufficient to Maintain Junin Virus in Nature

Alfredo D. Vitullo; Maria Susana Merani

The quantitative contribution of vertical transmission to the prevalence rate of Junin virus infection in subsequent generations of its natural reservoir, Calomys musculinus, was analysed. Data on mortality and reproduction of C. musculinus infected at birth with a wild strain of Junin virus were used to estimate the infection-dependent relative survival rate (beta = 0.4849) and relative fertility of the infected host (alpha = 0.2088). Prevalence rates of infection, obtained by mathematical simulation in optimal conditions of vertical transfer, dropped steadily to zero in a few generations. Vertical transmission was found to be insufficient to overcome the effect of highly depressed survival and fertility of the infected host and maintain a stabilized prevalence of Junin virus infection in successive generations; this suggested that viral maintenance is mainly dependent upon horizontal transmission.


Reproduction | 2014

Quantification of healthy and atretic germ cells and follicles in the developing and post-natal ovary of the South American plains vizcacha, Lagostomus maximus: evidence of continuous rise of the germinal reserve

Pablo Ignacio Felipe Inserra; Noelia P. Leopardo; Miguel A. Willis; Agustina L Freysselinard; Alfredo D. Vitullo

The female germ line in mammals is subjected to massive cell death that eliminates 60-85% of the germinal reserve by birth and continues from birth to adulthood until the exhaustion of the germinal pool. Germ cell demise occurs mainly through apoptosis by means of a biased expression in favour of pro-apoptotic members of the BCL2 gene family. By contrast, the South American plains vizcacha, Lagostomus maximus, exhibits sustained expression of the anti-apoptotic BCL2 gene throughout gestation and a low incidence of germ cell apoptosis. This led to the proposal that, in the absence of death mechanisms other than apoptosis, the female germ line should increase continuously from foetal life until after birth. In this study, we quantified all healthy germ cells and follicles in the ovaries of L. maximus from early foetal life to day 60 after birth using unbiased stereological methods and detected apoptosis by labelling with TUNEL assay. The healthy germ cell population increased continuously from early-developing ovary reaching a 50 times higher population number by the end of gestation. TUNEL-positive germ cells were <0.5% of the germ cell number, except at mid-gestation (3.62%). Mitotic proliferation, entrance into prophase I stage and primordial follicle formation occurred as overlapping processes from early pregnancy to birth. Germ cell number remained constant in early post-natal life, but a remnant population of non-follicular VASA- and PCNA-positive germ cells still persisted at post-natal day 60. L. maximus is the first mammal so far described in which female germ line develops in the absence of constitutive massive germ cell elimination.


Journal of Mammalogy | 2003

SPERM CHARACTERISTICS IN TWO POPULATIONS OF THE SUBTERRANEAN RODENT CTENOMYS TALARUM (RODENTIA: OCTODONTIDAE)

Roxana R. Zenuto; Alfredo D. Vitullo; Cristina Busch

Abstract Sperm quantity and quality were examined in 2 populations (from Mar de Cobo and Necochea, Argentina) of the subterranean rodent Ctenomys talarum (tuco-tuco) for which polygyny was confirmed as their mating system. Nonetheless, differential population attributes allow us to propose that polygyny may be exerted at different levels. Mean epididymal sperm counts were not different, but the Necochea population was characterized by higher variance in sperm counts. Low sperm production, with little variance, in the Mar de Cobo population is consistent with a more extreme polygyny, with aggression playing an important role in the males securing monopolization of females. In the Necochea population, where males were less likely to maintain female exclusivity, subordinant males are not driven away and may invest more in sperm production than in male–male interactions. However, C. talarum males from both populations produce high-quality sperm cells, based on their motility, percentage of live sperm cells, and morphology.


Biology of Reproduction | 2013

Variation in Progesterone Receptors and GnRH Expression in the Hypothalamus of the Pregnant South American Plains Vizcacha, Lagostomus maximus (Mammalia, Rodentia)

Verónica Berta Dorfman; Lucía Saucedo; Noelia P. Di Giorgio; Pablo Ignacio Felipe Inserra; Nicolás Fraunhoffer; Noelia P. Leopardo; Julia Halperin; Victoria Lux-Lantos; Alfredo D. Vitullo

ABSTRACT In mammals, elevated levels of progesterone (P4) throughout gestation maintain a negative feedback over the hypothalamic-hypophyseal-gonadal (H-H-G) axis, avoiding preovulatory follicular growth and preventing ovulation. Recent studies showed that in the South American plains vizcacha (Lagostomus maximus) folliculogenesis progresses to preovulatory stages during gestation, and an ovulatory process seems to occur at midgestation. The aim of this work was to analyze hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) and P4 receptors (PR) expression and luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion and correlate these with the functional state of the ovary in nonovulating and ovulating females and gestating females with special emphasis in the supposedly ovulating females at midgestation. We investigated P4 and LH serum levels as well as the distribution, localization, and expression of PR and GnRH in the hypothalamus of L. maximus at different time points during gestation and in nongestating, ovulating and nonovulating, females. A significant increment in GnRH, P4, and LH was detected in midpregnant vizcachas with respect to early-pregnant and to ovulating females. PR was also significantly increased in midpregnant animals. PR was detected in neurons of the preoptic and hypothalamic areas. Coexistence of both PR and GnRH in neurons of medial preoptic area and supraoptic nucleus was detected. Midpregnant animals showed increased number of PR immunoreactive cells at median eminence, localized adjacently to GnRH immunoreactive fibers. High expression of hypothalamic GnRH and PR, despite an increased level of P4, was correlated with the presence of antral, preovulatory follicles, and luteinized unruptured follicles at midgestation that suggest a possible role of the H-H-G axis in the modulation of ovulation during gestation in L. maximus.

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Candela Rocío González

Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental

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María B. Espinosa

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Noelia P. Leopardo

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Pablo Ignacio Felipe Inserra

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Federico Jensen

Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg

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Nicolás Fraunhoffer

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Julia Halperin

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Cristina Busch

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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