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Dive into the research topics where Analía Reinés is active.

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Featured researches published by Analía Reinés.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2011

S100B alters neuronal survival and dendrite extension via RAGE-mediated NF-κB signaling

Alejandro Villarreal; Rolando Xavier Aviles Reyes; Maria Florencia Angelo; Analía Reinés; Alberto Javier Ramos

J. Neurochem. (2011) 117, 321–332.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2008

Maintenance Treatment with Fluoxetine is Necessary to Sustain Normal Levels of Synaptic Markers in an Experimental Model of Depression: Correlation with Behavioral Response

Analía Reinés; Marina Cereseto; Alejandro Ferrero; Laura Sifonios; María Fernanda Podestá; Silvia I. Wikinski

Dysfunction of hippocampal plasticity has been proposed to play a critical role in the pathophysiology of depression. However, antidepressant drug effects on synaptic plasticity and cytoskeletal remodeling remain controversial. The aim of the present study was to evaluate in animals exposed to the learned helplessness (LH) paradigm, an accepted experimental model of depression, the effect of chronic treatment with fluoxetine (FLX) on synaptic and cytoskeletal proteins known to undergo plastic changes. Synaptophysin (SYN), postsynaptic density 95 (PSD-95), axon growth-associated protein 43 (GAP-43), and cytoskeletal proteins (intermediate neurofilaments and MAP-2) were studied in the hippocampus by immunohistochemistry. Whereas LH animals treated 21 days with saline (LH-S group) displayed diminished SYN and PSD-95 immunostainings in the CA3 but not in the DG, chronic treatment with FLX not only reversed the despaired behavior induced by exposure to LH paradigm, but also fully recovered SYN and PSD-95 labeling to control values. Similar results were obtained for the axonal remodeling marker GAP-43. FLX treatment did not modify either the decreased light neurofilament subunit (NFL) observed in the hippocampus of LH animals or any other cytoskeletal protein studied. When FLX treatment was withdrawn for 90 days in those LH-FLX animals in which reversion of despair had been observed at day 25, recurrence of despaired behavior was found accompanied by decreased SYN, PSD-95, and NFL labelings. Results indicate that the synapse remodeling induced by FLX in the CA3 region could underlie its behavioral efficacy despite the absence of cytoskeletal remodeling and that the stability of synaptic changes would depend on the continuous administration of the drug.


Neuroscience | 2004

Neuronal cytoskeletal alterations in an experimental model of depression

Analía Reinés; Marina Cereseto; A. Ferrero; C. Bonavita; Silvia Wikinski

It has been proposed that depression is associated with hippocampal morphological changes. The apical dendrite atrophy of hippocampal CA3 pyramidal neurons has been described in experimental models of depression. The aim of the present study was to determine which cytoskeletal components are involved in the morphological changes previously described in the hippocampus of depressed animals. The expression of different neuronal cytoskeletal markers was analyzed by immunohistochemistry in rats exposed to a learned helplessness paradigm, an experimental model of depression. Rats were trained with 60 inescapable foot shocks (0.6 mA/15 s) and escape latencies and failures were tested 4 days after training. Animals in which learned helplessness behavior persisted for 21 days were included in the depressed group. No foot shocks were delivered to control rats. Microtubule-associated protein 2 (MAP-2) and light (NFL; 68 kDa), medium (NFM; 160 kDa) and heavy (NFH; 200 kDa) neurofilament subunit immunostainings were analyzed employing morphometric parameters. In the depressed group, NFL immunostaining decreased 55% (P<0.05) and 60% (P<0.001) in CA3 and dentate gyrus, respectively. In the same areas, MAP-2, NFM and NFH immunostainings did not differ between depressed and control animals. Since NFL is present in the core of mature neurofilament, it is proposed that hippocampal depression-associated plastic alterations may be due to changes in the dynamics of the neurofilament assembly.


Neurochemistry International | 1998

Na+,K+-ATPase interaction with a brain endogenous inhibitor (endobain E)

G. Rodríguez de Lores Arnaiz; Analía Reinés; T. Herbin; Clara Peña

Na+,K+-ATPase activity of rat brain synaptosomal membranes was evaluated in the presence of an inhibitory fraction II-E (termed endobain E), isolated by gel filtration and anionic exchange HPLC of a rat brain soluble fraction. We studied endobain E aging, analyzed its inhibitory potency in the absence or presence of ouabain as well as its ability to block high affinity [3H]ouabain binding to cerebral cortex membranes. Similar loss of endobain E activity was observed when samples were stored either dried or in solution. Endobain E fraction inhibited synaptosomal membrane Na+,K+-ATPase activity in a concentration-dependent manner and the slope of the corresponding curve strongly resembled that of ouabain. Assays performed in the presence of endobain E and ouabain indicated that the inhibitory effect was additive or less than additive, depending on their respective concentrations during preincubation and/or incubation. High affinity [3H]ouabain binding to cerebral cortex membranes proved concentration-dependent from 0.10 to 0.50 mg protein per ml; binding inhibition by endobain E was independent of protein concentration within the above range. [3H]ouabain binding inhibition by endobain E was concentration-dependent over a 10-fold range, an effect similar to that found for Na+,K+-ATPase inhibition. The extent of endobain E effect on Na+,K+-ATPase inhibition was much higher (90-100%) than that on [3H]ouabain binding blockade (50%). Findings suggest some type of interaction between endobain E and ouabain inhibitory mechanisms and favour the view that the former behaves as an endogenous ouabain.


European Journal of Pharmacology | 2010

Potentiation of omega-3 fatty acid antidepressant-like effects with low non-antidepressant doses of fluoxetine and mirtazapine.

Carlos Horacio Laino; Cristina Fonseca; Norma Sterin-Speziale; Nora Slobodianik; Analía Reinés

Despite the advances in psychopharmacology, the treatment of depressive disorders is still not satisfactory. Side effects and resistance to antidepressant drugs are the greatest complications during treatment. Based on recent evidence, omega-3 fatty acids may influence vulnerability and outcome in depressive disorders. The aim of this study was to further characterize the omega-3 antidepressant-like effect in rats in terms of its behavioral features in the depression model forced swimming test either alone or in combination with antidepressants fluoxetine or mirtazapine. Ultimately, we prompted to determine the lowest dose at which omega-3 fatty acids and antidepressant drugs may still represent a pharmacological advantage when employed in combined treatments. Chronic diet supplementation with omega-3 fatty acids produced concentration-dependent antidepressant-like effects in the forced swimming test displaying a behavioral profile similar to fluoxetine but different from mirtazapine. Fluoxetine or mirtazapine at antidepressant doses (10 and 20 mg/kg/day, respectively) rendered additive effects in combination with omega-3 fatty acid supplementation (720 mg/kg/day). Beneficial effects of combined treatment were also observed at sub-effective doses (1 mg/kg/day) of fluoxetine or mirtazapine, since in combination with omega-3 fatty acids (720 mg/kg/day), antidepressants potentiated omega-3 antidepressant-like effects. The antidepressant-like effects occurred in the absence of changes in brain phospholipid classes. The therapeutic approach of combining omega-3 fatty acids with low ineffective doses of antidepressants might represent benefits in the treatment of depression, especially in patients with depression resistant to conventional treatments and even may contribute to patient compliance by decreasing the magnitude of some antidepressant dose-dependent side effects.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2009

p75NTR Expression is induced in isolated neurons of the penumbra after ischemia by cortical devascularization

Maria Florencia Angelo; Rolando Xavier Aviles-Reyes; Alejandro Villarreal; Phil Barker; Analía Reinés; Alberto Javier Ramos

The p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR) is involved in neuronal functions ranging from induction of apoptosis and growth inhibition to the promotion of survival. p75NTR expression is induced in the central nervous system (CNS) by a range of pathological conditions, where it seems to have a role in neuronal death and axonal growth inhibition. The cellular mechanisms driving p75NTR expression in cell lines and primary neurons is Sp1 dependent (Ramos et al. [ 2007 ] J. Neurosci. 27:1498). In this study, we analyzed the spatiotemporal profile of p75NTR expression after an ischemic lesion induced by cortical devascularization (CD). Our results show that p75NTR expression occurs in isolated neurons of the ischemic lesion site. The p75NTR+ neurons presented morphological alterations and active caspase‐3 staining. Some p75NTR+ neurons were also positive for sortilin. The peak of p75NTR expression was localized 3 days postlesion (3DPL) in the penumbra. Sp1 transcription factor nuclear localization was observed in p75NTR+ neurons. The overall level of Sp1 expression was increased until 14DPL on the ipsilateral hemisphere. With primary cortical neurons, we demonstrated that p75NTR expression is induced by excitotoxic stress and correlated with increased Sp1 abundance. We conclude that p75NTR expression is localized in selected neurons of the ischemic lesion and that these neurons are probably condemned to apoptotic cell death. In primary neuronal culture, it is clear that excitotoxity and Sp1 are involved in induction of p75NTR expression, although, in vivo, some additional mechanisms are likely to be involved in the control of p75NTR expression in specific neurons in vivo.


Developmental Neuroscience | 2015

Differential Local Connectivity and Neuroinflammation Profiles in the Medial Prefrontal Cortex and Hippocampus in the Valproic Acid Rat Model of Autism

Martín Gabriel Codagnone; María Fernanda Podestá; Nonthué Alejandra Uccelli; Analía Reinés

Autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are a group of developmental disabilities characterized by impaired social interaction, communication deficit and repetitive and stereotyped behaviors. Neuroinflammation and synaptic alterations in several brain areas have been suggested to contribute to the physiopathology of ASD. Although the limbic system plays an important role in the functions found impaired in ASD, reports on these areas are scarce and results controversial. In the present study we searched in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) and hippocampus of rats exposed to the valproic acid (VPA) model of ASD for early structural and molecular changes, coincident in time with the behavioral alterations. After confirming delayed growth and maturation in VPA rats, we were able to detect decreased exploratory activity and social interaction at an early time point (postnatal day 35). In mPFC, although typical cortical column organization was preserved in VPA animals, we found that interneuronal space was wider than in controls. Hippocampal CA3 (cornu ammonis 3) pyramidal layer and the granular layer of the dentate gyrus both showed a disorganized spatial arrangement in VPA animals. Neuronal alterations were accompanied with increased tomato lectin and glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) immunostainings both in the mPFC and hippocampus. In the latter region, the increased GFAP immunoreactivity was CA3 specific. At the synaptic level, while mPFC from VPA animals showed increased synaptophysin (SYN) immunostaining, a SYN deficit was found in all hippocampal subfields. Additionally, both the mPFC and the hippocampus of VPA rats showed increased neuronal cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) immunostaining together with decreased levels of its polysialylated form (PSA-NCAM). Interestingly, these changes were more robust in the CA3 hippocampal subfield. Our results indicate that exploratory and social deficits correlate with region-dependent neuronal disorganization and reactive gliosis in the mPFC and hippocampus of VPA rats. While microgliosis is spread in these two limbic areas, astrogliosis, although extended in the mPFC, is circumscribed to the CA3 hippocampal subfield. Our work indicates that neuroinflammation and synaptic alterations do coexist in VPA rats, making this model suitable for studying novel aspects of neuron-glia interactions. Moreover, it suggests that the mPFC and hippocampus might behave differently in the context of the local hyperconnectivity and synaptic hypotheses of autism.


Brain Research | 2004

Allosteric modulation of [3H]dizocilpine binding to N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor by an endogenous Na+, K+-ATPase inhibitor: dependence on receptor activation

Analía Reinés; Clara Peña; Georgina Rodríguez de Lores Arnaiz

An endogenous Na(+), K(+)-ATPase inhibitor, termed endobain E, has been isolated from rat brain and proved to decrease [3H]dizocilpine binding to cerebral cortex N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor, an effect independent of sodium pump activity. The purpose of this study was to disclose the mechanism of [3H]dizocilpine binding reduction by endobain E by performing saturation, kinetic and competitive assays. In saturation binding assays, endobain E increased K(d) without modifying B(max) value. To determine whether competitive or allosteric interaction was involved, kinetics of [3H]dizocilpine binding to cerebral cortex membranes was studied. Endobain E increased [3H]dizocilpine dissociation rate constant and induced an initial fast phase, without modifying association rate constant, indicating an allosteric interaction. In competitive [3H]dizocilpine binding assays, no additive effect was observed with endobain E plus competitive antagonists for glutamate or glycine sites (2-amino-5-phosphonopentanoic acid (AP-5) and 7-chlorokynurenic acid, respectively), indicating that coagonist site blockade interferes with endobain E effect. However, the higher glutamate and glycine concentration, the greater its effect. Endobain E binding reduction was partially additive with that induced by ketamine or Mg(2+) (receptor-associated channel blockers). Results suggest that the greater the channel activation by glutamate and glycine, the greater endobain E allosteric effect. Furthermore, as ketamine and Mg(2+) interfere with endobain E effect, this factor most likely binds to the inner surface of the NMDA associated channel.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2007

Cytoskeleton of hippocampal neurons as a target for valproic acid in an experimental model of depression.

Alejandro J. Ferrero; Marina Cereseto; Laura Sifonios; Analía Reinés; Estanislao Peixoto; Modesto C. Rubio; Silvia Wikinski

BACKGROUND Atrophy of pyramidal hippocampal neurons and of the entire hippocampus has been reported in experimental models of depression and in depressive patients respectively. We investigated the efficacy of valproic acid (VPA) for reversing a depressive-like behaviour and a cytoskeletal alteration in the hippocampus, the loss of the light neurofilament subunit (NF-L). METHODS Depressive-like behaviour was induced by inescapable stress. Animals were divided into four groups: two to assess the response to 21 days of treatment with 200 mg/kg (I.P.) of valproic acid, and two in which the treatment was interrupted and the effects of VPA were evaluated 90 days later. Depressive-like behaviour was evaluated by the quantification of escape movements in a swimming test. NF-L was quantified by immunohistochemistry in dentate gyrus and CA3 of hippocampus. RESULTS VPA corrected the depressive-like behaviour and reversed the diminution of NF-L in the hippocampus. Ninety days after the end of the treatment, and in contrast to the results previously obtained with fluoxetine, no recurrence of the depressive-like behaviour was observed. CONCLUSIONS Despite interruption of the treatment, a long-lasting effect of VPA was observed. A possible relationship between the effect on NF-L and the prevention of depressive-like behaviour recurrence could be suggested.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Distinctive PSA-NCAM and NCAM hallmarks in glutamate-induced dendritic atrophy and synaptic disassembly.

María Fernabda Podestá; Patricia T. Yam; Martín Gabriel Codagnone; Nonthué Alejandra Uccelli; David R. Colman; Analía Reinés

Dendritic and synapse remodeling are forms of structural plasticity that play a critical role in normal hippocampal function. Neural cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) and its polysialylated form (PSA-NCAM) participate in neurite outgrowth and synapse formation and plasticity. However, it remains unclear whether they contribute to dendritic retraction and synaptic disassembly. Cultured hippocampal neurons exposed to glutamate (5 µM) showed a reduced MAP-2 (+) area in the absence of neuronal death 24 h after the insult. Concomitantly, synapse loss, revealed by decreased synaptophysin and post-synaptic density-95 cluster number and area, together with changes in NCAM and PSA-NCAM levels were found. Dendritic atrophy and PSA-NCAM reduction proved NMDA-receptor dependent. Live-imaging experiments evidenced dendritic atrophy 4 h after the insult; this effect was preceded by smaller NCAM clusters (1 h) and decreased surface and total PSA-NCAM levels (3 h). Simultaneously, total NCAM cluster number and area remained unchanged. The subsequent synapse disassembly (6 h) was accompanied by reductions in total NCAM cluster number and area. A PSA mimetic peptide prevented both the dendritic atrophy and the subsequent synaptic changes (6 h) but had no effect on the earliest synaptic remodeling (3 h). Thus, NCAM-synaptic reorganization and PSA-NCAM level decrease precede glutamate-induced dendritic atrophy, whereas the NCAM level reduction is a delayed event related to synapse loss. Consequently, distinctive stages in PSA-NCAM/NCAM balance seem to accompany glutamate-induced dendritic atrophy and synapse loss.

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Clara Peña

University of Buenos Aires

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Marina Cereseto

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Laura Sifonios

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Silvia Wikinski

University of Buenos Aires

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Alejandro Ferrero

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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