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Dive into the research topics where André L. Takatsu-Coleman is active.

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Featured researches published by André L. Takatsu-Coleman.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2004

Effects of pre- or post-training paradoxical sleep deprivation on two animal models of learning and memory in mice

Regina H. Silva; A.B. Chehin; Sonia R. Kameda; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Vanessa C. Abílio; Sergio Tufik; Roberto Frussa-Filho

The aim of the present study was to verify the effects of pre- or post-training paradoxical sleep (PS) deprivation in mice tested in the passive and the plus-maze discriminative avoidance tasks. Three-month-old Swiss male mice were placed in narrow platforms in a water tank for 72 h to prevent the occurrence of PS. Control animals were kept in the same room, but in their home cages. Before or after this period, the animals were submitted to the training session of one of the behavioral tasks. The test sessions were performed 3 and 10 days after the training. The animals that were PS-deprived before the training session showed retention deficits in the test sessions performed 3 days later in both tasks (decreased latency to enter the dark chamber of the passive avoidance apparatus or increased percent time spent in the aversive arm of the plus-maze discriminative avoidance apparatus). Animals that were PS deprived after the training session showed no differences from control animals in the test sessions performed 3 days after the training in any of the tasks, but showed passive and discriminative avoidance retention deficits in the test performed 10 days after the training. The results suggest that both pre- and post-training paradoxical sleep deprivation produce memory deficits in mice. However, these effects have different temporal characteristics.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2005

Behavioral characterization of morphine effects on motor activity in mice

Camilla L. Patti; Roberto Frussa-Filho; Regina H. Silva; Rita C. Carvalho; Sonia R. Kameda; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Jaime L.S. Cunha; Vanessa C. Abílio

A biphasic effect of morphine on locomotion has been extensively described. Nevertheless, the effects of this opioid on other behavioral parameters have been overlooked. The aim of the present study was to verify the effects of different doses of morphine on motor behaviors observed in an open-field. Adult female mice were injected with saline or morphine (10, 15 and 20 mg/kg, i.p.) and observed in an open-field for quantification of locomotor and rearing frequencies as well as duration of immobility and grooming. The lowest dose of morphine decreased locomotion (and increased immobility duration) while the highest dose increased it. All doses tested decreased rearing and grooming. Thus, the effects of morphine on locomotion do not parallel to its effects on rearing and grooming. Our results indicate that locomotion not always reflects the effect of drugs on motor activity, which can be better investigated when other behavioral parameters are concomitantly taken into account.


Brain Research | 2006

Effects of reserpine on the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task: dissociation between memory and motor impairments.

Rita C. Carvalho; Camilla C. Patti; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Sonia R. Kameda; Claudio F. Souza; Lúcia Garcez-do-Carmo; Vanessa C. Abílio; Roberto Frussa-Filho; Regina Helena Silva

We investigated the effects of reserpine (0.1-0.5 mg/kg) on the performance of mice in the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task (DAVT), which simultaneously evaluates memory and motor activity. All doses induced memory impairment (increased aversive arm time) but only 0.5 mg/kg reserpine decreased locomotion (entries in enclosed arms). The results suggest that the DAVT evaluation in reserpine-treated mice can be a useful model for studying cognitive deficits accompanied by motor impairments.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2015

Effects of rimonabant on the development of single dose-induced behavioral sensitization to ethanol, morphine and cocaine in mice.

Eduardo A.V. Marinho; Alexandre J. Oliveira-Lima; R. Santos; A.W. Hollais; Marilia A. Baldaia; Raphael Wuo-Silva; T.S. Yokoyama; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Camilla L. Patti; Beatriz M. Longo; Laís F. Berro; Roberto Frussa-Filho

RATIONALE The endocannabinoid system has been implicated in the neurobiological mechanism underlying drug addiction, especially the primary rewarding dopamine-dependent processes. Therefore, endocannabinoid receptor antagonists, such as the CB1 cannabinoid antagonist rimonabant, have been proposed as candidates for preventive addiction therapies. OBJECTIVES Investigate the possible involvement of CB1 receptors in the development of behavioral sensitization to ethanol, morphine and cocaine in mice. METHODS We compared the effects of different doses of rimonabant (0.3, 1, 3 and 10mg/kg) on spontaneous locomotor activity in the open-field, hyperlocomotion induced by acute administration of ethanol (1.8g/kg), morphine (20mg/kg) or cocaine (10mg/kg) and on subsequent drug-induced locomotor sensitization using a two-injection protocol in mice. We also investigated a possible depressive-like effect of an acute rimonabant challenge at the highest dose and its potential anxiogenic property. RESULTS At the highest dose, rimonabant abolished ethanol- and cocaine-induced hyperlocomotion and behavioral sensitization without modifying spontaneous and central locomotor activity or inducing depressive-like behavior on the forced swim test in mice. The other doses of rimonabant also selectively blocked acute ethanol-induced central hyperlocomotion. Although rimonabant at 0.3 and 1mg/kg potentiated the central hyperlocomotion induced by acute morphine injection, it was effective in attenuating morphine-induced behavioral sensitization at all doses. CONCLUSIONS Because the neural basis of behavioral sensitization has been proposed to correspond to some components of addiction, our findings indicate that the endocannabinoid system might be involved in ethanol, cocaine and morphine abuse.


Journal of Psychiatry & Neuroscience | 2013

Short-term social isolation induces depressive-like behaviour and reinstates the retrieval of an aversive task: mood-congruent memory in male mice?

André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Camilla L. Patti; Karina A. Zanin; Adriano Zager; Rita C. Carvalho; Aline R. Borçoi; L.M.B. Ceccon; Laís F. Berro; Sergio Tufik; Monica L. Andersen; Roberto Frussa-Filho

BACKGROUND Although mood-congruent memory (MCM), or the tendency to recall information consistent with ones mood, is a robust phenomenon in human depression, to our knowledge, it has never been demonstrated in animals. METHODS Mice were subjected to social isolation (SI) or crowding for 12 hours and had their depressive-like behaviour (evaluated by the forced swim, tail suspension, sucrose preference and splash tests) or their serum corticosterone concentrations evaluated. In addition, we determined the temporal forgetting curve of the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task (PM-DAT) and examined the effects of SI or crowding on memory retrieval in the PM-DAT. Finally, we verified the effects of metyrapone pretreatment on reinstatement of memory retrieval or on the increase of corticosterone levels induced by SI. RESULTS Twelve hours of SI produced depressive-like behaviour, enhanced corticosterone concentration and reinstated retrieval of a forgotten discriminative aversive (i.e., negatively valenced) task. Depressive-like behaviour was critical for this facilitative effect of SI because 12 hours of crowding neither induced depressive-like behaviour nor enhanced retrieval, although it increased corticosterone levels at the same magnitude as SI. However, corticosterone increase was a necessary condition for MCM in mice, in that the corticosterone synthesis inhibitor metyrapone abolished SI-induced retrieval reinstatement. LIMITATIONS Our study did not investigate the effects of the social manipulations proposed here in a positively valenced task. CONCLUSION To our knowledge, the present paper provides the first evidence of MCM in animal models.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2010

Amnestic effect of cocaine after the termination of its stimulant action

Suzy Tamie Niigaki; Regina Helena Silva; Camilla L. Patti; J.L.S. Cunha; Sonia R. Kameda; Jorge Correia-Pinto; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Raquel Levin; Vanessa C. Abílio; Roberto Frussa-Filho

The effects of cocaine on memory are controversial. Furthermore, the psychostimulant action of cocaine can be a critical issue in the interpretation of its effects on learning/memory models. The effects of a single administration of cocaine on memory were investigated during the presence of its motor stimulating effect or just after its termination. The plus-maze discriminative avoidance task (PM-DAT) was used because it provides simultaneous information about memory, anxiety and motor activity. In Experiment I, mice received saline, 7.5, 10, 15 or 30 mg/kg cocaine 5 min before the training session. In Experiment II, mice were trained 30 min after the injection of saline, 7.5, 10, 15 or 30 mg/kg cocaine. In Experiment III, mice received 30 mg/kg cocaine 30 min pre-training and pre-test. In Experiment IV, mice received 30 mg/kg cocaine immediately post-training. Tests were always conducted 24 h following the training session. Given 5 min before training, cocaine promoted a motor stimulant effect at the highest dose during the training session but did not impair memory. When cocaine was injected 30 min pre-training, the drug did not modify motor activity, but produced marked amnestic effects at all doses tested. This amnesia induced by cocaine given 30 min pre-training was not related to a state-dependent learning because it was not abolished by pre-test administration of the drug. Post-training cocaine administration did not induce memory deficits either. Our results suggest that the post-stimulant phase is the critical moment for cocaine-induced memory deficit in a discriminative task in mice.


Psychoneuroendocrinology | 2013

Short-term sleep deprivation reinstates memory retrieval in mice: the role of corticosterone secretion.

André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Karina A. Zanin; Camilla L. Patti; Adriano Zager; Leonardo B. Lopes-Silva; Beatriz M. Longo; Sergio Tufik; Monica L. Andersen; Roberto Frussa-Filho

While the effects of sleep deprivation (SD) on the acquisition and consolidation phases of memory have been extensively characterized, its effects on memory retrieval remain overlooked. SD alone is a stressor, and stress-activated glucocorticoids promote bimodal effects on memory. Because we have recently demonstrated that 72h SD impairs memory retrieval in the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task (PM-DAT) in mice, this study investigated whether shorter SD periods would facilitate retrieval. In Experiment I, the temporal forgetting curve of the PM-DAT was determined and an interval between training/testing in which retrieval was no longer present was used in all subsequent experiments. In Experiments II and III, retrieval performance and corticosterone concentration, respectively, were quantified in mice that were sleep deprived for 12 or 24h before testing. In Experiments IV and V, the effects of the corticosterone synthesis inhibitor metyrapone were evaluated on 12h SD-induced retrieval reinstatement and corticosterone concentration enhancement, respectively. Experiment VI determined whether pre-test acute administration of exogenous corticosterone would mimic the facilitatory effects of 12h SD on retrieval. Thirty days after training, mice presented poor performance of the task; however, SD for 12h (but not for 24) before testing reinstated memory retrieval. This facilitatory effect was accompanied by increased corticosterone concentration, abolished by metyrapone, and mimicked by pre-test acute corticosterone administration. Collectively, short-term SD can facilitate memory retrieval by enhancing corticosterone secretion. This facilitatory effect is abolished by longer periods of SD.


Stress | 2013

Mild acute stress reactivates memory of a discriminative avoidance task in mice

André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Camilla L. Patti; Karina A. Zanin; Leandro Sanday; Adriano Zager; Rita C. Carvalho; Monica L. Andersen; Sergio Tufik; Roberto Frussa-Filho

Previous studies have demonstrated that stress or glucocorticoids impair the retrieval of spatial memory in rodents and declarative memory in humans. However, the effects on memory retrieval of stress introduced a long time after learning have not been well studied. We investigated whether a mild, extrinsic stressor (1-s 0.1 or 0.3 mA foot shock) would reactivate low baseline retrieval of an aversive memory [the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task (PM-DAT)] and if it would be modulated by glucocorticoids. In Experiment 1, male Swiss mice received pre-test foot shock (n = 10 mice/group) 7 days after training and just before testing. A time-retrieval curve for low baseline retrieval for the subsequent experiments was also determined (Experiment 2, n = 10 mice/group). We investigated if pre-test foot shock could modify corticosterone release (Experiment 3, n = 8–9 mice/group) and reinstate retrieval in the PM-DAT (Experiment 4, n = 15 mice/group). The effects of metyrapone (100 mg/kg) on retrieval reinstatement (Experiment 5, n = 15 mice/group) and serum corticosterone enhancement (Experiments 6, n = 7–9 mice/group) induced by foot shock were analyzed. Finally, the effects of foot shock itself on PM-DAT exploration were verified (Experiment 7, n = 10 mice/group). We demonstrated here that foot shock reinstated the retrieval of a low baseline, discriminative avoidance task 30 (but not 7) days after training. This facilitative effect was not dependent on corticosterone secretion because metyrapone abolished the enhancement of corticosterone concentration but did not reverse the stress-induced reinstatement of retrieval.


Psychopharmacology | 2004

Anxiogenic effect of sleep deprivation in the elevated plus-maze test in mice.

Regina H. Silva; Sonia R. Kameda; Rita C. Carvalho; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Suzy Tamie Niigaki; Vanessa C. Abílio; Sergio Tufik; Roberto Frussa-Filho


Psychopharmacology | 2007

Dissociation of the effects of ethanol on memory, anxiety, and motor behavior in mice tested in the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task

Sonia R. Kameda; Roberto Frussa-Filho; Rita C. Carvalho; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Victor Proença Ricardo; Camilla L. Patti; Mariana Bendlin Calzavara; Giorgia Batlle Lopez; Nilza P. Araujo; Vanessa C. Abílio; R. de A. Ribeiro; V. D’Almeida; Regina Helena Silva

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Roberto Frussa-Filho

Federal University of São Paulo

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Camilla L. Patti

Federal University of São Paulo

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Rita C. Carvalho

Federal University of São Paulo

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Sonia R. Kameda

Federal University of São Paulo

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Vanessa C. Abílio

Federal University of São Paulo

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Sergio Tufik

Federal University of São Paulo

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Regina H. Silva

Federal University of São Paulo

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Regina Helena Silva

Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte

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Adriano Zager

University of São Paulo

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Karina A. Zanin

Federal University of São Paulo

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