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Dive into the research topics where Andrea N. Chisari is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrea N. Chisari.


Neuroendocrinology | 1994

Sex Differences in the Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Response to Inflammatory and Neuroendocrine Stressors

Eduardo Spinedi; Margarita Salas; Andrea N. Chisari; Marcelo J. Perone; Monica Carino; Rolf C. Gaillard

Susceptibility to inflammatory disease in infantile Lewis (LEW/N) female rats seems to be related to their impaired hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis response to different inflammatory stimuli, while the relative resistance to this type of disease in Fischer (F344/N) female rats is apparently due to their potent HPA axis response to the same stimuli. In the present study, we attempted to elucidate whether there is an impairment in the HPA axis response in the juvenile female LEW/N rat to inflammatory and noninflammatory stimuli, and also to determine whether the endogenous sex-steroid environment influences the HPA axis function in both strains of rats. For these purposes, juvenile F344/N and LEW/N rats of both sexes were submitted to different treatments: (a) inhalation of normal atmosphere or ether vapors for 1 min (Ether); (b) i.p. injection of vehicle alone or containing CRH (0.5 microgram/rat), arginine vasopressin (AVP; 5 micrograms/rat, angiotensin II (AII; 5 micrograms/rat), insulin (INS; 0.3 IU/rat), bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS; 100 micrograms/rat) or snake venom (SV; 100 micrograms/rat). Rats were then killed at different time intervals (in min) after treatments: 20 for Ether, AVP and CRH, 30 for AII, 45 for INS, 60 for SV and 120 for LPS.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 1995

Sex and strain variability in the rat hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function

Andrea N. Chisari; Monica Carino; Marcelo J. Perone; Rolf C. Gaillard; Eduardo Spinedi

In the present investigation, we examined the influence of both genetic background and sex factors in the rat hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function under both basal and post adrenalectomy (ADX) conditions. For these purposes adult female and male rats, from Sprague-Dawley (S-D), Fischer (F344/N), Lewis (LEW/N) and Buffalo (BUF) strains, were decapitated in basal condition or several (2, 7 and 14) days after ADX. Plasma stress hormones levels and adrenal corticosterone (B) concentration as well as peptide (ACTH, CRH and vasopressin, AVP) content in different tissues (anterior pituitary, AP; medial basal hypothalamus, MBH), were then evaluated by specific assays. Our results indicate that: a) despite no sex- and strain-related differences in AP ACTH and MBH ACTH secretagogues in basal condition, there exits a clear sexual dimorphism in plasma ACTH levels as well as in both plasma and adrenal B concentrations, with values significantly higher in females than in males, regardless the strain; b) ADX abolished plasma B levels and increased AP ACTH output in a time-dependent fashion up to the 14th day post surgery; c) AP ACTH content decreased 2 days after ADX, except in BUF female rats, thereafter tending to either recover or increase sham values by two weeks post ADX; d) ADX decreased MBH CRH at all periods studied, except in BUF female animals on day 14; e) ADX clearly diminished MBH AVP only in S-D rats, and f) a sexual dimorphism was also found in AP ACTH in 7-day-ADX S-D rats and in 14-day-ADX S-D and F344/N animals; also, a dimorphic pattern in MBH CRH was found in 7-day-ADX S-D as well as in 14-day-ADX F344/N and LEW/N rats. Our findings further indicate that both sex- and genetic-factors are able to modulate the rat HPA axis function under both physiological and pathophysiological conditions.


Neuroendocrinology | 2003

Adrenal Enucleation in MSG-Damaged Hyperleptinemic Male Rats Transiently Restores Adrenal Sensitivity to Leptin

Mario Perello; Rolf C. Gaillard; Andrea N. Chisari; Eduardo Spinedi

It is known that the neonatal treatment of rats with monosodium L-glutamate (MSG) induces several metabolic abnormalities, resulting in enhanced adiposity and hyperleptinemia. Our study was designed to explore the consequences of MSG-induced chronic hyperleptinemia on adrenal sensitivity to the inhibitory effect of exogenous leptin. Neonatal male rats treated with MSG or vehicle (controls, CTR) were followed during 150 days in order to study changes observed over development in body weight, food consumption as well as in vivo hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and adipocyte functions. During adulthood, adrenal response to adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) was evaluated both in vitro and in vivo in order to determine the adrenal sensitivity to the inhibitory effect of leptin. For this purpose, sham-operated as well as CTR and MSG rats with bilateral adrenal enucleation (AE) were used. Our results indicate that: (1) between 30 and 150 days of age, MSG animals developed hypophagia, accompanied by arrest in body weight gain, and concomitant enhanced basal levels of all HPA axis components and of leptin; (2) adrenals from of 150-day- old MSG rats displayed an in vitro adrenocortical hyperresponse to ACTH stimulation as well as an adrenal refractoriness to the physiological inhibitory effect of leptin on ACTH-stimulated glucocorticoid output, and (3) bilateral AE in adult MSG-treated rats transiently reversed the MSG-induced hyperleptinemia, restoring normal leptin levels as well as a normal adrenal sensitivity to the inhibitory effect of leptin. Our data indicate that adrenal exposure to the chronically high plasma leptin levels observed in MSG rats is involved in the loss of the inhibitory regulatory effect of leptin at the adrenal level, being therefore, at least in part, responsible for the increased total and free glucocorticoid production measured in MSG adult rats. Furthermore, this study strongly suggests that the adrenal overfunction, frequently associated with different phenotypes of obesity, could be due to an adrenal resistance to the leptin-negative regulation.


Neuroendocrinology | 2000

Food Intake-Induced Leptin Secretion Modulates Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Response and Hypothalamic Ob-Rb Expression to Insulin Administration

Andrés Giovambattista; Andrea N. Chisari; Rolf C. Gaillard; Eduardo Spinedi

The mutation of the ob gene is known to induce a phenotype of obesity accompanied by symptoms including enhanced production of glucocorticoid. Chronic administration to ob/ob mice of leptin, the ob gene product, reverses hypercorticosteronemia. This establishes a clear relation between adipocyte and hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis functions. In the present study we investigated the acute modulatory effects of food intake-stimulated leptin secretion on HPA axis activity and hypothalamic leptin receptor (Ob-Rb) expression in 24-hour fasting, adult female, BALB/c mice after insulin-induced hypoglycemia. Our results indicate that: (1) food supply for 45 min to 24-hour fasting mice increased plasma glucose levels and reversed both hypercorticosteronemia and hypoleptinemia; (2) the insulin-induced hypoglycemia produced a marked HPA axis activation in animals with no access to food but this response was fully prevented by food intake and the consecutive increase in plasma leptin levels; (3) the inhibitory effect of leptin on the HPA axis response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia was corroborated by i.p. administration of murine leptin, and (4) fasting-induced hypothalamic Ob-Rb overexpression is not modulated by insulin itself but by leptin, since increase in leptin levels by food intake or by administration of exogenous leptin completely reversed this Ob-Rb overexpression. These results confirm the inhibitory effect of leptin on the HPA axis response to various stress stimuli. They clearly demonstrate that acute food intake in 24-hour fasting mice: (a) rapidly reduced fasting-induced hypercorticosteronemia by enhancing both spontaneous and insulin-elicited endogenous leptin secretion; (b) fully prevented HPA axis response to insulin administration, by rapidly increasing endogenous leptin secretion and probably also by diminishing the extent and the duration of insulin-induced hypoglycemia, and (c) abolished hypothalamic Ob-Rb overexpression induced by fasting itself combined with insulin treatment. The present data strongly suggests an inhibitory effect of endogenous leptin on insulin-induced HPA axis response, an interaction relevant to the physiological adaptation to starvation and caloric excess, and further supports the pivotal role played by the hypothalamus in restoring homeostasis in different allostatic states.


Neuroimmunomodulation | 1997

Sexual Dimorphism in the Mouse Hypothalamic-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis Function after Endotoxin and Insulin Stresses during Development

Eduardo Spinedi; Andrea N. Chisari; Frangois Pralong; Rolf C. Gaillard

Bidirectional communication between the immune and the endocrine systems is now widely accepted as essential for the survival of the organism. Since a classical nonresponsive period of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis takes place shortly after birth and because endogenous sex hormones modulate immune function, the aim of the present work was to determine whether sex steroids regulate the PHA axis response to immune (bacterial, lipopolysaccharide, LPS) and nonimmune (insulin, INS) stressors in mice during development. For this purpose 7-, 15-, 30-, 45- and 60-day-old mice of both sexes were intraperitoneally injected with either vehicle alone (basal) or containing LPS (2 mg/kg body weight) or INS (12 IU/kg body weight). The animals were then killed by decapitation, 2 h or 45 min after LPS or INS, respectively. Plasma samples were assayed to measure corticosterone concentrations. The results indicated that: (a) there was a transient increase in basal plasma corticosterone levels during development, with a peak value at the juvenile age, regardless of sex; (b) a higher basal plasma corticosterone concentration in females than in males characterized the adult age; (c) the infantile age is a period of the HPA axis function nonresponsive to purely neuroendocrine but not to inflammatory stimuli; (d) during the juvenile age, females showed a hyporesponsive HPA axis to neurendocrine and immune stress, whereas male mice were fully unresponsive to both challenges; (e) animals of both sexes showed a maximal HPA axis response to purely neuroendocrine stress at the prepubertal age; this response to the immune stimulus was also maximal in 30-day-old males, while it was found in females after puberty (45-day-old mice); (f) sexual dimorphism in the HPA axis response to a purely neuroendocrine stimulus was found at 30 days of age or later, while this characteristic of the response to endotoxin was not present until puberty. These data clearly suggest that these are gender-dependent characteristics of the ontogeny of the HPA and HP-gonadal axes that are responsible for the sexual dimorphism of HPA axis function in mice.


Neuroimmunomodulation | 2000

Metabolic, Neuroendocrine and Immune Functions in Basal Conditions and during the Acute-Phase Response to Endotoxic Shock in Undernourished Rats

Andrés Giovambattista; Andrea N. Chisari; Lucrecia Corró; Rolf C. Gaillard; Eduardo Spinedi

Chronic malnutrition is one of the most important causes of several metabolic, immune and neuroendocrine dysfunctions. The aim of the present study was to determine the influence of chronic food restriction on basal neuroendocrine, immune and adipocyte functions and during the acute-phase response to endotoxic shock in female rats. The effect of refeeding of undernourished rats on the above-mentioned functions was also investigated. For these purposes, plasma total protein, glucose, triglycerides, ACTH, corticosterone, tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF) and leptin (LEP) levels were determined in basal condition and 2 h after endotoxin (LPS; 180 µg/kg body weight, i.p.) administration in 3 different groups: (1) well-nourished (WN) controls; (2) undernourished (UN) rats as a consequence of chronic food restriction, and (3) UN rats re-fed to restoration of their body weights in the WN rat range. The results indicate that UN rats, in comparison with WN controls, developed an arrest in body weight gain as well as in basal hypoglycemia, hypotriglyceridemia, hypoleptinemia, hypercorticosteronemia and enhanced adrenal glucocorticoid content; however, no changes in basal total protein, ACTH and TNF plasma levels and in anterior pituitary ACTH concentrations were found. When endotoxic shock was induced, the LPS-induced hypoglycemia developed in WN rats was abolished in UN animals, and both ACTH and TNF plasma concentrations after endotoxin, albeit significantly (p < 0.05) higher than the respective basal values, were significantly (p < 0.05) lower in UN than in WN control rats. Despite the high basal plasma corticosterone concentration in UN vs. WN rats, the LPS-induced glucocorticoid release was similar in WN and UN rats. Additionally, LPS treatment did not modify basal plasma LEP levels, regardless of the group. Interestingly, UN rats fed ad libitum for 15 days restored their body weight to WN rat range values, and the various metabolic dysfunctions seen in UN rats in both basal and post-LPS conditions were fully normalized. Our results clearly indicate that chronic undernutrition not only affects, as earlier described, reproductive function but also metabolic, neuroendocrine, immune and adipocyte functions, and that the effects induced by undernutrition can be fully reversed after recovery of normal body weight. The present study strongly supports the involvement of the metabolic status in the effectiveness of the defense mechanisms developed in patients in inflammatory stress conditions.


Endocrine | 2001

Impact of Maternal Undernutrition on Hypothalamo-Pituitary-Adrenal Axis and Adipocyte Functions in Male Rat Offspring

Andrea N. Chisari; Andrés Giovambattista; Mario Perello; Eduardo Spinedi

Malnutrition induces profound deleterious effects on several metabolic and neuroendocrine functions. In the present study, we examined the impact of maternal food restriction, during gestation and lactation, on the metabolic-neuroendocrine function of their male offspring at 21 and 60 d of age. Well-nourished (WN) and undernourished (UN) pregnant rats were used, during gestation and lactation, until pups were weaned. Twenty-one-day-old WN and UN male pups were studied in basal and postinsulin conditions. Additional groups of weaned (WN and UN) male rats were fed either ad libitum (WN-WN and UN-WN) or in a restricted fashion (WN-UN and UN-UN) until experimentation at age 60 d. Body weights of mothers and their male offspring were monitored. Basal and post-insulin plasma concentrations of several metabolic fuels were evaluated. Our results indicate that 21-d-old UN male rats exhibited (vs their WN counterparts), decreased body weights, similar basal and postinsulin glycemia, similar basal plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and corticosterone levels but diminished ACTH response to insulin treatment, and basal hypoleptinemia and significant insulin-induced leptin release. Finally, at 60 d of age, long-term UN (WN-UN and UN-UN) rats showed lower plasma (basal and postinsulin) glucose, and basal triglyceride levels than their counterparts (WN-WN and UN-WN). Sixty-day-old rats submitted to either food restriction protocol also showed a reduced hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenalaxis response to insulin-induced hypoglycemia and basal hypoleptinemia, in spite of restoration of normal body weights. These results further indicate a clear metabolic-neuroendocrine dysfunction in male pups of UN mothers, with the abnormality partially present at weaning and deteriorated by adulthood, even after the recovery of normal body weight. Our study strongly supports the importance of the irreversibility of a deleterious allostatic state resulting from fetal and early postnatal undernutrition.


Neuroimmunomodulation | 2000

Modulatory Role of the Epinergic System in the Neuroendocrine-Immune System Function

Andrés Giovambattista; Andrea N. Chisari; Rolf C. Gaillard; Eduardo Spinedi

It is well recognized that the reciprocal interaction established between the immune and neuroendocrine systems is crucial for the homeostatic adaptation of individuals during septicemia. In the present study, using an in vivo rat model, we investigated the degree of participation of central and peripheral epinergic systems in the modulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal and immune axes’ functions during endotoxemia. For this purpose, acute endotoxemia was induced in adult male rats pretreated intraperitoneally with either different inhibitors of phenylethanolamine-N-methyltransferase (PNMT) [which are active either peripherally (SKF 29661) or both peripherally and centrally (SKF 64139), thus lowering epinephrine (EPI) synthesis] or vehicle only (CTRL). Twelve hours after pretreatment, animals were intraperitoneally injected with vehicle alone (basal) or vehicle containing bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and sacrificed 2 h later. A significant (p < 0.05 vs. the respective basal value) hypoglycemia was found in all groups studied. No pretreatment modified basal plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), glucocorticoid and cytokine concentrations. Endotoxin-stimulated ACTH secretion was severalfold (p < 0.05) higher than the respective basal value in CTRL and in SKFs-pretreated rats; however, the plasma ACTH levels after LPS were significantly (p < 0.05 vs. CTRL and SKF-29661 values) reduced in SKF-64139-pretreated rats. All groups studied showed an appropriate adrenal response to endotoxin challenge. Although no differences were found in basal anterior pituitary (AP) ACTH content among groups, LPS treatment significantly (p < 0.05 versus the respective basal value) decreased AP ACTH in CTRL and SKF 29661 groups. No pretreatment modified the basal medial basal hypothalamus (MBH) corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) content. Conversely, SKF 64139 pretreatment significantly (p < 0.05 vs. CTRL and SKF 29661 values) reduced basal median eminence (ME) CRH content, and LPS administration significantly (p < 0.05) decreased ME CRH in CTRL and SKF-29661-pretreated rats. SKF 64139 pretreatment significantly (p < 0.05) enhanced basal MBH and ME arginine vasopressin (AVP) contents. LPS administration significantly (p < 0.05) decreased MBH AVP in CTRL and SKF-29661-pretreated rats and diminished (p < 0.05 vs. basal values) ME AVP in all groups. The plasma tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα) concentrations were enhanced severalfold (p < 0.05 vs. basal values) after LPS treatment in CTRL rats, but not in SKFs-treated animals. In order to explore the reduced cytokine release after LPS in PNMT-inhibited rats, additional ex vivo experiments were performed by using peripheral mononuclear cells (PMNC) from both CTRL and SKF-29661-pretreated rats. The results of these experiments confirmed an immune dysfunction after inhibition of peripheral EPI synthesis; in fact, basal and concanavalin-A-stimulated TNFα secretions were significantly (p < 0.05) lower in SKF-29661-treated than in CTRL PMNC, while, interestingly, addition of EPI (10–7 M) to the medium fully restored these effects. These data demonstrate that: (1) the mechanism whereby LPS-induced hypoglycemia was independent of epinergic activity; (2) selective central inhibition of epinergic function reduced endotoxin-stimulated ACTH secretion, an effect that could mainly be due to a decrease in CRH-ergic activity; (3) the central epinergic system positively and negatively modulates CRH- and AVPergic functions, respectively, and (4) inhibition of peripheral PNMT activity reduced immune system function in vivo and ex vivo. It is further suggested that low peripheral levels of EPI could be beneficial for the body’s defense mechanisms during endotoxic shock.


International Journal for Parasitology | 2010

Primary cell culture of Echinococcus granulosus developed from the cystic germinal layer: biological and functional characterization.

Clara M. Albani; María Celina Elissondo; Andrea C. Cumino; Andrea N. Chisari; Guillermo M. Denegri

Cell cultures of parasitic helminths are an invaluable tool for investigations of basic biological processes, as well as for development of improved chemotherapeutic agents and molecular interactions between host and parasite. We carried out a simple and efficient methodology to isolate Echinococcus granulosus germinal cells which were maintained for at least 4 months while cultivated in the presence of reducing agents and hormones. Microscopic analysis of the primary cell culture revealed the presence of cells with similar Echinococcus germinal cell morphology and behaviour. Population doubling time was estimated at 48 h, showing a rapid division rate. To discard possible host contamination, the specificity of the primary culture was tested by nested PCR, analyzing mdh gene expression and obtaining only one product with the expected size. We also studied the expression of specific E. granulosus proteins in primary cell culture. The novel and systematized method described here constitutes a powerful tool for investigations in cystic echinococcosis on biochemical and biological aspects related to the life cycle of the parasite and mechanisms of host-parasite interactions. This method also constitutes a powerful tool for the design of more efficient therapeutic alternatives.


Neuroimmunomodulation | 2001

Maternal Undernutrition Induces Neuroendocrine Immune Dysfunction in Male Pups at Weaning

Andrea N. Chisari; Andrés Giovambattista; Mario Perello; Rolf C. Gaillard; Eduardo Spinedi

The present study was designed to assess the effect of maternal undernutrition, during gestation and lactation, on the neuroendocrine [hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)]-immune axis response to endotoxin (LPS) administration. For this purpose, 21-day-old male rats from both well-nourished (WN) and undernourished (UN) mothers were examined 2 h after injection (i.p.) of vehicle alone (VEH) or containing LPS (130 µg/kg BW). Circulating levels of glucose (GLU), ACTH, corticosterone (B), tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFα) and leptin were explored. The results indicate that: (a) mother body weight was significantly (p < 0.05) reduced, as a consequence of UN, at the second and third weeks of pregnancy; (b) no differences in basal glycemia were found in the two groups of pups, and LPS treatment did not induce hypoglycemia, in either group; (c) basal plasma ACTH, B and TNFα levels were similar in the two groups, and LPS-induced ACTH, B and TNFα secretions, although severalfold higher than respective VEH values (p < 0.05) in pups from WN mothers, were fully (ACTH and B) and partially (TNFα) abolished in products from UN mothers; (d) both mean body weights and basal plasma leptin levels were significantly (p < 0.05) lower in pups from UN than from WN mothers, and LPS administration did not modify plasma leptin values in products from both groups. In addition, results of dispersed total adrenal cells incubated in vitro indicate that: (a) both basal and ACTH (22 pM)-induced B secretion were significantly (p < 0.05) lower in cells from UN than WN pups, and (b) leptin (100 nM) was able to inhibit partially ACTH-stimulated B output by adrenal gland (AG) cells from WN pups; however, it failed to inhibit ACTH-stimulated glucocorticoid release by AG cells from UN pups. The present results indicate that undernutrition in mothers, during the very critical periods of gestation and lactation, induces in their male pups at weaning: (a) reduced circulating leptin levels and body weight values; (b) metabolic adaptation to normal carbohydrate metabolism; (c) hyporesponsiveness of the HPA and immune (TNFα) axes during endotoxemia, and (d) leptin resistance at the adrenocortical level. This study strongly supports that undernutrition of mothers results in neuroendocrine immune dysfunction of their pups; however, adrenal resistance to the inhibitory effect of leptin on glucocorticoid output is developed, probably as an adaptive mechanism to counteract unfavorable metabolic conditions.

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Eduardo Spinedi

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Andrés Giovambattista

National University of La Plata

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Eduardo Spinedi

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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Marcelo J. Perone

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Monica Carino

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Mario Perello

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Senlin Li

University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio

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