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Dive into the research topics where Anton B. Tonchev is active.

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Featured researches published by Anton B. Tonchev.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2005

Enhanced Proliferation of Progenitor Cells in the Subventricular Zone and Limited Neuronal Production in the Striatum and Neocortex of Adult Macaque Monkeys After Global Cerebral Ischemia

Anton B. Tonchev; Tetsumori Yamashima; Kazunobu Sawamoto; Hideyuki Okano

Cerebral ischemia in adult rodent models increases the proliferation of endogenous neural progenitor cells residing in the subventricular zone along the anterior horn of the lateral ventricle (SVZa) and induces neurogenesis in the postischemic striatum and cortex. Whether the adult primate brain preserves a similar ability in response to an ischemic insult is uncertain. We used the DNA synthesis indicator bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) to label newly generated cells in adult macaque monkeys and show here that the proliferation of cells with a progenitor phenotype (double positive for BrdU and the markers Musashi1, Nestin, and βIII‐tubulin) in SVZa increased during the second week after a 20‐min transient global brain ischemia. Subsequent progenitor migration seemed restricted to the rostral migratory stream toward the olfactory bulb and ischemia increased the proportion of adult‐generated cells retaining their location in SVZa with a progenitor phenotype. Despite the lack of evidence for progenitor cell migration toward the postischemic striatum or prefrontal neocortex, a small but sustained proportion of BrdU‐labeled cells expressed features of postmitotic neurons (positive for the protein NeuN and the transcription factors Tbr1 and Islet1) in these two regions for at least 79 days after ischemia. Taken together, our data suggest an enhanced neurogenic response in the adult primate telencephalon after a cerebral ischemic insult.


Neuroscience Research | 2007

Expression of free fatty acid receptor GPR40 in the central nervous system of adult monkeys.

Dexuan Ma; Bangbao Tao; Shogo Warashina; Susumu Kotani; Li Lu; Desislav B. Kaplamadzhiev; Yoshimi Mori; Anton B. Tonchev; Tetsumori Yamashima

The G-protein coupled receptor 40 (GRP40) is a transmembrane receptor for free fatty acids, and is known for its relation to insulin secretion in the pancreas. Recent studies demonstrated that spatial memory and hippocampal long-term potentiation of rodents and cognitive function of humans are improved by a dietary supplementation with arachidonic and/or docosahexaenoic acids, which are possible ligands for GPR40. While free fatty acid effects on the brain might be related to GPR40 activation, the role of GPR40 in the central nervous system (CNS) is at present not known. Here, we studied expression and distribution of GPR40 in CNS of adult monkeys by immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry. Immunoblotting analysis showed a band of approximately 31 kDa consistent with the size of GPR40 protein. GPR40 immunoreactivity of was observed in the nuclei and/or perikarya of a wide variety of neurons including neurons in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, hypothalamus, cerebellum, spinal cord. In addition, astrocytes of the cerebral white matter, the molecular layer and multiform layer of the cerebral cortex, the subventricular zone along the anterior horn of the lateral ventricle, and the subgranular zone of the hippocampal dentate gyrus showed GPR40 immunoreactivity. The present data first provide a morphological basis for clarifying the role of GPR40 in the primate CNS.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Selective Cortical Layering Abnormalities and Behavioral Deficits in Cortex-Specific Pax6 Knock-Out Mice

Tran Cong Tuoc; Konstantin Radyushkin; Anton B. Tonchev; Maria Carmen Piñon; Ruth Ashery-Padan; Zoltán Molnár; Michail S. Davidoff; Anastassia Stoykova

The transcription factor Pax6 has been implicated in neocortical neurogenesis in vertebrates, including humans. Analyses of the role of Pax6 in layer formation and cognitive abilities have been hampered by perinatal lethality of Pax6 mutants. Here, we generated viable mutants exhibiting timed, restricted inactivation of Pax6 during early and late cortical neurogenesis using Emx1-Cre and hGFAP-Cre lines, respectively. The disruption of Pax6 at the onset of neurogenesis using Emx1-Cre line resulted in premature cell cycle exit of early progenitors, increase of early born neuronal subsets located in the marginal zone and lower layers, and a nearly complete absence of upper layer neurons, especially in the rostral cortex. Furthermore, progenitors, which accumulated in the enlarged germinal neuroepithelium at the pallial/subpallial border in the Pax6 mutants, produced an excess of oligodendrocytes. The inactivation of Pax6 after generation of the lower neuronal layers using hGFAP-Cre line did not affect specification or numbers of late-born neurons, indicating that the severe reduction of upper layer neurons in Pax6 deficiency is mostly attributable to a depletion of the progenitor pool, available for late neurogenesis. We further show that Pax6fl/fl;Emx1-Cre mutants exhibited deficiencies in sensorimotor information integration, and both hippocampus-dependent short-term and neocortex-dependent long-term memory recall. Because a majority of the morphological and behavior disabilities of the Pax6 mutant mice parallel abnormalities reported for aniridia patients, a condition caused by PAX6 haploinsufficiency, the Pax6 conditional mutant mice generated here represent a valuable genetic tool to understand how the developmental cortical disruption can lead to a human behavior abnormality.


Glia | 2003

Differential proliferative response in the postischemic hippocampus, temporal cortex, and olfactory bulb of young adult macaque monkeys.

Anton B. Tonchev; Tetsumori Yamashima; Liang Zhao; Hideyuki Okano

We investigated the fate of proliferating cells in the adult monkey brain after global ischemia. We used the thymidine analogue bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU) to label S‐phase cells and their progeny in Japanese macaques subjected to global cerebral ischemia for 20 min or to a sham operation. Subsequently, newly generated cells were identified by BrdU immunohistochemistry, and their immunophenotype was determined quantitatively, using specific markers. The ischemic insult significantly increased the number of proliferating cells in the hippocampus and temporal neocortex, where the majority BrdU‐labeled cells expressed markers for microglia (Iba1, CD68, and Ham56) or astrocytes (S‐100β and glial fibrillary acidic protein [GFAP]). In contrast, the proliferation level in the parahippocampal region remained unchanged. This discrepancy prompted us to investigate the postischemic response in the olfactory bulb, a well‐known site of adult cell generation that is anatomically distant from the above‐mentioned regions but that is also subjected to the global ischemic insult. The olfactory bulb contained clusters of proliferating cells expressing markers for neural (Musashi1 and Nestin) and/or neuronal (class III β‐tubulin) progenitors; these were immunophenotypically distinct from other cell types. Their number and distribution were unaltered by ischemia. Our results demonstrate that cell proliferation and differentiation in the adult macaque brain and olfactory bulb are differentially affected by a common insult. GLIA 42:209–224, 2003.


Cell Death and Disease | 2014

The autophagy regulators Ambra1 and Beclin 1 are required for adult neurogenesis in the brain subventricular zone.

M Yazdankhah; S Farioli-Vecchioli; Anton B. Tonchev; Anastassia Stoykova; Francesco Cecconi

Autophagy is a conserved proteolytic mechanism required for maintaining cellular homeostasis. The role of this process in vertebrate neural development is related to metabolic needs and stress responses, even though the importance of its progression has been observed in a number of circumstances, both in embryonic and in postnatal differentiating tissues. Here we show that the proautophagic proteins Ambra1 and Beclin 1, involved in the initial steps of autophagosome formation, are highly expressed in the adult subventricular zone (SVZ), whereas their downregulation in adult neural stem cells in vitro leads to a decrease in cell proliferation, an increase in basal apoptosis and an augmented sensitivity to DNA-damage-induced death. Further, Beclin 1 heterozygosis in vivo results in a significant reduction of proliferating cells and immature neurons in the SVZ, accompanied by a marked increase in apoptotic cell death. In sum, we propose that Ambra1- and Beclin 1-mediated autophagy plays a crucial role in adult neurogenesis, by controlling the survival of neural precursor cells.


Neuroscience | 2007

Expression of angiogenic and neurotrophic factors in the progenitor cell niche of adult monkey subventricular zone

Anton B. Tonchev; Tetsumori Yamashima; Jianzhong Guo; G.N. Chaldakov; Nobuyuki Takakura

The subventricular zone along the anterior horn (SVZa) of the cerebral lateral ventricle of adult mammals contains multipotent progenitor cells, which supposedly exist in an angiogenic niche. Numerous signals are known to modulate the precursor cell proliferation, migration or differentiation, in rodent models. In contrast, the data on signals regulating the primate SVZa precursors in vivo are scarce. We analyzed the expression at protein level of a panel of angiogenic and/or neurotrophic factors and their receptors in SVZa of adult macaque monkeys, under normal condition or after transient global ischemia which enhances endogenous progenitor cell proliferation. We found that fms-like tyrosine kinase 1 (Flt1), a receptor for vascular endothelial cell growth factor, was expressed by over 30% of the proliferating progenitors, and the number of Flt1-positive precursors was significantly increased by the ischemic insult. Smaller fractions of mitotic progenitors were positive for the neurotrophin receptor tropomyosin-related kinase (Trk) B or the hematopoietic receptor Kit, while immature neurons expressed Flt1 and the neurotrophin receptor TrkA. Further, SVZa astroglia, ependymal cells and blood vessels were positive for distinctive sets of ligands/receptors, which we characterized. The presented data provide a molecular phenotypic analysis of cell types comprising adult monkey SVZa, and suggest that a complex network of angiogenic/neurotrophic signals operating in an autocrine or paracrine manner may regulate SVZa neurogenesis in the adult primate brain.


Brain Research | 2003

Accumulation of microglial cells expressing ELR motif-positive CXC chemokines and their receptor CXCR2 in monkey hippocampus after ischemia-reperfusion.

Boryana K. Popivanova; Koji Koike; Anton B. Tonchev; Yuko Ishida; Toshikazu Kondo; Satoshi Ogawa; Naofumi Mukaida; Masaki Inoue; Tetsumori Yamashima

ELR(+) CXC chemokines including IL-8 are known to be involved in the ischemia-reperfusion injuries in various organs including rodent brain. However, the roles of these chemokines during the ischemia-reperfusion injuries of the primate brain still remain unknown. Here, we studied expressions of CXC chemokines and their receptor CXCR2 in monkey hippocampus known to develop total CA1 neuronal loss on day 5 after 20-min ischemia and reperfusion. ELR(+) chemokines and their receptor CXCR2 were not detected in the hippocampus of non-ischemic monkeys. On the contrary, at 30-60 min after the start of reperfusion, CD68-positive microglial cells increased significantly in the hippocampal CA1 sector, but there was negligible infiltration of neutrophils. These microglial cells expressed simultaneously growth regulated oncogene (Gro)-alpha and other ELR(+) CXC chemokines. Moreover, CD68-positive microglial cells also expressed the receptor for ELR(+) CXC chemokines. On day 4, capillary endothelial cells were significantly increased in the CA1 sector. Considering that ELR(+) CXC chemokines have potent angiogenic activities, the coordinate expression of ELR(+) CXC chemokines and their receptor CXCR2 in microglial cells may be related not only to the ischemic brain injuries but also to the microglial and capillary proliferation in the monkey hippocampus.


Experimental Neurology | 2006

Differential neurogenic potential of progenitor cells in dentate gyrus and CA1 sector of the postischemic adult monkey hippocampus

Anton B. Tonchev; Tetsumori Yamashima

The adult mammalian hippocampus contains neural progenitor cells capable of neuronal production under normal conditions. Cerebral injuries such as ischemia lead to their upregulation in rodent models, resulting in neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus (DG) and CA1 sector. The adult primate DG also has neurogenic potential under normal conditions, and we have previously shown that transient global cerebral ischemia increases progenitor cell proliferation in monkey DG, with a peak in the second postischemic week. Until now, however, long-term effects of ischemia on adult-generated cells in the primate hippocampus have not been described. We show here that nearly 15% of the adult-generated cells in monkey DG express neuronal features in the dentate granule layer for at least 79 days after the insult. At the same time, most adult-born cells in DG sustained their localization in the subgranular zone with an immature progenitor phenotype. In contrast to DG, no signs of neuronal production were observed in the postischemic hippocampus proper and in particular in the CA1 sector, where the newly-born cells were consistently of glial phenotype. Proliferating progenitors in DG but not in the subventricular zone adjacent to CA1 expressed the pro-neural transcription factors Emx2, Pax6 and Ngn2. Taken together, these results suggest that the neuronal production in adult monkey hippocampus after global brain ischemia is limited to DG and does not occur in the hippocampus proper. The present data implicate the proteins Emx2, Pax6 and Ngn2 as putative molecular signals controlling the fate of progenitor cells of the adult primate hippocampus.


Neuroscience Letters | 2004

Expression of estrogen receptor-β in the postischemic monkey hippocampus

Noriko Takahashi; Anton B. Tonchev; Koji Koike; Kouichi Murakami; Kiyofumi Yamada; Tetsumori Yamashima; Masaki Inoue

Abstract The molecular basis of estrogen-mediated neuroprotection against brain ischemia remains obscure. Here, we studied by immunohistochemistry the expression of estrogen receptor (ER) α and β in the hippocampal CA1 sector of postischemic adult macaque monkeys. ERβ was present in control CA1 pyramidal neurons, decreasing on day 4 after ischemia. In contrast, ERβ immunoreactivity increased remarkably in the radiate and molecular layers of CA1, where it was present in astrocytes and microglia. ERα was negligible in both control and postischemic monkeys. These results indicate that ERβ is the major receptor responsible for the direct estrogen actions on the monkey hippocampus, regulating glial response after ischemia.


Archives Italiennes De Biologie | 2011

Brain ischemia, neurogenesis, and neurotrophic receptor expression in primates.

Anton B. Tonchev

Generation of new neurons persists in the normal adult mammalian brain, with neural stem/progenitor cells residing in at least two brain regions: the subventricular zone (SVZ) of the lateral ventricle and the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the dentate gyrus (DG). Adult neurogenesis is well documented in the rodent, and has also been demonstrated in vivo in nonhuman primates and humans. Brain injuries such as ischemia affect neurogenesis in adult rodents as both global and focal ischemic insults enhance the proliferation of progenitor cells residing in SGZ or SVZ. We addressed the issue whether an injury triggered activation of endogenous neuronal precursors also takes place in the adult primate brain. We found that the ischemic insult increased the number of progenitor cells in monkey SGZ and SVZ, and caused gliogenesis in the ischemia-prone hippocampal CA1 sector. To better understand the mechanisms regulating precursor cell division and differentiation in the primate, we analyzed the expression at protein level of a panel of potential regulatory molecules, including neurotrophic factors and their receptors. We found that a fraction of mitotic progenitors were positive for the neurotrophin receptor TrkB, while immature neurons expressed the neurotrophin receptor TrkA. Astroglia, ependymal cells and blood vessels in SVZ were positive for distinctive sets of ligands/receptors, which we characterized. Thus, a network of neurotrophic signals operating in an autocrine or paracrine manner may regulate neurogenesis in adult primate SVZ. We also analyzed microglial and astroglial proliferation in postischemic hippocampal CA1 sector. We found that proliferating postischemic microglia in adult monkey CA1 sector express the neurotrophin receptor TrkA, while activated astrocytes were labeled for nerve growth factor (NGF), ligand for TrkA, and the tyrosine kinase TrkB, a receptor for brain derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). These results implicate NGF and BDNF as regulators of postischemic glial proliferation in adult primate hippocampus.

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Deyan Dzhenkov

Medical University of Varna

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