Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Antônio M. Rodrigues is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Antônio M. Rodrigues.


Epilepsia | 2008

Mechanistic hypotheses for nonsynaptic epileptiform activity induction and its transition from the interictal to ictal state—Computational simulation

Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Antônio M. Rodrigues; Fulvio A. Scorza; Esper A. Cavalheiro; Hewerson Z. Teixeira; Mário A. Duarte; Gilcélio Amaral da Silveira; Emerson Z. Arruda

Purpose:  The aim of this work is to study, by means of computational simulations, the induction and sustaining of nonsynaptic epileptiform activity.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Effects of Anterior Thalamic Nucleus Deep Brain Stimulation in Chronic Epileptic Rats

Luciene Covolan; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Beatriz Amorim; Clarissa Fantin Cavarsan; Maísa Ferreira Miranda; Mayra C. Aarão; Ana Paula Madureira; Antônio M. Rodrigues; José N. Nobrega; Luiz E. Mello; Clement Hamani

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) has been investigated for the treatment of epilepsy. In rodents, an increase in the latency for the development of seizures and status epilepticus (SE) has been reported in different animal models but the consequences of delivering stimulation to chronic epileptic animals have not been extensively addressed. We study the effects of anterior thalamic nucleus (AN) stimulation at different current intensities in rats rendered epileptic following pilocarpine (Pilo) administration. Four months after Pilo-induced SE, chronic epileptic rats were bilaterally implanted with AN electrodes or had sham-surgery. Stimulation was delivered for 6 h/day, 5 days/week at 130 Hz, 90 µsec. and either 100 µA or 500 µA. The frequency of spontaneous recurrent seizures in animals receiving stimulation was compared to that recorded in the preoperative period and in rats given sham treatment. To investigate the effects of DBS on hippocampal excitability, brain slices from animals receiving AN DBS or sham surgery were studied with electrophysiology. We found that rats treated with AN DBS at 100 µA had a 52% non-significant reduction in the frequency of seizures as compared to sham-treated controls and 61% less seizures than at baseline. Animals given DBS at 500 µA had 5.1 times more seizures than controls and a 2.8 fold increase in seizure rate as compared to preoperative values. In non-stimulated controls, the average frequency of seizures before and after surgery remained unaltered. In vitro recordings have shown that slices from animals previously given DBS at 100 µA had a longer latency for the development of epileptiform activity, shorter and smaller DC shifts, and a smaller spike amplitude compared to non-stimulated controls. In contrast, a higher spike amplitude was recorded in slices from animals given AN DBS at 500 µA.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2014

Role of adenosine in the antiepileptic effects of deep brain stimulation

Maísa Ferreira Miranda; Clement Hamani; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Beatriz Amorim; Carlos Eduardo Macedo; Maria José da Silva Fernandes; José N. Nobrega; Mayra C. Aarão; Ana Paula Madureira; Antônio M. Rodrigues; Monica L. Andersen; Sergio Tufik; Luiz E. Mello; Luciene Covolan

Despite the effectiveness of anterior thalamic nucleus (AN) deep brain stimulation (DBS) for the treatment of epilepsy, mechanisms responsible for the antiepileptic effects of this therapy remain elusive. As adenosine modulates neuronal excitability and seizure activity in animal models, we hypothesized that this nucleoside could be one of the substrates involved in the effects of AN DBS. We applied 5 days of stimulation to rats rendered chronically epileptic by pilocarpine injections and recorded epileptiform activity in hippocampal slices. We found that slices from animals given DBS had reduced hippocampal excitability and were less susceptible to develop ictal activity. In live animals, AN DBS significantly increased adenosine levels in the hippocampus as measured by microdialysis. The reduced excitability of DBS in vitro was completely abolished in animals pre-treated with A1 receptor antagonists and was strongly potentiated by A1 receptor agonists. We conclude that some of the antiepileptic effects of DBS may be mediated by adenosine.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Alcohol Abuse Promotes Changes in Non-Synaptic Epileptiform Activity with Concomitant Expression Changes in Cotransporters and Glial Cells

Luiz Eduardo Canton Santos; Gilcélio Amaral da Silveira; Victor Diego Cupertino Costa; Aline Gisele Batista; Ana Paula Madureira; Antônio M. Rodrigues; Carla A. Scorza; Henrique Amorim; Ricardo Mario Arida; Mário A. Duarte; Fulvio A. Scorza; Esper A. Cavalheiro; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida

Non-synaptic mechanisms are being considered the common factor of brain damage in status epilepticus and alcohol intoxication. The present work reports the influence of the chronic use of ethanol on epileptic processes sustained by non-synaptic mechanisms. Adult male Wistar rats administered with ethanol (1, 2 e 3 g/kg/d) during 28 days were compared with Control. Non-synaptic epileptiform activities (NEAs) were induced by means of the zero-calcium and high-potassium model using hippocampal slices. The observed involvement of the dentate gyrus (DG) on the neurodegeneration promoted by ethanol motivated the monitoring of the electrophysiological activity in this region. The DG regions were analyzed for the presence of NKCC1, KCC2, GFAP and CD11b immunoreactivity and cell density. The treated groups showed extracellular potential measured at the granular layer with increased DC shift and population spikes (PS), which was remarkable for the group E1. The latencies to the NEAs onset were more prominent also for the treated groups, being correlated with the neuronal loss. In line with these findings were the predispositions of the treated slices for neuronal edema after NEAs induction, suggesting that restrict inter-cell space counteracts the neuronal loss and subsists the hyper-synchronism. The significant increase of the expressions of NKCC1 and CD11b for the treated groups confirms the existence of conditions favorable to the observed edematous necrosis. The data suggest that the ethanol consumption promotes changes on the non-synaptic mechanisms modulating the NEAs. For the lower ethanol dosage the neurophysiological changes were more effective suggesting to be due to the less intense neurodegenertation.


Epilepsy & Behavior | 2016

Effects of A1 receptor agonist/antagonist on spontaneous seizures in pilocarpine-induced epileptic rats

Beatriz Amorim; Clement Hamani; Elenn Soares Ferreira; Maísa Ferreira Miranda; Maria José da Silva Fernandes; Antônio M. Rodrigues; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Luciene Covolan

Adenosine is an endogenous anticonvulsant that activates pre- and postsynaptic adenosine A1 receptors. A1 receptor agonists increase the latency for the development of seizures and status epilepticus following pilocarpine administration. Although hippocampal adenosine is increased in the chronic phase of the pilocarpine model, it is not known whether the modulation of A1 receptors may influence the frequency of spontaneous recurrent seizures (SRS). Here, we tested the hypothesis that the A1 receptor agonist RPia ([R]-N-phenylisopropyladenosine) and the A1 antagonist DPCPX (8-Cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine) administered to chronic pilocarpine epileptic rats would respectively decrease and increase the frequency of SRS and hippocampal excitability. Four months after Pilo-induced SE, chronic epileptic rats were video-monitored for the recording of SRS before (basal) and after a 2-week treatment with RPia (25μg/kg) or DPCPX (50μg/kg). Following sacrifice, brain slices were studied with electrophysiology. We found that rats given RPia had a 93% nonsignificant reduction in the frequency of seizures compared with their own pretreatment baseline. In contrast, the administration of DPCPX resulted in an 87% significant increase in seizure rate. Nontreated epileptic rats had a similar frequency of seizures along the study. Corroborating our behavioral data, in vitro recordings showed that slices from animals previously given DPCPX had a shorter latency to develop epileptiform activity, longer and higher DC shifts, and higher spike amplitude compared with slices from nontreated Pilo controls. In contrast, smaller spike amplitude was recorded in slices from animals given RPia. In summary, the administration of A1 agonists reduced hippocampal excitability but not the frequency of spontaneous recurrent seizures in chronic epileptic rats, whereas A1 receptor antagonists increased both.


Neuroscience | 2015

Enhanced nonsynaptic epileptiform activity in the dentate gyrus after kainate-induced status epilepticus

Graça Nogueira; Luiz Eduardo Canton Santos; Antônio M. Rodrigues; CarlaA Scorza; F.A. Scorza; Esper A. Cavalheiro; A.C. de Almeida

Understanding the mechanisms that influence brain excitability and synchronization provides hope that epileptic seizures can be controlled. In this scenario, non-synaptic mechanisms have a critical role in seizure activity. The contribution of ion transporters to the regulation of seizure-like activity has not been extensively studied. Here, we examined how non-synaptic epileptiform activity (NEA) in the CA1 and dentate gyrus (DG) regions of the hippocampal formation were affected by kainic acid (KA) administration. NEA enhancement in the DG and suppression in area CA1 were associated with increased NKCC1 expression in neurons and severe neuronal loss accompanied by marked glial proliferation, respectively. Twenty-four hours after KA, the DG exhibited intense microglial activation that was associated with reduced cell density in the infra-pyramidal lamina; however, cellular density recovered 7 days after KA. Intense Ki67 immunoreactivity was observed in the subgranular proliferative zone of the DG, which indicates new neuron incorporation into the granule layer. In addition, bumetanide, a selective inhibitor of neuronal Cl(-) uptake mediated by NKCC1, was used to confirm that the NKCC1 increase effectively contributed to NEA changes in the DG. Furthermore, 7 days after KA, prominent NKCC1 staining was identified in the axon initial segments of granule cells, at the exact site where action potentials are preferentially initiated, which endowed these neurons with increased excitability. Taken together, our data suggest a key role of NKCC1 in NEA in the DG.


Computational Intelligence and Neuroscience | 2013

Enhanced Synaptic Connectivity in the Dentate Gyrus during Epileptiform Activity: Network Simulation

Keite Lira de Almeida França; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Antonio Fernando Catelli Infantosi; Mário A. Duarte; Gilcélio Amaral da Silveira; Fulvio A. Scorza; Ricardo Mario Arida; Esper A. Cavalheiro; Antônio M. Rodrigues

Structural rearrangement of the dentate gyrus has been described as the underlying cause of many types of epilepsies, particularly temporal lobe epilepsy. It is said to occur when aberrant connections are established in the damaged hippocampus, as described in human epilepsy and experimental models. Computer modelling of the dentate gyrus circuitry and the corresponding structural changes has been used to understand how abnormal mossy fibre sprouting can subserve seizure generation observed in experimental models when epileptogenesis is induced by status epilepticus. The model follows the McCulloch-Pitts formalism including the representation of the nonsynaptic mechanisms. The neuronal network comprised granule cells, mossy cells, and interneurons. The compensation theory and the Hebbian and anti-Hebbian rules were used to describe the structural rearrangement including the effects of the nonsynaptic mechanisms on the neuronal activity. The simulations were based on neuroanatomic data and on the connectivity pattern between the cells represented. The results suggest that there is a joint action of the compensation theory and Hebbian rules during the inflammatory process that accompanies the status epilepticus. The structural rearrangement simulated for the dentate gyrus circuitry promotes speculation about the formation of the abnormal mossy fiber sprouting and its role in epileptic seizures.


Computational Biology and Chemistry | 2009

Research Article: Investigating the potassium interactions with the palytoxin induced channels in Na+/K+ pump

Antônio M. Rodrigues; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Antonio Fernando Catelli Infantosi; Hewerson Z. Teixeira; Mário A. Duarte

K(+) has been appointed as the main physiological inhibitor of the palytoxin (PTX) effect on the Na(+)/K(+) pump. This toxin acts opening monovalent cationic channels through the Na(+)/K(+) pump. We investigate, by means of computational modeling, the kinetic mechanisms related with K(+) interacting with the complex PTX-Na(+)/K(+) pump. First, a reaction model, with structure similar to Albers-Post model, describing the functional cycle of the pump, was proposed for describing K(+) interference on the complex PTX-Na(+)/K(+) pump in the presence of intracellular ATP. A mathematic model was derived from the reaction model and it was possible to solve numerically the associated differential equations and to simulate experimental maneuvers about the PTX induced currents in the presence of K(+) in the intra- and extracellular space as well as ATP in the intracellular. After the model adjusting to the experimental data, a Monte Carlo method for sensitivity analysis was used to analyze how each reaction parameter acts during each experimental maneuver involving PTX. For ATP and K(+) concentrations conditions, the simulations suggest that the enzyme substate with ATP bound to its high-affinity sites is the main substate for the PTX binding. The activation rate of the induced current is limited by the K(+) deocclusion from the PTX-Na(+)/K(+) pump complex. The K(+) occlusion in the PTX induced channels in the enzymes with ATP bound to its low-affinity sites is the main mechanism responsible for the reduction of the enzyme affinity to PTX.


Computational Biology and Chemistry | 2008

Research Article: Identifying essential conditions for refractoriness of Leão's spreading depression-Computational modeling

Hewerson Z. Teixeira; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Antonio Fernando Catelli Infantosi; Antônio M. Rodrigues; Natália L. Costa; Mário A. Duarte

A mathematical description of the restoring ionic mechanisms in a compartmentalized electrochemical model of neuronal tissues was developed aiming at studying the essential conditions for refractoriness of Leãos spreading depression (SD). The model comprehends the representation of a plexiform layer, composed by synaptic terminals and glial process immersed in an extracellular space where the space-temporal variations of the ionic concentrations were described by electrodiffusion equations. The synaptic transmission was described by differential equations representing the corresponding chemical reactions associated with the neurotransmitter release, diffusion, binding to its receptor in the postsynaptic membrane and the uptake by the presynaptic terminals. The effect of the neurotransmitter binding to the receptor induces changes in the permeability of the postsynaptic membrane and the corresponding transmembrane fluxes were calculated. The fluxes promote changes in the external ionic concentrations, changing the ionic electrodiffusion through the extracellular space. The description of these mechanisms provides the reaction-diffusion structure of the model and allows simulating the wave propagation. The simulations of experimental maneuvers of application of two consecutive stimuli for inducing SD suggest: (i) the extracellular space acts coupling the postsynaptic terminals and glial cells recovery mechanisms in such a way that the extracellular ionic concentrations change only during the wave front; (ii) the potassium removed from the extracellular by the glial cells, originated from the depolarization of the synaptic terminals returns slowly limited by the glial release, contributing for the refractoriness of the tissue; (iii) critical points for sodium and potassium transmembrane fluxes could be identified, allowing proposing specific conditions for the interplay between channels and pumps fluxes for determining the absolute and relative refractory periods.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2017

Physical Exercise Restores the Generation of Newborn Neurons in an Animal Model of Chronic Epilepsy

Fabricio N. Mendonça; Luiz Eduardo Canton Santos; Antônio M. Rodrigues; Sérgio Gomes da Silva; Ricardo Mario Arida; Gilcélio Amaral da Silveira; Fulvio A. Scorza; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida

Neurogenesis impairment is associated with the chronic phase of the epilepsy in humans and also observed in animal models. Recent studies with animal models have shown that physical exercise is capable of improving neurogenesis in adult subjects, alleviating cognitive impairment and depression. Here, we show that there is a reduction in the generation of newborn granule cells in the dentate gyrus of adult rats subjected to a chronic model of epilepsy during the postnatal period of brain development. We also show that the physical exercise was capable to restore the number of newborn granule cells in this animals to the level observed in the control group. Notably, a larger number of newborn granule cells exhibiting morphological characteristics indicative of correct targeting into the hippocampal circuitry and the absence of basal dendrite projections was also observed in the epileptic animals subjected to physical exercise compared to the epileptic animals. The results described here could represent a positive interference of the physical exercise on the neurogenesis process in subjects with chronic epilepsy. The results may also help to reinterpret the benefits of the physical exercise in alleviating symptoms of depression and cognitive dysfunction.

Collaboration


Dive into the Antônio M. Rodrigues's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida

Universidade Federal de São João del-Rei

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fulvio A. Scorza

Federal University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Esper A. Cavalheiro

Federal University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mário A. Duarte

Universidade Federal de São João del-Rei

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Luiz Eduardo Canton Santos

Universidade Federal de São João del-Rei

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ricardo Mario Arida

Federal University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carla A. Scorza

Federal University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gilcélio Amaral da Silveira

Universidade Federal de São João del-Rei

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Luciene Covolan

Federal University of São Paulo

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge