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Dive into the research topics where Arturo Romano is active.

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Featured researches published by Arturo Romano.


Brain Research | 2000

Participation of Rel/NF-κB transcription factors in long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus

Ramiro Freudenthal; Arturo Romano

The induction of gene expression has been correlated with long-lasting neuronal plasticity and long-term memory (LTM) formation. The fast activation of constitutive transcription factors by signaling mechanisms is thought to be the link between synaptic events and gene expression. However, only one constitutive transcription factor, CREB, has been shown to play a key role in several memory paradigms, both in vertebrates and invertebrates. Here, we report evidences for Rel/NFkappa-B constitutive transcription factors participation in memory. Using the LTM paradigm in the crab Chasmagnathus, an enhancement of NFkappa-B DNA-binding activity was found after spaced training, which induces LTM, but not after massed training which yields an intermediate-term memory (ITM). Such finding is correlated with the requirement of protein synthesis for LTM consolidation but not for ITM. Furthermore, NFkappa-B activation was observed after 15 or 30 training trials, which are sufficient to induce LTM, but not after 5 or 10 trials, a number of trials insufficient to induce LTM. The kinetics of activation was studied and two waves of DNA-binding activity were found, similar to the time course described in other systems. NFkappa-B activation after training was also found in synaptosomal extracts. The latter result supports the hypothesis of a novel synapse-to-nucleus signaling system, in which the transcription factor is locally activated by synaptic events and then transported to the nucleus.


Neuroscience | 2002

The IκB kinase inhibitor sulfasalazine impairs long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus

Emiliano Merlo; Ramiro Freudenthal; Arturo Romano

Evidence for the participation of Rel/NF-kappaB transcription factors in long-term memory has recently been reported in the context-signal learning paradigm of the crab Chasmagnathus, in which a high correlation between long-term memory formation and NF-kappaB activation was observed. Two components of the NF-kappaB pathway in the crab brain have now been identified by cross-immunoreactivity using mammalian antibodies for IkappaB-alpha and IkappaB kinase alpha. Furthermore, IkappaB kinase-like phosphotransferase activity, which was inhibited by the IkappaB kinase inhibitor sulfasalazine, was detected in brain extracts. We have evaluated the effect of sulfasalazine administration on long-term memory tested at 48 h. Amnesia was found when sulfasalazine was administered pre-training and 5 h after training but not at 0 or 24 h after training. Thus, two periods for sulfasalazine-induced amnesia were found in coincidence with the two phases of NF-kappaB activation previously described (immediately and 6 h after training). The cyclooxygenase inhibitor indomethacin did not induce amnesia when administered pre-training. Thus, the possibility that sulfasalazine induces amnesia by means of cyclooxygenase inhibition is unlikely to be tenable. In vivo sulfasalazine inhibition of basal NF-kappaB activity was found between 30 and 45 min after injection, as assessed by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. On the other hand, in vivo sulfasalazine administration 6 h after training inhibited the second phase of training-induced NF-kappaB activation, providing evidence that the sulfasalazine effect on memory is due to a direct effect of the drug on the NF-kappaB pathway. These results provide the first evidence that IkappaB kinase and NF-kappaB activation are necessary for memory formation.


Neuroscience Letters | 1998

κ-B like DNA-binding activity is enhanced after spaced training that induces long-term memory in the crab Chasmagnathus

Ramiro Freudenthal; Fernando Locatelli; Gabriela Hermitte; Héctor Maldonado; Carlos Lafourcade; Alejandro Delorenzi; Arturo Romano

Regulation of gene expression has been involved in long-term memory consolidation. Present results support the role of Rel/ NFkappa-B like activation in this process. In the crab Chasmagnathus, the spaced presentation of 15 or more danger stimuli induces long-term habituation (LTH), while no LTH is observed after a massed training of 600 trials. When a group trained with 30 spaced trials was compared with a passive control group and massed trained groups, a higher level of specific Rel/kappa-B like DNA-binding activity was found in brain nuclear extracts. These results strongly suggest that the enhancement of Rel/kappa-B like DNA-binding activity in the brain is specifically related to LTH formation.


Learning & Behavior | 1998

Context-us association as a determinant of long-term habituation in the crabChasmagnathus

Daniel Tomsic; María Eugenia Pedreira; Arturo Romano; Gabriela Hermitte; Héctor Maldonado

An opaque screen moving overhead elicits an escape response in the crabChasmagnathus that habituates for a long period after just a few presentations. A series of experiments was performed to determine whether the crab’s long-term habituation (LTH) is mediated by an association between contextual cues and the eliciting stimulus.Chasmagnathus failed to exhibit LTH when a visual cue in the experimental environment was changed between training and testing. In addition, long-term exposure to the context in the absence of the eliciting stimulus impaired LTH, both when the exposure preceded the habituation training (latent inhibition) and when the exposure came after the training (extinction). Long exposure to the context alone prior to training also produced a decrease in responsiveness to the eliciting stimulus, which confirmed previous results. However, both effects of long exposure were only manifested when the crabs spent a period of time between exposure and testing out of the experimental context. The results of this paper are interpreted as supporting the view thatChasmagnathus LTH can be understood largely by Wagner’s associative theory of habituation.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

NF-κB transcription factor is required for inhibitory avoidance long-term memory in mice

Ramiro Freudenthal; Mariano M. Boccia; Gabriela B. Acosta; Mariano G. Blake; Emiliano Merlo; Carlos M. Baratti; Arturo Romano

Although it is generally accepted that memory consolidation requires regulation of gene expression, only a few transcription factors (TFs) have been clearly demonstrated to be specifically involved in this process. Increasing research data point to the participation of the Rel/nuclear factor‐κB (NF‐κB) family of TFs in memory and neural plasticity. Here we found that two independent inhibitors of NF‐κB induced memory impairment in the one‐trial step‐through inhibitory avoidance paradigm in mice: post‐training administration of the drug sulfasalazine and 2 h pretraining administration of a double‐stranded DNA oligonucleotide containing the NF‐κB consensus sequence (κB decoy). Conversely, one base mutation of the κB decoy (mut‐κB decoy) injection did not affect long‐term memory. Accordingly, the κB decoy inhibited NF‐κB in hippocampus 2 h after injection but no inhibition was found with mut‐κB decoy administration. A temporal course of hippocampal NF‐κB activity after training was determined. Unexpectedly, an inhibition of NF‐κB was found 15 min after training in shocked and unshocked groups when compared with the naïve group. Hippocampal NF‐κB was activated 45 min after training in both shocked and unshocked groups, decreasing 1 h after training and returning to basal levels 2 and 4 h after training. On the basis of the latter results, we propose that activation of NF‐κB in hippocampus is part of the molecular mechanism involved in the storage of contextual features that constitute the conditioned stimulus representation. The results presented here provide the first evidence to support NF‐κB activity being regulated in hippocampus during consolidation, stressing the role of this TF as a conserved molecular mechanism for memory storage.


Physiology & Behavior | 1990

Long-term habituation to a danger stimulus in the crab Chasmagnathus granulatus

Mariana Lozada; Arturo Romano; Héctor Maldonado

A shadow moving overhead acts as a danger stimulus and elicits an escape response in the crab Chasmagnathus granulatus, that habituates after 15 stimulus presentations at 3-min intervals. Here, the habituation was induced by 3 diverse shadow stimuli and the habituated response persisted after 24 hr in every case. This long-lasting effect failed to appear if the testing stimulus did not keep the same spatial specificity as that of the training one. A partial stimulus generalization was detected, when training and testing stimuli differed in size. The adaptive value of a high danger stimulus specificity in long-term habituation is discussed. Extinction of the long-term habituated response failed to occur although crabs were exposed to the context in the absence of danger stimulation.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Activation of Hippocampal Nuclear Factor-κB by Retrieval Is Required for Memory Reconsolidation

Mariano M. Boccia; Ramiro Freudenthal; Mariano G. Blake; Verónica de la Fuente; Gabriela B. Acosta; Carlos M. Baratti; Arturo Romano

Initially, memory is labile and requires consolidation to become stable. However, several studies support that consolidated memories can undergo a new period of lability after retrieval. The mechanistic differences of this process, termed reconsolidation, with the consolidation process are under debate, including the participation of hippocampus. Up to this point, few reports describe molecular changes and, in particular, transcription factor (TF) involvement in memory restabilization. Increasing evidence supports the participation of the TF nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) in memory consolidation. Here, we demonstrate that the inhibition of NF-κB after memory reactivation impairs retention of a hippocampal-dependent inhibitory avoidance task in mice. We used two independent disruptive strategies to reach this conclusion. First, we administered intracerebroventricular or intrahippocampal sulfasalazine, an inhibitor of IKK (IκB kinase), the kinase that activates NF-κB. Second, we infused intracerebroventricular or intrahippocampal κB decoy, a direct inhibitor of NF-κB consisting of a double-stranded DNA oligonucleotide that contains the κB consensus sequence. When injected immediately after memory retrieval, sulfasalazine or κB decoy (Decoy) impaired long-term retention. In contrast, a one base mutated κB decoy (mDecoy) had no effect. Furthermore, we also found NF-κB activation in the hippocampus, with a peak 15 min after memory retrieval. This activation was earlier than that found during consolidation. Together, these results indicate that NF-κB is an important transcriptional regulator in memory consolidation and reconsolidation in hippocampus, although the temporal kinetics of activation differs between the two processes.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Reconsolidation or Extinction: Transcription Factor Switch in the Determination of Memory Course after Retrieval

V. de la Fuente; Ramiro Freudenthal; Arturo Romano

In fear conditioning, aversive stimuli are readily associated with contextual features. A brief reexposure to the training context causes fear memory reconsolidation, whereas a prolonged reexposure induces memory extinction. The regulation of hippocampal gene expression plays a key role in contextual memory consolidation and reconsolidation. However, the mechanisms that determine whether memory will reconsolidate or extinguish are not known. Here, we demonstrate opposing roles for two evolutionarily related transcription factors in the mouse hippocampus. We found that nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) is required for fear memory reconsolidation. Conversely, calcineurin phosphatase inhibited NF-κB and induced nuclear factor of activated T-cells (NFAT) nuclear translocation in the transition between reconsolidation and extinction. Accordingly, the hippocampal inhibition of both calcineurin and NFAT independently impaired memory extinction, whereas inhibition of NF-κB enhanced memory extinction. These findings represent the first insight into the molecular mechanisms that determine memory reprocessing after retrieval, supporting a transcriptional switch that directs memory toward reconsolidation or extinction. The precise molecular characterization of postretrieval processes has potential importance to the development of therapeutic strategies for fear memory disorders.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Evolutionarily-conserved role of the NF-κB transcription factor in neural plasticity and memory

Arturo Romano; Ramiro Freudenthal; Emiliano Merlo; Aryeh Routtenberg

NF‐κB is an evolutionarily conserved family of transcription factors (TFs) critically involved in basic cellular mechanisms of the immune response, inflammation, development and apoptosis. In spite of the fact that it is expressed in the central nervous system, particularly in areas involved in memory processing, and is activated by signals such as glutamate and Ca2+, its role in neural plasticity and memory has only recently become apparent. A surprising feature of this molecule is its presence within the synapse. An increasing number of reports have called attention to the role of this TF in processes that require long‐term regulation of the synaptic function underlying memory and neural plasticity. Here we review the evidence regarding a dual role for NF‐κB, as both a signalling molecule after its activation at the synapse and a transcriptional regulator upon reaching the nucleus. The specific role of this signal, as well as the general transcriptional mechanism, in the process of memory formation is discussed. Converging lines of evidence summarized here point to a pivotal role for the NF‐κB transcription factor as a direct signalling mechanism in the regulation of gene expression involved in long‐term memory.


Learning & Memory | 2009

Histone acetylation is recruited in consolidation as a molecular feature of stronger memories

Noel Federman; Maria Sol Fustiñana; Arturo Romano

Gene expression is a key process for memory consolidation. Recently, the participation of epigenetic mechanisms like histone acetylation was evidenced in long-term memories. However, until now the training strength required and the persistence of the chromatin acetylation recruited are not well characterized. Here we studied whether histone acetylation is involved in consolidation in invertebrates, whether it depends on the training strength, and whether it is a permanent or transient mechanism. We used a well-characterized memory model in invertebrates, the context-signal memory in crabs. Our results show no changes in histone 3 (H3) acetylation during consolidation of a standard training protocol. However, strong training induced a significant increase in H3 acetylation 1-h post-training, returning to basal levels afterward. Accordingly, the administration of histone deacetylase inhibitors sodium butyrate (NaB) and trichostatin A allowed a weak training to induce long-term memory. NaB enhanced memory in two phases during consolidation. These findings support that H3 acetylation (1) is involved in consolidation, (2) occurs only after strong training, (3) is a transient process, and (4) memory is enhanced in two phases. The coincidence of these phases with other mechanisms of gene expression is discussed.

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Héctor Maldonado

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Noel Federman

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Fernando Locatelli

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Gisela Zalcman

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Mariano M. Boccia

University of Buenos Aires

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Daniel Tomsic

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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