Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Carlos V. Melo is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carlos V. Melo.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2005

Neuroprotection by BDNF against glutamate-induced apoptotic cell death is mediated by ERK and PI3-kinase pathways.

Ramiro D. Almeida; Bruno Manadas; Carlos V. Melo; João Gomes; C S Mendes; Mário Grãos; Ricardo Carvalho; Arsélio P. Carvalho; Carlos B. Duarte

Neurotrophins protect neurons against glutamate excitotoxicity, but the signaling mechanisms have not been fully elucidated. We studied the role of the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) and Ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways in the protection of cultured hippocampal neurons from glutamate induced apoptotic cell death, characterized by nuclear condensation and activation of caspase-3-like enzymes. Pre-incubation with the neurotrophin brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), for 24 h, reduced glutamate-evoked apoptotic morphology and caspase-3-like activity, and transiently increased the activity of the PI3-K and of the Ras/MAPK pathways. Inhibition of the PI3-K and of the Ras/MAPK signaling pathways abrogated the protective effect of BDNF against glutamate-induced neuronal death and similar effects were observed upon inhibition of protein synthesis. Moreover, incubation of hippocampal neurons with BDNF, for 24 h, increased Bcl-2 protein levels. The results indicate that the protective effect of BDNF in hippocampal neurons against glutamate toxicity is mediated by the PI3-K and the Ras/MAPK signaling pathways, and involves a long-term change in protein synthesis.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2007

Bdnf regulates the expression and traffic of NMDA receptors in cultured hippocampal neurons

Margarida V. Caldeira; Carlos V. Melo; Daniela Pereira; Ricardo Carvalho; Ana Luísa Carvalho; Carlos B. Duarte

The neurotrophin BDNF regulates the activity-dependent modifications of synaptic strength in the CNS. Physiological and biochemical evidences implicate the NMDA glutamate receptor as one of the targets for BDNF modulation. In the present study, we investigated the effect of BDNF on the expression and plasma membrane abundance of NMDA receptor subunits in cultured hippocampal neurons. Acute stimulation of hippocampal neurons with BDNF differentially upregulated the protein levels of the NR1, NR2A and NR2B NMDA receptor subunits, by a mechanism sensitive to transcription and translation inhibitors. Accordingly, BDNF also increased the mRNA levels for NR1, NR2A and NR2B subunits. The neurotrophin NT3 also upregulated the protein levels of NR2A and NR2B subunits, but was without effect on the NR1 subunit. The amount of NR1, NR2A and NR2B proteins associated with the plasma membrane of hippocampal neurons was differentially increased by BDNF stimulation for 30 min or 24 h. The rapid upregulation of plasma membrane-associated NMDA receptor subunits was correlated with an increase in NMDA receptor activity. The results indicate that BDNF increases the abundance of NMDA receptors and their delivery to the plasma membrane, thereby upregulating receptor activity in cultured hippocampal neurons.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Excitotoxicity Downregulates TrkB.FL Signaling and Upregulates the Neuroprotective Truncated TrkB Receptors in Cultured Hippocampal and Striatal Neurons.

João Gomes; João T. Costa; Carlos V. Melo; Federico Felizzi; Patricia Monteiro; Maria J. Pinto; Ana R. Inácio; Tadeusz Wieloch; Ramiro D. Almeida; Mário Grãos; Carlos B. Duarte

Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) plays an important role in neuronal survival through activation of TrkB receptors. The trkB gene encodes a full-length receptor tyrosine kinase (TrkB.FL) and its truncated (T1/T2) isoforms. We investigated the changes in TrkB protein levels and signaling activity under excitotoxic conditions, which are characteristic of brain ischemia, traumatic brain injury, and neurodegenerative disorders. Excitotoxic stimulation of cultured rat hippocampal or striatal neurons downregulated TrkB.FL and upregulated a truncated form of the receptor (TrkB.T). Downregulation of TrkB.FL was mediated by calpains, whereas the increase in TrkB.T protein levels required transcription and translation activities. Downregulation of TrkB.FL receptors in hippocampal neurons correlated with a decrease in BDNF-induced activation of the Ras/ERK and PLCγ pathways. However, calpain inhibition, which prevents TrkB.FL degradation, did not preclude the decrease in signaling activity of these receptors. On the other hand, incubation with anisomycin, to prevent the upregulation of TrkB.T, protected to a large extent the TrkB.FL signaling activity, suggesting that truncated receptors may act as dominant-negatives. The upregulation of TrkB.T under excitotoxic conditions was correlated with an increase in BDNF-induced inhibition of RhoA, a mediator of excitotoxic neuronal death. BDNF fully protected hippocampal neurons transduced with TrkB.T when present during excitotoxic stimulation with glutamate, in contrast with the partial protection observed in cells overexpressing TrkB.FL or expressing GFP. These results indicate that BDNF protects hippocampal neurons by two distinct mechanisms: through the neurotrophic effects of TrkB.FL receptors and by activation of TrkB.T receptors coupled to inhibition of the excitotoxic signaling.


PLOS ONE | 2013

BDNF regulates the expression and distribution of vesicular glutamate transporters in cultured hippocampal neurons.

Carlos V. Melo; Miranda Mele; Michele Curcio; Diogo Comprido; Carla G. Silva; Carlos B. Duarte

BDNF is a pro-survival protein involved in neuronal development and synaptic plasticity. BDNF strengthens excitatory synapses and contributes to LTP, presynaptically, through enhancement of glutamate release, and postsynaptically, via phosphorylation of neurotransmitter receptors, modulation of receptor traffic and activation of the translation machinery. We examined whether BDNF upregulated vesicular glutamate receptor (VGLUT) 1 and 2 expression, which would partly account for the increased glutamate release in LTP. Cultured rat hippocampal neurons were incubated with 100 ng/ml BDNF, for different periods of time, and VGLUT gene and protein expression were assessed by real-time PCR and immunoblotting, respectively. At DIV7, exogenous application of BDNF rapidly increased VGLUT2 mRNA and protein levels, in a dose-dependent manner. VGLUT1 expression also increased but only transiently. However, at DIV14, BDNF stably increased VGLUT1 expression, whilst VGLUT2 levels remained low. Transcription inhibition with actinomycin-D or α-amanitine, and translation inhibition with emetine or anisomycin, fully blocked BDNF-induced VGLUT upregulation. Fluorescence microscopy imaging showed that BDNF stimulation upregulates the number, integrated density and intensity of VGLUT1 and VGLUT2 puncta in neurites of cultured hippocampal neurons (DIV7), indicating that the neurotrophin also affects the subcellular distribution of the transporter in developing neurons. Increased VGLUT1 somatic signals were also found 3 h after stimulation with BDNF, further suggesting an increased de novo transcription and translation. BDNF regulation of VGLUT expression was specifically mediated by BDNF, as no effect was found upon application of IGF-1 or bFGF, which activate other receptor tyrosine kinases. Moreover, inhibition of TrkB receptors with K252a and PLCγ signaling with U-73122 precluded BDNF-induced VGLUT upregulation. Hippocampal neurons express both isoforms during embryonic and neonatal development in contrast to adult tissue expressing only VGLUT1. These results suggest that BDNF regulates VGLUT expression during development and its effect on VGLUT1 may contribute to enhance glutamate release in LTP.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Cleavage of the Vesicular GABA Transporter under Excitotoxic Conditions Is Followed by Accumulation of the Truncated Transporter in Nonsynaptic Sites

João Gomes; Andrea C. Lobo; Carlos V. Melo; Ana R. Inácio; Jiro Takano; Nobuhisa Iwata; Takaomi C. Saido; Luís Pereira de Almeida; Tadeusz Wieloch; Carlos B. Duarte

GABA is the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the CNS and changes in GABAergic neurotransmission affect the overall activity of neuronal networks. The uptake of GABA into synaptic vesicles is mediated by the vesicular GABA transporter (VGAT), and changes in the expression of the transporter directly regulate neurotransmitter release. In this work we investigated the changes in VGAT protein levels during ischemia and in excitotoxic conditions, which may affect the demise process. We found that VGAT is cleaved by calpains following excitotoxic stimulation of hippocampal neurons with glutamate, giving rise to a stable truncated cleavage product (tVGAT). VGAT cleavage was also observed after transient middle cerebral artery occlusion in mice, a cerebral ischemia model, and following intrahippocampal injection of kainate, but no effect was observed in transgenic mice overexpressing calpastatin, a calpain inhibitor. Incubation of isolated cerebrocortical synaptic vesicles with recombinant calpain also induced the cleavage of VGAT and formation of stable tVGAT. Immunoblot experiments using antibodies targeting different regions of VGAT and N-terminal sequencing analysis showed that calpain cleaves the transporter in the N-terminal region, at amino acids 52 and 60. Immunocytochemistry of GABAergic striatal neurons expressing GFP fusion proteins with the full-length VGAT or tVGAT showed that cleavage of the transporter induces a loss of synaptic delivery, leading to a homogeneous distribution of the protein along neurites. Our results show that excitotoxicity downregulates full-length VGAT, with a concomitant generation of tVGAT, which is likely to affect GABAergic neurotransmission and may influence cell death during ischemia.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

Excitotoxic stimulation downregulates the ubiquitin–proteasome system through activation of NMDA receptors in cultured hippocampal neurons

Margarida V. Caldeira; Michele Curcio; Graciano Leal; Ivan L. Salazar; Miranda Mele; Ana Rita Santos; Carlos V. Melo; Paulo Pereira; Lorella M.T. Canzoniero; Carlos B. Duarte

Overactivation of glutamate receptors contributes to neuronal damage (excitotoxicity) in ischemic stroke but the detailed mechanisms are not fully elucidated. Brain ischemia is also characterized by an impairment of the activity of the proteasome, one of the major proteolytic systems in neurons. We found that excitotoxic stimulation with glutamate rapidly decreases ATP levels and the proteasome activity, and induces the disassembly of the 26S proteasome in cultured rat hippocampal neurons. Downregulation of the proteasome activity, leading to an accumulation of ubiquitinated proteins, was mediated by calcium entry through NMDA receptors and was only observed in the nuclear fraction. Furthermore, excitotoxicity-induced proteasome inhibition was partially sensitive to cathepsin-L inhibition and was specifically induced by activation of extrasynaptic NMDA receptors. Oxygen and glucose deprivation induced neuronal death and downregulated the activity of the proteasome by a mechanism dependent on the activation of NMDA receptors. Since deubiquitinating enzymes may regulate proteins half-life by counteracting ubiquitination, we also analyzed how their activity is regulated under excitotoxic conditions. Glutamate stimulation decreased the total deubiquitinase activity in hippocampal neurons, but was without effect on the activity of Uch-L1, showing that not all deubiquitinases are affected. These results indicate that excitotoxic stimulation with glutamate has multiple effects on the ubiquitin-proteasome system which may contribute to the demise process in brain ischemia and in other neurological disorders.


Neuroscience | 2013

Spatiotemporal resolution of BDNF neuroprotection against glutamate excitotoxicity in cultured hippocampal neurons.

Carlos V. Melo; Sergio Hideki Okumoto; João Gomes; Márcio S. Baptista; Ben A. Bahr; Wolf B. Frommer; Carlos B. Duarte

Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) protects hippocampal neurons from glutamate excitotoxicity as determined by analysis of chromatin condensation, through activation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK) and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase (PI3-K) signaling pathways. However, it is still unknown whether BDNF also prevents the degeneration of axons and dendrites, and the functional demise of synapses, which would be required to preserve neuronal activity. Herein, we have studied the time-dependent changes in several neurobiological markers, and the regulation of proteolytic mechanisms in cultured rat hippocampal neurons, through quantitative western blot and immunocytochemistry. Calpain activation peaked immediately after the neurodegenerative input, followed by a transient increase in ubiquitin-conjugated proteins and increased abundance of cleaved-caspase-3. Proteasome and calpain inhibition did not reproduce the protective effect of BDNF and caspase inhibition in preventing chromatin condensation. However, proteasome and calpain inhibition did protect the neuronal markers for dendrites (MAP-2), axons (Neurofilament-H) and the vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUT1-2), whereas caspase inhibition was unable to mimic the protective effect of BDNF on neurites and synaptic markers. BDNF partially prevented the downregulation of synaptic activity measured by the KCl-evoked glutamate release using a Förster (Fluorescence) resonance energy transfer (FRET) glutamate nanosensor. These results translate a time-dependent activation of proteases and spatial segregation of these mechanisms, where calpain activation is followed by proteasome deregulation, from neuronal processes to the soma, and finally by caspase activation in the cell body. Moreover, PI3-K and PLCγ small molecule inhibitors significantly blocked the protective action of BDNF, suggesting an activity-dependent mechanism of neuroprotection. Ultimately, we hypothesize that neuronal repair after a degenerative insult is initiated at the synaptic level.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Role of the Proteasome in Excitotoxicity-Induced Cleavage of Glutamic Acid Decarboxylase in Cultured Hippocampal Neurons

Márcio S. Baptista; Carlos V. Melo; Mário Armelão; Dennis Herrmann; Diogo O. Pimentel; Graciano Leal; Margarida V. Caldeira; Ben A. Bahr; Mário Bengtson; Ramiro D. Almeida; Carlos B. Duarte

Glutamic acid decarboxylase is responsible for synthesizing GABA, the major inhibitory neurotransmitter, and exists in two isoforms—GAD65 and GAD67. The enzyme is cleaved under excitotoxic conditions, but the mechanisms involved and the functional consequences are not fully elucidated. We found that excitotoxic stimulation of cultured hippocampal neurons with glutamate leads to a time-dependent cleavage of GAD65 and GAD67 in the N-terminal region of the proteins, and decrease the corresponding mRNAs. The cleavage of GAD67 was sensitive to the proteasome inhibitors MG132, YU102 and lactacystin, and was also abrogated by the E1 ubiquitin ligase inhibitor UBEI-41. In contrast, MG132 and UBEI-41 were the only inhibitors tested that showed an effect on GAD65 cleavage. Excitotoxic stimulation with glutamate also increased the amount of GAD captured in experiments where ubiquitinated proteins and their binding partners were isolated. However, no evidences were found for direct GADs ubiquitination in cultured hippocampal neurons, and recombinant GAD65 was not cleaved by purified 20S or 26S proteasome preparations. Since calpains, a group of calcium activated proteases, play a key role in GAD65/67 cleavage under excitotoxic conditions the results suggest that GADs are cleaved after ubiquitination and degradation of an unknown binding partner by the proteasome. The characteristic punctate distribution of GAD65 along neurites of differentiated cultured hippocampal neurons was significantly reduced after excitotoxic injury, and the total GAD activity measured in extracts from the cerebellum or cerebral cortex at 24h postmortem (when there is a partial cleavage of GADs) was also decreased. The results show a role of the UPS in the cleavage of GAD65/67 and point out the deregulation of GADs under excitotoxic conditions, which is likely to affect GABAergic neurotransmission. This is the first time that the UPS has been implicated in the events triggered during excitotoxicity and the first molecular target of the UPS affected in this cell death process.


Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 2009

Vesicular GABA transporter (VGAT) is cleaved by calpains under excitotoxic conditions, generating a non-synaptic protein

João Gomes; Carlos V. Melo; Ana R. Inácio; Luís Pereira de Almeida; Tadeusz Wieloch; Carlos B. Duarte

Introduction: The pro-inflammatory response after stroke due to up-regulation of TNF-a and IL-1 can activate phospholipases and stimulate ROS production. Transient middle cerebral artery occlusion (tMCAO) in rat significantly increased (4-fold) PC-PLC activity, up-regulated sphingomyelinases (SMase, neutraland acidic-) and down-regulated PC synthesis and sphingomyelin (SM) synthases (SMS-1 and 2) in the ipsi cortex, causing significant PC and SM loss. Lipid second messengers 1,2-diacylglycerol (DAG) and ceramide, produced by hydrolysis of PC and SM, respectively, are key regulators of the cell cycle. The PC-PLC product DAG can stimulate cyclin D1 expression through pERK by activation of protein kinase C, either directly or through ASMase/ceramide pathway, and activation of AKT via ASMase/ ceramide/PI3 kinase pathway. Up-regulation of cyclin D1 can trigger the cell cycle, inducing proliferation of astrocytes and microglia/macrophages. However, for post-mitotic neurons, cell cycle entry results in their death. Results: In tMCAO (1 h by intraluminal suture method in SHR), PC-PLC inhibitor, tricyclodecan-9yl-xanthogenate (D609) attenuated infarction by 35±5%. D609 blocked proliferation (BrdU uptake) of rat neural progenitor cells by 75±5% and attenuated pERK, pAKT and cyclin D1 expression (Western blotting). D609 did not alter expression of pAKT, pERK and cyclin D1 after stroke. This may be due to heterogeneous populations of neuronal ( < 5%) and non-neuronal cells and changes might have been blunted, unlike in the homogeneous rat neural progenitor cells. However, treatment with D609 did increase ceramide levels and expression of endogenous cell cycle inhibitor, p21, suggesting cell cycle arrest at G1-phase after stroke. SM synthase transfers the phosphocholine group of PC to ceramide to form SM and DAG. D609 also inhibits SM synthase, which could account for the increase in ceramide following D609 treatment. Ceramide can induce G0/G1 cell cycle arrest by up-regulation of CDK inhibitor p21. Recent studies indicate that p21 exerts neuroprotection via mechanisms independent of its nuclear role in cell cycle inhibition. In addition to PC hydrolysis and impaired synthesis, oxidation of PC to oxidized-PC (OxPC, detected by EO6-monoclonal antibodies) due to ROS generation was also observed after tMCAO. OxPC may serve as a marker of neuroinflammation and apoptosis and also enhance pro-inflammatory signals. D609 also attenuated formation of OxPC-modified proteins after tMCAO, which could be mediated by increased p21 expression or reduction in pro-inflammatory cytokine levels. Conclusions: We hypothesize that PC-PLC regulates cell cycle through DAG in proliferating non-neuronal cells and mediates cell death in mature post-mitotic neurons. D609 prevented bFGF stimulated astrocyte proliferation in other studies. D609 may inhibit proliferation of cytokine-expressing microglia/macrophages and simultaneously prevent mature neurons from entering into cell cycle and dying, thus providing protection after stroke. Funded by NIH, AHA and UW Med School.


Archive | 2007

Neurotrophin Signaling and Cell Survival

Bruno Manadas; Carlos V. Melo; João Gomes; Carlos B. Duarte

Collaboration


Dive into the Carlos V. Melo's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ben A. Bahr

University of North Carolina at Pembroke

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge