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Dive into the research topics where Catherine Cohen-Solal is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine Cohen-Solal.


Hippocampus | 2008

Late N-acetylcysteine treatment prevents the deficits induced in the offspring of dams exposed to an immune stress during gestation.

Fabien Lanté; Johann Meunier; Janique Guiramand; Marie-Céleste de Jesus Ferreira; Gilles Cambonie; Rose Aimar; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Tangui Maurice; Michel Vignes; Gérard Barbanel

Prenatal infection is a major stressful experience leading to enhanced susceptibility for mental illnesses in humans. We recently reported in rats, that oxidative stress and glutathione (GSH) shortage occurred in fetal male brain after lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to the dams and that these responses might be involved in the neurodevelopmental deficits observed in adolescent offspring. Furthermore, pretreatment with N‐acetylcysteine (NAC) before LPS avoided both delayed synaptic plasticity and mnesic performance deficits. Since NAC is one of the few medications permitted in pregnant women, this study evaluated the ability of NAC to serve as a protective therapy even after the LPS challenge. Pregnant rats received a single ip injection of E. coli LPS, two days before delivery, and were given NAC in their tap water after the LPS. GSH was evaluated at the time of its expected drop in the hippocampus of male fetuses, whereas long‐term potentiation (LTP) in the CA1 area of the hippocampus and spatial memory in the water‐maze were recorded in 28‐day‐old male offspring. Post‐treatment with NAC, four hours after the LPS challenge fully prevented the drop in the GSH hippocampal content. LTP, as well as spatial learning were completely protected. NAC administration at delivery also partially restored the LTP whereas post‐treatment two days later was inefficient. Another set of dams were supplemented with α‐tocopherol prior to LPS exposure, enhancing the α‐tocopherol levels in fetal hippocampus. This treatment did not prevent the LPS‐induced synaptic plasticity impairment. These results point to fetal hippocampal GSH as a major target of the detrimental effects of in utero LPS challenge. The therapeutic window of NAC extends up to birth, suggesting that this drug might be clinically useful even after an immuno‐inflammatory episode.


Biological Psychiatry | 2011

Early, time-dependent disturbances of hippocampal synaptic transmission and plasticity after in utero immune challenge.

Marion Escobar; Nadine Crouzin; Mélanie Cavalier; Julie Quentin; Julien Roussel; Fabien Lanté; Aline Rideau Batista-Novais; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Marie-Céleste de Jesus Ferreira; Janique Guiramand; Gérard Barbanel; Michel Vignes

BACKGROUND Maternal infection during pregnancy is a recognized risk factor for the occurrence of a broad spectrum of psychiatric and neurologic disorders, including schizophrenia, autism, and cerebral palsy. Prenatal exposure of rats to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) leads to impaired learning and psychotic-like behavior in mature offspring, together with an enduring modification of glutamatergic excitatory synaptic transmission. The question that arises is whether any alterations of excitatory transmission and plasticity occurred at early developmental stages after in utero LPS exposure. METHODS Electrophysiological experiments were carried out on the CA1 area of hippocampal slices from prenatally LPS-exposed male offspring from 4 to 190 days old to study the developmental profiles of long-term depression (LTD) triggered by delivering 900 shocks either single- or paired-pulse (50-msec interval) at 1 Hz and the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDAr) contribution to synaptic transmission. RESULTS The age-dependent drop of LTD is accelerated in prenatally LPS-exposed animals, and LTD is transiently converted into a slow-onset long-term potentiation between 16 and 25 days old. This long-term potentiation depends on Group I metabotropic glutamate receptors and protein kinase A activations and is independent of NMDArs. Maternal LPS challenge also leads to a rapid developmental impairment of synaptic NMDArs. This was associated with a concomitant reduced expression of GluN1, without any detectable alteration in the developmental switch of NMDAr GluN2 subunits. CONCLUSIONS Aberrant forms of synaptic plasticity can be detected at early developmental stages after prenatal LPS challenge concomitant with a clear hypo-functioning of the NMDAr in the hippocampus. This might result in later-occurring brain dysfunctions.


RNA | 2008

Potent activation of FGF-2 IRES-dependent mechanism of translation during brain development

Sylvie Audigier; Janique Guiramand; Leonel Prado-Lourenco; Caroline Conte; Irma Gabriela Gonzalez-Herrera; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Max Récasens; Anne-Catherine Prats

Fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) plays a fundamental role in brain functions. This role may be partly achieved through the control of its expression at the translational level via an internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-dependent mechanism. Transgenic mice expressing a bicistronic mRNA allowed us to study in vivo and ex vivo where this translational mechanism operates. Along brain development, we identified a stringent spatiotemporal regulation of FGF-2 IRES activity showing a peak at post-natal day 7 in most brain regions, which is concomitant with neuronal maturation. At adult age, this activity remained relatively high in forebrain regions. By the enrichment of this activity in forebrain synaptoneurosomes and by the use of primary cultures of cortical neurons or cocultures with astrocytes, we showed that this activity is indeed localized in neurons, is dependent on their maturation, and correlates with endogenous FGF-2 protein expression. In addition, this activity was regulated by astrocyte factors, including FGF-2, and spontaneous electrical activity. Thus, neuronal IRES-driven translation of the FGF-2 mRNA may be involved in synapse formation and maturation.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Area-specific alterations of synaptic plasticity in the 5XFAD mouse model of Alzheimer's disease: dissociation between somatosensory cortex and hippocampus.

Nadine Crouzin; Kévin Baranger; Mélanie Cavalier; Yannick Marchalant; Catherine Cohen-Solal; François S. Roman; Michel Khrestchatisky; Santiago Rivera; François Féron; Michel Vignes

Transgenic mouse models of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) that overproduce the amyloid beta peptide (Aβ) have highlighted impairments of hippocampal long-term synaptic plasticity associated with the progression of the disease. Here we examined whether the characteristics of one of the hallmarks of AD, i.e. Aβ deposition, in both the somatosensory cortex and the hippocampus, correlated with specific losses of synaptic plasticity in these areas. For this, we evaluated the occurrence of long-term potentiation (LTP) in the cortex and the hippocampus of 6-month old 5xFAD transgenic mice that exhibited massive Aβ deposition in both regions but with different features: in cortical areas a majority of Aβ deposits comprised a dense core surrounded by a diffuse corona while such kind of Aβ deposition was less frequently observed in the hippocampus. In order to simultaneously monitor synaptic changes in both areas, we developed a method based on the use of Multi-Electrode Arrays (MEA). When compared with wild-type (WT) mice, basal transmission was significantly reduced in both areas in 5xFAD mice, while short-term synaptic plasticity was unaffected. The induction of long-term changes of synaptic transmission by different protocols revealed that in 5xFAD mice, LTP in the layer 5 of the somatosensory cortex was more severely impaired than LTP triggered in the CA1 area of the hippocampus. We conclude that cortical plasticity is deficient in the 5xFAD model and that this deficit could be correlated with the proportion of diffuse plaques in 5xFAD mice.


Pediatric Research | 2013

N -acetyl-cysteine prevents pyramidal cell disarray and reelin-immunoreactive neuron deficiency in CA3 after prenatal immune challenge in rats

Aline Rideau Batista Novais; Janique Guiramand; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Nadine Crouzin; Marie Celeste de Jesus Ferreira; Michel Vignes; Gérard Barbanel; Gilles Cambonie

Background:Prenatal infection is a major risk factor for the occurrence of neuropsychiatric disorders. These have been associated with hippocampal neuroanatomical and functional abnormalities. In the present study, we evaluated the occurrence of pyramidal cell disarray and reelin neuronal deficit in the hippocampus, and the protective role of N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) in a rodent experimental model of prenatal immune challenge.Methods:Sprague–Dawley rats received either 500 μg/kg of endotoxin (lipopolysaccharide, LPS) or 2 ml/kg of isotonic saline by i.p. injection on day 19 of gestation. After LPS injection, rats were or were not maintained on a preventive treatment of NAC (5 g/l in tap water), up to delivery. The pyramidal cell orientation and the number and type of reelin-expressing neurons were determined in male offspring.Results:Prenatal LPS challenge led to permanent pyramidal cell disarray and to an early and transient decreased density of reelin-immunoreactive neurons. These disorders, more pronounced in the CA3 area, were prevented by NAC.Conclusion:Hippocampal cytoarchitectural alterations and reelin deficiency may be involved in the development of remote cognitive impairments in this model. The antioxidant NAC is an efficient neuroprotective drug that underlines the role of oxidative stress in prenatal infection and associated neurodevelopmental damage.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2005

Gliotoxicity in hippocampal cultures is induced by transportable, but not by nontransportable, glutamate uptake inhibitors.

Janique Guiramand; Alexandra Martin; Marie-Céleste de Jesus Ferreira; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Michel Vignes; Max Récasens

Extracellular glutamate is kept below a toxic level by glial and neuronal glutamate transporters. Here we show that the transportable glutamate uptake inhibitor L‐trans‐pyrrolidine‐2,4‐dicarboxylate (t‐PDC) induced cell death in mature, but not in immature, hippocampal neuron‐enriched cultures. The cell death produced by a 24‐hr treatment with t‐PDC was dose‐dependent and reached 85% of the cell population at a 250 μM concentration at 23 days in vitro (DIV). Immunocytochemistry experiments showed that, under these experimental conditions, t‐PDC killed not only neurons as expected but also glial cells. The N‐methyl‐D‐aspartate (NMDA) antagonist D‐2‐aminophosphonovalerate (D‐APV; 250 μM) only partially reversed this toxicity, completely protecting the neuronal cell population but not the glial population. The antioxidant compounds α‐tocopherol or Trolox, used at concentrations that reverse the oxidative stress‐induced toxicity, did not block the gliotoxicity specifically produced by t‐PDC in the presence of D‐APV. The nontransportable glutamate uptake inhibitor DL‐threo‐β‐benzyloxyaspartate (TBOA) elicited cell death only in mature, but not in immature, hippocampal cultures. The TBOA toxic effect was dose dependent and reached a plateau at 100 μM in 23‐DIV cultures. About 50% of the cell population died. TBOA affected essentially the neuronal population. D‐APV (250 μM) completely reversed this toxicity. It is concluded that nontransportable glutamate uptake inhibitors are neurotoxic via overactivation of NMDA receptors, whereas transportable glutamate uptake inhibitors induce both an NMDA‐dependent neurotoxicity and an NMDA‐ and oxidative stress‐independent gliotoxicity, but only in mature hippocampal cultures.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2015

Involvement of PKA and ERK pathways in ghrelin‐induced long‐lasting potentiation of excitatory synaptic transmission in the CA1 area of rat hippocampus

Mélanie Cavalier; Nadine Crouzin; Azza Ben Sedrine; Marie Celeste de Jesus Ferreira; Janique Guiramand; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Jean-Alain Fehrentz; Jean Martinez; Gérard Barbanel; Michel Vignes

Acute effects of ghrelin on excitatory synaptic transmission were evaluated on hippocampal CA1 synapses. Ghrelin triggered an enduring enhancement of synaptic transmission independently of NMDA receptor activation and probably via postsynaptic modifications. This ghrelin‐mediated potentiation resulted from the activation of GHS‐R1a receptors as it was mimicked by the selective agonist JMV1843 and blocked by the selective antagonist JMV2959. This potentiation also required the activation of PKA and ERK pathways to occur as it was inhibited by KT5720 and U0126, respectively. Moreover it most probably involved Ca2+ influxes as both ghrelin and JMV1843 elicited intracellular Ca2+ increases, which were dependent on the presence of extracellular Ca2+ and mediated by L‐type Ca2+ channels opening. In addition, ghrelin potentiated AMPA receptor‐mediated [Ca2+]i increases while decreasing NMDA receptor‐mediated ones. Thus the potentiation of synaptic transmission by GHS‐R1a at hippocampal CA1 excitatory synapses probably results from postsynaptic mechanisms involving PKA and ERK activation, which are producing long‐lasting enhancement of AMPA receptor‐mediated responses.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Tiagabine Improves Hippocampal Long-Term Depression in Rat Pups Subjected to Prenatal Inflammation

Aline Rideau Batista Novais; Nadine Crouzin; Mélanie Cavalier; Mathilde Boubal; Janique Guiramand; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Marie-Céleste de Jesus Ferreira; Gilles Cambonie; Michel Vignes; Gérard Barbanel

Maternal inflammation during pregnancy is associated with the later development of cognitive and behavioral impairment in the offspring, reminiscent of the traits of schizophrenia or autism spectrum disorders. Hippocampal long-term potentiation and long-term depression of glutamatergic synapses are respectively involved in memory formation and consolidation. In male rats, maternal inflammation with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) led to a premature loss of long-term depression, occurring between 12 and 25 postnatal days instead of after the first postnatal month, and aberrant occurrence of long-term potentiation. We hypothesized this would be related to GABAergic system impairment. Sprague Dawley rats received either LPS or isotonic saline ip on gestational day 19. Male offsprings hippocampus was studied between 12 and 25 postnatal days. Morphological and functional analyses demonstrated that prenatal LPS triggered a deficit of hippocampal GABAergic interneurons, associated with presynaptic GABAergic transmission deficiency in male offspring. Increasing ambient GABA by impairing GABA reuptake with tiagabine did not interact with the low frequency-induced long-term depression in control animals but fully prevented its impairment in male offspring of LPS-challenged dams. Tiagabine furthermore prevented the aberrant occurrence of paired-pulse triggered long-term potentiation in these rats. Deficiency in GABA seems to be central to the dysregulation of synaptic plasticity observed in juvenile in utero LPS-challenged rats. Modulating GABAergic tone may be a possible therapeutic strategy at this developmental stage.


Amino Acids | 2011

Synthesis of C5-tetrazole derivatives of 2-amino-adipic acid displaying NMDA glutamate receptor antagonism

Fatimazohra Lenda; Nadine Crouzin; Mélanie Cavalier; Janique Guiramand; Fabien Lanté; Gérard Barbanel; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Jean Martinez; Farhate Guenoun; Frédéric Lamaty; Michel Vignes

Five derivatives of 2-amino-adipic acid bearing a tetrazole-substituted in C5 position were synthesized. These compounds displayed selective antagonism towards N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors compared with AMPA receptors, and they were devoid of any neurotoxicity. Among these five analogues, one exhibited a higher affinity for synaptic NMDA responses than the other four. Therefore, C5 tetrazole-substituted of 2-amino-adipic acid represent an interesting series of new NMDA receptor antagonists. This approach may be considered as a new strategy to develop ligands specifically targeted to synaptic or extra-synaptic NMDA receptors.


ACS Chemical Neuroscience | 2017

Characterization of l-Theanine Excitatory Actions on Hippocampal Neurons: Toward the Generation of Novel N-Methyl-d-aspartate Receptor Modulators Based on Its Backbone

Fatiha Sebih; Matthieu Rousset; Salima Bellahouel; Marc Rolland; Marie Celeste de Jesus Ferreira; Janique Guiramand; Catherine Cohen-Solal; Gérard Barbanel; Thierry Cens; Mohammed Abouazza; Adrien Tassou; Maud Gratuze; Céline Meusnier; Pierre Charnet; Michel Vignes; Valérie Rolland

l-Theanine (or l-γ-N-ethyl-glutamine) is the major amino acid found in Camellia sinensis. It has received much attention because of its pleiotropic physiological and pharmacological activities leading to health benefits in humans, especially. We describe here a new, easy, efficient, and environmentally friendly chemical synthesis of l-theanine and l-γ-N-propyl-Gln and their corresponding d-isomers. l-Theanine, and its derivatives obtained so far, exhibited partial coagonistic action at N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptors, with no detectable agonist effect at other glutamate receptors, on cultured hippocampal neurons. This activity was retained on NMDA receptors expressed in Xenopus oocytes. In addition, both GluN2A and GluN2B containing NMDA receptors were equally modulated by l-theanine. The stereochemical change from l-theanine to d-theanine along with the substitution of the ethyl for a propyl moiety in the γ-N position of l- and d-theanine significantly enhanced the biological efficacy, as measured on cultured hippocampal neurons. l-Theanine structure thus represents an interesting backbone to develop novel NMDA receptor modulators.

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Michel Vignes

University of Montpellier

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Nadine Crouzin

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Fabien Lanté

University of Montpellier

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Jean Martinez

University of Montpellier

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