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Dive into the research topics where Cathy Cailotto is active.

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Featured researches published by Cathy Cailotto.


Journal of Biological Rhythms | 2006

SCN outputs and the hypothalamic balance of life

A. Kalsbeek; I. F. Palm; S. E. La Fleur; Frank A. J. L. Scheer; S. Perreau-Lenz; Marieke Ruiter; Felix Kreier; Cathy Cailotto; R. M. Buijs

The circadian clock in the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) is composed of thousands of oscillator neurons, each dependent on the cell-autonomous action of a defined set of circadian clock genes. Still, the major question remains how these individual oscillators are organized into a biological clock producing a coherent output able to time all the different daily changes in behavior and physiology. In the present review, the authors discuss the anatomical connections and neurotransmitters used by the SCN to control the daily rhythms in hormone release. The efferent SCN projections mainly target neurons in the medial hypothalamus surrounding the SCN. The activity of these preautonomic and neuroendocrine target neurons is controlled by differentially timed waves of, among others, vasopressin, GABA, and glutamate release from SCN terminals. Together, the data on the SCN control of neuroendocrine rhythms provide clear evidence not only that the SCN consists of phenotypically (i.e., according to neurotransmitter content) different subpopulations of neurons but also that subpopulations should be distinguished (within phenotypically similar groups of neurons) based on the acrophase of their (electrical) activity. Moreover, the specialization of the SCN may go as far as a single body structure, that is, the SCN seems to contain neurons that specifically target the liver, pineal, and adrenal.


Gut | 2014

A distinct vagal anti-inflammatory pathway modulates intestinal muscularis resident macrophages independent of the spleen

Gianluca Matteoli; Pedro J. Gomez-Pinilla; Andrea Nemethova; Martina Di Giovangiulio; Cathy Cailotto; Sjoerd H. van Bree; Klaus Michel; Kevin J. Tracey; Michael Schemann; Werend Boesmans; Pieter Vanden Berghe; Guy E. Boeckxstaens

The cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway (CAIP) has been proposed as a key mechanism by which the brain, through the vagus nerve, modulates the immune system in the spleen. Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) reduces intestinal inflammation and improves postoperative ileus. We investigated the neural pathway involved and the cells mediating the anti-inflammatory effect of VNS in the gut. The effect of VNS on intestinal inflammation and transit was investigated in wild-type, splenic denervated and Rag-1 knockout mice. To define the possible role of α7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (α7nAChR), we used knockout and bone marrow chimaera mice. Anterograde tracing of vagal efferents, cell sorting and Ca2+ imaging were used to reveal the intestinal cells targeted by the vagus nerve. VNS attenuates surgery-induced intestinal inflammation and improves postoperative intestinal transit in wild-type, splenic denervated and T-cell-deficient mice. In contrast, VNS is ineffective in α7nAChR knockout mice and α7nAChR-deficient bone marrow chimaera mice. Anterograde labelling fails to detect vagal efferents contacting resident macrophages, but shows close contacts between cholinergic myenteric neurons and resident macrophages expressing α7nAChR. Finally, α7nAChR activation modulates ATP-induced Ca2+ response in small intestine resident macrophages. We show that the anti-inflammatory effect of the VNS in the intestine is independent of the spleen and T cells. Instead, the vagus nerve interacts with cholinergic myenteric neurons in close contact with the muscularis macrophages. Our data suggest that intestinal muscularis resident macrophages expressing α7nAChR are most likely the ultimate target of the gastrointestinal CAIP.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Effects of Nocturnal Light on (Clock) Gene Expression in Peripheral Organs: A Role for the Autonomic Innervation of the Liver

Cathy Cailotto; Jun Lei; Jan van der Vliet; Caroline van Heijningen; Corbert G. van Eden; Andries Kalsbeek; Paul Pévet; R.M. Buijs

Background The biological clock, located in the hypothalamic suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), controls the daily rhythms in physiology and behavior. Early studies demonstrated that light exposure not only affects the phase of the SCN but also the functional activity of peripheral organs. More recently it was shown that the same light stimulus induces immediate changes in clock gene expression in the pineal and adrenal, suggesting a role of peripheral clocks in the organ-specific output. In the present study, we further investigated the immediate effect of nocturnal light exposure on clock genes and metabolism-related genes in different organs of the rat. In addition, we investigated the role of the autonomic nervous system as a possible output pathway of the SCN to modify the activity of the liver after light exposure. Methodology and Principal Findings First, we demonstrated that light, applied at different circadian times, affects clock gene expression in a different manner, depending on the time of day and the organ. However, the changes in clock gene expression did not correlate in a consistent manner with those of the output genes (i.e., genes involved in the functional output of an organ). Then, by selectively removing the autonomic innervation to the liver, we demonstrated that light affects liver gene expression not only via the hormonal pathway but also via the autonomic input. Conclusion Nocturnal light immediately affects peripheral clock gene expression but without a clear correlation with organ-specific output genes, raising the question whether the peripheral clock plays a “decisive” role in the immediate (functional) response of an organ to nocturnal light exposure. Interestingly, the autonomic innervation of the liver is essential to transmit the light information from the SCN, indicating that the autonomic nervous system is an important gateway for the SCN to cause an immediate resetting of peripheral physiology after phase-shift inducing light exposures.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Peripheral oscillators: the driving force for food‐anticipatory activity

Carolina Escobar; Cathy Cailotto; Manuel Angeles-Castellanos; Roberto Salgado Delgado; R.M. Buijs

Food‐anticipatory activity (FAA) and especially the food‐entrained oscillator (FEO) have driven many scientists to seek their mechanisms and locations. Starting our research on FAA we, possibly like many other scientists, were convinced that clock genes held the key to the location and the underlying mechanisms for FAA. In this review, which is aimed especially at discussing the contribution of the peripheral oscillators, we have put together the accumulating evidence that the clock gene machinery as we know it today is not sufficient to explain food entrainment. We discuss the contribution of three types of oscillating processes: (i) within the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN), neurons capable of maintaining a 24‐h oscillation in electrical activity driven by a set of clock genes; (ii) oscillations in metabolic genes and clock genes in other parts of the brain and in peripheral organs driven by the SCN or by food, which damp out after a few cycles; (iii) an FEO which, we propose, is a system built up of different oscillatory processes and consisting of an as‐yet‐unidentified network of central and peripheral structures. In view of the evidence that clock genes and metabolic oscillations are not essential for the persistence of FAA we propose that food entrainment is initiated by a repeated metabolic state of scarcity that drives an oscillating network of brain nuclei in interaction with peripheral oscillators. This complex may constitute the proposed FEO and is distributed in our peripheral organs as well as within the central nervous system.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 2011

Central activation of the cholinergic anti-inflammatory pathway reduces surgical inflammation in experimental post-operative ileus

Cathy Cailotto; J. van der Vliet; W. J. de Jonge; Roelof J. Bennink; R.M. Buijs; Guy E. Boeckxstaens

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve reduces intestinal inflammation following mechanical handling, thereby shortening post‐operative ileus in mice. Previous studies in a sepsis model showed that this cholinergic anti‐inflammatory pathway can be activated pharmacologically by central administration of semapimod, an inhibitor of p38 mitogen‐activated protein kinase. We therefore evaluated the effect of intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) semapimod on intestinal inflammation and post‐operative ileus in mice.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2012

Neuroanatomical evidence demonstrating the existence of the vagal anti-inflammatory reflex in the intestine

Cathy Cailotto; Lea Costes; J. van der Vliet; S.H.W. van Bree; J.J. van Heerikhuize; R.M. Buijs; G. E. Boeckxstaens

Background  The cholinergic anti‐inflammatory pathway is proposed to be part of the so‐called vago‐vagal ‘inflammatory reflex’. The aim of this study is to provide neuro‐anatomical evidence to support the existence of a functional neuronal circuit and its activation in response to intestinal inflammation.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Neuro-anatomical evidence indicating indirect modulation of macrophages by vagal efferents in the intestine but not in the spleen.

Cathy Cailotto; Pedro J. Gomez-Pinilla; Léa M. M. Costes; Jan van der Vliet; Martina Di Giovangiulio; Andrea Némethova; Gianluca Matteoli; Guy E. Boeckxstaens

Background Electrical stimulation of the vagus nerve suppresses intestinal inflammation and normalizes gut motility in a mouse model of postoperative ileus. The exact anatomical interaction between the vagus nerve and the intestinal immune system remains however a matter of debate. In the present study, we provide additional evidence on the direct and indirect vagal innervation of the spleen and analyzed the anatomical evidence for neuroimmune modulation of macrophages by vagal preganglionic and enteric postganglionic nerve fibers within the intestine. Methods Dextran conjugates were used to label vagal preganglionic (motor) fibers projecting to the small intestine and spleen. Moreover, identification of the neurochemical phenotype of the vagal efferent fibers and enteric neurons was performed by immunofluorescent labeling. F4/80 antibody was used to label resident macrophages. Results Our anterograde tracing experiments did not reveal dextran-labeled vagal fibers or terminals in the mesenteric ganglion or spleen. Vagal efferent fibers were confined within the myenteric plexus region of the small intestine and mainly endings around nNOS, VIP and ChAT positive enteric neurons. nNOS, VIP and ChAT positive fibers were found in close proximity of intestinal resident macrophages carrying α7 nicotinic receptors. Of note, VIP receptors were found on resident macrophages located in close proximity of VIP positive nerve fibers. Conclusion In the present study, we show that the vagus nerve does not directly interact with resident macrophages in the gut or spleen. Instead, the vagus nerve preferentially interacts with nNOS, VIP and ChAT enteric neurons located within the gut muscularis with nerve endings in close proximity of the resident macrophages.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2012

Mast cells trigger epithelial barrier dysfunction, bacterial translocation and postoperative ileus in a mouse model

Susanne A. Snoek; Shobhit Dhawan; S.H.W. van Bree; Cathy Cailotto; S A van Diest; Jose Duarte; Oana I. Stanisor; Francisca W. Hilbers; Laurens Nijhuis; Anneke Koeman; R.M.J.G.J. van den Wijngaard; Coert J. Zuurbier; G. E. Boeckxstaens; W. J. de Jonge

Background  Abdominal surgery involving bowel manipulation commonly results in inflammation of the bowel wall, which leads to impaired intestinal motility and postoperative ileus (POI). Mast cells have shown to play a key role in the pathogenesis of POI in mouse models and human studies. We studied whether mast cells contribute to the pathogenesis of POI by eliciting intestinal barrier dysfunction.


Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology | 2012

New therapeutic strategies for postoperative ileus

Sjoerd H. van Bree; Andrea Nemethova; Cathy Cailotto; Pedro J. Gomez-Pinilla; Gianluca Matteoli; G. E. Boeckxstaens

Patients undergoing an abdominal surgical procedure develop a transient episode of impaired gastrointestinal motility or postoperative ileus. Importantly, postoperative ileus is a major determinant of recovery after intestinal surgery and leads to increased morbidity and prolonged hospitalization, which is a great economic burden to health-care systems. Although a variety of strategies reduce postoperative ileus, including multimodal postoperative rehabilitation (fast-track care) and minimally invasive surgery, none of these methods have been completely successful in shortening the duration of postoperative ileus. The aetiology of postoperative ileus is multifactorial, but insights into the pathogenesis of postoperative ileus have identified intestinal inflammation, triggered by surgical handling, as the main mechanism. The importance of this inflammatory response in postoperative ileus is underscored by the beneficial effect of pharmacological interventions that block the influx of leukocytes. New insights into the pathophysiology of postoperative ileus and the involvement of the innate and the adaptive (T-helper type 1 cell-mediated immune response) immune system offer interesting and important new approaches to prevent postoperative ileus. In this Review, we discuss the latest insights into the mechanisms behind postoperative ileus and highlight new strategies to intervene in the postoperative inflammatory cascade.


Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2013

Susceptibility to stress induced visceral hypersensitivity in maternally separated rats is transferred across generations

R.M.J.G.J. van den Wijngaard; Oana I. Stanisor; S A van Diest; Olaf Welting; Mira M. Wouters; Cathy Cailotto; W. J. de Jonge; Guy E. Boeckxstaens

In irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), familial clustering and transfer across generations may largely depend on environmental factors but this is difficult to establish in the human setting. Therefore, we aimed to set up a relevant animal model. We investigated whether susceptibility to stress induced visceral hypersensitivity in maternally separated (MS) Long Evans rats can be transferred across generations without further separation protocols and, if so, whether this depends on maternal care.

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Guy E. Boeckxstaens

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jan van der Vliet

Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience

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R.M. Buijs

National Autonomous University of Mexico

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Andrea Nemethova

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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