Daniela Pietrobon
University of Padua
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Publication
Featured researches published by Daniela Pietrobon.
Neuron | 2004
Arn M. J. M. van den Maagdenberg; Daniela Pietrobon; Tommaso Pizzorusso; Simon Kaja; Ludo A. M. Broos; Tiziana Cesetti; Rob C. G. van de Ven; Angelita Tottene; Jos van der Kaa; Jaap J. Plomp; Rune R. Frants; Michel D. Ferrari
Migraine is a common, disabling, multifactorial, episodic neurovascular disorder of unknown etiology. Familial hemiplegic migraine type 1 (FHM-1) is a Mendelian subtype of migraine with aura that is caused by missense mutations in the CACNA1A gene that encodes the alpha(1) subunit of neuronal Ca(v)2.1 Ca(2+) channels. We generated a knockin mouse model carrying the human pure FHM-1 R192Q mutation and found multiple gain-of-function effects. These include increased Ca(v)2.1 current density in cerebellar neurons, enhanced neurotransmission at the neuromuscular junction, and, in the intact animal, a reduced threshold and increased velocity of cortical spreading depression (CSD; the likely mechanism for the migraine aura). Our data show that the increased susceptibility for CSD and aura in migraine may be due to cortical hyperexcitability. The R192Q FHM-1 mouse is a promising animal model to study migraine mechanisms and treatments.
Nature Reviews Neuroscience | 2003
Daniela Pietrobon; Jörg Striessnig
Migraine — an episodic headache — affects more than 10% of the general population. Despite recent progress, drug therapy for preventing and treating migraine remains unsatisfactory for many patients. One problem that slows the development of new therapeutic approaches is our limited understanding of migraine neurobiology. Activation of the trigeminovascular system is a central step in the development of migraine. However, two main issues remain incompletely understood: the primary cause of migraine, leading to activation of the trigeminovascular system, and the mechanisms of pain generation after its activation.
Annual Review of Physiology | 2013
Daniela Pietrobon; Michael A. Moskowitz
Migraine is a collection of perplexing neurological conditions in which the brain and its associated tissues have been implicated as major players during an attack. Once considered exclusively a disorder of blood vessels, compelling evidence has led to the realization that migraine represents a highly choreographed interaction between major inputs from both the peripheral and central nervous systems, with the trigeminovascular system and the cerebral cortex among the main players. Advances in in vivo and in vitro technologies have informed us about the significance to migraine of events such as cortical spreading depression and activation of the trigeminovascular system and its constituent neuropeptides, as well as about the importance of neuronal and glial ion channels and transporters that contribute to the putative cortical excitatory/inhibitory imbalance that renders migraineurs susceptible to an attack. This review focuses on emerging concepts that drive the science of migraine in both a mechanistic direction and a therapeutic direction.
Neuron | 2009
Angelita Tottene; Rossella Conti; Alessandra Fabbro; Dania Vecchia; Maryna Shapovalova; Mirko Santello; Arn M. J. M. van den Maagdenberg; Michel D. Ferrari; Daniela Pietrobon
Migraine is a common disabling brain disorder. A subtype of migraine with aura (familial hemiplegic migraine type 1: FHM1) is caused by mutations in Ca(V)2.1 (P/Q-type) Ca(2+) channels. Knockin mice carrying a FHM1 mutation show increased neuronal P/Q-type current and facilitation of induction and propagation of cortical spreading depression (CSD), the phenomenon that underlies migraine aura and may activate migraine headache mechanisms. We studied cortical neurotransmission in neuronal microcultures and brain slices of FHM1 mice. We show gain of function of excitatory neurotransmission due to increased action-potential-evoked Ca(2+) influx and increased probability of glutamate release at pyramidal cell synapses but unaltered inhibitory neurotransmission at fast-spiking interneuron synapses. Using an in vitro model of CSD, we show a causative link between enhanced glutamate release and CSD facilitation. The synapse-specific effect of FHM1 mutations points to disruption of excitation-inhibition balance and neuronal hyperactivity as the basis for episodic vulnerability to CSD ignition in migraine.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Angelita Tottene; Tommaso Fellin; Stefano Pagnutti; Siro Luvisetto; Joerg Striessnig; Colin F. Fletcher; Daniela Pietrobon
Insights into the pathogenesis of migraine with aura may be gained from a study of human CaV2.1 channels containing mutations linked to familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM). Here, we extend the previous single-channel analysis to human CaV2.1 channels containing mutation V1457L. This mutation increased the channel open probability by shifting its activation to more negative voltages and reduced both the unitary conductance and the density of functional channels in the membrane. To investigate the possibility of changes in CaV2.1 function common to all FHM mutations, we calculated the product of single-channel current and open probability as a measure of Ca2+ influx through single CaV2.1 channels. All five FHM mutants analyzed showed a single-channel Ca2+ influx larger than wild type in a broad voltage range around the threshold of activation. We also expressed the FHM mutants in cerebellar granule cells from CaV2.1α1−/− mice rather than HEK293 cells. The FHM mutations invariably led to a decrease of the maximal CaV2.1 current density in neurons. Current densities were similar to wild type at lower voltages because of the negatively shifted activation of FHM mutants. Our data show that mutational changes of functional channel densities can be different in different cell types, and they uncover two functional effects common to all FHM mutations analyzed: increase of single-channel Ca2+ influx and decrease of maximal CaV2.1 current density in neurons. We discuss the relevance of these findings for the pathogenesis of migraine with aura.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008
William A. Catterall; Sulayman D. Dib-Hajj; Miriam H. Meisler; Daniela Pietrobon
Studies of genetic forms of epilepsy, chronic pain, and migraine caused by mutations in ion channels have given crucial insights into molecular mechanisms, pathogenesis, and therapeutic approaches to complex neurological disorders. Gain-of-function missense mutations in the brain type-I sodium channel NaV1.1 are a primary cause of generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus. Loss-of-function mutations in NaV1.1 channels cause severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy, an intractable childhood epilepsy. Studies of a mouse model show that this disease is caused by selective loss of sodium current and excitability of GABAergic inhibitory interneurons, which leads to hyperexcitability, epilepsy, and ataxia. Mutations in the peripheral sodium channel NaV1.7 cause familial pain syndromes. Gain-of-function mutations cause erythromelalgia and paroxysmal extreme pain disorder as a result of hyperexcitability of sensory neurons, whereas loss-of-function mutations cause congenital indifference to pain because of attenuation of action potential firing. These experiments have defined correlations between genotype and phenotype in chronic pain diseases and focused attention on NaV1.7 as a therapeutic target. Familial hemiplegic migraine is caused by mutations in the calcium channel, CaV2.1, which conducts P/Q-type calcium currents that initiate neurotransmitter release. These mutations increase activation at negative membrane potentials and increase evoked neurotransmitter release at cortical glutamatergic synapses. Studies of a mouse genetic model show that these gain-of-function effects lead to cortical spreading depression, aura, and potentially migraine. Overall, these experiments indicate that imbalance in the activity of excitatory and inhibitory neurons is an important underlying cause of these diseases.
Neurotherapeutics | 2007
Daniela Pietrobon
SummaryFamilial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) is a rare and genetically heterogeneous autosomal dominant subtype of migraine with aura. Mutations in the genes CACNA1A and SCNA1A, encoding the pore-forming α1 subunits of the neuronal voltage-gated Ca2+ channels Cav2.1 and Na+ channels Nav1.1, are responsible for FHM1 and FHM3, respectively, whereas mutations in ATP1A2, encoding the α2 subunit of the Na+, K+ adenosinetriphosphatase (ATPase), are responsible for FHM2. This review discusses the functional studies of two FHM1 knockin mice and of several FHM mutants in heterologous expression systems (12 FHM1, 8 FHM2, and 1 FHM3). These studies show the following: (1) FHM1 mutations produce gain-of-function of the Cav2.1 channel and, as a consequence, increased Cav2.1-dependent neurotransmitter release from cortical neurons and facilitation of in vivo induction and propagation of cortical spreading depression (CSD: the phenomenon underlying migraine aura); (2) FHM2 mutations produce loss-of-function of the α2 Na+,K+-ATPase; and (3) the FHM3 mutation accelerates recovery from fast inactivation of Nav1.5 (and presumably Nav1.1) channels. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that FHM mutations share the ability of rendering the brain more susceptible to CSD by causing either excessive synaptic glutamate release (FHM1) or decreased removal of K+ and glutamate from the synaptic cleft (FHM2) or excessive extracellular K+ (FHM3). The FHM data support a key role of CSD in migraine pathogenesis and point to cortical hyperexcitability as the basis for vulnerability to CSD and to migraine attacks. Hence, they support novel therapeutic strategics that consider CSD and cortical hyperexcitability as key targets for preventive migraine treatment.
Molecular Neurobiology | 2002
Daniela Pietrobon
Several inherited human neurological disorders can be caused by mutations in genes encoding Ca2+ channel subunits. This review deals with known human and mouse calcium channelopathies of the central nervous system (CNS). The human diseases comprise: 1) a recessive retinal disorder, X-linked congenital stationary night blindness, associated with mutations in the CACNA1F gene, encoding α11.4 subunits of L-type channels; and 2) a group of rare allelic autosomal dominant human neurological disorders including familial hemiplegic migraine, episodic ataxia type 2, and spinocerebellar ataxia type 6, all associated with mutations in the CACNA1A gene, encoding α12.1 subunits of P/Q-type calcium channels. Mutations at the mouse orthologue of the CACNA1A gene cause a group of recessive neurological disorders, including the tottering, leaner, and rocker phenotypes with ataxia and absence epilepsy, and the rolling Nagoya phenotype with ataxia without seizures. Two other spontaneous mouse mutants with ataxia and absence epilepsy, lethargic and stargazer, have mutations in genes encoding a calcium channel auxiliary β subunit and a putative calcium channel auxiliary γ subunit. For each channelopathy, the review describes disease phenotype, channel genotype, and known functional consequences of the pathological mutations; in some cases, it also describes working hypothesis and/or speculations addressing the challenging question of how the alterations in channel function lead to selective cellular dysfunction and disease.
The FASEB Journal | 2001
Colin F. Fletcher; Angelita Tottene; Vanda A. Lennon; Scott M. Wilson; Stefan J. Dubel; Richard Paylor; David A. Hosford; Lino Tessarollo; Maureen W. McEnery; Daniela Pietrobon; Neal G. Copeland; Nancy A. Jenkins
P/Q‐type voltage‐dependent calcium channel CACNA1A mutations cause dominantly inherited migraine, episodic ataxia, and cerebellar atrophy in humans and cause recessively inherited ataxia, episodic dyskinesia, cerebellar atrophy, and absence epilepsy in mice. The basis of these species differences and the disease mechanism(s) are not understood. To address this question and to identify required P/Q function in vivo, we created a germline Cacna1a null mutation (designated Cacna1a Fcrtm1) by gene targeting. Null mice develop dystonia and late‐onset cerebellar degeneration in a specific pattern. This indicates a requirement for P/Q function for survival in a subset of cerebellar neurons. Homozygous null mice completely lack P/Q‐type channel activity, and they also lack ω‐CTx‐MVIIC receptors, indicating that a single gene encodes P/Q channel activity. An increase of L‐and N‐type current densities is detected in P/Q‐null granule cells. Heterozygous Cacna1a Fcrtm1/+ mice are phenotypically normal, despite having a 50% reduction in current density, indicating that reduced current density is not itself sufficient to cause the pathophysiology of spontaneous mouse mutants with ataxia and seizures.
The Neuroscientist | 2005
Daniela Pietrobon
Migraine is an episodic headache disorder affecting more than 10% of the general population. Migraine arises from a primary brain dysfunction that leads to activation and sensitization of the trigeminovascular system. A major incompletely understood issue in the neurobiology of migraine concerns the molecular and cellular mechanisms that underlie the primary brain dysfunction and lead to activation and sensitization of the trigeminovascular system, thus generating and maintaining migraine pain. Here the author reviews recent discoveries that have advanced our understanding of these mechanisms toward a unifying pathophysiological hypothesis, in which cortical spreading depression (CSD), the phenomenon underlying migraine aura, assumes a key role. In particular, the author discusses the main recent findings in the genetics and neurobiology of familial hemiplegic migraine and the insights they provide into the molecular and cellular mechanisms that may lead to the increased susceptibility of CSD in migraineurs.