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Dive into the research topics where Eduardo Brambila is active.

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Featured researches published by Eduardo Brambila.


Synapse | 2015

A high calorie diet causes memory loss, metabolic syndrome and oxidative stress into hippocampus and temporal cortex of rats

Samuel Treviño; Patricia Aguilar-Alonso; José Angel Flores Hernández; Eduardo Brambila; Jorge Guevara; Gonzalo Flores; Gustavo Lopez-Lopez; Guadalupe Muñoz-Arenas; Julio Cesar Morales-Medina; Veronica Toxqui; Berenice Venegas; Alfonso Díaz

A high calorie intake can induce the appearance of the metabolic syndrome (MS), which is a serious public health problem because it affects glucose levels and triglycerides in the blood. Recently, it has been suggested that MS can cause complications in the brain, since chronic hyperglycemia and insulin resistance are risk factors for triggering neuronal death by inducing a state of oxidative stress and inflammatory response that affect cognitive processes. This process, however, is not clear. In this study, we evaluated the effect of the consumption of a high‐calorie diet (HCD) on both neurodegeneration and spatial memory impairment in rats. Our results demonstrated that HCD (90 day consumption) induces an alteration of the main energy metabolism markers, indicating the development of MS in rats. Moreover, an impairment of spatial memory was observed. Subsequently, the brains of these animals showed activation of an inflammatory response (increase in reactive astrocytes and interleukin1‐β as well as tumor necrosis factor‐α) and oxidative stress (reactive oxygen species and lipid peroxidation), causing a reduction in the number of neurons in the temporal cortex and hippocampus. Altogether, these results suggest that a HCD promotes the development of MS and contributes to the development of a neurodegenerative process and cognitive failure. In this regard, it is important to understand the relationship between MS and neuronal damage in order to prevent the onset of neurodegenerative disorders. Synapse 69:421–433, 2015.


Brain Research | 2008

The increase in Zinc levels and upregulation of Zinc transporters are mediated by nitric oxide in the cerebral cortex after transient ischemia in the rat

Patricia Aguilar-Alonso; Daniel Martinez-Fong; Nidia G. Pazos-Salazar; Eduardo Brambila; Juan Antonio González-Barrios; Alejandro Mejorada; Gonzalo Flores; Lourdes Millan-PerezPeña; Hector Rubio; Bertha Alicia León-Chávez

The transient occlusion of cerebral arteries causes an increase in zinc levels in the brain, which is associated with a production of nitric oxide (NO). The types of zinc transporters (ZnT) involved in zinc homeostasis in the cerebral cortex after hypoxia-ischemia are not completely known. We studied the effect of the transient occlusion (10 min) of the common carotid artery (CCA) on NO-induced zinc levels, ZnT mRNA expression, and cell-death markers in the cerebral cortex-hippocampus of the rat. Nitrites, zinc, and lipoperoxidation were quantified by colorimetric methods, ZnT expression was determined by RT-PCR, caspase-3 by ELISA and immunohistochemistry, and histopathological alterations by H&E staining. After restoration of the blood flow, the basal levels of NO and zinc increased in a biphasic manner over time, but the peaks of NO levels appeared earlier (2 h and 24 h) than those of zinc (6 h and 36 h). Upregulation of ZnT1, ZnT2, and ZnT4 mRNAs was determined after 8-h postreperfusion, but ZnT3 RNA levels were unaffected. Lipoperoxidation and caspase-3 levels were also increased, and necrosis and apoptosis were present at 24 h postreperfusion. All the effects determined were prevented by l-nitro-arginine methyl ester injected 1 h before the occlusion of the CCA. Our results suggest that the upregulation of ZnT1, ZnT2, and ZnT4 was to decrease the cytosolic zinc levels caused by NO after transient occlusion of the CCA, although this was unable to lead to physiological levels of zinc and to prevent cell damage in the cerebral cortex-hippocampus of the rat.


Synapse | 2015

Dendritic morphology changes in neurons from the ventral hippocampus, amygdala and nucleus accumbens in rats with neonatal lesions into the prefrontal cortex

Zayda Lazcano; Oscar Solis; Alfonso Díaz; Eduardo Brambila; Patricia Aguilar-Alonso; Jorge Guevara; Gonzalo Flores

Neonatal prefrontal cortex (nPFC) lesions in rats could be a potential animal model to study the early neurodevelopmental abnormalities associated with the behavioral and morphological brain changes observed in schizophrenia. Morphological alterations in pyramidal neurons from the ventral hippocampus (VH) have been observed in post‐mortem schizophrenic brains, mainly because of decreased dendritic arbor and spine density. We assessed the effects of nPFC‐lesions on the dendritic morphology of neurons from the VH, basolateral‐amygdala (BLA) and the nucleus accumbens (NAcc) in rats. nPFC lesions were made on postnatal day 7 (PD7), after dendritic morphology was studied by the Golgi‐Cox stain procedure followed by Sholl analysis at PD35 (prepubertal) and PD60 (adult) ages. We also evaluated the effects of PFC‐lesions on locomotor activity caused by a novel environment. Adult animals with nPFC lesions showed a decreased spine density in pyramidal neurons from the VH and in medium spiny cells from the NAcc. An increased locomotion was observed in a novel environment for adult animals with a PFC‐lesion. Our results indicate that PFC‐lesions alter the neuronal dendrite morphology of the NAcc and the VH, suggesting a disconnection between these limbic structures. The locomotion paradigms suggest that dopaminergic transmission is altered in the PFC lesion model. This could help to understand the consequences of an earlier PFC dysfunction in schizophrenia. To evaluate possible dendritic changes in neonatal prefrontal cortex lesions in schizophrenia‐related regions including nucleus accumbens, ventral hippocampus and basolateral amygdala, we used the Golgi‐Cox stain samples at PD35 and PD70. Our results suggest that neonatal prefrontal cortex damage alters dendritic parameters in limbic regions, and this has potential implications for schizophrenia. Synapse 69:314–325, 2015.


Brain Research | 2006

Increased nitric oxide levels and nitric oxide synthase isoform expression in the cerebellum of the taiep rat during its severe demyelination stage

Bertha Alicia León-Chávez; Patricia Aguilar-Alonso; Juan Antonio Gonzalez-Barrios; J.Ramón Eguibar; Araceli Ugarte; Eduardo Brambila; Alejandro Ruiz-Arguelles; Daniel Martinez-Fong

We have previously reported progressive reactive astrocytes in the cerebellum of taiep rats, one of the most regions affected by demyelination, and activation of cerebellar glial cells in vitro. Based on the hypothesis that activated glial cells produce high levels of reactive nitrogen intermediates, we assessed the production of nitric oxide (NO) and the expression of the three NO synthases (NOS) in the cerebellum of 6-month-old taiep rats. A significant 40% increase of NO levels was measured in taiep rats when compared with controls. The protein and mRNA levels of the three NOS isoforms were also significantly increased. In contrast to controls, immunostaining assays against nNOS or iNOS showed an increased number of immunoreactive glial cells in the granular layer (nNOS) and Purkinje layer (iNOS) of cerebellum of taiep rats. Microglia-macrophages and both CD4- and CD8-immunoreactive cells were observed in cerebellar white matter of taiep rats only, thus suggesting other possible cell sources of those NOSs. Differences in the cellular location for eNOS immunoreactivity were not observed. The enhanced levels of NO, NOS proteins, mRNAs, and NOS immunoreactivities in glial cells and microglia strongly suggest glial activation together with the professional immune cells can aggravate the demyelination of aged taiep rats.


Annals of Human Biology | 2012

Risk factors for diabetes, but not for cardiovascular disease, are associated with family history of Type 2 diabetes in subjects from central Mexico

Irma Zamora-Ginez; Ricardo Pérez-Fuentes; Blanca G. Baez-Duarte; Cristina Revilla-Monsalve; Eduardo Brambila

Background: Independent of obesity, family history of type 2 diabetes mellitus (FHT2DM) is another important risk factor for developing diabetes. Aim: To establish the association among FHT2DM, risk factors for diabetes and cardiovascular disease in subjects from central Mexico. Subjects and methods: Clinical and biochemical studies were performed in 383 first-degree relatives of patients with type 2 diabetes and 270 subjects unrelated to patients with type 2 diabetes—all subjects were from the city of Puebla in central Mexico. Logistic regressions were used to assess the association between FHT2DM and metabolic parameters. Cardiovascular risk was classified by dyslipidemia and the Framingham Risk Score (FRS). Results: FHT2DM was associated with risk factors for diabetes, such as increased fasting insulin levels (OR = 1.731, 95% CI = 1.041–2.877), decreased insulin sensitivity (OR = 1.951, 95% CI = 1.236–3.080) and pre-diabetes (OR = 1.63, 95% CI = 1.14–2.33). FHT2DH was not associated with risk factors for cardiovascular disease, such as dyslipidemia (OR = 1.12, 95% CI = 0.70–1.79) and FRS (OR = 0.74, 95% CI = 0.40–1.36) when adjusted for gender, age, smoking and obesity. Conclusion: Diabetic risk factors, but not cardiovascular disease risk factors, are associated with a positive family history of diabetes in subjects from central Mexico, independent of the presence of obesity.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2013

Subacute Zinc Administration and L-NAME Caused an Increase of NO, Zinc, Lipoperoxidation, and Caspase-3 during a Cerebral Hypoxia-Ischemia Process in the Rat

Victor Manuel Blanco-Alvarez; Patricia Lopez-Moreno; Guadalupe Soto-Rodriguez; Daniel Martinez-Fong; Hector Rubio; Juan Antonio Gonzalez-Barrios; Celia Piña-Leyva; Maricela Torres-Soto; María de Jesus Gomez-Villalobos; Daniel Hernandez-Baltazar; Eduardo Brambila; Jose R. Eguibar; Araceli Ugarte; Jorge Cebada; Bertha Alicia León-Chávez

Zinc or L-NAME administration has been shown to be protector agents, decreasing oxidative stress and cell death. However, the treatment with zinc and L-NAME by intraperitoneal injection has not been studied. The aim of our work was to study the effect of zinc and L-NAME administration on nitrosative stress and cell death. Male Wistar rats were treated with ZnCl2 (2.5 mg/kg each 24 h, for 4 days) and N-ω-nitro-L-arginine-methyl ester (L-NAME, 10 mg/kg) on the day 5 (1 hour before a common carotid-artery occlusion (CCAO)). The temporoparietal cortex and hippocampus were dissected, and zinc, nitrites, and lipoperoxidation were assayed at different times. Cell death was assayed by histopathology using hematoxylin-eosin staining and caspase-3 active by immunostaining. The subacute administration of zinc before CCAO decreases the levels of zinc, nitrites, lipoperoxidation, and cell death in the late phase of the ischemia. L-NAME administration in the rats treated with zinc showed an increase of zinc levels in the early phase and increase of zinc, nitrites, and lipoperoxidation levels, cell death by necrosis, and the apoptosis in the late phase. These results suggest that the use of these two therapeutic strategies increased the injury caused by the CCAO, unlike the alone administration of zinc.


Oxidative Medicine and Cellular Longevity | 2016

Energy Drink Administration in Combination with Alcohol Causes an Inflammatory Response and Oxidative Stress in the Hippocampus and Temporal Cortex of Rats

Alfonso Díaz; Samuel Treviño; Jorge Guevara; Guadalupe Muñoz-Arenas; Eduardo Brambila; Blanca Espinosa; Albino Moreno-Rodríguez; Gustavo Lopez-Lopez; Ulises Peña-Rosas; Berenice Venegas; Anabella Handal-Silva; José Luis Morán-Perales; Gonzalo Flores; Patricia Aguilar-Alonso

Energy drinks (EDs) are often consumed in combination with alcohol because they reduce the depressant effects of alcohol. However, different researches suggest that chronic use of these psychoactive substances in combination with alcohol can trigger an oxidative and inflammatory response. These processes are regulated by both a reactive astrogliosis and an increase of proinflammatory cytokines such as IL-1β, TNF-α, and iNOS, causing cell death (apoptosis) at the central and peripheral nervous systems. Currently, mechanisms of toxicity caused by mixing alcohol and ED in the brain are not well known. In this study, we evaluated the effect of chronic alcohol consumption in combination with ED on inflammatory response and oxidative stress in the temporal cortex (TCx) and hippocampus (Hp) of adult rats (90 days old). Our results demonstrated that consuming a mixture of alcohol and ED for 60 days induced an increase in reactive gliosis, IL-1β, TNF-α, iNOS, reactive oxygen species, lipid peroxidation, and nitric oxide, in the TCx and Hp. We also found immunoreactivity to caspase-3 and a decrease of synaptophysin in the same brain regions. The results suggested that chronic consumption of alcohol in combination with ED causes an inflammatory response and oxidative stress, which induced cell death via apoptosis in the TCx and Hp of the adult rats.


Biological Trace Element Research | 1999

Early effects of surgery on zinc and metallothionein levels in female rats

Eduardo Brambila; José Luis Muñoz-Sánchez; Arnulfo Albores; Michael P. Waalkes

Time-response effects of experimental surgery on zinc (Zn) and metallothionein (MT) homeostasis were investigated in female rats up to 24 h. Hepatic Zn content increased at 20 and 24 h postsurgery, whereas serum Zn levels decreased. Hepatic MT increased significantly by 9 h postsurgery and peaked at up to twofold of control at 12 h after surgery. Following the peak at 12 h, hepatic MT content decreased with time but did not reach control levels at the end of this study. When MT isoforms were evaluated, MT-II levels were elevated to the highest extent by 12 h after surgery, whereas MT-I levels started to decrease after 3 h postsurgery but then increased by 20 h. The early increases in MT content are probably mediated by nonmetallic mediators released during the postsurgical inflammatory process, favoring the plasma/tissue mobilization of Zn. This process might be part of the overall mechanisms occurring in the inflammation.


Neural Plasticity | 2015

Prophylactic Subacute Administration of Zinc Increases CCL2, CCR2, FGF2, and IGF-1 Expression and Prevents the Long-Term Memory Loss in a Rat Model of Cerebral Hypoxia-Ischemia

Victor Manuel Blanco-Alvarez; Guadalupe Soto-Rodriguez; Juan Antonio Gonzalez-Barrios; Daniel Martinez-Fong; Eduardo Brambila; Maricela Torres-Soto; Ana Karina Aguilar-Peralta; Alejandro Gonzalez-Vazquez; Constantino Tomas-Sanchez; I. Daniel Limón; Jose R. Eguibar; Araceli Ugarte; Jeanett Hernandez-Castillo; Bertha Alicia León-Chávez

Prophylactic subacute administration of zinc decreases lipoperoxidation and cell death following a transient cerebral hypoxia-ischemia, thus suggesting neuroprotective and preconditioning effects. Chemokines and growth factors are also involved in the neuroprotective effect in hypoxia-ischemia. We explored whether zinc prevents the cerebral cortex-hippocampus injury through regulation of CCL2, CCR2, FGF2, and IGF-1 expression following a 10 min of common carotid artery occlusion (CCAO). Male rats were grouped as follows: (1) Zn96h, rats injected with ZnCl2 (one dose every 24 h during four days); (2) Zn96h + CCAO, rats treated with ZnCl2 before CCAO; (3) CCAO, rats with CCAO only; (4) Sham group, rats with mock CCAO; and (5) untreated rats. The cerebral cortex-hippocampus was dissected at different times before and after CCAO. CCL2/CCR2, FGF2, and IGF-1 expression was assessed by RT-PCR and ELISA. Learning in Morris Water Maze was achieved by daily training during 5 days. Long-term memory was evaluated on day 7 after learning. Subacute administration of zinc increased expression of CCL2, CCR2, FGF2, and IGF-1 in the early and late phases of postreperfusion and prevented the CCAO-induced memory loss in the rat. These results might be explained by the induction of neural plasticity because of the expression of CCL2 and growth factors.


Clinical & Developmental Immunology | 2016

Prophylactic Chronic Zinc Administration Increases Neuroinflammation in a Hypoxia-Ischemia Model

Constantino Tomas-Sanchez; Victor Manuel Blanco-Alvarez; Juan Antonio Gonzalez-Barrios; Daniel Martinez-Fong; Guadalupe Garcia-Robles; Guadalupe Soto-Rodriguez; Eduardo Brambila; Maricela Torres-Soto; Alejandro Gonzalez-Vazquez; Ana Karina Aguilar-Peralta; José-Luis Garate-Morales; Luis-Angel Aguilar-Carrasco; Daniel I. Limón; Jorge Cebada; Bertha Alicia León-Chávez

Acute and subacute administration of zinc exert neuroprotective effects in hypoxia-ischemia animal models; yet the effect of chronic administration of zinc still remains unknown. We addressed this issue by injecting zinc at a tolerable dose (0.5 mg/kg weight, i.p.) for 14 days before common carotid artery occlusion (CCAO) in a rat. After CCAO, the level of zinc was measured by atomic absorption spectrophotometry, nitrites were determined by Griess method, lipoperoxidation was measured by Gerard-Monnier assay, and mRNA expression of 84 genes coding for cytokines, chemokines, and their receptors was measured by qRT-PCR, whereas nitrotyrosine, chemokines, and their receptors were assessed by ELISA and histopathological changes in the temporoparietal cortex-hippocampus at different time points. Long-term memory was evaluated using Morris water maze. Following CCAO, a significant increase in nitrosative stress, inflammatory chemokines/receptors, and cell death was observed after 8 h, and a 2.5-fold increase in zinc levels was detected after 7 days. Although CXCL12 and FGF2 protein levels were significantly increased, the long-term memory was impaired 12 days after reperfusion in the Zn+CCAO group. Our data suggest that the chronic administration of zinc at tolerable doses causes nitrosative stress, toxic zinc accumulation, and neuroinflammation, which might account for the neuronal death and cerebral dysfunction after CCAO.

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Dive into the Eduardo Brambila's collaboration.

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Bertha Alicia León-Chávez

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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Patricia Aguilar-Alonso

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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Samuel Treviño

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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Alfonso Díaz

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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Daniel Martinez-Fong

Instituto Politécnico Nacional

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Guadalupe Soto-Rodriguez

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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José Ángel Flores-Hernández

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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Maricela Torres-Soto

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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Araceli Ugarte

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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Gonzalo Flores

Benemérita Universidad Autónoma de Puebla

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