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Dive into the research topics where Eduardo Soriano is active.

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Featured researches published by Eduardo Soriano.


Development | 2003

BDNF regulates spontaneous correlated activity at early developmental stages by increasing synaptogenesis and expression of the K+/Cl- co-transporter KCC2

Fernando Aguado; Maria A. Carmona; Esther Pozas; Agustín Aguiló; Francisco José Martínez-Guijarro; Soledad Alcántara; Víctor Borrell; Rafael Yuste; Carlos F. Ibáñez; Eduardo Soriano

Spontaneous neural activity is a basic property of the developing brain, which regulates key developmental processes, including migration, neural differentiation and formation and refinement of connections. The mechanisms regulating spontaneous activity are not known. By using transgenic embryos that overexpress BDNF under the control of the nestin promoter, we show here that BDNF controls the emergence and robustness of spontaneous activity in embryonic hippocampal slices. Further, BDNF dramatically increases spontaneous co-active network activity, which is believed to synchronize gene expression and synaptogenesis in vast numbers of neurons. In fact, BDNF raises the spontaneous activity of E18 hippocampal neurons to levels that are typical of postnatal slices. We also show that BDNF overexpression increases the number of synapses at much earlier stages (E18) than those reported previously. Most of these synapses were GABAergic, and GABAergic interneurons showed hypertrophy and a 3-fold increase in GAD expression. Interestingly, whereas BDNF does not alter the expression of GABA and glutamate ionotropic receptors, it does raise the expression of the recently cloned K+/Cl- KCC2 co-transporter, which is responsible for the conversion of GABA responses from depolarizing to inhibitory, through the control of the Cl- potential. Together, results indicate that both the presynaptic and postsynaptic machineries of GABAergic circuits may be essential targets of BDNF actions to control spontaneous activity. The data indicate that BDNF is a potent regulator of spontaneous activity and co-active networks, which is a new level of regulation of neurotrophins. Given that BDNF itself is regulated by neuronal activity, we suggest that BDNF acts as a homeostatic factor controlling the emergence, complexity and networking properties of spontaneous networks.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2002

Dyrk1A Haploinsufficiency Affects Viability and Causes Developmental Delay and Abnormal Brain Morphology in Mice

Vassiliki Fotaki; Mara Dierssen; Soledad Alcántara; Salvador Martínez; Eulàlia Martí; Caty Casas; Joana Visa; Eduardo Soriano; Xavier Estivill; Maria L. Arbonés

ABSTRACT DYRK1A is the human orthologue of the Drosophila minibrain (mnb) gene, which is involved in postembryonic neurogenesis in flies. Because of its mapping position on chromosome 21 and the neurobehavioral alterations shown by mice overexpressing this gene, involvement of DYRK1A in some of the neurological defects of Down syndrome patients has been suggested. To gain insight into its physiological role, we have generated mice deficient in Dyrk1A function by gene targeting. Dyrk1A−/− null mutants presented a general growth delay and died during midgestation. Mice heterozygous for the mutation (Dyrk1A+/−) showed decreased neonatal viability and a significant body size reduction from birth to adulthood. General neurobehavioral analysis revealed preweaning developmental delay of Dyrk1A+/− mice and specific alterations in adults. Brains of Dyrk1A+/− mice were decreased in size in a region-specific manner, although the cytoarchitecture and neuronal components in most areas were not altered. Cell counts showed increased neuronal densities in some brain regions and a specific decrease in the number of neurons in the superior colliculus, which exhibited a significant size reduction. These data provide evidence about the nonredundant, vital role of Dyrk1A and suggest a conserved mode of action that determines normal growth and brain size in both mice and flies.


Nature Neuroscience | 2007

Mechanism suppressing glycogen synthesis in neurons and its demise in progressive myoclonus epilepsy

David Vilchez; Susana Ros; Daniel Cifuentes; Lluís Pujadas; Jordi Vallès; Belén García-Fojeda; Olga Criado-García; E. Fernández-Sánchez; Iria Medraño-Fernández; Jorge Domínguez; Mar García-Rocha; Eduardo Soriano; Santiago Rodríguez de Córdoba; Joan J. Guinovart

Glycogen synthesis is normally absent in neurons. However, inclusion bodies resembling abnormal glycogen accumulate in several neurological diseases, particularly in progressive myoclonus epilepsy or Lafora disease. We show here that mouse neurons have the enzymatic machinery for synthesizing glycogen, but that it is suppressed by retention of muscle glycogen synthase (MGS) in the phosphorylated, inactive state. This suppression was further ensured by a complex of laforin and malin, which are the two proteins whose mutations cause Lafora disease. The laforin-malin complex caused proteasome-dependent degradation both of the adaptor protein targeting to glycogen, PTG, which brings protein phosphatase 1 to MGS for activation, and of MGS itself. Enforced expression of PTG led to glycogen deposition in neurons and caused apoptosis. Therefore, the malin-laforin complex ensures a blockade of neuronal glycogen synthesis even under intense glycogenic conditions. Here we explain the formation of polyglucosan inclusions in Lafora disease by demonstrating a crucial role for laforin and malin in glycogen synthesis.


Neuron | 2005

The Cells of Cajal-Retzius: Still a Mystery One Century After

Eduardo Soriano; José Antonio del Río

Cajal-Retzius (CR) cells are an enigmatic class of neurons located at the surface of the cerebral cortex, playing a major role in cortical development. In this review, we discuss several distinct features of these neurons and the mechanisms by which they regulate cortical development. Many CR cells likely have extracortical origin and undergo cell death during development. Recent genetic studies report unique patterns of gene expression in CR cells, which may help to explain the developmental processes in which they participate. Moreover, a number of studies indicate that CR cells, and their secreted gene product, reelin, are involved in neuronal migration by acting on two key partners, migrating neurons and radial glial cells. Emerging data show that these neurons are a critical part of an early and complex network of neural activity in layer I, supporting the notion that CR cells modulate cortical maturation. Given these key and complex developmental properties, it is therefore conceivable for CR cells to be implicated in the pathogenesis of a variety of neurological disorders.


Brain Research Reviews | 1998

The functions of the preplate in development and evolution of the neocortex and hippocampus

H Supèr; Eduardo Soriano; H.B.M Uylings

Recently, it has been shown that the early developmental organization of the archicortical hippocampus resembles that of the neocortex. In both cortices at embryonic stages, a preplate is present, which is split by the formation of the cortical plate into a marginal zone and a subplate layer. The pioneer neurons of the preplate are believed to form a phylogenetically ancient cortical structure. Neurons in these preplate layers are the first postmitotic neurons and have important roles in the development of the cerebral cortex. Cajal-Retzius cells in the marginal zone regulate the phenotype of radial glial cells and may direct neuronal migration establishing the inside-out gradient of corticogenesis. Furthermore, pioneer neurons form the initial axonal connections with other (sub)cortical structures. A significant difference between the hippocampus and neocortex, however, is that in the hippocampus, most afferents are guided by the pioneer neurons in the prominent marginal zone, while in the neocortex most ingrowing afferent axons enter via the subplate. At later developmental periods, most pioneer neurons disappear by cell death or transform into other neuronal shapes. Here, we review the early developmental organization of the mammalian cerebral cortex (both neocortex and hippocampus) and discuss the functions and fate of pioneer neurons in cortical development, in particular that of Cajal-Retzius cells. Evaluating the developmental properties of the hippocampus and neocortex, we present the hypothesis that the distribution of the main ingrowing afferent systems in the developing neocortex, which differs from the one in the hippocampal region, may have enabled the specific evolution of the neocortex.


Experimental Brain Research | 1989

Plasticity in the barrel cortex of the adult mouse: effects of peripheral deprivation on GAD-immunoreactivity.

Egbert Welker; Eduardo Soriano; H. Van der Loos

SummaryThe whisker-to-barrel pathway of the adult mouse was used in a study on the effects of peripheral sensory deprivation on GAD-immunoreactivity in the somatosensory cortex. At varying periods of time after removal of a set of vibrissal follicles, mice were processed for immunohistochemistry using an antibody against GAD. In sections tangential to the cortical surface we observed, in the barrels whose follicles were removed, decreased immunoreactivity as early as three days after surgery. The decrease was due to a lesser numerical density of stained puncta and to less intense staining of those remaining. GAD-positive somata were also less intensely stained, whereas their number did not seem to be changed. The changes, apparent at 3 days after the surgery, were restricted to the barrels corresponding to the removed follicles and were maximal at 2–4 weeks. At longer survival times (until 7 months) the immunoreactivity returned to normal, coincident with the regeneration of peripheral nerve fibres in the absence of their follicles. We conclude that GAD-immunoreactivity in the barrel cortex swiftly reacts to modifications of neuronal activity evoked in the periphery.


Anatomy and Embryology | 1993

Postnatal development of parvalbumin and calbindin D28K immunoreactivities in the cerebral cortex of the rat.

Soledad Alcántara; Isidro Ferrer; Eduardo Soriano

Parvalbumin and calbindin D28k immunoreactivities were examined in the neocortex of the rat during postnatal development. Parvalbumin-immunoreactive nonpyramidal neurons first appear in layer V and later in layers VI and IV, and then in II and III. Immunoreactive terminals forming baskets surrounding unlabelled somata appear about 2 days later. The first parvalbumin-immunoreactive neurons appear in the retrosplenial and cingulate cortices, and the rostral region of the primary somatosensory cortex at postnatal days 8 or 9 (P8–P9). These regions are followed by the primary visual, primary auditory and motor cortices at P11. Parvalbumin immunoreactivity appears last in the secondary areas of the sensory regions and association cortices. Adult patterns are reached at the end of the 3rd week. Calbindin D28K-immunoreactive nonpyramidal neurons are found at birth in all cortical layers excepting the molecular layer. The intensity of the immunoreaction increases during the first 8 or 11 days of postnatal life, first in the inner and later in the upper cortical layers, following, therefore, an “inside-out” gradient. Heavily-labelled calbindin D28K-immunoreactive nonpyramidal cells dramatically decrease in number from P11 to P15 due mainly to a decrease of the multipolar subtypes. This suggests that two populations of calbindin D28k-immunoreactive nonpyramidal neurons are produced in the neocortex during postnatal development: one population of neurons transitorily expresses calbindin D28k immunoreactivity; the other population is composed of neurons that are permanently calbindin D28k immunoreactive. In addition to heavily labelled nonpyramidal cells, a band of weakly labelled pyramid-like neurons progressively appears in layers II and III throughout the cerebral cortex, beginning in layer IV in the somatosensory cortex by the end of the 2st week. Adult patterns are reached at the end of the 3rd week. These results indicate that parvalbumin and calbindin D28k immunoreactivities in the cerebral neocortx follow different characteristic patterns during postnatal development. The appearance of parvalbumin immunoreactivity correlates with the appearance of the related functional activity in the different cortical regions, and, probably, with the appearance of inhibitory activity in the neocortex. On the other hand, the early appearance of calbindin D28k immunoreactivity in the neocortex may be related to the early appearance of calbindin immunoreactivity in many other brain regions, and suggests another, as yet unknown, role for this calcium-binding protein during development of the cerebral cortex.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 1999

Thyroid hormone regulates reelin and dab1 expression during brain development

Manuel Alvarez-Dolado; Mónica Ruiz; José Antonio del Río; Soledad Alcántara; Ferran Burgaya; Michael Sheldon; Kazunori Nakajima; Juan Bernal; Brian W. Howell; Tom Curran; Eduardo Soriano; Alberto Muñoz

The reelin and dab1 genes are necessary for appropriate neuronal migration and lamination during brain development. Since these processes are controlled by thyroid hormone, we studied the effect of thyroid hormone deprivation and administration on the expression of reelin anddab1. As shown by Northern analysis, in situ hybridization, and immunohistochemistry studies, hypothyroid rats expressed decreased levels of reelinRNA and protein during the perinatal period [embryonic day 18 (E18) and postnatal day 0 (P0)]. The effect was evident in Cajal-Retzius cells of cortex layer I, as well as in layers V/VI, hippocampus, and granular neurons of the cerebellum. At later ages, however, Reelin was more abundant in the cortex, hippocampus, cerebellum, and olfactory bulb of hypothyroid rats (P5), and no differences were detected at P15. Conversely, Dab1 levels were higher at P0, and lower at P5 in hypothyroid animals. In line with these results, reelin RNA and protein levels were higher in cultured hippocampal slices from P0 control rats compared to those from hypothyroid animals. Significantly, thyroid-dependent regulation of reelin anddab1 was confirmed in vivo and in vitro by hormone treatment of hypothyroid rats and organotypic cultures, respectively. In both cases, thyroid hormone led to an increase in reelin expression. Our data suggest that the effects of thyroid hormone on neuronal migration may be in part mediated through the control of reelin anddab1 expression during brain ontogenesis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

Cerebellar GABAergic progenitors adopt an external granule cell-like phenotype in the absence of Ptf1a transcription factor expression.

Marta Pascual; Ibane Abasolo; Ana Mingorance-Le Meur; Albert Martínez; José Antonio del Río; Christopher V.E. Wright; Francisco X. Real; Eduardo Soriano

We report in this study that, in the cerebellum, the pancreatic transcription factor Ptf1a is required for the specific generation of Purkinje cells (PCs) and interneurons. Moreover, granule cell progenitors in the external GCL (EGL) appear to be unaffected by deletion of Ptf1a. Cell lineage analysis in Ptf1aCre/Cre mice was used to establish that, in the absence of Ptf1a expression, ventricular zone progenitors, normally fated to produce PCs and interneurons, aberrantly migrate to the EGL and express typical markers of these cells, such as Math1, Reelin, and Zic1/2. Furthermore, these cells have a fine structure typical of EGL progenitors, indicating that they adopt an EGL-like cell phenotype. These findings indicate that Ptf1a is necessary for the specification and normal production of PCs and cerebellar interneurons. Moreover, our results suggest that Ptf1a is also required for the suppression of the granule cell specification program in cerebellar ventricular zone precursors.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2010

Reelin Regulates Postnatal Neurogenesis and Enhances Spine Hypertrophy and Long-Term Potentiation

Lluís Pujadas; Agnès Gruart; Carles Bosch; Lídia Delgado; Cátia Teixeira; Daniela Rossi; Luis de Lecea; Albert Martínez; José M. Delgado-García; Eduardo Soriano

Reelin, an extracellular protein essential for neural migration and lamination, is also expressed in the adult brain. To unravel the function of this protein in the adult forebrain, we generated transgenic mice that overexpress Reelin under the control of the CaMKIIα promoter. Overexpression of Reelin increased adult neurogenesis and impaired the migration and positioning of adult-generated neurons. In the hippocampus, the overexpression of Reelin resulted in an increase in synaptic contacts and hypertrophy of dendritic spines. Induction of long-term potentiation (LTP) in alert-behaving mice showed that Reelin overexpression evokes a dramatic increase in LTP responses. Hippocampal field EPSP during a classical conditioning paradigm was also increased in these mice. Our results indicate that Reelin levels in the adult brain regulate neurogenesis and migration, as well as the structural and functional properties of synapses. These observations suggest that Reelin controls developmental processes that remain active in the adult brain.

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Jesús Avila

Spanish National Research Council

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