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Dive into the research topics where Emilia Saulle is active.

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Featured researches published by Emilia Saulle.


Neuropharmacology | 2001

Selective involvement of mGlu1 receptors in corticostriatal LTD.

Paolo Gubellini; Emilia Saulle; Diego Centonze; Paola Bonsi; Antonio Pisani; Giorgio Bernardi; François Conquet; Paolo Calabresi

Although metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) have been proposed to play a role in corticostriatal long-term depression (LTD), the specific receptor subtype required for this form of synaptic plasticity has not been characterized yet. Thus, we utilized a corticostriatal brain slice preparation and intracellular recordings from striatal spiny neurons to address this issue. We observed that both AIDA (100 microM) and LY 367385 (30 microM), two blockers of mGluR1s, were able to fully prevent the induction of this form of synaptic plasticity, whereas MPEP (30 microM), a selective antagonist of the mGluR5 subtype, did not significantly affect the amplitude and time-course of corticostriatal LTD. Both AIDA and LY 367385 were ineffective on LTD when applied after its induction. The critical role of mGluR1s in the formation of corticostriatal LTD was confirmed in experiments performed on mice lacking mGluR1s. In these mice, in fact, a significant reduction of the LTD amplitude was observed in comparison to the normal LTD measured in their wild-type counterparts. We found that neither acute pharmacological blockade of mGluR1s nor the genetic disruption of these receptors affected the presynaptic modulation of corticostriatal excitatory postsynapic potentials (EPSPs) exerted by DCG-IV and L-SOP, selective agonists of group II and III mGluRs, respectively. Our data show that the induction of corticostriatal LTD requires the activation of mGluR1 but not mGluR5. mGluR1-mediated control of this form of synaptic plasticity may play a role in the modulatory effect exerted by mGluRs in the basal ganglia-related motor activity.


Neuropharmacology | 2003

Corticostriatal LTP requires combined mGluR1 and mGluR5 activation

Paolo Gubellini; Emilia Saulle; Diego Centonze; Cinzia Costa; Domenicantonio Tropepi; Giorgio Bernardi; François Conquet; Paolo Calabresi

Metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRs) have been demonstrated to play a role in synaptic plasticity. It has been recently shown that mGluR1 is involved in corticostriatal long-term depression, by means of pharmacological approach and by using mGluR1-knockout mice. Here, we report that both mGluR1 and mGluR5 are involved in corticostriatal long-term potentiation (LTP). In particular, the mGluR1 antagonist LY 367385, as well as the mGluR5 antagonist MPEP, reduce LTP amplitude. Moreover, blockade of both mGluR1 and mGluR5 by LY 367385 and MPEP co-administration fully suppresses LTP. Accordingly, group II and group III mGluRs antagonists fail to affect LTP induction. Interestingly, LTP amplitude is also significantly reduced in both mGluR1- and mGluR5-knockout mice. The differential function of mGluR1 and mGluR5 in corticostriatal synaptic plasticity may play a role in the modulation of the motor activity mediated by the basal ganglia, thus providing a substrate for the pharmacological treatment of motor disorders involving the striatum.


Stroke | 2004

Coactivation of GABAA and GABAB Receptor Results in Neuroprotection During In Vitro Ischemia

Cinzia Costa; Giorgia Leone; Emilia Saulle; Francesco Pisani; Giorgio Bernardi; Paolo Calabresi

Background and Purpose— The possible neuroprotective effect of endogenous &ggr;-aminobutyric acid (GABA) on the irreversible electrophysiological changes induced by in vitro ischemia on striatal neurons was investigated. In particular, the aim of the study was the characterization of the neuroprotective action of 2 antiepileptic drugs increasing GABAergic transmission such as tiagabine, a GABA transporter inhibitor, and vigabatrin, an irreversible inhibitor of GABA transaminase. Methods— Extracellular field potential recordings were obtained from rat corticostriatal slice preparations. In vitro ischemia was delivered by switching to an artificial cerebrospinal fluid solution in which glucose was omitted and oxygen was replaced with N2. Results— An irreversible loss of the field potentials recorded from striatal neurons was observed after 10 minutes of ischemia in control solution. Conversely, tiagabine and vigabatrin partially prevented the ischemia-induced field potential loss. Surprisingly, both GABAA and GABAB receptor antagonists blocked these effects. Accordingly, neuroprotection could be obtained only when GABAA and GABAB receptor agonists were coapplied, but not when a single agonist was given in isolation. Conclusions— Antiepileptic drugs targeting GABAergic transmission can exert neuroprotective effects against ischemia by increasing endogenous GABA levels and via the activation of both GABAA and GABAB receptors.


Stroke | 2000

Is Pharmacological Neuroprotection Dependent on Reduced Glutamate Release

Paolo Calabresi; Barbara Picconi; Emilia Saulle; Diego Centonze; Atticus H. Hainsworth; Giorgio Bernardi

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The aim of this study was to determinate the possible role of the ionotropic glutamate receptor in the expression of irreversible electrophysiological changes induced by in vitro ischemia and to test whether the neuroprotective action of various neurotransmitter agonists and drugs of clinical interest is related to a presynaptic inhibitory action at glutamatergic synapses. METHODS Intracellular and extracellular recordings have been performed in a rat corticostriatal slice preparation. Different pharmacological compounds have been tested on corticostriatal glutamatergic transmission in control conditions and in an in vitro model of ischemia (oxygen and glucose deprivation). RESULTS In vitro ischemia lasting 10 minutes produced an irreversible loss of the field potential recorded from striatal slices after cortical stimulation. Preincubation of the slices with 3 micromol/L 6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione (an alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methylisoxazole-4-propionic acid [AMPA] receptor antagonist) allowed a significant recovery of the field potential amplitude (P<0.05, n=6), whereas incubation with 30 micromol/L aminophosphonovaleric acid (an N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist) did not produce a significant recovery after 10 minutes of ischemia (P>0.05, n=7). Bath application of 3 mmol/L glutamate for 5 minutes produced a complete but reversible inhibition of the field potential amplitude. When a similar application was coupled with a brief period of ischemia (5 minutes), which produced, per se, only a transient inhibition of the field potential, it caused an irreversible loss of this parameter. We also tested the possible neuroprotective effect of neurotransmitter agonists reducing the release of glutamate from corticostriatal terminals. Agonists acting on purinergic (adenosine), muscarinic (oxotremorine), and metabotropic glutamate receptors (L-serine o-phosphate [L-SOP]) significantly (P<0.001, n=8 for each agonist) reduced glutamatergic synaptic potentials, with each showing different potencies. The EC(50) was 26.4 micromol/L for adenosine, 0. 08 micromol/L for oxotremorine, and 0.89 micromol/L for L-SOP. Concentrations of these agonists producing the maximal inhibition of the synaptic potential were tested on the ischemia-induced irreversible loss of field potential. Adenosine (P<0.05, n=9) and oxotremorine (P<0.05, n=8) showed significant neuroprotective action, whereas L-SOP was ineffective (P>0.05, n=10). Similarly, putative neuroprotective drugs significantly (P<0.001, n=10 for each drug) reduced the amplitude of corticostriatal potential, with different EC(50) values (phenytoin, 33.5 micromol/L; gabapentin, 96.8 micromol/L; lamotrigine, 26.7 micromol/L; riluzole, 6 micromol/L; and sipatrigine, 2 micromol/L). Concentration of these drugs producing maximal inhibition of the amplitude of corticostriatal potentials showed a differential neuroprotective action on the ischemic electrical damage. Phenytoin (P<0.05, n=10), lamotrigine (P<0.05, n=10), riluzole (P<0.05, n=9), and sipatrigine (P<0.001, n=10) produced a significant neuroprotection, whereas gabapentin (P>0.05, n=11) was ineffective. The neuroprotective action of transmitter agonists and clinical drugs was not related to their ability in decreasing glutamate release, as detected by changes in the paired-pulse facilitation protocol. CONCLUSIONS Ionotropic glutamate receptors, and particularly AMPA-like receptors, play a role in the irreversible loss of field potential amplitude induced by ischemia in the striatum. Drugs acting by reducing glutamatergic corticostriatal transmission may show a neuroprotective effect. However, their efficacy does not seem to be directly related to their capability to decrease glutamate release from corticostriatal terminals. We suggest that additional modulatory actions on voltage-dependent conductances and on ischemia-induced ion distribution at the postsynaptic site may also exert a crucial role.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2004

Neuronal vulnerability following inhibition of mitochondrial complex II: a possible ionic mechanism for Huntington's disease

Emilia Saulle; Paolo Gubellini; Barbara Picconi; Diego Centonze; Domenicantonio Tropepi; Antonio Pisani; Michele Morari; Matteo Marti; Luisa Rossi; Michele Papa; Giorgio Bernardi; Paolo Calabresi

An impaired complex II (succinate dehydrogenase, SD) striatal mitochondrial activity is one of the prominent metabolic alterations in Huntingtons disease (HD), and intoxication with 3-nitropropionic acid (3-NP), an inhibitor of mitochondrial complex II, mimics the motor abnormalities and the pathology of HD. We found that striatal spiny neurons responded to this toxin with an irreversible membrane depolarization/inward current, while cholinergic interneurons showed a hyperpolarization/outward current. Both these currents were sensitive to intracellular concentration of ATP. The 3-NP-induced depolarization was associated with an increased release of endogenous GABA, while acetylcholine levels were reduced. Moreover, 3-NP induced a higher depolarization in presymptomatic R6/2 HD transgenic mice compared to wild-type (WT) mice, showing an increased susceptibility to SD inhibition. Conversely, the hyperpolarization did not significantly differ from the one recorded in WT mice. The diverse membrane changes induced by SD inhibition may contribute to the cell-type-specific neuronal death in HD.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2002

Tissue plasminogen activator is required for corticostriatal long-term potentiation

Diego Centonze; Maddalena Napolitano; Emilia Saulle; Paolo Gubellini; Barbara Picconi; Alessandro Martorana; Antonio Pisani; Alberto Gulino; Giorgio Bernardi; Paolo Calabresi

Several experimental data indicate that tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) is involved in memory formation and synaptic plasticity in different brain areas. In the attempt to highlight the role of this serine protease in striatal neuron activity, mice lacking tPA have been used for electrophysiological, immunohistochemical and Western blot experiments. Disruption of tPA gene prevented corticostriatal long‐term potentiation, an NMDA‐dependent form of synaptic plasticity requiring the stimulation of both dopamine and acetylcholine receptors. Spontaneous and evoked glutamatergic transmission was intact in the striatum of tPA‐deficient mice, as was the nigrostriatal dopamine innervation and the expression of dopamine D1 receptors. Conversely, the sensitivity of striatal cholinergic interneurons to dopamine D1 receptor stimulation was lost in these mutants, suggesting that tPA facilitates long‐term potentiation (LTP) induction in the striatum by favouring the D1 receptor‐mediated excitation of acetylcholine‐producing interneurons. The demonstration that tPA ablation interferes with the induction of corticostriatal LTP and with the dopamine receptor‐mediated control of cholinergic interneurons might help to explain the altered striatum‐dependent learning deficits observed in tPA‐deficient mice and provides new insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying synaptic plasticity in the striatum.


Stroke | 2002

Endogenous dopamine amplifies ischemic long-term potentiation via D1 receptors

Emilia Saulle; Diego Centonze; Ana B. Martín; Rosario Moratalla; Giorgio Bernardi; Paolo Calabresi

Background and Purpose— Several observations indicate that, during energy deprivation, endogenous dopamine may become neurotoxic. Accordingly, the nucleus striatum is a preferential site of silent infarcts in humans, and experimental ischemia caused by homolateral carotid occlusion selectively damages this dopamine-enriched brain area. In an attempt to clarify how dopamine takes part in ischemia-induced neuronal damage, we performed in vitro electrophysiological recordings from neurons of the nucleus striatum. Methods— Intracellular recordings with sharp microelectrodes were performed from corticostriatal slices. Slices were obtained from both rats and wild-type and dopamine D1 receptor-lacking mice. In some experiments, the striatum was unilaterally denervated by injecting the dopamine-specific neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine in the homolateral substantia nigra. Dopamine agonists and antagonists, as well as drugs targeting the intracellular cascade coupled to dopamine receptor stimulation, were applied at known concentrations. Results— Manipulation of the dopamine system failed to affect the membrane depolarization of striatal neurons exposed to combined oxygen and glucose deprivation of short duration, but it reduced the amplitude of postischemic long-term potentiation (LTP) expressed at corticostriatal synapses. In particular, pharmacological blockade or genetic inactivation of D1/cAMP/protein kinase A pathway prevented the long-term increase of the excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) amplitude caused by a transient ischemic episode, while it failed to prevent the increase of the EPSP half-decay coupled to ischemic LTP. Conclusions— The present data suggest that endogenous dopamine, via D1 receptors, selectively facilitates the expression of ischemic LTP on the AMPA-mediated component of the EPSPs, while it does not alter the expression of this form of synaptic plasticity on the N-methyl-d-aspartate-mediated component of corticostriatal synaptic potentials. Understanding the cellular and molecular mechanisms of ischemia-triggered excitotoxicity offers hope for the development of specific treatments able to interfere with this pathological process.


Experimental Neurology | 2003

Lamotrigine and remacemide protect striatal neurons against in vitro ischemia : an electrophysiological study

Paolo Calabresi; Matteo Marti; Barbara Picconi; Emilia Saulle; Cinzia Costa; Diego Centonze; Francesco Pisani; Giorgio Bernardi

In the present study, we investigated the cellular and synaptic mechanisms underlying the neuroprotective action of lamotrigine and remacemide. Both drugs, in fact, have been reported to exert a neuroprotective action in in vivo animal models of ischemia. To address this issue, electrophysiological recordings and cell swelling measurements were performed from striatal neurons in control condition and during combined oxygen and glucose deprivation (in vitro ischemia) in a brain slice preparation. Lamotrigine, remacemide, and the active desglycinyl metabolite of remacemide, D-REMA, induced a concentration-dependent reduction of both repetitive firing discharge and excitatory postsynaptic potentials. However, while remacemide and D-REMA exerted their inhibitory action on glutamatergic transmission by blocking NMDA receptors, lamotrigine exerted a preferential presynaptic action, as indicated by its ability to increase paired-pulse facilitation. Both remacemide and lamotrigine were found to be neuroprotective against the irreversible field potential loss and cell swelling induced by in vitro ischemia, and coadministration of low concentrations of these drugs exerted an additive neuroprotective action. A combined use of lamotrigine and remacemide could be employed in clinical trials to enhance neuroprotection in neurological disorders involving an abnormal striatal glutamatergic transmission.


Neurological Sciences | 2001

An abnormal striatal synaptic plasticity may account for the selective neuronal vulnerability in Huntington's disease

Diego Centonze; Paolo Gubellini; Barbara Picconi; Emilia Saulle; Massimo Tolu; Paola Bonsi; Patrizia Giacomini; Paolo Calabresi

Abstract A marked decrease in the activity of mitochondrial complex II (succinate dehydrogenase, SD) has been found in the brains of Huntingtons disease (HD) patients. Here we have examined the possibility that SD inhibitors might produce their toxic action by increasing corticostriatal glutamatergic transmission. We report that SD inhibitors produce a durable augmentation of NMDA-mediated corticostriatal excitation (DANCE) in striatal spiny neurons, but not in striatal cholinergic interneurons. DANCE involves increased intracellular calcium, activation of MAP kinase ERK and is critically dependent upon endogenous dopamine (DA) acting via D2-like receptors. This pathological form of corticostriatal synaptic plasticity might play a key role in the regional and cell-type specific neuronal death observed in HD.


Experimental Neurology | 2000

Electrophysiology of Sipatrigine: A Lamotrigine Derivative Exhibiting Neuroprotective Effects

Paolo Calabresi; Alessandro Stefani; Girolama A. Marfia; Atticus H. Hainsworth; Diego Centonze; Emilia Saulle; Francesca Spadoni; Michael J. Leach; Patrizia Giacomini; Giorgio Bernardi

Sipatrigine (BW619C89), a derivative of the antiepileptic agent lamotrigine, has potent neuroprotective properties in animal models of cerebral ischemia and head injury. In the present study we investigated the electrophysiological effects of sipatrigine utilizing intracellular current-clamp recordings obtained from striatal spiny neurons in rat corticostriatal slices and whole-cell patch-clamp recordings in isolated striatal neurons. The number of action potentials produced in response to a depolarizing current pulse in the recorded neurons was reduced by sipatrigine (EC(50) 4.5 microM). Although this drug preferentially blocked action potentials in the last part of the depolarizing current pulse, it also decreased the frequency of the first action potentials. Sipatrigine also inhibited tetrodotoxin-sensitive sodium (Na(+)) current recorded from isolated striatal neurons. The EC(50) for this inhibitory action was 7 microM at the holding potential (V(h)) of -65 mV, but 16 microM at V(h) = -105, suggesting a dependence of this pharmacological effect on the membrane potential. Moreover, although the inhibitory action of sipatrigine on Na(+) currents was maximal during high-frequency activation (20 Hz), it could also be detected at low frequencies. The amplitude of excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs), recorded following stimulation of the corticostriatal pathway, was depressed by sipatrigine (EC(50) 2 microM). This inhibitory action, however, was incomplete; in fact maximal concentrations of this drug reduced EPSP amplitude by only 45%. Sipatrigine produced no increase in paired-pulse facilitation, suggesting that the modulation of a postsynaptic site was the main pharmacological effect of this agent. The inhibition of voltage-dependent Na(+) channels exerted by sipatrigine might account for its depressant effects on both repetitive firing discharge and corticostriatal excitatory transmission. The modulation of Na(+) channels described here, as well as the previously observed inhibition of high-voltage-activated calcium currents, might contribute to the neuroprotective efficacy exerted by this compound in experimental models of in vitro and in vivo ischemia.

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Paolo Calabresi

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Diego Centonze

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Giorgio Bernardi

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Paolo Gubellini

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Antonio Pisani

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Girolama A. Marfia

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Domenicantonio Tropepi

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Paola Bonsi

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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