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Dive into the research topics where Enrica Maria Petrini is active.

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Featured researches published by Enrica Maria Petrini.


Nature Communications | 2014

Synaptic recruitment of gephyrin regulates surface GABAA receptor dynamics for the expression of inhibitory LTP

Enrica Maria Petrini; Tiziana Ravasenga; Torben Johann Hausrat; Giuliano Iurilli; Umberto Olcese; Victor Racine; Jean-Baptiste Sibarita; Tija C. Jacob; Stephen J. Moss; Fabio Benfenati; Paolo Medini; Matthias Kneussel; Andrea Barberis

Postsynaptic long-term potentiation of inhibition (iLTP) can rely on increased GABAA receptors (GABAARs) at synapses by promoted exocytosis. However, the molecular mechanisms that enhance the clustering of postsynaptic GABAARs during iLTP remain obscure. Here we demonstrate that during chemically induced iLTP (chem-iLTP), GABAARs are immobilized and confined at synapses, as revealed by single-particle tracking of individual GABAARs in cultured hippocampal neurons. Chem-iLTP expression requires synaptic recruitment of the scaffold protein gephyrin from extrasynaptic areas, which in turn is promoted by CaMKII-dependent phosphorylation of GABAAR-β3-Ser383. Impairment of gephyrin assembly prevents chem-iLTP and, in parallel, blocks the accumulation and immobilization of GABAARs at synapses. Importantly, an increase of gephyrin and GABAAR similar to those observed during chem-iLTP in cultures were found in the rat visual cortex following an experience-dependent plasticity protocol that potentiates inhibitory transmission in vivo. Thus, phospho-GABAAR-β3-dependent accumulation of gephyrin at synapses and receptor immobilization are crucial for iLTP expression and are likely to modulate network excitability.


Small | 2013

Nanostructured superhydrophobic substrates trigger the development of 3D neuronal networks

Tania Limongi; Fabrizia Cesca; Francesco Gentile; Roberto Marotta; Roberta Ruffilli; Andrea Barberis; Marco Dal Maschio; Enrica Maria Petrini; S. Santoriello; Fabio Benfenati; Enzo Di Fabrizio

The generation of 3D networks of primary neurons is a big challenge in neuroscience. Here, a novel method is presented for a 3D neuronal culture on superhydrophobic (SH) substrates. How nano-patterned SH devices stimulate neurons to build 3D networks is investigated. Scanning electron microscopy and confocal imaging show that soon after plating neurites adhere to the nanopatterned pillar sidewalls and they are subsequently pulled between pillars in a suspended position. These neurons display an enhanced survival rate compared to standard cultures and develop mature networks with physiological excitability. These findings underline the importance of using nanostructured SH surfaces for directing 3D neuronal growth, as well as for the design of biomaterials for neuronal regeneration.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

Presynaptic source of quantal size variability at GABAergic synapses in rat hippocampal neurons in culture

Andrea Barberis; Enrica Maria Petrini; Enrico Cherubini

The variability of quantal size depends on both presynaptic (profile of the neurotransmitter concentration in the cleft) and postsynaptic (number and gating properties of postsynaptic receptors) factors. Here we have examined the possibility that at nonsaturated synapses in cultured hippocampal neurons, changes in both the transmitter concentration peak and its clearance from the synaptic cleft may influence the variability of spontaneous miniature synaptic GABAergic currents (mIPSCs). We found that, in contrast to the slow‐off GABAA receptor antagonist bicuculline, fast‐off competitive antagonists such as SR‐95103 and TPMPA differentially blocked small and large mIPSCs. In the presence of flurazepam, a drug believed to increase the affinity of GABA for GABAAR, small mIPSCs were enhanced more efficiently than large events. Moreover, the addition of dextran, which increases the viscosity of the extracellular fluid, preferentially increased small mIPSCs with respect to large ones. These observations suggest that changes in the concentration peak and the speed of GABA clearance in the cleft may be an important source of synaptic variability. The study of the correlation between peak amplitude and kinetics of mIPSCs allowed determination of the relative contribution of transmitter peak concentration vs. time of GABA clearance. Small synaptic responses were associated with fast onset and decay kinetics while large amplitude currents were asociated with slow kinetics, indicating a crucial role for GABA synaptic clearance in variability of mIPSCs. By using model simulations we were able to estimate the range of variability of both the concentration and the speed of clearance of the GABA transient in the synaptic cleft.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2011

Impact of Synaptic Neurotransmitter Concentration Time Course on the Kinetics and Pharmacological Modulation of Inhibitory Synaptic Currents

Andrea Barberis; Enrica Maria Petrini; Jerzy W. Mozrzymas

The time course of synaptic currents is a crucial determinant of rapid signaling between neurons. Traditionally, the mechanisms underlying the shape of synaptic signals are classified as pre- and post-synaptic. Over the last two decades, an extensive body of evidence indicated that synaptic signals are critically shaped by the neurotransmitter time course which encompasses several phenomena including pre- and post-synaptic ones. The agonist transient depends on neurotransmitter release mechanisms, diffusion within the synaptic cleft, spill-over to the extra-synaptic space, uptake, and binding to post-synaptic receptors. Most estimates indicate that the neurotransmitter transient is very brief, lasting between one hundred up to several hundreds of microseconds, implying that post-synaptic activation is characterized by a high degree of non-equilibrium. Moreover, pharmacological studies provide evidence that the kinetics of agonist transient plays a crucial role in setting the susceptibility of synaptic currents to modulation by a variety of compounds of physiological or clinical relevance. More recently, the role of the neurotransmitter time course has been emphasized by studies carried out on brain slice models that revealed a striking, cell-dependent variability of synaptic agonist waveforms ranging from rapid pulses to slow volume transmission. In the present paper we review the advances on studies addressing the impact of synaptic neurotransmitter transient on kinetics and pharmacological modulation of synaptic currents at inhibitory synapses.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2014

Diffusion dynamics of synaptic molecules during inhibitory postsynaptic plasticity

Enrica Maria Petrini; Andrea Barberis

The plasticity of inhibitory transmission is expected to play a key role in the modulation of neuronal excitability and network function. Over the last two decades, the investigation of the determinants of inhibitory synaptic plasticity has allowed distinguishing presynaptic and postsynaptic mechanisms. While there has been a remarkable progress in the characterization of presynaptically-expressed plasticity of inhibition, the postsynaptic mechanisms of inhibitory long-term synaptic plasticity only begin to be unraveled. At postsynaptic level, the expression of inhibitory synaptic plasticity involves the rearrangement of the postsynaptic molecular components of the GABAergic synapse, including GABAA receptors, scaffold proteins and structural molecules. This implies a dynamic modulation of receptor intracellular trafficking and receptor surface lateral diffusion, along with regulation of the availability and distribution of scaffold proteins. This Review will focus on the mechanisms of the multifaceted molecular reorganization of the inhibitory synapse during postsynaptic plasticity, with special emphasis on the key role of protein dynamics to ensure prompt and reliable activity-dependent adjustments of synaptic strength.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Influence of GABAAR Monoliganded States on GABAergic Responses

Enrica Maria Petrini; Thierry Nieus; Tiziana Ravasenga; Francesca Succol; Stefania Guazzi; Fabio Benfenati; Andrea Barberis

To reach the open state, the GABAA receptor (GABAAR) is assumed to bind two agonist molecules. Although it is currently believed that GABAAR could also operate in the monoliganded state, the gating properties of singly bound GABAAR are poorly understood and their physiological role is still obscure. In the present study, we characterize for the first time the gating properties of singly bound GABAARs by using a mutagenesis approach and we propose that monoliganded GABAAR contribute in shaping synaptic responses. At saturating GABA concentrations, currents mediated by recombinant GABAARs with a single functional binding site display slow onset, fast deactivation kinetics, and slow rate of desensitization-resensitization. GABAARs with two binding sites activated by brief pulses of subsaturating GABA concentrations (in the range of the GABA concentration profile in the synaptic cleft) could also mediate fast deactivating currents, displaying deactivation kinetics similar to those mediated by GABAARs with a single functional binding site. Model simulations of receptors activated by realistic synaptic GABA waves revealed that a considerable proportion of GABAA receptors open in the monoliganded state during synaptic transmission, therefore contributing in shaping IPSCs.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2017

Nanoscale molecular reorganization of the inhibitory postsynaptic density is a determinant of GABAergic synaptic potentiation

Francesca Pennacchietti; Sebastiano Vascon; Thierry Nieus; Christian Rosillo; Sabyasachi Das; Shiva K. Tyagarajan; Alberto Diaspro; Alessio Del Bue; Enrica Maria Petrini; Andrea Barberis; Francesca Cella Zanacchi

Gephyrin is a key scaffold protein mediating the anchoring of GABAA receptors at inhibitory synapses. Here, we exploited superresolution techniques combined with proximity-based clustering analysis and model simulations to investigate the single-molecule gephyrin reorganization during plasticity of inhibitory synapses in mouse hippocampal cultured neurons. This approach revealed that, during the expression of inhibitory LTP, the increase of gephyrin density at postsynaptic sites is associated with the promoted formation of gephyrin nanodomains. We demonstrate that the gephyrin rearrangement in nanodomains stabilizes the amplitude of postsynaptic currents, indicating that, in addition to the number of synaptic GABAA receptors, the nanoscale distribution of GABAA receptors in the postsynaptic area is a crucial determinant for the expression of inhibitory synaptic plasticity. In addition, the methodology implemented here clears the way to the application of the graph-based theory to single-molecule data for the description and quantification of the spatial organization of the synapse at the single-molecule level. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The mechanisms of inhibitory synaptic plasticity are poorly understood, mainly because the size of the synapse is below the diffraction limit, thus reducing the effectiveness of conventional optical and imaging techniques. Here, we exploited superresolution approaches combined with clustering analysis to study at unprecedented resolution the distribution of the inhibitory scaffold protein gephyrin in response to protocols inducing LTP of inhibitory synaptic responses (iLTP). We found that, during the expression of iLTP, the increase of synaptic gephyrin is associated with the fragmentation of gephyrin in subsynaptic nanodomains. We demonstrate that such synaptic gephyrin nanodomains stabilize the amplitude of inhibitory postsynaptic responses, thus identifying the nanoscale gephyrin rearrangement as a key determinant for inhibitory synaptic plasticity.


Neuropharmacology | 2002

Allosteric interaction of zinc with recombinant α1β2γ2 and α1β2 GABAA receptors

Andrea Barberis; Enrica Maria Petrini; Enrico Cherubini; Jerzy W. Mozrzymas

Abstract In a recent study we have provided evidence that inhibition of native GABA A receptors by zinc depends primarily on the allosteric modulation of receptor gating. Both the kinetics and the sensitivity of the GABA A receptor to zinc depend on subunit composition, especially on the presence of the γ 2 subunit. To analyze the mechanism of action of zinc its effects have been tested on recombinant α 1 β 2 γ 2 and α 1 β 2 receptors expressed in HEK 293 cells. The currents produced by ultrafast application of GABA have been measured to assess the impact of zinc ions on GABA A receptor gating with resolution corresponding to the time scale of synaptic currents. While, as expected, zinc markedly reduced the peak amplitude of α 1 β 2 -mediated currents, its effect on kinetics was significantly different from that observed for α 1 β 2 γ 2 . In particular, unlike α 1 β 2 γ 2 , zinc did not affect the onset of α 1 β 2 -mediated responses. Moreover, zinc increased the extent of desensitisation of α 1 β 2 γ 2 receptors and reduced desensitisation of α 1 β 2 ones. Quantitative analysis suggests that zinc exerts an allosteric modulation on both α 1 β 2 γ 2 and α 1 β 2 receptors. Zinc effects on α 1 β 2 γ 2 were qualitatively similar to those reported for native receptors.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Synaptic Competition Sculpts the Development of GABAergic Axo-Dendritic but Not Perisomatic Synapses

Elena Frola; Annarita Patrizi; Thomas Goetz; Lucian Medrihan; Enrica Maria Petrini; Andrea Barberis; Peer Wulff; William Wisden; Marco Sassoè-Pognetto

The neurotransmitter GABA regulates many aspects of inhibitory synapse development. We tested the hypothesis that GABAA receptors (GABAARs) work together with the synaptic adhesion molecule neuroligin 2 (NL2) to regulate synapse formation in different subcellular compartments. We investigated mice (“γ2 knockdown mice”) with an engineered allele of the GABAAR γ2 subunit gene which produced a mosaic expression of synaptic GABAARs in neighboring neurons, causing a strong imbalance in synaptic inhibition. Deletion of the γ2 subunit did not abolish synapse formation or the targeting of NL2 to distinct types of perisomatic and axo-dendritic contacts. Thus synaptic localization of NL2 does not require synaptic GABAARs. However, loss of the γ2 subunit caused a selective decrease in the number of axo-dendritic synapses on cerebellar Purkinje cells and cortical pyramidal neurons, whereas perisomatic synapses were not significantly affected. Notably, γ2-positive cells had increased axo-dendritic innervation compared with both γ2-negative and wild-type counterparts. Moreover heterologous synapses on spines, that are found after total deletion of GABAARs from all Purkinje cells, were rare in cerebella of γ2 knockdown mice. These findings reveal a selective role of γ2 subunit-containing GABAARs in regulating synapse development in distinct subcellular compartments, and support the hypothesis that the refinement of axo-dendritic synapses is regulated by activity-dependent competition between neighboring neurons.


ACS Nano | 2017

Selective Targeting of Neurons with Inorganic Nanoparticles: Revealing the Crucial Role of Nanoparticle Surface Charge

Silvia Dante; Alessia Petrelli; Enrica Maria Petrini; Roberto Marotta; Alessandro Maccione; Alessandro Alabastri; Alessandra Quarta; Francesco De Donato; Tiziana Ravasenga; Ayyappan Sathya; Roberto Cingolani; Remo Proietti Zaccaria; Luca Berdondini; Andrea Barberis; Teresa Pellegrino

Nanoparticles (NPs) are increasingly used in biomedical applications, but the factors that influence their interactions with living cells need to be elucidated. Here, we reveal the role of NP surface charge in determining their neuronal interactions and electrical responses. We discovered that negatively charged NPs administered at low concentration (10 nM) interact with the neuronal membrane and at the synaptic cleft, whereas positively and neutrally charged NPs never localize on neurons. This effect is shape and material independent. The presence of negatively charged NPs on neuronal cell membranes influences the excitability of neurons by causing an increase in the amplitude and frequency of spontaneous postsynaptic currents at the single cell level and an increase of both the spiking activity and synchronous firing at neural network level. The negatively charged NPs exclusively bind to excitable neuronal cells, and never to nonexcitable glial cells. This specific interaction was also confirmed by manipulating the electrophysiological activity of neuronal cells. Indeed, the interaction of negatively charged NPs with neurons is either promoted or hindered by pharmacological suppression or enhancement of the neuronal activity with tetrodotoxin or bicuculline, respectively. We further support our main experimental conclusions by using numerical simulations. This study demonstrates that negatively charged NPs modulate the excitability of neurons, revealing the potential use of NPs for controlling neuron activity.

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Andrea Barberis

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Tiziana Ravasenga

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Enrico Cherubini

International School for Advanced Studies

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Thierry Nieus

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Alberto Diaspro

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Francesca Cella Zanacchi

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Roberto Marotta

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Jerzy W. Mozrzymas

Wrocław Medical University

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Alessio Del Bue

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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