Gian Carlo Bellenchi
National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Gian Carlo Bellenchi.
Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience | 2015
Luisa Speranza; Teresa Giuliano; Floriana Volpicelli; M. Egle De Stefano; Loredana Lombardi; Angela Chambery; Enza Lacivita; Marcello Leopoldo; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; Umberto di Porzio; Marianna Crispino; Carla Perrone-Capano
Recent studies have indicated that the serotonin receptor subtype 7 (5-HT7R) plays a crucial role in shaping neuronal morphology during embryonic and early postnatal life. Here we show that pharmacological stimulation of 5-HT7R using a highly selective agonist, LP-211, enhances neurite outgrowth in neuronal primary cultures from the cortex, hippocampus and striatal complex of embryonic mouse brain, through multiple signal transduction pathways. All these signaling systems, involving mTOR, the Rho GTPase Cdc42, Cdk5, and ERK, are known to converge on the reorganization of cytoskeletal proteins that subserve neurite outgrowth. Indeed, our data indicate that neurite elongation stimulated by 5-HT7R is modulated by drugs affecting actin polymerization. In addition, we show, by 2D Western blot analyses, that treatment of neuronal cultures with LP-211 alters the expression profile of cofilin, an actin binding protein involved in microfilaments dynamics. Furthermore, by using microfluidic chambers that physically separate axons from the soma and dendrites, we demonstrate that agonist-dependent activation of 5-HT7R stimulates axonal elongation. Our results identify for the first time several signal transduction pathways, activated by stimulation of 5-HT7R, that converge to promote cytoskeleton reorganization and consequent modulation of axonal elongation. Therefore, the activation of 5-HT7R might represent one of the key elements regulating CNS connectivity and plasticity during development.
The FASEB Journal | 2013
Maurice Jansen; Wei Wang; Dario Greco; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; Umberto di Porzio; Andrew J. Brown; Elina Ikonen
The brain is the most cholesterol‐enriched tissue in the body. During brain development, desmosterol, an immediate precursor of cholesterol, transiently accumulates up to 30% of total brain sterols. This massive desmosterol deposition appears to be present in all mammalian species reported so far, including humans, but how it is achieved is not well understood. Here, we propose that desmosterol accumulation in the developing brain may be primarily caused by post‐transcriptional repression of 3β‐hydroxysterol 24‐reductase (DHCR24) by progesterone. Furthermore, distinct properties of desmosterol may serve to increase the membrane active pool of sterols in the brain: desmosterol cannot be hydroxylated to generate 24S‐hydroxycholesterol, a brain derived secretory sterol, desmosterol has a reduced propensity to be esterified as compared to cholesterol, and desmosterol may activate LXR to stimulate astrocyte sterol secretion. This regulated accumulation of desmosterol by progesterone‐induced suppression of DHCR24 may facilitate the rapid enrichment and distribution of membrane sterols in the developing brain.—Jansen, M., Wang, W., Greco, D., Bellenchi, G. C., di Porzio, U., Brown, A. J., and Ikonen, E. What dictates the accumulation of desmosterol in the developing brain? FASEB J. 27, 865–870 (2013). www.fasebj.org
Experimental Cell Research | 2011
Massimiliano Caiazzo; Luca Colucci-D'Amato; Floriana Volpicelli; Luisa Speranza; Ciro Petrone; Lucio Pastore; Stefano Stifani; Francesco Ramirez; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; Umberto di Porzio
Krüppel-like factor 7 (KLF7) belongs to the large family of KLF transcription factors, which comprises at least 17 members. Within this family, KLF7 is unique since its expression is strictly restricted within the nervous system during development. We have previously shown that KLF7 is required for neuronal morphogenesis and axon guidance in selected regions of the nervous system, including hippocampus, olfactory bulbs and cortex, as well as in neuronal cell cultures. In the present work, we have furthered our analysis of the role of KLF7 in central nervous system development. By gene expression analysis during brain embryogenesis, we found significant alterations in dopaminergic neurons in Klf7 null mice. In particular, the tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopamine transporter (Dat) transcripts are strongly decreased in the olfactory bulbs and ventral midbrain at birth, compared to wild-type littermates. Interestingly, Klf7-mutant mice show a dramatic reduction of TH-positive neurons in the olfactory bulbs, but no change in GABAergic or midbrain dopaminergic neurons. These observations raise the possibility that a lack of a KLF family member affects dopaminergic neuron development.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2017
Luisa Speranza; Josephine Labus; Floriana Volpicelli; Daria Guseva; Enza Lacivita; Marcello Leopoldo; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; Umberto di Porzio; Monika Bijata; Carla Perrone-Capano; Evgeni Ponimaskin
Precise control of dendritic spine density and synapse formation is critical for normal and pathological brain functions. Therefore, signaling pathways influencing dendrite outgrowth and remodeling remain a subject of extensive investigations. Here, we report that prolonged activation of the serotonin 5‐HT7 receptor (5‐HT7R) with selective agonist LP‐211 promotes formation of dendritic spines and facilitates synaptogenesis in postnatal cortical and striatal neurons. Critical role of 5‐HT7R in neuronal morphogenesis was confirmed by analysis of neurons isolated from 5‐HT7R‐deficient mice and by pharmacological inactivation of the receptor. Acute activation of 5‐HT7R results in pronounced neurite elongation in postnatal striatal and cortical neurons, thus extending previous data on the morphogenic role of 5‐HT7R in embryonic and hippocampal neurons. We also observed decreased number of spines in neurons with either genetically (i.e. 5‐HT7R‐knock‐out) or pharmacologically (i.e. antagonist treatment) blocked 5‐HT7R, suggesting that constitutive 5‐HT7R activity is critically involved in the spinogenesis. Moreover, cyclin‐dependent kinase 5 and small GTPase Cdc42 were identified as important downstream effectors mediating morphogenic effects of 5‐HT7R in neurons. Altogether, our data suggest that the 5‐HT7R‐mediated structural reorganization during the postnatal development might have a crucial role for the development and plasticity of forebrain areas such as cortex and striatum, and thereby can be implicated in regulation of the higher cognitive functions.
Brain | 2018
Nadia Giordano; Attilio Iemolo; Maria Luisa Mancini; Fabrizio Cacace; Maria De Risi; Emanuele Claudio Latagliata; Veronica Ghiglieri; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; Stefano Puglisi-Allegra; Paolo Calabresi; Barbara Picconi; Elvira De Leonibus
Nigro-striatal dopamine transmission is central to a wide range of neuronal functions, including skill learning, which is disrupted in several pathologies such as Parkinsons disease. The synaptic plasticity mechanisms, by which initial motor learning is stored for long time periods in striatal neurons, to then be gradually optimized upon subsequent training, remain unexplored. Addressing this issue is crucial to identify the synaptic and molecular mechanisms involved in striatal-dependent learning impairment in Parkinsons disease. In this study, we took advantage of interindividual differences between outbred rodents in reaching plateau performance in the rotarod incremental motor learning protocol, to study striatal synaptic plasticity ex vivo. We then assessed how this process is modulated by dopamine receptors and the dopamine active transporter, and whether it is impaired by overexpression of human α-synuclein in the mesencephalon; the latter is a progressive animal model of Parkinsons disease. We found that the initial acquisition of motor learning induced a dopamine active transporter and D1 receptors mediated long-term potentiation, under a protocol of long-term depression in striatal medium spiny neurons. This effect disappeared in animals reaching performance plateau. Overexpression of human α-synuclein reduced striatal dopamine active transporter levels, impaired motor learning, and prevented the learning-induced long-term potentiation, before the appearance of dopamine neuronal loss. Our findings provide evidence of a reorganization of cellular plasticity within the dorsolateral striatum that is mediated by dopamine receptors and dopamine active transporter during the acquisition of a skill. This newly identified mechanism of cellular memory is a form of metaplasticity that is disrupted in the early stage of synucleinopathies, such as Parkinsons disease, and that might be relevant for other striatal pathologies, such as drug abuse.
The EMBO Journal | 2017
Domenico Russo; Floriana Della Ragione; Riccardo Rizzo; Eiji Sugiyama; Francesco Scalabrì; Kei Hori; Serena Capasso; Lucia Sticco; Salvatore Fioriniello; Roberto De Gregorio; Ilaria Granata; Mario Rosario Guarracino; Vittorio Maglione; Ludger Johannes; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; Mikio Hoshino; Mitsutoshi Setou; Maurizio D'Esposito; Alberto Luini; Giovanni D'Angelo
Neural development is accomplished by differentiation events leading to metabolic reprogramming. Glycosphingolipid metabolism is reprogrammed during neural development with a switch from globo‐ to ganglio‐series glycosphingolipid production. Failure to execute this glycosphingolipid switch leads to neurodevelopmental disorders in humans, indicating that glycosphingolipids are key players in this process. Nevertheless, both the molecular mechanisms that control the glycosphingolipid switch and its function in neurodevelopment are poorly understood. Here, we describe a self‐contained circuit that controls glycosphingolipid reprogramming and neural differentiation. We find that globo‐series glycosphingolipids repress the epigenetic regulator of neuronal gene expression AUTS2. AUTS2 in turn binds and activates the promoter of the first and rate‐limiting ganglioside‐producing enzyme GM3 synthase, thus fostering the synthesis of gangliosides. By this mechanism, the globo–AUTS2 axis controls glycosphingolipid reprogramming and neural gene expression during neural differentiation, which involves this circuit in neurodevelopment and its defects in neuropathology.
Scientific Reports | 2015
Davide Viggiano; Deepak P. Srivastava; Luisa Speranza; Carla Perrone-Capano; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; U. Di Porzio; Noel J. Buckley
Spine motility analysis has become the mainstay for investigating synaptic plasticity but is limited in its versatility requiring complex, non automatized instrumentations. We describe an entropy-based method for determining the spatial distribution of dendritic spines that allows successful estimation of spine motility from still images. This method has the potential to extend the applicability of spine motility analysis to ex vivo preparations.
Stem cell reports | 2018
Roberto De Gregorio; Salvatore Pulcrano; Claudia De Sanctis; Floriana Volpicelli; Ezia Guatteo; Lars von Oerthel; Emanuele Claudio Latagliata; Rosa Maria Piscitelli; Carla Perrone-Capano; Valerio Costa; Dario Greco; Stefano Puglisi-Allegra; Marten P. Smidt; Umberto di Porzio; Massimiliano Caiazzo; Nicola B. Mercuri; Meng Li; Gian Carlo Bellenchi
Summary The differentiation of dopaminergic neurons requires concerted action of morphogens and transcription factors acting in a precise and well-defined time window. Very little is known about the potential role of microRNA in these events. By performing a microRNA-mRNA paired microarray screening, we identified miR-34b/c among the most upregulated microRNAs during dopaminergic differentiation. Interestingly, miR-34b/c modulates Wnt1 expression, promotes cell cycle exit, and induces dopaminergic differentiation. When combined with transcription factors ASCL1 and NURR1, miR-34b/c doubled the yield of transdifferentiated fibroblasts into dopaminergic neurons. Induced dopaminergic (iDA) cells synthesize dopamine and show spontaneous electrical activity, reversibly blocked by tetrodotoxin, consistent with the electrophysiological properties featured by brain dopaminergic neurons. Our findings point to a role for miR-34b/c in neuronal commitment and highlight the potential of exploiting its synergy with key transcription factors in enhancing in vitro generation of dopaminergic neurons.
Behavioural Brain Research | 2018
Davide Viggiano; Luisa Speranza; Marianna Crispino; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; Umberto di Porzio; Attilio Iemolo; Elvira De Leonibus; Floriana Volpicelli; Carla Perrone-Capano
Dendritic spines, small protrusions emerging from the dendrites of most excitatory synapses in the mammalian brain, are highly dynamic structures and their shape and number is continuously modulated by memory formation and other adaptive changes of the brain. In this study, using a behavioral paradigm of motor learning, we applied the non-linear analysis of dendritic spines to study spine complexity along dendrites of cortical and subcortical neural systems, such as the basal ganglia, that sustain important motor learning processes. We show that, after learning, the spine organization has greater complexity, as indexed by the maximum Lyapunov exponent (LyE). The positive value of the exponent demonstrates that the system is chaotic, while recurrence plots show that the system is not simply composed by random noise, but displays quasi-periodic behavior. The increase in the maximum LyE and in the system entropy after learning was confirmed by the modification of the reconstructed trajectories in phase-space. Our results suggest that the remodeling of spines, as a result of a chaotic and non-random dynamical process along dendrites, may be a general feature associated with the structural plasticity underlying processes such as long-term memory maintenance. Furthermore, this work indicates that the non-linear method is a very useful tool to allow the detection of subtle stimulus-induced changes in dendritic spine dynamics, giving a key contribution to the study of the relationship between structure and function of spines.
Neuropharmacology | 2013
Luisa Speranza; Angela Chambery; M. Di Domenico; Marianna Crispino; V. Severino; Floriana Volpicelli; Marcello Leopoldo; Gian Carlo Bellenchi; U. di Porzio; Carla Perrone-Capano