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Dive into the research topics where Giulio Srubek Tomassy is active.

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Featured researches published by Giulio Srubek Tomassy.


Science | 2014

Distinct Profiles of Myelin Distribution Along Single Axons of Pyramidal Neurons in the Neocortex

Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Daniel R. Berger; Hsu-Hsin Chen; Narayanan Kasthuri; Kenneth J. Hayworth; Alessandro Vercelli; H. Sebastian Seung; Jeff W. Lichtman; Paola Arlotta

Patchy Insulation Myelin insulates neuronal axons such that their electrical signals travel faster and more efficiently. However, not all axons are myelinated equally. Tomassy et al. (p. 319; see the Perspective by Fields) obtained detailed images from two snippets of the adult mouse brain and generated three-dimensional reconstructions of individual neurons and their myelination patterns. The images show that some axons have long, unmyelinated stretches, which might offer sites for building new connections. Thus, myelination is not an all-or-none phenomenon but rather is a characteristic of what may be a specific dialogue between the neuron and the surrounding myelin-producing cells. Mouse neurons display different and distinctive patterns of myelination. [Also see Perspective by Fields] Myelin is a defining feature of the vertebrate nervous system. Variability in the thickness of the myelin envelope is a structural feature affecting the conduction of neuronal signals. Conversely, the distribution of myelinated tracts along the length of axons has been assumed to be uniform. Here, we traced high-throughput electron microscopy reconstructions of single axons of pyramidal neurons in the mouse neocortex and built high-resolution maps of myelination. We find that individual neurons have distinct longitudinal distribution of myelin. Neurons in the superficial layers displayed the most diversified profiles, including a new pattern where myelinated segments are interspersed with long, unmyelinated tracts. Our data indicate that the profile of longitudinal distribution of myelin is an integral feature of neuronal identity and may have evolved as a strategy to modulate long-distance communication in the neocortex.


Nature Neuroscience | 2007

COUP-TFI regulates the balance of cortical patterning between frontal/motor and sensory areas

Maria Armentano; Shen-Ju Chou; Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Axel Leingärtner; Dennis D.M. O'Leary; Michèle Studer

We used cortex-specific deletion of the transcription factor gene COUP-TFI (also known as Nr2f1) in mice to demonstrate previously unknown fundamental roles for it in patterning mammalian neocortex into areas. The highest COUP-TFI expression is observed in the cortical progenitors and progeny in parietal and occipital cortex that form sensory areas, and the lowest expression was observed in frontal cortex that includes motor areas. Cortical deletion of COUP-TFI resulted in massive expansion of frontal areas, including motor, to occupy most of neocortex, paralleled by marked compression of sensory areas to caudal occipital cortex. These area patterning changes are preceded and paralleled by corresponding changes in molecular markers of area identity and altered axonal projections to maintain patterned area-specific input and output connections. We conclude that COUP-TFI is required for balancing patterning of neocortex into frontal/motor and sensory areas by acting in its expression domain to repress frontal/motor area identities and to specify sensory area identities.


Cerebral Cortex | 2008

COUP-TFI Coordinates Cortical Patterning, Neurogenesis, and Laminar Fate and Modulates MAPK/ERK, AKT, and ß-Catenin Signaling

Andrea Faedo; Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Youlin Ruan; Hannah Teichmann; Stefan Krauss; Samuel J. Pleasure; Sophia Y. Tsai; Ming-Jer Tsai; Michèle Studer; John L.R. Rubenstein

A major unsolved question in cortical development is how proliferation, neurogenesis, regional growth, regional identity, and laminar fate specification are coordinated. Here we provide evidence, using loss-of-function and gain-of-function manipulations, that the COUP-TFI orphan nuclear receptor promotes ventral cortical fate, promotes cell cycle exit and neural differentiation, regulates the balance of early- and late-born neurons, and regulates the balanced production of different types of layer V cortical projection neurons. We suggest that COUP-TFI controls these processes by repressing Mapk/Erk, Akt, and beta-catenin signaling.


Neuron | 2012

A radial glia-specific role of RhoA in double cortex formation

Silvia Cappello; Christian R.J. Böhringer; Matteo Bergami; Karl-Klaus Conzelmann; Alexander Ghanem; Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Paola Arlotta; Marco Mainardi; Manuela Allegra; Matteo Caleo; Jolanda van Hengel; Cord Brakebusch; Magdalena Götz

The positioning of neurons in the cerebral cortex is of crucial importance for its function as highlighted by the severe consequences of migrational disorders in patients. Here we show that genetic deletion of the small GTPase RhoA in the developing cerebral cortex results in two migrational disorders: subcortical band heterotopia (SBH), a heterotopic cortex underlying the normotopic cortex, and cobblestone lissencephaly, in which neurons protrude beyond layer I at the pial surface of the brain. Surprisingly, RhoA(-/-) neurons migrated normally when transplanted into wild-type cerebral cortex, whereas the converse was not the case. Alterations in the radial glia scaffold are demonstrated to cause these migrational defects through destabilization of both the actin and the microtubules cytoskeleton. These data not only demonstrate that RhoA is largely dispensable for migration in neurons but also showed that defects in radial glial cells, rather than neurons, can be sufficient to produce SBH.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Area-specific temporal control of corticospinal motor neuron differentiation by COUP-TFI

Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Elvira De Leonibus; Denis Jabaudon; Simona Lodato; Christian Alfano; Andrea Mele; Jeffrey D. Macklis; Michèle Studer

Transcription factors with gradients of expression in neocortical progenitors give rise to distinct motor and sensory cortical areas by controlling the area-specific differentiation of distinct neuronal subtypes. However, the molecular mechanisms underlying this area-restricted control are still unclear. Here, we show that COUP-TFI controls the timing of birth and specification of corticospinal motor neurons (CSMN) in somatosensory cortex via repression of a CSMN differentiation program. Loss of COUP-TFI function causes an area-specific premature generation of neurons with cardinal features of CSMN, which project to subcerebral structures, including the spinal cord. Concurrently, genuine CSMN differentiate imprecisely and do not project beyond the pons, together resulting in impaired skilled motor function in adult mice with cortical COUP-TFI loss-of-function. Our findings indicate that COUP-TFI exerts critical areal and temporal control over the precise differentiation of CSMN during corticogenesis, thereby enabling the area-specific functional features of motor and sensory areas to arise.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Loss of COUP-TFI Alters the Balance between Caudal Ganglionic Eminence- and Medial Ganglionic Eminence-Derived Cortical Interneurons and Results in Resistance to Epilepsy

Simona Lodato; Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Elvira De Leonibus; Yoryani G. Uzcategui; Gennaro Andolfi; Maria Armentano; Audrey Touzot; José María Gaztelu; Paola Arlotta; Liset Menendez de la Prida; Michèle Studer

In rodents, cortical interneurons originate from the medial ganglionic eminence (MGE) and caudal ganglionic eminence (CGE) according to precise temporal schedules. The mechanisms controlling the specification of CGE-derived interneurons and their role in cortical circuitry are still unknown. Here, we show that COUP-TFI expression becomes restricted to the dorsal MGE and CGE at embryonic day 13.5 in the basal telencephalon. Conditional loss of function of COUP-TFI in subventricular precursors and postmitotic cells leads to a decrease of late-born, CGE-derived, VIP (vasoactive intestinal peptide)- and CR (calretinin)-expressing bipolar cortical neurons, compensated by the concurrent increase of early-born MGE-derived, PV (parvalbumin)-expressing interneurons. Strikingly, COUP-TFI mutants are more resistant to pharmacologically induced seizures, a phenotype that is dependent on GABAergic signaling. Together, our data indicate that COUP-TFI controls the delicate balance between MGE- and CGE-derived cortical interneurons by regulating intermediate progenitor divisions and ultimately affecting the activity of the cortical inhibitory circuitry.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Spatiotemporal expression and transcriptional perturbations by long noncoding RNAs in the mouse brain

Loyal A. Goff; Abigail F. Groff; Martin Sauvageau; Zachary Trayes-Gibson; Diana B. Sanchez-Gomez; Michael A. Morse; Ryan D. Martin; Lara Elcavage; Stephen C. Liapis; Meryem Gonzalez-Celeiro; Olivia Plana; Eric Li; Chiara Gerhardinger; Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Paola Arlotta; John L. Rinn

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) have been implicated in numerous cellular processes including brain development. However, the in vivo expression dynamics and molecular pathways regulated by these loci are not well understood. Here, we leveraged a cohort of 13 lncRNA-null mutant mouse models to investigate the spatiotemporal expression of lncRNAs in the developing and adult brain and the transcriptome alterations resulting from the loss of these lncRNA loci. We show that several lncRNAs are differentially expressed both in time and space, with some presenting highly restricted expression in only selected brain regions. We further demonstrate altered regulation of genes for a large variety of cellular pathways and processes upon deletion of the lncRNA loci. Finally, we found that 4 of the 13 lncRNAs significantly affect the expression of several neighboring protein-coding genes in a cis-like manner. By providing insight into the endogenous expression patterns and the transcriptional perturbations caused by deletion of the lncRNA locus in the developing and postnatal mammalian brain, these data provide a resource to facilitate future examination of the specific functional relevance of these genes in neural development, brain function, and disease.


Trends in Cell Biology | 2016

Diversity Matters: A Revised Guide to Myelination.

Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Lori Bowe Dershowitz; Paola Arlotta

The evolutionary success of the vertebrate nervous system is largely due to a unique structural feature--the myelin sheath, a fatty envelope that surrounds the axons of neurons. By increasing the speed by which electrical signals travel along axons, myelin facilitates neuronal communication between distant regions of the nervous system. We review the cellular and molecular mechanisms that regulate the development of myelin as well as its homeostasis in adulthood. We discuss how finely tuned neuron-oligodendrocyte interactions are central to myelin formation during development and in the adult, and how these interactions can have profound implications for the plasticity of the adult brain. We also speculate how the functional diversity of both neurons and oligodendrocytes may impact on the myelination process in both health and disease.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 2004

Subpopulations of rat dorsal root ganglion neurons express active vesicular acetylcholine transporter

Ada Maria Tata; M. Egle De Stefano; Giulio Srubek Tomassy; M. Teresa Vilaró; Allan I. Levey; Stefano Biagioni

The vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) is a transmembrane protein required, in cholinergic neurons, for selective storage of acetylcholine into synaptic vesicles. Although dorsal root ganglion (DRG) neurons utilize neuropeptides and amino acids for neurotransmission, we have previously demonstrated the presence of a cholinergic system. To investigate whether, in sensory neurons, the vesicular accumulation of acetylcholine relies on the same mechanisms active in classical cholinergic neurons, we investigated VAChT presence, subcellular distribution, and activity. RT‐PCR and Western blot analysis demonstrated the presence of VAChT mRNA and protein product in DRG neurons and in the striatum and cortex, used as positive controls. Moreover, in situ hybridization and immunocytochemistry showed VAChT staining located mainly in the medium/large‐sized subpopulation of the sensory neurons. A few small neurons were also faintly labeled by immunocytochemistry. In the electron microscope, immunolabeling was associated with vesicle‐like elements distributed in the neuronal cytoplasm and in both myelinated and unmyelinated intraganglionic nerve fibers. Finally, [3H]acetylcholine active transport, evaluated either in the presence or in the absence of ATP, also demonstrated that, as previously reported, the uptake of acetylcholine by VAChT is ATP dependent. This study suggests that DRG neurons not only are able to synthesize and degrade ACh and to convey cholinergic stimuli but also are capable of accumulating and, possibly, releasing acetylcholine by the same mechanism used by the better known cholinergic neurons.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2004

Detection of basal and potassium-evoked acetylcholine release from embryonic DRG explants

Nadia Bernardini; Giulio Srubek Tomassy; Ada Maria Tata; Gabriella Augusti-Tocco; Stefano Biagioni

Spontaneous and potassium‐induced acetylcholine release from embryonic (E12 and E18) chick dorsal root ganglia explants at 3 and 7 days in culture was investigated using a chemiluminescent procedure. A basal release ranging from 2.4 to 13.8 pm/ganglion/5 min was detected. Potassium application always induced a significant increase over the basal release. The acetylcholine levels measured in E12 explants were 6.3 and 38.4 pm/ganglion/5 min at 3 and 7 days in culture, respectively, while in E18 explant cultures they were 10.7 and 15.5 pm/ganglion/5 min. In experiments performed in the absence of extracellular Ca2+ ions, acetylcholine release, both basal and potassium‐induced, was abolished and it was reduced by cholinergic antagonists. A morphometric analysis of explant fibre length suggested that acetylcholine release was directly correlated to neurite extension. Moreover, treatment of E12 dorsal root ganglion‐dissociated cell cultures with carbachol as cholinergic receptor agonist was shown to induce a higher neurite outgrowth compared with untreated cultures. The concomitant treatment with carbachol and the antagonists at muscarinic receptors atropine and at nicotinic receptors mecamylamine counteracted the increase in fibre outgrowth. Although the present data have not established whether acetylcholine is released by neurones or glial cells, these observations provide the first evidence of a regulated release of acetylcholine in dorsal root ganglia.

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Ada Maria Tata

Sapienza University of Rome

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Elvira De Leonibus

Sapienza University of Rome

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Stefano Biagioni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Andrea Mele

Sapienza University of Rome

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