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Dive into the research topics where Gregory Dal Bo is active.

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Featured researches published by Gregory Dal Bo.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2004

Dopamine neurons in culture express VGLUT2 explaining their capacity to release glutamate at synapses in addition to dopamine

Gregory Dal Bo; Fannie St-Gelais; Marc Danik; Sylvain Williams; Mathieu Cotton; Louis-Eric Trudeau

Dopamine neurons have been suggested to use glutamate as a cotransmitter. To identify the basis of such a phenotype, we have examined the expression of the three recently identified vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUT1‐3) in postnatal rat dopamine neurons in culture. We found that the majority of isolated dopamine neurons express VGLUT2, but not VGLUT1 or 3. In comparison, serotonin neurons express only VGLUT3. Single‐cell RT‐PCR experiments confirmed the presence of VGLUT2 mRNA in dopamine neurons. Arguing for phenotypic heterogeneity among axon terminals, we find that only a proportion of terminals established by dopamine neurons are VGLUT2‐positive. Taken together, our results provide a basis for the ability of dopamine neurons to release glutamate as a cotransmitter. A detailed analysis of the conditions under which DA neurons gain or loose a glutamatergic phenotype may provide novel insight into pathophysiological processes that underlie diseases such as schizophrenia, Parkinsons disease and drug dependence.


Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2014

Morphometric characterization of microglial phenotypes in human cerebral cortex

Susana G. Torres-Platas; Samuel Comeau; Adeline Rachalski; Gregory Dal Bo; Cristiana Cruceanu; Gustavo Turecki; Bruno Giros; Naguib Mechawar

BackgroundMicroglia can adopt different morphologies, ranging from a highly ramified to an amoeboid-like phenotype. Although morphological properties of microglia have been described in rodents, little is known about their fine features in humans. The aim of this study was to characterize the morphometric properties of human microglia in gray and white matter of dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC), a region implicated in behavioral adaptation to neuroinflammation. These properties were compared to those of murine microglia in order to gain a better appreciation of the differences displayed by these cells across species.MethodsPostmortem dACC samples were analyzed from 11 individuals having died suddenly without any history of neuroinflammatory, neurodegenerative, nor psychiatric illness. Tissues were sectioned and immunostained for the macrophage marker Ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule 1 (IBA1). Randomly selected IBA1-immunoreactive (IBA1-IR) cells displaying features corresponding to commonly accepted microglial phenotypes (ramified, primed, reactive, amoeboid) were reconstructed in 3D and all aspects of their morphologies quantified using the Neurolucida software. The relative abundance of each morphological phenotype was also assessed. Furthermore, adult mouse brains were similarly immunostained, and IBA1-IR cells in cingulate cortex were compared to those scrutinized in human dACC.ResultsIn human cortical gray and white matter, all microglial phenotypes were observed in significant proportions. Compared to ramified, primed microglia presented an average 2.5 fold increase in cell body size, with almost no differences in branching patterns. When compared to the primed microglia, which projected an average of six primary processes, the reactive and amoeboid phenotypes displayed fewer processes and branching points, or no processes at all. In contrast, the majority of microglial cells in adult mouse cortex were highly ramified. This was also the case following a postmortem interval of 43 hours. Interestingly, the morphology of ramified microglia was strikingly similar between species.ConclusionsThis study provides fundamental information on the morphological features of microglia in the normal adult human cerebral cortex. These morphometric data will be useful for future studies of microglial morphology in various illnesses. Furthermore, this first direct comparison of human and mouse microglia reveals that these brain cells are morphologically similar across species, suggesting highly conserved functions.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2009

The Dual Dopamine-Glutamate Phenotype of Growing Mesencephalic Neurons Regresses in Mature Rat Brain

Noémie Bérubé-Carrière; Mustapha Riad; Gregory Dal Bo; Daniel Lévesque; Louis-Eric Trudeau; Laurent Descarries

Coexpression of tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and vesicular glutamate transporter 2 (VGLUT2) mRNAs in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and colocalization of these proteins in axon terminals of the nucleus accumbens (nAcb) have recently been demonstrated in immature (15‐day‐old) rat. After neonatal 6‐hydroxydopamine (6‐OHDA) lesion, the proportion of VTA neurons expressing both mRNAs and of nAcb terminals displaying the two proteins was enhanced. To determine the fate of this dual phenotype in adults, double in situ hybridization and dual immunolabeling for TH and VGLUT2 were performed in 90‐day‐old rats subjected or not to the neonatal 6‐OHDA lesion. Very few neurons expressed both mRNAs in the VTA and substantia nigra (SN) of P90 rats, even after neonatal 6‐OHDA. Dually immunolabeled terminals were no longer found in the nAcb of normal P90 rats and were exceedingly rare in the nAcb of 6‐OHDA‐lesioned rats, although they had represented 28% and 37% of all TH terminals at P15. Similarly, 17% of all TH terminals in normal neostriatum and 46% in the dopamine neoinnervation of SN in 6‐OHDA‐lesioned rats were also immunoreactive for VGLUT2 at P15, but none at P90. In these three regions, all dually labeled terminals made synapse, in contradistinction to those immunolabeled for only TH or VGLUT2 at P15. These results suggest a regression of the VGLUT2 phenotype of dopamine neurons with age, following normal development, lesion, or sprouting after injury, and a role for glutamate in the establishment of synapses by these neurons. J. Comp. Neurol. 517:873–891, 2009.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2008

Developmental and Target-Dependent Regulation of Vesicular Glutamate Transporter Expression by Dopamine Neurons

José Alfredo Mendez; Marie-Josée Bourque; Gregory Dal Bo; Mathieu L. Bourdeau; Marc Danik; Sylvain Williams; Jean-Claude Lacaille; Louis-Eric Trudeau

Mesencephalic dopamine (DA) neurons have been suggested to use glutamate as a cotransmitter. Here, we suggest a mechanism for this form of cotransmission by showing that a subset of DA neurons both in vitro and in vivo expresses vesicular glutamate transporter 2 (VGluT2). Expression of VGluT2 decreases with age. Moreover, when DA neurons are grown in isolation using a microculture system, there is a marked upregulation of VGluT2 expression. We provide evidence that expression of this transporter is normally repressed through a contact-dependent interaction with GABA and other DA neurons, thus providing a partial explanation for the highly restricted expression of VGluT2 in DA neurons in vivo. Our results demonstrate that the neurotransmitter phenotype of DA neurons is both developmentally and dynamically regulated. These findings may have implications for a better understanding of the fast synaptic action of DA neurons as well as basal ganglia circuitry.


Biological Psychiatry | 2015

Presynaptic D2 Dopamine Receptors Control Long-Term Depression Expression and Memory Processes in the Temporal Hippocampus

Jill Rocchetti; Elsa Isingrini; Gregory Dal Bo; Sara Sagheby; Aurore Menegaux; François Tronche; Daniel Lévesque; Luc Moquin; Alain Gratton; Tak Pan Wong; Marcelo Rubinstein; Bruno Giros

BACKGROUND Dysfunctional mesocorticolimbic dopamine signaling has been linked to alterations in motor and reward-based functions associated with psychiatric disorders. Converging evidence from patients with psychiatric disorders and use of antipsychotics suggests that imbalance of dopamine signaling deeply alters hippocampal functions. However, given the lack of full characterization of a functional mesohippocampal pathway, the precise role of dopamine transmission in memory deficits associated with these disorders and their dedicated therapies is unknown. In particular, the positive outcome of antipsychotic treatments, commonly antagonizing D2 dopamine receptors (D2Rs), on cognitive deficits and memory impairments remains questionable. METHODS Following pharmacologic and genetic manipulation of dopamine transmission, we performed anatomic, neurochemical, electrophysiologic, and behavioral investigations to uncover the role of D2Rs in hippocampal-dependent plasticity and learning. Naïve mice (n = 4-21) were used in the different procedures. RESULTS Dopamine modulated both long-term potentiation and long-term depression in the temporal hippocampus as well as spatial and recognition learning and memory in mice through D2Rs. Although genetic deletion or pharmacologic blockade of D2Rs led to the loss of long-term potentiation expression, the specific genetic removal of presynaptic D2Rs impaired long-term depression and performances on spatial memory tasks. CONCLUSIONS Presynaptic D2Rs in dopamine fibers of the temporal hippocampus tightly modulate long-term depression expression and play a major role in the regulation of hippocampal learning and memory. This direct role of mesohippocampal dopamine input as uncovered here adds a new dimension to dopamine involvement in the physiology underlying deficits associated with neuropsychiatric disorders.


Biological Psychiatry | 2017

DCC Confers Susceptibility to Depression-like Behaviors in Humans and Mice and Is Regulated by miR-218

Angélica Torres-Berrío; Juan Pablo Lopez; Rosemary C. Bagot; Dominique Nouel; Gregory Dal Bo; Santiago Cuesta; Lei Zhu; Colleen Manitt; Conrad Eng; Helen M. Cooper; Kai-Florian Storch; Gustavo Turecki; Eric J. Nestler; Cecilia Flores

BACKGROUD Variations in the expression of the Netrin-1 guidance cue receptor DCC (deleted in colorectal cancer) appear to confer resilience or susceptibility to psychopathologies involving prefrontal cortex (PFC) dysfunction. METHODS With the use of postmortem brain tissue, mouse models of defeat stress, and in vitro analysis, we assessed microRNA (miRNA) regulation of DCC and whether changes in DCC levels in the PFC lead to vulnerability to depression-like behaviors. RESULTS We identified miR-218 as a posttranscriptional repressor of DCC and detected coexpression of DCC and miR-218 in pyramidal neurons of human and mouse PFC. We found that exaggerated expression of DCC and reduced levels of miR-218 in the PFC are consistent traits of mice susceptible to chronic stress and of major depressive disorder in humans. Remarkably, upregulation of Dcc in mouse PFC pyramidal neurons causes vulnerability to stress-induced social avoidance and anhedonia. CONCLUSIONS These data are the first demonstration of microRNA regulation of DCC and suggest that, by regulating DCC, miR-218 may be a switch of susceptibility versus resilience to stress-related disorders.


Archive | 2009

Glutamate Co-Release by Monoamine Neurons

Louis Eric Trudeau; Gregory Dal Bo; José Alfredo Mendez

A wide range of indirect data obtained during the last two decades has suggested that monoamine neurons may co-release neurotransmitters. Ultrastructural investigations have consistently reported that these neurons, including dopamine, serotonin and norepinephrine neurons establish both junctional (i.e. synaptic) and non-junctional (i.e. non-synaptic) axon terminals. The hypothesis that some of these terminals can mediate synaptic glutamate release has received strong support from cell culture studies as well as indirect support from electrophysiological recordings obtained in slice preparations and in intact animals. The molecular identification of vesicular glutamate transporters (VGluTs) in recent years has provided a new impetus and a new strategy to confirm the glutamatergic phenotype of neurons. A number of recent results now confirm that while many serotonin neurons express VGluT3, a subset of norepinephrine and dopamine neurons express VGluT2, thus supporting the hypothesis of glutamate co-transmission. The possibility that the neurotransmitter repertoire of central monoamine neurons may be plastic during development and in the context of activity-dependent neuronal plasticity or disease is now a major direction of current research.


Brain Research Reviews | 2008

Glutamate in dopamine neurons: synaptic versus diffuse transmission.

Laurent Descarries; Noémie Bérubé-Carrière; Mustapha Riad; Gregory Dal Bo; J. Alfredo Mendez; Louis-Eric Trudeau


M S-medecine Sciences | 2010

Découvertes récentes sur la fonction et la plasticité des voies dopaminergiques du cerveau

Dominic Thibault; Christian Kortleven; Caroline Fasano; Gregory Dal Bo; Louis-Eric Trudeau


Brain Structure & Function | 2018

Cocaine increases dopaminergic connectivity in the nucleus accumbens

Marc Dos Santos; Emma Cahill; Gregory Dal Bo; Peter Vanhoutte; Jocelyne Caboche; Bruno Giros; Nicolas Heck

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Gustavo Turecki

Douglas Mental Health University Institute

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Mustapha Riad

Université de Montréal

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