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Dive into the research topics where Janete A. Anselmo-Franci is active.

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Featured researches published by Janete A. Anselmo-Franci.


Brain Research | 1998

Stress increases oxytocin release within the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus

Tatsuya Nishioka; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci; Ping Li; Michael F. Callahan; Mariana Morris

Evidence indicates that the hypothalamic paraventricular nucleus (PVN) and oxytocin (OT) neurons in particular play a role in the physiological response to stress. Microdialysis (MD) experiments were performed to determine whether OT is released into the PVN during shaker stress. Male rats were prepared with venous catheters and PVN guide cannulae. OT and vasopressin (VP) release into PVN and peripheral blood were measured under basal conditions and during and after shaker stress (10 min at 110 cycles/min). Stress produced a specific increase in PVN and plasma OT. Dialysate OT levels were 0.3+/-0.1, 2.8+/-1.2 and 1.3+/-0.6 pg/sample (control, stress and recovery, respectively). Plasma OT was significantly increased during stress (3.7+/-1.2 vs. 11.7+/-2.3 pg/ml, basal vs. stress, respectively). When MD probes were located outside the PVN, there was no increase in OT release, demonstrating site specificity. Stress produced no change in VP levels, either in dialysate or plasma. These results show that OT, but not VP, is released into the PVN and peripheral blood in response to shaker stress. The data raise the possibility that local release of OT into the PVN plays a role in the neuroendocrine stress cascade.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2003

Evidence for the substantia nigra pars compacta as an essential component of a memory system independent of the hippocampal memory system.

Claudio Da Cunha; Samantha Wietzikoski; Evellyn Claudia Wietzikoski; Edmar Miyoshi; Marcelo Machado Ferro; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci; Newton Sabino Canteras

The aim of the present study was to test if the nigrostriatal pathway is an essential component for a water maze cued task learning and if it works independently of the hippocampal memory system. This hypothesis was tested using an animal model of Parkinsons disease in which male Wistar rats were lesioned in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) by the intranigral infusion of 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP), thus causing a partial depletion of striatal dopamine. SNc-lesioned and sham-operated animals were implanted bilaterally with guide cannulae above the dorsal hippocampus in order to be tested after the administration of 0.4 microl 2% lidocaine or saline into this structure. The animals were tested in a spatial or in a cued version of the water maze, memory tasks previously reported to model hippocampal-dependent spatial/relational and striatal-dependent S-R learning, respectively. Hippocampal inactivation, but not SNc lesion, impaired learning and memory in the spatial version of the water maze. An opposite situation was observed with the cued version. No significant interaction was observed between the SNc lesion and hippocampal inactivation conditions affecting scores in the spatial or in the cued version of the water maze. These results suggest that the nigrostriatal pathway is an essential part of the memory system that processes S-R learning and that it works independently of the hippocampal memory system that processes spatial/relational memories.


Physiology & Behavior | 2004

Effects of neonatal handling on the behavior and prolactin stress response in male and female rats at various ages and estrous cycle phases of females

Gabriela Sentena Severino; Isabel Amaral Martins Fossati; Maristela J. Padoin; Cármen Marilei Gomes; Luciano Trevizan; Gilberto Luiz Sanvitto; Celso Rodrigues Franci; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci; Aldo Bolten Lucion

Neonatal handling induces behavioral and hormonal changes, characterized by reduced fear in novel environments, and lesser elevation and faster return to basal levels of plasma corticosterone, prolactin and adrenaline, in response to stressors in adulthood. The present study aimed to analyze the effects of neonatal handling from Days 1 to 10 postnatal on prolactin response to ether stress in male and female rats at three life periods: neonatal, peripubertal and adulthood. Moreover, adult females were tested in two different phases of the estrous cycle, i.e., diestrus and estrus. In another set of experiments, the behavior of peripubertal and adult males and females in estrus and diestrus was analyzed in the elevated plus maze test. Pups were either handled for 1 min (handled group) or left undisturbed (nonhandled group) during the first 10 days after delivery. In adults, in the handled females in diestrus, stress induced a lesser increase in plasma prolactin compared with nonhandled ones, as in males. However, in estrus, handled females showed no difference in the prolactin response to stress. In the elevated plus maze, handled females in diestrus, but not in estrus, showed higher locomotor activity compared with nonhandled ones. Peripubertal male and female rats handled during the neonatal period showed no difference in behavior in the elevated plus maze compared with nonhandled animals. Early-life stimulation can induce long-lasting behavioral and stress-related hormonal changes, but they are not stable throughout life and phases of the estrous cycle.


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2003

Neonatal handling reduces the number of cells in the locus coeruleus of rats.

Aldo Bolten Lucion; Francine Martins Pereira; Elisa C. Winkelman; Gilberto Luiz Sanvitto; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci

Neonatal handling induces long-lasting effects on behaviors and stress responses. The objective of the present study was to analyze the effects of neonatal handling (from the 1st to the 10th day after delivery) on the number of cells and volume of locus coeruleus (LC) nucleus in male and female rats at 4 different ages: 11, 26, 35, and 90 days. Results showed significant reductions in the number of cells and the volume of the LC nucleus in neonatally handled males and females compared with nonhandled rats. Environmental stimulation early in life induced a stable structural change in a central noradrenergic nucleus, which could be one of the causal factors for the behavioral and hormonal alterations observed in adulthood.


Endocrinology | 2010

Kisspeptin Regulates Prolactin Release through Hypothalamic Dopaminergic Neurons

Raphael Escorsim Szawka; Aline B. Ribeiro; Cristiane M. Leite; Cleyde Vanessa Vega Helena; Celso Rodrigues Franci; Greg M. Anderson; Gloria E. Hoffman; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci

Prolactin (PRL) is tonically inhibited by dopamine (DA) released from neurons in the arcuate and periventricular nuclei. Kisspeptin plays a pivotal role in LH regulation. In rodents, kisspeptin neurons are found mostly in the anteroventral periventricular and arcuate nuclei, but the physiology of arcuate kisspeptin neurons is not completely understood. We investigated the role of kisspeptin in the control of hypothalamic DA and pituitary PRL secretion in adult rats. Intracerebroventricular kisspeptin-10 (Kp-10) elicited PRL release in a dose-dependent manner in estradiol (E2)-treated ovariectomized rats (OVX+E2), whereas no effect was found in oil-treated ovariectomized rats (OVX). Kp-10 increased PRL release in males and proestrous but not diestrous females. Associated with the increase in PRL release, intracerebroventricular Kp-10 reduced Fos-related antigen expression in tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive (ir) neurons of arcuate and periventricular nuclei in OVX+E2 rats, with no effect in OVX rats. Kp-10 also decreased 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid concentration and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid-DA ratio in the median eminence but not striatum in OVX+E2 rats. Double-label immunofluorescence combined with confocal microscopy revealed kisspeptin-ir fibers in close apposition to and in contact with tyrosine hydroxylase-ir perikarya in the arcuate. In addition, Kp-10 was not found to alter PRL release from anterior pituitary cell cultures regardless of E2 treatment. We provide herein evidence that kisspeptin regulates PRL release through inhibition of hypothalamic dopaminergic neurons, and that this mechanism is E2 dependent in females. These findings suggest a new role for central kisspeptin with possible implications for reproductive physiology.


Neuroscience Research | 2010

Evaluation of chronic omega-3 fatty acids supplementation on behavioral and neurochemical alterations in 6-hydroxydopamine-lesion model of Parkinson's disease

Ana Marcia Delattre; Ágata Kiss; Raphael Escorsim Szawka; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci; Pamela Brambilla Bagatini; Léder Leal Xavier; Paula Rigon; Matilde Achaval; Fabíola Iagher; Cintia de David; Norma Anair Possa Marroni; Anete Curte Ferraz

Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (omega-3 PUFAs) have been widely associated to beneficial effects over different neuropathologies, but only a few studies associate them to Parkinsons disease (PD). Rats were submitted to chronic supplementation (21-90 days of life) with fish oil, rich in omega-3 PUFAs, and were uni- or bilaterally lesioned with 4microg of the neurotoxin 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA) in the medial forebrain bundle. Although lipid incorporation was evidenced in neuronal membranes, it was not sufficient to compensate motor deficits induced by 6-OHDA. In contrast, omega-3 PUFAs were capable of reducing rotational behavior induced by apomorphine, suggesting neuroprotection over dyskinesia. The beneficial effects of omega-3 PUFAs were also evident in the maintenance of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances index from animals lesioned with 6-OHDA similar to levels from SHAM and intact animals. Although omega-3 PUFAs did not modify the tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity in the substantia nigra pars compacta and in the ventral tegmental area, nor the depletion of dopamine (DA) and its metabolites in the striatum, DA turnover was increased after omega-3 PUFAs chronic supplementation. Therefore, it is proposed that omega-3 PUFAs action characterizes the adaptation of remaining neurons activity, altering striatal DA turnover without modifying the estimated neuronal population.


Brain Research | 2002

Luteinizing hormone and luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone secretion is under locus coeruleus control in female rats

Cleyde Vanessa Vega Helena; Celso Rodrigues Franci; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci

It has been suggested that norepinephrine (NE) from the locus coeruleus (LC) plays an important role in triggering the preovulatory surge of gonadotropins. This work intended to study the role of LC in luteinizing hormone (LH) secretion during the estrous cycle and in ovariectomized rats treated with estradiol and progesterone (OVXE(2)P) and to correlate it with LH releasing hormone (LHRH) content in the medial preoptic area (MPOA) and median eminence (ME). Female rats on each day of the estrous cycle and OVXE(2)P were submitted to jugular cannulation and LC electrolytic lesion or sham-operation, at 09:00 h. Blood samples were collected hourly from 11:00 to 18:00 h, when animals were decapitated and their brains removed to analyze LC lesion and punch out the MPOA and ME. Plasma LH levels and LHRH content of MPOA and ME were determined by radioimmunoassay. During metestrus, diestrus and estrus, LC lesion did not modify either LH plasma concentrations or LHRH content, but completely abolished the preovulatory LH surge during proestrus and the surge of OVXE(2)P. These blockades were accompanied by an increased content of LHRH in the MPOA and ME. The results suggest that: (1). LC does not participate in the control of basal LH secretion but its activation is essential to trigger spontaneous or induced LH surges, and (2). the increased content of LHRH in the MPOA and ME may be due to a decreased NE input to these areas. Thus, LC activation may be required for depolarization of LHRH neurons and consequent LH surges.


Endocrinology | 2008

Locus Coeruleus Mediates Cold Stress-Induced Polycystic Ovary in Rats

Marcelo Picinin Bernuci; Raphael Escorsim Szawka; Cleyde Vanessa Vega Helena; Cristiane M. Leite; Hernán E. Lara; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci

Previous reports about the rat ovary have shown that cold stress promotes ovarian morphological alterations related to a polycystic ovary (PCO) condition through activation of the ovarian sympathetic nerves. Because the noradrenergic nucleus locus coeruleus (LC) is activated by cold stress and synaptically connected to the preganglionic cell bodies of the ovarian sympathetic pathway, this study aimed to evaluate the LCs role in cold stress-induced PCO in rats. Ovarian morphology and endocrine and sympathetic functions were evaluated after 8 wk of chronic intermittent cold stress (4 C, 3 h/d) in rats with or without LC lesion. The effect of acute and chronic cold stress upon the LC neuron activity was confirmed by Fos protein expression in tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive neurons. Cold stress induced the formation of follicular cysts, type III follicles, and follicles with hyperthecosis alongside increased plasma estradiol and testosterone levels, irregular estrous cyclicity, and reduced ovulation. Considering estradiol release in vitro, cold stress potentiated the ovarian response to human chorionic gonadotropin. Ovarian norepinephrine (NE) was not altered after 8 wk of stress. However, LC lesion reduced NE activity in the ovary of cold-stressed rats, but not in controls, and prevented all the cold stress effects evaluated. Cold stress increased the number of Fos/tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive neurons in the LC, but this effect was more pronounced for acute stress as compared with chronic stress. These results show that cold stress promotes PCO in rats, which apparently depends on ovarian NE activity that, under this condition, is regulated by the noradrenergic nucleus LC.


Toxicology | 2009

Long-term effects of developmental exposure to di-n-butyl-phthalate (DBP) on rat prostate: Proliferative and inflammatory disorders and a possible role of androgens

Wellerson Rodrigo Scarano; Fabíola C. de Toledo; Marina T. Guerra; Silvana G.P. Campos; Luís Antonio Justulin Júnior; Sérgio Luis Felisbino; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci; Sebastião Roberto Taboga; Wilma De Grava Kempinas

In the present study we evaluated the toxic effects on the male adult rat prostate of DBP exposure during fetal and lactational periods, because although many studies have addressed the influence of phthalates on the male reproductive system, only a few have discussed their possible effects on prostate development. Pregnant females were distributed into two experimental groups: Control (C) and Treated (T). The females of the T group received DBP (100mg/kg, by gavage) from gestation day 12 to postnatal day 21, while C rats received the vehicle (corn oil). In adulthood (90 days old), the animals were euthanized. The serum and testicular testosterone levels were measured. Ventral prostate was removed and weighed. Distal segment fragments of the ventral prostate were fixed and processed for histochemistry and immunohistochemistry to detect androgen receptor (AR) and Ki67 antigens. Protein extraction from ventral prostate fragments was performed for AR immunoblotting and Gelatin zymography for MMP-2 and MMP-9 (MMP, metalloproteinase). Stereological and histopathological analyses were also performed. Serum and testicular testosterone levels and prostate weight were comparable between groups. In the T group the relative proportions (%) of epithelial (C=32.86; T=42.04*) and stromal (C=21.61; T=27.88*) compartments were increased, while the luminal compartment was decreased (C=45.54; T=30.08*), *p<0.05. InT, disseminated inflammatory infiltrate in the stroma, associated or not with epithelial dysplasia and PIN (Prostatic Intraepithelial Neoplasia), was observed. Increases in AR expression, proliferation index and metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) activity were noted in T animals. In some T animals, collagen fibrils accumulated adjacent to the epithelium. As far as we are aware, this is the first report in the literature showing that phthalates could play a role in proliferative and inflammatory disorders of the rat prostate.


Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology | 2011

Vitamin C partially attenuates male reproductive deficits in hyperglycemic rats

Glaura Scantamburlo Alves Fernandes; Carla D. B. Fernandez; Kleber Eduardo de Campos; Débora Cristina Damasceno; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci; Wilma De Grava Kempinas

BackgroundHyperglycemia can impair the male reproductive system in experimental animals and in men during reproductive age. Studies have shown that vitamin C has some good effects on male reproductive system, and therefore vitamin C treatment could attenuate the dysfunctions in this system caused by hyperglycemia. Thus, the objective of this work was to evaluate whether vitamin C treatment could attenuate reproductive dysfunctions in hyperglycemic male rats.MethodsAdult male rats were divided into 3 groups: a normoglycemic (n = 10) and two hyperglycemic (that received a single dose of streptozotocin - 40 mg/kg BW). The two last groups (n = 10 per group) were divided into: hyperglycemic control (Hy) and hyperglycemic + 150 mg of vitamin C (HyC), by gavage during 30 consecutive days. The normoglycemic and hyperglycemic control groups received the vehicle (water). The first day after the treatment, the rats were anesthetized and killed to evaluate oxidative stress biomarkers (TBARS, SOD, GSHt and GSH-Px) in the erythrocytes, body and reproductive organ weights, sperm parameters, plasma hormone levels (FSH, LH and testosterone), testicular and epididymal histo-morphometry and histopathology.ResultsCompared with the normoglycemic animals, hyperglycemic control rats showed reduced weight of the body and reproductive organ but testis weight was maintained. It was also observed reduction of testosterone and LH levels, seminiferous tubular diameter, sperm motility and sperm counts in the epididymis. In addition, there was an increase in morphological abnormalities on spermatozoa as well as in oxidative stress level. Vitamin C reduced the oxidative stress level, diminished the number of abnormal sperm, and increased testosterone and LH levels and seminiferous tubular diameter but did not show improvement of sperm motility in relation to the hyperglycemic control group. Hyperglycemia caused a rearrangement in the epididymal tissue components (stroma, ephitelium and lumen) as demonstrated by the stereological analysis results. However, this alteration was partially prevented by vitamin C treatment.ConclusionsWe conclude that vitamin C partially attenuated some male reproductive system dysfunctions in hyperglycemic rats.

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Aldo Bolten Lucion

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Gilberto Luiz Sanvitto

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Raphael E. Szawka

Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais

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Anete Curte Ferraz

Federal University of Paraná

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Márcio Vinícius Fagundes Donadio

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Bruna Kalil

University of São Paulo

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