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Dive into the research topics where José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos is active.

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Featured researches published by José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Increased Metallothionein I/II Expression in Patients with Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; Orfa Yineth Galvis-Alonso; Tonicarlo Rodrigues Velasco; Ludmyla Kandratavicius; João Alberto Assirati; Carlos Gilberto Carlotti; Renata Caldo Scandiuzzi; Luciano Neder Serafini; João Pereira Leite

In the central nervous system, zinc is released along with glutamate during neurotransmission and, in excess, can promote neuronal death. Experimental studies have shown that metallothioneins I/II (MT-I/II), which chelate free zinc, can affect seizures and reduce neuronal death after status epilepticus. Our aim was to evaluate the expression of MT-I/II in the hippocampus of patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Hippocampi from patients with pharmacoresistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) and patients with TLE associated with tumor or dysplasia (TLE-TD) were evaluated for expression of MT-I/II, for the vesicular zinc levels, and for neuronal, astroglial, and microglial populations. Compared to control cases, MTLE group displayed widespread increase in MT-I/II expression, astrogliosis, microgliosis and reduced neuronal population. In TLE-TD, the same changes were observed, except that were mainly confined to fascia dentata. Increased vesicular zinc was observed only in the inner molecular layer of MTLE patients, when compared to control cases. Correlation and linear regression analyses indicated an association between increased MT-I/II and increased astrogliosis in TLE. MT-I/II levels did not correlate with any clinical variables, but MTLE patients with secondary generalized seizures (SGS) had less MT-I/II than MTLE patients without SGS. In conclusion, MT-I/II expression was increased in hippocampi from TLE patients and our data suggest that it is associated with astrogliosis and may be associated with different seizure spread patterns.


Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2015

Mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with psychiatric comorbidities: a place for differential neuroinflammatory interplay

Ludmyla Kandratavicius; José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; Mariana Raquel Monteiro; Renata Caldo Scandiuzzi; Carlos Gilberto Carlotti; João Alberto Assirati; Jaime Eduardo Hallak; João Pereira Leite

BackgroundDespite the strong association between epilepsy and psychiatric comorbidities, few biological substrates are currently described. We have previously reported neuropathological alterations in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) patients with major depression and psychosis that suggest a morphological and neurochemical basis for psychopathological symptoms. Neuroinflammatory-related structures and molecules might be part of the altered neurochemical milieu underlying the association between epilepsy and psychiatric comorbidities, and such features have not been previously investigated in humans.MethodsMTLE hippocampi of subjects without psychiatric history (MTLEW), MTLE + major depression (MTLE + D), and MTLE + interictal psychosis (MTLE + P) derived from epilepsy surgery and control necropsies were investigated for reactive astrocytes (glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)), activated microglia (human leukocyte antigen, MHC class II (HLA-DR)), glial metallothionein-I/II (MT-I/II), and aquaporin 4 (AQP4) immunohistochemistry.ResultsWe found an increased GFAP immunoreactive area in the molecular layers, granule cell layer, and cornus ammonis region 2 (CA2) and cornus ammonis region 1 (CA1) of MTLEW and MTLE + P, respectively, compared to MTLE + D. HLA-DR immunoreactive area was higher in cornus ammonis region 3 (CA3) of MTLE + P, compared to MTLE + D and MTLEW, and in the hilus, when compared to MTLEW. MTLEW cases showed increased MT-I/II area in the granule cell layer and CA1, compared to MTLE + P, and in the parasubiculum, when compared to MTLE + D and MTLE + P. Differences between MTLE and control, such as astrogliosis, microgliosis, increased MT-I/II, and decreased perivascular AQP4 in the epileptogenic hippocampus, were in agreement to what is currently described in the literature.ConclusionsNeuroinflammatory-related molecules in MTLE hippocampus show a distinct pattern of expression when patients present with a comorbid psychiatric diagnosis, similar to what is found in the pure forms of schizophrenia and major depression. Future studies focusing on inflammatory characteristics of MTLE with psychiatric comorbidities might help in the design of better therapeutic strategies.


Epilepsia | 2015

Temporal lobe epilepsy patients with severe hippocampal neuron loss but normal hippocampal volume: Extracellular matrix molecules are important for the maintenance of hippocampal volume

José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; Tonicarlo Rodrigues Velasco; Orfa Yineth Galvis-Alonso; David Araujo; Ludmyla Kandratavicius; João Alberto Assirati; Carlos Gilberto Carlotti; Renata Caldo Scandiuzzi; Antonio Carlos dos Santos; João Pereira Leite

Hippocampal sclerosis is a common finding in patients with temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies associate the reduction of hippocampal volume with the neuron loss seen on histologic evaluation. Astrogliosis and increased levels of chondroitin sulfate, a major component of brain extracellular matrix, are also seen in hippocampal sclerosis. Our aim was to evaluate the association between hippocampal volume and chondroitin sulfate, as well as neuronal and astroglial populations in the hippocampus of patients with TLE.


Brain | 2015

Increased frequency of hippocampal sclerosis ILAE type 2 in patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with normal episodic memory

Guilherme Riccioppo Rodrigues; Ludmyla Kandratavicius; José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; Mariana Raquel Monteiro; Ana Carolina Gargaro; C.V.L. Geraldi; Tonicarlo Rodrigues Velasco; João Pereira Leite

Sir, We read with interest the study of Coras et al. (2014) reporting the absence of verbal anterograde episodic memory (AEM) impairment in patients with mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) with a hippocampal sclerosis ILAE type 2 classification (HS ILAE 2, i.e. CA1 predominant cell loss). This finding may provide an anatomical basis for the dissociation of anterograde/long-term episodic memory seen in some disorders like accelerated long-term forgetting (Butler et al. , 2007), which has not been explained …


Frontiers in Pharmacology | 2017

Protective Effects of Cannabidiol against Seizures and Neuronal Death in a Rat Model of Mesial Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

Raquel Araujo Do Val-da Silva; José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; Ludmyla Kandratavicius; Jana B. de Ross; I.M. Esteves; Bruno S. De Martinis; Marcela Nogueira Rabelo Alves; Renata Caldo Scandiuzzi; Jaime E. C. Hallak; Antonio Waldo Zuardi; José Alexandre S. Crippa; Joao P. Leite

The present study reports the behavioral, electrophysiological, and neuropathological effects of cannabidiol (CBD), a major non-psychotropic constituent of Cannabis sativa, in the intrahippocampal pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus (SE) rat model. CBD was administered before pilocarpine-induced SE (group SE+CBDp) or before and after SE (group SE+CBDt), and compared to rats submitted only to SE (SE group), CBD, or vehicle (VH group). Groups were evaluated during SE (behavioral and electrophysiological analysis), as well as at days one and three post-SE (exploratory activity, electrophysiological analysis, neuron density, and neuron degeneration). Compared to SE group, SE+CBD groups (SE+CBDp and SE+CBDt) had increased SE latency, diminished SE severity, increased contralateral afterdischarge latency and decreased relative powers in delta (0.5–4 Hz) and theta (4–10 Hz) bands. Only SE+CBDp had increased vertical exploratory activity 1-day post SE and decreased contralateral relative power in delta 3 days after SE, when compared to SE group. SE+CBD groups also showed decreased neurodegeneration in the hilus and CA3, and higher neuron density in granule cell layer, hilus, CA3, and CA1, when compared to SE group. Our findings demonstrate anticonvulsant and neuroprotective effects of CBD preventive treatment in the intrahippocampal pilocarpine epilepsy model, either as single or multiple administrations, reinforcing the potential role of CBD in the treatment of epileptic disorders.


Neuroscience | 2017

SELECTIVE POST-TRAINING TIME WINDOW FOR MEMORY CONSOLIDATION INTERFERENCE OF CANNABIDIOL INTO THE PREFRONTAL CORTEX: REDUCED DOPAMINERGIC MODULATION AND IMMEDIATE GENE EXPRESSION IN LIMBIC CIRCUITS

Matheus T. Rossignoli; Cleiton Lopes-Aguiar; Rafael N. Ruggiero; Raquel Araujo Do Val-da Silva; Lezio Soares Bueno-Junior; Ludmyla Kandratavicius; José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; José Alexandre S. Crippa; Jaime Eduardo Cecílio Hallak; Antonio Waldo Zuardi; Raphael E. Szawka; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci; João Pereira Leite; Rodrigo N. Romcy-Pereira

The prefrontal cortex (PFC), amygdala and hippocampus display a coordinated activity during acquisition of associative fear memories. Evidence indicates that PFC engagement in aversive memory formation does not progress linearly as previously thought. Instead, it seems to be recruited at specific time windows after memory acquisition, which has implications for the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorders. Cannabidiol (CBD), the major non-psychotomimetic phytocannabinoid of the Cannabis sativa plant, is known to modulate contextual fear memory acquisition in rodents. However, it is still not clear how CBD interferes with PFC-dependent processes during post-training memory consolidation. Here, we tested whether intra-PFC infusions of CBD immediately after or 5h following contextual fear conditioning was able to interfere with memory consolidation. Neurochemical and cellular correlates of the CBD treatment were evaluated by the quantification of extracellular levels of dopamine (DA), serotonin, and their metabolites in the PFC and by measuring the cellular expression of activity-dependent transcription factors in cortical and limbic regions. Our results indicate that bilateral intra-PFC CBD infusion impaired contextual fear memory consolidation when applied 5h after conditioning, but had no effect when applied immediately after it. This effect was associated with a reduction in DA turnover in the PFC following retrieval 5days after training. We also observed that post-conditioning infusion of CBD reduced c-fos and zif-268 protein expression in the hippocampus, PFC, and thalamus. Our findings support that CBD interferes with contextual fear memory consolidation by reducing PFC influence on cortico-limbic circuits.


Epilepsia | 2017

Individual hippocampal subfield assessment indicates that matrix macromolecules and gliosis are key elements for the increased T2 relaxation time seen in temporal lobe epilepsy

José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; Ludmyla Kandratavicius; Tonicarlo Rodrigues Velasco; João Alberto Assirati; Carlos Gilberto Carlotti; Renata Caldo Scandiuzzi; Carlos Ernesto Garrido Salmon; Antonio Carlos dos Santos; João Pereira Leite

Increased T2 relaxation time is often seen in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) with hippocampal sclerosis. Water content directly affects the effective T2 in a voxel. Our aim was to evaluate the relation between T2 values and two molecules associated with brain water homeostasis aquaporin 4 (AQP4) and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan (CSPG), as well as cellular populations in the hippocampal region of patients with TLE.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Using Postmortem hippocampi tissue can interfere with differential gene expression analysis of the epileptogenic process

João Paulo Lopes Born; Heloisa de Carvalho Matos; Mykaella Andrade de Araújo; Olagide Wagner de Castro; Marcelo Duzzioni; José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; João Pereira Leite; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco; Maria Luisa Paçó-Larson; Daniel Leite Góes Gitaí

Neuropathological studies often use autopsy brain tissue as controls to evaluate changes in protein or RNA levels in several diseases. In mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE), several genes are up or down regulated throughout the epileptogenic and chronic stages of the disease. Given that postmortem changes in several gene transcripts could impact the detection of changes in case-control studies, we evaluated the effect of using autopsy specimens with different postmortem intervals (PMI) on differential gene expression of the Pilocarpine (PILO)induced Status Epilepticus (SE) of MTLE. For this, we selected six genes (Gfap, Ppia, Gad65, Gad67, Npy, and Tnf-α) whose expression patterns in the hippocampus of PILO-injected rats are well known. Initially, we compared hippocampal expression of naïve rats whose hippocampi were harvested immediately after death (0h-PMI) with those harvested at 6h postmortem interval (6h-PMI): Npy and Ppia transcripts increased and Tnf-α transcripts decreased in the 6h-PMI group (p<0.05). We then investigated if these PMI-related changes in gene expression have the potential to adulterate or mask RT-qPCR results obtained with PILO-injected rats euthanized at acute or chronic phases. In the acute group, Npy transcript was significantly higher when compared with 0h-PMI rats, whereas Ppia transcript was lower than 6h-PMI group. When we used epileptic rats (chronic group), the RT-qPCR results showed higher Tnf-α only when compared to 6h-PMI group. In conclusion, our study demonstrates that PMI influences gene transcription and can mask changes in gene transcription seen during epileptogenesis in the PILO-SE model. Thus, to avoid erroneous conclusions, we strongly recommend that researchers account for changes in postmortem gene expression in their experimental design.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Identification of microRNAs with Dysregulated Expression in Status Epilepticus Induced Epileptogenesis

Mykaella Andrade de Araújo; Thalita Ewellyn Batista Sales Marques; Shirley Octacílio-Silva; Carmem Lúcia de Arroxelas-Silva; Marília Gabriella Alves Goulart Pereira; José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; Ludmyla Kandratavicius; João Pereira Leite; Norberto Garcia-Cairasco; Olagide W. Castro; Marcelo Duzzioni; Geraldo A. Passos; Maria Luisa Paçó-Larson; Daniel Leite Góes Gitaí

The involvement of miRNA in mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) pathogenesis has increasingly become a focus of epigenetic studies. Despite advances, the number of known miRNAs with a consistent expression response during epileptogenesis is still small. Addressing this situation requires additional miRNA profiling studies coupled to detailed individual expression analyses. Here, we perform a miRNA microarray analysis of the hippocampus of Wistar rats 24 hours after intra-hippocampal pilocarpine-induced Status Epilepticus (H-PILO SE). We identified 73 miRNAs that undergo significant changes, of which 36 were up-regulated and 37 were down-regulated. To validate, we selected 5 of these (10a-5p, 128a-3p, 196b-5p, 352 and 324-3p) for RT-qPCR analysis. Our results confirmed that miR-352 and 196b-5p levels were significantly higher and miR-128a-3p levels were significantly lower in the hippocampus of H-PILO SE rats. We also evaluated whether the 3 miRNAs show a dysregulated hippocampal expression at three time periods (0h, 24h and chronic phase) after systemic pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus (S-PILO SE). We demonstrate that miR-128a-3p transcripts are significantly reduced at all time points compared to the naïve group. Moreover, miR-196b-5p was significantly higher only at 24h post-SE, while miR-352 transcripts were significantly up-regulated after 24h and in chronic phase (epileptic) rats. Finally, when we compared hippocampi of epileptic and non-epileptic humans, we observed that transcript levels of miRNAs show similar trends to the animal models. In summary, we successfully identified two novel dysregulated miRNAs (196b-5p and 352) and confirmed miR-128a-3p downregulation in SE-induced epileptogenesis. Further functional assays are required to understand the role of these miRNAs in MTLE pathogenesis.


Neuroscience | 2016

DECREASED NEURON LOSS AND MEMORY DYSFUNCTION IN PILOCARPINE-TREATED RATS PRE-EXPOSED TO HYPOXIA

Raquel Araujo Do Val-da Silva; José Eduardo Peixoto-Santos; Renata Caldo Scandiuzzi; Priscila Alves Balista; Mirian Bassi; Mogens L. Glass; Rodrigo N. Romcy-Pereira; Orfa Yineth Galvis-Alonso; João Pereira Leite

Preconditioning can induce a cascade of cellular events leading to neuroprotection against subsequent brain insults. In this study, we investigated the chronic effects of hypoxic preconditioning on spontaneous recurrent seizures (SRS), neuronal death, and spatial memory performance in rats subjected to pilocarpine (Pilo)-induced status epilepticus (SE). Rats underwent a short hypoxic episode (7% O2+93% N2; 30min on two consecutive days) preceding a 4-h SE (HSE group). Control groups were rats submitted to SE only (SE), rats subjected to hypoxia only (H) or normoxia-saline (C). Animals were monitored for the occurrence of SRS, and spatial memory performance was evaluated in the radial-arm maze. Hippocampal sections were analyzed for cell death and mossy fiber sprouting at 1 or 60days after SE. Compared to SE group, HSE had increased SE latency, reduced number of rats with SRS, reduced mossy fiber sprouting at 60days, and reduced cell death in the hilus and the CA3 region 1 and 60days after SE. Additionally, HSE rats had better spatial memory performance than SE rats. Our findings indicated that short hypoxic preconditioning preceding SE promotes long-lasting protective effects on neuron survival and spatial memory.

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