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Dive into the research topics where Juan L. Blázquez is active.

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Featured researches published by Juan L. Blázquez.


International Review of Cytology-a Survey of Cell Biology | 2005

Hypothalamic tanycytes: a key component of brain-endocrine interaction

Esteban M. Rodríguez; Juan L. Blázquez; Francisco E. Pastor; Belén Peláez; Patricio Peña; Bruno Peruzzo; Pedro Amat

Tanycytes are bipolar cells bridging the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) to the portal capillaries and may link the CSF to neuroendocrine events. During the perinatal period a subpopulation of radial glial cells differentiates into tanycytes, a cell lineage sharing some properties with astrocytes and the radial glia, but displaying unique and distinct morphological, molecular, and functional characteristics. Four populations of tanycytes, alpha(1,2) and beta(1,2), can be distinguished. These subtypes express differentially important functional molecules, such as glucose and glutamate transporters; a series of receptors for neuropeptide and peripheral hormones; secretory molecules such as transforming growth factors, prostaglandin E(2), and the specific protein P85; and proteins of the endocytic pathways. This results in functional differences between the four subtypes of tanycytes. Thus, alpha(1,2) tanycytes do not have barrier properties, whereas beta(1,2) tanycytes do. Different types of tanycytes use different mechanisms to internalize and transport cargo molecules; compounds internalized via a clathrin-dependent endocytosis would only enter tanycytes from the CSF. There are also differences in the neuron-tanycyte relationships; beta(1,2) tanycytes are innervated by peptidergic and aminergic neurons, but alpha(1,2) tanycytes are not. Important aspects of the neuron-beta(1) tanycyte relationships have been elucidated. Tanycytes can participate in the release of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) to the portal blood by expressing estrogen receptors, absorbing molecules from the CSF, and providing signal(s) to the GnRH neurons. Removal of tanycytes prevents the pulse of GnRH release into the portal blood, the peak of luteinizing hormone, and ovulation. The discovery in tanycytes of new functional molecules is opening a new field of research. Thus, thyroxine deiodinase type II, an enzyme generating triiodothyronine (T(3)) from thyroxine, appears to be exclusively expressed by tanycytes, suggesting that these cells are the main source of brain T(3). Glucose transporter-2 (GLUT-2), a low-affinity transporter of glucose and fructose, and ATP-sensitive K(+) channels are expressed by tanycytes, suggesting that they may sense CSF glucose concentrations.


Experimental Brain Research | 2000

A second look at the barriers of the medial basal hypothalamus

Bruno Peruzzo; Francisco E. Pastor; Juan L. Blázquez; Karin Schöbitz; Belén Peláez; Pedro Amat; Esteban M. Rodríguez

Abstract. The cell bodies of hypothalamic secretory neurons are localized in areas protected by the blood-brain barrier (BBB), whereas their axon terminals are localized in the median eminence, which lacks a BBB. This implies a complex barrier system, allowing neurons of the central nervous system to secrete into the blood stream without making the BBB leaky. In the present study, three experimental protocols were applied to clarify certain relevant aspects of the barriers operating in the medial basal hypothalamus of the rat. We established that the milieu of the arcuate nucleus is exposed to both the ventricular and the subarachnoidal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF).The median eminence milieu, the perivascular space of the portal vessels, and the subarachnoid space appear to be in open communication; also, β2-tanycytes establish an efficient barrier between the median eminence milieu and the ventricular CSF. Similarly, β1-tanycytes establish a lateral barrier, separating the intercellular space of the median eminence from that of the arcuate nucleus. We also found that the glucose transporter I (GLUT I), a BBB marker, is localized throughout the whole plasma membrane of β1-tanycytes, but is missing from β2-tanycytes. Expression of GLUT I by tanycytes progressively develops during the first postnatal weeks; while the degree of damage of the arcuate nucleus by administration of monosodium glutamate, at different postnatal intervals, parallels that of the GLUT I immunoreactivity of β1-tanycytes. An explanation is offered for the selective destruction of the arcuate neurons by the parenteral administration of monosodium glutamate to infant rats.


Peptides | 2010

The design of barriers in the hypothalamus allows the median eminence and the arcuate nucleus to enjoy private milieus: The former opens to the portal blood and the latter to the cerebrospinal fluid

Esteban M. Rodríguez; Juan L. Blázquez; Montserrat Guerra

The blood-brain barrier (BBB) is a single uninterrupted barrier that in the brain capillaries is located at the endothelial cells and in the circumventricular organs, such as the choroid plexuses (CP) and median eminence (ME), is displaced to specialized ependymal cells. How do hypothalamic hormones reach the portal circulation without making the BBB leaky? The ME milieu is open to the portal vessels, while it is closed to the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and to the arcuate nucleus. The cell body and most of the axons of neurons projecting to the ME are localized in areas protected by the BBB, while the axon terminals are localized in the BBB-free area of the ME. This design implies a complex organization of the intercellular space of the median basal hypothalamus. The privacy of the ME milieu implies that those neurons projecting to this area would not be under the influence of compounds leaking from the portal capillaries, unless receptors for such compounds are located at the axon terminal. Amazingly, the arcuate nucleus also has its private milieu that is closed to all adjacent neural structures and open to the infundibular recess. The absence of multiciliated cells in this recess should result in a slow CSF flow at this level. This whole arrangement should facilitate the arrival of CSF signal to the arcuate nucleus. This review will show how peripheral hormones can reach hypothalamic targets without making the BBB leaky.


Cell and Tissue Research | 2004

Polarized endocytosis and transcytosis in the hypothalamic tanycytes of the rat

Bruno Peruzzo; Francisco E. Pastor; Juan L. Blázquez; Pedro Amat; Esteban M. Rodríguez

Four types of tanycytes can be distinguished in the rat hypothalamus: α1 and α2 tanycytes establish an anatomical link between the ventricular cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and the arcuate nucleus, whereas β1 and β2 tanycytes establish a link between CSF and portal blood. Endocytosis and transcytosis in these cells have been investigated by (1) immunocytochemistry with antibodies against molecular markers of the endocytotic and transcytotic pathways; (2) the administration of wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) into the ventricular or subarachnoidal CSF and following its internalisation by and its routing through tanycytes. The four populations of tanycytes show marked differences concerning the expression and subcellular location of proteins involved in endocytosis and transcytosis, such as clathrin, caveolin-1, Rab4 and ARF6. Thus, β1,2 tanycytes express caveolin-1 at the ventricular cell pole and at their terminals contacting the portal capillaries, whereas α1,2 tanycytes do not, suggesting that caveolae-dependant endocytosis does not occur in the latter and that, in β1,2 tanycytes, it may occur at both cell poles. In β1,2 tanycytes, clathrin is only expressed at the ventricular cell pole indicating that clathrin-dependant endocytosis operates for compounds present in the ventricular CSF and not for those exposed to the terminals. This agrees with the property of β1,2 tanycytes of internalising WGA through the ventricular cell pole but not through the terminals. The subcellular distribution in β1,2 tanycytes of WGA and of the proteins clathrin and Rab4 indicates that part of the internalised WGA follows the degradative pathway and part is sorted to a transcytotic pathway and that the transcytotic and the secretory pathways might intersect.


Cell and Tissue Research | 2010

Cell organization of the rat pars tuberalis. Evidence for open communication between pars tuberalis cells, cerebrospinal fluid and tanycytes

Montserrat Guerra; Juan L. Blázquez; Bruno Peruzzo; Belén Peláez; Sara Rodríguez; Daniel Toranzo; Francisco E. Pastor; Esteban M. Rodríguez

The pars tuberalis (PT) is the only pituitary region in close contact with the medial-basal hypothalamus and bathed by cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). Although PT has long been recognized as an endocrine gland, certain aspects of its structure remain obscure. The present investigation has been designed to gain information concerning (1) the cellular organization of PT, (2) the PT/median eminence spatial relationship and (3) the exposure of various cell compartments of PT to CSF. Non-endocrine cells (S100-reactive) appear as the organizer of the PT architecture. The apical poles of these cells line large cistern-like cavities and the processes of these cells establish a close spatial relationship with PT-specific secretory cells, portal capillaries and tanycytes. The cisterns are also endowed with clusters of ciliated cells and with a highly electron-dense and PAS-reactive content. The unique spatial organization of endocrine and non-endocrine cells of the PT supports a functional relationship between both cell populations. PT endocrine cells display a hallmark of PT-specific cells, namely, the paranuclear spot, which is a complex structure involving the Golgi apparatus, a large pool of immature secretory granules and a centriole from which originates a single 9+0 cilium projecting to the intercellular channels. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) injected into the CSF readily reaches the intercellular channels of PT and the inner channel of the single cilium and is incorporated by the endocytic machinery of the secretory cells. The PT endocrine cells, through their single 9+0 cilium, may act as sensors of the CSF. HRP also reaches the lumen of the cisterns, indicating that this PT compartment is also exposed to CSF. PT endocrine cells establish direct cell-to-cell contacts with hypothalamic β1 tanycytes, suggesting a second means of brain-PT communication.


Neuroscience | 1999

Lateral evaginations from the third ventricle into the rat mediobasal hypothalamus: an amplification of the ventricular route

P Amat; Francisco E. Pastor; Juan L. Blázquez; Belén Peláez; A Sanchez; A.J Alvarez-Morujo; D Toranzo; G Amat-Peral

In this work we report the existence of several evaginations extending out of the third ventricle within the mediobasal hypothalamus of the rat. In coronal sections, these evaginations appear as very narrow canaliculi integrating a canalicular system, which increases the contact surface between the ventricular lining and the nervous tissue. Consequently these evaginations enlarge the ventricular route for the transport of active principles present in the cerebrospinal fluid, such as (neuro)hormones and neurotransmitters. The mediobasal hypothalamus includes the arcuate nucleus and the median eminence (both involved in neuroendocrine mechanisms and in the regulation of pituitary function). A possible implication of our finding is that the neuroactive substance-containing ventricular cerebrospinal fluid may reach the intercellular spaces of the surrounding neuropil of the arcuate nucleus. According to literature these substances cross the ependyma of the lateral wall of the infundibular recess of the third ventricle. We suggest that such substances might also pass through the ependymal lining of the canalicular system, which displays the same ultrastructural characteristics as the rest of the ependyma of the lateral wall of the third ventricle. Therefore, the arcuate neurons may be influenced not only by synaptic inputs (afferent fibers) but also by non-synaptic diffusion neurotransmission (by means of neuroactive substances present in the cerebrospinal fluid).


Fluids and Barriers of the CNS | 2017

Blood–brain barrier and foetal-onset hydrocephalus, with a view on potential novel treatments beyond managing CSF flow

Montserrat Guerra; Juan L. Blázquez; Esteban M. Rodríguez

Despite decades of research, no compelling non-surgical therapies have been developed for foetal hydrocephalus. So far, most efforts have pointed to repairing disturbances in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) flow and to avoid further brain damage. There are no reports trying to prevent or diminish abnormalities in brain development which are inseparably associated with hydrocephalus. A key problem in the treatment of hydrocephalus is the blood–brain barrier that restricts the access to the brain for therapeutic compounds or systemically grafted cells. Recent investigations have started to open an avenue for the development of a cell therapy for foetal-onset hydrocephalus. Potential cells to be used for brain grafting include: (1) pluripotential neural stem cells; (2) mesenchymal stem cells; (3) genetically-engineered stem cells; (4) choroid plexus cells and (5) subcommissural organ cells. Expected outcomes are a proper microenvironment for the embryonic neurogenic niche and, consequent normal brain development.


Cell and Tissue Research | 2002

Antibodies obtained by xenotransplantation of organ-cultured median eminence specifically recognize hypothalamic tanycytes

Juan L. Blázquez; Montserrat Guerra; Francisco E. Pastor; Bruno Peruzzo; Pedro Amat; Esteban M. Rodríguez


Biomedical Research-tokyo | 1995

NADPH-DIAPHORASE ACTIVITY IN THE RAT HYPOTHALAMO-NEUROHYPOPHYSIAL SYSTEM AFTER SALT LOADING AND REHYDRATION

Juan L. Blázquez; Belén Peláez; Francisco E. Pastor; Rosa M. López; Pedro Amat


The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection | 2018

Tanycytes allow a tight BBB in the median eminence

Esteban M. Rodríguez; Juan L. Blázquez; Montserrat Guerra

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Pedro Amat

University of Salamanca

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Montserrat Guerra

Austral University of Chile

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Bruno Peruzzo

Austral University of Chile

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Bruno Peruzzo

Austral University of Chile

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A Sanchez

University of Salamanca

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D Toranzo

University of Salamanca

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