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Featured researches published by Katalin Völgyi.


Journal of Proteomics | 2015

Synaptic mitochondria: A brain mitochondria cluster with a specific proteome

Katalin Völgyi; Péter Gulyássy; Krisztina Háden; Viktor Kis; Kata Badics; Katalin A. Kékesi; Attila Simor; Balazs Gyorffy; Eszter Angéla Tóth; Gert Lubec; Gábor Juhász; Árpád Dobolyi

UNLABELLED The synapse is a particularly important compartment of neurons. To reveal its molecular characteristics we isolated whole brain synaptic (sMito) and non-synaptic mitochondria (nsMito) from the mouse brain with purity validated by electron microscopy and fluorescence activated cell analysis and sorting. Two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry based proteomics revealed 22 proteins with significantly higher and 34 proteins with significantly lower levels in sMito compared to nsMito. Expression differences in some oxidative stress related proteins, such as superoxide dismutase [Mn] (Sod2) and complement component 1Q subcomponent-binding protein (C1qbp), as well as some tricarboxylic acid cycle proteins, including isocitrate dehydrogenase subunit alpha (Idh3a) and ATP-forming β subunit of succinyl-CoA ligase (SuclA2), were verified by Western blot, the latter two also by immunohistochemistry. The data suggest altered tricarboxylic acid metabolism in energy supply of synapse while the marked differences in Sod2 and C1qbp support high sensitivity of synapses to oxidative stress. Further functional clustering demonstrated that proteins with higher synaptic levels are involved in synaptic transmission, lactate and glutathione metabolism. In contrast, mitochondrial proteins associated with glucose, lipid, ketone metabolism, signal transduction, morphogenesis, protein synthesis and transcription were enriched in nsMito. Altogether, the results suggest a specifically tuned composition of synaptic mitochondria. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE Neurons communicate with each other through synapse, a compartment metabolically isolated from the cell body. Mitochondria are concentrated in presynaptic terminals by active transport to provide energy supply for information transfer. Mitochondrial composition in the synapse may be different than in the cell body as some examples have demonstrated altered mitochondrial composition with cell type and cellular function in the muscle, heart and liver. Therefore, we posed the question whether protein composition of synaptic mitochondria reflects its specific functions. The determined protein difference pattern was in accordance with known functional specialties of high demand synaptic mitochondria. The data also suggest specifically tuned metabolic fluxes for energy production by means of interaction with glial cells surrounding the synapse. These findings provide possible mechanisms for dynamically adapting synaptic mitochondrial output to actual demand. In turn, an increased vulnerability of synaptic mitochondria to oxidative stress is implied by the data. This is important from theoretical but potentially also from therapeutic aspects. Mitochondria are known to be affected in some neurodegenerative and psychiatric disorders, and proteins with elevated level in synaptic mitochondria, e.g. C1qbp represent targets for future drug development, by which synaptic and non-synaptic mitochondria can be differentially affected.


Brain Research | 2010

Different electrophysiological actions of 24- and 72-hour aggregated amyloid-beta oligomers on hippocampal field population spike in both anesthetized and awake rats

Gergely Orban; Katalin Völgyi; Gábor Juhász; Botond Penke; Katalin A. Kékesi; József Kardos; András Czurkó

Diffusible oligomeric assemblies of the amyloid beta-protein (Abeta) could be the primary factor in the pathogenic pathway leading to Alzheimers disease (AD). Converging lines of evidence support the notion that AD begins with subtle alterations in synaptic efficacy, prior to the occurrence of extensive neuronal degeneration. Recently, however, a shared or overlapping pathogenesis for AD and epileptic seizures occurred as aberrant neuronal hyperexcitability, as well as nonconvulsive seizure activity were found in several different APP transgenic mouse lines. This generated a renewed attention to the well-known comorbidity of AD and epilepsy and interest in how Abeta oligomers influence neuronal excitability. In this study therefore, we investigated the effect of various in vitro-aged Abeta(1-42) oligomer solutions on the perforant pathway-evoked field potentials in the ventral hippocampal dentate gyrus in vivo. Firstly, Abeta oligomer solutions (1 microl, 200 microM) which had been aggregated in vitro for 0, 24 or 72h were injected into the hippocampus of urethane-anesthetized rats, in parallel with in vitro physico-chemical characterization of Abeta oligomerization (atomic force microscopy, thioflavin-T fluorescence). We found a marked increase of hippocampal population spike (pSpike) after injection of the 24-h Abeta oligomer solution and a decrease of the pSpike amplitude after injection of the 72-h Abeta oligomer. Since urethane anesthesia affects the properties of hippocampal evoked potentials, we repeated the injection of these two Abeta oligomer solutions in awake, freely moving animals. Evoked responses to perforant pathway stimulation revealed a 70% increase of pSpike amplitude 50 min after the 24-h Abeta oligomer injection and a 55% decrease after the 72-h Abeta oligomer injection. Field potentials, that reflect synaptic potentials, were not affected by the Abeta injection. These results demonstrate that oligomeric Abeta aggregates elicit opposite electrophysiological effects on neuronal excitability which depend on their degree of oligomerization.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2014

Brain protein expression changes in WAG/Rij rats, a genetic rat model of absence epilepsy after peripheral lipopolysaccharide treatment

Balazs Gyorffy; Zsolt Kovács; Péter Gulyássy; Attila Simor; Katalin Völgyi; Gergely Orban; Péter Baracskay; Zoltán Szabó; Tamás Janáky; Árpád Dobolyi; Gábor Juhász; András Czurkó; Katalin A. Kékesi

Peripheral injection of bacterial lipopolysaccharide (LPS) facilitates 8-10Hz spike-wave discharges (SWD) characterizing absence epilepsy in WAG/Rij rats. It is unknown however, whether peripherally administered LPS is able to alter the generator areas of epileptic activity at the molecular level. We injected 1mg/kg dose of LPS intraperitoneally into WAG/Rij rats, recorded the body temperature and EEG, and examined the protein expression changes of the proteome 12h after injection in the fronto-parietal cortex and thalamus. We used fluorescent two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis to investigate the expression profile. We found 16 differentially expressed proteins in the fronto-parietal cortex and 35 proteins in the thalamus. It is known that SWD genesis correlates with the transitional state of sleep-wake cycle thus we performed meta-analysis of the altered proteins in relation to inflammation, epilepsy as well as sleep. The analysis revealed that all categories are highly represented by the altered proteins and these protein-sets have considerable overlap. Protein network modeling suggested that the alterations in the proteome were largely induced by the immune response, which invokes the NFkB signaling pathway. The proteomics and computational analysis verified the known functional interplay between inflammation, epilepsy and sleep and highlighted proteins that are involved in their common synaptic mechanisms. Our physiological findings support the phenomenon that high dose of peripheral LPS injection increases SWD-number, modifies its duration as well as the sleep-wake stages and decreases body temperature.


Journal of Proteomics | 2017

Proteomic investigation of the prefrontal cortex in the rat clomipramine model of depression

Barbara Gellén; Katalin Völgyi; Balazs Gyorffy; Zsuzsa Darula; Éva Hunyadi-Gulyás; Péter Baracskay; András Czurkó; István Hernádi; Gábor Juhász; Árpád Dobolyi; Katalin A. Kékesi

Neonatal rodents chronically treated with the tricyclic antidepressant clomipramine show depression-like behavior, which persists throughout adulthood. Therefore, this animal model is suitable to investigate the pathomechanism of depression, which is still largely unknown at the molecular level beyond monoaminergic dysfunctions. Here, we describe protein level changes in the prefrontal cortex of neonatally clomipramine-treated adult rats correlating with behavioral abnormalities. Clomipramine was administered to rat pups twice daily between postnatal days 8-21, while controls received saline injections. Behavioral tests were performed on 3months old rats. The proteomic study was conducted using two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis. We have identified 32 proteins by mass spectrometry analysis of the significantly altered protein spots. The changed proteins are related to several biological functions, such as inflammation, transcription, cell metabolism and cytoskeleton organization. Among the altered proteins, the level of macrophage migration inhibitory factor showed the largest alteration, which was confirmed with Western blot. Macrophage migration inhibitory factor showed widespread distribution and was predominantly expressed in astrocytes in the forebrain of rats which were described using immunohistochemistry. We conclude that neonatal clomipramine exposure induces sustained modification in the proteome, which may form the molecular basis of the observed depression-like behavior in adult rats. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE It is known that some of the psychiatric disorders, such as autism, depression or schizophrenia may be at least in part, developmental disorders. We hypothesized that clomipramine treatment in early stage of brain development, which is known to induce depression-like behavior in adult rats, results in pathological distortion in neuronal and glial network development, which can be reflected by the cellular proteome in adulthood. Thus, we performed an unbiased proteomics experiment in adult rats, which were neonatally administered with clomipramine to reveal protein level changes three months after treatment. Many of the identified changed proteins are previously associated with depressive symptoms, e.g., the macrophage migration inhibitory factor (MIF), the level of which showed the largest alteration among the identified proteins. Based on our data, we suggest that neonatal clomipramine treatment is a reliable model to study the developmental effect of psychoactive drugs applied in the sensitive early phase of brain development. Furthermore, our findings support the idea that the alteration of early development of the brain induced by antidepressant treatment could result in sustained pathological changes in the cellular phenotype in the prefrontal cortex leading to depression-like behavioral symptoms.


Brain Behavior and Immunity | 2016

Widespread alterations in the synaptic proteome of the adolescent cerebral cortex following prenatal immune activation in rats

Balazs Gyorffy; Péter Gulyássy; Barbara Gellén; Katalin Völgyi; Dóra Madarasi; Viktor Kis; Olivér Ozohanics; Ildikó Papp; Péter Kovács; Gert Lubec; Árpád Dobolyi; József Kardos; László Drahos; Gábor Juhász; Katalin A. Kékesi

An increasing number of studies have revealed associations between pre- and perinatal immune activation and the development of schizophrenia and autism spectrum disorders (ASDs). Accordingly, neuroimmune crosstalk has a considerably large impact on brain development during early ontogenesis. While a plethora of heterogeneous abnormalities have already been described in established maternal immune activation (MIA) rodent and primate animal models, which highly correlate to those found in human diseases, the underlying molecular background remains obscure. In the current study, we describe the long-term effects of MIA on the neocortical pre- and postsynaptic proteome of adolescent rat offspring in detail. Molecular differences were revealed in sub-synaptic fractions, which were first thoroughly characterized using independent methods. The widespread proteomic examination of cortical samples from offspring exposed to maternal lipopolysaccharide administration at embryonic day 13.5 was conducted via combinations of different gel-based proteomic techniques and tandem mass spectrometry. Our experimentally validated proteomic data revealed more pre- than postsynaptic protein level changes in the offspring. The results propose the relevance of altered synaptic vesicle recycling, cytoskeletal structure and energy metabolism in the presynaptic region in addition to alterations in vesicle trafficking, the cytoskeleton and signal transduction in the postsynaptic compartment in MIA offspring. Differing levels of the prominent signaling regulator molecule calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II in the postsynapse was validated and identified specifically in the prefrontal cortex. Finally, several potential common molecular regulators of these altered proteins, which are already known to be implicated in schizophrenia and ASD, were identified and assessed. In summary, unexpectedly widespread changes in the synaptic molecular machinery in MIA rats were demonstrated which might underlie the pathological cortical functions that are characteristic of schizophrenia and ASD.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2017

The short- and long-term proteomic effects of sleep deprivation on the cortical and thalamic synapses

Attila Simor; Balazs Gyorffy; Péter Gulyássy; Katalin Völgyi; Vilmos Tóth; Mihail Ivilinov Todorov; Viktor Kis; Zsolt Borhegyi; Zoltán Szabó; Tamás Janáky; László Drahos; Gábor Juhász; Katalin A. Kékesi

&NA; Acute total sleep deprivation (SD) impairs memory consolidation, attention, working memory and perception. Structural, electrophysiological and molecular experimental approaches provided evidences for the involvement of sleep in synaptic functions. Despite the wide scientific interest on the effects of sleep on the synapse, there is a lack of systematic investigation of sleep‐related changes in the synaptic proteome. We isolated parietal cortical and thalamic synaptosomes of rats after 8 h of total SD by gentle handling and 16 h after the end of deprivation to investigate the short‐ and longer‐term effects of SD on the synaptic proteome, respectively. The SD efficiency was verified by electrophysiology. Protein abundance alterations of the synaptosomes were analyzed by fluorescent two‐dimensional differential gel electrophoresis and by tandem mass spectrometry. As several altered proteins were found to be involved in synaptic strength regulation, our data can support the synaptic homeostasis hypothesis function of sleep and highlight the long‐term influence of SD after the recovery sleep period, mostly on cortical synapses. Furthermore, the large‐scale and brain area‐specific protein network change in the synapses may support both ideas of sleep‐related synaptogenesis and molecular maintenance and reorganization in normal rat brain. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available. HighlightsThe first synaptic proteomic study related to the effects of sleep deprivation.The parietal cortex is more affected by sleep deprivation than the thalamus.The long‐term effects of sleep deprivation are unexpectedly extensive.Our data support the synaptic homeostasis hypothesis of sleep.


Journal of Proteomics | 2017

Synaptic proteome changes in the hypothalamus of mother rats

Edina Brigitta Udvari; Katalin Völgyi; Péter Gulyássy; Diána Dimén; Viktor Kis; János Barna; Éva Rebeka Szabó; Gert Lubec; Gábor Juhász; Katalin A. Kékesi; Árpád Dobolyi

To establish synaptic proteome changes associated with motherhood, we isolated synaptosome fractions from the hypothalamus of mother rats and non-maternal control females at the 11th postpartum day. Proteomic analysis by two-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis combined with mass spectrometric protein identification established 26 significant proteins, 7 increasing and 19 decreasing protein levels in the dams. The altered proteins are mainly involved in energy homeostasis, protein folding, and metabolic processes suggesting the involvement of these cellular processes in maternal adaptations. The decrease in a significantly altered protein, complement component 1q subcomponent-binding protein (C1qbp) was validated with Western blotting. Furthermore, immunohistochemistry showed its presence in hypothalamic fibers and terminals in agreement with its presence in synaptosomes. We also found the expression of C1qbp in different hypothalamic nuclei including the preoptic area and the paraventricular hypothalamic nucleus at the protein and at the mRNA level using immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization histochemistry, respectively. Bioinformatical network analysis revealed that cytokines, growth factors, and protein kinases are common regulators, which indicates a complex regulation of the proteome change in mothers. The results suggest that maternal responsiveness is associated with synaptic proteins level changes in the hypothalamus, and that growth factors and cytokines may govern these alterations. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE The period of motherhood is accompanied with several behavioral, neuroendocrine, emotional and metabolic adaptations in the brain. Although it is established that various hypothalamic networks participate in the maternal adaptations of the rodent brain, our knowledge on the molecular background of these alterations remains seriously limited. In the present study, we first determined that the functional alterations of the maternal brain can be detected at the level of the synaptic proteome in the hypothalamus. Independent confirmation of synaptic localization, and also the established decrease in the level of C1qbp protein suggest the validity of the data. Common regulators of altered proteins belonging to the growth factor and cytokine family suggest that the synaptic adaptation is governed by these extracellular signals and future studies should focus on their specific roles. Our study was also the first to describe the expression pattern of C1qbp in the hypothalamus, a protein potentially involved in mitochondrial and neuroimmunological regulations of synaptic plasticity. Its presence in the preoptic area responsible for maternal behaviors and also in the paraventricular hypothalamic and arcuate nuclei regulating hormonal levels suggests that the same proteins may be involved in different aspects of maternal adaptations. The conclusions of the present work contribute to establishing the molecular alterations that determine different maternal adaptations in the brain. Since maternal changes are models of neuronal plasticity in all social interactions, the reported results can affect a wide field of molecular and behavioral neuroscience.


Journal of Proteomics | 2017

Maternal alterations in the proteome of the medial prefrontal cortex in rat

Katalin Völgyi; Edina Brigitta Udvari; Éva Rebeka Szabó; Balazs Gyorffy; Éva Hunyadi-Gulyás; Katalin F. Medzihradszky; Gábor Juhász; Katalin A. Kékesi; Árpád Dobolyi

Proteomic differences between rat dams and control mothers deprived of their pups immediately after delivery were investigated in the medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC). A 2-D DIGE minimal dye technique combined with LC-MS/MS identified 32 different proteins that showed significant changes in expression in the mPFC, of which, 25 were upregulated and 7 were downregulated in dams. The identity of one significantly increased protein, the small heat-shock protein alpha-crystallin B chain (Cryab), was confirmed via Western blot analysis. Alpha-crystallin B chain was distributed in scattered cells in the mPFC, as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry. Furthermore, it was found to be localized in parvalbumin-containing neurons using double labeling. The elevation of its mRNA level in rat dams was also demonstrated via RT-PCR. The functional classification of the altered proteins was conducted using the UniProt and Gene Ontology protein databases. The identified proteins predominantly participate in synaptic transport and plasticity, neuron development, oxidative stress and apoptosis, and cytoskeleton organization. A common regulator and target analysis of these proteins determined using the Elsevier Pathway Studio Platform suggests that protein level changes associated with pup nursing are driven by growth factors and cytokines, while the MAP kinase pathway was identified as a common target. A high proportion of the proteins that were found to be altered in the mPFC are associated with depression. BIOLOGICAL SIGNIFICANCE The behavior and emotional state of females change robustly when they become mothers. The brain, which governs these changes, may also undergo molecular alterations in mothers. As no proteomics approaches have been applied regarding maternal changes in the brain, we addressed this issue in the mPFC as this brain area is the uppermost cortical center of maternal control and the associated mood changes. The high number of protein-level alterations found between mothers taking care of their litter and those without pups indicates that pup nursing is associated with cortical protein-level changes. Alterations in proteins participating in synaptic transport, plasticity and neuron development suggest neuroplastic changes in the maternal brain. In turn, the relatively high number of altered proteins in the mPFC associated with depression suggests that the physiological effects of the protein-level alterations in the maternal mPFC could promote the incidence of postpartum depression. Cryab, a protein confirmed to be increased during maternal behaviors, was selectively found in parvalbumin cells, which, as fast-spiking interneurons, are associated with depression. The function of Cryab should be further investigated to establish whether it can be used to identify drug targets for future drug development.


European Journal of East Asian Studies | 2018

Mega-FTAs in the Asia-Pacific region: a Japanese perspective

Eszter Lukács; Katalin Völgyi

The emerging wave of mega- FTA s during the global economic crisis era has so far attracted considerable academic attention. This paper primarily investigates two of the mega- FTA s, namely TPP and RCEP , from the perspective of Japan. It focuses on Japan’s role and interests in the launch of mega- FTA s and how Japan tries to keep them on track, with protectionism on the rise worldwide (particularly on the US side).The emerging wave of mega-FTAs during the global economic crisis era has so far attracted considerable academic attention. This paper primarily investigates two of the mega-FTAs, namely TPP and RCEP, from the perspective of Japan. It focuses on Japan’s role and interests in the launch of mega-FTAs and how Japan tries to keep them on track, with protectionism on the rise worldwide (particularly on the US side).


Tér és Társadalom | 2014

A délkelet-ázsiai régió integrációs sikere: az ASEAN egységes termelési bázis

Katalin Völgyi; Eszter Lukács

In our study, we primarily analyse the impact of the creation of the ASEAN Economic Community on the region’s FDI attractiveness. Two phases can be distinguished in the economic cooperation among ASEAN countries. Between 1976 and 1987, the economic cooperation in Southeast Asia was characterised by import-substitution industrialisation. Since the 1980s, however, ASEAN regional agreements and initiatives have been embedded in an export-oriented and FDI-dependent strategy. The initiatives of the earlier import-substitution strategy did not render significant results. The economic integration of ASEAN member countries has, however, started to evolve through growing production networks created by transnational companies which were seeking for a cheap production base since the second half of the 1980s. The shift in strategy at the end of the 1980s has supported market-led processes. For two decades, ASEAN regional agreements and initiatives have been aimed at creating a highly liberalised regional market and a single – integrated – production base which promotes the effective functioning of these production networks in the region, and has attracted new foreign investments. The liberalisation efforts of several regional initiatives and agreements can be linked to the period of 1997–2003, when due to the Asian financial crisis, FDI inflows into the ASEAN region decreased and then stagnated. In 2003, ASEAN agreed on the creation of the ASEAN Economic Community by 2015 which is based on former regional initiatives and agreements. The efforts for accelerating regional integration contributed to the fact that ASEAN managed to increase its share in global FDI inflows considerably. In this time of global crisis, ASEAN member countries decided to launch new regional initiatives which amended former ones to make their region more attractive for foreign direct investments. In 2013, FDI inflows into ASEAN reached a record level. As a consequence, the ASEAN region has already caught-up with China in the global FDI race.

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Gábor Juhász

Eötvös Loránd University

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Katalin A. Kékesi

Eötvös Loránd University

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Péter Gulyássy

Eötvös Loránd University

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Árpád Dobolyi

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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Balazs Gyorffy

Eötvös Loránd University

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Viktor Kis

Eötvös Loránd University

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László Drahos

Hungarian Academy of Sciences

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András Czurkó

Eötvös Loránd University

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Attila Simor

Eötvös Loránd University

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Kata Badics

Eötvös Loránd University

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