Léder L. Xavier
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
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Featured researches published by Léder L. Xavier.
Behavioural Brain Research | 2006
Clarice Sandi Madruga; Léder L. Xavier; Matilde Achaval; Gilberto Luiz Sanvitto; Aldo Bolten Lucion
This study aimed at identifying the effects of neonatal handling (H) and maternal separation (MS) on two paradigms of fear, learned and innate, and on the tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) immunoreactive cells in adult life. Wistar rats were daily handled with a brief maternal separation, maternal separated for 3 h or left undisturbed during the first 10 days of life. Behavioural responses in the open-field (innate fear) and conditioned fear (learned fear) were evaluated. Moreover, a semi-quantitative analysis of TH immunoreactivity in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) was performed using optical densitometry and confirmed by planar measurements of neuronal density. Early handling decreased behaviour responses of innate and learned fear in adult life, while maternal separation had no significant long-lasting effect on these responses compared to the non-handled group. The behavioural effects of early handling could not be explained by changes in the density of midbrain dopaminergic cells, which were not affected by handling or maternal separation.
Brain Research | 2004
Analú Lopes Rodrigues; Nice Sarmento Arteni; Cristiano R. Abel; Daniel Suslik Zylbersztejn; Rodrigo Chazan; Giordano Gubert Viola; Léder L. Xavier; Matilde Achaval; Carlos Alexandre Netto
Unilateral neonatal hypoxia-ischemia causes important damage to the hippocampus of the hemisphere ipsilateral to carotid artery occlusion; two forms of neonatal handling, tactile stimulation and maternal separation for a short period, have been shown to produce functional/behavioral protection in distinct models of CNS challenge. In this paper we investigated whether neonatal handling could alter the hippocampal damage caused by neonatal hypoxia-ischemia (HI) in the Wistar rat. Pups at postnatal day 7, P7, received HI (8% O(2)-92% N(2)) for 90 min and were submitted to neonatal handling, tactile stimulation of maternal separation daily, from P8 to P21, for 10 min. On adulthood, hippocampal volume was analyzed by stereological techniques, along with measures of cortical thickness and hemispheric area at the level -3.30 mm from bregma. HI caused a reduction of volume of whole hippocampus, of Amons horn and of dentate gyrus, with no effect on cortical and hemispheric measures; neonatal handling prevented such effect. This is the first report showing that both tactile stimulation and neonatal handling exert a morphological neuroprotective action for HI-induced damage to the hippocampus.
Brain Research Bulletin | 2002
Alberto A. Rasia-Filho; Léder L. Xavier; Paula dos Santos; Günther Gehlen; Matilde Achaval
The medial amygdala (MeA) has receptors for gonadal hormones and modulates reproductive behaviors in rats. Adult male and female rats were used for the immunodetection, a less accurate technique, and the immunohistochemistry for the astrocytic marker glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) in the anterior and posterior MeA. Both procedures were done using polyclonal anti-GFAP and were quantified by densitometry. The first technique provided no evidence for a difference between sexes in the immunocontent of GFAP in any region of the MeA (p > 0.1). Nevertheless, the measure of the intensity of GFAP immunoreactivity (GFAP-IR) showed that females had a higher GFAP-IR in the posterodorsal (p < 0.01) and in the posteroventral subregions of the MeA (p < 0.01) than males. No sex difference was found in its anterodorsal part (p > 0.1). The present results point out the differences between these two above-mentioned techniques but add a new finding to the previously described sexual dimorphism in the MeA, i.e., the GFAP-IR. Data also suggest that probably astrocytes can be affected by sex steroids in this brain area. It is likely that this regionally specific difference in the GFAP-IR may contribute to the distinct functional roles that the MeA subregions have in male and female rats.
Brain Research | 2003
Anete Curte Ferraz; Léder L. Xavier; Sı́lvia Hernandes; Martha Sulzbach; Giordano Gubert Viola; Janete A. Anselmo-Franci; Matilde Achaval; Claudio Da Cunha
The immunostaining for tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) and in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) after intranigral infusion of 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA, 6 microg/side) was analyzed in ovariectomized adult female Wistar rats. Estrogen replacement for 52 days (400-microg 17-beta-estradiol capsules) did not prevent the loss of TH-immunoreactive cells induced by 6-OHDA in the SNpc. This result indicates that the neuroprotective effect of dopaminergic mesencephalic cells is not observed with long-term estrogen replacement.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2005
Matilde Achaval; M.A.P. Penha; Alessandra Swarowsky; P. Rigon; Léder L. Xavier; Giordano Gubert Viola; Denise Maria Zancan
We describe the behavior of the snail Megalobulimus abbreviatus upon receiving thermal stimuli and the effects of pretreatment with morphine and naloxone on behavior after a thermal stimulus, in order to establish a useful model for nociceptive experiments. Snails submitted to non-functional (22 degrees C) and non-thermal hot-plate stress (30 degrees C) only displayed exploratory behavior. However, the animals submitted to a thermal stimulus (50 degrees C) displayed biphasic avoidance behavior. Latency was measured from the time the animal was placed on the hot plate to the time when the animal lifted the head-foot complex 1 cm from the substrate, indicating aversive thermal behavior. Other animals were pretreated with morphine (5, 10, 20 mg/kg) or naloxone (2.5, 5.0, 7.5 mg/kg) 15 min prior to receiving a thermal stimulus (50 degrees C; N = 9 in each group). The results (means +/- SD) showed an extremely significant difference in response latency between the group treated with 20 mg/kg morphine (63.18 +/- 14.47 s) and the other experimental groups (P < 0.001). With 2.5 mg/kg (16.26 +/- 3.19 s), 5.0 mg/kg (11.53 +/- 1.64 s) and 7.5 mg/kg naloxone (7.38 +/- 1.6 s), there was a significant, not dose-dependent decrease in latency compared to the control (33.44 +/- 8.53 s) and saline groups (29.1 +/- 9.91 s). No statistically significant difference was found between the naloxone-treated groups. With naloxone plus morphine, there was a significant decrease in latency when compared to all other groups (minimum 64% in the saline group and maximum 83.2% decrease in the morphine group). These results provide evidence of the involvement of endogenous opioid peptides in the control of thermal withdrawal behavior in this snail, and reveal a stereotyped and reproducible avoidance behavior for this snail species, which could be studied in other pharmacological and neurophysiological studies.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 1999
Wania Aparecida Partata; Ana Maria Rocha Krepsky; Léder L. Xavier; Maria Marques; Matilde Achaval
Glycogen phosphorylase (GP) and cytochrome oxidase (CO) activities were mapped histochemically in the brain of the turtle Trachemys dorbigni. In the telencephalon, both activities occurred in the olfactory bulb, in all cortical areas, in the dorsal ventricular ridge, striatum, primordium hippocampi and olfactory tubercle. In the diencephalon, they were identified in some areas of the hypothalamus, and in rotundus and geniculate nuclei. Both reactions were detected in the oculomotor, trochlear, mesencephalic trigeminal nuclei, the nucleus of the posterior commissure, torus semicircularis, substantia nigra and ruber and isthmic nuclei of the mesencephalon. In all layers of the optic tectum GP activity was found, but CO only labelled the stratum griseum centrale. In the medulla oblonga both enzymes appear in the reticular, raphe and vestibular nuclei, locus coeruleus and nuclei of cranial nerves. In the cerebellum, the granular and molecular layers, and the deep cerebellar nuclei were positive for both enzymes. The Purkinje cells were only reactive for CO. In the spinal cord, motor and commissural neurones exhibited a positive reaction for the two enzymes. However, CO also occurred in the marginal nucleus and in the lateral funiculus. These results may be useful as a basis for subsequent studies on turtle brain metabolism.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2002
Wania Aparecida Partata; Josi Fernanda Cerveira; Léder L. Xavier; Giordano Gubert Viola; Matilde Achaval
Using immunohistochemistry and optical densitometry, substance P (SP) was investigated in the lumbar spinal cord of the frog Rana catesbeiana after sciatic nerve transection. In control animals, there was a high density of SP fibers in the Lissauers tract and in the mediolateral band of the dorsal gray matter. Other SP immunoreactive fibers were observed in the dorsal part of the lateral funiculus and in the ventral horn. No SP label was found in any cell bodies. After axotomy, SP immunoreactive fibers decreased in the Lissauers tract on the same side of the lesion. The other regions remained labeled. The changes were observed at 3 days following axonal injury and persisted at 5, 8 and 15 days. At 20 days, there was no significant difference between the axotomized side and the control one, thus indicating a recovery of the SP expression. These results indicate that the frog may be used as a model to study the effects of peripheral axotomy, contributing to elucidate the SP actions in the pain neuropath.
Brazilian Journal of Medical and Biological Research | 2003
Wania Aparecida Partata; Ana Maria Rocha Krepsky; Léder L. Xavier; Maria Marques; Matilde Achaval
Immunoreactive substance P was investigated in turtle lumbar spinal cord after sciatic nerve transection. In control animals immunoreactive fibers were densest in synaptic field Ia, where the longest axons invaded synaptic field III. Positive neuronal bodies were identified in the lateral column of the dorsal horn and substance P immunoreactive varicosities were observed in the ventral horn, in close relationship with presumed motoneurons. Other varicosities appeared in the lateral and anterior funiculi. After axotomy, substance P immunoreactive fibers were reduced slightly on the side of the lesion, which was located in long fibers that invaded synaptic field III and in the varicosities of the lateral and anterior funiculus. The changes were observed at 7 days after axonal injury and persisted at 15, 30, 60 and 90 days after the lesion. These findings show that turtles should be considered as a model to study the role of substance P in peripheral axonal injury, since the distribution and temporal changes of substance P were similar to those found in mammals.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology B | 2004
Renata Padilha Guedes; Melina Isabel Marchi; Giordano Gubert Viola; Léder L. Xavier; Matilde Achaval; Wania Aparecida Partata
Acta Neurobiologiae Experimentalis | 2003
Anete Curte Ferraz; Léder L. Xavier; S Hernandes; M Sulzbach; Giordano Gubert Viola; Janete Aparecida Anselmo-Franci; Matilde Achaval; C. Da Cunha