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Dive into the research topics where Lisa Mapelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisa Mapelli.


Cell | 2006

Increased Ethanol Resistance and Consumption in Eps8 Knockout Mice Correlates with Altered Actin Dynamics

Nina Offenhäuser; Daniela Castelletti; Lisa Mapelli; Blanche Ekalle Soppo; Maria Cristina Regondi; Paola Rossi; Egidio D'Angelo; Carolina Frassoni; Alida Amadeo; Arianna Tocchetti; Benedetta Pozzi; Andrea Disanza; Douglas J. Guarnieri; Christer Betsholtz; Giorgio Scita; Ulrike Heberlein; Pier Paolo Di Fiore

Dynamic modulation of the actin cytoskeleton is critical for synaptic plasticity, abnormalities of which are thought to contribute to mental illness and addiction. Here we report that mice lacking Eps8, a regulator of actin dynamics, are resistant to some acute intoxicating effects of ethanol and show increased ethanol consumption. In the brain, the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor is a major target of ethanol. We show that Eps8 is localized to postsynaptic structures and is part of the NMDA receptor complex. Moreover, in Eps8 null mice, NMDA receptor currents and their sensitivity to inhibition by ethanol are abnormal. In addition, Eps8 null neurons are resistant to the actin-remodeling activities of NMDA and ethanol. We propose that proper regulation of the actin cytoskeleton is a key determinant of cellular and behavioral responses to ethanol.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2015

Stim and Orai proteins in neuronal Ca2+ signaling and excitability

Francesco Moccia; Estella Zuccolo; Teresa Soda; Franco Tanzi; Germano Guerra; Lisa Mapelli; Francesco Lodola; Egidio D’Angelo

Stim1 and Orai1 are ubiquitous proteins that have long been known to mediate Ca2+ release-activated Ca2+ (CRAC) current (ICRAC) and store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE) only in non-excitable cells. SOCE is activated following the depletion of the endogenous Ca2+ stores, which are mainly located within the endoplasmic reticulum (ER), to replete the intracellular Ca2+ reservoir and engage specific Ca2+-dependent processes, such as proliferation, migration, cytoskeletal remodeling, and gene expression. Their paralogs, Stim2, Orai2 and Orai3, support SOCE in heterologous expression systems, but their physiological role is still obscure. Ca2+ inflow in neurons has long been exclusively ascribed to voltage-operated and receptor-operated channels. Nevertheless, recent work has unveiled that Stim1–2 and Orai1-2, but not Orai3, proteins are also expressed and mediate SOCE in neurons. Herein, we survey current knowledge about the neuronal distribution of Stim and Orai proteins in rodent and human brains; we further discuss that Orai2 is the main pore-forming subunit of CRAC channels in central neurons, in which it may be activated by either Stim1 or Stim2 depending on species, brain region and physiological stimuli. We examine the functions regulated by SOCE in neurons, where this pathway is activated under resting conditions to refill the ER, control spinogenesis and regulate gene transcription. Besides, we highlighted the possibility that SOCE also controls neuronal excitation and regulate synaptic plasticity. Finally, we evaluate the involvement of Stim and Orai proteins in severe neurodegenerative and neurological disorders, such as Alzheimer’s disease and epilepsy.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2009

Tonic Activation of GABAB Receptors Reduces Release Probability at Inhibitory Connections in the Cerebellar Glomerulus

Lisa Mapelli; Paola Rossi; Thierry Nieus; Egidio D'Angelo

In the cerebellum, granule cells are inhibited by Golgi cells through GABAergic synapses generating complex responses involving both phasic neurotransmitter release and the establishment of ambient gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) levels. Although at this synapse the mechanisms of postsynaptic integration have been clarified to a considerable extent, the mechanisms of neurotransmitter release remained largely unknown. Here we have investigated the quantal properties of release during repetitive neurotransmission, revealing that tonic GABA(B) receptor activation by ambient GABA regulates release probability. Blocking GABA(B) receptors with CGP55845 enhanced the first inhibitory postsynaptic current (IPSC) and short-term depression in a train while reducing trial-to-trial variability and failures. The changes caused by CGP55845 were similar to those caused by increasing extracellular Ca(2+) concentration, in agreement with a presynaptic GABA(B) receptor modulation of release probability. However, the slow tail following IPSC peak demonstrated a remarkable temporal summation and was not modified by CGP55845 or extracellular Ca(2+) increase. This result shows that tonic activation of presynaptic GABA(B) receptors by ambient GABA selectively regulates the onset of inhibition bearing potential consequences for the dynamic regulation of signal transmission through the mossy fiber-granule cell pathway of the cerebellum.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Inhibition of constitutive inward rectifier currents in cerebellar granule cells by pharmacological and synaptic activation of GABAB receptors

Paola Rossi; Lisa Mapelli; Leda Roggeri; David Gall; Alban de Kerchove d'Exaerde; Serge N. Schiffmann; Vanni Taglietti; Egidio D'Angelo

γ‐Aminobutyric acid (GABA)B receptors are known to enhance activation of Kir3 channels generating G‐protein‐dependent inward rectifier K+‐currents (GIRK). In some neurons, GABAB receptors either cause a tonic GIRK activation or generate a late K+‐dependent inhibitory postsynaptic current component. However, other neurons express Kir2 channels, which generate a constitutive inward rectifier K+‐current (CIRK) without requiring G‐protein activation. The functional coupling of CIRK with GABAB receptors remained unexplored so far. About 50% of rat cerebellar granule cells in the internal granular layer of P19–26 rats showed a sizeable CIRK current. Here, we have investigated CIRK current regulation by GABAB receptors in cerebellar granule cells, which undergo GABAergic inhibition through Golgi cells. By using patch‐clamp recording techniques and single‐cell reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction in acute cerebellar slices, we show that granule cells co‐express Kir2 channels and GABAB receptors. CIRK current biophysical properties were compatible with Kir2 but not Kir3 channels, and could be inhibited by the GABAB receptor agonist baclofen. The action of baclofen was prevented by the GABAB receptor blocker CGP35348, involved a pertussis toxin‐insensitive G‐protein‐mediated pathway, and required protein phosphatases inhibited by okadaic acid. GABAB receptor‐dependent CIRK current inhibition could also be induced by repetitive GABAergic transmission at frequencies higher than the basal autorhythmic discharge of Golgi cells. These results suggest therefore that GABAB receptors can exert an inhibitory control over CIRK currents mediated by Kir2 channels. CIRK inhibition was associated with an increased input resistance around rest and caused a ∼ 5 mV membrane depolarization. The pro‐excitatory action of these effects at an inhibitory synapse may have an homeostatic role re‐establishing granule cell readiness under conditions of strong inhibition.


Frontiers in Neural Circuits | 2013

The cerebellar Golgi cell and spatiotemporal organization of granular layer activity

Egidio D'Angelo; Sergio Solinas; Jonathan Mapelli; Daniela Gandolfi; Lisa Mapelli; Francesca Prestori

The cerebellar granular layer has been suggested to perform a complex spatiotemporal reconfiguration of incoming mossy fiber signals. Central to this role is the inhibitory action exerted by Golgi cells over granule cells: Golgi cells inhibit granule cells through both feedforward and feedback inhibitory loops and generate a broad lateral inhibition that extends beyond the afferent synaptic field. This characteristic connectivity has recently been investigated in great detail and been correlated with specific functional properties of these neurons. These include theta-frequency pacemaking, network entrainment into coherent oscillations and phase resetting. Important advances have also been made in terms of determining the membrane and synaptic properties of the neuron, and clarifying the mechanisms of activation by input bursts. Moreover, voltage sensitive dye imaging and multi-electrode array (MEA) recordings, combined with mathematical simulations based on realistic computational models, have improved our understanding of the impact of Golgi cell activity on granular layer circuit computations. These investigations have highlighted the critical role of Golgi cells in: generating dense clusters of granule cell activity organized in center-surround structures, implementing combinatorial operations on multiple mossy fiber inputs, regulating transmission gain, and cut-off frequency, controlling spike timing and burst transmission, and determining the sign, intensity and duration of long-term synaptic plasticity at the mossy fiber-granule cell relay. This review considers recent advances in the field, highlighting the functional implications of Golgi cells for granular layer network computation and indicating new challenges for cerebellar research.


Cell Calcium | 2015

A novel Ca2+-mediated cross-talk between endoplasmic reticulum and acidic organelles: Implications for NAADP-dependent Ca2+ signalling

Virginia Ronco; Duilio Michele Potenza; Federico Denti; Sabrina Vullo; Giuseppe Gagliano; Marialuisa Tognolina; Germano Guerra; Paolo Pinton; Armando A. Genazzani; Lisa Mapelli; Dmitry Lim; Francesco Moccia

Nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NAADP) serves as the ideal trigger of spatio-temporally complex intracellular Ca(2+) signals. However, the identity of the intracellular Ca(2+) store(s) recruited by NAADP, which may include either the endolysosomal (EL) or the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) Ca(2+) pools, is still elusive. Here, we show that the Ca(2+) response to NAADP was suppressed by interfering with either EL or ER Ca(2+) sequestration. The measurement of EL and ER Ca(2+) levels by using selectively targeted aequorin unveiled that the preventing ER Ca(2+) storage also affected ER Ca(2+) loading and vice versa. This indicates that a functional Ca(2+)-mediated cross-talk exists at the EL-ER interface and exerts profound implications for the study of NAADP-induced Ca(2+) signals. Extreme caution is warranted when dissecting NAADP targets by pharmacologically inhibiting EL and/or the ER Ca(2+) pools. Moreover, Ca(2+) transfer between these compartments might be essential to regulate vital Ca(2+)-dependent processes in both organelles.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Gating of Long-Term Potentiation by Nicotinic Acetylcholine Receptors at the Cerebellum Input Stage

Francesca Prestori; Claudia Bonardi; Lisa Mapelli; Paola Lombardo; Rianne Goselink; Maria Egle De Stefano; Daniela Gandolfi; Jonathan Mapelli; Daniel Bertrand; Martijn Schonewille; Chris I. De Zeeuw; Egidio D’Angelo

The brain needs mechanisms able to correlate plastic changes with local circuit activity and internal functional states. At the cerebellum input stage, uncontrolled induction of long-term potentiation or depression (LTP or LTD) between mossy fibres and granule cells can saturate synaptic capacity and impair cerebellar functioning, which suggests that neuromodulators are required to gate plasticity processes. Cholinergic systems innervating the cerebellum are thought to enhance procedural learning and memory. Here we show that a specific subtype of acetylcholine receptors, the α7-nAChRs, are distributed both in cerebellar mossy fibre terminals and granule cell dendrites and contribute substantially to synaptic regulation. Selective α7-nAChR activation enhances the postsynaptic calcium increase, allowing weak mossy fibre bursts, which would otherwise cause LTD, to generate robust LTP. The local microperfusion of α7-nAChR agonists could also lead to in vivo switching of LTD to LTP following sensory stimulation of the whisker pad. In the cerebellar flocculus, α7-nAChR pharmacological activation impaired vestibulo-ocular-reflex adaptation, probably because LTP was saturated, preventing the fine adjustment of synaptic weights. These results show that gating mechanisms mediated by specific subtypes of nicotinic receptors are required to control the LTD/LTP balance at the mossy fibre-granule cell relay in order to regulate cerebellar plasticity and behavioural adaptation.


The Cerebellum | 2016

Distributed Circuit Plasticity: New Clues for the Cerebellar Mechanisms of Learning

Egidio D’Angelo; Lisa Mapelli; Claudia Casellato; Jesús Alberto Garrido; Niceto R. Luque; Jessica Monaco; Francesca Prestori; Alessandra Pedrocchi; Eduardo Ros

The cerebellum is involved in learning and memory of sensory motor skills. However, the way this process takes place in local microcircuits is still unclear. The initial proposal, casted into the Motor Learning Theory, suggested that learning had to occur at the parallel fiber–Purkinje cell synapse under supervision of climbing fibers. However, the uniqueness of this mechanism has been questioned, and multiple forms of long-term plasticity have been revealed at various locations in the cerebellar circuit, including synapses and neurons in the granular layer, molecular layer and deep-cerebellar nuclei. At present, more than 15 forms of plasticity have been reported. There has been a long debate on which plasticity is more relevant to specific aspects of learning, but this question turned out to be hard to answer using physiological analysis alone. Recent experiments and models making use of closed-loop robotic simulations are revealing a radically new view: one single form of plasticity is insufficient, while altogether, the different forms of plasticity can explain the multiplicity of properties characterizing cerebellar learning. These include multi-rate acquisition and extinction, reversibility, self-scalability, and generalization. Moreover, when the circuit embeds multiple forms of plasticity, it can easily cope with multiple behaviors endowing therefore the cerebellum with the properties needed to operate as an effective generalized forward controller.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2015

Integrated plasticity at inhibitory and excitatory synapses in the cerebellar circuit

Lisa Mapelli; Martina Pagani; Jesús Alberto Garrido; Egidio D’Angelo

The way long-term potentiation (LTP) and depression (LTD) are integrated within the different synapses of brain neuronal circuits is poorly understood. In order to progress beyond the identification of specific molecular mechanisms, a system in which multiple forms of plasticity can be correlated with large-scale neural processing is required. In this paper we take as an example the cerebellar network, in which extensive investigations have revealed LTP and LTD at several excitatory and inhibitory synapses. Cerebellar LTP and LTD occur in all three main cerebellar subcircuits (granular layer, molecular layer, deep cerebellar nuclei) and correspondingly regulate the function of their three main neurons: granule cells (GrCs), Purkinje cells (PCs) and deep cerebellar nuclear (DCN) cells. All these neurons, in addition to be excited, are reached by feed-forward and feed-back inhibitory connections, in which LTP and LTD may either operate synergistically or homeostatically in order to control information flow through the circuit. Although the investigation of individual synaptic plasticities in vitro is essential to prove their existence and mechanisms, it is insufficient to generate a coherent view of their impact on network functioning in vivo. Recent computational models and cell-specific genetic mutations in mice are shedding light on how plasticity at multiple excitatory and inhibitory synapses might regulate neuronal activities in the cerebellar circuit and contribute to learning and memory and behavioral control.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2014

Regulation of output spike patterns by phasic inhibition in cerebellar granule cells

Thierry Nieus; Lisa Mapelli; Egidio D'Angelo

The complex interplay of multiple molecular mechanisms taking part to synaptic integration is hard to disentangle experimentally. Therefore, we developed a biologically realistic computational model based on the rich set of data characterizing the cerebellar glomerulus microcircuit. A specific issue was to determine the relative role of phasic and tonic inhibition in dynamically regulating granule cell firing, which has not been clarified yet. The model comprised the excitatory mossy fiber—granule cell and the inhibitory Golgi cell—granule cell synapses and accounted for vesicular release processes, neurotransmitter diffusion and activation of different receptor subtypes. Phasic inhibition was based on stochastic GABA release and spillover causing activation of two major classes of postsynaptic receptors, α1 and α6, while tonic inhibition was based on steady regulation of a Cl− leakage. The glomerular microcircuit model was validated against experimental responses to mossy fiber bursts while metabotropic receptors were blocked. Simulations showed that phasic inhibition controlled the number of spikes during burst transmission but predicted that it specifically controlled time-related parameters (firing initiation and conclusion and first spike precision) when the relative phase of excitation and inhibition was changed. In all conditions, the overall impact of α6 was larger than that of α1 subunit-containing receptors. However, α1 receptors controlled granule cell responses in a narrow ±10 ms band while α6 receptors showed broader ±50 ms tuning. Tonic inhibition biased these effects without changing their nature substantially. These simulations imply that phasic inhibitory mechanisms can dynamically regulate output spike patterns, as well as calcium influx and NMDA currents, at the mossy fiber—granule cell relay of cerebellum without the intervention of tonic inhibition.

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Thierry Nieus

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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