M Skup
Nencki Institute of Experimental Biology
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Featured researches published by M Skup.
Experimental Neurology | 2002
M Skup; A Dwornik; Matylda Macias; D Sulejczak; M Wiater; J Czarkowska-Bauch
Neurotrophins are potent regulators of neuronal survival, maintenance, and synaptic strength. In particular, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), acting through full-length TrkB receptor (TrkB(FL)), is implicated in the stimulation of neurotransmission. Physical activity has been reported to increase BDNF expression in the brain and spinal cord. In this study we have evaluated the hypothesis that activation of a spinal neuronal network, due to exercise, affects the entire spinal neurotrophin system acting via TrkB receptors by modulation of BDNF, neurotrophin 4 (NT-4), and their TrkB receptor proteins. We investigated the effect of treadmill walking (4 weeks, 1 km daily) on distribution patterns and response intensity of these proteins in the lumbar spinal cord of adult rats. Training enhanced immunoreactivity (IR) of both neurotrophins. BDNF IR increased in cell processes of spinal gray matter, mainly in dendrites. NT-4 IR was augmented in the white matter fibers, which were, in part, of astrocytic identity. Training strongly increased both staining intensity and number of TrkB(FL)-like IR small cells of the spinal gray matter. The majority of these small cells were oligodendrocytes, representing both their precursor and their mature forms. In contrast, training did not exert an effect on expression of the truncated form of TrkB receptor in the spinal cord. These results show that both neuronal and nonneuronal cells may be actively recruited to BDNF/NT-4/TrkB(FL) neurotrophin signaling which can be up-regulated by training. Oligodendrocytes of the spinal gray matter were particularly responsive to exercise, pointing to their involvement in activity-driven cross talk between neurons and glia.
Brain Research | 1986
M. Gra¸dkowska; M Skup; L. Kiedrowski; S. Calzolari; Barbara Oderfeld-Nowak
The partial lesion paradigm of the dorsal hippocampal afferents in the rat was used as a model to study the effect of GM1 ganglioside treatment on recovery of neurotransmitter markers of the cholinergic and serotoninergic activity in various hippocampal regions. It was found that the enhancement of recovery of acetylcholinesterase, choline acetyltransferase and serotonin uptake by GM1 treatment (30 mg/kg i.m., daily), as studied on the 6th and 21st postlesion day, was dependent on the degree of fiber degeneration. The results may be interpreted in terms of the relationship between the action of GM1 and that of neuronotrophic factors whose release also depends on the extent of the fiber degeneration. These data indicate that GM1 elicits the recovery of biochemical parameters, or fails to, depending on the specificity of the trauma. The result may explain why, after certain brain lesions, GM1 does not promote functional recovery.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Matylda Macias; A Dwornik; Ewelina Ziemlińska; Susanna Fehr; Melitta Schachner; J Czarkowska-Bauch; M Skup
Previous evidence indicates that locomotor exercise is a powerful means of increasing brain‐derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and its signal transduction receptor TrkB mRNA levels, immunolabeling intensity and number of BDNF‐ and TrkB‐immunopositive cells in the spinal cord of adult rats but the contribution of specific cell types to changes resulting from long‐term activity is unknown. As changes in BDNF protein distribution due to systemic stimuli may reflect either its in‐situ synthesis or its translocation from other sources, we investigated where BDNF and TrkB mRNA are expressed in the spinal lumbar segments. We report on the cell types defined by size, BDNF mRNA levels and number of cells with TrkB transcripts in sedentary and exercised animals following 28 days of treadmill walking. In the majority of cells, exercise increased perikaryonal levels of BDNF mRNA but did not affect TrkB transcript levels. Bidirectional changes in a number of TrkB mRNA‐expressing cells occurred in small groups of ventral horn neurons. An increase in BDNF transcripts was translated into changes in pro‐BDNF and BDNF levels. A 7‐day walking regimen increased BDNF protein levels similarly to 28‐day treadmill walking. Our observations indicate that long‐ and short‐term locomotor activity of moderate intensity produce stimuli sufficient to recruit a majority of spinal cells to increased BDNF synthesis, suggesting that continuous tuning of pro‐BDNF and BDNF levels permits spinal networks to undergo trophic modulation not requiring changes in TrkB mRNA supply.
Pain | 2009
Maria Osikowicz; M Skup; Joanna Mika; Wioletta Makuch; J Czarkowska-Bauch; Barbara Przewlocka
ABSTRACT Metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptors, which are present on neurons and glial cells, have been shown to play a role in neuropathic pain. The present study sought to investigate how the glial inhibitors minocycline and pentoxifylline alter the effect that chronic constriction injury (CCI) has on the expression of mGlu receptors and on their associated ligands. RT‐PCR analysis revealed that seven days after CCI, the mRNA levels of glial markers C1q and GFAP, as well as those of mGlu5 and mGlu3, but not mGlu7, were elevated in the lumbar spinal cord – ipsilateral to the injury. The protein levels of the microglial marker OX42, the astroglial marker GFAP, and mGlu5 receptor protein were increased, whereas the levels of mGlu2/3 and mGlu7 receptor proteins were reduced. Preemptive and repeated intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration (16 and 1 h before nerve injury and then twice daily for seven days) of minocycline (30 mg/kg) and pentoxifylline (20 mg/kg) prevented the injury‐induced changes in the levels of mGlu3 and mGlu5 receptor mRNAs and the injury‐induced changes in the protein levels of all the receptors. Repeated administration of minocycline and pentoxifylline significantly attenuated CCI‐induced allodynia (von Frey test) and hyperalgesia (cold plate test) measured on day seven after injury and potentiated the antiallodynic and antihyperalgesic effects of single i.p. and intrathecal (i.t.) injections of mGlu receptor ligands: MPEP, LY379268 or AMN082. We conclude that attenuation of injury‐induced glial activation can reduce glutamatergic activity, thereby contributing to regulation of pain sensation.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Ewelina Ziemlińska; Sebastian Kügler; Melitta Schachner; Iwona Wewiór; J Czarkowska-Bauch; M Skup
Strategies to induce recovery from lesions of the spinal cord have not fully resulted in clinical applications. This is a consequence of a number of impediments that axons encounter when trying to regrow beyond the lesion site, and that intraspinal rearrangements are subjected to. In the present study we evaluated (1) the possibility to improve locomotor recovery after complete transection of the spinal cord by means of an adeno-associated (AAV) viral vector expressing the neurotrophin brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in lumbar spinal neurons caudal to the lesion site and (2) how the spinal cord transection and BDNF treatment affected neurotransmission in the segments caudal to the lesion site. BDNF overexpression resulted in clear increases in expression levels of molecules involved in glutamatergic (VGluT2) and GABAergic (GABA, GAD65, GAD67) neurotransmission in parallel with a reduction of the potassium-chloride co-transporter (KCC2) which contributes to an inhibitory neurotransmission. BDNF treated animals showed significant improvements in assisted locomotor performance, and performed locomotor movements with body weight support and plantar foot placement on a moving treadmill. These positive effects of BDNF local overexpression were detectable as early as two weeks after spinal cord transection and viral vector application and lasted for at least 7 weeks. Gradually increasing frequencies of clonic movements at the end of the experiment attenuated the quality of treadmill walking. These data indicate that BDNF has the potential to enhance the functionality of isolated lumbar circuits, but also that BDNF levels have to be tightly controlled to prevent hyperexcitability.
Brain Research | 2004
D Sulejczak; J Czarkowska-Bauch; Matylda Macias; M Skup
The hypothesis that devascularization of somatosensory and motor cortex causes apoptosis in infarcted regions and in the linked thalamic nuclei was evaluated. To unravel whether Bcl-related proteins, known to regulate apoptosis, participate in neuronal and glial responses to devascularization, we analyzed immunohistochemically the distribution and intensity of staining of Bcl-2 and Bax proteins at different time points after lesion. Both early (up to 6 h) and late (1-7 days) responses were studied. Devascularization led to rapid (within hours) apoptosis in the cortex and to a delayed (within 3-7 days) apoptosis in thalamic nuclei. In control groups, Bcl-2 and Bax immunoreactivity (IR) was detected in neurons and oligodendrocytes but not in astrocytes or microglia. Following devascularization, Bcl-2 IR and Bax IR increased in neurons before the onset of the apoptosis. In the ischemic focus, the increase reached maximal values 3 h after the lesion. The increase was of slower onset in the penumbra zone (24 h and after), a region in which both proteins were induced in astrocytes also. The change of Bax IR intensity exceeded four times that of Bcl-2 at all time points investigated, indicating a diminution of Bcl-2/Bax ratio that may direct neurons to apoptotic pathway. In numerous neurons, an increase of IR in the cytoplasm was accompanied by induction of nuclear staining. No changes of Bcl-2 and Bax IR were found in thalamic nuclei. Our results point to different mechanisms underlying apoptosis of cortical and thalamic neurons. Nuclear appearance of Bcl-2 and Bax suggests they possess regulatory role of gene expression changes triggered by cortical infarct.
European Journal of Neuroscience | 2012
M Skup; Olga Gajewska‐Wozniak; Paulina Grygielewicz; Tatsyana Mankovskaya; J Czarkowska-Bauch
Cholinergic input modulates excitability of motoneurons and plays an important role in the control of locomotion in both intact and spinalized animals. However, spinal cord transection in adult rats affects cholinergic innervation of only some hindlimb motoneurons, suggesting that specificity of this response is related to functional differences between motoneurons. Our aim was therefore to compare cholinergic input to motoneurons innervating the soleus (Sol) and tibialis anterior (TA) motoneurons following spinal cord transection at a low‐thoracic level. The second aim was to investigate whether deficits in cholinergic input to these motoneurons could be modified by locomotor training. The Sol and TA motoneurons were identified by retrograde labelling with fluorescent dyes injected intramuscularly. Cholinergic terminals were detected using anti‐vesicular acetylcholine transporter (VAChT) antibody. Overall innervation of motoneurons was evaluated with anti‐synaptophysin antibody. After spinalization we found a decrease in the number of VAChT‐positive boutons apposing perikarya of the Sol (to 49%) but not TA motoneurons. Locomotor training, resulting in moderate functional improvement, partly reduced the deficit in cholinergic innervation of Sol motoneurons by increasing the number of VAChT‐positive boutons. However, the optical density of VAChT‐positive boutons terminating on various motoneurons, which decreased after spinalization, continued to decrease despite the training, suggesting an impairment of acetylcholine availability in the terminals. Different effects of spinal cord transection on cholinergic innervation of motoneurons controlling the ankle extensor and flexor muscles point to different functional states of these muscles in paraplegia as a possible source of activity‐dependent signaling regulating cholinergic input to the motoneurons.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 1983
M Skup; Barbara Oderfeld-Nowak; Hans Rommelspacher
Abstract: Acetylcholinesterase (acetylcholine acetylhy‐drolase, EC 3.1.1.7) activity and muscarinic receptor binding of homogenates from several brain structures were inhibited by β‐carbolines. The inhibition was of the noncompetitive type in the case of the enzyme and of the mixed type in the case of the receptor binding. This effect was most strongly manifested by pyridoindoles(harmane, norharmane), i.e., carbolines containing an aromatic C ring than by the corresponding piperidoindoles (tetrahy‐droharmane, tetrahydronorharmane), i.e., those with a reduced C ring. The activity of choline acetyltransferase (acetyl‐CoAxholine O‐acetyltransferase, EC 2.3.1.6) was not altered. These data are further evidence of the interactions between indoleamine derivatives and the cholinergic system. The results are discussed in terms of their possible biological significance.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Olga Gajewska-Woźniak; M Skup; Stefan Kasicki; Ewelina Ziemlińska; J Czarkowska-Bauch
The importance of neurotrophin 3 (NT-3) for motor control prompted us to ask the question whether direct electrical stimulation of low-threshold muscle afferents, strengthening the proprioceptive signaling, could effectively increase the endogenous pool of this neurotrophin and its receptor TrkC in the Hoffmann-reflex (H-reflex) circuitry. The effects were compared with those of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and its TrkB receptor. Continuous bursts of stimuli were delivered unilaterally for seven days, 80 min daily, by means of a cuff-electrode implanted over the tibial nerve in awake rats. The H-reflex was recorded in the soleus muscle to control the strength of stimulation. Stimulation aimed at activation of Ia fibers produced a strong increase of NT-3 protein, measured with ELISA, in the lumbar L3-6 segments of the spinal cord and in the soleus muscle. This stimulation exerted much weaker effect on BDNF protein level which slightly increased only in L3-6 segments of the spinal cord. Increased protein level of NT-3 and BDNF corresponded to the changes of NT-3 mRNA and BDNF mRNA expression in L3-6 segments but not in the soleus muscle. We disclosed tissue-specificity of TrkC mRNA and TrkB mRNA responses. In the spinal cord TrkC and TrkB transcripts tended to decrease, whereas in the soleus muscle TrkB mRNA decreased and TrkC mRNA expression strongly increased, suggesting that stimulation of Ia fibers leads to sensitization of the soleus muscle to NT-3 signaling. The possibility of increasing NT-3/TrkC signaling in the neuromuscular system, with minor effects on BDNF/TrkB signaling, by means of low-threshold electrical stimulation of peripheral nerves, which in humans might be applied in non-invasive way, offers an attractive therapeutic tool.
Neurochemistry International | 1986
Jolanta Ułas; Gradkowska M; Maria Jezierska; M Skup; Jolanta Skangiel-Kramska; Barbara Odefeld-Nowak
This report examines the effects of unilateral electrolytic and knife-cut lesions of entorhinal cortex on glutamate uptake, the muscarinic receptor [(3)H]QNB binding and acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity in the dorsal and ventral parts of the ipsi- and contralateral hippocampus of the rat. We found that (1) in unoperated, control rats there are no pre-existing differences in the level of the investigated markers between the right and left hippocampus, (2) both electrolytic and knife-cut lesions of the entorhinal cortex evoke bilateral changes in the investigated markers and (3) the character of the response is dependent on the survival time and on the hippocampal part involved. Four days after operation a substantial reduction in glutamate uptake was found in both the dorsal and ventral parts of the ipsi- and contralateral hippocampus. At the same time there was a drop in muscarinic receptor binding, while AChE activity was not affected. The decrease in glutamate uptake persisted on the 21st postoperative day, whereas muscarinic receptor binding was enhanced, in comparison with the control level, in the ventral part of both the ipsi- and contralateral hippocampus. This overshoot was not so evident on the 30th postoperative day; glutamate uptake at that time reached or even surpassed the control level. Enhancement of AChE activity on the ipsi- and contralateral sides was noted on both the 21st and 30th day after operation. We suggest the following interpretation of these results: (1) glutamatergic projections from the entorhinal cortex to the hippocampus are bilateral, (2) some transneuronal changes probably contribute to the decline in glutamate uptake, particularly on the contralateral side, (3) neuronal depolarization does not seem to be the only mechanism responsible for the decrease in muscarinic receptor binding and (4) some compensatory mechanisms occur in the hippocampus at a later time after the lesion. Moreover, we believe that the use of the contralateral side as a control should be considered with caution in studies with unilaterally lesioned animals.