Marcello D’Amelio
Sapienza University of Rome
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marcello D’Amelio.
Molecular Neurobiology | 2012
Virve Cavallucci; Marcello D’Amelio; Francesco Cecconi
Alzheimers Disease (AD), the most common age-related neurodegenerative disorder, is characterized by progressive cognitive decline, synaptic loss, the formation of extracellular β-amyloid plaques and intracellular neurofibrillary tangles, and neuronal cell death. Despite the massive neuronal loss in the ‘late stage’ of disease, dendritic spine loss represents the best pathological correlate to the cognitive impairment in AD patients. The ‘amyloid hypothesis’ of AD recognizes the Aβ peptide as the principal player in the pathological process. Many lines of evidence point out to the neurotoxicity of Aβ, highlighting the correlation between soluble Aβ oligomer accumulation, rather than insoluble Aβ fibrils and disease progression. Pathological increase of Aβ in AD brains, resulting from an imbalance between its production, aggregation and clearance, might target mitochondrial function promoting a progressive synaptic impairment. The knowledge of the exact mechanisms by which Aβ peptide impairs neuronal function will help us to design new pharmacological tools for preventing AD neurodegeneration.
Neuromolecular Medicine | 2012
Robert Nisticò; Virve Cavallucci; Sonia Piccinin; Simone Macrì; Marco Pignatelli; Bisan Mehdawy; Fabio Blandini; Giovanni Laviola; Davide Lauro; Nicola B. Mercuri; Marcello D’Amelio
The insulin receptor (IR) is a protein tyrosine kinase playing a pivotal role in the regulation of peripheral glucose metabolism and energy homoeostasis. IRs are also abundantly distributed in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus, where they regulate synaptic activity required for learning and memory. As the major anabolic hormone in mammals, insulin stimulates protein synthesis partially through the activation of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway, playing fundamental roles in neuronal development, synaptic plasticity and memory. Here, by means of a multidisciplinary approach, we report that long-term synaptic plasticity and recognition memory are impaired in IR β-subunit heterozygous mice. Since IR expression is diminished in type-2 diabetes as well as in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients, these data may provide a mechanistic link between insulin resistance, impaired synaptic transmission and cognitive decline in humans with metabolic disorders.
Nature Communications | 2017
Annalisa Nobili; Emanuele Claudio Latagliata; Maria Teresa Viscomi; Virve Cavallucci; Debora Cutuli; Giacomo Giacovazzo; Paraskevi Krashia; Francesca Romana Rizzo; Ramona Marino; Mauro Federici; Paola De Bartolo; Daniela Aversa; Maria Concetta Dell’Acqua; Alberto Cordella; Marco Sancandi; Flavio Keller; Laura Petrosini; Stefano Puglisi-Allegra; Nicola B. Mercuri; Roberto Coccurello; Nicola Berretta; Marcello D’Amelio
Alterations of the dopaminergic (DAergic) system are frequently reported in Alzheimers disease (AD) patients and are commonly linked to cognitive and non-cognitive symptoms. However, the cause of DAergic system dysfunction in AD remains to be elucidated. We investigated alterations of the midbrain DAergic system in the Tg2576 mouse model of AD, overexpressing a mutated human amyloid precursor protein (APPswe). Here, we found an age-dependent DAergic neuron loss in the ventral tegmental area (VTA) at pre-plaque stages, although substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc) DAergic neurons were intact. The selective VTA DAergic neuron degeneration results in lower DA outflow in the hippocampus and nucleus accumbens (NAc) shell. The progression of DAergic cell death correlates with impairments in CA1 synaptic plasticity, memory performance and food reward processing. We conclude that in this mouse model of AD, degeneration of VTA DAergic neurons at pre-plaque stages contributes to memory deficits and dysfunction of reward processing.
Neuromolecular Medicine | 2013
Virve Cavallucci; Nicola Berretta; Annalisa Nobili; Robert Nisticò; Nicola B. Mercuri; Marcello D’Amelio
Functional and ultrastructural investigations support the concept that altered brain connectivity, exhausted neural plasticity, and synaptic loss are the strongest correlates of cognitive decline in age-related neurodegenerative dementia of Alzheimer’s type. We have previously demonstrated that in transgenic mice, expressing amyloid-β precursor protein-Swedish mutation active caspase-3 accumulates in hippocampal postsynaptic compartments leading to altered postsynaptic density (PSD) composition, increased long-term depression (LTD), and dendritic spine loss. Furthermore, we found strong evidence that dendritic spine alteration is mediated by calcineurin activation, a calcium-dependent phosphatase involved in synapse signaling. In the present work, we analyzed the molecular mechanism linking alteration of synaptic plasticity to the increase of calcineurin activity. We found that acute treatment of young and plaque-free transgenic mice with the calcineurin inhibitor FK506 leads to a complete rescue of LTD and PSD composition. Our findings are in agreement with other results reporting that calcineurin inhibition improves memory function and restores dendritic spine density, confirming that calcineurin inhibition may be explored as a neuroprotective treatment to stop or slowdown synaptic alterations in Alzheimer’s disease.
Alzheimer's Research & Therapy | 2013
Debora Cutuli; Paola De Bartolo; Paola Caporali; Anna Maria Tartaglione; Diego Oddi; Francesca R. D’Amato; Annalisa Nobili; Marcello D’Amelio; Laura Petrosini
IntroductionIntraparenchymal injections of the immunotoxin 192-IgG-saporin into medial septum and nucleus basalis magnocellularis causes a selective depletion of basal forebrain cholinergic neurons. Thus, it represents a valid model to mimic a key component of the cognitive deficits associated with aging and dementia. Here we administered donepezil, a potent acetylcholinesterase inhibitor developed for treating Alzheimer’s disease, 15 days before 192-IgG-saporin injection, and thus we examined donepezil effects on neurodegeneration and cognitive deficits.MethodsCaspase-3 activity and cognitive performances of lesioned rats pre-treated with donepezil or saline were analyzed and compared to the outcomes obtained in pre-treated sham-lesioned rats.ResultsCholinergic depletion increased hippocampal and neocortical caspase-3 activity and impaired working memory, spatial discrimination, social novelty preference, and ultrasonic vocalizations, without affecting anxiety levels and fear conditioning. In lesioned animals, donepezil pre-treatment reduced hippocampal and neocortical caspase-3 activity and improved working memory and spatial discrimination performances and partially rescued ultrasonic vocalizations, without preventing social novelty alterations.ConclusionsPresent data indicate that donepezil pre-treatment exerts beneficial effects on behavioral deficits induced by cholinergic depletion, attenuating the concomitant hippocampal and neocortical neurodegeneration.
Journal of Cell Biology | 2015
Vittoria Pagliarini; Laura Pelosi; Maria Blaire Bustamante; Annalisa Nobili; Maria Grazia Berardinelli; Marcello D’Amelio; Antonio Musarò; Claudio Sette
Knockout of the splicing factor SAM68 promotes SMN2 splicing, improving neuromuscular defects and viability in SMA mice.
Neuromolecular Medicine | 2016
Chiara Cervetto; Laura Vergani; Mario Passalacqua; Milena Ragazzoni; Arianna Venturini; Francesco Cecconi; Nicola Berretta; Nicola B. Mercuri; Marcello D’Amelio; Guido Maura; Paolo Mariottini; Adriana Voci; Manuela Marcoli; Manuela Cervelli
Transgenic mice overexpressing spermine oxidase (SMO) in the cerebral cortex (Dach-SMO mice) showed increased vulnerability to excitotoxic brain injury and kainate-induced epileptic seizures. To investigate the mechanisms by which SMO overexpression leads to increased susceptibility to kainate excitotoxicity and seizure, in the cerebral cortex of Dach-SMO and control mice we assessed markers for astrocyte proliferation and neuron loss, and the ability of kainate to evoke glutamate release from nerve terminals and astrocyte processes. Moreover, we assessed a possible role of astrocytes in an in vitro model of epileptic-like activity in combined cortico-hippocampal slices recorded with a multi-electrode array device. In parallel, as the brain is a major metabolizer of oxygen and yet has relatively feeble protective antioxidant mechanisms, we analyzed the oxidative status of the cerebral cortex of both SMO-overexpressing and control mice by evaluating enzymatic and non-enzymatic scavengers such as metallothioneins. The main findings in the cerebral cortex of Dach-SMO mice as compared to controls are the following: astrocyte activation and neuron loss; increased oxidative stress and activation of defense mechanisms involving both neurons and astrocytes; increased susceptibility to kainate-evoked cortical epileptogenic activity, dependent on astrocyte function; appearance of a glutamate-releasing response to kainate from astrocyte processes due to activation of Ca2+-permeable AMPA receptors in Dach-SMO mice. We conclude that reactive astrocytosis and activation of glutamate release from astrocyte processes might contribute, together with increased reactive oxygen species production, to the vulnerability to kainate excitotoxicity in Dach-SMO mice. This mouse model with a deregulated polyamine metabolism would shed light on roles for astrocytes in increasing vulnerability to excitotoxic neuron injury.
Pharmacological Research | 2018
Marcello D’Amelio; Stefano Puglisi-Allegra; Nicola B. Mercuri
&NA; Mammalian brain cortical functions, from executive and motor functioning to memory and emotional regulation, are strictly regulated by subcortical projections. These projections terminate in cortical areas that are continuously influenced by released neurotransmitters and neuromodulators. Among the subcortical structures, the dopaminergic midbrain plays a pivotal role in tuning cortical functions that commonly result altered in many neurological and psychiatric disorders. Incidentally, extensive neuropathological observations support a strong link between structural alterations of the dopaminergic midbrain and significant behavioural symptomatology observed in patients suffering from Alzheimer s disease(AD). Here, we will review recent progress on the involvement of the dopaminergic system in the pathophysiology of AD as well as the current therapeutic strategies targeting this system. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available.
Pharmacological Research | 2018
Ada Ledonne; Dalila Mango; Emanuele Claudio Latagliata; Giulia Chiacchierini; Annalisa Nobili; Robert Nisticò; Marcello D’Amelio; Stefano Puglisi-Allegra; Nicola B. Mercuri
&NA; The neurotrophic factors neuregulins (NRGs) and their receptors, ErbB tyrosine kinases, regulate neurotransmission, synaptic plasticity and cognitive functions and their alterations have been associated to different neuropsychiatric disorders. Group 1 metabotropic glutamate receptors (mGluRI)‐dependent mechanisms are also altered in animal models of neuropsychiatric diseases, especially mGluRI‐induced glutamatergic long‐term depression (mGluRI‐LTD), a form of synaptic plasticity critically involved in learning and memory. Despite this evidence, a potential link between NRGs/ErbB signalling and mGluRI‐LTD has never been considered. Here, we aimed to test the hypothesis that NRGs/ErbB signalling regulates mGluRI functions in the hippocampus, thus controlling CA1 pyramidal neurons excitability and synaptic plasticity as well as mGluRI‐dependent behaviors. We investigated the functional interaction between NRG1/ErbB signalling and mGluRI in hippocampal CA1 pyramidal neurons, by analyzing the effect of a pharmacological modulation of NRG1/ErbB signalling on the excitation of pyramidal neurons and on the LTD at CA3‐CA1 synapses induced by an mGluRI agonist. Furthermore, we verified the involvement of ErbB signalling in mGluRI‐dependent learning processes, by evaluating the consequence of an intrahippocampal in vivo injection of a pan‐ErbB inhibitor in the object recognition test in mice, a learning task dependent on hippocampal mGluRI. We found that NRG1 potentiates mGluRI‐dependent functions on pyramidal neurons excitability and synaptic plasticity at CA3‐CA1 synapses. Further, endogenous ErbB signalling per se regulates, through mGluRI, neuronal excitability and LTD in CA1 pyramidal neurons, since ErbB inhibition reduces mGluRI‐induced neuronal excitation and mGluRI‐LTD. In vivo intrahippocampal injection of the ErbB inhibitor, PD158780, impairs mGluRI‐LTD at CA3‐CA1 synapses and affects the exploratory behavior in the object recognition test. Thus, our results identify a key role for NRG1/ErbB signalling in the regulation of hippocampal mGluRI‐dependent synaptic and cognitive functions, whose alteration might contribute to the pathogenesis of different brain diseases. Graphical abstract Figure. No caption available.
Molecular Neurobiology | 2018
Annalisa Nobili; Paraskevi Krashia; Alberto Cordella; Livia La Barbera; Maria Concetta Dell’Acqua; Angela Caruso; Annabella Pignataro; Ramona Marino; Francesca Sciarra; Filippo Biamonte; Maria Luisa Scattoni; Martine Ammassari-Teule; Francesco Cecconi; Nicola Berretta; Flavio Keller; Nicola B. Mercuri; Marcello D’Amelio
Imbalances between excitatory and inhibitory synaptic transmission cause brain network dysfunction and are central to the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental disorders. Parvalbumin interneurons are highly implicated in this imbalance. Here, we probed the social behavior and hippocampal function of mice carrying a haploinsufficiency for Ambra1, a pro-autophagic gene crucial for brain development. We show that heterozygous Ambra1 mice (Ambra+/−) are characterized by loss of hippocampal parvalbumin interneurons, decreases in the inhibition/excitation ratio, and altered social behaviors that are solely restricted to the female gender. Loss of parvalbumin interneurons in Ambra1+/− females is further linked to reductions of the inhibitory drive onto principal neurons and alterations in network oscillatory activity, CA1 synaptic plasticity, and pyramidal neuron spine density. Parvalbumin interneuron loss is underlined by increased apoptosis during the embryonic development of progenitor neurons in the medial ganglionic eminence. Together, these findings identify an Ambra1-dependent mechanism that drives inhibition/excitation imbalance in the hippocampus, contributing to abnormal brain activity reminiscent of neurodevelopmental disorders.