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Dive into the research topics where Mario Bossi is active.

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Featured researches published by Mario Bossi.


Experimental Neurology | 2007

Bortezomib-induced peripheral neurotoxicity: A neurophysiological and pathological study in the rat

Guido Cavaletti; Alessandra Gilardini; Annalisa Canta; Laura Maria Rigamonti; Virginia Rodriguez-Menendez; Cecilia Ceresa; Paola Marmiroli; Mario Bossi; Norberto Oggioni; Maurizio D'Incalci; Roland De Coster

Bortezomib is a new proteasome inhibitor with a high antitumor activity, but also with a potentially severe peripheral neurotoxicity. To establish a preclinical model and to characterize the changes induced on the peripheral nerves, dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and spinal cord, bortezomib was administered to Wistar rats (0.08, 0.15, 0.20, 0.30 mg/kg/day twice [2q7d] or three times [3q7d] weekly for a total of 4 weeks). At baseline, on days 14, 21 and 28 after the beginning the treatment period and during a 4-week follow-up period sensory nerve conduction velocity (SNCV) was determined in the tail of each animal. Sciatic nerve, DRG and spinal cord specimens were processed for light and electron microscope observations and morphometry. At the maximum tolerated dose bortezomib induced a significant reduction in SNCV, with a complete recovery at the end of the follow-up period. Sciatic nerve examination and morphometric determinations demonstrated mild to moderate pathological changes, involving predominantly the Schwann cells and myelin, although axonal degeneration was also observed. Bortezomib-induced changes were also observed in DRG and they were represented by satellite cell intracytoplasmatic vacuolization due to mitochondrial and endoplasmic reticulum damage, closely resembling the changes observed in sciatic nerve Schwann cells. Only rarely did the cytoplasm of DRG neurons has a dark appearance and clear vacuoles occurring in the cytoplasm. Spinal cord was morphologically normal. This model is relevant to the neuropathy induced by bortezomib in the treatment of human malignancies and it could be useful in increasing our knowledge regarding the mechanisms underlying bortezomib neurotoxicity.


Nature | 1997

Loose-patch recordings of single quanta at individual hippocampal synapses

Lia Forti; Mario Bossi; Andrea Bergamaschi; Antonello Villa; Antonio Malgaroli

Synapses in the central nervous system are typically studied by recording electrical responses from the cell body of the postsynaptic cell. Because neurons are normally connected by multiple synaptic contacts, these postsynaptic responses reflect the combined activity of many thousands synapses, and it remains unclear to what extent the properties of individual synapses can be deduced from the population response. We have therefore developed a method for recording the activity of individual hippocampal synapses. By capturing an isolated presynaptic bouton inside a loose-patch pipette and recording from the associated patch of postsynaptic membrane, we were able to detect miniature excitatory postsynaptic currents (‘minis’) arising from spontaneous vesicle exocytosis at a single synaptic site, and to compare these with minis recorded simultaneously from the cell body. The average peak conductance at a single synapse was about 900 pS, corresponding roughly to the opening of 90 AMPA-type glutamate-receptor channels. The variability in this conductance was about 30%, matching the value reported for the neuromuscular junction. Given that our synapses displayed single postsynaptic densities (PSDs), this variability is larger than would be predicted from the random opening of receptor channels, suggesting that they are not saturated by the content of a single vesicle. Therefore the response to a quantum of neurotransmitter at these synapses is not limited by the number of available postsynaptic receptors.


Neuron | 1992

Synapsin I partially dissociates from synaptic vesicles during exocytosis induced by electrical stimulation

F.Torri Tarelli; Mario Bossi; Riccardo Fesce; Paul Greengard; Flavia Valtorta

The distribution of the synaptic vesicle-associated phosphoprotein synapsin I after electrical stimulation of the frog neuromuscular junction was investigated by immunogold labeling and compared with the distribution of the integral synaptic vesicle protein synaptophysin. In resting terminals both proteins were localized exclusively on synaptic vesicles. In stimulated terminals they appeared also in the axolemma and its infoldings, which however exhibited a lower synapsin I/synaptophysin ratio with respect to synaptic vesicles at rest. The value of this ratio was intermediate in synaptic vesicles of stimulated terminals, and an increased synapsin I labeling of the cytomatrix was observed. These results indicate that synapsin I undergoes partial dissociation from and reassociation with synaptic vesicles, following physiological stimulation, and are consistent with the proposed modulatory role of the protein in neurotransmitter release.


Experimental Neurology | 2010

Neurophysiological and neuropathological characterization of new murine models of chemotherapy-induced chronic peripheral neuropathies

Valentina Alda Carozzi; Annalisa Canta; Norberto Oggioni; Barbara Sala; Alessia Chiorazzi; Cristina Meregalli; Mario Bossi; Paola Marmiroli; Guido Cavaletti

Cisplatin, paclitaxel and bortezomib belong to some of the most effective families of chemotherapy drugs for solid and haematological cancers. Epothilones represent a new family of very promising antitubulin agents. The clinical use of all these drugs is limited by their severe peripheral neurotoxicity. Several in vivo rat models have reproduced the characteristics of the peripheral neurotoxicity of these drugs. However, since only a very limited number of cancer types can be studied in immunocompetent rats, these animal models do not represent an effective way to evaluate, at the same time, the antineoplastic activity and the neurotoxic effects of the anticancer compounds. In this study, we characterized the neurophysiological impairment induced by chronic chemotherapy treatment in BALB/c mice, a strain suitable for assessing the activity of anticancer treatments. At the end of a 4-week period of treatment with cisplatin, paclitaxel, epothilone-B or bortezomib, sensory and sensory/motor nerve conduction velocities (NCV) were determined in the caudal and digital nerves and dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and sciatic nerves were collected for histopathological analysis. The electrophysiological studies revealed that all the compounds caused a statistically significant reduction in the caudal NCV, while impairment of the digital NCV was less severe. This functional damage was confirmed by the histopathological observations evidencing axonal degeneration in the sciatic nerve induced by all the drugs associated with pathological changes in DRG induced only by cisplatin and bortezomib. These results confirm the possibility to use our models to combine the study of the antineoplastic activity of anticancer drugs and of their toxic effects on the peripheral nervous system in the BALB/c mouse strain.


Cancer Science | 2010

Biological heterogeneity of putative bladder cancer stem-like cell populations from human bladder transitional cell carcinoma samples

Angela Bentivegna; Donatella Conconi; Elena Panzeri; Elena Sala; Giorgio Bovo; P Viganò; Silvia Brunelli; Mario Bossi; Giovanni Tredici; G Strada; Leda Dalprà

Transitional cell carcinoma (TCC) is the most common type of bladder cancer. Emerging evidence has suggested that the capability of a tumor to grow and propagate is dependent on a small subset of cells, the cancer stem‐like cells (CSCs) or tumor initiating cells. We report on the isolation and biological characterization of putative bladder CSC populations from primary TCCs. Isolated cells were induced to proliferate in stem cell culture conditions (serum‐free medium containing mitogenic growth factors). The proliferating cells formed spheroids (urospheres) and their abilities for extensive proliferation and self‐renewal were assayed. Their positivity for several stem cell markers (CD133, Oct‐3/4, nestin, and cytokeratins) was also assessed by immunofluorescence tests and they could have the potential to differentiate in the presence of serum. In stem cell culture conditions they gradually showed loss of proliferation, adherence to the substrate, and morphological changes, which might reflect their progressive acquisition of differentiative capacity and loss of self‐renewal ability. To evaluate if effective cell selection occurred after isolation, conventional cytogenetic studies on fresh chromosome spreads immediately after isolation and after culture were carried out. In addition, a molecular cytogenetic study by UroVysion assay was carried out on paraffin‐embedded tissue sections and on fresh and after culture nuclei preparations. The data collected indicated important karyotype changes and a positive selection for hypo‐ or near‐diploid cells, losing the complexity present in fresh tumors. (Cancer Sci 2009)


PLOS ONE | 2010

Long-term survival of human neural stem cells in the ischemic rat brain upon transient immunosuppression.

Laura Rota Nodari; Daniela Ferrari; Fabrizio Giani; Mario Bossi; Virginia Rodriguez-Menendez; Giovanni Tredici; Domenico Delia; Angelo L. Vescovi; Lidia De Filippis

Understanding the physiology of human neural stem cells (hNSCs) in the context of cell therapy for neurodegenerative disorders is of paramount importance, yet large-scale studies are hampered by the slow-expansion rate of these cells. To overcome this issue, we previously established immortal, non-transformed, telencephalic-diencephalic hNSCs (IhNSCs) from the fetal brain. Here, we investigated the fate of these IhNSCs immediate progeny (i.e. neural progenitors; IhNSC-Ps) upon unilateral implantation into the corpus callosum or the hippocampal fissure of adult rat brain, 3 days after global ischemic injury. One month after grafting, approximately one fifth of the IhNSC-Ps had survived and migrated through the corpus callosum, into the cortex or throughout the dentate gyrus of the hippocampus. By the fourth month, they had reached the ipsilateral subventricular zone, CA1-3 hippocampal layers and the controlateral hemisphere. Notably, these results could be accomplished using transient immunosuppression, i.e administering cyclosporine for 15 days following the ischemic event. Furthermore, a concomitant reduction of reactive microglia (Iba1+ cells) and of glial, GFAP+ cells was also observed in the ipsilateral hemisphere as compared to the controlateral one. IhNSC-Ps were not tumorigenic and, upon in vivo engraftment, underwent differentiation into GFAP+ astrocytes, and β-tubulinIII+ or MAP2+ neurons, which displayed GABAergic and GLUTAmatergic markers. Electron microscopy analysis pointed to the formation of mature synaptic contacts between host and donor-derived neurons, showing the full maturation of the IhNSC-P-derived neurons and their likely functional integration into the host tissue. Thus, IhNSC-Ps possess long-term survival and engraftment capacity upon transplantation into the globally injured ischemic brain, into which they can integrate and mature into neurons, even under mild, transient immunosuppressive conditions. Most notably, transplanted IhNSC-P can significantly dampen the inflammatory response in the lesioned host brain. This work further supports hNSCs as a reliable and safe source of cells for transplantation therapy in neurodegenerative disorders.


Journal of Anatomy | 2008

Expression and distribution of 'high affinity' glutamate transporters GLT1, GLAST, EAAC1 and of GCPII in the rat peripheral nervous system.

Valentina Alda Carozzi; Annalisa Canta; Norberto Oggioni; Cecilia Ceresa; Paola Marmiroli; Jan Konvalinka; C Zoia; Mario Bossi; Carlo Ferrarese; Giovanni Tredici; Guido Cavaletti

l‐Glutamate is one of the major excitatory neurotransmitters in the mammalian central nervous system, but recently it has been shown to have a role also in the transduction of sensory input at the periphery, and in particular in the nociceptive pathway. An excess of glutamate is implicated in cases of peripheral neuropathies as well. Conventional therapeutic approaches for treating these diseases have focused on blocking glutamate receptors with small molecules or on reducing its synthesis of the receptors through the inhibition of glutamate carboxypeptidase II (GCPII), the enzyme that generates glutamate. In vivo studies have demonstrated that the pharmacological inhibition of GCPII can either prevent or treat the peripheral nerve changes in both BB/Wor and chemically induced diabetes in rats. In this study, we characterized the expression and distribution of glutamate transporters GLT1, GLAST, EAAC1 and of the enzyme GCPII in the peripheral nervous system of female Wistar rats. Immunoblotting results demonstrated that all glutamate transporters and GCPII are present in dorsal root ganglia (DRG) and the sciatic nerve. Immunofluorescence localization studies revealed that both DRG and sciatic nerves were immunopositive for all glutamate transporters and for GCPII. In DRG, satellite cells were positive for GLT1 and GCPII, whereas sensory neurons were positive for EAAC1. GLAST was localized in both neurons and satellite cells. In the sciatic nerve, GLT1 and GCPII were expressed in the cytoplasm of Schwann cells, whereas GLAST and EAAC1 stained the myelin layer. Our results give for the first time a complete characterization of the glutamate transporter system in the peripheral nervous system. Therefore, they are important both for understanding glutamatergic signalling in the PNS and for establishing new strategies to treat peripheral neuropathies.


Neuroscience Letters | 2006

Human platelets express the synaptic markers VGLUT1 and 2 and release glutamate following aggregation

Lucio Tremolizzo; J.C. DiFrancesco; Virginia Rodriguez-Menendez; E. Sirtori; M. Longoni; Cassetti A; Mario Bossi; S. El Mestikawy; Guido Cavaletti; Carlo Ferrarese

Vesicular glutamate transporters (VGLUTs) are involved in storing glutamate for secretion at the level of glutamatergic axon terminals, and for this reason they have been extensively used as markers to identify glutamate-releasing cells. Platelets have been considered as a suitable model for studying glutamatergic dysfunction because they perform glutamate uptake and express both external transporters, and NMDA-like receptors. Here, we show that platelets express the pre-synaptic markers VGLUT1 and VGLUT2 and release glutamate following aggregation, implying a possible contributory role in the pathophysiology of stroke, migraine, and other excitotoxic disorders.


Neurotoxicology | 2012

Myelin structure is unaltered in chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy

Alessandra Gilardini; Robin L. Avila; Norberto Oggioni; Virginia Rodriguez-Menendez; Mario Bossi; Annalisa Canta; Guido Cavaletti; Daniel A. Kirschner

PURPOSE Alterations in mRNA for myelin proteins are reported in animal models of chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathies (CIPN); however, ultrastructural changes in aldehyde-fixed and plastic-embedded myelin are not evident by electron microscopy. Therefore, we used X-ray diffraction (XRD) to investigate more subtle changes in myelin sheath structure from unfixed nerves. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN We used in vivo chronic animal models of CIPN in female Wistar rats, administering cisplatin (CDDP 2mg/kg, i.p. twice/week), paclitaxel (PT 10mg/kg, i.v. once/week) or bortezomib (0.20mg/kg, i.v. three times/week) over a total period of 4weeks. Animal weights were monitored, and tail nerve conduction velocity (NCV) was determined at the end of the treatments to assess the occurrence of peripheral neuropathy. Sciatic nerves were collected and the myelin structure was analyzed using electron microscopy (EM) and XRD. RESULTS All the rats treated with the chemotherapy agents developed peripheral neuropathy, as indicated by a decrease in NCV values; however, light and electron microscopy indicated no severe pathological alterations of the myelin morphology. XRD also did not demonstrate significant differences between sciatic nerves in treated vs. control rats with respect to myelin period, relative amount of myelin, membrane structure, and regularity of membrane packing. CONCLUSIONS These results indicate that experimental peripheral neuropathy caused by CDDP, PT, and bortezomib-which are among the most widely used chemotherapy agents-does not significantly affect the structure of internodal myelin in peripheral nerve.


Current Medicinal Chemistry | 2013

Functionalized mesoporous silica nanoparticles: a possible strategy to target cancer cells reducing peripheral nervous system uptake

Cecilia Ceresa; Gabriella Nicolini; Roberta Rigolio; Mario Bossi; L. Pasqua; Guido Cavaletti

Mesoporous silica materials (MSM) have been proposed as promising tools for cell specific drug delivery or fluorescent cell tracking. In cancer therapy there is an urgent need to develop a cancer cell specific drug carrier able to limit the non-specific uptake of the drug by normal cells thereby reducing serious side effects. Chemotherapy induced peripheral neurotoxicity (CIPN) is one of the most clinically relevant side effects linked to the use of several antineoplastic drugs. In this study we showed that the uptake of MSM (synthesized using a PEG surfactant-based interfacial synthesis procedure), functionalised with folic acid (MSM-FOL) after 1, 6 and 24 hours is very limited in neuronal-like cellular systems such as differentiated SH-SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells and rat embryonic dorsal root ganglia sensory neurons. By contrast, the nanoparticles are highly internalized in A549 and IGROV-1 cancer cells. The 6 hour-treatment of A549 and IGROV-1 cells with nanoparticles loaded with the antineoplastic drug cisplatin (CP) induced significant cytotoxicity with respect to CP alone. These results were observed treating IGROV-1 cells with 25 and 50 μg/ml nanoparticles doses (corresponding respectively to CP 6.25 and 12.5 μM) and treating A549 with 50 μg/ml.Our results demonstrated a selective uptake of functionalized MSM suggesting them as promising tools for targeted antineoplastic therapy. Further studies will be necessary in order to confirm if this approach may be useful in reducing neurotocity of anticancer drugs.

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Guido Cavaletti

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Giovanni Tredici

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Paola Marmiroli

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Alessia Chiorazzi

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Cecilia Ceresa

University of Milano-Bicocca

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