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Featured researches published by Marta Agudo.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2009

Brn3a as a Marker of Retinal Ganglion Cells: Qualitative and Quantitative Time Course Studies in Naïve and Optic Nerve-Injured Retinas

Francisco M. Nadal-Nicolás; Manuel Jiménez-López; Paloma Sobrado-Calvo; Leticia Nieto-Lopez; Isabel Cánovas-Martínez; Manuel Salinas-Navarro; Manuel Vidal-Sanz; Marta Agudo

PURPOSE To characterize Brn3a expression in adult albino rat retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) in naïve animals and in animals subjected to complete intraorbital optic nerve transection (IONT) or crush (IONC). METHODS Rats were divided into three groups, naïve, IONT, and IONC. Two-, 5-, 9-, or 14-day postlesion (dpl) retinas were examined for immunoreactivity for Brn3a. Before the injury, the RGCs were labeled with Fluorogold (FG; Fluorochrome, Corp. Denver, CO). Brn3a retinal expression was also determined by Western blot analysis. The proportion of RGCs double labeled with Brn3a and FG was determined in radial sections. The temporal course of reduction in Brn3a(+) RGCs and FG(+) RGCs induced by IONC or IONT was assessed by quantifying, in the same wholemounts, the number of surviving FG-labeled RGCs and Brn3a(+)RGCs at the mentioned time points. The total number of FG(+)RGCs was automatically counted in naïve and injured retinas (2 and 5 dpl) or estimated by manual quantification in retinas processed at 9 and 14 dpl. All Brn3a immunopositive RGCs were counted using an automatic routine specifically developed for this purpose. This protocol allowed, as well, the investigation of the spatial distribution of these neurons. RESULTS Brn3a(+) cells were only present in the ganglion cell layer and showed a spatial distribution comparable to that of FG(+) cells. In the naïve retinal wholemounts the mean (mean +/- SEM; n = 14) total number of FG(+)RGCs and Brn3a(+)RGCs was 80,251 +/- 2,210 and 83,449 +/- 4,541, respectively. Whereas in the radial sections, 92.2% of the FG(+)RGCs were also Brn3a(+), 4.4% of the RGCs were Brn3a(+)FG(-) and 3.4% were FG(+)Brn3a(-). Brn3a expression pattern was maintained in injured RGCs. The temporal course of Brn3a(+)RGC and FG(+)RGC loss induced by IONC or IONT followed a similar trend, but Brn3a(+)RGCs loss was detected earlier than that of FG(+)RGCs. Independent of the marker used to detect the RGCs, it was observed that their loss was quicker and more severe after IONT than after IONC. CONCLUSIONS Brn3a can be used as a reliable, efficient ex vivo marker to identify and quantify RGCs in control and optic nerve-injured retinas.


Experimental Eye Research | 2009

Effects of different neurotrophic factors on the survival of retinal ganglion cells after a complete intraorbital nerve crush injury: A quantitative in vivo study

Guillermo Parrilla-Reverter; Marta Agudo; Paloma Sobrado-Calvo; Manuel Salinas-Navarro; María Paz Villegas-Pérez; Manuel Vidal-Sanz

We examined in adult Sprague Dawley rats the loss of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) induced by complete intraorbital optic nerve crush (IONC) as well as the effects of several neurotrophic factors to prevent IONC-induced RGC loss. Completeness of the IONC lesion was assessed by investigating the orthograde and retrograde transport of neuronal tracers applied to the origin and termination of the retinotectal pathway. RGC survival after IONC alone or combined with intraocular injection of the neurotrophic factors NT-4, BDNF or CNTF was quantified at survival intervals ranging from 5 to 12 days post-lesion (dpl) by identifying RGCs that had been pre-labelled with fluorogold (FG). RGC loss first appeared at 7dpl and by 12dpl only 32% of the RGC population remained in the retina. Intraocular administration of NT-4, BDNF or CNTF resulted in almost a complete protection against IONC-induced RGC loss by 7dpl, and the protection remained significant by 12dpl only for NT-4 and BDNF. We have analyzed these results taking into account our previous studies on the loss of RGCs induced by intraorbital optic nerve transection (IONT) and concluded that RGC loss induced by IONC is slower and less severe than that following IONT. Moreover, as for IONT-induced RGC loss, IONC-induced RGC loss may also be prevented with administration of NT-4, BDNF or CNTF, though for NT-4 and CNTF their neuroprotective effects differ depending on the injury type. Overall this data underscore the importance of the type of ON injury on the pattern of RGC degeneration as well as in their response to neuroprotective treatments.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2009

Immediate Upregulation of Proteins Belonging to Different Branches of the Apoptotic Cascade in the Retina after Optic Nerve Transection and Optic Nerve Crush

Marta Agudo; Maria Cruz Pérez-Marín; Paloma Sobrado-Calvo; Ulrika Lönngren; Manuel Salinas-Navarro; I. Cánovas; Francisco M. Nadal-Nicolás; Jaime Miralles-Imperial; Finn Hallböök; Manuel Vidal-Sanz

PURPOSE To further investigate the molecular signals underlying optic nerve (ON) injury, the authors analyzed in adult control, ON-transected, and ON-crushed retinas the expression pattern and time-course regulation of the following proteins, all of which are linked to apoptosis through different pathways: Stat 1, caspase 11 (inflammation and death), cathepsins C and B (lysosomal death pathway), calpain 1 (endoplasmic reticulum stress), calreticulin (apoptosis marker), Jun (early response), and aryl hydrocarbon receptor (cell cycle arrest). METHODS Adult female rats were subjected to intraorbital optic nerve transection (IONT) or intraorbital optic nerve crush (IONC). Protein from naive and ON-injured adult rat retinas was extracted at different times postlesion, and Western blotting experiments were performed. For immunohistofluorescence analyses, retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) were retrogradely identified with fluorogold applied to the superior colliculi 1 week before injury. RESULTS Western blotting analyses revealed upregulation of all the analyzed proteins as early as 12 hours postlesion (hpl), peaking at 48 hpl, in agreement with our previous RNA study findings. Furthermore, immunohistofluorescence to radial sections showed that all but Stat 1 were expressed by the primarily injured neurons, the RGCs, as seen by colocalization with fluorogold. CONCLUSIONS All analyzed proteins were upregulated in the retina after IONT or IONC as early as 12 hpl, indicating that ON injury regulates several branches of the apoptotic cascade and suggesting that commitment to death might be an earlier event than previously anticipated.


Experimental Eye Research | 2010

Retinal ganglion cell numbers and delayed retinal ganglion cell death in the P23H rat retina.

Diego García-Ayuso; Manuel Salinas-Navarro; Marta Agudo; Nicolás Cuenca; Isabel Pinilla; Manuel Vidal-Sanz; María Paz Villegas-Pérez

The P23H-1 rat strain carries a rhodopsin mutation frequently found in retinitis pigmentosa patients. We investigated the progressive degeneration of the inner retina in this strain, focussing on retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) fate. Our data show that photoreceptor death commences in the ventral retina, spreading to the whole retina as the rat ages. Quantification of the total number of RGCs identified by Fluorogold tracing and Brn3a expression, disclosed that the population of RGCs in young P23H rats is significantly smaller than in its homologous SD strain. In the mutant strain, there is also RGC loss with age: RGCs show their first symptoms of degeneration at P180, as revealed by an abnormal expression of cytoskeletal proteins which, at P365, translates into a significant loss of RGCs, that may ultimately be caused by displaced inner retinal vessels that drag and strangulate their axons. RGC axonal compression begins also in the ventral retina and spreads from there causing RGC loss through the whole retinal surface. These decaying processes are common to several models of photoreceptor loss, but show some differences between inherited and light-induced photoreceptor degeneration and should therefore be studied to a better understanding of photoreceptor degeneration and when developing therapies for these diseases.


Vision Research | 2009

Time-course of the retinal nerve fibre layer degeneration after complete intra-orbital optic nerve transection or crush: A comparative study

Guillermo Parrilla-Reverter; Marta Agudo; Francisco M. Nadal-Nicolás; Luis Alarcón-Martínez; Manuel Jiménez-López; Manuel Salinas-Navarro; Paloma Sobrado-Calvo; Jose Manuel Bernal-Garro; María Paz Villegas-Pérez; Manuel Vidal-Sanz

We examined qualitatively and quantitatively in adult rat retinas the temporal degeneration of the nerve fibre layer after intra-orbital optic nerve transection (IONT) or crush (IONC). Retinal ganglion cell (RGC) axons were identified by their heavy neurofilament subunit phosphorylated isoform (pNFH) expression. Optic nerve injury induces a progressive axonal degeneration which after IONT proceeds mainly with abnormal pNFH-accumulations in RCG axons and after IONC in RGCs somas and dendrites. Importantly, this aberrant pNFH-expression pattern starts earlier and is more dramatic after IONT than after IONC, highlighting the importance that the type of injury has on the time-course of RGC degeneration.


Upsala Journal of Medical Sciences | 2010

Multiple receptor tyrosine kinases are expressed in adult rat retinal ganglion cells as revealed by single-cell degenerate primer polymerase chain reaction

Niclas Lindqvist; Ulrika Lönngren; Marta Agudo; Ulla Näpänkangas; Manuel Vidal-Sanz; Finn Hallböök

Abstract Background. To achieve a better understanding of the repertoire of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) in adult retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) we performed polymerase chain reaction (PCR), using degenerate primers directed towards conserved sequences in the tyrosine kinase domain, on cDNA from isolated single RGCs univocally identified by retrograde tracing from the superior colliculi. Results. All the PCR-amplified fragments of the expected sizes were sequenced, and 25% of them contained a tyrosine kinase domain. These were: Axl, Csf-1R, Eph A4, Pdgfrβ, Ptk7, Ret, Ros, Sky, TrkB, TrkC, Vegfr-2, and Vegfr-3. Non-RTK sequences were Jak1 and 2. Retinal expression of Axl, Csf-1R, Pdgfrβ, Ret, Sky, TrkB, TrkC, Vegfr-2, and Vegfr-3, as well as Jak1 and 2, was confirmed by PCR on total retina cDNA. Immunodetection of Csf-1R, Pdgfrα/β, Ret, Sky, TrkB, and Vegfr-2 on retrogradely traced retinas demonstrated that they were expressed by RGCs. Co-localization of Vegfr-2 and Csf-1R, of Vegfr-2 and TrkB, and of Csf-1R and Ret in retrogradely labelled RGCs was shown. The effect of optic nerve transection on the mRNA level of Pdgfrβ, Csf-1R, Vegfr-2, Sky, and Axl, and of the Axl ligands Gas6 and ProteinS, was analysed. These analyses show transection-induced changes in Axl and ProteinS mRNA levels. Conclusions. The repertoire of RTKs expressed by RGCs is more extensive than previously anticipated. Several of the receptors found in this study, including Pdgfrβ, Csf-1R, Vegfr-2, Sky, and Axl, and their ligands, have not previously been primarily associated with retinal ganglion cells.


Molecular Vision | 2008

Time course profiling of the retinal transcriptome after optic nerve transection and optic nerve crush.

Marta Agudo; Maria Cruz Pérez-Marín; Ulrika Lönngren; Paloma Sobrado; Ana Conesa; I. Cánovas; Manuel Salinas-Navarro; Jaime Miralles-Imperial; Finn Hallböök; Manuel Vidal-Sanz


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

DIFFERENCES IN CONE TYPE PROPORTIONS AND DISTRIBUTION BETWEEN PIGMENTED AND ALBINO STRAINS OF ADULT MICE

Manuel Vidal-Sanz; Arturo Ortín-Martínez; Francisco M. Nadal-Nicolás; Manuel Jiménez-López; Juan J. Alburquerque-Béjar; Leticia Nieto-Lopez; María Paz Villegas-Pérez; Marta Agudo


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2014

Characterization of a new model of focal cone degeneration induced by a Light-emitting-diode (LED).

F Javier Valiente-Soriano; Arturo Ortín-Martínez; Diego García-Ayuso; Manuel Jiménez-López; Luis Alarcón-Martínez; Jose Manuel Bernal-Garro; Francisco M. Nadal-Nicolás; Marta Agudo; María Paz Villegas-Pérez; Manuel Vidal-Sanz


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2010

Retinal Ganglion Cell Axonal Constriction and Death in the P23H-1 Rat Retina

Diego García-Ayuso; Manuel Salinas-Navarro; Marta Agudo; Leticia Nieto-Lopez; Nicolás Cuenca; Isabel Pinilla; Manuel Vidal-Sanz; M. P. Villegas-Pérez

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