Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Mauricio Mondaca is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Mauricio Mondaca.


The Journal of Physiology | 2008

Evidence of a role for melatonin in fetal sheep physiology: direct actions of melatonin on fetal cerebral artery, brown adipose tissue and adrenal gland

Claudia Torres-Farfan; Francisco J. Valenzuela; Mauricio Mondaca; Guillermo J. Valenzuela; Bernardo J. Krause; Emilio A. Herrera; Raquel A. Riquelme; Aníbal J. Llanos; María Serón-Ferré

Although the fetal pineal gland does not secrete melatonin, the fetus is exposed to melatonin of maternal origin. In the non‐human primate fetus, melatonin acts as a trophic hormone for the adrenal gland, stimulating growth while restraining cortisol production. This latter physiological activity led us to hypothesize that melatonin may influence some fetal functions critical for neonatal adaptation to extrauterine life. To test this hypothesis we explored (i) the presence of G‐protein‐coupled melatonin binding sites and (ii) the direct modulatory effects of melatonin on noradrenaline (norepinephrine)‐induced middle cerebral artery (MCA) contraction, brown adipose tissue (BAT) lypolysis and ACTH‐induced adrenal cortisol production in fetal sheep. We found that melatonin directly inhibits the response to noradrenaline in the MCA and BAT, and also inhibits the response to ACTH in the adrenal gland. Melatonin inhibition was reversed by the melatonin antagonist luzindole only in the fetal adrenal. MCA, BAT and adrenal tissue displayed specific high‐affinity melatonin binding sites coupled to G‐protein (Kd values: MCA 64 ± 1 pm, BAT 98.44 ± 2.12 pm and adrenal 4.123 ± 3.22 pm). Melatonin binding was displaced by luzindole only in the adrenal gland, supporting the idea that action in the MCA and BAT is mediated by different melatonin receptors. These direct inhibitory responses to melatonin support a role for melatonin in fetal physiology, which we propose prevents major contraction of cerebral vessels, restrains cortisol release and restricts BAT lypolysis during fetal life.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2005

Mild prenatal protein malnutrition increases α2C‐adrenoceptor density in the cerebral cortex during postnatal life and impairs neocortical long‐term potentiation and visuo‐spatial performance in rats

Rubén Soto-Moyano; Luis Valladares; Walter Sierralta; Hernán Pérez; Mauricio Mondaca; Victor Fernández; Héctor Burgos; Alejandro Hernández

Mild reduction in the protein content of the mothers diet from 25 to 8% casein, calorically compensated by carbohydrates, does not alter body and brain weights of rat pups at birth, but leads to significant enhancements in the concentration and release of cortical noradrenaline during early postnatal life. Since central noradrenaline and some of its receptors are critically involved in long‐term potentiation (LTP) and memory formation, this study evaluated the effect of mild prenatal protein malnutrition on the α2C‐adrenoceptor density in the frontal and occipital cortices, induction of LTP in the same cortical regions and the visuo‐spatial memory. Pups born from rats fed a 25% casein diet throughout pregnancy served as controls. At day 8 of postnatal age, prenatally malnourished rats showed a threefold increase in neocortical α2C‐adrenoceptor density. At 60 days‐of‐age, α2C‐adrenoceptor density was still elevated in the neocortex, and the animals were unable to maintain neocortical LTP and presented lower visuo‐spatial memory performance. Results suggest that overexpression of neocortical α2C‐adrenoceptors during postnatal life, subsequent to mild prenatal protein malnutrition, could functionally affect the synaptic networks subserving neocortical LTP and visuo‐spatial memory formation.


Neuroscience Letters | 2004

Melatonin-induced inhibition of spinal cord synaptic potentiation in rats is MT2 receptor-dependent.

Rodrigo Noseda; Alejandro Hernández; Luis Valladares; Mauricio Mondaca; Claudio Laurido; Rubén Soto-Moyano

Systemically administered melatonin has been reported to produce antinociception and to inhibit spinal nociceptive transmission in rats. The present study was designed to investigate in anesthetized rats (i) whether intrathecally administered melatonin can depress synaptic potentiation (wind-up) in the spinal cord, and (ii) whether this effect is prevented by intrathecal (i.t.) administration of the MT2 receptor antagonist luzindole. Results showed that melatonin i.t. (10, 30 and 90 microg) induced dose-dependent inhibition of wind-up activity (ED50=52.06 microg i.t.), an effect that was prevented by 100 microg i.t. of luzindole. Since wind-up is dependent on NMDA receptor activation, the results suggest that melatonin can interfere with the NMDA-mediated glutamatergic component of pain transmission in rat spinal cord by acting on MT2 receptors.


Brain Research | 2004

α2-Adrenoceptor modulation of long-term potentiation elicited in vivo in rat occipital cortex

Mauricio Mondaca; Alejandro Hernández; Hernán Pérez; Luis Valladares; Walter Sierralta; Victor Fernández; Rubén Soto-Moyano

Pretreatment with the alpha(2)-adrenoceptor agonist clonidine (31.25, 62.5, or 125 microg/kg, i.p.) dose-dependently reduced long-term potentiation (LTP) elicited in vivo in the occipital cortex of anesthetized rats, whereas pretreatment with the alpha(2)-adrenoceptor antagonist yohimbine (0.133, 0.4, or 1.2 mg/kg, i.p.) increased neocortical LTP in a dose-dependent fashion. These effects could be related to the reported disruptive and facilitatory actions induced on memory formation by pretreatment with alpha(2)-adrenoceptor agonists and antagonists, respectively.


Neural Plasticity | 2008

Effect of prenatal protein malnutrition on long-term potentiation and BDNF protein expression in the rat entorhinal cortex after neocortical and hippocampal tetanization.

Alejandro Hernández; Héctor Burgos; Mauricio Mondaca; Rafael Barra; Héctor Núñez; Hernán Pérez; Rubén Soto-Moyano; Walter Sierralta; Victor Fernández; Ricardo Olivares; Luis Valladares

Reduction of the protein content from 25 to 8% casein in the diet of pregnant rats results in impaired neocortical long-term potentiation (LTP) of the offspring together with lower visuospatial memory performance. The present study was aimed to investigate whether this type of maternal malnutrition could result in modification of plastic capabilities of the entorhinal cortex (EC) in the adult progeny. Unlike normal eutrophic controls, 55–60-day-old prenatally malnourished rats were unable to develop LTP in the medial EC to tetanizing stimulation delivered to either the ipsilateral occipital cortex or the CA1 hippocampal region. Tetanizing stimulation of CA1 also failed to increase the concentration of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in the EC of malnourished rats. Impaired capacity of the EC of prenatally malnourished rats to develop LTP and to increase BDNF levels during adulthood may be an important factor contributing to deficits in learning performance having adult prenatally malnourished animals.


Neuroscience Letters | 2003

Interleukin-1β increases spinal cord wind-up activity in normal but not in monoarthritic rats

Luis Constandil; Teresa Pelissier; Rubén Soto-Moyano; Mauricio Mondaca; Hernán Sáez; Claudio Laurido; Carlos Muñoz; Nandy López; Alejandro Hernández

Cytokines produced by spinal cord glia after peripheral inflammation, infection or trauma have a relevant role in the maintenance of pain states. The effect of intrathecally administered interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) on spinal cord nociceptive transmission was studied in normal and monoarthritic rats by assessing wind-up activity in a C-fiber-mediated reflex paradigm evoked by repetitive (1 Hz) electric stimulation. Low i.t. doses of IL-1beta (0.03, 0.12, 0.5 and 2.0 ng) dose-dependently enhanced wind-up activity in normal rats, while higher doses (8.0 ng) only produced a marginal unsignificant effect. IL-1beta administration to monoarthritic rats did not significantly change wind-up scores at any dose. Adaptive changes developed in the spinal cord during chronic pain may underlie the ineffectiveness of exogenous IL-1beta to up-regulate nociceptive transmission.


Brain Research | 2004

Blockade of supraspinal 5-HT1A receptors potentiates the inhibitory effect of venlafaxine on wind-up activity in mononeuropathic rats

Fabien Marchand; Teresa Pelissier; Alain Eschalier; Denis Ardid; Abdelkrim Alloui; Rubén Soto-Moyano; Mauricio Mondaca; Claudio Laurido; Luis Constandil; Alejandro Hernández

In mononeuropathic rats submitted to a C-fiber reflex responses paradigm, repeated administration (five successive injections every half-life) of 10 mg/kg, s.c. of venlafaxine, but not of 2.5 mg/kg, s.c., a mixed monoamine reuptake inhibitor with preferential inhibitory activity in 5-HT reuptake, induced a progressive reduction of spinal wind-up. Repeated co-administration of the selective 5-HT1A receptor antagonist WAY 100,635 i.c.v. (50 microg/injection) significantly increased the effect of venlafaxine s.c., indicating that venlafaxine-induced inhibition of spinal wind-up in mononeuropathic rats is potentiated by blockade of central 5-HT1A receptors.


Frontiers in Endocrinology | 2015

Impact of Maternal Melatonin Suppression on Amount and Functionality of Brown Adipose Tissue (BAT) in the Newborn Sheep.

María Serón-Ferré; Henry Reynolds; Natalia Mendez; Mauricio Mondaca; Francisco J. Valenzuela; Renato Ebensperger; Guillermo J. Valenzuela; Emilio A. Herrera; Aníbal J. Llanos; Claudia Torres-Farfan

In human and sheep newborns, brown adipose tissue (BAT) accrued during fetal development is used for newborn thermogenesis. Here, we explored the role of maternal melatonin during gestation on the amount and functionality of BAT in the neonate. We studied BAT from six lambs gestated by ewes exposed to constant light from 63% gestation until delivery to suppress melatonin (LL), six lambs gestated by ewes exposed to LL but receiving daily oral melatonin (12 mg at 1700 h, LL + Mel) and another six control lambs gestated by ewes maintained in 12 h light:12 h dark (LD). Lambs were instrumented at 2 days of age. At 4–6 days of age, they were exposed to 24°C (thermal neutrality conditions) for 1 h, 4°C for 1 h, and 24°C for 1 h. Afterward, lambs were euthanized and BAT was dissected for mRNA measurement, histology, and ex vivo experiments. LL newborns had lower central BAT and skin temperature under thermal neutrality and at 4°C, and higher plasma norepinephrine concentration than LD newborns. In response to 4°C, they had a pronounced decrease in skin temperature and did not increase plasma glycerol. BAT weight in LL newborns was about half of that of LD newborns. Ex vivo, BAT from LL newborns showed increased basal lipolysis and did not respond to NE. In addition, expression of adipogenic/thermogenic genes (UCP1, ADBR3, PPARγ, PPARα, PGC1α, C/EBPβ, and perilipin) and of the clock genes Bmal1, Clock, and Per2 was increased. Remarkably, the effects observed in LL newborns were absent in LL + Mel newborns. Thus, our results support that maternal melatonin during gestation is important in determining amount and normal functionality of BAT in the neonate.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2006

Mild prenatal protein malnutrition increases α2C-adrenoceptor expression in the rat cerebral cortex during postnatal life

Walter Sierralta; Alejandro Hernández; Luis Valladares; Hernán Pérez; Mauricio Mondaca; Rubén Soto-Moyano

Mild reduction in the protein content in the diet of pregnant rats from 25 to 8% casein, calorically compensated by carbohydrates, does not alter body and brain weights of rat pups at birth, but results in significant changes of the concentration and release of cortical noradrenaline during postnatal life, together with impaired long-term potentiation and memory formation. Since some central noradrenergic receptors are critically involved in neuroplasticity, the present study evaluated, by utilizing immunohistochemical methods, the effect of mild prenatal protein malnutrition on the alpha 2C-adrenoceptor expression in the frontal and occipital cortices of 8- and 60-day-old rats. At day 8 of postnatal age, prenatally malnourished rats exhibited a three-fold increase of alpha 2C-adrenoceptor expression in both the frontal and the occipital cortices, as compared to well-nourished controls. At 60 days of age, prenatally malnourished rats showed normal expression levels scores of alpha 2C-adrenoceptor in the neocortex. Results suggest that overexpression of neocortical alpha 2C-adrenoceptors during early postnatal life, subsequent to mild prenatal protein malnutrition, could in part be responsible for neural and behavioral disturbances showing prenatally malnourished animals during the postnatal life.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2004

Involvement of melatonin metabolites in the long-term inhibitory effect of the hormone on rat spinal nociceptive transmission.

Mauricio Mondaca; Alejandro Hernández; Luis Valladares; Walter Sierralta; Rodrigo Noseda; Rubén Soto-Moyano

There is evidence that melatonin and its metabolites could bind to nuclear sites in neurones, suggesting that this hormone is able to exert long-term functional effects in the central nervous system via genomic mechanisms. This study was designed to investigate (i) whether systemically administered melatonin can exert long-term effects on spinal cord windup activity, and (ii) whether blockade of melatonin degradation with eserine could prevent this effect. Rats receiving melatonin (10 mg/kg ip), the same dose of melatonin plus eserine (0.5 mg/kg ip), or saline were studied. Seven days after administration of the drugs or saline, spinal windup of rats was assessed in a C-fiber reflex response paradigm. Results show that rats receiving melatonin exhibited a reduction in spinal windup activity. This was not observed in the animals receiving melatonin plus eserine or saline, suggesting a role for melatonin metabolites in long-term changes of nociceptive transmission in the rat spinal cord.

Collaboration


Dive into the Mauricio Mondaca's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alejandro Hernández

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Alejandro Hernández

SUNY Downstate Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge