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Dive into the research topics where Natale Belluardo is active.

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Featured researches published by Natale Belluardo.


Brain Research | 2000

Expression of connexin36 in the adult and developing rat brain.

Natale Belluardo; Giuseppa Mudò; Angela Trovato-Salinaro; Sabine Le Gurun; Anne Charollais; Véronique Serre-Beinier; Giuseppe Amato; Jacques-Antoine Haefliger; Paolo Meda; D. F. Condorelli

The distribution of connexin36 (Cx36) in the adult rat brain and retina has been analysed at the protein (immunofluorescence) and mRNA (in situ hybridization) level. Cx36 immunoreactivity, consisting primarily of round or elongated puncta, is highly enriched in specific brain regions (inferior olive and the olfactory bulb), in the retina, in the anterior pituitary and in the pineal gland, in agreement with the high levels of Cx36 mRNA in the same regions. A lower density of immunoreactive puncta can be observed in several brain regions, where only scattered subpopulations of cells express Cx36 mRNA. By combining in situ hybridization for Cx36 mRNA with immunohistochemistry for a general neuronal marker (NeuN), we found that neuronal cells are responsible for the expression of Cx36 mRNA in inferior olive, cerebellum, striatum, hippocampus and cerebral cortex. Cx36 mRNA was also demonstrated in parvalbumin-containing GABAergic interneurons of cerebral cortex, striatum, hippocampus and cerebellar cortex. Analysis of developing brain further revealed that Cx36 reaches a peak of expression in the first two weeks of postnatal life, and decreases sharply during the third week. Moreover, in these early stages of postnatal development Cx36 is detectable in neuronal populations that are devoid of Cx36 mRNA at the adult stage. The developmental changes of Cx36 expression suggest a participation of this connexin in the extensive interneuronal coupling which takes place in several regions of the early postnatal brain.


Brain Research Reviews | 2000

Expression of Cx36 in mammalian neurons.

D. F. Condorelli; Natale Belluardo; Angela Trovato-Salinaro; Giuseppa Mudò

Cx36 is the first mammalian member of a novel subgroup of the connexin family, characterized by a long cytoplasmic loop, a peculiar gene structure and a preferential expression in cell types of neural origin. In the present review we summarize the evidence in favour of its predominant expression in neuronal cells in the mammalian central nervous system, such as results from experiments with specific neurotoxins and co-localization of Cx36 mRNA and a neuronal marker. We also report a detailed description of Cx36 mRNA distribution in the rat and human central nervous system by in situ hybridization and, for each brain region, we correlate the novel findings with previous morphological or functional demonstrations of neuronal gap junctions in the same area.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress Inhibition Protects against Excitotoxic Neuronal Injury in the Rat Brain

Anna-Leena Sokka; Noora Putkonen; Giuseppa Mudò; Evgeny Pryazhnikov; Sami Reijonen; Leonard Khiroug; Natale Belluardo; Dan Lindholm; Laura Korhonen

Elevated brain glutamate with activation of neuronal glutamate receptors accompanies neurological disorders, such as epilepsy and brain trauma. However, the mechanisms by which excitotoxicity triggers neuronal injury are not fully understood. We have studied the glutamate receptor agonist kainic acid (KA) inducing seizures and excitotoxic cell death. KA caused the disintegration of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) membrane in hippocampal neurons and ER stress with the activation of the ER proteins Bip, Chop, and caspase-12. Salubrinal, inhibiting eIF2α (eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 subunit α) dephosphorylation, significantly reduced KA-induced ER stress and neuronal death in vivo and in vitro. KA-induced rise in intracellular calcium was not affected by Salubrinal. The results show that ER responses are essential parts of excitotoxicity mediated by glutamate receptor activation and that Salubrinal decreases neuronal death in vivo. Inhibition of ER stress by small molecular compounds may be beneficial for treatment of various neuronal injuries and brain disorders.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2000

Central nicotinic receptors, neurotrophic factors and neuroprotection

Natale Belluardo; Giuseppa Mudò; Mariann Blum; Kjell Fuxe

The multiple combinations of nAChR subunits identified in central nervous structures possess distinct pharmacological and physiological properties. A growing number of data have shown that compounds interacting with neuronal nAChRs have, both in vivo and in vitro, the potential to be neuroprotective and that treatment with nAChR agonists elicit long-lasting improving of cognitive performance in a variety of behavioural tests in rats, monkeys and humans. Epidemiological and clinical studies suggested also a potential neuroprotective/trophic role of (-)-nicotine in neurodegenerative disease, such as Alzheimers and Parkinsons disease. Taken together experimental and clinical data largely indicate a neuroprotective/trophic role of nAChR activation involving mainly alpha7 and alpha4beta2 nAChR subtypes, as evidenced using selective nAChR antagonists, and by potent nAChR agonists recently found displaying efficacy and/or larger selective affinities than (-)-nicotine for neuronal nAChR subtypes. A neurotrophic factor gene regulation by nAChR signalling has been taken into consideration as possible mechanism involved in neuroprotective/trophic effects by nAChR activation and has evidenced an involvement of the fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2) gene as a target of nAChR signalling. These findings suggested that FGF-2 could be involved, according to the FGF-2 neurotrophic functions, in nAChR mechanisms mediating the neuronal survival, trophism and plasticity.


Brain Research Reviews | 2007

From the Golgi–Cajal mapping to the transmitter-based characterization of the neuronal networks leading to two modes of brain communication: Wiring and volume transmission ☆

Kjell Fuxe; Annica Dahlström; Malin Höistad; Daniel Marcellino; Anders Jansson; Alicia Rivera; Zaida Díaz-Cabiale; Kirsten X. Jacobsen; Barbro Tinner-Staines; Beth Hagman; Giuseppina Leo; William A. Staines; Diego Guidolin; Jan Kehr; Susanna Genedani; Natale Belluardo; Luigi F. Agnati

After Golgi-Cajal mapped neural circuits, the discovery and mapping of the central monoamine neurons opened up for a new understanding of interneuronal communication by indicating that another form of communication exists. For instance, it was found that dopamine may be released as a prolactin inhibitory factor from the median eminence, indicating an alternative mode of dopamine communication in the brain. Subsequently, the analysis of the locus coeruleus noradrenaline neurons demonstrated a novel type of lower brainstem neuron that monosynaptically and globally innervated the entire CNS. Furthermore, the ascending raphe serotonin neuron systems were found to globally innervate the forebrain with few synapses, and where deficits in serotonergic function appeared to play a major role in depression. We propose that serotonin reuptake inhibitors may produce antidepressant effects through increasing serotonergic neurotrophism in serotonin nerve cells and their targets by transactivation of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTK), involving direct or indirect receptor/RTK interactions. Early chemical neuroanatomical work on the monoamine neurons, involving primitive nervous systems and analysis of peptide neurons, indicated the existence of alternative modes of communication apart from synaptic transmission. In 1986, Agnati and Fuxe introduced the theory of two main types of intercellular communication in the brain: wiring and volume transmission (WT and VT). Synchronization of phasic activity in the monoamine cell clusters through electrotonic coupling and synaptic transmission (WT) enables optimal VT of monoamines in the target regions. Experimental work suggests an integration of WT and VT signals via receptor-receptor interactions, and a new theory of receptor-connexin interactions in electrical and mixed synapses is introduced. Consequently, a new model of brain function must be built, in which communication includes both WT and VT and receptor-receptor interactions in the integration of signals. This will lead to the unified execution of information handling and trophism for optimal brain function and survival.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2012

Transgenic expression and activation of PGC-1α protect dopaminergic neurons in the MPTP mouse model of Parkinson’s disease

Giuseppa Mudò; Johanna Mäkelä; Valentina Di Liberto; Timofey V. Tselykh; Melania Olivieri; Petteri Piepponen; Ove Eriksson; Annika Mälkiä; Alessandra Bonomo; Minna Kairisalo; J.A. Aguirre; Laura Korhonen; Natale Belluardo; Dan Lindholm

Mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress occur in Parkinson’s disease (PD), but little is known about the molecular mechanisms controlling these events. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma coactivator-1α (PGC-1α) is a transcriptional coactivator that is a master regulator of oxidative stress and mitochondrial metabolism. We show here that transgenic mice overexpressing PGC-1α in dopaminergic neurons are resistant against cell degeneration induced by the neurotoxin MPTP. The increase in neuronal viability was accompanied by elevated levels of mitochondrial antioxidants SOD2 and Trx2 in the substantia nigra of transgenic mice. PGC-1α overexpression also protected against MPTP-induced striatal loss of dopamine, and mitochondria from PGC-1α transgenic mice showed an increased respiratory control ratio compared with wild-type animals. To modulate PGC-1α, we employed the small molecular compound, resveratrol (RSV) that protected dopaminergic neurons against the MPTP-induced cell degeneration almost to the same extent as after PGC-1α overexpression. As studied in vitro, RSV activated PGC-1α in dopaminergic SN4741 cells via the deacetylase SIRT1, and enhanced PGC-1α gene transcription with increases in SOD2 and Trx2. Taken together, the results reveal an important function of PGC-1α in dopaminergic neurons to combat oxidative stress and increase neuronal viability. RSV and other compounds acting via SIRT1/PGC-1α may prove useful as neuroprotective agents in PD and possibly in other neurological disorders.


Journal of Neural Transmission | 2009

The FGF-2/FGFRs neurotrophic system promotes neurogenesis in the adult brain

Giuseppa Mudò; Alessandra Bonomo; V. Di Liberto; Monica Frinchi; Kjell Fuxe; Natale Belluardo

Neurogenesis occurs in two regions of the adult brain, namely, the subventricular zone (SVZ) throughout the wall of the lateral ventricle and the subgranular zone (SGZ) of the dentate gyrus (DG) in hippocampal formation. Adult neurogenesis requires several neurotrophic factors to sustain and regulate the proliferation and differentiation of the adult stem cell population. In the present review, we examine the cellular and functional aspects of a trophic system mediated by fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) and its receptors (FGFRs) related to neurogenesis in the SVZ and SGZ of the adult rat brain. In the SVZ, FGF-2 is expressed in GFAP-positive cells of SVZ but is not present in proliferating precursor cells, which instead express FGFR-1 and FGFR-2, but not FGFR-3 mRNA, although expressed in the SVZ, and FGFR-4. Therefore, it seems that in the SVZ FGF-2 may be released by GFAP-positive cells, different from the precursor cell lineage, and via volume transmission it reaches the proliferating precursor cells. FGFR-1 mRNA is also expressed in the SGZ and is localized in BrdU-labeled precursor cells, whereas FGFR-2 and FGFR-3 mRNA, although expressed in the SGZ, are not located within proliferating precursor cells. An aged-related decline of proliferating precursor cells in the SVZ and DG of old rats has been well documented, and there is the suggestion that in part it could be the consequence of alterations in growth factor expression levels. Thus, the old precursors may respond to growth factors, suggesting that during aging the basic components for neuronal precursor cell proliferation are retained and the capacity to increase neurogenesis after appropriate stimulation is still preserved. In conclusion, the trophic system mediated by FGF-2 and its receptors contributes to create an important micro-environmental niche that promotes neurogenesis in the adult and aged brain.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2003

Cellular expression of connexins in the rat brain: neuronal localization, effects of kainate‐induced seizures and expression in apoptotic neuronal cells

D. F. Condorelli; Angela Trovato-Salinaro; Giuseppa Mudò; Melita B. Mirone; Natale Belluardo

The identification of connexins (Cxs) expressed in neuronal cells represents a crucial step for understanding the direct communication between neurons and between neuron and glia. In the present work, using a double‐labelling method combining in situ hybridization for Cx mRNAs with immunohistochemical detection for neuronal markers, we provide evidence that, among cerebral connexins (Cx26, Cx32, Cx36, Cx37, Cx40, Cx43, Cx45 and Cx47), only Cx45 and Cx36 mRNAs are localized in neuronal cells in both developing and adult rat brain. In order to establish whether connexin expression is influenced in vivo by abnormal neuronal activity, we examined the short‐term effects of kainate‐induced seizures. The results revealed an unexpected expression of Cx26 and Cx45 mRNA in neuronal cells undergoing apoptotic cell death in the CA3–CA4, in the hilus of the hippocampus and in other brain regions involved in seizure‐induced lesion. However, the expression of Cx26 and Cx45 mRNAs was not associated with detectable expression of corresponding proteins as evaluated by immunohistochemistry with specific antibodies. Moreover, in the same brain regions Cx32 and Cx43 were up‐regulated in non‐neruronal cells whereas the neuronal Cx36 was down‐regulated. Taken together the present results provide novel information regarding the specific subpopulation of neurons expressing Cx45 and raise the question of the meaning of connexin mRNA expression in the neuronal apoptotic process.


Journal of Neuroscience Research | 1999

Structure, chromosomal localization, and brain expression of human Cx36 gene

Natale Belluardo; Angela Trovato-Salinaro; Giuseppa Mudò; Y.L. Hurd; D. F. Condorelli

Rat connexin‐36 (Cx36) is the first gap junction protein shown to be expressed predominantly in neuronal cells of the mammalian central nervous system. As a prerequisite for studies devoted to the investigation of the possible role of this connexin in human neurological diseases, we report the cloning and sequencing of the human Cx36 gene, its chromosomal localization, and its pattern of expression in the human brain analyzed by radioactive in situ hybridization. The determination of the human gene sequence revealed that the coding sequence of Cx36 is highly conserved (98% identity at the protein level with the mouse and rat Cx36 and 80% with the ortholog perch and skate Cx35), and that the gene structure is that typical of the Cx35/36 subgroup observed in the other species (presence of a single intron located within the coding region, 71 bp after the translation initiation site). The distribution of Cx36 in several regions of the human central nervous system is similar to that previously observed in rat brain. The most intense signal among the cerebral areas examined by in situ hybridization was observed in the inferior olivary complex, both in principal and accessory nuclei. A moderate labeling was also observed in several myelencephalic nuclei, in specific cells of the the cerebellar cortex, in a relatively large subpopulation of cells in the cerebral cortex, in the hilus of the dentate gyrus, and in the strata radiatum and oriens of hippocampal subfields. Moreover, labeled cells were revealed in all the lamina of the spinal cord gray matter. The chromosomal localization of the human Cx36 gene was determined by fluorescence in situ hybridization. The results allowed assignment of the gene to band 15q14, thus making it a possible candidate gene for a form of familial epilepsy previously linked to the same chromosomal band. The knowledge of the human Cx36 gene sequence, of its chromosomal localization, and of its pattern of expression opens new avenues for the analysis of its possible involvement in human genetic and acquired neuropathology. J. Neurosci. Res. 57:740–752, 1999.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2003

Transplantation of prodrug-converting neural progenitor cells for brain tumor therapy

Vincenza Barresi; Natale Belluardo; Simonetta Sipione; Giuseppa Mudò; D. F. Condorelli

Since neural progenitor cells can engraft stably into brain tumors and differentiate along the neuronal and glial line, we tested the hypothesis that transplanted cytosine deaminase (CD)-expressing ST14A cells (an immortalized neural progenitor cell line) can convert locally 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) into 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and produce a regression of glioma tumors. ST14A, retrovirally transduced with the E. coli CD gene, showed a strong bystander effect on glioma cells as assessed by in vitro assay. Intracerebral injection of C6 glioma cells generated a rapidly growing tumoral mass. DiI prelabeled ST14A, coinjected into the rat brain with C6 glioma cells, survived in the tumoral mass up to 10 days and their number was not affected by in vivo 5-FC treatment. In contrast, a significant decrease of the glioma tumoral mass (−50%) was observed in 5-FC-treated rats. 5-FC had no effect on the tumor in the absence of CD-expressing ST14A cells. Our results support the feasibility of systems based on intratumoral transplantation of prodrug-converting cells for brain tumor therapy.

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G Mudò

University of Palermo

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