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Dive into the research topics where Natalina Salmaso is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalina Salmaso.


Nature Neuroscience | 2014

Leptin signaling in astrocytes regulates hypothalamic neuronal circuits and feeding

Jae Geun Kim; Shigetomo Suyama; Marco Koch; Sungho Jin; Pilar Argente-Arizón; Jesús Argente; Zhong-Wu Liu; Marcelo R. Zimmer; Jin Kwon Jeong; Klara Szigeti-Buck; Yuanqing Gao; Cristina García-Cáceres; Chun-Xia Yi; Natalina Salmaso; Flora M. Vaccarino; Julie A. Chowen; Sabrina Diano; Marcelo O. Dietrich; Matthias H. Tschöp; Tamas L. Horvath

We found that leptin receptors were expressed in hypothalamic astrocytes and that their conditional deletion led to altered glial morphology and synaptic inputs onto hypothalamic neurons involved in feeding control. Leptin-regulated feeding was diminished, whereas feeding after fasting or ghrelin administration was elevated in mice with astrocyte-specific leptin receptor deficiency. These data reveal an active role of glial cells in hypothalamic synaptic remodeling and control of feeding by leptin.


Nature Neuroscience | 2014

Neurobiology of premature brain injury.

Natalina Salmaso; Beata Jablonska; Joseph Scafidi; Flora M. Vaccarino; Vittorio Gallo

Every year in the United States, an estimated 500,000 babies are born preterm (before 37 completed weeks of gestation), and this number is rising, along with the recognition of brain injuries due to preterm delivery. A common underlying pathogenesis appears to be perinatal hypoxia induced by immature lung development, which causes injury to vulnerable neurons and glia. Abnormal growth and maturation of susceptible cell types, particularly neurons and oligodendrocytes, in preterm babies with very low birth weight is associated with decreased cerebral and cerebellar volumes and increases in cerebral ventricular size. Here we reconcile these observations with recent studies using models of perinatal hypoxia that show perturbations in the maturation and function of interneurons, oligodendrocytes and astroglia. Together, these findings suggest that the global mechanism by which perinatal hypoxia alters development is through a delay in maturation of affected cell types, including astroglia, oligodendroglia and neurons.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Hypoxia-Induced Developmental Delays of Inhibitory Interneurons Are Reversed by Environmental Enrichment in the Postnatal Mouse Forebrain

Mila Komitova; Dionysios Xenos; Natalina Salmaso; Kathy May Tran; Theresa Brand; Michael L. Schwartz; Laura R. Ment; Flora M. Vaccarino

Infants born premature experience hypoxic episodes due to immaturity of their respiratory and central nervous systems. This profoundly affects brain development and results in cognitive impairments. We used a mouse model to examine the impact of hypoxic rearing (9.5–10.5% O2) from postnatal day 3 to 11 (P3–P11) on GABAergic interneurons and the potential for environmental enrichment to ameliorate these developmental abnormalities. At P15 the numbers of cortical interneurons expressing immunohistochemically detectable levels of parvalbumin (PV), somatostatin (SST), and vasoactive intestinal peptide were decreased in hypoxic-reared mice by 59%, 32%, and 38%, respectively, compared with normoxic controls. Hypoxia also decreased total GABA content in frontal neocortex by 31%. However, GAD67-EGFP knock-in mice reared under hypoxic conditions showed no changes in total number of GAD67-EGFP+ cells and no evidence of increased interneuron death, suggesting that the total number of interneurons was not decreased, but rather, that hypoxic-rearing decreased interneuron marker expression in these cells. In adulthood, PV and SST expression levels were decreased in hypoxic-reared mice. In contrast, intensity of reelin (RLN) expression was significantly increased in adult hypoxic-reared mice compared with normoxic controls. Housing mice in an enriched environment from P21 until adulthood normalized phenotypic interneuron marker expression without affecting total interneuron numbers or leading to increased neurogenesis. Our data show that (1) hypoxia decreases PV and SST and increases RLN expression in cortical interneurons during postnatal cortical development and (2) enriched environment has the capacity to normalize the interneuron abnormalities in cortex.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Cortical Glial Fibrillary Acidic Protein-Positive Cells Generate Neurons after Perinatal Hypoxic Injury

Baoyuan Bi; Natalina Salmaso; Mila Komitova; Maria Vittoria Simonini; John Silbereis; Elise Cheng; Janice Kim; Suzannah Luft; Laura R. Ment; Tamas L. Horvath; Michael L. Schwartz; Flora M. Vaccarino

Glial fibrillary acidic protein-positive (GFAP+) cells give rise to new neurons in the neurogenic niches; whether they are able to generate neurons in the cortical parenchyma is not known. Here, we use genetic fate mapping to examine the progeny of GFAP+ cells after postnatal hypoxia, a model for the brain injury observed in premature children. After hypoxia, immature cortical astroglia underwent a shift toward neuronal fate and generated cortical excitatory neurons that appeared synaptically integrated into the circuitry. Fate-mapped cortical GFAP+ cells derived ex vivo from hypoxic, but not normoxic, mice were able to form pluripotent, long-term self-renewing neurospheres. Similarly, exposure to low oxygen conditions in vitro induced stem-cell-like potential in immature cortical GFAP+ cells. Our data support the conclusion that hypoxia promotes pluripotency in GFAP+ cells in the cortical parenchyma. Such plasticity possibly explains the cognitive recovery found in some preterm children.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Environmental Enrichment Increases the GFAP+ Stem Cell Pool and Reverses Hypoxia-Induced Cognitive Deficits in Juvenile Mice

Natalina Salmaso; John Silbereis; Mila Komitova; Patrick Mitchell; Katherine E Chapman; Laura R. Ment; Michael L. Schwartz; Flora M. Vaccarino

Premature children born with very low birth weight (VLBW) can suffer chronic hypoxic injury as a consequence of abnormal lung development and cardiovascular abnormalities, often leading to grave neurological and behavioral consequences. Emerging evidence suggests that environmental enrichment improves outcome in animal models of adult brain injury and disease; however, little is known about the impact of environmental enrichment following developmental brain injury. Intriguingly, data on socio-demographic factors from longitudinal studies that examined a number of VLBW cohorts suggest that early environment has a substantial impact on neurological and behavioral outcomes. In the current study, we demonstrate that environmental enrichment significantly enhances behavioral and neurobiological recovery from perinatal hypoxic injury. Using a genetic fate-mapping model that allows us to trace the progeny of GFAP+ astroglial cells, we show that hypoxic injury increases the proportion of astroglial cells that attain a neuronal fate. In contrast, environmental enrichment increases the stem cell pool, both through increased stem cell proliferation and stem cell survival. In mice subjected to hypoxia and subsequent enrichment there is an additive effect of both conditions on hippocampal neurogenesis from astroglia, resulting in a robust increase in the number of neurons arising from GFAP+ cells by the time these mice reach full adulthood.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

Steroid hormones and maternal experience interact to induce glial plasticity in the cingulate cortex.

Natalina Salmaso; J. Nadeau; Barbara Woodside

Neocortical plasticity is not usually associated with changes in reproductive function. However, we have shown a six to 10‐fold increase in the number of astrocytes labeled with glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and astrocytic basic fibroblast growth factor or FGF‐2 (bFGF) in the cingulate cortex area 2 (Cg2) in postpartum rats, indicative of changes in connectivity in this area. In the present studies, we investigated the necessary and sufficient stimuli for these changes to occur. We show that 3 h of maternal experience combined with a hormonal treatment that mimics late pregnancy induces the astrocytic changes in Cg2 in virgin rats. The extent of these changes was similar to those of postpartum females. Sensitized virgin females did not show any astrocytic changes after 3 h of maternal behavior, suggesting that a similar amount of maternal experience alone is not sufficient to increase astrocytic bFGF‐ and GFAP‐immunoreactivity in Cg2. Consistent with these data, eliminating early maternal experience by removing pups immediately postpartum abolishes the increased bFGF and GFAP protein expression in the cingulate cortex. These results suggest that maternal experience and hormonal state interact to produce astrocytic remodeling in the Cg2. The current results are consistent with a role for the cingulate cortex in maternal responsivity as suggested by early lesion studies in rats and more recent imaging studies in humans.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Pregnancy and Maternal Behavior Induce Changes in Glia, Glutamate and Its Metabolism within the Cingulate Cortex

Natalina Salmaso; Marie-Pierre Cossette; Barbara Woodside

An upregulation of the astrocytic proteins GFAP and bFGF within area 2 of the cingulate cortex (Cg2) occurs within 3 hours of parturition in rats. These changes are the result of an interaction between hormonal state and maternal experience and are associated with increased dendritic spine density in this area. Here, we examined whether this upregulation of astrocytic proteins generalized to other glial markers and, in particular those associated with glutamate metabolism. We chose glial markers commonly used to reflect different aspects of glial function: vimentin, like GFAP, is a marker of intermediate filaments; glutamine synthetase (GS), and S-100beta, are used as markers for mature astrocytes and GS has also been used as a specific marker for glutamatergic enzymatic activity. In addition, we examined levels of proteins associated with glutamine synthetase, glutamate, glutamine and two excitatory amino acid transporters found in astrocytes, glt-1 and glast. S100beta immunoreactivity did not vary with reproductive state in either Cg2 or MPOA suggesting no change in the number of mature astrocytes across these conditions. Vimentin-ir did not differ across groups in Cg2, but expression of this protein decreased from Day 1 postpartum onwards in the MPOA. By contrast, GS-ir was increased within 24 h postpartum in Cg2 but not MPOA and similarly to GFAP and bFGF this upregulation of GS resulted from an interaction between hormonal state and maternal experience. Within Cg2, upregulation of GS was not accompanied by changes in the astrocytic glutamatergic transporters, glt-1 and glast, however, an increase in both glutamate and glutamine proteins were observed within the Cg2 of postpartum animals. Together, these changes suggest postpartum upregulation of glutamatergic activity and metabolism within Cg2 that is stimulated by pregnancy hormones and maternal experience.


Hormones and Behavior | 2006

Upregulation of astrocytic basic fibroblast growth factor in the cingulate cortex of lactating rats: Time course and role of suckling stimulation

Natalina Salmaso; Barbara Woodside

Previous work from our laboratory has shown that there is a much higher level of bFGF and GFAP immunoreactivity in area 2 of the cingulate cortex (Cg2) of rats on day 16 of lactation than in cycling or late pregnant females. To examine the time course of this change, in the first of the current studies, we compared bFGF and GFAP immunoreactivity in the brains of lactating females on postpartum day 4 (PP4), day 10 (PP10), day 16 (PP16), and day 24 (PP24) with that of cycling and ovariectomized (OVX) females. In the second study, we investigated whether the maintenance of these changes in bFGF and GFAP depended on suckling stimulation by removing litters on day 1 or day 16 postpartum and examining the brains of the dams on day 4 (Pr4) or day 24 (Pr24) postpartum, respectively. bFGF and GFAP immunoreactivity within Cg2 and the medial preoptic area (MPOA) were measured. In both experiments astrocytic bFGF and GFAP surface density in the Cg2 varied significantly across groups. All postpartum rats, regardless of stage of lactation or presence of the litter, had significantly higher levels of bFGF and GFAP immunoreactivity than cycling animals. Thus, the maintenance of this upregulation in bFGF and GFAP immunoreactivity does not depend on suckling stimulation. Consistent with our previous report, astrocytic bFGF was also elevated in the MPOA of PP16 animals. These data suggest a robust, long-lasting, postpartum change in bFGF and GFAP immunoreactivity in Cg2 and a role for this area of the cortex in the physiological and behavioral adaptations that accompany reproductive experience.


Neuroscience | 2005

Differential effects of reproductive and hormonal state on basic fibroblast growth factor and glial fibrillary acid protein immunoreactivity in the hypothalamus and cingulate cortex of female rats

Natalina Salmaso; N. Popeski; L.A. Peronace; Barbara Woodside

Morphological changes in astrocytes occur in a number of brain regions including the hypothalamus and hippocampal regions as a function of hormonal and reproductive state. Because basic fibroblast growth factor has been shown to play an important role in morphological changes in astrocytes, we investigated whether basic fibroblast growth factor immunoreactivity would also be influenced by reproductive state and circulating gonadal steroids. To do this we compared astrocytic basic fibroblast growth factor and glial fibrillary acid protein immunoreactivity in hypothalamic nuclei and the cingulate cortex, area 2 among groups of cycling, late pregnant and lactating rats as well as in ovariectomized and ovariectomized hormone-replaced females. Significant differences in both basic fibroblast growth factor and glial fibrillary acid protein immunoreactivity were observed across groups in the supraoptic nucleus, parvocellular paraventricular nucleus, medial preoptic area of the hypothalamus and cingulate cortex 2. The pattern of change in basic fibroblast growth factor and glial fibrillary acid protein immunoreactivity varied across regions both in direction and magnitude. For example, although in the supraoptic nucleus ovariectomized rats had lower levels of basic fibroblast growth factor-ir than cycling females, this pattern was reversed within cingulate cortex. Overall the results of this study suggest that reproductive and hormonal states are associated with robust changes in basic fibroblast growth factor and glial fibrillary acid protein immunoreactivity in a number of brain areas but that the changes observed vary in magnitude as well as direction from one brain region to another.


Clinics in Perinatology | 2014

NEUROGENESIS AND MATURATION IN NEONATAL BRAIN INJURY

Natalina Salmaso; Simone Tomasi; Flora M. Vaccarino

The incidence of preterm birth is on the rise. The outcome of premature birth can vary widely, spanning completely normal development to severe neurologic deficits, with most children showing mild to moderate cognitive delay and increased incidence of neuropsychiatric conditions such as anxiety, attention deficit hyperactivity, and autism spectrum disorders. Several animal models have been employed to study the consequences of prematurity, one of the most promising being chronic perinatal hypoxia in mouse, which recapitulates the cognitive impairments, partial recovery over time and enhanced recovery with environmental enrichment.

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