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Dive into the research topics where Nicolás Cuenca is active.

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Featured researches published by Nicolás Cuenca.


Neuroscience | 2004

Regressive and reactive changes in the connectivity patterns of rod and cone pathways of P23H transgenic rat retina

Nicolás Cuenca; Isabel Pinilla; Yves Sauve; Bin Lu; Shaomei Wang; Raymond D. Lund

We have used the P23H line 1 homozygous albino rat to study how progressive photoreceptor degeneration affects rod and cone relay pathways. We examined P23H retinas at different stages of degeneration by confocal microscopy of immunostained sections and electroretinogram (ERG) recordings. By 21 days of age in the P23H rat retina, there is already substantial loss of rods and reduction in rod bipolar dendrites along with reduction of metabotropic glutamate receptor 6 (mGluR6) and rod-associated bassoon staining. The cone pathway is relatively unaffected. By 150 days, when rods are absent from much of the retina, some rod bipolars remain and dendrites of rod and cone bipolar cells form synaptic complexes associated with cones and horizontal cell processes. These complexes include foci of mGluR6 and bassoon staining; they develop further by 270 days of age. Over the course of degeneration, beginning at 21 days, bipolar axon terminals atrophy and the inner retina undergoes further changes including a reduced and disorganized AII amacrine cell population and thinning of the inner plexiform layer. Electroretinogram (ERG) results at 23 days show reductions in a-wave amplitude, in rod and cone-associated b-waves (using a double flash paradigm) and in the amplitude of oscillatory potentials (OPs). By 38 days, rod scotopic a-wave responses and OPs are lost. B-wave amplitudes decline until 150 days, at which point they are purely cone-driven and remain stable up to 250 days. The results show that during the course of photoreceptor loss in the P23H rat, there are progressive degenerative changes, particularly in the rod relay pathway, and these are reflected in the changing ERG response patterns. Later reactive changes involving condensation of cone terminals and neurotransmitter receptors associated with rod and cone bipolar dendrites and with horizontal cell processes suggest that at this stage, there are likely to be complex changes in the relay of sensory information through the retina.


Progress in Retinal and Eye Research | 2014

Cellular responses following retinal injuries and therapeutic approaches for neurodegenerative diseases.

Nicolás Cuenca; Laura Fernández-Sánchez; Laura Campello; Victoria Maneu; Pedro de la Villa; Pedro Lax; Isabel Pinilla

Retinal neurodegenerative diseases like age-related macular degeneration, glaucoma, diabetic retinopathy and retinitis pigmentosa each have a different etiology and pathogenesis. However, at the cellular and molecular level, the response to retinal injury is similar in all of them, and results in morphological and functional impairment of retinal cells. This retinal degeneration may be triggered by gene defects, increased intraocular pressure, high levels of blood glucose, other types of stress or aging, but they all frequently induce a set of cell signals that lead to well-established and similar morphological and functional changes, including controlled cell death and retinal remodeling. Interestingly, an inflammatory response, oxidative stress and activation of apoptotic pathways are common features in all these diseases. Furthermore, it is important to note the relevant role of glial cells, including astrocytes, Müller cells and microglia, because their response to injury is decisive for maintaining the health of the retina or its degeneration. Several therapeutic approaches have been developed to preserve retinal function or restore eyesight in pathological conditions. In this context, neuroprotective compounds, gene therapy, cell transplantation or artificial devices should be applied at the appropriate stage of retinal degeneration to obtain successful results. This review provides an overview of the common and distinctive features of retinal neurodegenerative diseases, including the molecular, anatomical and functional changes caused by the cellular response to damage, in order to establish appropriate treatments for these pathologies.


Journal of Neurocytology | 1990

The synaptic organization of the dopaminergic amacrine cell in the cat retina

Helga Kolb; Nicolás Cuenca; H. H. Wang; Laura Dekorver

SummaryThe dopaminergic amacrine cells of the cat retina have been stained by immunocytochemistry using an antibody to tyrosine hydroxylase (Toh). The complete population of Toh+cells has been studied by light microscopy of retinal wholemounts to evaluate morphological details of dendritic structure and branching patterns. Selected Toh+amacrine cells have been studied by serial-section electron microscopy to analyse synaptic input and output relationships. The majority of Toh+amacrine cells occur in the amacrine cell layer of the retina and have their dendrites ramifying and forming the characteristic rings in stratum 1 of the inner plexiform layer. A minority of Toh+cells have cell bodies displaced to the ganglion cell layer but their dendrites also stratify in stratum 1. All Toh+cells have some dendritic branches running in stratum 2 as well as in stratum 1, and frequently they have long ‘axon-like’ processes (500–1000 μm long) dipping down to run in stratum 5 before passing up to rejoin the major dendritic arbors in stratum 1. In addition Toh+stained processes follow blood vessels in the inner plexiform layer and in the ganglion cell layer. A population of Toh+cells found in the inferior retina appears to give rise to stained processes that pass to the outer plexiform layer and therein to run for as far as one millimeter.Electron microscopy reveals that Toh+amacrine cells are postsynaptic to amacrine cells and a few bipolar cell terminals in stratum 1 of the inner plexiform layer and are primarily presynaptic to All amacrine cell bodies and lobular appendages, and to another type of amacrine cell body and amacrine dendrites hypothesized to be the A17 amacrine cell. The Toh+dendrites in stratum 2 are presynaptic to All lobular appendages primarily. Stained ‘axon-like’ processes running in stratum 5 prove to be presynaptic to All amacrine dendrites as they approach the rod bipolar axon terminals and they may also be presynaptic to the rod bipolar terminal itself. The Toh+stained dendrites that have been followed in the outer plexiform layer run along the top of the B-type horizontal cell somata and may have small synapses upon them. The only clear synapses seen in the outer plexiform layer are from the Toh+profiles upon vesicle filled amacrine-like profiles that are in turn presynaptic to bipolar cell dendrites in the outer plexiform layer. We presume the cells postsynaptic to the Toh+dendrites in the outer plexiform layer are interplexiform cells. Finally the Toh+profiles that course along blood vessel walls and in the ganglion cell layer appear to end either against the basal lamina of the blood vessel or at intercellular channels of vesicle-laden Muller cell end-feet.


Neuroscience | 2008

Functional and structural modifications during retinal degeneration in the rd10 mouse

R. Barhoum; Gema C. Martínez-Navarrete; Silvia Corrochano; F. Germain; Laura Fernández-Sánchez; E.J. de la Rosa; P. de la Villa; Nicolás Cuenca

Mouse models of retinal degeneration are useful tools to study therapeutic approaches for patients affected by hereditary retinal dystrophies. We have studied degeneration in the rd10 mice both by immunocytochemistry and TUNEL-labeling of retinal cells, and through electrophysiological recordings. The cell degeneration in the retina of rd10 mice produced appreciable morphological changes in rod and cone cells by P20. Retinal cell death is clearly observed in the central retina and it peaked at P25 when there were 800 TUNEL-positive cells per mm(2). In the central retina, only one row of photoreceptors remained in the outer nuclear layer by P40 and there was a remarkable deterioration of bipolar cell dendrites postsynaptic to photoreceptors. The axon terminals of bipolar cells also underwent atrophy and the inner retina was subject to further changes, including a reduction and disorganization of AII amacrine cell population. Glutamate sensitivity was tested in rod bipolar cells with the single cell patch-clamp technique in slice preparations, although at P60 no significant differences were observed with age-matched controls. Thus, we conclude that rod and cone degeneration in the rd10 mouse model is followed by deterioration of their postsynaptic cells and the cells in the inner retina. However, the functional preservation of receptors for photoreceptor transmission in bipolar cells may open new therapeutic possibilities.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Early changes in synaptic connectivity following progressive photoreceptor degeneration in RCS rats

Nicolás Cuenca; Isabel Pinilla; Yves Sauve; Raymond D. Lund

The Royal College of Surgeons (RCS) rat has a retinal pigment epithelial cell defect that causes progressive loss of photoreceptors. Although it is extensively used in retinal degeneration and repair studies, how photoreceptor degeneration affects retinal circuitry has not been fully explored. This study examined the changes in synaptic connectivity between photoreceptors and their target cells using immunocytochemistry and correlated these changes with retinal function using the electroretinogram (ERG). Immunostaining with bassoon and synaptophysin (as presynaptic markers) and metabotropic glutamate receptor (mGluR6, a postsynaptic marker for ON‐bipolar dendrites) was already impaired at postnatal day (P) 21 and progressively lost with infrequent pairing of presynaptic and postsynaptic elements at P60. By P90 to P120, staining became increasingly patchy and was eventually restricted to sparsely and irregularly distributed foci in which the normal pairing of presynaptic and postsynaptic markers was lost. ERG results showed that mixed scotopic a‐waves and b‐waves were already reduced by P21 but not oscillatory potentials. While cone‐driven responses (photopic b‐wave) reached normal levels at P30, they were impaired by P60 but could still be recorded at P120, although with reduced amplitude; rod responses never reached normal amplitudes. Thus, only cone‐driven activity attained normal levels, but declined rapidly thereafter. In conclusion, the synaptic markers associated with photoreceptors and processes of bipolar and horizontal cells show abnormalities prior to significant photoreceptor loss. These changes are paralleled with the deterioration of specific aspects of ERG responsiveness with age. Besides providing information on the effects of photoreceptor dysfunction and loss on connection patterns in the retina, the work addresses the more general issue of how disorder of input neurons affects downstream circuitry.


Vision Research | 1999

Endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) is localized to Müller cells in all vertebrate retinas

Silke Haverkamp; Helga Kolb; Nicolás Cuenca

The distribution of endothelial nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity (eNOS-IR) was investigated in the retinas of all phylogenetic vertebrate classes by using a monoclonal eNOS antibody. Confocal light microscopy showed immunoreactive labeling in Müller cells of fish, frog, salamander, turtle, chicken, rat, ground squirrel, and monkey retina. In vascularized retinas (rat, monkey), astrocytes and some blood vessels were also stained. Furthermore, eNOS-IR was localized to axon terminals of turtle and fish horizontal cells. These observations are the first to show the presence of eNOS-IR in Muller glia and horizontal cell structures of the vertebrate retina.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2002

A new look at calretinin‐immunoreactive amacrine cell types in the monkey retina

Helga Kolb; Li Zhang; Laura Dekorver; Nicolás Cuenca

We have examined amacrine cells that are calretinin‐immunoreactive (‐IR) in the macaque monkey retina with the aim of classifying them into morphological and functional subtypes. There are calretinin‐IR cells in the fovea and throughout the retina. Their highest density is reached at 1.0 mm from the foveal pit (10,500 cells/mm2) and falls to 2,600/mm2 by 10 mm of eccentricity. Nearest‐neighbor statistics for the calretinin‐IR cell body distribution indicate a nonregular pattern, with a regularity index of 1.4–1.6. There is an increase or “bump” of cell density 3.5–4.0 mm from the foveal pit, corresponding to the rod photoreceptor density peak. Based on morphological differences, there appear to be three types of amacrine cell that are calretinin‐IR. To determine the types, we doubly immunolabeled retinas, from fovea to periphery, for calretinin‐IR in combination with other calcium binding proteins and inhibitory amino acid neurotransmitters. Labeling with parvalbumin and calretinin antibodies indicated that 70% of the amacrine cells were solely calretinin‐IR, and 30% contained parvalbumin‐IR as well. In the same way, 70% of the calretinin‐IR amacrine cells colocalized calbindin, but 30% were only calretinin‐IR. Among the calretinin/calbindin‐colocalized cells, there were small‐field and wide‐field types. Double labeling with antibodies to calretinin and γ‐aminobutyric acid (GABA) and to calretinin and glycine revealed the majority to be glycine‐IR, but some were GABA‐IR. The glycine‐IR population consists mainly of AII amacrine cell types, but clearly another non‐AII type is involved. The non‐AII glycine‐IR population resembles a small‐ to medium‐field diffuse type. The calretinin‐IR wide‐field type is GABAergic and corresponds to an A19 type. The central, rod‐free, fovea contains the calretinin‐IR, non‐AII glycine‐IR type and the calretinin‐IR, GABAergic type only. To learn more concerning the circuitry of the calretinin/glycine‐IR, non‐AII amacrine cell type in isolation from AII amacrine cells, we concentrated on the rod‐free fovea, where AII amacrine cells are absent. We performed a serial section electron microscopy (EM) study on four calretinin‐IR cells. They were involved with cone pathway circuitry. They got input from ON and OFF midget bipolar cells, reciprocated synapses to these bipolar cells, and provided synapses to ON‐center ganglion cells. Thus we have obtained new information on a cone pathway amacrine cell of the central monkey fovea that is involved in the midget system. J. Comp. Neurol. 453:168–184, 2002.


Vision Research | 2001

Localization of neurotransmitters and calcium binding proteins to neurons of salamander and mudpuppy retinas

Ping Deng; Nicolás Cuenca; Terry Doerr; David V. Pow; Robert F. Miller; Helga Kolb

We wished to identify the different types of retinal neurons on the basis of their content of neuroactive substances in both larval tiger salamander and mudpuppy retinas, favored species for electrophysiological investigation. Sections and wholemounts of retinas were labeled by immunocytochemical methods to demonstrate three calcium binding protein species and the common neurotransmitters, glycine, GABA and acetylcholine. Double immunostained sections and single labeled wholemount retinas were examined by confocal microscopy. Immunostaining patterns appeared to be the same in salamander and mudpuppy. Double and single cones, horizontal cells, some amacrine cells and ganglion cells were strongly calbindin-immunoreactive (IR). Calbindin-IR horizontal cells colocalized GABA. Many bipolar cells, horizontal cells, some amacrine cells and ganglion cells were strongly calretinin-IR. One type of horizontal cell and an infrequently occurring amacrine cell were parvalbumin-IR. Acetylcholine as visualized by ChAT-immunoreactivity was seen in a mirror-symmetric pair of amacrine cells that colocalized GABA and glycine. Glycine and GABA colocalized with calretinin, calbindin and occasionally with parvalbumin in amacrine cells.


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.


Experimental Eye Research | 2010

Changes in the inner and outer retinal layers after acute increase of the intraocular pressure in adult albino Swiss mice

Nicolás Cuenca; Isabel Pinilla; Laura Fernández-Sánchez; Manuel Salinas-Navarro; Luis Alarcón-Martínez; Marcelino Avilés-Trigueros; Pedro de la Villa; Jaime Miralles de Imperial; María Paz Villegas-Pérez; Manuel Vidal-Sanz

In adult albino mice the effects of increased intraocular pressure on the outer retina and its circuitry was investigated at intervals ranging 3-14 weeks. Ocular hypertension (OHT) was induced by cauterizing the vessels draining the anterior part of the mice eye, as recently reported (Salinas-Navarro et al., 2009a). Electroretinographic (ERG) responses were recorded simultaneously from both eyes and compared each other prior to and at different survival intervals of 2, 8 or 12 weeks after lasering. Animals were processed at 3, 9 or 14 weeks after lasering, and radial sections were obtained in the cryostat and further processed for immunocytochemistry using antibodies against recoverin, gamma-transducin, Protein Kinase C-alpha (PKC-alpha), calbindin or synaptophysin. The synaptic ribbons were identified using an antibody against the protein bassoon, which labels photoreceptor ribbons and nuclei were identified using TO-PRO. Laser photocoagulation of the perilimbar and episcleral veins of the left eye resulted in an increase in mean intraocular pressure to approximately over twice its baseline by 24 h that was maintained for approximately five days reaching basal levels by 1 week. ERG recordings from the different groups of mice showed their a-, b-wave and scotopic threshold response (STR) amplitudes, when compared to their contralateral fellow eye, reduced to 62%, 52% and 23% at 12 weeks after lasering. Three weeks after lasering, immunostaining with recoverin and transducin antibodies could not document any changes in the outer nuclear layer (ONL) but both ON-rod bipolar and horizontal cells had lost their dendritic processes in the outer plexiform layer (OPL). Sprouting of horizontal and bipolar cell processes were observed into the ONL. Fourteen weeks after lasering, protein kinase-C antibodies showed morphologic changes of ON-rod bipolar cells and calbindin staining showed abnormal horizontal cells and a loss of their relationship with their presynaptic input. Moreover, at this time, quantitative studies indicate significant diminutions in the number of photoreceptor synaptic ribbons/100 microm, and in the thickness of the outer nuclear and plexiform layer, when compared to their fellow eyes. Increased intraocular pressure in Swiss mice results in permanent alterations of their full field ERG responses and in changes of the inner and outer retinal circuitries.

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Pedro Lax

University of Alicante

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Helga Kolb

University of Alicante

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