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Featured researches published by Nuria T. Villagra.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2006

The PML-nuclear inclusion of human supraoptic neurons: a new compartment with SUMO-1- and ubiquitin–proteasome-associated domains

Nuria T. Villagra; Joaquín Navascués; Iñigo Casafont; J. Fernando Val-Bernal; Miguel Lafarga; Maria T. Berciano

It is well known that the cell nucleus is organized in structural and functional compartments involved in transcription, RNA processing and protein modifications such as conjugation with SUMO-1 and proteolysis. Promyelocytic leukaemia (PML) bodies are dynamic nuclear structures that concentrate PML protein, SUMO-1 and several sumoylated and non-sumoylated protein regulators of nuclear functions. PML bodies and their associated CBP has been involved in neuronal survival. By light and electron microscopy immunocytochemistry and in situ hybridization we reported the presence, in non-pathological conditions, of a large PML-nuclear inclusion (PML-NI) in human supraoptic neurons. This inclusion appears as a single nuclear structure composed of a capsule enriched in PML, SUMO-1 and CBP proteins and a central lattice of filaments immunoreactive for class III beta-tubulin, ubiquitinated proteins and proteasomes. Furthermore, the PML-NI concentrates the SUMO-conjugating enzyme E2 (UBC9). The PML-NI may be considered a nuclear factory involved in sumoylation and proteolysis via ubiquitin-proteasome system, two nuclear pathways engaged in the control of the nucleoplasmic concentration of active transcriptional regulators. Interestingly, the structural and molecular organization of the PML-NI is related to the Marinesco bodies, age-associated ubiquitinated intranuclear inclusions, and to the intranuclear rodlets enriched in class III beta-tubulin, which are nuclear structures markedly decreased in Alzheimers disease.


Neurobiology of Disease | 2004

PML bodies in reactive sensory ganglion neurons of the Guillain–Barré syndrome

Nuria T. Villagra; José Berciano; Marcos Altable; Joaquín Navascués; Iñigo Casafont; Miguel Lafarga; Maria T. Berciano

Acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (AIDP) is a type of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) characterized by primary nerve demyelination sometimes with secondary axonal degeneration. Studies on the fine structure of dorsal root ganglia in AIDP are lacking. Our aim was to investigate the cytology and nuclear organization of primary sensory neurons in AIDP with axonal injury using ultrastructural and immunohistochemical analysis. The light cytology of the L5 dorsal ganglion showed the characteristic findings of neuronal axonal reaction. The organization of chromatin, nucleolus, Cajal bodies, and nuclear pores corresponded to transcriptionally active neurons. However, the hallmark of the nuclear response to axonal injury was the formation of numerous nuclear bodies (NBs; 6.37 +/- 0.6, in the AIDP, vs. 2.53 +/- 0.2, in the control, mean +/- SDM), identified as promyelocytic leukemia (PML) bodies by the presence of the protein PML. In addition to PML protein, nuclear bodies contained SUMO-1 and the transcriptional regulators CREB-binding protein (CBP) and glucocorticoid receptor (GR). The presence of proteasome 19S was also detected in some nuclear bodies. We suggest that neuronal PML bodies could regulate the nuclear concentration of active proteins, a process mediated by protein interactions with PML and SUMO-1 proteins. In the AIDP case, the proliferation of PML bodies may result from the overexpression of some nuclear proteins due to changes in gene expression associated with axonal injury.


Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 1999

Necrosis of schwann cells during tellurium-induced primary demyelination: DNA fragmentation, reorganization of splicing machinery, and formation of intranuclear rods of actin.

Maria T. Berciano; Rosario Fernandez; Emma Pena; Ester Calle; Nuria T. Villagra; Miguel Lafarga

We present a cytological, immunocytochemical, and biochemical study of the cell death of mature myelinating Schwann cells (SCs) in the primary demyelinating neuropathy induced by tellurium (Te). Weaned rats were fed a diet containing 1.1% elemental Te. The animals were killed daily within the first week of Te diet. After 4 to 6 days of Te treatment some SCs underwent degeneration and necrosis. By electron microscopy analysis, degenerating SCs showed chromatin condensation, detachment from the nuclear envelope of condensed chromatin clumps, aggregation of interchromatin granule clusters, formation of intranuclear bundles of microfilaments, and cytoplasmic vesiculation. By confocal laser fluorescence microscopy, chromatin regions were stained with the TUNEL method for in situ labeling of DNA fragmentation and exhibited a progressive reduction of histone signal. In addition, splicing small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) factors were redistributed in a few large nuclear domains and bright foci of intranuclear actin were observed. DNA electrophoresis revealed a smear pattern of DNA fragmentation in sciatic nerve samples from Te-treated animals. Upon Te treatment, no degradation of the caspase substrates poly (ADP-ribose) polymerase and lamin B was detected by Western blots or immunocytochemistry, respectively. The peculiar structural rearrangement of the transcription and splicing machinery as well as the vesicular degeneration of the cytoplasm in degenerating SCs support an autophagic cell death of the necrotic type. Unlike the apoptosis of pre-remyelinating SCs (11), this caspase independent cell death of necrotic type involves mature pre-demyelinating SCs and eliminates SCs injured by the neurotoxic effect of Te.


Molecular and Cellular Neuroscience | 2008

Nuclear compartmentalization and dynamics of the poly(A)-binding protein nuclear 1 (PABPN1) inclusions in supraoptic neurons under physiological and osmotic stress conditions

Nuria T. Villagra; Rocio Bengoechea; José P. Vaqué; Javier Llorca; Maria T. Berciano; Miguel Lafarga

Nuclear aggregation of the expanded polyalanine tract in the poly(A)-binding protein nuclear 1 (PABPN1) is the pathological hallmark of oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy. However, wild type PABPN1 aggregates into nuclear inclusion in oxytocin-producing neurons under physiological conditions. In this study we have analyzed the nuclear organization and dynamics of PABPN1 inclusions in oxytocin-producing neurons. We demonstrated that PABPN1 inclusions represent a distinct compartment of the interchromatin region. They establish a spatial relationship with nuclear speckles, Cajal bodies and clastosomes. PABPN1 inclusions accumulate poly(A) RNA, but do not concentrate highly expressed mRNAs in oxytocin producing neurons and the mRNA-binding proteins hnRNP C, Y14 and REF. PABPN1 inclusions are dynamic structures that appear during the postnatal period and their number decrease in response to the activation of transcription. Our results support that the RNA retained in the PABPN1 inclusions is a noncoding regulatory RNA involved in some aspects of nuclear RNA metabolism.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2014

Compensatory Motor Neuron Response to Chromatolysis in the Murine hSOD1(G93A) Model of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis

Javier Riancho; Maria Ruiz-Soto; Nuria T. Villagra; José Berciano; Maria T. Berciano; Miguel Lafarga

We investigated neuronal self-defense mechanisms in a murine model of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), the transgenic hSOD1G93A, during both the asymptomatic and symptomatic stages. This is an experimental model of endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress with severe chromatolysis. As a compensatory response to translation inhibition, chromatolytic neurons tended to reorganize the protein synthesis machinery at the perinuclear region, preferentially at nuclear infolding domains enriched in nuclear pores. This organization could facilitate nucleo-cytoplasmic traffic of RNAs and proteins at translation sites. By electron microscopy analysis, we observed that the active euchromatin pattern and the reticulated nucleolar configuration of control motor neurons were preserved in ALS chromatolytic neurons. Moreover the 5′-fluorouridine (5′-FU) transcription assay, at the ultrastructural level, revealed high incorporation of the RNA precursor 5′-FU into nascent RNA. Immunogold particles of 5′-FU incorporation were distributed throughout the euchromatin and on the dense fibrillar component of the nucleolus in both control and ALS motor neurons. The high rate of rRNA transcription in ALS motor neurons could maintain ribosome biogenesis under conditions of severe dysfunction of proteostasis. Collectively, the perinuclear reorganization of protein synthesis machinery, the predominant euchromatin architecture, and the active nucleolar transcription could represent compensatory mechanisms in ALS motor neurons in response to the disturbance of ER proteostasis. In this scenario, epigenetic activation of chromatin and nucleolar transcription could have important therapeutic implications for neuroprotection in ALS and other neurodegenerative diseases. Although histone deacetylase inhibitors are currently used as therapeutic agents, we raise the untapped potential of the nucleolar transcription of ribosomal genes as an exciting new target for the therapy of some neurodegenerative diseases.


Glia | 2000

Formation of intranuclear crystalloids and proliferation of the smooth endoplasmic reticulum in schwann cells induced by tellurium treatment : Association with overexpression of HMG CoA reductase and HMG CoA synthase mrna

Maria T. Berciano; Rosario Fernandez; Emma Pena; Ester Calle; Nuria T. Villagra; José C. Rodríguez-Rey; Miguel Lafarga

Administration of tellurium (Te) in weaning rats causes a well‐established demyelinating neuropathy induced by the inhibition in myelinating Schwann cells (SC) of the synthesis of cholesterol, a major component of the myelin sheath, at the level of squalene epoxidase. We have used this experimental model of Te neuropathy to study the biogenesis and reorganization of the endomembranes of the nuclear envelope and endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in response to Te treatment by ultrastructural analysis and in situ hybridization for the detection of HMG CoA reductase and synthase mRNA, which encode key enzymes in cholesterol synthesis. The adaptive response of myelinating SC to cholesterol depletion includes cell hypertrophy, the formation of tubular invaginations of proliferating nuclear membranes giving rise to peculiar nuclear inclusions termed crystalloids, and, at the cytoplasmic level, the formation of lamellar bodies of rough ER, proliferation of the smooth ER, and overexpression of HMG CoA reductase and synthase mRNAs. The changes revert after withdrawal of Te treatment. Our results show that the biogenesis and structural organization of both endomembrane systems change dynamically upon Te‐induced cholesterol depletion, indicating that this constituent plays a critical role in the organization of nuclear envelope and ER compartments in SC. The results also suggest that the HMG CoA reductase, an integral membrane protein of ER, provides the signal for the extensive membrane assembly. While the physiological meaning of crystalloid remains to be clarified, the hypertrophy of the smooth ER may represent a cytoprotective mechanism involved in detoxification of the neurotoxic agent or its metabolic derivates. GLIA 29:246–259, 2000.


Journal of The Peripheral Nervous System | 2009

Severe Guillain-Barré syndrome: sorting out the pathological hallmark in an electrophysiological axonal case.

José Berciano; Antonio García; Nuria T. Villagra; Félix Suárez González; César Ramón; Isabel Illa; Maria T. Berciano; Miguel Lafarga

Abstract  We describe a clinicopathological study of a patient presenting with severe and electrophysiological axonal Guillain‐Barré syndrome (GBS). An 83‐year‐old man had a 2‐day history of distal acroparesthesias and ascending weakness culminating in quadriplegia, the patient dying 1 month after onset. On day 3, motor conduction velocity (MCV) and distal motor latency values were normal or minimally delayed; most F waves were present with latencies normal or barely delayed. Compound muscle action potential (CMAP) amplitudes were variably reduced. On day 10, there was reduction of CMAPs with relative preservation of MCV. On histological study, the density of myelinated fibers was normal in L5 ventral and dorsal roots, where outstanding lesions included dark fibers, scattered macrophage infiltration, and occasional images of de‐remyelination or axonal degeneration. In the fifth spinal nerve, there was widespread loss of myelinated fibers with focal areas showing almost complete fiber loss and variable fascicular combination of extensive de‐remyelination and axonal degeneration. Wallerian‐like degeneration predominated in femoral and sciatic nerves. Peripheral neuron cell bodies showed central chromatolysis. We conclude that the pathological hallmark of this electrophysiological axonal GBS case is extensive but variable de‐remyelination of proximal nerve trunks with superimposed nerve ischemia and axonal degeneration.


Journal of Neurocytology | 2004

Reorganization of nuclear compartments of type A neurons of trigeminal ganglia in response to inflammatory injury of peripheral nerve endings

Joaquín Navascués; Iñigo Casafont; Nuria T. Villagra; Miguel Lafarga; Maria T. Berciano

In this study we have taken advantage of the high nuclear responsiveness of type A sensory ganglia neurons to variations of cellular activity to investigate the reorganization and dynamics of nuclear compartments involved in transcription and RNA processing in response to neuronal injury. As experimental model we have used the inflammatory injury of the peripheral nerve endings induced by formalin injection in the areas of ophthalmic/maxillary nerve distribution. We have performed immunofluorescence and confocal laser microscopy analysis with specific antibodies for different nuclear compartments and ultrastructural analysis. The initial response to neuronal injury, within the 3 days post-injury, consisted of chromatin condensation, reduction in the expression level of acetylated histone H4, accumulation of perichromatin granules, reorganization of splicing factors in prominent nuclear speckles, reduction in the number of Cajal bodies and nucleolar alterations. These changes tended to revert by day 7 post-injury and are consistent with a transient inhibition of transcription and RNA processing. Moreover, we have observed an early and sustained expression of the transcription factor c-Jun. These results illustrate the transcription-dependent organization of nuclear compartments in type A trigeminal neurons and also support the importance of the nuclear response to axonal injury as a key component in the regenerative capacity of this neuronal population.


Archive | 2002

Reactive Astroglia in the Ataxic Form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease

Miguel Lafarga; Nuria T. Villagra; Maria T. Berciano

Transmissible spongiform encephalopathies (TSE) are sub-acute neurodegenerative disorders which include scrapie in sheep, bovine spongiform encephalopathy in cows, and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), kuru, Gerstmann-Straussler syndrome, and fatal familial insomnia in humans. The essential pathogenic component of TSE is an abnormal isoform of the prion protein designated PrPSc (for reviews and discussions see 1.) The naturally occurring, cellular prion protein, called PrPC, encoded by the Prnp gene, is expressed in neurons (2) and glia (3). PrPC is glycosilated and anchored to the plasma membrane, but little is known about its cellular function (see references in 1.) During the disease process, PrPC is converted into PrPSc in both neurons and astrocytes. The “converted” PrPSc is partly resistant to proteinase K digestion and has an altered conformational state whereby the amount α-helical structure decreases and the content of β-sheet increases (for review see 1). Prion-induced encephalopathies are characterized by intracerebral accumulation of PrPSc and deposition of PrP amyloid (for review see 1,4). The observation that Prnp knockout mice do not develop spontaneous scrapie (5) supports the view that the accumulation of PrPSc and PrP amyloid in the brain mediate neuronal toxicity in the central nervous system.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2004

Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy-like nuclear inclusions are present in normal magnocellular neurosecretory neurons of the hypothalamus

Maria T. Berciano; Nuria T. Villagra; José L. Ojeda; Joaquín Navascués; Anita Quintal Gomes; Miguel Lafarga; Maria Carmo-Fonseca

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Emma Pena

University of Cantabria

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Ester Calle

University College London

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