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Featured researches published by P Matteucci.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Maternal Exposure to Low Levels of Corticosterone during Lactation Protects the Adult Offspring against Ischemic Brain Damage

Paola Casolini; Maria Rosaria Domenici; Carlo Cinque; Giovanni Sebastiano Alemà; Valentina Chiodi; Mariangela Galluzzo; Marco Musumeci; Jérôme Mairesse; Anna Rita Zuena; P Matteucci; Giuseppe Marano; Stefania Maccari; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Assia Catalani

A growing body of evidence underscores the importance of early life events as predictors of health in adulthood. Abnormalities in maternal care or other forms of early postnatal stress induce long-term changes in behavior and influence the vulnerability to illnesses throughout life. Some of these changes may be produced by the activation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis, which is invariably associated with stress. We used a model in which neonate rats are fed by mothers drinking water supplemented with 0.2 mg/ml corticosterone, the main glucocorticoid hormone in rodents. Plasma corticosterone levels increased in the dams to an extent similar to that induced by a mild stress. Corticosterone-treated dams also showed an increase in maternal care. Remarkably, adult rats that had been nursed by corticosterone-treated mothers were protected against neuronal damage and cognitive impairment produced by transient global brain ischemia. Neuroprotection was associated with a reduced HPA response to ischemia and was primarily decreased when corticosterone was injected at a dose that eliminated any difference in endogenous corticosterone levels between rats raised by mothers supplemented with corticosterone and their matched controls. These data suggest that an increased maternal care protects the offspring against ischemic neuronal damage and that at least a component of neuroprotection is mediated by a reduced response of the HPA axis to ischemia.


Toxicology Letters | 2010

Long-term effects of developmental exposure to low doses of PCB 126 and methylmercury

Annabella Vitalone; Assia Catalani; Carlo Cinque; Vittorio Fattori; P Matteucci; Anna Rita Zuena; Lucio G. Costa

Methylmercury (MeHg) and polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) are food contaminants often found in fish. Experimental and epidemiological studies indicate that both PCBs and MeHg are developmental neurotoxicants, and some reports suggest that they may cause additive and/or synergistic neurotoxicity. We had previously investigated the effects of exposure to low doses of MeHg (0.5 mg/kg/day in drinking water) and PCB 126 (100 ng/kg/day in food) alone or in combination, from gestational day 7 to post-partum day 21, on neurobehavioral development in Wistar rats. The main finding was hyperactivity in male rats exposed to PCB 126, and in female animals exposed to PCB 126+MeHg at 4 months of age (Vitalone et al., 2008). Since effects caused by developmental exposure may be exacerbated as the animal ages, aim of the present study was to investigate behavioral effects of the same developmental exposure to PCB 126 and/or MeHg up to the age of 20 months. Results indicate that aging did not enhance the behavioral effects of early exposures; however, behavioral alterations found in the first months of life in male rats exposed to PCB 126, or in female rats exposed to PCB 126+MeHg, were persistent. Furthermore, an additional effect (increased body weight) was unmasked in adulthood in male rats exposed to PCB 126. These results indicate that developmental exposure to a low, environmentally relevant dose of PCB 126 causes long-lasting hyperactivity in male rats, and a significant increase in body weight.


Environmental Toxicology and Pharmacology | 2008

Neurobehavioral assessment of rats exposed to low doses of PCB126 and methyl mercury during development

Annabella Vitalone; Assia Catalani; Valentina Chiodi; Carlo Cinque; Vittorio Fattori; Matteo Goldoni; P Matteucci; Diana Poli; Anna Rita Zuena; Lucio G. Costa

Epidemiological and laboratory studies have suggested that polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) and methyl mercury (MeHg) may have additive or synergistic effects on CNS function. Aim of this study was to characterize the effects of exposure to low levels of MeHg (0.5mg/kgday in drinking water) and PCB126 (100ng/kgday in food), alone and in combination, on neurobehavioral development in Wistar rats. Dams were treated from gestational day 7 to post-natal day (PND) 21. Animals were tested for developmental landmarks and reflexes (PND1-21), attention deficits (PND40), locomotor activity (PND30, 110), spatial learning (PND75), coordination and balance (PND90), object discrimination (PND80), anxiety (PND100), and conditioned learning (PND110). Parameters related to pregnancy, sex ratio at birth, and physical development (at weaning) did not differ among groups, though PCB126 decreased number of pups at birth. A slight delay in negative geotaxis was found in female rats in all treatment groups. No significant effects were seen in attention, coordination and balance, object discrimination, and spatial and conditioned learning. Increased motor activity was present in PCB126-treated male and in MeHg+PCB-treated female rats in the elevated plus maze test, and in PCB126-treated male rats in the open field test (PND110). The results do not support the hypothesis that co-exposure to MeHg and PCB126 results in additive or synergistic effects. This finding is in agreement with more recent in vitro and in vivo studies.


Archive | 2006

Differential long term consequences of a restraint prenatal stress on hippocampal neurogenesis in male and female adult rats.

Roberto Gradini; Giovanni Sebastiano Alemà; Paola Casolini; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Carlo Cinque; Stefania Maccari; Jérôme Mairesse; P Matteucci; Sara Morley-Fletcher; Anna Rita Zuena; Valentina Chiodi; Assia Catalani


Archive | 2006

Early-life glucocorticoid exposure protects the adult brain against ischemic damage.

Giovanni Sebastiano Alemà; Paola Casolini; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Carlo Cinque; Marco Musumeci; Maria Rosaria Domenici; P Matteucci; Stefania Maccari; Assia Catalani; Mariangela Galluzzo; Valentina Chiodi; Anna Rita Zuena


Archive | 2005

Neuroprotection after transient global ischemia in rats neonatally exposed to low doses of corticosterone.

Giovanni Sebastiano Alemà; Paola Casolini; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Marco Musumeci; P Popoli; Assia Catalani; P Matteucci; Stefania Maccari; Carlo Cinque; Ar Zuena; Albedi Malchiodi; Domenici; Mariangela Galluzzo; Valentina Chiodi; A Giacomi


Archive | 2005

Neonatal exposure to low doses of corticosterone confers neuroprotection in a rat model of transient global ischemia.

Giovanni Sebastiano Alemà; Paola Casolini; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Marco Musumeci; P Popoli; Maria Rosaria Domenici; P Matteucci; Stefania Maccari; V Fattori; Assia Catalani; Carlo Cinque; Mariangela Galluzzo; Valentina Chiodi; Anna Rita Zuena; A Giacomi


Archive | 2005

Long term consequences of a restraint prenatal stress on hippocampal brain-derived neurotrophic factor and metabotropic receptors.

Giovanni Sebastiano Alemà; Paola Casolini; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Carlo Cinque; Stefania Maccari; P Matteucci; Jérôme Mairesse; Sara Morley-Fletcher; Odile Viltart; Anna Rita Zuena; Assia Catalani; A Giacomi


Archive | 2004

Altered behavior and reduced activity of metabotropic glutamate receptors in rats exposed to neonatal anoxia.

Paola Casolini; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Viola G La; Assia Catalani; P Matteucci; Carlo Cinque; A Adriani; Anna Rita Zuena; A Giacomi


Behavioural Pharmacology | 2004

Neonatal anoxia: effects on behavior and glutamate receptors in rats.

Paola Casolini; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Carlo Cinque; W Adriani; G Laviola; Assia Catalani; P Matteucci; Anna Rita Zuena

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Assia Catalani

Sapienza University of Rome

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Carlo Cinque

Sapienza University of Rome

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Anna Rita Zuena

Sapienza University of Rome

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Valentina Chiodi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Marco Musumeci

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Mariangela Galluzzo

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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