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Dive into the research topics where Paolo F. Fabene is active.

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Featured researches published by Paolo F. Fabene.


Nature Medicine | 2008

A role for leukocyte-endothelial adhesion mechanisms in epilepsy

Paolo F. Fabene; Graciela Navarro Mora; Marianna Martinello; Barbara Rossi; Flavia Merigo; Linda Ottoboni; Simona Bach; Stefano Angiari; Donatella Benati; Asmaa Chakir; Lara Zanetti; Federica Schio; Antonio Osculati; Pasquina Marzola; Elena Nicolato; Jonathon W. Homeister; Lijun Xia; John B. Lowe; Rodger P. McEver; Francesco Osculati; Andrea Sbarbati; Eugene C. Butcher; Gabriela Constantin

The mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis of epilepsy, a chronic neurological disorder that affects approximately one percent of the world population, are not well understood. Using a mouse model of epilepsy, we show that seizures induce elevated expression of vascular cell adhesion molecules and enhanced leukocyte rolling and arrest in brain vessels mediated by the leukocyte mucin P-selectin glycoprotein ligand-1 (PSGL-1, encoded by Selplg) and leukocyte integrins α4β1 and αLβ2. Inhibition of leukocyte-vascular interactions, either with blocking antibodies or by genetically interfering with PSGL-1 function in mice, markedly reduced seizures. Treatment with blocking antibodies after acute seizures prevented the development of epilepsy. Neutrophil depletion also inhibited acute seizure induction and chronic spontaneous recurrent seizures. Blood-brain barrier (BBB) leakage, which is known to enhance neuronal excitability, was induced by acute seizure activity but was prevented by blockade of leukocyte-vascular adhesion, suggesting a pathogenetic link between leukocyte-vascular interactions, BBB damage and seizure generation. Consistent with the potential leukocyte involvement in epilepsy in humans, leukocytes were more abundant in brains of individuals with epilepsy than in controls. Our results suggest leukocyte-endothelial interaction as a potential target for the prevention and treatment of epilepsy.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

Localized delivery of fibroblast growth factor–2 and brain-derived neurotrophic factor reduces spontaneous seizures in an epilepsy model

Beatrice Paradiso; Peggy Marconi; Silvia Zucchini; Elena Berto; Anna Binaschi; Aleksandra Bozac; Andrea Buzzi; Manuela Mazzuferi; Eros Magri; Graciela Navarro Mora; Donata Rodi; Tao Su; Ilaria Volpi; Lara Zanetti; Andrea Marzola; Roberto Manservigi; Paolo F. Fabene; Michele Simonato

A loss of neurons is observed in the hippocampus of many patients with epilepsies of temporal lobe origin. It has been hypothesized that damage limitation or repair, for example using neurotrophic factors (NTFs), may prevent the transformation of a normal tissue into epileptic (epileptogenesis). Here, we used viral vectors to locally supplement two NTFs, fibroblast growth factor–2 (FGF-2) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), when epileptogenic damage was already in place. These vectors were first characterized in vitro, where they increased proliferation of neural progenitors and favored their differentiation into neurons, and they were then tested in a model of status epilepticus-induced neurodegeneration and epileptogenesis. When injected in a lesioned hippocampus, FGF-2/BDNF expressing vectors increased neuronogenesis, embanked neuronal damage, and reduced epileptogenesis. It is concluded that reduction of damage reduces epileptogenesis and that supplementing specific NTFs in lesion areas represents a new approach to the therapy of neuronal damage and of its consequences.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2010

The emerging role for chemokines in epilepsy.

Paolo F. Fabene; Placido Bramanti; Gabriela Constantin

Epilepsy has been considered mainly a neuronal disease, without much attention to non-neuronal cells. In recent years growing evidence suggest that astrocytes, microglia, blood leukocytes and blood-brain barrier breakdown are involved in the pathogenesis of epilepsy. In particular, leukocyte-endothelium interactions and eventually subsequent leukocyte recruitment in the brain parenchyma seem to represent key players in the epileptogenic cascade. Chemokines are chemotactic factors controlling leukocyte migration under physiological and pathological conditions. In the light of recent advances in our understanding of the role of inflammation mechanisms in the pathogenesis of epilepsy, pro-inflammatory chemokines may play a critical role in epileptogenesis.


Journal of Neuroinflammation | 2010

Hippocampal FGF-2 and BDNF overexpression attenuates epileptogenesis-associated neuroinflammation and reduces spontaneous recurrent seizures.

Roberta Bovolenta; Silvia Zucchini; Beatrice Paradiso; Donata Rodi; Flavia Merigo; Graciela Navarrro Mora; Francesco Osculati; Elena Berto; Peggy Marconi; Andrea Marzola; Paolo F. Fabene; Michele Simonato

Under certain experimental conditions, neurotrophic factors may reduce epileptogenesis. We have previously reported that local, intrahippocampal supplementation of fibroblast growth factor-2 (FGF-2) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) increases neurogenesis, reduces neuronal loss, and reduces the occurrence of spontaneous seizures in a model of damage-associated epilepsy. Here, we asked if these possibly anti-epileptogenic effects might involve anti-inflammatory mechanisms. Thus, we used a Herpes-based vector to supplement FGF-2 and BDNF in rat hippocampus after pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus that established an epileptogenic lesion. This model causes intense neuroinflammation, especially in the phase that precedes the occurrence of spontaneous seizures. The supplementation of FGF-2 and BDNF attenuated various parameters of inflammation, including astrocytosis, microcytosis and IL-1β expression. The effect appeared to be most prominent on IL-1β, whose expression was almost completely prevented. Further studies will be needed to elucidate the molecular mechanism(s) for these effects, and for that on IL-1β in particular. Nonetheless, the concept that neurotrophic factors affect neuroinflammation in vivo may be highly relevant for the understanding of the epileptogenic process.


PLOS ONE | 2007

Pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus in rats involves ischemic and excitotoxic mechanisms.

Paolo F. Fabene; Flavia Merigo; Mirco Galiè; Donatella Benati; Paolo Bernardi; Paolo Farace; Elena Nicolato; Pasquina Marzola; Andrea Sbarbati

The neuron loss characteristic of hippocampal sclerosis in temporal lobe epilepsy patients is thought to be the result of excitotoxic, rather than ischemic, injury. In this study, we assessed changes in vascular structure, gene expression, and the time course of neuronal degeneration in the cerebral cortex during the acute period after onset of pilocarpine-induced status epilepticus (SE). Immediately after 2 hr SE, the subgranular layers of somatosensory cortex exhibited a reduced vascular perfusion indicative of ischemia, whereas the immediately adjacent supragranular layers exhibited increased perfusion. Subgranular layers exhibited necrotic pathology, whereas the supergranular layers were characterized by a delayed (24 h after SE) degeneration apparently via programmed cell death. These results indicate that both excitotoxic and ischemic injuries occur during pilocarpine-induced SE. Both of these degenerative pathways, as well as the widespread and severe brain damage observed, should be considered when animal model-based data are compared to human pathology.


Epilepsia | 2011

Localized overexpression of FGF‐2 and BDNF in hippocampus reduces mossy fiber sprouting and spontaneous seizures up to 4 weeks after pilocarpine‐induced status epilepticus

Beatrice Paradiso; Silvia Zucchini; Tao Su; Roberta Bovolenta; Elena Berto; Peggy Marconi; Andrea Marzola; Graciela Navarro Mora; Paolo F. Fabene; Michele Simonato

Purpose:  We have recently reported that viral vector–mediated supplementation of fibroblast growth factor‐2 (FGF‐2) and brain‐derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in a lesioned, epileptogenic rat hippocampus limits neuronal damage, favors neurogenesis, and reduces spontaneous recurrent seizures. To test if this treatment can also prevent hippocampal circuit reorganization, we examined here its effect on mossy fiber sprouting, the best studied form of axonal plasticity in epilepsy.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Does Pilocarpine-Induced Epilepsy in Adult Rats Require Status epilepticus?

Graciela Navarro Mora; Placido Bramanti; Francesco Osculati; Asmaa Chakir; Elena Nicolato; Pasquina Marzola; Andrea Sbarbati; Paolo F. Fabene

Pilocarpine-induced seizures in rats provide a widely animal model of temporal lobe epilepsy. Some evidences reported in the literature suggest that at least 1 h of status epilepticus (SE) is required to produce subsequent chronic phase, due to the SE-related acute neuronal damage. However, recent data seems to indicate that neuro-inflammation plays a crucial role in epileptogenesis, modulating secondarily a neuronal insult. For this reason, we decided to test the following hypotheses: a) whether pilocarpine-injected rats that did not develop SE can exhibit long-term chronic spontaneous recurrent seizures (SRS) and b) whether acute neurodegeneration is mandatory to obtain chronic epilepsy. Therefore, we compared animals injected with the same dose of pilocarpine that developed or did not SE, and saline treated rats. We used telemetric acquisition of EEG as long-term monitoring system to evaluate the occurrence of seizures in non-SE pilocarpineinjected animals. Furthermore, histology and MRI analysis were applied in order to detect neuronal injury and neuropathological signs. Our observations indicate that non-SE rats exhibit SRS almost 8 (+/22) months after pilocarpine-injection, independently to the absence of initial acute neuronal injury. This is the first time reported that pilocarpine injected rats without developing SE, can experience SRS after a long latency period resembling human pathology. Thus, we strongly emphasize the important meaning of including these animals to model human epileptogenesis in pilocarpine induced epilepsy.


Epilepsia | 2011

Modulation of peripheral cytotoxic cells and ictogenesis in a model of seizures

Nicola Marchi; Aaron J. Johnson; Vikram Puvenna; Holly Johnson; William S. Tierney; Chaitali Ghosh; Luca Cucullo; Paolo F. Fabene; Damir Janigro

Purpose:  A link between seizure susceptibility, blood–brain barrier (BBB) failure, and the activation of peripheral white blood cells has been recently proposed. However, the molecular players involved in this cascade of events are unknown. We tested the hypothesis that immunosupression by splenectomy or lack of perforin, a downstream factor of natural killer (NK) and cytotoxic T cells, could reduce seizure onset.


Epilepsia | 2012

Finding a better drug for epilepsy: Antiinflammatory targets

Stefanie Dedeurwaerdere; Alon Friedman; Paolo F. Fabene; Andrey Mazarati; Yoshiya L. Murashima; Annamaria Vezzani; Tallie Z. Baram

This monograph summarizes one of the sessions of the XI Workshop on Neurobiology of Epilepsy (WONOEP), and provides a critical review of the current state of the field. Speakers and discussants focused on several broad topics: (1) the coexistence of inflammatory processes encompassing several distinct signal‐transduction pathways with the epileptogenic process; (2) evidence for the contribution of specific inflammatory molecules and processes to the onset and progression of epilepsy, as well as to epilepsy‐related morbidities including depression; (3) the complexity and intricate cross‐talk of the pathways involved in inflammation, and the discrete, often opposite roles of a given mediator in neurons versus other cell types. These complexities highlight the challenges confronting the field as it aims to define inflammatory molecules as promising targets for epilepsy prevention and treatment.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2010

Classic hippocampal sclerosis and hippocampal-onset epilepsy produced by a single "cryptic" episode of focal hippocampal excitation in awake rats.

Braxton A. Norwood; Argyle V. Bumanglag; Francesco Osculati; Andrea Sbarbati; Pasquina Marzola; Elena Nicolato; Paolo F. Fabene; Robert S. Sloviter

In refractory temporal lobe epilepsy, seizures often arise from a shrunken hippocampus exhibiting a pattern of selective neuron loss called “classic hippocampal sclerosis.” No single experimental injury has reproduced this specific pathology, suggesting that hippocampal atrophy might be a progressive “endstage” pathology resulting from years of spontaneous seizures. We posed the alternative hypothesis that classic hippocampal sclerosis results from a single excitatory event that has never been successfully modeled experimentally because convulsive status epilepticus, the insult most commonly used to produce epileptogenic brain injury, is too severe and necessarily terminated before the hippocampus receives the needed duration of excitation. We tested this hypothesis by producing prolonged hippocampal excitation in awake rats without causing convulsive status epilepticus. Two daily 30‐minute episodes of perforant pathway stimulation in Sprague–Dawley rats increased granule cell paired‐pulse inhibition, decreased epileptiform afterdischarge durations during 8 hours of subsequent stimulation, and prevented convulsive status epilepticus. Similarly, one 8‐hour episode of reduced‐intensity stimulation in Long–Evans rats, which are relatively resistant to developing status epilepticus, produced hippocampal discharges without causing status epilepticus. Both paradigms immediately produced the extensive neuronal injury that defines classic hippocampal sclerosis, without giving any clinical indication during the insult that an injury was being inflicted. Spontaneous hippocampal‐onset seizures began 16–25 days postinjury, before hippocampal atrophy developed, as demonstrated by sequential magnetic resonance imaging. These results indicate that classic hippocampal sclerosis is uniquely produced by a single episode of clinically “cryptic” excitation. Epileptogenic insults may often involve prolonged excitation that goes undetected at the time of injury. J. Comp. Neurol. 518:3381–3407, 2010.

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Claudio Babiloni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Gianluigi Forloni

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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