Patricia Páez
University of Málaga
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Publication
Featured researches published by Patricia Páez.
Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2005
María Dolores Domínguez-Pinos; Patricia Páez; Antonio-Jesús Jiménez; Bernardo Weil; Miguel-Ángel Arráez; José Manuel Pérez-Fígares; E. M. Rodríguez
In mutant rodents, ependymal denudation occurs early in fetal life, preceding the onset of a communicating hydrocephalus, and is a key event in the etiology of this disease. The present investigation was designed to obtain evidence whether or not ependymal denudation occurs in 16- to 40-week-old human fetuses developing a communicating hydrocephalus (n = 8) as compared to fetuses of similar ages with no neuropathologic alterations (n = 15). Sections through the walls of the cerebral aqueduct and lateral ventricles were processed for lectin binding and immunocytochemistry using antibodies against ependyma, astroglia, neuroblasts, and macrophages markers. Anti-caveolin was used as a functional marker of the fetal ependyma. The structural and functional molecular markers are differentially expressed throughout the differentiation of the human fetal ependyma. Denudation of the ependyma of the aqueduct and lateral ventricles occurred in all fetuses developing a communicating hydrocephalus, including the youngest ones studied. The denuded surface area increased in parallel with the fetus age. The possibility is advanced that in many or most cases of human fetal hydrocephalus there is a common defect at the ependymal cell lineage leading to ependymal detachment. Evidence was obtained that in hydrocephalic human fetuses a process to repair the denuded areas takes place during the fetal life. In hydrocephalic fetuses, detachment of the ependyma of the lateral ventricles resulted in the (i) loss of the germinal ependymal zone, (ii) disorganization of the subventricular zone and, (iii) abnormal migration of neuroblasts into the ventricular cavity. Thus, detachment of the ependymal layer in hydrocephalic fetuses would not only be associated with the pathogenesis of hydrocephalus but also to abnormal neurogenesis.
Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2007
Patricia Páez; Luis-Federico Bátiz; Ruth Roales-Buján; Luis-Manuel Rodríguez-Pérez; Sara Rodríguez; Antonio J Jiménez; Esteban M. Rodríguez; José Manuel Pérez-Fígares
Hyh mutant mice develop long-lasting hydrocephalus and represent a good model for investigating neuropathologic events associated with hydrocephalus. The study of their brains by use of lectin binding, bromodeoxyuridine labeling, immunochemistry, and scanning electron microscopy revealed that certain events related to hydrocephalus followed a well-defined pattern. A program of neuroepithelium/ependyma denudation was initiated at embryonic day 12 and terminated at the end of the second postnatal week. After the third postnatal week the denuded areas remained permanently devoid of ependyma. In contrast, a selective group of ependymal areas resisted denudation throughout the lifespan. Ependymal denudation triggered neighboring astrocytes to proliferate. These astrocytes expressed particular glial markers and formed a superficial cell layer replacing the lost ependyma. The loss of the neuroepithelium/ependyma layer at specific regions of the ventricular walls and at specific stages of brain development would explain the fact that only certain brain structures had abnormal development. Therefore, commissural axons forming the corpus callosum and the hippocampal commissure displayed abnormalities, whereas those forming the anterior and posterior commissures did not; and the brain cortex was not homogenously affected, with the cingular and frontal cortices being the most altered regions. All of these telencephalic alterations developed at stages when hydrocephalus was not yet patent at the lateral ventricles, indicating that abnormal neural development and hydrocephalus are linked at the etiologic level, rather than the former being a consequence of the latter. All evidence collected on hydrocephalic hyh mutant mice indicates that a primary alteration in the neuroepithelium/ependyma cell lineage triggers both hydrocephalus and abnormalities in telencephalic development.
Acta Neuropathologica | 2012
Ruth Roales-Buján; Patricia Páez; Montserrat Guerra; Sara Rodríguez; Karin Vío; Ailec Ho-Plagaro; María García-Bonilla; Luis-Manuel Rodríguez-Pérez; María-Dolores Domínguez-Pinos; E. M. Rodríguez; J. M. Pérez-Fígares; Antonio-Jesús Jiménez
Hydrocephalic hyh mutant mice undergo a programmed loss of the neuroepithelium/ependyma followed by a reaction of periventricular astrocytes, which form a new cell layer covering the denuded ventricular surface. We present a comparative morphological and functional study of the newly formed layer of astrocytes and the multiciliated ependyma of hyh mice. Transmission electron microscopy, immunocytochemistry for junction proteins (N-cadherin, connexin 43) and proteins involved in permeability (aquaporin 4) and endocytosis (caveolin-1, EEA1) were used. Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and lanthanum nitrate were used to trace the intracellular and paracellular transport routes. The astrocyte layer shares several cytological features with the normal multiciliated ependyma, such as numerous microvilli projected into the ventricle, extensive cell–cell interdigitations and connexin 43-based gap junctions, suggesting that these astrocytes are coupled to play an unknown function as a cell layer. The ependyma and the astrocyte layers also share transport properties: (1) high expression of aquaporin 4, caveolin-1 and the endosome marker EEA1; (2) internalization into endocytic vesicles and early endosomes of HRP injected into the ventricle; (3) and a similar paracellular route of molecules moving between CSF, the subependymal neuropile and the pericapillary space, as shown by lanthanum nitrate and HRP. A parallel analysis performed in human hydrocephalic foetuses indicated that a similar phenomenon would occur in humans. We suggest that in foetal-onset hydrocephalus, the astrocyte assembly at the denuded ventricular walls functions as a CSF–brain barrier involved in water and solute transport, thus contributing to re-establish lost functions at the brain parenchyma–CSF interphase.
Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2009
Antonio J Jiménez; José Manuel García-Verdugo; César González; Luis Federico Bátiz; Luis Manuel Rodríguez-Pérez; Patricia Páez; Mario Soriano-Navarro; Ruth Roales-Buján; Patricia Rivera; Sara Rodríguez; Esteban M. Rodríguez; José Manuel Pérez-Fígares
Neural stem cells persist after embryonic development in the subventricular zone (SVZ) niche and produce new neural cells during postnatal life; ependymal cells are a key component associated with this neurogenic niche. In the animal model of human hydrocephalus, the hyh mouse, the ependyma of the lateral ventricles is progressively lost during late embryonic and early postnatal life and disappears from most of the ventricular surface throughout its life span. To determine the potential consequences of this loss on the SVZ, we characterized the abnormalities in this neurogenic niche in hyh mice. There was overall disorganization and a marked reduction of proliferative cells in the SVZ of both newborn and adult hyh hydrocephalic mice in vivo; neuroblasts were displaced to the ventricular surface, and their migration through the rostral migratory stream was reduced. The numbers of resident neural progenitor cells in hyh mice were also markedly reduced, but they were capable of proliferating, forming neurospheres, and differentiating into neurons and glia in vitro in a manner indistinguishable from that of wild-type progenitor cells. These findings suggest that the reduction of proliferative activity observed in vivo is not caused by a cell autonomous defect of SVZ progenitors but is a consequence of a reduced number of these cells. Furthermore, the overall tissue disorganization of the SVZ and displacement of neuroblasts imply alterations in the neurogenic niche of postnatal hyh mice.
Acta Neuropathologica | 2011
Luis Federico Bátiz; Antonio J Jiménez; Montserrat Guerra; Luis Manuel Rodríguez-Pérez; Cesar Toledo; Karin Vío; Patricia Páez; José Manuel Pérez-Fígares; Esteban M. Rodríguez
A heterogeneous population of ependymal cells lines the brain ventricles. The evidence about the origin and birth dates of these cell populations is scarce. Furthermore, the possibility that mature ependymal cells are born (ependymogenesis) or self-renewed (ependymal proliferation) postnatally is controversial. The present study was designed to investigate both phenomena in wild-type (wt) and hydrocephalic α-SNAP mutant (hyh) mice at different postnatal stages. In wt mice, proliferating cells in the ventricular zone (VZ) were only found in two distinct regions: the dorsal walls of the third ventricle and Sylvian aqueduct (SA). Most proliferating cells were monociliated and nestin+, likely corresponding to radial glial cells. Postnatal cumulative BrdU-labeling showed that most daughter cells remained in the VZ of both regions and they lost nestin-immunoreactivity. Furthermore, some labeled cells became multiciliated and GLUT-1+, indicating they were ependymal cells born postnatally. Postnatal pulse BrdU-labeling and Ki-67 immunostaining further demonstrated the presence of cycling multiciliated ependymal cells. In hydrocephalic mutants, the dorsal walls of the third ventricle and SA expanded enormously and showed neither ependymal disruption nor ventriculostomies. This phenomenon was sustained by an increased ependymogenesis. Consequently, in addition to the physical and geometrical mechanisms traditionally explaining ventricular enlargement in fetal-onset hydrocephalus, we propose that postnatal ependymogenesis could also play a role. Furthermore, as generation of new ependymal cells during postnatal stages was observed in distinct regions of the ventricular walls, such as the roof of the third ventricle, it may be a key mechanism involved in the development of human type 1 interhemispheric cysts.
Molecular and Cellular Probes | 2009
Luis Federico Bátiz; Ruth Roales-Buján; Luis Manuel Rodríguez-Pérez; Isabel M. Matas; Patricia Páez; María Rodríguez Roque; Antonio J Jiménez; Cayo Ramos; José Manuel Pérez-Fígares
alpha-SNAP is an essential component of the protein machinery responsible for membrane fusion events in different cell types. The hyh (hydrocephalus with hop gait) mouse carries a missense mutation in Napa gene that results in a point mutation (M105I) in alpha-SNAP protein. Homozygous animals for the mutant allele have been identified by the clinical and/or neuropathological phenotype, or by direct sequencing of PCR products. The aims of the present study were (i) to develop a high-throughput technique to genotype hyh mice, (ii) to correlate genotype-phenotype, and (iii) to analyze the earliest pathological changes of hyh mutant mice. As no restriction sites are affected by the hyh mutation, we resolved this problem by creating a BspHI restriction site with a modified (mismatch) polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primer in wild-type allele. This artificially created restriction site (ACRS)-PCR technique is a simple, rapid and reliable method to genotype hyh mice in a day-work procedure. Biochemical and histological analysis of genotyped hyh embryos at different developmental stages allowed us to identify and characterize the earliest brain pathological changes of the hyh phenotype, including the first signs of neuroepithelial disruption and neuronal ectopia. In addition, genotype-phenotype analysis of 327 animals confirmed that (i) hyh is a single-gene autosomal recessive disorder, and (ii) the disorder has 100% penetrance (i.e., the mutation was only present in affected mice). The genotyping method described here enhances the potentiality of hyh mouse as a unique in vivo model to study the role of membrane trafficking in different developmental and physiological processes.
Cerebrospinal Fluid Research | 2005
Federico Bátiz; Patricia Páez; Antonio J Jiménez; Sara Rodríguez; José Manuel Pérez-Fígares; Esteban M. Rodríguez
The hyh (hydrocephalus with hop gait) mutant micedevelop inherited hydrocephalus. A key feature in thismutant is that there is a foetal-onset ependymal denuda-tion which precedes cerebral aqueduct obliteration andhydrocephalus [1]. Recently, a point mutation in alpha-SNAP protein has been identified as responsible of thehyh phenotype [2]. However, preliminary findings fromour laboratory have suggested clinical and pathologicalheterogeneity in the expression of hydrocephalus, indicat-ing that other (nongenetic?) factors may influence thedegree of severity of this pathology. This is in accordancewith findings in other hydrocephalic mutant strains [3,4].The present investigation was designed to (a) study theclinical evolution of hydrocephalic mice in order to eval-uate wether or not clinical heterogeneity does actuallyoccur, (b) identify nongenetic factors (maternal age, mul-tiparity) that may affect such an evolution, and (c) iden-tify neuropathologic events underlying clinicalheterogeneity.
Cerebrospinal Fluid Research | 2005
Patricia Páez; Ruth Roales-Buján; Sara Rodríguez; Federico Bátiz; Antonio J Jiménez; Esteban M. Rodríguez; J. M. Pérez-Fígares
mutant mice suffer a congenital hydrocephalus trig-gered by ependyma denudation [1]. The ventricular sur-face in non hydrocephalic newborn mice is lined by theimmature ependyma, which is characterized for beingvimentin (-) and S100β (-), at variance in the adult ani-mals the mature ependyma expresses vimentin and S100 β[2]. On the other hand, in the hydrocephalic mice theependyma begins to denudate on the 12th day of gesta-tion, and at PN8 only some areas of lateral ventricle arestill endowed with ependyma. In parallel, astroglia startsto cover the denuded surface forming a new cell layer, theglial scar, which lines the damaged ventricular surface. Wehave studied the permeability to horseradish peroxidase(HRP) of these four regions at the ventricular wills:mature ependyma, and denuded areas with or withoutglial scar.
Cerebrospinal Fluid Research | 2005
Patricia Páez; Luis Manuel Rodríguez-Pérez; Ruth Roales-Buján; Antonio J Jiménez; Esteban M. Rodríguez; J. M. Pérez-Fígares
Background Hyh mutant mice suffer a congenital hydrocephalus triggered by ependyma denudation [1]. Additional pathological events have been observed: the absence of corpus callosum (ACC) and the reduction in the thickness of the cerebral cortex in this mutant. These two alterations frequently appear associated with human and animal hydrocephalus. Crossing the midline by callosal axons requires the presence of three types of midline glial cells (glial wedge, glial sling and indusium griseum glial cells) and also the correct guidance provided by pioneering axons. This crossing occurs about E-16.5 and pioneering axons appear around E-15.5 [2]. Development of cerebral cortex begins at E-12, continues until postnatal life, and requires proliferation and migration of progenitor cells from subventricular regions.
Cerebrospinal Fluid Research | 2005
María Dolores Domínguez; Antonio J Jiménez; Patricia Páez; Bernardo Weil; Miguel Angel Arráez; Esteban M. Rodríguez; J. M. Pérez-Fígares
Materials and methods The present investigation was carried out in 16–40 week old human foetuses with a communicating hydrocephalus and displaying a moderate dilatation of the ventricular cavities (n = 8), and foetuses of similar ages with no neuropathological alterations (n = 15). Paraffin sections throughout the walls of the cerebral aqueduct and lateral ventricles were processed for lectin binding and immunocytochemistry using ependyma, astroglia, neuroblasts and macrophague markers.