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Dive into the research topics where Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil is active.

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Featured researches published by Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil.


Nature Neuroscience | 2008

Age-dependent epigenetic control of differentiation inhibitors is critical for remyelination efficiency

Siming Shen; Juan Sandoval; Victoria A. Swiss; Jiadong Li; Jeff Dupree; Robin J.M. Franklin; Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil

The efficiency of remyelination decreases with age, but the molecular mechanisms responsible for this decline remain only partially understood. In this study, we show that remyelination is regulated by age-dependent epigenetic control of gene expression. In demyelinated young brains, new myelin synthesis is preceded by downregulation of oligodendrocyte differentiation inhibitors and neural stem cell markers, and this is associated with recruitment of histone deacetylases (HDACs) to promoter regions. In demyelinated old brains, HDAC recruitment is inefficient, and this allows the accumulation of transcriptional inhibitors and prevents the subsequent surge in myelin gene expression. Defective remyelination can be recapitulated in vivo in mice receiving systemic administration of pharmacological HDAC inhibitors during cuprizone treatment and is consistent with in vitro results showing defective differentiation of oligodendrocyte progenitors after silencing specific HDAC isoforms. Thus, we suggest that inefficient epigenetic modulation of the oligodendrocyte differentiation program contributes to the age-dependent decline in remyelination efficiency.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007

Proteolipid Protein Is Required for Transport of Sirtuin 2 into CNS Myelin

Hauke B. Werner; Katja Kuhlmann; Siming Shen; Marina Uecker; Anke Schardt; Kalina Dimova; Foteini Orfaniotou; Ajit S. Dhaunchak; Bastian G. Brinkmann; Wiebke Möbius; Lenny Guarente; Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Olaf Jahn; Klaus-Armin Nave

Mice lacking the expression of proteolipid protein (PLP)/DM20 in oligodendrocytes provide a genuine model for spastic paraplegia (SPG-2). Their axons are well myelinated but exhibit impaired axonal transport and progressive degeneration, which is difficult to attribute to the absence of a single myelin protein. We hypothesized that secondary molecular changes in PLPnull myelin contribute to the loss of PLP/DM20-dependent neuroprotection and provide more insight into glia-axonal interactions in this disease model. By gel-based proteome analysis, we identified >160 proteins in purified myelin membranes, which allowed us to systematically monitor the CNS myelin proteome of adult PLPnull mice, before the onset of disease. We identified three proteins of the septin family to be reduced in abundance, but the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+)-dependent deacetylase sirtuin 2 (SIRT2) was virtually absent. SIRT2 is expressed throughout the oligodendrocyte lineage, and immunoelectron microscopy revealed its association with myelin. Loss of SIRT2 in PLPnull was posttranscriptional, suggesting that PLP/DM20 is required for its transport into the myelin compartment. Because normal SIRT2 activity is controlled by the NAD+/NADH ratio, its function may be coupled to the axo-glial metabolism and the long-term support of axons by oligodendrocytes.


Neuron | 2007

The Transcription Factor Yin Yang 1 Is Essential for Oligodendrocyte Progenitor Differentiation

Ye He; Jeff Dupree; Ju Wang; Juan Sandoval; Jiadong Li; Huifei Liu; Yang Shi; Klaus-Armin Nave; Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil

The progression of progenitors to oligodendrocytes requires proliferative arrest and the activation of a transcriptional program of differentiation. While regulation of cell cycle exit has been extensively characterized, the molecular mechanisms responsible for the initiation of differentiation remain ill-defined. Here, we identify the transcription factor Yin Yang 1 (YY1) as a critical regulator of oligodendrocyte progenitor differentiation. Conditional ablation of yy1 in the oligodendrocyte lineage in vivo induces a phenotype characterized by defective myelination, ataxia, and tremor. At the cellular level, lack of yy1 arrests differentiation of oligodendrocyte progenitors after they exit from the cell cycle. At the molecular level, YY1 acts as a lineage-specific repressor of transcriptional inhibitors of myelin gene expression (Tcf4 and Id4), by recruiting histone deacetylase-1 to their promoters during oligodendrocyte differentiation. Thus, we identify YY1 as an essential component of the transcriptional network regulating the transition of oligodendrocyte progenitors from cell cycle exit to differentiation.


Brain Research Reviews | 1998

Neurotrophin receptors: mediators of life and death.

Moses V. Chao; Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Bruce D. Carter; Alexandra Chittka; Haeyoung Kong; Sung Ok Yoon

The mechanism of action of NGF has continued to provide a challenging and formidable problem in signal transduction. NGF can bind independently to two different receptors, the trkA tyrosine kinase receptor and the p75 neurotrophin receptor, which are involved in many different signaling events. In addition to promoting cell differentiation survival, NGF can paradoxically be an inducer of cell death. Several receptor mediated mechanisms are proposed to explain how NGF might act as a trophic factor and as a cell killer. The survival and cell death properties of the receptors are dependent upon the relative ratio of receptors and the persistent nature of the signaling events.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Increased Citrullination of Histone H3 in Multiple Sclerosis Brain and Animal Models of Demyelination: A Role for Tumor Necrosis Factor-Induced Peptidylarginine Deiminase 4 Translocation

Fabrizio G. Mastronardi; D. Denise Wood; Jiang Mei; Reinout Raijmakers; Vivian Tseveleki; Hans-Michael Dosch; Lesley Probert; Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Mario A. Moscarello

Modification of arginine residues by citrullination is catalyzed by peptidylarginine deiminases (PADs), of which five are known, generating irreversible protein structural modifications. We have shown previously that enhanced citrullination of myelin basic protein contributed to destabilization of the myelin membrane in the CNS of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. We now report increased citrullination of nucleosomal histones by PAD4 in normal-appearing white matter (NAWM) of MS patients and in animal models of demyelination. Histone citrullination was attributable to increased levels and activity of nuclear PAD4. PAD4 translocation into the nucleus was attributable to elevated tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) protein. The elevated TNF-α in MS NAWM was not associated with CD3+ or CD8+ lymphocytes, nor was it associated with CD68+ microglia/macrophages. GFAP, a measure of astrocytosis, was the only cytological marker that was consistently elevated in the MS NAWM, suggesting that TNF-α may have been derived from astrocytes. In cell cultures of mouse and human oligodendroglial cell lines, PAD4 was predominantly cytosolic but TNF-α treatment induced its nuclear translocation. To address the involvement of TNF-α in targeting PAD4 to the nucleus, we found that transgenic mice overexpressing TNF-α also had increased levels of citrullinated histones and elevated nuclear PAD4 before demyelination. In conclusion, high citrullination of histones consequent to PAD4 nuclear translocation is part of the process that leads to irreversible changes in oligodendrocytes and may contribute to apoptosis of oligodendrocytes in MS.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1999

Neurotrophins in Cell Survival/Death Decisions

Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Chenghua Gu; Moses V. Chao

Neurotrophins are target-derived soluble factors required for neuronal survival. Nerve growth factor (NGF) the founding member of the neurotrophin family, binds to two types of receptors: Trk tyrosine kinase and the p75 neurotrophin receptor, which belongs to the Fas-tumor necrosis factor (TNF) receptor superfamily. Binding of neurotrophins to Trk receptor tyrosine kinases initiate signaling cascades that promote cell survival sand differentiation. In contrast, p75 NGFR has been shown to modulate the susceptibility to death of selective cellular populations--including differentiated rat oligodendrocytes--in specific conditions. Notably, NGF effect on viability was only observed in fully differentiated oligodendrocytes and not in oligodendrocyte progenitor cells. The effect of p75 activation on oligodendrocyte survival correlates with increased activity of the stress related kinase JNK-1 and cleavage of specific caspases. Indeed, activation of additional stress pathways or impairment of survival signals may be required for p75 mediated activation of cell death execution programs. Interestingly, co-expression of the TrkA receptor in the same cell type abolishes the JNK-1 mediated death signal and induces MAP kinase activity, resulting in cell survival. This suggests that glial cell survival results from a balance between positive and negative regulators modulated by selective signalling pathways by tyrosine kinases and cytokine receptors.


EMBO Reports | 2001

p21cip1 is required for the differentiation of oligodendrocytes independently of cell cycle withdrawal

Jürgen Zezula; Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Sergei A. Ezhevsky; Donna J. Osterhout; Joel M. Levine; Steve F. Dowdy; Moses V. Chao; Andrew Koff

Differentiation of most cell types requires both establishment of G1 arrest and the induction of a program related to achieving quiescence. We have chosen to study the differentiation of oligodendrocyte cells to determine the role of p27 and p21 in this process. Here we report that both p27 and p21 are required for the appropriate differentiation of these cells. p27 is required for proper withdrawal from the cell cycle, p21 is not. Instead, p21 is required for the establishment of the differentiation program following growth arrest. Similar observations were made in vivo. We show that p21−/− cells withdraw from the cell cycle similar to wild‐type cells; however, early in animal life, the brain is hypomyelinated, inferring that the loss of p21 delayed myelination in the cerebellum. We found that we could complement or bypass the differentiation failure in p21−/− cells with either PD98059, an inhibitor of Mek1, or by transducing them with a tat–p16Ink4a protein. We concluded that the two cdk inhibitors serve non‐redundant roles in this program of differentiation, with p27 being responsible for arrest and p21 having a function in differentiation independent of its ability to control exit from the cell cycle.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 1998

Neurotrophins: the biological paradox of survival factors eliciting apoptosis.

Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Haeyoung Kong; Moses V. Chao

Neurotrophins are target-derived soluble polypeptides required for neuronal survival. Binding of neurotrophins to Trk receptor tyrosine kinases initiate signaling cascades that promote cell survival and differentiation. All family members bind to another receptor (p75NTR), which belongs to the tumor necrosis factor superfamily. Hence, nerve growth factor (NGF) and related trophic factors are unique in that two separate receptor types are utilized. Although the biological function of p75NTR has been elusive, it has been suggested to mediate apoptosis of developing neurons in the absence of Trk receptors. This presents a tantalizing paradigm, in which life-death decisions of cells are dependent upon the expression and action of two different receptors with distinctive signaling mechanisms. In the presence of TrkA receptors, p75 can participate in the formation of high affinity binding sites and enhanced NGF responsiveness leading to a survival signal. In the absence of TrkA receptors, p75 can generate, in only specific cell populations, a death signal. Here we discuss the unique features and implications of this unusual signal transduction system.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005

Combinatorial Profiles of Oligodendrocyte-Selective Classes of Transcriptional Regulators Differentially Modulate Myelin Basic Protein Gene Expression

Solen Gokhan; Mireya Marin-Husstege; Shau Yu Yung; Darah Fontanez; Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Mark F. Mehler

Recent studies suggest that specific neural basic helix-loop-helix (HLH; i.e., Olig1 and Olig2, Mash1), associated inhibitory HLH (i.e., Id2 and Id4), high-mobility group domain (i.e., Sox10), and homeodomain (i.e., Nkx2.2) transcription factors are involved in oligodendrocyte (OL) lineage specification and progressive stages of maturation including myelination. However, the developmental interplay among these lineage-selective determinants, in a cell- and maturational stage-specific context, has not yet been defined. We show here in vivo and in vitro developmental expression profiles for these distinct classes of transcriptional regulators of OLs. We show that progressive stages of OL lineage maturation are characterized by dynamic changes in the subcellular distribution of these transcription factors and by different permutations of combinatorial transcriptional codes. Transient transfections of these precise combinatorial codes with a luciferase reporter gene driven by the myelin basic protein promoter define how changes in the molecular composition of these transcriptional complexes modulate myelin gene expression. Our overall findings suggest that the dynamic interplay between developmental stage-specific classes of transcriptional activators and associated inhibitory factors orchestrate myelin gene expression during terminal maturation of the mammalian CNS.


Microscopy Research and Technique | 1999

P75 NEUROTROPHIN RECEPTOR AS A MODULATOR OF SURVIVAL AND DEATH DECISIONS

Patrizia Casaccia-Bonnefil; Chenghua Gu; Gus Khursigara; Moses V. Chao

The p75 receptor is the founding member of the TNF receptor superfamily. Members in this receptor family share a common cysteine motif repeated two to six times that serves as the ligand binding domain. In addition, several members contain a cytoplasmic region designated the death domain. The neurotrophins NGF, BDNF, NT‐3, and NT‐4 each bind to the p75 receptor and also more selectively to members of the Trk family of receptor tyrosine kinases. Although the biological functions of p75 have been elusive, recent experimental evidence supports an involvement of this receptor in apoptosis. This presents a counter‐intuitive function for neurotrophins, which are normally required for the survival of neurons during development. The life‐and‐death decisions by neurotrophins appear to be governed by the level of expression and signaling activities of the p75 and Trk tyrosine kinase receptors and their downstream effector molecules. The generation of the correct number of cells in the nervous system is a highly controlled and coordinated process that is the consequence of cell proliferation and cell death decisions. The appropriate number of neuronal and glial cells formed during development guarantees the establishment of proper innervation and functional synaptic connections. One common mechanism to account for the number of viable cells is the ability to form ligand‐receptor complexes that promote cell survival under conditions of limiting concentrations of trophic factors. Another diametrically opposed mechanism is to produce ligand‐receptor interactions that can activate programmed cell death directly. Microsc. Res. Tech. 45:217–224, 1999.

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Aixiao Liu

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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Jiadong Li

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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Mireya Marin-Husstege

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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Andrew Koff

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

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