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Dive into the research topics where R.V. Gallará is active.

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Featured researches published by R.V. Gallará.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1995

Modification of the β-adrenergic sensitivity of rat submandibular gland by constant light

R.V. Gallará; S.L. Bellavia

Rats exposed for 2, 5, 10, 20, 35 and 50 days to constant light (CL) showed beta-adrenergic desensitization of the submandibular gland as indicated by dose-response curves to 1.5, 2.0, 3.0, 10.0, 30.0 and 50.0 micrograms/kg isoproterenol. The phenomenon, evident with 1.5, 2.0 and 50.0 micrograms/kg after 2 days at CL, was more intense as time of exposure increased to reach values of about 50% those for controls after 20 days. After 35 and 50 days, desensitization showed some reversion, but the secretory responses were still lower than for controls maintained under a typical photoperiod. In the groups of rats exposed to CL for 20 days, gland wet and dry weights were higher (10%) than those of controls. These changes probably indicate an adaptation of the sympathetic control of salivary secretion induced by environmental illumination.


Archives of Oral Biology | 2012

Functional and proteomic analysis of submandibular saliva in rats exposed to chronic stress by immobilization or constant light

A. Alterman; R. Mathison; C.E. Coronel; M.M. Stroppa; A.B. Finkelberg; R.V. Gallará

OBJECTIVE In this study, we have evaluated the effects of stress on functional and proteomic changes in submandibular saliva of rats. DESIGN Male adult rats were divided in three groups: IMO (2 h/day of immobilization for 7 days), LL (constant light during 20 days), C (unstressed controls submitted to 14 h light-10h dark cycle). Body weight, food intake and the dry weight of submandibular gland were recorded. Saliva samples, collected under anaesthesia following i.p. administration of isoproterenol and pilocarpine (5 mg/kg), were assayed for total proteins (TP), amylase activity and SDS-PAGE electrophoresis. RESULTS Body weight, food intake and the dry weight of submandibular gland of IMO rats were lower than those of C and LL groups. The salivary volumes secreted in IMO and LL rats, were significantly higher than in controls. The TP output (μg protein/μg saliva/mg of dry tissue) and amylase activity output (AU/μg of saliva/mg of dry tissue) in IMO were significantly higher than in C and LL animals. The electrophoretic pattern of saliva proteins of LL rats, revealed the absence of a protein band of approximately 25 kDa. This band was composed by the common salivary protein-1 and a prolactin-induced protein as identified by peptide mass fingerprinting. CONCLUSIONS Differences in body weight and food intake between IMO and LL might be attributed to the sort and intensity of stressors stimuli. The changes in the volume of secreted saliva could be a compensatory mechanism in response to stressors. The increase of total protein in IMO rats and the absence of 25 kDa proteins in LL, would suggest that the submandibular glands respond to the sympathetic nervous system stimuli induced by the stress with an increase of activity of the sympathetic nerves in IMO and a reduction in LL rats.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1993

Effect of sympathetic denervation of the pineal gland on maternal co-ordination of the circadian rhythm of α-amylase in parotid gland from young rats

S.L. Bellavia; E.G. Sanz; R.V. Gallará; A. Carpentieri; Nelia T. Vermouth

Twenty-five-day-old rats maintained in constant darkness since birth and born from mothers kept in the dark since the 14th day of pregnancy showed a circadian rhythm of alpha-amylase content in parotid glands, which may be explained by a mechanism of maternal co-ordination. Rats in the same conditions, except that their mothers had been submitted to bilateral excision of the superior cervical ganglia 30 days before mating, did not show diurnal variations of alpha-amylase activity in the parotid glands. When ganglionectomized mothers were treated with a daily dose of melatonin (1 mg/kg) from the 14th day of gestation up to the 10th day of lactation, their litters showed significant diurnal variations of amylase in the parotid glands, suggesting a role of the maternal pineal gland in the maternal-fetal and/or maternal-neonatal transfer of photoperiodic information.


Archives of Oral Biology | 2015

Fluoride alters connexin expression in rat incisor pulp.

V. Centeno; P.A. Fontanetti; V. Interlandi; Rubén H. Ponce; R.V. Gallará

OBJECTIVE Connexins (Cxs) are important to control growth and cell differentiation of dental tissues. The aim of the present study was to assess the impact of chronic exposure to sodium fluoride (NaF) on Cxs expression and alkaline phosphatase (ALP) activity in dental pulp, and on morphometric parameters of adult rat mandible and incisors. DESIGN Three groups of male Wistar rats (22 days-old) were given water containing: (a) 0.3 mg/L (Control), (b) 10 mg/L and (c) 50 mg/L of NaF for eight weeks. Incisor pulp homogenates were prepared for determination of Cx32, Cx43 and Cx45 gene expression, using semi-quantitative RT-PCR, and of ALP activity. Morphometric parameters of mandible and incisors were determined on radiographs. RESULTS Cx43 gene expression increased with exposure to NaF in a dose-dependent manner. Cx32 mRNA levels were higher than controls in the 10mg/L NaF group only; Cx45 mRNA levels were lower in groups given 10 and 50mg/L of NaF than in controls. ALP activity was higher in both high-NaF dose groups compared to the control group (p<0.05). Lower incisor diameter was lower in the 50 mg/L NaF than in the control group (p<0.01). None of the mandibular growth parameters were affected by NaF treatment. CONCLUSION Our results showed that fluorotic alterations in rat incisor were associated with increased Cx43 expression and ALP activity, as well as with changes in the expression pattern of different Cxs in pulp tissue. The observed changes may have a stimulating effect on dentin mineralization.


Biological Trace Element Research | 2018

Chronic Exposure to Fluoride During Gestation and Lactation Increases Mandibular Bone Volume of Suckling Rats

Victoria Interlandi; Pablo A. Fontanetti; Rubén H. Ponce; R.V. Gallará; V. Centeno

We aimed to investigate the effect of maternal exposure to NaF on mandibular bone microarchitecture and phosphocalcic plasma parameters of the offspring. For this purpose, 10-, 15-, and 21-day-old pups (n = 6–8 per group) from two groups of mothers, control and NaF 50mg/L treated dams, were used. Plasma calcium (Ca) and phosphorus (P) levels and alkaline phosphatase activity (ALP) were measured. Fluoride concentration (F−) in bone and in stomach content was measured using potentiometry after isothermal distillation. Morphometric, histological, and histomorphometric analyses of the jaw bones were performed. Plasma Ca and P levels and ALP activity increased in 10-day and decreased in 21-day-old pups from NaF-treated mothers. Fluoride concentration in stomach content samples of 15- and 21-day-old nursing pups from mothers exposed to NaF in their drinking water was higher compared to that observed in control dam offspring. Mandibular F− content was higher in 21-day-old pups born to F−-exposed dams compared to those observed in age-matched control pups. Mandibular area increased in 21-day-old pups born to treated mothers as compared to controls. Mandibular bone volume BV/TV (%) was higher in offspring from NaF-exposed dams than in controls at all the studied times. The increase in bone volume after exposure to F− was concomitant with the increase in trabecular thickness and the decrease in trabecular separation. Altogether, our results showed that exposure to NaF during gestation and lactation increased mandibular area and bone volume of pups, with concomitant changes in phosphocalcic parameters associated with the bone modeling process.


Archives of Oral Biology | 1998

Modification of the β- and α2-adrenergic sensitivity of rat submandibular glands by environmental stimuli and stress

S.L. Bellavia; R.V. Gallará


Molecular Brain Research | 2004

Environmental light conditions alter gene expression of rat catecholamine biosynthetic enzymes and Neuropeptide Y: differential effect in superior cervical ganglia and adrenal gland

R.V. Gallará; S.L. Bellavia; Lidia L Serova; Esther L. Sabban


Journal of Oral Research | 2015

Measuring color change of tooth enamel by in vitro remineralization of white spot lesion.

Betina Raquel Tolcachir; Luis Crohare; R.V. Gallará


Journal of Oral Research | 2018

Effect of constant light and immobilization stress on rat submandibular saliva secretory response induced by cholinergic and peptidergic agonists.

R.V. Gallará; Rubén H. Ponce; V. Centeno; S.L. Bellavia


Bone | 2016

Chronic fluoride exposure during gestation and lactation increases mandibular bone volume and impairs dental eruption in the rat offspring

V. Interlandi; P.A. Fontanetti; I. González-Segura; Rubén H. Ponce; R.V. Gallará; V. Centeno

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Rubén H. Ponce

National University of Cordoba

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V. Centeno

National University of Cordoba

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S.L. Bellavia

National University of Cordoba

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P.A. Fontanetti

National University of Cordoba

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V. Interlandi

National University of Cordoba

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Nelia T. Vermouth

National University of Cordoba

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A. Alterman

National University of Cordoba

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A. Carpentieri

National University of Cordoba

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A.B. Finkelberg

National University of Cordoba

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Betina Raquel Tolcachir

National University of Cordoba

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