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Dive into the research topics where Rosa C. Paolicelli is active.

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Featured researches published by Rosa C. Paolicelli.


Science | 2011

Synaptic pruning by microglia is necessary for normal brain development.

Rosa C. Paolicelli; Giulia Bolasco; Francesca Pagani; Laura Maggi; Maria Scianni; Patrizia Panzanelli; Maurizio Giustetto; Tiago A. Ferreira; Eva Guiducci; Laura Dumas; Davide Ragozzino; Cornelius Gross

A good brain needs a good vacuum cleaner. Microglia are highly motile phagocytic cells that infiltrate and take up residence in the developing brain, where they are thought to provide a surveillance and scavenging function. However, although microglia have been shown to engulf and clear damaged cellular debris after brain insult, it remains less clear what role microglia play in the uninjured brain. Here, we show that microglia actively engulf synaptic material and play a major role in synaptic pruning during postnatal development in mice. These findings link microglia surveillance to synaptic maturation and suggest that deficits in microglia function may contribute to synaptic abnormalities seen in some neurodevelopmental disorders.


Nature Neuroscience | 2014

Deficient neuron-microglia signaling results in impaired functional brain connectivity and social behavior.

Yang Zhan; Rosa C. Paolicelli; Francesco Sforazzini; Laetitia Weinhard; Giulia Bolasco; Francesca Pagani; Alexei L. Vyssotski; Angelo Bifone; Alessandro Gozzi; Davide Ragozzino; Cornelius Gross

Microglia are phagocytic cells that infiltrate the brain during development and have a role in the elimination of synapses during brain maturation. Changes in microglial morphology and gene expression have been associated with neurodevelopmental disorders. However, it remains unknown whether these changes are a primary cause or a secondary consequence of neuronal deficits. Here we tested whether a primary deficit in microglia was sufficient to induce some autism-related behavioral and functional connectivity deficits. Mice lacking the chemokine receptor Cx3cr1 exhibit a transient reduction of microglia during the early postnatal period and a consequent deficit in synaptic pruning. We show that deficient synaptic pruning is associated with weak synaptic transmission, decreased functional brain connectivity, deficits in social interaction and increased repetitive-behavior phenotypes that have been previously associated with autism and other neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders. These findings open the possibility that disruptions in microglia-mediated synaptic pruning could contribute to neurodevelopmental and neuropsychiatric disorders.


PLOS ONE | 2012

An Abundant Tissue Macrophage Population in the Adult Murine Heart with a Distinct Alternatively-Activated Macrophage Profile

Alexander R. Pinto; Rosa C. Paolicelli; Ekaterina Salimova; Janko Gospočić; Esfir Slonimsky; Daniel Bilbao-Cortes; James W. Godwin; Nadia Rosenthal

Cardiac tissue macrophages (cTMs) are a previously uncharacterised cell type that we have identified and characterise here as an abundant GFP+ population within the adult Cx3cr1GFP/+ knock-in mouse heart. They comprise the predominant myeloid cell population in the myocardium, and are found throughout myocardial interstitial spaces interacting directly with capillary endothelial cells and cardiomyocytes. Flow cytometry-based immunophenotyping shows that cTMs exhibit canonical macrophage markers. Gene expression analysis shows that cTMs (CD45+CD11b+GFP+) are distinct from mononuclear CD45+CD11b+GFP+ cells sorted from the spleen and brain of adult Cx3cr1GFP/+ mice. Gene expression profiling reveals that cTMs closely resemble alternatively-activated anti-inflammatory M2 macrophages, expressing a number of M2 markers, including Mrc1, CD163, and Lyve-1. While cTMs perform normal tissue macrophage homeostatic functions, they also exhibit a distinct phenotype, involving secretion of salutary factors (including IGF-1) and immune modulation. In summary, the characterisation of cTMs at the cellular and molecular level defines a potentially important role for these cells in cardiac homeostasis.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2014

Fractalkine regulation of microglial physiology and consequences on the brain and behavior

Rosa C. Paolicelli; Kanchan Bisht; Marie-Ève Tremblay

Neural circuits are constantly monitored and supported by the surrounding microglial cells, using finely tuned mechanisms which include both direct contact and release of soluble factors. These bidirectional interactions are not only triggered by pathological conditions as a S.O.S. response to noxious stimuli, but they rather represent an established repertoire of dynamic communication for ensuring continuous immune surveillance and homeostasis in the healthy brain. In addition, recent studies are revealing key tasks for microglial interactions with neurons during normal physiological conditions, especially in regulating the maturation of neural circuits and shaping their connectivity in an activity- and experience-dependent manner. Chemokines, a family of soluble and membrane-bound cytokines, play an essential role in mediating neuron-microglia crosstalk in the developing and mature brain. As part of this special issue on Cytokines as players of neuronal plasticity and sensitivity to environment in healthy and pathological brain, our review focuses on the fractalkine signaling pathway, involving the ligand CX3CL1 which is mainly expressed by neurons, and its receptor CX3CR1 that is exclusively found on microglia within the healthy brain. An extensive literature largely based on transgenic mouse models has revealed that fractalkine signaling plays a critical role in regulating a broad spectrum of microglial properties during normal physiological conditions, especially their migration and dynamic surveillance of the brain parenchyma, in addition to influencing the survival of developing neurons, the maturation, activity and plasticity of developing and mature synapses, the brain functional connectivity, adult hippocampal neurogenesis, as well as learning and memory, and the behavioral outcome.


Neuron Glia Biology | 2011

Microglia in development: linking brain wiring to brain environment.

Rosa C. Paolicelli; Cornelius Gross

Microglia are enigmatic non-neuronal cells that infiltrate and take up residence in the brain during development and are thought to perform a surveillance function. An established literature has documented how microglia are activated by pathogenic stimuli and how they contribute to and resolve injuries to the brain. However, much less work has been aimed at understanding their function in the uninjured brain. A series of recent in vivo imaging studies shows that microglia in their resting state are highly motile and actively survey their neuronal surroundings. Furthermore, new data suggest that microglia in their resting state are able to phagocytose unwanted synapses and in this way contribute to synaptic pruning and maturation during development. Coupled with their exquisite sensitivity to pathogenic stimuli, these data suggest that microglia form a link that couples changes in brain environment to changes in brain wiring. Here we discuss this hypothesis and propose a model for the role of microglia during development in sculpting brain connectivity.


Neuron | 2017

TDP-43 Depletion in Microglia Promotes Amyloid Clearance but Also Induces Synapse Loss

Rosa C. Paolicelli; Ali Jawaid; Christopher M. Henstridge; Andrea Valeri; Mario Merlini; John L. Robinson; Edward B. Lee; Jamie Rose; Stanley H. Appel; Virginia M.-Y. Lee; John Q. Trojanowski; Tara L. Spires-Jones; Paul E. Schulz; Lawrence Rajendran

Summary Microglia coordinate various functions in the central nervous system ranging from removing synaptic connections, to maintaining brain homeostasis by monitoring neuronal function, and clearing protein aggregates across the lifespan. Here we investigated whether increased microglial phagocytic activity that clears amyloid can also cause pathological synapse loss. We identified TDP-43, a DNA-RNA binding protein encoded by the Tardbp gene, as a strong regulator of microglial phagocytosis. Mice lacking TDP-43 in microglia exhibit reduced amyloid load in a model of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) but at the same time display drastic synapse loss, even in the absence of amyloid. Clinical examination from TDP-43 pathology cases reveal a considerably reduced prevalence of AD and decreased amyloid pathology compared to age-matched healthy controls, confirming our experimental results. Overall, our data suggest that dysfunctional microglia might play a causative role in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders, critically modulating the early stages of cognitive decline.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2015

Defective microglial development in the hippocampus of Cx3cr1 deficient mice

Francesca Pagani; Rosa C. Paolicelli; Emanuele Murana; Barbara Cortese; Silvia Di Angelantonio; Emanuele Zurolo; Eva Guiducci; Tiago A. Ferreira; Stefano Garofalo; Myriam Catalano; Giuseppina D’Alessandro; Alessandra Porzia; Giovanna Peruzzi; Fabrizio Mainiero; Cristina Limatola; Cornelius Gross; Davide Ragozzino

Microglial cells participate in brain development and influence neuronal loss and synaptic maturation. Fractalkine is an important neuronal chemokine whose expression increases during development and that can influence microglia function via the fractalkine receptor, CX3CR1. Mice lacking Cx3cr1 show a variety of neuronal defects thought to be the result of deficient microglia function. Activation of CX3CR1 is important for the proper migration of microglia to sites of injury and into the brain during development. However, little is known about how fractalkine modulates microglial properties during development. Here we examined microglial morphology, response to ATP, and K+ current properties in acute brain slices from Cx3cr1 knockout mice across postnatal hippocampal development. We found that fractalkine signaling is necessary for the development of several morphological and physiological features of microglia. Specifically, we found that the occurrence of an outward rectifying K+ current, typical of activated microglia, that peaked during the second and third postnatal week, was reduced in Cx3cr1 knockout mice. Fractalkine signaling also influenced microglial morphology and ability to extend processes in response to ATP following its focal application to the slice. Our results reveal the developmental profile of several morphological and physiological properties of microglia and demonstrate that these processes are modulated by fractalkine signaling.


Frontiers in Synaptic Neuroscience | 2017

Function and Dysfunction of Microglia during Brain Development: Consequences for Synapses and Neural Circuits

Rosa C. Paolicelli; Maria Teresa Ferretti

Many diverse factors, ranging from stress to infections, can perturb brain homeostasis and alter the physiological activity of microglia, the immune cells of the central nervous system. Microglia play critical roles in the process of synaptic maturation and brain wiring during development. Any perturbation affecting microglial physiological function during critical developmental periods could result in defective maturation of synaptic circuits. In this review, we critically appraise the recent literature on the alterations of microglial activity induced by environmental and genetic factors occurring at pre- and early post-natal stages. Furthermore, we discuss the long-lasting consequences of early-life microglial perturbation on synaptic function and on vulnerability to neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2011

Sensitized phenotypic screening identifies gene dosage sensitive region on chromosome 11 that predisposes to disease in mice

Olga Ermakova; Lukasz Piszczek; Luisa Luciani; Florence Mg Cavalli; Tiago A. Ferreira; Dominika Farley; Stefania Rizzo; Rosa C. Paolicelli; Mumna Al-Banchaabouchi; Claus Nerlov; Richard Moriggl; Nicholas M. Luscombe; Cornelius Gross

The identification of susceptibility genes for human disease is a major goal of current biomedical research. Both sequence and structural variation have emerged as major genetic sources of phenotypic variability and growing evidence points to copy number variation as a particularly important source of susceptibility for disease. Here we propose and validate a strategy to identify genes in which changes in dosage alter susceptibility to disease‐relevant phenotypes in the mouse. Our approach relies on sensitized phenotypic screening of megabase‐sized chromosomal deletion and deficiency lines carrying altered copy numbers of ∼30 linked genes. This approach offers several advantages as a method to systematically identify genes involved in disease susceptibility. To examine the feasibility of such a screen, we performed sensitized phenotyping in five therapeutic areas (metabolic syndrome, immune dysfunction, atherosclerosis, cancer and behaviour) of a 0.8 Mb reciprocal chromosomal duplication and deficiency on chromosome 11 containing 27 genes. Gene dosage in the region significantly affected risk for high‐fat diet‐induced metabolic syndrome, antigen‐induced immune hypersensitivity, ApoE‐induced atherosclerosis, and home cage activity. Follow up studies on individual gene knockouts for two candidates in the region showed that copy number variation in Stat5 was responsible for the phenotypic variation in antigen‐induced immune hypersensitivity and metabolic syndrome. These data demonstrate the power of sensitized phenotypic screening of segmental aneuploidy lines to identify disease susceptibility genes.


Immunity | 2018

The Microglial Innate Immune Receptor TREM2 Is Required for Synapse Elimination and Normal Brain Connectivity

Fabia Filipello; Raffaella Morini; Irene Corradini; Valerio Zerbi; Alice Canzi; Bernadeta Michalski; Marco Erreni; Marija Markicevic; Chiara Starvaggi-Cucuzza; Karel Otero; Laura Piccio; Francesca Cignarella; Fabio Perrucci; Matteo Tamborini; Marco Genua; Lawrence Rajendran; Elisabetta Menna; Stefania Vetrano; Margaret Fahnestock; Rosa C. Paolicelli; Michela Matteoli

SUMMARY The triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2 (TREM2) is a microglial innate immune receptor associated with a lethal form of early, progressive dementia, Nasu‐Hakola disease, and with an increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease. Microglial defects in phagocytosis of toxic aggregates or apoptotic membranes were proposed to be at the origin of the pathological processes in the presence of Trem2 inactivating mutations. Here, we show that TREM2 is essential for microglia‐mediated synaptic refinement during the early stages of brain development. The absence of Trem2 resulted in impaired synapse elimination, accompanied by enhanced excitatory neurotransmission and reduced long‐range functional connectivity. Trem2−/− mice displayed repetitive behavior and altered sociability. TREM2 protein levels were also negatively correlated with the severity of symptoms in humans affected by autism. These data unveil the role of TREM2 in neuronal circuit sculpting and provide the evidence for the receptor’s involvement in neurodevelopmental diseases. Graphical Abstract Figure. No Caption available. HighlightsLack of TREM2 results in lower microglia activation during early brain developmentTREM2 is required for microglia‐dependent synapse eliminationAdult mice lacking TREM2 display sociability defects and altered brain connectivityTREM2 protein is reduced in patients affected by autism &NA; TREM2 is a microglial innate immune receptor whose functions during brain development are still unknown. Filipello et al. demonstrate that TREM2 is essential for microglia to eliminate supernumerary synapses in the developing brain. TREM2 protein was also reduced in autistic patients, suggesting that the receptor may be involved in neurodevelopmental diseases.

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Cornelius Gross

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Davide Ragozzino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Francesca Pagani

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Tiago A. Ferreira

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Eva Guiducci

European Bioinformatics Institute

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Giulia Bolasco

European Bioinformatics Institute

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