Sara Barbera
Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sara Barbera.
Journal of Neuroimmunology | 2006
Costanza Savino; Rosetta Pedotti; Fulvio Baggi; Federica Ubiali; Barbara Gallo; Sara Nava; Paolo Bigini; Sara Barbera; Elena Fumagalli; Tiziana Mennini; Annamaria Vezzani; Massimo Rizzi; Thomas Coleman; Anthony Cerami; Michael Brines; Pietro Ghezzi; Roberto Bianchi
Erythropoietin (EPO) mediates a wide range of neuroprotective activities, including amelioration of disease and neuroinflammation in rat models of EAE. However, optimum dosing parameters are currently unknown. In the present study, we used a chronic EAE model induced in mice by immunization with the myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein peptide (MOG35-55) to compare the effect of EPO given with different treatment schedules. EPO was administered intraperitoneally at 0.5, 5.0 or 50 microg/kg three times weekly starting from day 3 after immunization (preventive schedule), at the onset of clinical disease (therapeutic schedule) or 15 days after the onset of symptoms (late therapeutic schedule). The results show that EPO is effective even when given after the appearance of clinical signs of EAE, but with a reduced efficacy compared to the preventative schedule. To determine whether this effect requires the homodimeric EPO receptor (EPOR2)-mediated hematopoietic effect of EPO, we studied the effect of carbamylated EPO (CEPO) that does not bind EPOR2. CEPO, ameliorated EAE without changing the hemoglobin concentration. Another non-erythropoietic derivative, asialoEPO was also effective. Both EPO and CEPO equivalently decreased the EAE-associated production of TNF-alpha, IL-1beta and IL-1Ra in the spinal cord, and IFN-gamma by peripheral lymphocytes, indicating that their action involves targeting neuroinflammation. The lowest dosage tested appeared fully effective. The possibility to dissociate the anti-neuroinflammatory action of EPO from its hematopoietic action, which may cause undesired side effects in non-anemic patients, present new avenues to the therapy of multiple sclerosis.
Rejuvenation Research | 2011
Paolo Bigini; P. Veglianese; G. Andriolo; Lidia Cova; G. Grignaschi; I. Caron; C. Daleno; Sara Barbera; A. Ottolina; Cinzia Calzarossa; Lorenza Lazzari; Tiziana Mennini; C. Bendotti; Vincenzo Silani
The lack of effective drug therapies for motor neuron diseases (MND), and in general for all the neurodegenerative disorders, has increased the interest toward the potential use of stem cells. Among the cell therapy approaches so far tested in MND animal models, systemic injection of human cord blood mononuclear cells (HuCB-MNCs) has proven to reproducibly increase, although modestly, the life span of SOD1G93A mice, a model of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), even if only few transplanted cells were found in the damaged areas. In attempt to improve the potential efficacy of these cells in the central nervous system, we examined the effect and distribution of Hoechst 33258-labeled HuCB-MNCs after a single bilateral intracerberoventricular injection in two models of motor neuron degeneration, the transgenic SOD1G93A and wobbler mice. HuCB-MNCs significantly ameliorated symptoms progression in both mouse models and prolonged survival in SOD1G93A mice. They were localized in the lateral ventricles, even 4 months after administration. However, HuCB-MNCs were not found in the spinal cord ventral horns. This evidence strengthens the hypothesis that the beneficial role of transplanted cells is not due to cell replacement but is rather associated with the production and release of circulating protective factors that may act both at the central and/or peripheral levels. In particular, we show that HuCB-MNCs release a series of cytokines and chemokines with antiinflammatory properties that could be responsible of the functional improvement of mouse models of motor neuron degenerative disorders.
Experimental Neurology | 2006
Elena Fumagalli; Paolo Bigini; Sara Barbera; Massimiliano De Paola; Tiziana Mennini
The wobbler mouse is one of the most useful models of motoneuron degeneration, characterized by selective motoneuronal death in the cervical spinal cord. We carried out two parallel studies in wobbler mice, comparing the anti-glutamatergic drug riluzole and the AMPA receptor antagonist RPR119990. Mice were treated with 40 mg/kg/day of riluzole or with 3 mg/kg/day of RPR119990 from the 4th to the 12th week of age. Here, we show that chronic treatment with riluzole improves motor behavior, prevents biceps muscle atrophy and decreases the amount of motoneuron loss in treated wobbler mice. Chronic treatment with the AMPA antagonist RPR119990 is ineffective in improving motor impairment, in reducing motoneuronal loss and muscular atrophy in treated mice. These results, together with the unchanged immunostaining for the AMPA receptor subunit GluR2 in wobbler mice, suggest that AMPA receptor-mediated injury is unlikely to be involved in neurodegeneration in wobbler disease, and that the protective effect of riluzole in wobbler mice seems to be independent of its anti-glutamatergic activity, as suggested in other models of neurodegeneration. Immunostaining of cervical spinal cord sections shows that in riluzole-treated wobbler mice BDNF expression is significantly increased in motoneurons with no changes in the high-affinity receptor Trk-B. Our data confirm that riluzole has beneficial effects in wobbler mice, and suggest that these effects could be associated to the increased levels of the neurotrophic and neuroprotective factor BDNF.
BMC Neuroscience | 2006
Paolo Bigini; Fabrizio Gardoni; Sara Barbera; Alfredo Cagnotto; Elena Fumagalli; Annalisa Longhi; Massimiliano M. Corsi; Monica Di Luca; Tiziana Mennini
BackgroundThe localisation of AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits was studied in a model of degeneration of cervical spinal motoneurons, the wobbler mouse. Cervical regions from early or late symptomatic wobbler mice (4 or 12 weeks of age) were compared to lumbar tracts (unaffected) and to those of healthy mice.ResultsNo differences were found in the distribution of AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits at both ages. Western blots analysis showed a trend of reduction in AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits, mainly GluR1 and NR2A, exclusively in the cervical region of late symptomatic mice in the triton-insoluble post-synaptic fraction but not whole homogenates. Colocalisation experiments evidenced the expression of GluR1 and NR2A receptors in activated astrocytes from the cervical spinal cord of wobbler mice, GluR2 did not colocalise with GFAP positive cells. No differences were found in the expression of AMPA and NMDA receptor subunits in the lumbar tract of wobbler mice, where neither motoneuron loss nor reactive gliosis occurs.ConclusionIn late symptomatic wobbler mice altered levels of GluR1 and NR2A receptor subunits may be a consequence of motoneuron loss rather than an early feature of motoneuron vulnerability.
Neurobiology of Disease | 2008
Paolo Bigini; Mariaelena Repici; Giuseppina Cantarella; Elena Fumagalli; Sara Barbera; Alfredo Cagnotto; Ada De Luigi; Rossella Tonelli; Renato Bernardini; Tiziana Borsello; Tiziana Mennini
TNF-alpha overexpression may contribute to motor neuron death in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We investigated the intracellular pathway associated with TNF-alpha in the wobbler mouse, a murine model of ALS, at the onset of symptoms. TNF-alpha and TNFR1 overexpression and JNK/p38MAPK phosphorylation occurred in neurons and microglia in early symptomatic mice, suggesting that this activation may contribute to motor neuron damage. The involvement of TNF-alpha was further confirmed by the protective effect of treatment with rhTNF-alpha binding protein (rhTBP-1) from 4 to 9 weeks of age. rhTBP-1 reduced the progression of symptoms, motor neuron loss, gliosis and JNK/p38MAPK phosphorylation in wobbler mice, but did not reduce TNF-alpha and TNFR1 levels. rhTBP-1 might possibly bind TNF-alpha and reduce the downstream phosphorylation of two main effectors of the neuroinflammatory response, p38MAPK and JNK.
Journal of Neuropathology and Experimental Neurology | 2010
Paolo Bigini; Knut R. Steffensen; Anna Ferrario; Luisa Diomede; Giovanni Ferrara; Sara Barbera; Sonia Salzano; Elena Fumagalli; Pietro Ghezzi; Tiziana Mennini; Jan Åke Gustafsson
In amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), there is selective degeneration of motor neurons that leads to paralysis and death. Although the etiology of ALS is unclear, its heterogeneity suggests that a combination of factors (endogenous and/or environmental) may induce progressive motor neuron stress that results in the activation of different cell death pathways. Alterations of brain cholesterol homeostasis have recently been considered as possible cofactors in many neurodegenerative disorders, including ALS. The liver X receptor &bgr; (LXR&bgr;) receptor is involved in lipogenesis and cholesterol metabolism, and we previously found that adult-onset motor neuron pathology occurs in LXR&bgr;−/− mice. Here, we investigated neuromuscular alterations of LXR&bgr;−/− mice from ages 3 to 24 months. Increased cholesterol levels, gliosis, and inflammation preceded motor neuron loss and clinical disease onset; the mice showed progressivemotor neuron deficits starting from age 7 months. The numbers ofmotor neurons and neuromuscular junctions were decreased in 24-month-old mice, but neither paralysis nor reduced life span was observed. Moreover, other spinal neurons were also lost in these mice. These results suggest that LXR&bgr; may inhibit neuroinflammation and maintain cholesterol homeostasis, and that LXR&bgr;−/− mice represent a potential model for investigating the role of cholesterol in ALS and other neurodegenerative disorders.
PLOS ONE | 2012
Paolo Bigini; Valentina Diana; Sara Barbera; Elena Fumagalli; Edoardo Micotti; Leopoldo Sitia; Alessandra Paladini; Cinzia Bisighini; Laura De Grada; Laura Coloca; Laura Colombo; Pina Manca; Patrizia Bossolasco; Francesca Malvestiti; Fabio Fiordaliso; Gianluigi Forloni; Massimo Morbidelli; Mario Salmona; Daniela Giardino; Tiziana Mennini; Davide Moscatelli; Vincenzo Silani; Lidia Cova
Stem Cell (SC) therapy is one of the most promising approaches for the treatment of Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS). Here we employed Super Paramagnetic Iron Oxide nanoparticles (SPIOn) and Hoechst 33258 to track human Amniotic Fluid Cells (hAFCs) after transplantation in the lateral ventricles of wobbler (a murine model of ALS) and healthy mice. By in vitro, in vivo and ex vivo approaches we found that: 1) the main physical parameters of SPIOn were maintained over time; 2) hAFCs efficiently internalized SPIOn into the cytoplasm while Hoechst 33258 labeled nuclei; 3) SPIOn internalization did not alter survival, cell cycle, proliferation, metabolism and phenotype of hAFCs; 4) after transplantation hAFCs rapidly spread to the whole ventricular system, but did not migrate into the brain parenchyma; 5) hAFCs survived for a long time in the ventricles of both wobbler and healthy mice; 6) the transplantation of double-labeled hAFCs did not influence mice survival.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2010
Torun M. Melø; Paolo Bigini; Ursula Sonnewald; Silvia Balosso; Alfredo Cagnotto; Sara Barbera; Sarah Uboldi; Annamaria Vezzani; Tiziana Mennini
J. Neurochem. (2010) 115, 1445–1454.
Neuroscience Letters | 2007
Paolo Bigini; Cristiana Atzori; Elena Fumagalli; Alfredo Cagnotto; Sara Barbera; Antonio Migheli; Tiziana Mennini
The mechanism of motor neuron degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is still unclear and the post-mortem analysis of samples from ALS patients does not permit a clarification of the early events of cell death occurring in ALS. Animal models of motor neuron degeneration represent a reliable tool to investigate the type of cell death. Attention was focused on the possible role of apoptosis in a spontaneous model of cervical spinal cord motor neuron degeneration, the wobbler mouse. Firstly, the rate of motor neuron loss occurring in the cervical spinal cord region of wobbler mice during different phases of symptoms progression was quantified by CholineAcetyltransferase (ChAT) immunohistochemistry. This was followed by a series of immunohistological studies to ascertain whether apoptosis was actually involved. ChAT immunostaining confirmed the severe loss of cholinergic neurons. Since the rate of motor neuron death is maximal in the first phase of the disease (from the 3rd to the 5th postnatal week), apoptotic markers were evaluated in 4-week-old wobbler mice. This study, carried out by examining a large number of cervical spinal cord sections from 20 affected animals and 20 healthy littermates, did not show either caspase activation or DNA fragmentation. These results strongly suggest that motor neuron death occurring in the wobbler mouse is not related to a caspase-dependent apoptotic mechanism.
Molecular Medicine | 2008
Manuela Mengozzi; Ilaria Cervellini; Paolo Bigini; Sara Martone; Antonella Biondi; Rosetta Pedotti; Barbara Gallo; Sara Barbera; Tiziana Mennini; Mariaserena Boraso; Marina Marinovich; Edwige Petit; Myriam Bernaudin; Roberto Bianchi; Barbara Viviani; Pietro Ghezzi
Erythropoietin (EPO) is of great interest as a therapy for many of the central nervous system (CNS) diseases and its administration is protective in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), an animal model of multiple sclerosis (MS). Endogenous EPO is induced by hypoxic/ischemic injury, but little is known about its expression in other CNS diseases. We report here that EPO expression in the spinal cord is induced in mouse models of chronic or relapsing-remitting EAE, and is prominently localized to motoneurons. We found a parallel increase of hypoxia-inducible transcription factor (HIF)-1α, but not HIF-2α, at the mRNA level, suggesting a possible role of non-hypoxic factors in EPO induction. EPO mRNA in the spinal cord was co-expressed with interferon (IFN)-γ and tumor necrosis factor (TNF), and these cytokines inhibited EPO production in vitro in both neuronal and glialcells. Given the known inhibitory effect of EPO on neuroinflammation, our study indicates that EPO should be viewed as part of the inflammatory/anti-inflammatory network in MS.