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Dive into the research topics where Sónia Paixão is active.

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Featured researches published by Sónia Paixão.


Nature Neuroscience | 2009

Neuron-glia communication via EphA4/ephrin-A3 modulates LTP through glial glutamate transport

Alessandro Filosa; Sónia Paixão; Silke D. Honsek; Maria A. Carmona; Lore Becker; Berend Feddersen; Louise Gaitanos; York Rudhard; Ralf Schoepfer; Thomas Klopstock; Klas Kullander; Christine R. Rose; Elena B. Pasquale; Ruediger Klein

Astrocytes are critical participants in synapse development and function, but their role in synaptic plasticity is unclear. Eph receptors and their ephrin ligands have been suggested to regulate neuron-glia interactions, and EphA4-mediated ephrin reverse signaling is required for synaptic plasticity in the hippocampus. Here we show that long-term potentiation (LTP) at the CA3–CA1 synapse is modulated by EphA4 in the postsynaptic CA1 cell and by ephrin-A3, a ligand of EphA4 that is found in astrocytes. Lack of EphA4 increased the abundance of glial glutamate transporters, and ephrin-A3 modulated transporter currents in astrocytes. Pharmacological inhibition of glial glutamate transporters rescued the LTP defects in EphA4 (Epha4) and ephrin-A3 (Efna3) mutant mice. Transgenic overexpression of ephrin-A3 in astrocytes reduces glutamate transporter levels and produces focal dendritic swellings possibly caused by glutamate excitotoxicity. These results suggest that EphA4/ephrin-A3 signaling is a critical mechanism for astrocytes to regulate synaptic function and plasticity.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2004

Modular Structure of the Human Lamin B2 Replicator

Sónia Paixão; Ivan N. Colaluca; Matthieu Cubells; Fiorenzo A. Peverali; Annarita Destro; Sara Giadrossi; Mauro Giacca; Arturo Falaschi; Silvano Riva; Giuseppe Biamonti

ABSTRACT The cis-acting elements necessary for the activity of DNA replication origins in metazoan cells are still poorly understood. Here we report a thorough characterization of the DNA sequence requirements of the origin associated with the human lamin B2 gene. A 1.2-kb DNA segment, comprising the start site of DNA replication and located within a large protein-bound region, as well as a CpG island, displays origin activity when moved to different ectopic positions. Genomic footprinting analysis of both the endogenous and the ectopic origins indicates that the large protein complex is assembled in both cases around the replication start site. Replacement of this footprinted region with an unrelated sequence, maintaining the CpG island intact, abolishes origin activity and the interaction with hORC2, a subunit of the origin recognition complex. Conversely, the replacement of 17 bp within the protected region reduces the extension of the protection without affecting the interaction with hORC2. This substitution does not abolish the origin activity but makes it more sensitive to the integration site. Finally, the nearby CpG island positively affects the efficiency of initiation. This analysis reveals the modular structure of the lamin B2 origin and supports the idea that sequence elements close to the replication start site play an important role in origin activation.


Current Opinion in Neurobiology | 2010

Neuron-astrocyte communication and synaptic plasticity

Sónia Paixão; Rüdiger Klein

By forming close contacts with synapses, astrocytes secrete neuroactive substances and remove neurotransmitters, thus influencing the processing of information by the nervous system. Here, we review recent work on astrocytes and their roles in regulating neuronal function and synaptic plasticity. Astrocytes are organized as networks and communicate with each other, thereby affecting larger neural circuits. They also provide a link between neurons and the vasculature, potentially changing the cerebral microcirculation. Recent work has provided insights into the relative contributions of specific astrocytic cues and transporters to synaptic transmission, plasticity, and animal behavior.


Journal of Cell Science | 2004

Subnuclear distribution of the largest subunit of the human origin recognition complex during the cell cycle

Maria Rosa Lidonnici; Rossella Rossi; Sónia Paixão; Ramiro Mendoza-Maldonado; Roberta Paolinelli; Caterina Arcangeli; Mauro Giacca; Giuseppe Biamonti; Alessandra Montecucco

In eukaryotes, initiation of DNA replication requires the activity of the origin recognition complex (ORC). The largest subunit of this complex, Orc1p, has a critical role in this activity. Here we have studied the subnuclear distribution of the overexpressed human Orc1p during the cell cycle. Orc1p is progressively degraded during S-phase according to a spatio-temporal program and it never colocalizes with replication factories. Orc1p is resynthesized in G1. In early G1, the protein is distributed throughout the cell nucleus, but successively it preferentially associates with heterochromatin. This association requires a functional ATP binding site and a protein region partially overlapping the bromo-adjacent homology domain at the N-terminus of Orc1p. The same N-terminal region mediates the in vitro interaction with heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1). Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments demonstrate the interaction of human Orc1p and HP1 in vivo. Our data suggest a role of HP1 in the recruitment but not in the stable association of Orc1p with heterochromatin. Indeed, the subnuclear distribution of Orc1p is not affected by treatments that trigger the dispersal of HP1.


Chromosome Research | 2003

Is DNA sequence sufficient to specify DNA replication origins in metazoan cells

Giuseppe Biamonti; Sónia Paixão; Alessandra Montecucco; Fiorenzo A. Peverali; Silvano Riva; Arturo Falaschi

DNA replication occupies a central position in the cell cycle and, therefore, in the development and life of multicellular organisms. During the last 10 years, our comprehension of this important process has considerably improved. Although the mechanisms that coordinate DNA replication with the other moments of the cell cycle are not yet fully understood, it is known that they mainly operate through DNA replication origins and the protein complexes bound to them. In eukaryotes, the packaging status of chromatin seems to be part of the mechanism that controls whether or not and when during the S-phase a particular origin will be activated. Intriguingly, the protein complexes bound to DNA replication origins appear to be directly involved in controlling chromatin packaging. In this manner they can also affect gene expression. In this review we focus on DNA replication origins in metazoan cells and on the relationship between these elements and the structural and functional organization of the genome.


Neuron | 2013

EphrinB3/EphA4-mediated guidance of ascending and descending spinal tracts.

Sónia Paixão; Aarathi Balijepalli; Najet Serradj; Jingwen Niu; Wenqin Luo; John H. Martin; Rüdiger Klein

The spinal cord contains many descending and ascending longitudinal tracts whose development appears to be controlled by distinct guidance systems. We identified a population of dorsal spinal neurons marked by coexpression of the transcription factor Zic2 and the guidance receptor EphA4. Zic2+;EphA4+ neurons are surrounded by mechanosensory terminals, suggesting innervation by mechanoreceptor afferents. Their axons form an ipsilateral ascending pathway that develops during embryogenesis and projects within the ventral aspect of the dorsal funiculus, the same location as the descending corticospinal tract (CST), which develops postnatally. Interestingly, the same guidance mechanism, namely, ephrinB3-induced EphA4 forward signaling, is required for the guidance of both ascending and descending axon tracts. Our analysis of conditional EphA4 mutant mice also revealed that the development of the dorsal funiculus occurs independently of EphA4 expression in descending CST axons and is linked to the distribution of Zic2+;EphA4+ spinal neurons and the formation of the ascending pathway.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2014

EphA4-Mediated Ipsilateral Corticospinal Tract Misprojections Are Necessary for Bilateral Voluntary Movements But Not Bilateral Stereotypic Locomotion

Najet Serradj; Sónia Paixão; Tomasz Sobocki; Mitchell Feinberg; Ruediger Klein; Klas Kullander; John H. Martin

In this study, we took advantage of the reported role of EphA4 in determining the contralateral spinal projection of the corticospinal tract (CST) to investigate the effects of ipsilateral misprojections on voluntary movements and stereotypic locomotion. Null EphA4 mutations produce robust ipsilateral CST misprojections, resulting in bilateral corticospinal tracts. We hypothesize that a unilateral voluntary limb movement, not a stereotypic locomotor movement, will become a bilateral movement in EphA4 knock-out mice with a bilateral CST. However, in EphA4 full knock-outs, spinal interneurons also develop bilateral misprojections. Aberrant bilateral spinal circuits could thus transform unilateral corticospinal control signals into bilateral movements. We therefore studied mice with conditional forebrain deletion of the EphA4 gene under control by Emx1, a gene expressed in the forebrain that affects the developing CST but spares brainstem motor pathways and spinal motor circuits. We examined two conditional knock-outs targeting forebrain EphA4 during performance of stereotypic locomotion and voluntary movement: adaptive locomotion over obstacles and exploratory reaching. We found that the conditional knock-outs used alternate stepping, not hopping, during overground locomotion, suggesting normal central pattern generator function and supporting our hypothesis of minimal CST involvement in the moment-to-moment control of stereotypic locomotion. In contrast, the conditional knock-outs showed bilateral voluntary movements under conditions when single limb movements are normally produced and, as a basis for this aberrant control, developed a bilateral motor map in motor cortex that is driven by the aberrant ipsilateral CST misprojections. Therefore, a specific change in CST connectivity is associated with and explains a change in voluntary movement.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

The Protein Dendrite Arborization and Synapse Maturation 1 (Dasm-1) Is Dispensable for Dendrite Arborization†

Archana Mishra; Boris Knerr; Sónia Paixão; Edgar R. Kramer; Rüdiger Klein

ABSTRACT The development of a highly branched dendritic tree is essential for the establishment of functional neuronal connections. The evolutionarily conserved immunoglobulin superfamily member, the protein dendrite arborization and synapse maturation 1 (Dasm-1) is thought to play a critical role in dendrite formation of dissociated hippocampal neurons. RNA interference-mediated Dasm-1 knockdown was previously shown to impair dendrite, but not axonal, outgrowth and branching (S. H. Shi, D. N. Cox, D. Wang, L. Y. Jan, and Y. N. Jan, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 101:13341-13345, 2004). Here, we report the generation and analysis of Dasm-1 null mice. We find that genetic ablation of Dasm-1 does not interfere with hippocampal dendrite growth and branching in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, the absence of Dasm-1 does not affect the modulation of dendritic outgrowth induced by brain-derived neurotrophic factor. Importantly, the previously observed impairment in dendrite growth after Dasm-1 knockdown is also observed when the Dasm-1 knockdown is performed in cultured hippocampal neurons from Dasm-1 null mice. These findings indicate that the dendrite arborization phenotype was caused by off-target effects and that Dasm-1 is dispensable for hippocampal dendrite arborization.


Journal of Neurotrauma | 2012

Functional and Histological Outcome after Focal Traumatic Brain Injury Is Not Improved in Conditional EphA4 Knockout Mice

Anders Hånell; Fredrik Clausen; Anders Djupsjö; Anna Vallstedt; Kalicharan Patra; Charlotte Israelsson; Martin Larhammar; Maria Björk; Sónia Paixão; Klas Kullander; Niklas Marklund

We investigated the role of the axon guidance molecule EphA4 following traumatic brain injury (TBI) in mice. Neutralization of EphA4 improved motor function and axonal regeneration following experimental spinal cord injury (SCI). We hypothesized that genetic absence of EphA4 could improve functional and histological outcome following TBI. Using qRT-PCR in wild-type (WT) mice, we evaluated the EphA4 mRNA levels following controlled cortical impact (CCI) TBI or sham injury and found it to be downregulated in the hippocampus (p<0.05) but not the cortex ipsilateral to the injury at 24 h post-injury. Next, we evaluated the behavioral and histological outcome following CCI using WT mice and Emx1-Cre-driven conditional knockout (cKO) mice. In cKO mice, EphA4 was completely absent in the hippocampus and markedly reduced in the cortical regions from embryonic day 16, which was confirmed using Western blot analysis. EphA4 cKO mice had similar learning and memory abilities at 3 weeks post-TBI compared to WT controls, although brain-injured animals performed worse than sham-injured controls (p<0.05). EphA4 cKO mice performed similarly to WT mice in the rotarod and cylinder tests of motor function up to 29 days post-injury. TBI increased cortical and hippocampal astrocytosis (GFAP immunohistochemistry, p<0.05) and hippocampal sprouting (Timm stain, p<0.05) and induced a marked loss of hemispheric tissue (p<0.05). EphA4 cKO did not alter the histological outcome. Although our results may argue against a beneficial role for EphA4 in the recovery process following TBI, further studies including post-injury pharmacological neutralization of EphA4 are needed to define the role for EphA4 following TBI.


Archive | 2015

The Eph Receptor Family

Thomas N Gaitanos; Irina Dudanova; Maria Sakkou; Rüdiger Klein; Sónia Paixão

Eph receptors constitute the largest subfamily of receptor tyrosine kinases and mediate contact-dependent cell–cell communication in many tissues. Unique features of Eph receptors include their engagement with membrane-attached ephrin ligands, the requirement of higher-order clustering for full activation, and bidirectional signaling into the receptor- as well as ligand-expressing cell. Eph receptor functions can be additionally modulated by cis interactions with ephrins expressed on the same cell as well as proteolytic cleavage. Extensive studies in several model organisms have implicated Eph receptors in multiple physiological and pathological processes at all stages from early embryogenesis to aging. Eph signaling is often repulsive and governs cell sorting, migration, and boundary formation. During embryonic and early postnatal period, Ephs are involved in the development of the nervous system, cardiovascular system, and several other organs and tissues. Eph receptors also have various functions in adult physiology, including their important role in neural plasticity. Finally, Ephs have emerged as important players in different types of cancer and several neurological diseases and are regarded as potential drug targets for these disorders.

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John H. Martin

City University of New York

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Najet Serradj

City University of New York

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Mitchell Feinberg

City University of New York

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Tomasz Sobocki

City University of New York

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Trevor Drew

Université de Montréal

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