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Dive into the research topics where Sonia R. Kameda is active.

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Featured researches published by Sonia R. Kameda.


Neuropharmacology | 2004

Role of hippocampal oxidative stress in memory deficits induced by sleep deprivation in mice.

Regina H. Silva; Vanessa C. Abílio; A.L Takatsu; Sonia R. Kameda; Christian Grassl; A.B. Chehin; Wladimir Agostini Medrano; Mariana Bendlin Calzavara; S. Registro; Monica L. Andersen; Ricardo Borges Machado; Rita C. Carvalho; R. de A. Ribeiro; Sergio Tufik; Roberto Frussa-Filho

Numerous animal and clinical studies have described memory deficits following sleep deprivation. There is also evidence that the absence of sleep increases brain oxidative stress. The present study investigates the role of hippocampal oxidative stress in memory deficits induced by sleep deprivation in mice. Mice were sleep deprived for 72 h by the multiple platform method-groups of 4-6 animals were placed in water tanks, containing 12 platforms (3 cm in diameter) surrounded by water up to 1 cm beneath the surface. Mice kept in their home cage or placed onto larger platforms were used as control groups. The results showed that hippocampal oxidized/reduced glutathione ratio as well as lipid peroxidation of sleep-deprived mice was significantly increased compared to control groups. The same procedure of sleep deprivation led to a passive avoidance retention deficit. Both passive avoidance retention deficit and increased hippocampal lipid peroxidation were prevented by repeated treatment (15 consecutive days, i.p.) with the antioxidant agents melatonin (5 mg/kg), N-tert-butyl-alpha-phenylnitrone (200 mg/kg) or vitamin E (40 mg/kg). The results indicate an important role of hippocampal oxidative stress in passive avoidance memory deficits induced by sleep deprivation in mice.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2004

Effects of pre- or post-training paradoxical sleep deprivation on two animal models of learning and memory in mice

Regina H. Silva; A.B. Chehin; Sonia R. Kameda; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Vanessa C. Abílio; Sergio Tufik; Roberto Frussa-Filho

The aim of the present study was to verify the effects of pre- or post-training paradoxical sleep (PS) deprivation in mice tested in the passive and the plus-maze discriminative avoidance tasks. Three-month-old Swiss male mice were placed in narrow platforms in a water tank for 72 h to prevent the occurrence of PS. Control animals were kept in the same room, but in their home cages. Before or after this period, the animals were submitted to the training session of one of the behavioral tasks. The test sessions were performed 3 and 10 days after the training. The animals that were PS-deprived before the training session showed retention deficits in the test sessions performed 3 days later in both tasks (decreased latency to enter the dark chamber of the passive avoidance apparatus or increased percent time spent in the aversive arm of the plus-maze discriminative avoidance apparatus). Animals that were PS deprived after the training session showed no differences from control animals in the test sessions performed 3 days after the training in any of the tasks, but showed passive and discriminative avoidance retention deficits in the test performed 10 days after the training. The results suggest that both pre- and post-training paradoxical sleep deprivation produce memory deficits in mice. However, these effects have different temporal characteristics.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2005

Behavioral characterization of morphine effects on motor activity in mice

Camilla L. Patti; Roberto Frussa-Filho; Regina H. Silva; Rita C. Carvalho; Sonia R. Kameda; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Jaime L.S. Cunha; Vanessa C. Abílio

A biphasic effect of morphine on locomotion has been extensively described. Nevertheless, the effects of this opioid on other behavioral parameters have been overlooked. The aim of the present study was to verify the effects of different doses of morphine on motor behaviors observed in an open-field. Adult female mice were injected with saline or morphine (10, 15 and 20 mg/kg, i.p.) and observed in an open-field for quantification of locomotor and rearing frequencies as well as duration of immobility and grooming. The lowest dose of morphine decreased locomotion (and increased immobility duration) while the highest dose increased it. All doses tested decreased rearing and grooming. Thus, the effects of morphine on locomotion do not parallel to its effects on rearing and grooming. Our results indicate that locomotion not always reflects the effect of drugs on motor activity, which can be better investigated when other behavioral parameters are concomitantly taken into account.


Schizophrenia Bulletin | 2009

Neuroleptic drugs revert the contextual fear conditioning deficit presented by spontaneously hypertensive rats: a potential animal model of emotional context processing in schizophrenia?

Mariana Bendlin Calzavara; Wladimir Agostini Medrano; Raquel Levin; Sonia R. Kameda; Monica L. Andersen; Sergio Tufik; Regina Helena Silva; Roberto Frussa-Filho; Vanessa C. Abílio

Schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) present abnormalities in emotion processing. A previous study showed that the spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR), a putative animal model of ADHD, present reduced contextual fear conditioning (CFC). The aim of the present study was to characterize the deficit in CFC presented by SHR. Adult male normotensive Wistar rats and SHR were submitted to the CFC task. Sensitivity of the animals to the shock and the CFC performance after repeated exposure to the task were investigated. Pharmacological characterization consisted in the evaluation of the effects of the following drugs administered previously to the acquisition of the CFC: pentylenetetrazole (anxiogenic) and chlordiazepoxide (anxiolytic); methylphenidate and amphetamine (used for ADHD); lamotrigine, carbamazepine, and valproic acid (mood stabilizers); haloperidol, ziprasidone, risperidone, amisulpride, and clozapine (neuroleptic drugs); metoclopramide and SCH 23390 (dopamine antagonists without antipsychotic properties); and ketamine (a psychotomimmetic). The effects of paradoxical sleep deprivation (that worsens psychotic symptoms) and the performance in a latent inhibition protocol (an animal model of schizophrenia) were also verified. No differences in the sensitivity to the shock were observed. The repeated exposure to the CFC task did not modify the deficit in CFC presented by SHR. Considering pharmacological treatments, only the neuroleptic drugs reversed this deficit. This deficit was potentiated by proschizophrenia manipulations. Finally, a deficit in latent inhibition was also presented by SHR. These findings suggest that the deficit in CFC presented by SHR could be a useful animal model to study abnormalities in emotional context processing related to schizophrenia.


Brain Research | 2006

Effects of reserpine on the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task: dissociation between memory and motor impairments.

Rita C. Carvalho; Camilla C. Patti; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Sonia R. Kameda; Claudio F. Souza; Lúcia Garcez-do-Carmo; Vanessa C. Abílio; Roberto Frussa-Filho; Regina Helena Silva

We investigated the effects of reserpine (0.1-0.5 mg/kg) on the performance of mice in the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task (DAVT), which simultaneously evaluates memory and motor activity. All doses induced memory impairment (increased aversive arm time) but only 0.5 mg/kg reserpine decreased locomotion (entries in enclosed arms). The results suggest that the DAVT evaluation in reserpine-treated mice can be a useful model for studying cognitive deficits accompanied by motor impairments.


Pharmacology, Biochemistry and Behavior | 2011

Adolescent mice are more vulnerable than adults to single injection-induced behavioral sensitization to amphetamine.

Sonia R. Kameda; Daniela F. Fukushiro; Thaís F. Trombin; Roberta Procópio-Souza; Camilla L. Patti; A.W. Hollais; Mariana Bendlin Calzavara; Vanessa C. Abílio; Rosana de A. Ribeiro; Sergio Tufik; Vânia D'Almeida; Roberto Frussa-Filho

Drug-induced behavioral sensitization in rodents has enhanced our understanding of why drugs acquire increasing motivational and incentive value. Compared to adults, human adolescents have accelerated dependence courses with shorter times from first exposure to dependence. We compared adolescent and adult mice in their ability to develop behavioral sensitization to amphetamine following a single injection. Adult (90-day-old) and adolescent (45-day-old) male Swiss mice received an acute intraperitoneal injection of saline or amphetamine (1.0, 2.0 or 4.0 mg/kg). Seven days later, half of the mice from the saline group received a second injection of saline. The remaining animals were challenged with 2.0 mg/kg amphetamine. Following all of the injections, mice were placed in activity chambers and locomotion was quantified for 45 min. The magnitude of both the acute and sensitized locomotor stimulatory effect of amphetamine was higher in the adolescent mice. Previous experience with the test environment inhibited the acute amphetamine stimulation in both adolescent and adult mice, but facilitated the detection of elevated spontaneous locomotion in adolescent animals. These results support the notion that the adolescent period is associated with an increased risk for development of drug abuse. Additionally, they indicate a complex interaction between the environmental novelty, adolescence and amphetamine.


Addiction Biology | 2011

Addictive potential of modafinil and cross-sensitization with cocaine: a pre-clinical study.

Raphael Wuo-Silva; Daniela F. Fukushiro; Aline R. Borçoi; Helaine A. Fernandes; Roberta Procópio-Souza; A.W. Hollais; R. Santos; Luciana Takahashi Carvalho Ribeiro; Jussara M.R.M. Corrêa; F. Talhati; Luis P. Saito; Tatiana C.F. Aramini; Sonia R. Kameda; Lia Rita Azeredo Bittencourt; Sergio Tufik; Roberto Frussa-Filho

Repeated or even a single exposure to drugs of abuse can lead to persistent locomotor sensitization, which is the result of an abundance of neuroplastic changes occurring within the circuitry involved in motivational behavior and is thought to play a key role in certain aspects of drug addiction. There is substantial controversy about the addictive potential of modafinil, a wake‐promoting drug used to treat narcolepsy that is increasingly being used as a cognitive enhancer and has been proposed as a pharmacotherapy for cocaine dependence. Male mice were used to investigate the ability of modafinil to induce locomotor sensitization after repeated or single administration in mice. Bidirectional cross‐sensitization with cocaine and modafinil‐induced conditioned place preference were also evaluated. Both repeated and single exposure to moderate and high doses of modafinil produced a pronounced locomotor sensitization that cross‐sensitized in a bidirectional way with cocaine. Remarkably, when cocaine and modafinil were repeatedly administered sequentially, their behavioral sensitization was additive. Supporting these behavioral sensitization data, modafinil produced a pronounced conditioned place preference in the mouse. Taken together, the present findings provide pre‐clinical evidence for the addictive potential of modafinil. Our data also strongly suggest that similar neural substrates are involved in the psychomotor/rewarding effects of modafinil and cocaine.


Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2010

Amnestic effect of cocaine after the termination of its stimulant action

Suzy Tamie Niigaki; Regina Helena Silva; Camilla L. Patti; J.L.S. Cunha; Sonia R. Kameda; Jorge Correia-Pinto; André L. Takatsu-Coleman; Raquel Levin; Vanessa C. Abílio; Roberto Frussa-Filho

The effects of cocaine on memory are controversial. Furthermore, the psychostimulant action of cocaine can be a critical issue in the interpretation of its effects on learning/memory models. The effects of a single administration of cocaine on memory were investigated during the presence of its motor stimulating effect or just after its termination. The plus-maze discriminative avoidance task (PM-DAT) was used because it provides simultaneous information about memory, anxiety and motor activity. In Experiment I, mice received saline, 7.5, 10, 15 or 30 mg/kg cocaine 5 min before the training session. In Experiment II, mice were trained 30 min after the injection of saline, 7.5, 10, 15 or 30 mg/kg cocaine. In Experiment III, mice received 30 mg/kg cocaine 30 min pre-training and pre-test. In Experiment IV, mice received 30 mg/kg cocaine immediately post-training. Tests were always conducted 24 h following the training session. Given 5 min before training, cocaine promoted a motor stimulant effect at the highest dose during the training session but did not impair memory. When cocaine was injected 30 min pre-training, the drug did not modify motor activity, but produced marked amnestic effects at all doses tested. This amnesia induced by cocaine given 30 min pre-training was not related to a state-dependent learning because it was not abolished by pre-test administration of the drug. Post-training cocaine administration did not induce memory deficits either. Our results suggest that the post-stimulant phase is the critical moment for cocaine-induced memory deficit in a discriminative task in mice.


Alcoholism: Clinical and Experimental Research | 2013

Ethanol-Induced Memory Impairment in a Discriminative Avoidance Task is State-Dependent

Leandro Sanday; Camilla L. Patti; Karina A. Zanin; Luciano Fernandes-Santos; Larissa C. Oliveira; Sonia R. Kameda; Sergio Tufik; Roberto Frussa-Filho

BACKGROUND A considerable amount of experimental evidence has demonstrated ethanol (EtOH) induced amnestic effects following EtOH administration during pretraining in a variety of tasks both in humans and in laboratory animals. Although the phenomenon of state-dependency is known to play a critical role in memory deficits induced by both pharmacological and nonpharmacological pretraining perturbations, the involvement of this phenomenon in EtOH-induced anterograde amnesia has been overlooked. This study aimed to investigate the role of state-dependency in EtOH-induced amnestic effects and its interactions with the well-known anxiolysis and locomotor alterations. METHODS Mice were treated with 1.2 or 2.4 g/kg EtOH before training and/or before testing in the plus-maze discriminative avoidance task, an animal model that concomitantly evaluates learning, memory, anxiety-like behavior, and general activity. RESULTS Whereas both doses of EtOH induced anxiolysis, the 1.2 g/kg dose enhanced locomotion while the 2.4 g/kg dose decreased it. In addition, the administration of 1.2 g/kg of this drug during pretraining caused memory impairment, which was counteracted by the pretest administration of the same dose, revealing the participation of the state-dependency. Conversely, the administration of 2.4 g/kg EtOH led to amnestic effects irrespective of the time of the administration (pretraining and/or pretest), eliminating the influence of state-dependency. CONCLUSIONS Our data demonstrate that EtOH-induced memory deficits are critically related to state-dependency, which can also be affected by the dose range. These results indicate the possible participation of EtOH-induced modifications in anxiety and motor activity levels in relation to state-dependent memory deficits.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2011

Effects of group exposure on single injection-induced behavioral sensitization to drugs of abuse in mice

Roberta Procópio-Souza; Daniela F. Fukushiro; Thaís F. Trombin; Raphael Wuo-Silva; Lineane Helena Fernandes Zanlorenci; Alexandre J.O. Lima; Luciana Takahashi Carvalho Ribeiro; Jussara M.R.M. Corrêa; Eduardo A.V. Marinho; Sonia R. Kameda; Monica L. Andersen; Sergio Tufik; Roberto Frussa-Filho

BACKGROUND Behavioral sensitization in rodents is hypothesized to reflect neuronal adaptations that are related to drug addiction in humans. We evaluated the effects of group exposure on the acute hyperlocomotion and behavioral sensitization induced by four drugs of abuse in C57BL/6 mice: methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), d-amphetamine, morphine and ethanol. METHODS In the priming session, animals received an ip injection of one of the drugs of abuse and were exposed to an open field either individually or in groups of four. Seven days later, we assessed behavioral sensitization in the challenge session. All animals received an ip injection of the same drug and were exposed to the open field in the same social conditions described for the priming session. Locomotion and social interaction were quantified during each session. RESULTS Acute MDMA, morphine and ethanol, but not d-amphetamine, increased social interaction. However, group exposure only potentiated MDMA-induced hyperlocomotion. After a challenge injection of each drug, there was no sensitization to the facilitating effect of MDMA, morphine or ethanol on social interaction, but locomotion sensitization developed to all drugs of abuse except ethanol. This sensitization was potentiated by group exposure in MDMA-treated animals, attenuated in morphine-treated animals and not modified in d-amphetamine-treated animals. Acute MDMA enhanced body contact and peaceful following, while acute morphine and ethanol increased social sniffing. CONCLUSIONS These results provide preclinical evidence showing that while different drugs of abuse affect different components of social interaction, the neuronal adaptations related to drug dependence can be critically and specifically influenced by group exposure.

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Roberto Frussa-Filho

Federal University of São Paulo

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Sergio Tufik

Federal University of São Paulo

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Vanessa C. Abílio

Federal University of São Paulo

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Camilla L. Patti

Federal University of São Paulo

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Rita C. Carvalho

Federal University of São Paulo

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Daniela F. Fukushiro

Federal University of São Paulo

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André L. Takatsu-Coleman

Federal University of São Paulo

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Mariana Bendlin Calzavara

Federal University of São Paulo

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Regina H. Silva

Federal University of São Paulo

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Regina Helena Silva

Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte

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