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Dive into the research topics where Szilvia Varszegi is active.

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Featured researches published by Szilvia Varszegi.


Neurochemistry International | 2011

Activated MAO-B in the brain of Alzheimer patients, demonstrated by [11C]-L-deprenyl using whole hemisphere autoradiography

Balázs Gulyás; Elena Pavlova; Peter Kasa; Karoly Gulya; Lidia Bakota; Szilvia Varszegi; Éva Keller; Mónika Csilla Horváth; Sangram Nag; István Hermecz; K. Magyar; Christer Halldin

In the human brain the monoaminooxidase-B enzyme or MAO-B is highly abundant in astrocytes. As astrocyte activity and, consequently, the activity of the MAO-B enzyme, is up-regulated in neuroinflammatory processes, radiolabelled analogues of deprenyl may serve as an imaging biomarker in neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration, including Alzheimers disease. In the present study [(11)C]-L-deprenyl, the PET radioligand version of L-deprenyl or selegiline®, a selective irreversible MAO-B inhibitor was used in whole hemisphere autoradiographic experiments in human brain sections in order to test the radioligands binding to the MAO-B enzyme in human brain tissue, with an eye on exploring the radioligands applicability as a molecular imaging biomarker in human PET studies, with special regard to diagnostic detection of reactive astrogliosis. Whole hemisphere brain sections obtained from Alzheimer patients and from age matched control subjects were examined. In control brains the binding of [(11)C]-L-deprenyl was the highest in the hippocampus, in the basal ganglia, the thalamus, the substantia nigra, the corpus geniculatum laterale, the nucleus accumbens and the periventricular grey matter. In Alzheimer brains significantly higher binding was observed in the temporal lobes and the white matter. Furthermore, in the Alzheimer brains in the hippocampus, temporal lobe and white matter the binding negatively correlated with Braak stages. The highest binding was observed in Braak I-II, whereas it decreased with increasing Braak grades. The increased regional binding in Alzheimer brains coincided with the presence of an increased number of activated astrocytes, as demonstrated by correlative immunohistochemical studies with GFAP in adjacent brain slices. Deprenyl itself as well as the MAO-B antagonist rasagiline did effectively block the binding of the radioligand, whereas the MAO-A antagonist pirlindole did not affect it. Compounds with high affinity for the PBR system did not block the radioligand binding either, providing evidence for the specificity of [(11)C]-L-deprenyl for the MAO-B enzyme. In conclusion, the present observations indicate that [(11)C]-L-deprenyl may be a promising and selective imaging biomarker of increased MAO-B activity in the human brain and can therefore serve as a prospective PET tracer targeting neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration.


Neurochemistry International | 2009

A comparative autoradiography study in post mortem whole hemisphere human brain slices taken from Alzheimer patients and age-matched controls using two radiolabelled DAA1106 analogues with high affinity to the peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBR) system

Balázs Gulyás; Boglárka Makkai; Peter Kasa; Karoly Gulya; Lidia Bakota; Szilvia Varszegi; Zsuzsa Beliczai; Jan Andersson; László Csiba; Andrea Thiele; Thomas Dyrks; Tetsua Suhara; Kazutoshi Suzuki; Makato Higuchi; Christer Halldin

The binding of two radiolabelled analogues (N-(5-[125I]Iodo-2-phenoxyphenyl)-N-(2,5-dimethoxybenzyl)acetamide ([125I]desfluoro-DAA1106) and N-(5-[125I]Fluoro-2-phenoxyphenyl)-N-(2-[125I]Iodo-5-methoxybenzyl)acetamide ([125I]desmethoxy-DAA1106) of the peripheral benzodiazepine receptor (PBR) (or TSPO, 18kDa translocator protein) ligand DAA1106 was examined by in vitro autoradiography on human post mortem whole hemisphere brain slices obtained from Alzheimers disease (AD) patients and age-matched controls. Both [(125)I]desfluoro-IDAA1106 and [(125)I]desmethoxy-IDAA1106 were effectively binding to various brain structures. The binding could be blocked by the unlabelled ligand as well as by other PBR specific ligands. With both radiolabelled compounds, the binding showed regional inhomogeneity and the specific binding values proved to be the highest in the hippocampus, temporal and parietal cortex, the basal ganglia and thalamus in the AD brains. Compared with age-matched control brains, specific binding in several brain structures (temporal and parietal lobes, thalamus and white matter) in Alzheimer brains was significantly higher, indicating that the radioligands can effectively label-activated microglia and the up-regulated PBR/TSPO system in AD. Complementary immunohistochemical studies demonstrated reactive microglia activation in the AD brain tissue and indicated that increased ligand binding coincides with increased regional microglia activation due to neuroinflammation. These investigations yield further support to the PBR/TSPO binding capacity of DAA1106 in human brain tissue, demonstrate the effective usefulness of its radio-iodinated analogues as imaging biomarkers in post mortem human studies, and indicate that its radiolabelled analogues, labelled with short half-time bioisotopes, can serve as prospective in vivo imaging biomarkers of activated microglia and the up-regulated PBR/TSPO system in the human brain.


Life Sciences | 2002

Differential calmodulin gene expression in the rodent brain

Arpad Palfi; Elod Kortvely; Éva Fekete; Beatrix Kovacs; Szilvia Varszegi; Karoly Gulya

Apparently redundant members of the calmodulin (CaM) gene family encode for the same amino acid sequence. CaM, a ubiquitous cytoplasmic calcium ion receptor, regulates the function of a variety of target molecules even in a single cell. Maintenance of the fidelity of the active CaM-target interactions in different compartments of the cell requires a rather complex control of the total cellular CaM pool comprising multiple levels of regulatory circuits. Among these mechanisms, it has long been proposed that a multigene family maximizes the regulatory potentials at the level of the gene expression. CaM genes are expressed at a particularly profound level in the mammalian central nervous system (CNS), especially in the highly polarized neurons. Thus, in the search for clear evidence of the suggested differential expression of the CaM genes, much of the research has been focused on the elements of the CNS. This review aims to give a comprehensive survey on the current understanding of this field at the level of the regulation of CaM mRNA transcription and distribution in the rodent brain. The results indicate that the CaM genes are indeed expressed in a gene-specific manner in the developing and adult brain under physiological conditions. To establish local CaM pools in distant intracellular compartments (dendrites and glial processes), local protein synthesis from differentially targeted mRNAs is also employed. Moreover, the CaM genes are controlled in a unique, gene-specific fashion when responding to certain external stimuli. Additionally, putative regulatory elements have been identified on the CaM genes and mRNAs.


Shock | 2011

Protective effects of a phosphatidylcholine-enriched diet in lipopolysaccharide-induced experimental neuroinflammation in the rat.

Tünde Tökés; Gábor Eros; Attila Bebes; Petra Hartmann; Szilvia Varszegi; Gabriella Varga; József Kaszaki; Karoly Gulya; Miklos Ghyczy; Mihály Boros

Our goal was to characterize the neuroprotective properties of orally administered phosphatidylcholine (PC) in a rodent model of systemic inflammation. Sprague-Dawley rats were killed at 3 h, 1 day, 3 days, or 7 days after i.p. administration of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to determine the plasma levels of tumor necrosis factor &agr; (TNF-&agr;) and interleukin 6 cytokines. The control group and one group of LPS-treated animals were nourished with standard laboratory chow, whereas another LPS-treated group received a special diet enriched with 1% PC for 5 days before the administration of LPS and thereafter during the 7-day observation period. Immunohistochemistry was performed to visualize the bromodeoxyuridine and doublecortin-positive neuroprogenitor cells and Iba1-positive microglia in the hippocampus, whereas the degree of mucosal damage was evaluated on ileal and colon biopsy samples after hematoxylin-eosin staining. The activities of proinflammatory myeloperoxidase and xanthine-oxidoreductase and the tissue nitrite/nitrate (NOx) level were additionally determined, and the cognitive functions were monitored via Morris water maze testing. The inflammatory challenge transiently increased the hippocampal NOx level and led to microglia accumulation and decreased neurogenesis. The intestinal damage, mucosal myeloperoxidase, xanthine-oxidoreductase, and NOx changes were less pronounced, and long-lasting behavioral alterations were not observed. Phosphatidylcholine pretreatment reduced the plasma TNF-&agr; and hippocampal NOx changes and prevented the decreased neurogenesis. These data demonstrated the relative susceptibility of the brain to the consequences of transient peripheral inflammatory stimuli. Phosphatidylcholine supplementation did not reduce the overall extent of peripheral inflammatory activation, but efficiently counteracted the disturbed hippocampal neurogenesis by lowering circulating TNF-&agr; concentrations.


Brain Research Bulletin | 2011

Adult rat hippocampal slices as in vitro models for neurodegeneration: Studies on cell viability and apoptotic processes

Adam Legradi; Szilvia Varszegi; Csaba Szigeti; Karoly Gulya

Adult hippocampal slice cultures were used in the modeling of apoptotic aspects of neurodegeneration. Slice viability was determined by the use of trypan blue (TB) staining, and apoptosis was assessed by caspase-3 immunohistochemistry. A large number of pyramidal cells showed signs of degeneration 30 min after sectioning (58.4% of the total number of pyramidal cells), as they exhibited TB uptake, and about 71.6% of these neurons became stained by the third day in culture, when patches in the stratum oriens also demonstrated distinct TB staining. By the sixth day of culturing, almost all cells in the pyramidal cell layer became TB positive (88.4%). The caspase-3 immunoreactivity displayed a different pattern, as the most intense immunoreactivity, detected mainly in the pyramidal cells, peaked 6 h after culturing, and then decreased steadily. The present data show that in adult hippocampal slices a large number of pyramidal cells initiate apoptotic processes as a result of irreparable damage sustained during slice preparation and culture maintenance, and support the notion that apoptosis is an integral part of the neurodegenerative processes not only in vivo but also in vitro. Elucidation of mechanisms for the apoptotic processes in adult hippocampal slice cultures could lead to the development of new therapeutic strategies; moreover, the utilization of adult hippocampal slice cultures could be a viable alternative technique to in vivo experiments in studying the mechanisms responsible for neurodegeneration.


Journal of Histochemistry and Cytochemistry | 2003

Intracellular Targeting of Calmodulin mRNAs in Primary Hippocampal Cells

Elod Kortvely; Szilvia Varszegi; Arpad Palfi; Karoly Gulya

We investigated the intracellular distribution of the mRNAs corresponding to the three non-allelic CaM genes in cultured hippocampal cells by in situ hybridization with digoxigenin-labeled gene-specific riboprobes. In neurons the perikaryon was heavily stained and strong dendritic mRNA targeting was detected for all three CaM genes. The color labeling exhibited a punctate distribution, suggesting that CaM mRNAs are transported in RNA granules. Immunocytochemistry for S100 demonstrated that glial cells express CaM mRNAs at a very low level. A minority of the cultured cells were negative for either labeling.


Neurochemistry International | 2008

Immunohistoblot analysis on whole human hemispheres from normal and Alzheimer diseased brains

Zsuzsa Beliczai; Szilvia Varszegi; Balázs Gulyás; Christer Halldin; Peter Kasa; Karoly Gulya

We demonstrate the feasibility and usefulness of the histoblot immunostaining of cryosections of whole hemispheres of healthy and Alzheimer diseased (AD) human brains by localizing a neuron-specific marker, the anti-neuronal nuclei (NeuN) antigen. As expected, cortical NeuN-immunopositive regions were generally thinner and lighter in the AD brains than in the controls. The advantages of using whole hemisphere histoblots: (1) they provide a low-resolution overview/outline of the antigen distribution in a large surface area, (2) large, thick, and/or unfixed tissue sections from post-mortem samples (perhaps of inferior tissue quality) can be compared, and (3) subsequent immunohistochemistry can be performed on the tissue sections used for the histoblots.


Brain Research | 2006

Dithranol abolishes UCH-L1 immunoreactivity in the nerve fibers of the rat orofacial skin

Ivan Orojan; Csaba Szigeti; Szilvia Varszegi; E. Dobó; Karoly Gulya

Dithranol has been used to treat psoriasis for decades. Although its beneficial effect may involve the induction of cutaneous inflammation, and inflammation often leads to damages in nerve fibers, these alterations are not well documented. Therefore, we investigated the effects of dithranol on the immunohistochemical characteristics of the cutaneous nerve fibers in the rat skin. Epidermal nerve fiber staining was achieved with ubiquitin carboxyl-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCH-L1) immunohistochemistry in the orofacial skin of control rats, rats treated with (a) dithranol for 5 days, (b) corticosteroid for 5 days following dithranol treatment for 5 days, and (c) corticosteroid for 5 days. The results revealed a complete loss of UCH-L1 immunoreactivity in the dithranol-treated animals. Topical application of corticosteroid onto the inflamed skin for 5 days reversed this effect: the UCH-L1 immunoreactivity was almost completely restored. Steroid treatment for 5 days did not change the appearance of the UCH-L1-immunoreactive nerve fibers. These findings were supported by Western blot analyses. We conclude that dithranol, incidentally similarly to psoriasis, causes inflammation and abolishes UCH-L1 immunoreactivity in the rat orofacial skin in a corticosteroid-reversible manner. This phenomenon may be due to the ability of dithranol to cause oxidative damage to the UCH-L1 protein, and to the antioxidant activity of the corticosteroids countering this effect.


Acta Biologica Hungarica | 2000

Calmodulin gene expression in an immortalized striatal gabaergic cell line

Arpad Palfi; Mónika Tarcsa; Szilvia Varszegi; Karoly Gulya


Molecular Brain Research | 2005

Cloning and characterization of rat importin 9: implication for its neuronal function.

Elod Kortvely; Peter Burkovics; Szilvia Varszegi; Karoly Gulya

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Balázs Gulyás

Nanyang Technological University

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