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Dive into the research topics where Viviana F. Bumaschny is active.

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Featured researches published by Viviana F. Bumaschny.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

A Transgenic Marker for Newly Born Granule Cells in Dentate Gyrus

Linda S. Overstreet; Shane T. Hentges; Viviana F. Bumaschny; Flávio S. J. de Souza; James L. Smart; Andrea M. Santangelo; Malcolm J. Low; Gary L. Westbrook; Marcelo Rubinstein

Neurogenesis in the dentate gyrus continues into adulthood, yet little is known about the function of newly born neurons or how they integrate into an existing network of mature neurons. We made transgenic mice that selectively and transiently express enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) in newly born granule cells of the dentate gyrus under the transcriptional control of proopiomelanocortin (POMC) genomic sequences. Analysis of transgenic pedigrees with truncation or deletion mutations indicated that EGFP expression in the dentate gyrus required cryptic POMC promoter regions dispensable for arcuate hypothalamic or pituitary expression. Unlike arcuate neurons, dentate granule cells did not express the endogenous POMC gene. EGFP-positive neurons had immature properties, including short spineless dendrites and small action potentials. Colocalization with bromodeoxyuridine indicated that EGFP-labeled granule cells were ∼2 weeks postmitotic. EGFP-labeled cells expressed markers for immature granule cells but not the glial marker GFAP. The number of EGFP-labeled neurons declined with age and increased with exercise, paralleling neurogenesis. Our results indicate that POMC-EGFP marks immature granule cells and that adult-generated granule cells integrate quite slowly into the hippocampal circuitry.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2005

Identification of neuronal enhancers of the proopiomelanocortin gene by transgenic mouse analysis and phylogenetic footprinting

Flávio S. J. de Souza; Andrea M. Santangelo; Viviana F. Bumaschny; María Elena Avale; James L. Smart; Malcolm J. Low; Marcelo Rubinstein

ABSTRACT The proopiomelanocortin (POMC) gene is expressed in the pituitary and arcuate neurons of the hypothalamus. POMC arcuate neurons play a central role in the control of energy homeostasis, and rare loss-of-function mutations in POMC cause obesity. Moreover, POMC is the prime candidate gene within a highly significant quantitative trait locus on chromosome 2 associated with obesity traits in several human populations. Here, we identify two phylogenetically conserved neuronal POMC enhancers designated nPE1 (600 bp) and nPE2 (150 bp) located approximately 10 to 12 kb upstream of mammalian POMC transcriptional units. We show that mouse or human genomic regions containing these enhancers are able to direct reporter gene expression to POMC hypothalamic neurons, but not the pituitary of transgenic mice. Conversely, deletion of nPE1 and nPE2 in the context of the entire transcriptional unit of POMC abolishes transgene expression in the hypothalamus without affecting pituitary expression. Our results indicate that the nPEs are necessary and sufficient for hypothalamic POMC expression and that POMC expression in the brain and pituitary is controlled by independent sets of enhancers. Our study advances the understanding of the molecular nature of hypothalamic POMC neurons and will be useful to determine whether polymorphisms in POMC regulatory regions play a role in the predisposition to obesity.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

Obesity-programmed mice are rescued by early genetic intervention

Viviana F. Bumaschny; Miho Yamashita; Rodrigo Casas-Cordero; Veronica Otero-Corchon; Flávio S. J. de Souza; Marcelo Rubinstein; Malcolm J. Low

Obesity is a chronic metabolic disorder affecting half a billion people worldwide. Major difficulties in managing obesity are the cessation of continued weight loss in patients after an initial period of responsiveness and rebound to pretreatment weight. It is conceivable that chronic weight gain unrelated to physiological needs induces an allostatic regulatory state that defends a supranormal adipose mass despite its maladaptive consequences. To challenge this hypothesis, we generated a reversible genetic mouse model of early-onset hyperphagia and severe obesity by selectively blocking the expression of the proopiomelanocortin gene (Pomc) in hypothalamic neurons. Eutopic reactivation of central POMC transmission at different stages of overweight progression normalized or greatly reduced food intake in these obesity-programmed mice. Hypothalamic Pomc rescue also attenuated comorbidities such as hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, and hepatic steatosis and normalized locomotor activity. However, effectiveness of treatment to normalize body weight and adiposity declined progressively as the level of obesity at the time of Pomc induction increased. Thus, our study using a novel reversible monogenic obesity model reveals the critical importance of early intervention for the prevention of subsequent allostatic overload that auto-perpetuates obesity.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B | 2013

Enhancer turnover and conserved regulatory function in vertebrate evolution

Sabina Domene; Viviana F. Bumaschny; Flávio S. J. de Souza; Lucía F. Franchini; Sofia Nasif; Malcolm J. Low; Marcelo Rubinstein

Mutations in regulatory regions including enhancers are an important source of variation and innovation during evolution. Enhancers can evolve by changes in the sequence, arrangement and repertoire of transcription factor binding sites, but whole enhancers can also be lost or gained in certain lineages in a process of turnover. The proopiomelanocortin gene (Pomc), which encodes a prohormone, is expressed in the pituitary and hypothalamus of all jawed vertebrates. We have previously described that hypothalamic Pomc expression in mammals is controlled by two enhancers—nPE1 and nPE2—that are derived from transposable elements and that presumably replaced the ancestral neuronal Pomc regulatory regions. Here, we show that nPE1 and nPE2, even though they are mammalian novelties with no homologous counterpart in other vertebrates, nevertheless can drive gene expression specifically to POMC neurons in the hypothalamus of larval and adult transgenic zebrafish. This indicates that when neuronal Pomc enhancers originated de novo during early mammalian evolution, the newly created cis- and trans-codes were similar to the ancestral ones. We also identify the neuronal regulatory region of zebrafish pomca and confirm that it is not homologous to the mammalian enhancers. Our work sheds light on the process of gene regulatory evolution by showing how a locus can undergo enhancer turnover and nevertheless maintain the ancestral transcriptional output.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2009

Establishment of an in vitro estrogen-dependent mouse mammary tumor model: a new tool to understand estrogen responsiveness and development of tamoxifen resistance in the context of stromal–epithelial interactions

Osvaldo Pontiggia; Vanina Rodriguez; Victoria Fabris; Diego Raffo; Viviana F. Bumaschny; Gabriel L. Fiszman; Elisa Bal de Kier Joffé; Marina Simian

Currently, to our knowledge, there are no continuous cell lines derived from estrogen dependent, tamoxifen sensitive spontaneous mouse mammary carcinomas. We describe here the establishment and characterization of a cell line derived from the M05 mouse mammary tumor, LM05-Mix, composed of both an epithelial and a fibroblastic component. From it the respective epithelial LM05-E and fibroblastic LM05-F cell lines were generated by limiting dilution. Immunofluorescence studies confirmed that the epithelial cells were positive for E-cadherin, cytokeratins and vimentin whereas the fibroblastic cells were negative for the epithelial markers and positive for α-smooth muscle actin and vimentin. Both cell types expressed estrogen and progesterone receptors, although only the epithelial LM05-E cells were stimulated by estradiol and inhibited by tamoxifen. In the bicellular LM05-Mix cell line estradiol proved to stimulate cell proliferation whereas the response to tamoxifen was dependent on confluency and the degree of epithelial-fibroblastic interactions. The presence of membrane estrogen receptors in both cell types was suggested by the achievement of non-genomic responses to short treatments with estradiol, leading to the phosphorylation of ERK1/2. Finally, cytogenetic studies suggest that these two cell types represent independent cell populations within the tumor and would not be the result of an epithelial-mesenchymal transition. This model presents itself as a valuable alternative for the study of estrogen responsiveness and tamoxifen resistance in the context of epithelial-stromal interactions.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2004

Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase/ganciclovir system in multicellular tumor spheroids

Liliana Me Finocchiaro; Viviana F. Bumaschny; Armando L Karara; Gabriel L. Fiszman; Cecilia C Casais; Gerardo C. Glikin

We have developed multicellular spheroids (MCS) established from LM05e and LM3 spontaneous Balb/c-murine mammary adenocarcinoma and B16 C57-murine melanoma derived cell lines as an in vitro model to study the efficacy of the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase/ganciclovir (HSVtk/GCV) suicide system. We demonstrated for the first time that HSVtk-expressing cells assembled as MCS manifested a GCV resistance phenotype compared to the same cells grown as sparse monolayers. HSVtk-expressing LM05e, LM3 and B16 spheroids were 16-, three- and nine-fold less sensitive to GCV than their respective monolayers, even though they could express transgenes 10-, eight- and five-fold more efficiently. Mixed populations of HSVtk− and their respective βgal-expressing cells displayed a cell-type specific bystander effect that was higher in monolayers than in MCS. However, HSVtk−expressing cells in two- or three-dimensional cultures were always significantly more sensitive to GCV than the βgal-expressing counterparts, supporting the feasibility of this suicide approach in vivo. We present evidence showing that HSVtk-expressing tumor cells, when transferred from monolayers to MCS, displayed: (i) lower GCV cytotoxic activity and bystander effect; (ii) higher and efficient expression of genes transferred as lipoplexes; (iii) lower cell proliferation rates; and (iv) changes in intracellular Bax/Bcl-xL rheostat of mitochondria-mediated apoptosis.


Breast Cancer Research | 2004

Malignant myoepithelial cells are associated with the differentiated papillary structure and metastatic ability of a syngeneic murine mammary adenocarcinoma model

Viviana F. Bumaschny; Alejandro J. Urtreger; Miriam Diament; Martin A. Krasnapolski; Gabriel L. Fiszman; Slobodanka Klein; Elisa Bal de Kier Joffé

BackgroundThe normal duct and lobular system of the mammary gland is lined with luminal and myoepithelial cell types. Although evidence suggests that myoepithelial cells might suppress tumor growth, invasion and angiogenesis, their role remains a major enigma in breast cancer biology and few models are currently available for exploring their influence. Several years ago a spontaneous transplantable mammary adenocarcinoma (M38) arose in our BALB/c colony; it contains a malignant myoepithelial cell component and is able to metastasize to draining lymph nodes and lung.MethodsTo characterize this tumor further, primary M38 cultures were established. The low-passage LM38-LP subline contained two main cell components up to the 30th subculture, whereas the higher passage LM38-HP subline was mainly composed of small spindle-shaped cells. In addition, a large spindle cell clone (LM38-D2) was established by dilutional cloning of the low-passage MM38-LP cells. These cell lines were studied by immunocytochemistry, electron microscopy and ploidy, and syngeneic mice were inoculated subcutaneously and intravenously with the different cell lines, either singly or combined to establish their tumorigenic and metastatic capacity.ResultsThe two subpopulations of LM38-LP cultures were characterized as luminal and myoepithelium-like cells, whereas LM38-HP was mainly composed of small, spindle-shaped epithelial cells and LM38-D2 contained only large myoepithelial cells. All of them were tumorigenic when inoculated into syngeneic mice, but only LM38-LP cultures containing both conserved luminal and myoepithelial malignant cells developed aggressive papillary adenocarcinomas that spread to lung and regional lymph nodes.ConclusionThe differentiated histopathology and metastatic ability of the spontaneous transplantable M38 murine mammary tumor is associated with the presence and/or interaction of both luminal and myoepithelial tumor cell types.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2002

Lipofection of early passages of cell cultures derived from murine adenocarcinomas: in vitro and ex vivo testing of the thymidine kinase/ganciclovir system.

Armando L Karara; Viviana F. Bumaschny; Gabriel L. Fiszman; Cecilia C Casais; Gerardo C. Glikin; Liliana Me Finocchiaro

Early passages of cultured cells derived from four spontaneous Balb/c murine adenocarcinomas were used to explore the feasibility of a nonviral HSVtk-based suicide gene therapy system. After lipofection with pCMVtk, the transiently HSVtk expressing P07 (lung), M3, M05, and M38 (mammary gland) cells were, respectively, about 130-, 30-, 120-, and 170-fold more sensitive to ganciclovir (GCV) in vitro than their respective controls. Eighty percent of Balb/c mice subcutaneously inoculated with ex vivo pCMVtk-lipofected P07 cells, followed by intraperitoneal GCV injection for 7 days, displayed a complete inhibition of tumor growth for over 70 days. Control animals started to display tumors 13 days after inoculation. We present evidence showing that early passages of cultured tumor cells can efficiently express lipofected genes and that they are sensitive to the lipoplex-mediated HSVtk/GCV system.


PLOS Genetics | 2007

Ancient Exaptation of a CORE-SINE Retroposon into a Highly Conserved Mammalian Neuronal Enhancer of the Proopiomelanocortin Gene

Andrea M. Santangelo; Flávio S. J. de Souza; Lucía F. Franchini; Viviana F. Bumaschny; Malcolm J. Low; Marcelo Rubinstein


Molecular Biology and Evolution | 2005

Subfunctionalization of Expression and Peptide Domains Following the Ancient Duplication of the Proopiomelanocortin Gene in Teleost Fishes

Flávio S. J. de Souza; Viviana F. Bumaschny; Malcolm J. Low; Marcelo Rubinstein

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Armando L Karara

University of Buenos Aires

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Gerardo C. Glikin

Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales

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Lucía F. Franchini

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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