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Dive into the research topics where Walter Adriani is active.

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Featured researches published by Walter Adriani.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2002

Peculiar vulnerability to nicotine oral self-administration in mice during early adolescence.

Walter Adriani; Simone Macrì; Roberta Pacifici; Giovanni Laviola

A “gateway” function toward substance abuse has been suggested for early tobacco smoking. Nicotine actually represents an easily available drug for human adolescents, who are very likely to use a number of different psychoactive agents. Surprisingly, the psychobiological factors involved in this age-related willingness have been poorly investigated. In Experiment 1, nicotine consumption was studied in outbred CD-1 mice during Early (postnatal day (pnd) 24 to 35), Middle (pnd 37 to 48) or Late (pnd 50 to 61) adolescence, in an oral self-administration paradigm. During the drinking session (2 h/day), animals had free choice between either tap water or a nicotine solution (10 mg/l). After a 6-day period, a fading study was carried out, in which nicotine concentration was reduced to 7 mg/l (days 7–9) and 5 mg/l (days 10–12), to assess whether animals would compensate by increasing their intake from the nicotine solution. In Experiment 2, psychopharmacological effects on locomotion induced by the nicotine solution (0, 10, 30 mg/l) during the 1-h drinking session were assessed in Early and Late adolescent mice. In Experiment 1, Early adolescents expressed a marked and stable preference for the nicotine solution, showing a daily nicotine intake of 1.15 ± 0.04 mg/kg. Middle adolescents did not show any preference for either bottle, whereas a tendency toward avoidance for the nicotine solution was found for Late adolescents. In the fading study, Early adolescents were the only group to show increased consumption from the nicotine bottle as far as nicotine concentration was reduced. A time-course analysis of plasma levels of cotinine (the principal biomarker of nicotine consumption) revealed some pharmacokinetic differences between the three age-groups. In Experiment 2, drinking from a nicotine solution produced a prominent hyperactivity in Early adolescents, whereas a quite opposite profile was associated with older subjects. In summary, even if a role for taste factors cannot be completely ruled out, a peculiar spontaneous drive toward oral nicotine consumption, as well as a nicotine-induced arousal, is specific to Early adolescence in mice. The present animal model might be useful to investigate psychobiological determinants involved in early tobacco smoking in human adolescents


Behavioral Neuroscience | 2003

Elevated levels of impulsivity and reduced place conditioning with d-amphetamine: two behavioral features of adolescence in mice.

Walter Adriani; Giovanni Laviola

Human adolescents may have experience with easily available psychoactive drugs. Impulsivity and/or peculiarities in reward systems may play a role. These variables were studied in adolescent (Postnatal Day [PND] 30-49) and adult (PND > 60) CD-1 mice. In Experiment 1 (impulsivity), food-restricted mice were tested in operant chambers with 2 nose-poking holes that delivered 1 food pellet immediately or 5 pellets after a delay, respectively. Delay length was increased over days (0-100 s). Adolescent mice showed a shift to the left in the intolerance-delay curve, as well as enhanced demanding when nose-poking was not reinforced. In Experiment 2 (place conditioning with d-amphetamine at 0.0. 1.0, 2.0, 3.3, or 5.0 mg/kg for 3 days), adolescent mice showed no reliable evidence of place conditioning when compared with adults. Hence, 2 main features of adolescence were elevated impulsivity and restlessness, and low (or absent) rewarding efficacy of amphetamine.


Neuropharmacology | 2000

A unique hormonal and behavioral hyporesponsivity to both forced novelty and d-amphetamine in periadolescent mice

Walter Adriani; Giovanni Laviola

The identification of critical ontogenetic periods of increased vulnerability to the effects of drugs of abuse could have a great psychobiological and clinical-therapeutical importance. Potential age-related differences in the response of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis to both stress and psychostimulants has been tested here in an animal model of adolescence. Periadolescent (PND 33-43) and Adult (PND>60) mice of both sexes were injected with d-amphetamine (AMPH, 0, 2, or 10 mg/kg i.p.) and immediately faced with a mild psychological stress experience, i.e. placement in a novel environment. A detailed time-course analysis of both hormonal and behavioral profiles was performed, with animals being sacrificed for trunk-blood collection at different time-points during the test (before the injection, NT group; 15, 30, or 120 min after the injection). Basal corticosterone (CORT) levels (NT group) were consistently higher in periadolescents than in adults. As a whole, a marked increment of blood CORT levels was found in mice of both ages exposed to forced novelty. However, important age-related differences were also observed, with Saline-injected periadolescents still exhibiting elevated levels of locomotion at the end of the 120-min test session and failing to show the increasing profile of CORT release over the baseline that was typical of adults. Upon an AMPH 2 administration, periadolescents exhibited a much lower profile of locomotor hyperactivity than adults, and also failed to show an increase across the course of the session in CORT release, that was observed in adults. When treated with the high AMPH 10 dose, a marked locomotor hyperactivity was found in periadolescents, which however showed much lower levels of the stereotyped licking and gnawing behavior, that was typical of adults. The present results suggest a unique profile of integrated behavioral and physiological hyporesponsivity in mice during periadolescence. The latter also represents a very useful model for the study of the issue of psychobiological risk factors involved in vulnerability to drugs of abuse in human adolescents.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2004

Behavioral and neurochemical vulnerability during adolescence in mice: studies with nicotine.

Walter Adriani; Oleg Granstrem; Simone Macrì; Galina A. Izykenova; Svetlana A. Dambinova; Giovanni Laviola

People are very likely to start psychoactive drug use during adolescence, an earlier onset being associated with a higher risk of developing addiction later in life. In experiment I, Pre- (postnatal day (pnd) 23–35), Mid- (pnd 36–48), or Post- (pnd 49–61) adolescent mice underwent a restricted-drinking period (2 h/day for 12 days), one bottle containing water and the other containing nicotine (10 mg/l) or water. After this period, Mid-adolescents showed prominent exploration and reduced anxiety in the plus-maze. This ontogenetic profile was dampened by nicotine consumption. After 2 months, these mice were tested in a novel environment (30 min/day for 3 days). Locomotor-habituation profiles were specifically disrupted by nicotine consumption during Mid-adolescence, suggesting this age as a critical period. In experiment II, Mid-adolescent (pnd 35–44) and adult (pnd >70) mice were pretreated with nicotine (0, 0.03, 0.10, 0.30 mg/kg/day for 10 days). Acute nicotine administration had opposite effects on anxiety in adolescents and adults. At 2 months after pretreatment, we measured levels of AMPA GluR2/3 subunits, thought to be involved in the control of addictive behaviors. Nicotine exposure during Mid-adolescence dose-dependently downregulated these subunits in the striatum and hippocampus, but comparable exposure during adulthood had either opposite or no effects. NMDA NR2A/B subunits were affected by nicotine, but without age-related differences. The present data identified a nicotine-vulnerable age window, characterized by long-term disruption of locomotor habituation and downregulation of AMPA receptors. These findings support neurobiological vulnerability to drugs in adolescent humans.


Neuropsychopharmacology | 2006

Methylphenidate Administration to Adolescent Rats Determines Plastic Changes on Reward-Related Behavior and Striatal Gene Expression

Walter Adriani; Damiana Leo; Dario Greco; Monica Rea; Umberto di Porzio; Giovanni Laviola; Carla Perrone-Capano

Administration of methylphenidate (MPH, Ritalin®) to children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is an elective therapy, but raises concerns for public health, due to possible persistent neurobehavioral alterations. Wistar adolescent rats (30 to 46 day old) were administered MPH or saline (SAL) for 16 days, and tested for reward-related and motivational-choice behaviors. When tested in adulthood in a drug-free state, MPH-pretreated animals showed increased choice flexibility and economical efficiency, as well as a dissociation between dampened place conditioning and more marked locomotor sensitization induced by cocaine, compared to SAL-pretreated controls. The striatal complex, a core component of the natural reward system, was collected both at the end of the MPH treatment and in adulthood. Genome-wide expression profiling, followed by RT-PCR validation on independent samples, showed that three members of the postsynaptic-density family and five neurotransmitter receptors were upregulated in the adolescent striatum after subchronic MPH administration. Interestingly, only genes for the kainate 2 subunit of ionotropic glutamate receptor (Grik2, also known as KA2) and the 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) receptor 7 (Htr7) (but not GABAA subunits and adrenergic receptor α1b) were still upregulated in adulthood. cAMP responsive element-binding protein and Homer 1a transcripts were modulated only as a long-term effect. In summary, our data indicate short-term changes in neural plasticity, suggested by modulation of expression of key genes, and functional changes in striatal circuits. These modifications might in turn trigger enduring changes responsible for the adult neurobehavioral profile, that is, altered processing of incentive values and a modified flexibility/habit balance.


Behavioural Brain Research | 2005

Aspects of spatial memory and behavioral disinhibition in Tg2576 transgenic mice as a model of Alzheimer's disease

Elisa Ognibene; Silvia Middei; Stefania Daniele; Walter Adriani; Orlando Ghirardi; Antonio Caprioli; Giovanni Laviola

Transgenic mouse models of Alzheimers disease (AD) have been recently advanced. Tg2576 mice have been shown to develop progressive beta-amyloid (Abeta) neuritic plaques and exhibit impairment of cognitive function. The aim of this study was a better characterization of different aspects of spatial memory performance of transgenic mice, observed at a time when levels of soluble Abeta are elevated and Abeta neuritc plaques start to appear. A general elevation of basal locomotory activity in the home cage was found in Tg2576 mice, which also exhibited an impairment of spontaneous alternation in the Y-maze test. Tg2576 mice were not flexible upon changes in the schedule and failed to codify spatially the testing environment. Consistently, a deficit of spatial memory was also observed when mice were assessed for levels of reactivity to spatial change in the modified open-field test with objects. Compared to controls, Tg2576 mice also exhibited an increased number of explorative approaches to the different objects, and failed to discriminate the displacement of the object. Consistently with the hypothesis of increased disinhibition, a differential behavioural response to the plus-maze paradigm was exhibited by Tg2576 mice. Results clearly indicate that Tg2576 mice are characterized by a number of specific behavioral cognitive alterations, compatible with Alzheimers disease (AD), which make them a suitable animal model for testing of novel anti-AD drugs.


Animal Behaviour | 2002

Risk taking during exploration of a plus-maze is greater in adolescent than in juvenile or adult mice

Simone Macrı̀; Walter Adriani; Flavia Chiarotti; Giovanni Laviola

Abstract We investigated age-related changes in exploratory drive and anxiety in a plus-maze paradigm. We observed the behaviour of outbred CD-1 mice, Mus musculus , of both sexes at three ages: juvenile (35 days), adolescent (48 days) and adult (61 days). Juvenile and adult mice strongly avoided the open arms of the apparatus, suggesting high levels of anxiety. In contrast, adolescents spent similar amounts of time in both open and closed arms. They also entered the open arms more quickly and more often than the other age groups. No age-related differences were found in the frequency of the stretched-attend posture, a behavioural pattern considered to indicate risk assessment. The data can be interpreted in terms of either an increased exploratory drive or reduced environment-related anxiety, or both, during the adolescent period. This is consistent with previous evidence of elevated levels of novelty seeking and reduced behavioural and physiological responses to stressful situations in mice and rats around this age. Copyright 2002 The Association for the Study of Animal Behaviour. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved .


Behavioural Brain Research | 2002

Peculiar response of adolescent mice to acute and chronic stress and to amphetamine: evidence of sex differences

Giovanni Laviola; Walter Adriani; Sara Morley-Fletcher; MariaLivia Terranova

Although final brain size and the number of available neurons and axons appear to be established early in infancy, plasticity of the brain continues during adolescence through an integrated process of overproduction and elimination of synapses and receptors. In addition, hormonal levels change dramatically during this period, as a result of the onset of puberty. This age-specific condition has been suggested to serve as a permissive factor for the emergence of a number of early-onset neuropsychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia, attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and perhaps substance abuse. However, relatively few investigations have focused on animal models of this developmental phase. The periadolescent rodent (similar30-45-day-old), has been proposed as a useful model. Periadolescent rats and mice are generally associated with a peculiar behavioral profile, consisting of basal hyperactivity, high attraction towards novel stimuli and a marked involvement in affiliative and playful behaviors. Moreover, a unique profile of psychopharmacological responsivity characterizes rodents around this age. Recent experiments by our group investigated age-related discontinuities in the response of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA) to both stress and psychostimulants. The latter are often administered as therapeutic drugs to children with ADHD, which have been also associated with an impaired response to stress and abnormalities in HPA axis function. Indeed, an altered functioning of the HPA axis has been proposed as a possible risk factor and a potential marker for such a behavioral vulnerability. Animals were studied at adulthood (> pnd 70) or during periadolescence. Experiment I characterized basal corticosterone (CORT) levels in naive mice kept undisturbed in standard social conditions from weaning to sacrifice. Periadolescent male mice showed higher basal CORT levels than adult subjects, suggesting that the set up of the HPA axis is physiologically elevated during adolescence. In experiment II, we investigated age-related differences in the response to both acute and chronic stress conditions. Periadolescent and adult mice were housed either in a standard (three animals per cage) or in a crowding condition (nine animals per cage). The latter has been indeed reported to potentiate the subsequent reaction to acute stress in adult rodents. At the end of this period and following 24 h individual housing, mice were injected with either saline (SAL) or a standard amphetamine (AMPH) dose (2 mg/kg), and faced with a mild acute psychological stress, namely removal of sawdust from the home cage. Important sex differences emerged in animals of the two ages. Periadolescent females showed a reduced CORT response to acute stress. Within the adult male group, the chronic crowding condition produced a prominent potentiation of CORT response to the acute stress challenge. Conversely, this profile was not evidenced in periadolescents. These results indicate a strong role for gender and social variables in the response of periadolescent subjects to the various aspects of stress. As for AMPH effects, in the absence of significant changes in adult subjects, the drug produced a marked CORT release in periadolescent mice. A better understanding of neuroendocrine-related AMPH effects as a function of social and environmental risk factors during adolescence, might deepen our knowledge on the neurobiological bases of genetically determined neuropsichiatric disorders and possibly improve the therapeutical efficacy of psychostimulant drugs.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2009

Gene-environment interaction during early development in the heterozygous reeler mouse : Clues for modelling of major neurobehavioral syndromes

Giovanni Laviola; Elisa Ognibene; Emilia Romano; Walter Adriani; Flavio Keller

Autism and schizophrenia are multifactorial disorders with increasing prevalence in the young population. Among candidate molecules, reelin (RELN) is a protein of the extracellular matrix playing a key role in brain development and synaptic plasticity. The heterozygous (HZ) reeler mouse provides a model for studying the role of reelin deficiency for the onset of these syndromes. We investigated whether early indices of neurobehavioral disorders can be identified in the infant reeler, and whether the consequences of ontogenetic adverse experiences may question or support the suitability of this model. A first study focused on the link between early exposure to Chlorpyryfos and its enduring neurobehavioral consequences. Our data are interesting in view of recently discovered cholinergic abnormalities in autism and schizophrenia, and may suggest new avenues for early pharmacological intervention. In a second study, we analyzed the consequences of repeated maternal separation early in ontogeny. The results provide evidence of how unusual stress early in development are converted into altered behavior in some, but not all, individuals depending on gender and genetic background. A third study aimed to verify the reliability of the model at critical age windows. Data suggest reduced anxiety, increased impulsivity and disinhibition, and altered pain threshold in response to morphine for HZ, supporting a differential organization of brain dopaminergic, serotonergic and opioid systems in this genotype. In conclusion, HZ exhibited a complex behavioral and psycho-pharmacological phenotype, and differential responsivity to ontogenetic adverse conditions. HZ may be used to disentangle interactions between genetic vulnerability and environmental factors. Such an approach could help to model the pathogenesis of neurodevelopmental psychiatric diseases.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2011

Neurobehavioral adaptations to methylphenidate: the issue of early adolescent exposure.

Eva M. Marco; Walter Adriani; L.A. Ruocco; Rossella Canese; Giovanni Laviola

Exposure to psychostimulants, including both abused and therapeutic drugs, can occur first during human adolescence. Animal modeling is useful not only to reproduce adolescent peculiarities but also to study neurobehavioral adaptations to psychostimulant consumption. Human adolescence (generally considered as the period between 9/12 and 18 years old) has been compared with the age window between postnatal days (pnd) 28/35 and 50 in rats and mice. These adolescent rodents display basal hyperlocomotion and higher rates of exploration together with a marked propensity for sensation-seeking and risk-taking behaviors. Moreover, peculiar responses to psychostimulants, including enhanced locomotor sensitization, no drug-induced stereotypy and reduced place conditioning have been described in adolescent rodents. During this age window, forebrain dopamine systems undergo profuse remodeling, thus providing a neuro-biological substrate to explain behavioral peculiarities observed during adolescence, as well as the reported vulnerabilities to several drugs. Further, methylphenidate (MPH, better known as Ritalin®), a psychostimulant extensively prescribed to children and adolescents diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), raises concerns for its long-term safety. Using magnetic resonance techniques, MPH-induced acute effects appear to be different in adolescent rats compared to adult animals. Moreover, adolescent exposure to MPH seems to provoke persistent neurobehavioral consequences: long-term modulation of self-control abilities, decreased sensitivity to natural and drug reward, enhanced stress-induced emotionality, together with an enhanced cortical control over sub-cortical dopamine systems and an enduring up-regulation of Htr7 gene expression within the nucleus accumbens (NAcc). In summary, additional studies in animal models are necessary to better understand the long-term consequences of adolescent MPH, and to further investigate the safety of the prescription and administration of such pharmacological treatment at early life stages.

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Dive into the Walter Adriani's collaboration.

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Giovanni Laviola

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Francesca Zoratto

Boston Children's Hospital

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Rossella Canese

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Emilia Romano

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Damiana Leo

Istituto Italiano di Tecnologia

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Oleg Granstrem

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Francesca Zoratto

Boston Children's Hospital

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