98 research outputs found

    From locomotor behavior to cerebellum evolution and development in squamate models

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    Locomotor behavior, the entire set of movements an individual utilizes to modify its spatial location in time, is a crucial attribute of an organism’s life. Though not responsible for movement initiation or rhythmic locomotor pattern generation, the cerebellum, an ancient and functionally conserved feature of the vertebrate brain, plays a key role in many aspects of motor performance. Variations in its morphology, relative size and cortical organization, likely resulting from divergent developmental programs, have been observed even in closely related vertebrate species, often reflecting a tight linkage between cerebellar organization and functional demands associated with ecologically relevant factors and distinct behavioral traits. Taking advantage of the extraordinary ecomorphological diversity of squamates (lizards and snakes) and adopting a multidisciplinary approach, this thesis explores the impact of locomotor behavior on squamate brain, particularly on different levels of cerebellar biological organization, and investigates cerebellar morphogenesis in two squamate species to gain insights on the developmental mechanisms potentially responsible for squamate cerebellar divergence. Along with significant variations in cerebellar morphology and relative size across squamates, this thesis first highlights a wide heterogeneity in Purkinje cell (PC) spatial layout as well as in gene expression pattern, all correlating with specific locomotor behaviors, unveiling unique relationships between a major evolutionary transition and organ specialization in vertebrates. At the developmental level, the thesis indicates that developmental features considered, so far, exclusive hallmarks of avian and mammalian cerebellogenesis characterize squamate cerebellar morphogenesis. Furthermore, the thesis suggests that variations in the spatiotemporal patterning of different cerebellar neurons could be, at least partially, at the base of the large phenotypic diversification of the squamate cerebellum. Finally, this thesis reveals that squamates provide an important framework to expand our knowledge on organ system-ecology relationships and central nervous system (CNS) development and evolution in vertebrates.Eliöiden toimintaan liittyy oleellisena osana niiden kyky liikkua, eli siirtyä paikasta toiseen erilaisten ruuminosien liikkeiden avulla. Pikkuaivot (cerebellum) ovat hyvin oleellinen osa selkärankaisten liikkeen säätelyä, ja niiden toiminta onkin säilynyt peruspiirteiltään samana selkärankaisten evoluution aikana. Vaikka pikkuaivojen rooliin ei kuulu liikkeen aloittaminen tai rytmisen liikkeen tahdin säätely, niillä on huomattava rooli muussa liikkeen säätelyssä. Tähän lukeutuvat esimerkiksi liikkeiden oppiminen ja korjaaminen. Pikkuaivoissa esiintyy hyvin paljon lajien välistä vaihtelua, mikä johtuu todennäköisesti yksilönkehityksen ja sen säätelyn eroavaisuuksista eri lajeilla. Eroja on havaittavissa niin pikkuaivojen morfologiassa, suhteellisessa koossa kuin myös niiden kuorikerroksen rakenteessa, usein jopa lähisukuisten lajien välillä. Nämä eroavaisuudet heijastelevatkin usein eläinten erilaisia toiminnallisia tarpeita, liittyen varsinkin käyttäytymispiirteisiin sekä muihin niiden ekologiaan linkittyviin tekijöihin. Suomumatelijoilla (liskoilla ja käärmeillä) on huomattava laaja kirjos erilaisia ekomorfologioita ja liikkumistapoja. Tämä väitöskirja keskittyykin selvittämään liikkumistapojen vaikutusta suomumatelijoiden aivoihin sekä yleisesti että erityisesti pikkuaivoja tarkastellen. Huomio keskittyy pikkuaivoissa sekä kokonaiskuvan muodostamiseen niiden rakenteesta että niiden yksilönkehitykseen. Yksilönkehityksen suhteen vertailussa ovat kaksi eri suomumatelijoiden edustajaa mahdollisten yksilönkehityksen muutosten mekanismien selvittämiseksi. Väitöskirjatyössä havaittiin suomumatelijoilla merkittävää pikkuaivojen morfologian ja suhteellisen koon lajienvälistä vaihtelua. Tämän lisäksi työn aikana havaittiin huomattavia eroja pikkuaivojen niin sanottujen Purkinjen solujen järjestäytymisessä sekä eri geenien luennassa erilaista liikkumistyyppiä edustavien lajien välillä. Purkinjen solujen järjestäytymisen ja geeniluennan havaittiin myös korreloivan erilaisten liikkumistyyppien kanssa, tuoden esiin mielenkiintoisen yhteyden evolutiivisten muutosten ja elinten erikoistumisen välillä. Samoin tulokset viittaavat siihen, että linnuille ja nisäkkäille ainutlaatuisiksi luultuja pikkuaivojen muodostumisen piirteitä löytyy myös suomumatelijoilta. Väitöskirjatyössä havaittiin lisäksi viitteitä suomumatelijoiden pikkuaivojen monimuotoisuuden taustalla olevista yksilönkehityksen muutoksista. Tulosten valossa on mahdollista, että pikkuaivojen neuronien kaavoituksen ajoituksen ja sijainnin muutokset voisivat ainakin osin olla syy suomumatelijoiden pikkuaivojen monimuotoisuuteen. Laajemmassa mielessä tulokset tuovat esiin myös suomumatelijoiden erittäin oleellisen roolin selkärankaisten evoluution tutkimuksessa kahdesta oleellisesta tulokulmasta: selkärankaisten keskushermoston yksilönkehityksen ja evoluution tutkimus sekä yleisemmällä tasolla elinsysteemien ja ekologian yhteyden selvittäminen

    Heterochronic Developmental Shifts Underlying Squamate Cerebellar Diversity Unveil the Key Features of Amniote Cerebellogenesis

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    Despite a remarkable conservation of architecture and function, the cerebellum of vertebrates shows extensive variation in morphology, size, and foliation pattern. These features make this brain subdivision a powerful model to investigate the evolutionary developmental mechanisms underlying neuroanatomical complexity both within and between anamniote and amniote species. Here, we fill a major evolutionary gap by characterizing the developing cerebellum in two non-avian reptile species—bearded dragon lizard and African house snake—representative of extreme cerebellar morphologies and neuronal arrangement patterns found in squamates. Our data suggest that developmental strategies regarded as exclusive hallmark of birds and mammals, including transit amplification in an external granule layer (EGL) and Sonic hedgehog expression by underlying Purkinje cells (PCs), contribute to squamate cerebellogenesis independently from foliation pattern. Furthermore, direct comparison of our models suggests the key importance of spatiotemporal patterning and dynamic interaction between granule cells and PCs in defining cortical organization. Especially, the observed heterochronic shifts in early cerebellogenesis events, including upper rhombic lip progenitor activity and EGL maintenance, are strongly expected to affect the dynamics of molecular interaction between neuronal cell types in snakes. Altogether, these findings help clarifying some of the morphogenetic and molecular underpinnings of amniote cerebellar corticogenesis, but also suggest new potential molecular mechanisms underlying cerebellar complexity in squamates. Furthermore, squamate models analyzed here are revealed as key animal models to further understand mechanisms of brain organization.Peer reviewe

    From dissemination to Citizen Science

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    Zebrafish Adjust Their Behavior in Response to an Interactive Robotic Predator

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    Zebrafish (Danio rerio) constitutes a valuable experimental species for the study of the biological determinants of emotional responses, such as fear and anxiety. Fear-related test paradigms traditionally entail the interaction between focal subjects and live predators, which may show inconsistent behavior throughout the experiment. To address this technical challenge, robotic stimuli are now frequently integrated in behavioral studies, yielding repeatable, customizable, and controllable experimental conditions. While most of the research has focused on open-loop control where robotic stimuli are preprogrammed to execute a priori known actions, recent work has explored the possibility of two-way interactions between robotic stimuli and live subjects. Here, we demonstrate a “closed-loop control” system to investigate fear response of zebrafish in which the response of the robotic stimulus is determined in real-time through a finite-state Markov chain constructed from independent observations on the interactions between zebrafish and their predator. Specifically, we designed a 3D-printed robotic replica of the zebrafish allopatric predator red tiger Oscar fish (Astronotus ocellatus), instrumented to interact in real-time with live subjects. We investigated the role of closed-loop control in modulating fear response in zebrafish through the analysis of the focal fish ethogram and the information-theoretic quantification of the interaction between the subject and the replica. Our results indicate that closed-loop control elicits consistent fear response in zebrafish and that zebrafish quickly adjust their behavior to avoid the predator's attacks. The augmented degree of interactivity afforded by the Markov-chain-dependent actuation of the replica constitutes a fundamental advancement in the study of animal-robot interactions and offers a new means for the development of experimental paradigms to study fear

    Moderate Neonatal Stress Decreases Within-Group Variation in Behavioral, Immune and HPA Responses in Adult Mice

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    BACKGROUND: The significance of behavioral neuroscience and the validity of its animal models of human pathology largely depend on the possibility to replicate a given finding across different laboratories. Under the present test and housing conditions, this axiom fails to resist the challenge of experimental validation. When several mouse strains are tested on highly standardized behavioral test batteries in different laboratories, significant strain x lab interactions are often detected. This limitation, predominantly due to elevated within-group variability observed in control subjects, increases the number of animals needed to address fine experimental questions. Laboratory rodents display abnormal stress and fear reactions to experimental testing, which might depend on the discrepancy between the stability of the neonatal environment and the challenging nature of the adult test and housing conditions. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Stimulating neonatal environments (e.g. brief maternal separations, increased foraging demands or maternal corticosterone supplementation) reduce stress and fear responses in adulthood. Here we tested whether reduced fearfulness associated with experimental testing would also reduce inter-individual variation. In line with our predictions, we show that a moderate elevation in neonatal corticosterone through maternal milk significantly reduces fear responses and inter-individual variability (average 44%) in adult mouse offspring. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We observed reduced variation in pain perception, novelty preference, hormonal stress response and resistance to pathogen infection. This suggests that the results of this study may apply to a relatively broad spectrum of neuro-behavioral domains. Present findings encourage a reconsideration of the basic principles of neonatal housing systems to improve the validity of experimental models and reduce the number of animals used

    Monographic section; Clinical, bioethical and experimental considerations behind the study of coma patients. Preface

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    A Web-based Software System for Behavior Analysis of Laboratory Animals

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    The analysis of locomotion in laboratory animals plays a crucial role in many scientific research areas. In fact, important information on animals’ behavior and their reaction to a particular stimulus is deduced from a careful analysis of their movements. The techniques commonly adopted to support such analysis have many limitations, which make the related systems particularly ineffective. On the one hand, the human observation and annotation process is strongly observer-dependent and expensive in terms of time and efforts. On the other hand, the use of more sophisticated systems based on video recordings and recognition algorithms is very expensive and complex. In order to face this challenge, this paper presents a tracking solution based on passive Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology in Ultra High Frequency (UHF) band, allowing the tracking of laboratory animals with a high accuracy. The overall solution consists of a hybrid system including hardware and software components. In particular, in this paper, the attention is focused on the software component as the hardware has already been described in previous works. The software component is a Web-oriented solution that offers a complete 2D and 3D information tool including reports, dashboards, and tracking graphs. The proposed solution was widely tested using twelve laboratory mice and compared with an automated video-tracking software (i.e., EthoVision) in order to demonstrate its effectiveness and reliability. The obtained results have demonstrated that the proposed solution is able to correctly detect and reconstruct the events occurring in the animals’ cage, and to offer a complete and user-friendly tool to support researchers in behavioral analysis of small laboratory animals

    Genomic and physiological resilience in extreme environments are associated with a secure attachment style

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    Understanding individual capability to adjust to protracted confinement and isolation may inform adaptive plasticity and disease vulnerability/resilience, and may have long-term implications for operations requiring prolonged presence in distant and restricted environments. Individual coping depends on many different factors encompassing psychological dispositional traits, endocrine reactivity and their underlying molecular mechanisms (e.g. gene expression). A positive view of self and others (secure attachment style) has been proposed to promote individual resilience under extreme environmental conditions. Here, we tested this hypothesis and investigated the underlying molecular mechanisms in 13 healthy volunteers confined and isolated for 12 months in a research station located 1670 km away from the south geographic pole on the Antarctic Plateau at 3233 m above sea level. Study participants, stratified for attachment style, were characterised longitudinally (before, during and after confinement) for their psychological appraisal of the stressful nature of the expedition, diurnal fluctuations in endocrine stress reactivity, and gene expression profiling (transcriptomics). Predictably, a secure attachment style was associated with reduced psychological distress and endocrine vulnerability to stress. In addition, while prolonged confinement and isolation remarkably altered overall patterns of gene expression, such alteration was largely reduced in individuals characterised by a secure attachment style. Furthermore, increased resilience was associated with a reduced expression of genes involved in energy metabolism (mitochondrial function and oxidative phosphorylation). Ultimately, our data indicate that a secure attachment style may favour individual resilience in extreme environments and that such resilience can be mapped onto identifiable molecular substrates

    Repeated Cytoreduction Combined with Hyperthermic Intraperitoneal Chemotherapy (HIPEC) in Selected Patients Affected by Peritoneal Metastases: Italian PSM Oncoteam Evidence

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    The reiteration of surgical cytoreduction (CRS) and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) in patients affected by recurrent peritoneal metastases is still questioned regarding safety and effectiveness. This study evaluates the safety, efficacy, and associated factors of iterative CRS combined with HIPEC. This multicentric retrospective study collected data from four surgical oncology centers, on iterative HIPEC. We gathered data on patient and cancer characteristics, the peritoneal cancer index (PCI), completeness of cytoreduction (CC), postoperative complications, and overall survival (OS). In the study period, 141 CRS-plus-HIPECs were performed on 65 patients. Nine patients underwent three iterative procedures, and one underwent five. No increased incidence of complications after the second or third procedure was observed. Furthermore, operative time and hospitalization stay were significantly shorter after the second than after the first procedure (p p = 0.061). Concomitant hepatic-CRC-metastasis did not compromise the CRS-plus-HIPEC safety and efficacy. This multicentric experience encourages repeated CRS-plus-HIPEC, showing promising results
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