Publications by authors named "Nadege Dubourdieu"

Memory impairment is one of the disabling manifestations of multiple sclerosis (MS) possibly present from the early stages of the disease and for which there is no specific treatment. Hippocampal synaptic dysfunction and dendritic loss, associated with microglial activation, can underlie memory deficits, yet the molecular mechanisms driving such hippocampal neurodegeneration need to be elucidated. In early-stage experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE) female mice, we assessed the expression level of molecules involved in microglia-neuron interactions within the dentate gyrus and found overexpression of genes of the complement pathway.

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Article Synopsis
  • Astrocytes change their shape to support brain cells, and this flexibility is influenced by ion and water movement, particularly through the water channel aquaporin-4 (AQP4).
  • Researchers studied the distribution of two AQP4 isoforms (M1 and M23) in hippocampal astrocytes and found that AQP4-M1 forms small clusters while AQP4-M23 is found in larger clusters near synapses.
  • The study revealed that stabilizing AQP4-M23 enhances astrocyte activity and synaptic function, while autoantibodies from NMO patients disrupt this process, illustrating the role of AQP4 dynamics in both healthy brain function and autoimmune disorders.
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The hippocampus contains distinct populations of neurons organized into separate anatomical subfields and layers with differential vulnerability to pathological mechanisms. The ability of in vivo neuroimaging to pinpoint regional vulnerability is especially important for better understanding of hippocampal pathology at the early stage of neurodegenerative disorders and for monitoring future therapeutic strategies. This is the case for instance in multiple sclerosis whose neurodegenerative component can affect the hippocampus from the early stage.

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Memory impairment is an early and disabling manifestation of multiple sclerosis whose anatomical and biological substrates are still poorly understood. We thus investigated whether memory impairment encountered at the early stage of the disease could be explained by a differential vulnerability of particular hippocampal subfields. By using experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), a mouse model of multiple sclerosis, we identified that early memory impairment was associated with selective alteration of the dentate gyrus as pinpointed in vivo with diffusion-tensor-imaging (DTI).

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