In the brain, the oxytocinergic system is a key regulator of social behaviour. Oxytocin could therefore become a promising therapeutic molecule to treat behavioural alterations in neurodevelopmental disorders; however, in order to define its translational potential we need to understand more about the localization and signaling properties of its receptor (OTR) in the brain. The OTR is a G protein coupled receptor (GPCR) able to form homo or heterodimeric complexes with distinct pharmacological properties. Targeting GPCRs dimers in endogenous environments is often problematic: the techniques currently used to study them in native tissues can only prove molecular proximity between two protomers, not their actual dimerization. For these reasons, in my project I worked to develop new tools to study dimeric and monomeric OTRs in endogenous tissues. I characterized a series of bivalent ligands designed to pharmacologically target OTR homodimers, and started to develop an innovative “Nanoruler” technique to label OTR homodimers in native tissues. In parallel I also run an extensive autoradiographic mapping of the OTR in mouse brains, looking for changes of OTR levels in a mouse model of neurodevelopmental disorder (Magel2-KO). Through my work I already found important sex and genotype-induced effects on OTR expression in Magel2-KO mice, and I showed that in some cases a neonatal OT treatment (that can rescue some autistic traits of this model) modifies OTR levels in several regions. Once the Nanoruler technique is fully optimized we will compare its results with this mapping, to gather new important information about the dynamics of OTR distribution in mouse brain.

OXYTOCIN RECEPTORS IN NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES FOR THE QUANTIFICATION OF SOPRAMOLECULAR RECEPTOR COMPLEXES / F. Santini ; tutor: M. Locati ; supervisor: B. Chini, F. Muscatelli ; phd coordinator: M. Locati. Università degli Studi di Milano, 2021 Mar 22. 33. ciclo, Anno Accademico 2020. [10.13130/santini-francesca_phd2021-03-22].

OXYTOCIN RECEPTORS IN NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES FOR THE QUANTIFICATION OF SOPRAMOLECULAR RECEPTOR COMPLEXES

F. Santini
2021

Abstract

In the brain, the oxytocinergic system is a key regulator of social behaviour. Oxytocin could therefore become a promising therapeutic molecule to treat behavioural alterations in neurodevelopmental disorders; however, in order to define its translational potential we need to understand more about the localization and signaling properties of its receptor (OTR) in the brain. The OTR is a G protein coupled receptor (GPCR) able to form homo or heterodimeric complexes with distinct pharmacological properties. Targeting GPCRs dimers in endogenous environments is often problematic: the techniques currently used to study them in native tissues can only prove molecular proximity between two protomers, not their actual dimerization. For these reasons, in my project I worked to develop new tools to study dimeric and monomeric OTRs in endogenous tissues. I characterized a series of bivalent ligands designed to pharmacologically target OTR homodimers, and started to develop an innovative “Nanoruler” technique to label OTR homodimers in native tissues. In parallel I also run an extensive autoradiographic mapping of the OTR in mouse brains, looking for changes of OTR levels in a mouse model of neurodevelopmental disorder (Magel2-KO). Through my work I already found important sex and genotype-induced effects on OTR expression in Magel2-KO mice, and I showed that in some cases a neonatal OT treatment (that can rescue some autistic traits of this model) modifies OTR levels in several regions. Once the Nanoruler technique is fully optimized we will compare its results with this mapping, to gather new important information about the dynamics of OTR distribution in mouse brain.
22-mar-2021
Le système ocytocinergique est un régulateur clé du comportement social. L'ocytocine deviens donc une molécule thérapeutique prometteuse pour le traitement les troubles neurodéveloppementaux; cependant, afin de définir son potentiel translationnel, nous devons mieux comprendre les propriétés de son récepteur (OTR) dans le cerveau. L'OTR est un récepteur couplé à la protéine G (RCPG) qui peut former homo ou hétérodimères ayant des propriétés pharmacologiques distinctes. Le ciblage de ces complexes dans les tissus natifs est problématique: les techniques utilisées pour les étudier ne peuvent prouver que la proximité moléculaire entre deux protomères, et non leur dimérisation. Pour ces raisons, j'ai travaillé au développement de nouveaux outils pour étudier les OTR dans les tissus endogènes. J'ai caractérisé ligands bivalents conçus pour cibler pharmacologiquement les homodimères OTR et j'ai commencé à développer une méthode innovante de "Nanoruler" pour marquer les homodimères OTR dans les tissus natifs. En parallèle, j'ai effectué une cartographie autoradiographique de l'OTR dans le cerveau murin, afin d'étudier les modifications de ses niveaux dans un modèle de trouble neurodéveloppemental, Magel2-KO. Par ce travail, j'ai trouvé des altérations des niveaux de l'OTR induits par le sexe et le génotype, et j'ai montré qu’un traitement néonatal de l'OT (qui peut sauver certains traits autistiques dans ce modèle) peut modifier les niveaux d'OTR dans plusieurs régions. Quand le Nanoruler sera optimisé, nous comparerons les résultats avec cette cartographie, afin de recueillir de nouvelles informations sur la dynamique de la distribution de l'OTR dans le cerveau des souris.
Settore BIO/11 - Biologia Molecolare
oxytocin; GPCR; neurodevelopmental disorders;
LOCATI, MASSIMO
LOCATI, MASSIMO
Doctoral Thesis
OXYTOCIN RECEPTORS IN NEURODEVELOPMENTAL DISORDERS: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES FOR THE QUANTIFICATION OF SOPRAMOLECULAR RECEPTOR COMPLEXES / F. Santini ; tutor: M. Locati ; supervisor: B. Chini, F. Muscatelli ; phd coordinator: M. Locati. Università degli Studi di Milano, 2021 Mar 22. 33. ciclo, Anno Accademico 2020. [10.13130/santini-francesca_phd2021-03-22].
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
phd_unimi_R12120.pdf

Open Access dal 23/02/2022

Descrizione: Tesi di dottorato completa
Tipologia: Tesi di dottorato completa
Dimensione 5.09 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
5.09 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/816946
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact