Papers by Juan Fernandez-ruiz
Behavioral and Neural Biology, 1991
Journal of Neurology, 2006
Brain Research, 1990
Male rats received bilateral lesions within the medial preoptic area which completely abolished s... more Male rats received bilateral lesions within the medial preoptic area which completely abolished sexual behavior. Hypothalamic fetal brain transplants gradually restored sexual behavior to prelesion levels by the 6th week after the transplant. Immunocytochemical analyses revealed tyrosine hydroxylase immunoreactivity neurons within the transplanted tissue. These results demonstrate that fetal brain transplants can restore an innate complex behavior in which no spontaneous recovery is observed.
Journal of Neurology, 2006

Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 2010
Nerve conduction is profoundly affected in Spinocerebellar ataxia 2 (SCA2) even before the onset ... more Nerve conduction is profoundly affected in Spinocerebellar ataxia 2 (SCA2) even before the onset of the disease, but there is no information regarding its progression to the final stage of SCA2. In order to study the progression patterns of nerve conduction abnormalities in SCA2 we performed a prospective follow up evaluation of sensory and motor conduction in 21 SCA2 mutation carriers-initially presymptomatics- and 19 non-SCA2 mutation carriers during 20years. The earliest electrophysiological alterations were the reduction of sensory amplitudes in median and sural nerves, which could be found 8 to 5years prior disease onset and in the last 4years of the preclinical stage respectively. These abnormalities were followed by the increase of sensory latencies and decrease of conduction velocities. Sensory amplitudes progressively decreased during the follow-up clinical stage, rendering almost all patients with abnormal amplitudes and lack of sensory potentials, with faster progression rates in patients with larger CAG repeat lengths. Peripheral motor nerves showed the later involvement. These findings were used to define three distinct stages that describe the progression of the peripheral neuropathy. We suggest that sensory amplitudes could be useful biomarkers to assess the progression of peripheral nerve involvement and therefore to evaluate future clinical trials of therapeutic agents.
PLoS ONE, 2009
Background: Motor deficits are a critical component of the clinical characteristics of patients w... more Background: Motor deficits are a critical component of the clinical characteristics of patients with spinocerebellar ataxia type 2. However, there is no current information on the preclinical manifestation of those motor deficits in presymptomatic gene carriers. To further understand and characterize the onset of the clinical manifestation in this disease, we tested presymptomatic spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 gene carriers, and volunteers, in a task that evaluates their motor performance and their motor learning capabilities.

Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, 2015
Our goal was to improve spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) cognitive profile characterization b... more Our goal was to improve spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) cognitive profile characterization by testing the hypothesis that strategy, planning and rule acquisition capacities are affected in SCA2. Forty one patients with SCA2 were evaluated with the Spatial Working Memory (SWM), the Stockings of Cambridge (SOC), and the Intra-Extra Dimensional Shift (IED) tests of the Executive module of the Cambridge Neuropsychological Testing Automated Battery (CANTAB). Paired Associates Learning (PAL) and Delayed Matching to Sample (DMS) from the CANTAB memory module were also assessed to corroborate previous findings. Motor deterioration was measured using the Scale for the Assessment and Rating of Ataxia (SARA). We found significant SCA2 related deficits in strategy, planning, and rule acquisition. Our results also corroborated significant memory deficits in these patients with SCA2. Further analysis also showed that patients with large motor deterioration had poorer associative learning and spatial planning scores. Patients with SCA2 show strategy, planning, and rule acquisition deficits as revealed with the CANTAB battery. These deficits should be noted when planning an effective therapy for these patients. (JINS, 2015, 21, 1-7).

Behavioral and neural …, 1993
This experiment examined the effects of catecholamine depletion of the amygdala or insular cortex... more This experiment examined the effects of catecholamine depletion of the amygdala or insular cortex on the acquisition of olfactory and gustatory learning tasks. Bilateral lesions with 6-hydroxydopamine (4 t~g/0.5 t~l) were done in either amygdala or insular cortex of Wistar male rats, with two groups receiving sham lesions. All four groups of animals were trained and tested in the potentiation of odor by taste aversion paradigm. The results showed that the amygdala-lesioned group acquired the taste, but not the odor aversion, while the insular cortexlesioned group acquired odor, but not taste aversion. Both sham groups showed strong taste and odor aversions. Catecholamine levels in both lesioned groups were significantly lower than those in the sham groups. These results suggest that catecholamines are necessary in the insular cortex for the acquisition of taste and in the amygdala for the acquisition of odor aversion in the potentiation of odor by taste aversion paradigm.

Brain Research, 1989
Three groups of rats showing disrupted taste aversion due to gustatory neocortex lesions, were st... more Three groups of rats showing disrupted taste aversion due to gustatory neocortex lesions, were studied. One group received a transplant of homotopic conical tissue, another of heterotopic tectal tissue, obtained from 17-day-old fetuses. The third group remained without transplant as a lesioned control group. Comparisons of the taste aversion scores before and after graft, revealed that cortical grafted animals significantly improved the taste aversion, whereas those which received tectal grafts, and the cortical-lesioned controis did not. Moreover, results with horseradish peroxidase (HRP) histochemistry revealed that the homotopic, but not the heterotopic, brain transplants we~ able to re-establish connections with amygdala and with the ventromedial nucleus of the thalamus areas who normally kept connectivity with the gustatory neocortex. These results support the hypothesis that fetal brain transplants can reestablish cognitive functions, as well as connectivity with its host tissue.

Brain Research, 1990
Rats with lesions of the gustatory neocortex (GN) show deficits in the acquisition of taste avers... more Rats with lesions of the gustatory neocortex (GN) show deficits in the acquisition of taste aversion. Fetal GN grafts to a lesioned animal restore taste aversion learning and establish connections with the host brain. In this work, we examined whether the grafts are biochemically functional and whether this fact can be related to behavioral recovery. Gustatory or occipital cortices from rat fetuses were transplanted to GN-lesioned rats. Two months later, taste aversion recovery was tested and the release of labeled ~-aminobutyric acid (GABA), acetylcholine (ACh), dopamine and glutamate from the grafted tissue was assayed. Fetal GN grafts promoted recovery of learning and released GABA, ACh and glutamate in response to K ÷ depolarization. Occipital cortex grafts did not induce behavioral recovery, although they were capable of releasing GABA. In contrast, these grafts did not release ACh. Moreover, GN-grafted rats in which behavioral recovery was not seen also failed to release ACh. These results are in agreement with previous findings that cholinergic transmission is important in the GN and suggest that ACh may play a role in the graft-mediated behavioral recovery observed in this model. 0006-8993/90/$03.50 (~)
Brain Research, 1987
Rats showing disrupted taste aversion due to gustatory neocortex or amygdala lesions were transpl... more Rats showing disrupted taste aversion due to gustatory neocortex or amygdala lesions were transplanted into the lesioned area with homologous brain tissue obtained from 17-day-old fetuses. Comparisons of taste aversions scores before and after the graft, revealed that the grafted animals significantly recuperated taste aversions, whereas cortical lesioned animals without grafts did not. Surprisingly, however, amygdala-lesioned animals without graft presented spontaneous recovery. These results not only support the hypothesis that fetal brain transplants can restore cognitive functions, but also that there are some fundamental functional differences between the gustatory neocortex and the amygdala in the regulation of the processes involved in the acquisition and retention of taste aversion.

Neuropsychologia, 2007
Patients with spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2), develop severe pontine nuclei, inferior olive... more Patients with spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2), develop severe pontine nuclei, inferior olives, and Purkinje cell degeneration. This form of autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia is accompanied by progressive ataxia and dysarthria. Although the motor dysfunction is well characterized in these patients, nothing is known about their motor learning capabilities. Here we tested 43 SCA2 patients and their matched controls in prism adaptation, a kind of visuomotor learning task. Our results show that their pattern of brain damage does not entirely disrupt motor learning. Rather, patients had impaired adaptation decrement, but surprisingly a normal aftereffect. Moreover, the mutation degree could discriminate the degree of adaptation. This pattern could reflect the net contribution of two adaptive mechanisms: strategic control and spatial realignment. Accordingly, SCA2 patients show an impaired strategic control that affects the adaptation rate, but a normal spatial realignment measured through the aftereffect. Our results suggest that the neural areas subserving spatial realignment are spared in this form of spinocerebellar ataxia.
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Papers by Juan Fernandez-ruiz