Publications by authors named "Checcucci G"

Article Synopsis
  • The NEREA initiative focuses on creating an augmented observatory in the Gulf of Naples to improve our understanding of marine ecosystems through a comprehensive approach.
  • It combines traditional research methods with advanced techniques like metabarcoding and metagenomics, building on past expeditions and research sites.
  • In its first 10 months (April 2019 to January 2020), NEREA collected extensive data on physical and chemical parameters, plankton biodiversity, and genetics, resulting in significant insights into marine ecosystems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * A case study details a 25-year-old pianist who suffered a displaced fifth metacarpal neck fracture from punching a wall and was treated using the Jahss maneuver, followed by K-wire fixation to ensure stability and promote healing.
  • * The min-invasive technique used in this case avoided complications such as extensor tendon damage and resulted in successful rehabilitation, with the patient achieving full motion and strength four months post-surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The choice of prosthetic or autologous reconstruction for proximal interphalangeal (PIP) joint arthroplasty in degenerative osteoarthritis represents a challenge for hand surgeons, especially in consideration of complications and patient's quality of life. We report the case of a 49-year-old woman who developed diffuse arthritis of the finger joints, especially at the PIP joint of the third right finger. Radiographs showed destruction of the PIP joint, large osteophytes, marked narrowing of joint space, severe sclerosis, and deformation of bone contour.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The fast spread of SARS-CoV-2 virus in Italy resulted in a 3-months lockdown of the entire country. During this period, the effect of the relieved anthropogenic activities on the environment was plainly clear all over the country. Herein, we provide the first evidence of the lockdown effects on riverine dissolved organic matter (DOM) dynamics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The rise of antibiotic resistance is the main cause for the failure of conventional antibiotic therapy of infection, which is often associated with severe gastric diseases, including gastric cancer. In the last years, alternative non-pharmacological approaches have been considered in the treatment of infection. Among these, antimicrobial PhotoDynamic Therapy (aPDT), a light-based treatment able to photoinactivate a wide range of bacteria, viruses, fungal and protozoan parasites, could represent a promising therapeutic strategy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Swan neck deformity (SND) can be the manifestation of an acute trauma. We present a case report of a young basketball player with an acute traumatic SND determined by the single ulnar oblique retinacular ligament rupture. The patient caught a ball directly upon the tip of his right's hand middle finger into extension.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The step-up photophobic response of the heterotrich ciliate Blepharisma japonicum is mediated by a hypericinic pigment, blepharismin, which is not present in any of the known six families of photoreceptors, namely rhodopsins, phytochromes, xanthopsins, cryptochromes, phototropins, and BLUF proteins. Upon irradiation, native cells become light-adapted (blue) by converting blepharismin into the photochemically stable oxyblepharismin (OxyBP). So far, OxyBP has been investigated mainly from a photophysical point of view in vitro, either alone or complexed with proteins.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Oxyblepharismin is the photo-oxidized form of blepharismin, the chromophore responsible for the photophobic response of heterotrich ciliate Blepharisma japonicum, and represents a nice model for the study of photo-transduction. In this work, we focused on the photophysical characterization of OxyBP, in view of highlighting the main features related to excitation and emission. By a combined experimental and computational approach we identified the main features of absorption and fluorescence emission of the molecule in solvents of different properties, identifying the nature of transitions as well as the possible heterogeneity at ground/excited state.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Hinged external fixation of the elbow is an important tool for the orthopedic surgeon. It enables early postoperative mobilization that may result in better outcomes. All models require correct alignment with the elbow axis of rotation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Reconstruction of distal thumb injuries still remains a challenge for hand surgeons. Surgical treatment includes the use of local, regional, and free flaps. The purpose of this report is to present the results of the use of a sensitive reverse flow first dorsal metacarpal artery (FDMA) flap.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To understand the genotypic variation of citrus to mild salt stress, a proteomic approach has been carried out in parallel on two citrus genotypes ('Cleopatra' and 'Willow leaf' mandarins), which differ for Na(+) and Cl(-) accumulation, and their cognate autotetraploids (4×). Using two-dimensional electrophoresis approximately 910 protein spots were reproducibly detected in control and salt-stressed leaves of all genotypes. Among them, 44 protein spots showing significant variations at least in one genotype were subjected to mass spectrometry analysis for identification.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Thalassemia is a congenital hemolytic disorder caused by a partial or complete deficiency of α- or β-globin chain synthesis. It has been seen that thalassemic patients exhibit an increased frequency of thrombotic events. The article presents the first case of thumb reconstruction with a modified wrap-around flap in a patient suffering from β-thalassemia minor.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Total dislocation of the capitate is an extremely rare event. We report on one such unusual case. The complete expulsion of the capitate from its physiological position is difficult to diagnose.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We present new femtosecond transient-absorption and picosecond fluorescence experiments performed on OBIP, the oxyblepharismin-binding protein believed to trigger the photophobic response of the ciliate Blepharisma japonicum. The formerly identified heterogeneity of the sample is confirmed and rationalized in terms of two independent populations, called rOBIP and nrOBIP. The rOBIP population undergoes a fast photocycle restoring the initial ground state in less than 500 ps.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The interaction of blepharismin (BP) and oxyblepharismin (OxyBP) with bovine alpha-crystallin (BAC) has been studied both by steady-state and femtosecond spectroscopy, with the aim of assessing the possible phototoxicity of these compounds toward the eye tissues. We showed that these pigments form with BAC potentially harmful ground-state complexes, the dissociation constants of which have been estimated to be 6 +/- 2 micromol L(-1) for OxyBP and 9 +/- 4 micromol L(-1) for BP. Irradiation with steady-state visible light of solutions of blepharismins in the presence of BAC proved to induce a quenching of both the pigment and the intrinsic protein fluorescences.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: We propose a new technique of regional anesthesia that combines suprascapular nerve block (SSNB) and axillary nerve block (ANB) in arthroscopic shoulder surgery.

Methods: Twenty consecutive patients undergoing arthroscopic procedures for shoulder cuff diseases were included in the trial. SSNB was performed by introducing the stimulating needle approximately 2 cm medial to the medial border of the acromion and about 2 cm cranial to the superior margin of the scapular spine until supraspinatus or infraspinatus muscle contractions were elicited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this study we report for the first time the localization of a photoreceptor pigment in the cilia of the colored heterotrich ciliates Blepharisma japonicum red and blue form, Fabrea salina, and Stentor coeruleus, as result of a confocal microscopy investigation. Optical sectioning confocal microscopy has been used for studying the spatial distribution of the pigment in the cell body, surprisingly showing that, besides its expected presence in the cortical region immediately below the cell membrane, it is located in the cilia too. In order to ascertain possible differences in the pigment fluorescence properties along the cell body, we have measured emission spectra from different parts of it (anterior, posterior, and cilia).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Target analysis is performed on previously published transient absorption spectra of the 200-kDa oxyblepharismin-binding protein (OBIP) thought to trigger the photophobic response of the ciliate Blepharisma japonicum. The OBIP sample is considered as heterogeneous and made of two distinct classes of chromophore-protein complexes. A so-called nonreactive class is seen to be comparable to free oxyblepharismin in organic solution.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Blepharisma japonicum is a ciliated protozoan exhibiting a strong step-up photophobic response upon illumination. The photoreceptor chromophores responsible for this response have been identified to be hypericin-like chromophores (blepharismin and oxyblepharismin), complexed to a 200 kDa non-water-soluble protein. The present work opens up new perspectives on the primary phototransduction steps of B.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Circular dichroism (CD) was used to study the structure of oxyblepharismin (OxyBP), the photoreceptor chromophore for the photophobic response of the blue form of Blepharisma japonicum. Both the chromophore associated to its native protein and the free chromophore in ethanol solution were investigated. CD spectra in the far-UV range indicate that OxyBP induces a slight increase in the alpha-helix content of the protein matrix.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many freely motile microorganisms can perceive and transduce external photic stimuli to the motor apparatus, eventually moving, by means of various behavioural strategies, into environments in which the illumination conditions are the most favourable for their life. In different microorganisms, a wide range of chromophores operate as light detectors, each of them set in a special molecular pocket that, in its turn, can be linked to another component of the transduction chain. The diverse photosensors are organized in special (and in many cases dedicated) photoreceptor units or subcellular organelles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In order to elucidate the primary stage in the blepharismin phototransduction pathway, changes in the molecular structure of light-exposed blepharismins and oxyblepharismins, were examined. When exposed to light, blepharismins (pink form) were converted into oxyblepharismins (blue form) or dissociated into stentorins/p-hydroxybenzaldehyde with an O2-requiring process, whereas light-exposed oxyblepharismins were not dissociated into stentorins/p-hydroxybenzaldehyde. Since both blepharismins and oxyblepharismins can activate the phototransduction chain leading to the step-up photophobic response presumably through the same pathway, dissociation of p-hydroxybenzaldehyde may not be involved in signal transduction.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the ciliated protozoan Blepharisma, step-up photophobic response is believed to be mediated by a novel type of photosensory pigment known as "blepharismins" (BL) that are contained in the pigment granules located just beneath the plasma membrane. We examined the ultrastructure of the pigment granules by freeze-fracture and thin-section electron microscopy and proposed a schematic diagram showing the granules' three-dimensional inner membranous structure. Some of the BL are suggested to be associated with 200 kDa membrane protein.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A key question to answer studying the biological effects of ultraviolet radiation on planktonic micro-organisms is whether they can perceive UV-B radiation as a sensory signal, likewise they do with visible light. We have faced this problem performing an individual-cell analysis of Blepharisma japonicum photomotile responses to UV-B stimuli. Our results on spectral responsiveness and on the effects of a photoresponse inhibitor indicate that B.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To test the hypothesis that light signal transduction in the unicellular ciliates Stentor coeruleus and Blepharisma japonicum involves a change in intracellular pH as an initial signal following photoexcitation, we studied the dependence of the photophobic responses of the cells to changes in extracellular pH and to reagents that specifically affect intracellular pH. The extracellular pH can modify not only the intracellular pH, but can even reverse the sign of the pH gradient across the cell membrane. Thus, as predicted by the hypothesis, low extracellular pH reversibly inhibited the photophobic response of the ciliates.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF