Publications by authors named "Claudia d'Agostino"

The first case of CWD in a Norwegian red deer was detected by a routine ELISA test and confirmed by western blotting and immunohistochemistry in the brain stem of the animal. Two different western blotting tests were conducted independently in two different laboratories, showing that the red deer glycoprofile was different from the Norwegian CWD reindeer and CWD moose and from North American CWD. The isolate showed nevertheless features similar to the classical BSE (BSE-C) strain.

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Reactive astrogliosis is one of the pathological hallmarks of prion diseases. Recent studies highlighted the influence of several factors on the astrocyte phenotype in prion diseases, including the brain region involved, the genotype backgrounds of the host, and the prion strain. Elucidating the influence of prion strains on the astrocyte phenotype may provide crucial insights for developing therapeutic strategies.

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  • The study analyzed clinical characteristics and mortality risk factors for COVID-19 patients in an Italian hospital from March to May 2020, involving 258 patients with a mortality rate of 13.2%.
  • Key findings included that most patients were middle-aged (median age 62), with common symptoms like fever and cough, and a significant number had underlying health issues (66.7%).
  • Factors associated with higher mortality included older age, being male, high blood urea levels, and a decreased PaO2/FiO2 ratio, indicating severity in respiratory distress.
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Aquaporin-5 (AQP5), belonging to the aquaporins (AQPs) family of transmembrane water channels, facilitates osmotically driven water flux across biological membranes and the movement of hydrogen peroxide and CO. Various mechanisms have been shown to dynamically regulate AQP5 expression, trafficking, and function. Besides fulfilling its primary water permeability function, AQP5 has been shown to regulate downstream effectors playing roles in various cellular processes.

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Sjögren's syndrome (SS) is a chronic autoimmune disease with the pathological hallmark of lymphoplasmacytic infiltration of exocrine glands - more specifically salivary and lacrimal glands - resulting in a diminished production of tears and saliva (sicca syndrome). The pathophysiology underscoring the mechanisms of the sicca symptoms in SS has still yet to be unraveled but recent advances have identified a cardinal role of aquaporin-5 (AQP5) as a key player in saliva secretion as well as salivary gland epithelial cell dysregulation. AQP5 expression and localization are significantly altered in salivary glands from patients and mice models of the disease, shedding light on a putative mechanism accounting for diminished salivary flow.

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The prion protein (PrP) is subjected to several conserved endoproteolytic events producing bioactive fragments that are of increasing interest for their physiological functions and their implication in the pathogenesis of prion diseases and other neurodegenerative diseases. However, systematic and comprehensive investigations on the full spectrum of PrP proteoforms have been hampered by the lack of methods able to identify all PrP-derived proteoforms. Building on previous knowledge of PrP endoproteolytic processing, we thus developed an optimized Western blot assay able to obtain the maximum information about PrP constitutive processing and the relative abundance of PrP proteoforms in a complex biological sample.

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  • Atypical Scrapie is a spontaneous prion disease in small ruminants that does not spread like classical scrapie and cannot be controlled through selective breeding.
  • Research on this disease is crucial since it reflects similar spontaneous prion disorders found in humans, which account for over 85% of such cases.
  • Transgenic mice designed to express specific sheep prion proteins have shown symptoms of spongiform encephalopathy, and the prion strain from these mice closely resembles that of atypical scrapie, marking an important step in understanding and modeling this disease.
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Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker disease (GSS) is a rare genetic prion disease. A large GSS kindred linked to the serine-for-phenylalanine substitution at codon 198 of the prion protein gene (GSS-F198S) is characterized by conspicuous accumulation of prion protein (PrP)-amyloid deposits and neurofibrillary tangles. Recently, we demonstrated the transmissibility of GSS-F198S prions to bank vole carrying isoleucine at 109 PrP codon (BvI).

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Aquaporins (AQPs) are a family of transmembrane water channels expressed in all living organisms. AQPs facilitate osmotically driven water flux across biological membranes and, in some cases, the movement of small molecules (such as glycerol, urea, CO, NH, HO). Protein-protein interactions play essential roles in protein regulation and function.

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Prions are infectious agents that replicate through the autocatalytic misfolding of the cellular prion protein (PrPC) into infectious aggregates (PrPSc) causing fatal neurodegenerative diseases in humans and animals. Prions exist as strains, which are encoded by conformational variants of PrPSc. The transmissibility of prions depends on the PrPC sequence of the recipient host and on the incoming prion strain, so that some animal prion strains are more contagious than others or are transmissible to new species, including humans.

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Salivary gland (SG) dysfunction impairs the life quality of many patients, such as patients with radiation therapy for head and neck cancer and patients with Sjögren's syndrome. Multiple SG engineering strategies have been considered for SG regeneration, repair, or whole organ replacement. An in-depth understanding of the development and differentiation of epithelial stem and progenitor cells niche during SG branching morphogenesis and signaling pathways involved in cell-cell communication constitute a prerequisite to the development of suitable bioengineering solutions.

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Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of Tocilizumab (with or without corticosteroids) in a real-life context among moderate-to-severe COVID-19 patients hospitalized at the Infectious Diseases ward of two hospitals in Lazio region, Italy, during the first wave of SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.

Method: We conducted a retrospective cohort study among moderate-to-severe COVID-19 pneumonia to assess the influence of tocilizumab (with or without corticosteroids) on: 1) primary composite outcome: risk for death/invasive mechanical ventilation/ICU-transfer at 14 days from hospital admission; 2) secondary outcome: COVID-related death only. Both outcomes were also assessed at 28 days and restricted to baseline more severe cases.

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Puumala orthohantavirus (PUUV) causes a mild form of haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) called nephropathia epidemica (NE), regularly diagnosed in Europe. France represents the western frontier of the expansion of NE in Europe with two distinct areas: an endemic area (north-eastern France) where PUUV circulates in rodent populations, with the detection of many human NE cases, and a non-endemic area (south-western France) where the virus is not detected, with only a few human cases being reported. In this study, we describe the different stages of the isolation of two PUUV strains from two distinct French geographical areas: Ardennes (endemic area) and Loiret (non-endemic area).

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  • Viruses in the genus NoV are a leading cause of viral gastroenteritis globally, classified into 10 genogroups, with genogroup GV affecting various rodent species.
  • In a study conducted in an Italian animal facility, fecal samples from mice were taken in 2011 and 2014, revealing that over half the mice (54.6%) tested positive for murine norovirus (MNV).
  • Analysis indicated two distinct MNV variants were present, with one strain being isolated for full genome sequencing, suggesting a widespread issue in the facility despite care guidelines and connections to other European strains.
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  • Chronic wasting disease (CWD) is a severe prion-caused disease affecting deer populations in North America, recently detected in Norwegian reindeer and moose since 2016.
  • A study compared CWD prion strains from Norway and North America, revealing that the Norwegian strains have distinct characteristics and do not originate from North American CWD.
  • The research indicates that different CWD strains affect reindeer and moose in Norway, underlining the need to investigate the potential health risks these new strains may pose to humans.
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  • NK cells are primarily involved in COVID-19 pneumonia, but NKT cells, which link innate and adaptive immunity, are less understood.
  • In a study of 45 patients with COVID-19 pneumonia and 19 healthy donors, researchers found that COVID-19 patients had more NK cells and fewer NKT and CD56bright cells, with severe cases showing particularly low NKT cell levels.
  • The study suggests that low percentages of NKT cells in COVID-19 patients might be linked to greater disease severity, highlighting their potential importance in the illness.
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The main role of salivary glands (SG) is the production and secretion of saliva, in which aquaporins (AQPs) play a key role by ensuring water flow. The AQPs are transmembrane channel proteins permeable to water to allow water transport across cell membranes according to osmotic gradient. This review gives an insight into SG AQPs.

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The critical role of neuroinflammation in favoring and accelerating the pathogenic process in Alzheimer's disease (AD) increased the need to target the cerebral innate immune cells as a potential therapeutic strategy to slow down the disease progression. In this scenario, mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have risen considerable interest thanks to their immunomodulatory properties, which have been largely ascribed to the release of extracellular vesicles (EVs), namely exosomes and microvesicles. Indeed, the beneficial effects of MSC-EVs in regulating the inflammatory response have been reported in different AD mouse models, upon chronic intravenous or intracerebroventricular administration.

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Prions are transmissible agents causing lethal neurodegenerative diseases that are composed of aggregates of misfolded cellular prion protein (PrPSc). Despite non-fibrillar oligomers having been proposed as the most infectious prion particles, prions purified from diseased brains usually consist of large and fibrillar PrPSc aggregates, whose protease-resistant core (PrPres) encompasses the whole C-terminus of PrP. In contrast, PrPSc from Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker disease associated with alanine to valine substitution at position 117 (GSS-A117V) is characterized by a small protease-resistant core, which is devoid of the C-terminus.

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  • Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) is the only recognized animal prion that poses a risk to humans, and its detection in goats raises concerns about BSE in small ruminants.
  • The study used a new method to explore prion strain diversity in European goats by examining how different prion isolates interacted with various rodent models.
  • The results indicated that prion isolates in goats vary by region and suggested effective methods to distinguish goat BSE from other prion strains, revealing a complex nature of scrapie strains that may affect their transmission to different species, including humans.
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  • * A new propagation system called Protein Misfolding Shaking Amplification (PMSA) improves upon previous methods by replacing sonication with shaking, allowing for the production of large quantities of infectious recombinant prions.
  • * The introduction of specific cofactors, like dextran sulfate, reduces structural variability, enabling high-resolution techniques such as solid state Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (ssNMR) imaging to study these prions effectively.
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  • The study investigates how a high-fat diet (HFD) affects subcutaneous adipose tissue (scAT) and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) over time, using rabbits as a model.
  • Results showed that HFD caused changes in the blood cells of rabbits after 5 weeks, increasing inflammation and contributing to insulin resistance by 10 weeks, but did not significantly alter the scAT's lipid metabolism or inflammation.
  • The findings suggest that targeting the inflammatory responses in PBMC could be crucial for preventing metabolic issues associated with obesity and improving health outcomes.
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Background: Cytoreductive surgery (CRS) and hyperthermic intraperitoneal chemotherapy (HIPEC) showed promising results in selected patients. High morbidity restrains its wide application. The aim of this study was to report postoperative infectious complications and investigate possible correlations with the preoperative nutritional status and other prognostic factors in patients with peritoneal metastases treated with CRS and HIPEC.

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The aim of the study was to investigate the changes of matrix metalloproteinase (MMP)-2 and MMP-9 plasma levels during natalizumab treatment and their correlation with JC virus (JCV) reactivation and T-lymphocyte phenotypic modifications in peripheral blood samples from 34 relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) patients. MMP-9 levels were assessed by zymography in plasma samples. JCV-DNA was detected through quantitative real time PCR in plasma samples.

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  • - Variably protease-sensitive prionopathy (VPSPr) is a newly identified sporadic prion disease in humans, characterized by a unique prion protein with five fragments similar to another disease known as Gerstmann-Sträussler-Scheinker disease.
  • - In experiments, while VPSPr could be transmitted to human-like prion protein mice, the results were inconsistent; however, using bank voles showed successful transmission with complete attack rates ranging from 5%-35% in the first passage and 100% in the second, with shorter survival times.
  • - Three distinct phenotypes of the disease were observed in bank voles, some resembling Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and others mimicking Ger
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