Publications by authors named "Francesco Norelli"

Article Synopsis
  • - Primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC) and primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) are chronic liver diseases that damage bile ducts and lead to liver fibrosis and cirrhosis, but no specific biomarkers exist to differentiate them.
  • - This study analyzed saliva samples from 6 PBC patients using advanced mass spectrometry, comparing the results with samples from PSC patients, and identified 40 proteins that were significantly deregulated in PSC.
  • - The research revealed that some of these proteins are involved in immune responses and cytoskeleton remodeling, suggesting that saliva could be a valuable source for discovering biomarkers to differentiate between PSC and PBC.
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Introduction: Complement factor H (FH) is a major regulator of the complement alternative pathway, its mutations predispose to an uncontrolled activation in the kidney and on blood cells and to secondary C3 deficiency. Plasma exchange has been used to correct for FH deficiency and although the therapeutic potential of purified FH has been suggested by experiments in animal models, a clinical approved FH concentrate is not yet available. We aimed to develop a purification process of FH from a waste fraction rather than whole plasma allowing a more efficient and ethical use of blood and plasma donations.

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Quality by design (ICH-Topic Q8) requires a prospective summary of the desired quality characteristics of a drug product. This is known as the Quality Target Product Profile (QTPP), which forms the basis for the design and development of the product. An analogous term has been established for analytical procedures called the Analytical Target Profile (ATP).

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Introduction: Helicobacter pylori infection is among the most common human infections and the major risk factor for peptic disease and gastric cancer. Immunization with vaccines containing the H pylori vacuolating cytotoxin A (VacA), cytotoxin-associated antigen (CagA), and neutrophil-activating protein (NAP), alone or in combination, have been shown to prevent experimental infection in animals.

Aim: We sought to study the safety and immunogenicity of a vaccine consisting of recombinant VacA, CagA, and NAP given intramuscularly with aluminium hydroxide as an adjuvant to noninfected healthy subjects.

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Bacterial capsular polysaccharides covalently linked to an appropriate carrier protein represent the best tool to induce a protective immune response against a wide range of bacterial diseases, such as meningococcal infections. We describe here the physico-chemical characterisation of glycoconjugate molecules designed to prepare a vaccine against Neisseria meningitidis serogroups A, C, W135 and Y. The use of a selective conjugation chemistry resulted in well characterised, reproducible and traceable glycoconjugate that can be consistently manufactured at large scale.

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To generate a vaccine to protect against a variety of human pathogenic fungi, we conjugated laminarin (Lam), a well-characterized but poorly immunogenic beta-glucan preparation from the brown alga Laminaria digitata, with the diphtheria toxoid CRM197, a carrier protein used in some glyco-conjugate bacterial vaccines. This Lam-CRM conjugate proved to be immunogenic and protective as immunoprophylactic vaccine against both systemic and mucosal (vaginal) infections by Candida albicans. Protection probably was mediated by anti-beta-glucan antibodies as demonstrated by passive transfer of protection to naive mice by the whole immune serum, the immune vaginal fluid, and the affinity-purified anti-beta-glucan IgG fractions, as well as by administration of a beta-glucan-directed IgG2b mAb.

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The N19 polyepitope, consisting of a sequential string of universal human CD4(+)-T-cell epitopes, was tested as a carrier protein in a formulation of combined glycoconjugate vaccines containing the capsular polysaccharides (PSs) of Neisseria meningitidis serogroups A, C, W-135, and Y. Good antibody responses to all four polysaccharides were induced by one single immunization of mice with N19-based conjugates. Two immunizations with N19 conjugates elicited anti-MenACWY antibody titers comparable to those induced after three doses of glycoconjugates containing CRM197 as carrier protein.

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N19, a string of human universal CD4 T-cell epitopes from various pathogen-derived antigens, was shown to exert a stronger carrier effect than CRM197 for the induction of anti-group C Neisseria meningitidis capsular polysaccharide (MenC), after immunization of mice with various dosages of N19-MenC or CRM-MenC conjugate vaccines. After two immunizations, the N19-based construct induced anti-MenC antibody and protective bactericidal antibody titers higher than those induced by three doses of the CRM-MenC conjugate and required lower amounts of conjugate. N19-based conjugates are superior to CRM-based conjugates to induce protective immune responses to MenC conjugates.

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It is estimated that Helicobacter pylori infects the stomachs of over 50% of the world's population and if not treated may cause chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer disease, gastric adenocarcinoma and gastric B-cell lymphoma. The aim of this study was to enhance the mucosal and systemic immune responses against the H. pylori antigens cytotoxin-associated gene A (CagA) and neutrophil-activating protein (NAP), through combinations of mucosal and systemic immunizations in female BALB/c mice.

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