Publications by authors named "J D Unciti"

Article Synopsis
  • Cannabinoids, especially through CB receptors and GPR55, have shown neuroprotective effects in preclinical models of neurodegenerative diseases, sparking significant research interest.
  • The study tested a compound called VCE-006.1, which acts on GPR55, and found it effective in reversing motor defects and neuron loss in models of Parkinson's disease, although it had limited effects on inflammatory reactions.
  • Despite showing some protective benefits in models of neurodegeneration, the compound did not alter GPR55 expression levels, potentially explaining its varied effectiveness in different experimental setups.
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The application of new protocols for gene therapy against monogenic diseases requires the development of safer therapeutic vectors, particularly in the case of diseases in which expression of the mutated gene is subject to fine regulation, as it is with CD40L (CD154). CD40L, the gene mutated in the X-linked hyper-immunoglobulin M syndrome (HIGM1), is tightly regulated to allow surface expression of its product only on T cells stimulated by antigen encounter. Previous studies in an HIGM1 animal model showed that transduction of progenitor cells corrected the syndrome but caused a thymic lymphoproliferative disease because of the unregulated expression of the transgene by constitutive vectors.

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Primary immunodeficiencies (PID) are caused by mutations in genes that impair the development or activity of the immune system. Although bone marrow transplants achieve long time restoration in up to 90% of treated patients, morbidity and mortality are still high for some PID and adequate donors are not always available. Gene Therapy (GT) was envisioned as an alternative treatment for PID by inserting the correct gene into the patient's haematopoietic stem cells (HSCs).

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