Publications by authors named "Novella S"

Despite the discovery and prevalent clinical use of potent lipid-lowering therapies, including statins and PCSK9 inhibitors, cardiovascular diseases (CVD) caused by atherosclerosis remain a large unmet clinical need, accounting for frequent deaths worldwide. The pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is a complex process underlying the presence of modifiable and non-modifiable risk factors affecting several cell types including endothelial cells (ECs), monocytes/macrophages, smooth muscle cells (SMCs) and T cells. Heterogeneous composition of the plaque and its morphology could lead to rupture or erosion causing thrombosis, even a sudden death.

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Diabetes mellitus, a group of metabolic disorders characterized by high levels of blood glucose caused by insulin defect or impairment, is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases and related mortality. Patients with diabetes experience a state of chronic or intermittent hyperglycemia resulting in damage to the vasculature, leading to micro- and macro-vascular diseases. These conditions are associated with low-grade chronic inflammation and accelerated atherosclerosis.

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NETosis is a key host immune process against a pathogenic infection during innate immune activation, consisting of a neutrophil "explosion" and, consequently, NET formation, containing mainly DNA, histones, and other nuclear proteins. During sepsis, an exacerbated immune host response to an infection occurs, activating the innate immunity and NETosis events, which requires histone H3 citrullination. Our group compared the circulating histone levels with those citrullinated H3 levels in plasma samples of septic patients.

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Article Synopsis
  • Extracellular histones worsen conditions like inflammation and coagulopathy by increasing vascular permeability and reactive oxygen species (ROS) production in endothelial cells.
  • The study reveals that ROS production in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) is driven by cyclooxygenase (COX) and NADPH oxidase (NOX) after exposure to extracellular histones.
  • It also identifies TLR4 as a key player in the process, leading to increased cell adhesion molecules, which contributes to the activation of endothelial cells and systemic inflammation in related diseases.
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Introduction: Circulating extracellular histones acquire relevance as cytotoxic mediators in sepsis. Extracellular histones act as damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs), which induce oxidative stress and NLRP3 inflammasome activation. Inflammasome mediates pyroptosis, a programmed cell death mechanism that produces inflammation.

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  • MicroRNAs (miRNAs) play a crucial role in regulating communication between cells and are significant in cardiovascular diseases, especially in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI).
  • The study analyzed miRNA expression using a cohort of 53 AMI patients (NSTEMI) compared to 51 healthy controls, finding that 58 miRNAs were differentially expressed during AMI and 36 showed changes at a 1-year follow-up.
  • Results indicated that during AMI, miRNAs were mainly linked to vascular development processes, while a year later, expression changes were related to cardiac tissue morphogenesis, with let-7e-5p specifically influencing endothelial function and vascularization.
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ALSUntangled reviews alternative and off label treatments with a goal of helping patients make more informed decisions about them. Here we review ketogenic diets. We shows that these have plausible mechanisms, including augmenting cellular energy balance and reducing excitotoxicity, neuroinflammation and oxidative stress.

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Background/aims: Estrogen has been reported to have beneficial effects on vascular biology through direct actions on endothelium. Together with transcription factors, miRNAs are the major drivers of gene expression and signaling networks. The objective of this study was to identify a comprehensive regulatory network (miRNA-transcription factor-downstream genes) that controls the transcriptomic changes observed in endothelial cells exposed to estradiol.

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Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the biggest cause of sickness and mortality worldwide in both males and females. Clinical statistics demonstrate clear sex differences in risk, prevalence, mortality rates, and response to treatment for different entities of CVD. The reason for this remains poorly understood.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Recent studies have questioned the role of miRNAs in diagnosing cardiovascular disease due to inconsistencies in research methodologies, suggesting that variations in miRNA profiles can impact results.
  • - This research compared miRNA expression in plasma and serum from patients with Non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI), finding similar levels of circulating miRNAs in both blood types but notable differences in their expression patterns.
  • - The findings indicate that the source of blood material (plasma vs. serum) influences miRNA expression, which may complicate comparisons across studies and highlight the need for standardized methods in miRNA research related to cardiovascular disease.
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Women show a lower incidence of cardiovascular diseases than age-matched men, but this benefit disappears after menopause. Oestrogen-mediated vascular actions are mainly attributed to oestradiol and exerted by oestrogen receptors (ERα, ERβ and G protein-coupled oestrogen receptor), through rapid and/or genomic mechanisms, but these effects depend on ageing and inflammation. A cardiovascular approach in women's health has arisen due to controversy regarding oestrogen's beneficial impact as reported in experimental and observational studies and large randomized trials.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the top cause of death globally, highlighting the need for better diagnostic tools and therapies.
  • - A new COST Action focuses on enhancing understanding of the human transcriptome in CVD to improve personalized medicine through interdisciplinary collaboration.
  • - The initiative aims to accelerate research on cardiovascular transcriptomics, support innovative projects, and strengthen European leadership in this crucial health area.
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Cardiovascular diseases are a worldwide health problem and are the leading cause of mortality in developed countries. Together with experimental data, the lower incidence of cardiovascular diseases in women than in men of reproductive age points to the influence of sex hormones at the cardiovascular level and suggests that estrogens play a protective role against cardiovascular disease and that this role is also modified by ageing. Estrogens affect cardiovascular function via their specific estrogen receptors to trigger gene expression changes at the transcriptional level.

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Aims: Endothelial progenitor cells (EPC) play a role in endothelium integrity maintenance and regeneration. Decreased numbers of EPC or their impaired function correlates with an increase in cardiovascular events. Thus, EPC are important predictors of cardiovascular mortality and morbidity.

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Circulating histones have been proposed as targets for therapy in sepsis and hyperinflammatory symptoms. However, the proposed strategies have failed in clinical trials. Although different mechanisms for histone-related cytotoxicity are being explored, those mediated by circulating histones are not fully understood.

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Background/aims: Estrogen signalling plays an important role in vascular biology as it modulates vasoactive and metabolic pathways in endothelial cells. Growing evidence has also established microRNA (miRNA) as key regulators of endothelial function. Nonetheless, the role of estrogen regulation on miRNA profile in endothelial cells is poorly understood.

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The beneficial effects of estrogen on the cardiovascular system have been reported extensively. In fact, the incidence of cardiovascular diseases in women is lower than in age-matched men during their fertile stage of life, a benefit that disappears after menopause. These sex-related differences point to sexual hormones, mainly estrogen, as possible cardiovascular protective factors.

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Extracellular histones are mediators of inflammation, tissue injury and organ dysfunction. Interactions between circulating histones and vascular endothelial cells are key events in histone-mediated pathologies. Our aim was to investigate the implication of extracellular histones in the production of the major vasoactive compounds released by human endothelial cells (HUVECs), prostanoids and nitric oxide (NO).

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The Mas receptor is involved in the angiotensin (Ang)-(1-7) vasodilatory actions by increasing nitric oxide production (NO). We have previously demonstrated an increased production of Ang-(1-7) in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVEC) exposed to estradiol (E2), suggesting a potential cross-talk between E2 and the Ang-(1-7)/Mas receptor axis. Here, we explored whether the vasoactive response and NO-related signalling exerted by E2 are influenced by Mas.

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Aim: To evaluate the effects of asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) in renal arteries from portal hypertensive and cirrhotic rats.

Methods: Rat renal arteries from Sham ( = 15), pre-hepatic portal hypertension (PPVL; = 15) and bile duct ligation and excision-induced cirrhosis (BDL; = 15) were precontracted with norepinephrine, and additional contractions were induced with ADMA (10-10 mol/L), an endogenous inhibitor of nitric oxide (NO) synthase. Concentration-response curves to acetylcholine (1 × 10-3 × 10 mol/L) were determined in precontracted renal artery segments with norepinephrine in the absence and in the presence of ADMA.

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Ageing is a complex multifactorial process that results in many changes in physiological changes processes that ultimately increase susceptibility to a wide range of diseases. As such an ageing population is resulting in a pressing need for more and improved treatments across an assortment of diseases. Such treatments can come from a better understanding of the pathogenic pathways which, in turn, can be derived from models of disease.

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Human life expectancy has increased dramatically in the last century and as a result also the prevalence of a variety of age-related diseases and syndromes. One such syndrome is frailty, which is defined as a combination of organ dysfunctions leading to increased vulnerability to adverse health outcomes. In humans, frailty is associated with various biomarkers of ageing and predicts relevant outcomes such as responses to therapies and progression of health status and mortality.

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