Publications by authors named "S DE Iasio"

Article Synopsis
  • Notch signaling is crucial for tissue development and affects human osteoclast differentiation, with Notch1 showing conflicting roles in human versus mouse osteoclast formation.
  • Our study reveals that active Notch1 signaling blocks the differentiation of human mononuclear CD14 cells into osteoclasts while promoting expansion of specific cell subsets during osteoclastogenesis.
  • We found that IL7R is a downstream target of Notch1, highlighting a new interaction that enhances the development of osteoclast progenitors, and showcasing distinct gene expression and signaling pathways involved in this process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This research is the first empirical attempt to calculate the various components of the hidden bias associated with the sampling strategies routinely-used in human genetics, with special reference to surname-based strategies. We reconstructed surname distributions of 26 Italian communities with different demographic features across the last six centuries (years 1447-2001). The degree of overlapping between "reference founding core" distributions and the distributions obtained from sampling the present day communities by probabilistic and selective methods was quantified under different conditions and models.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This paper compares the structures of the surnames of 75 municipal populations living in six north-western Mediterranean regions. Its purpose is to unravel the relations between the local populations in Corsica and Sardinia and the links between these populations and those living in the Italian and French continental territory. On the basis of the matrix of similarity of surnames, some topological representations have been drafted showing the above-mentioned relations between populations under the light of their geographical position, their recent history and studies of genetic analysis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In 47 male adult Wistar rats with 4-wk aortic coarctation (AC) and 39 age-matched sham-operated rats (SO) chronically instrumented for telemetry electrocardiogram recording, we investigated the mechanisms of arrhythmogenesis in moderate cardiac hypertrophy, with an approach from "in vivo" toward the cellular level, analyzing 1) stress-induced cardiac arrhythmias in all rats and 2) myocardial fibrosis in 35 animals and action potential duration and density of hyperpolarization-activated current in 19 others at the ventricular level. Aortic banding increased arterial blood pressure, cardiac weight, and ventricular myocyte volume by 11, 25, and 14%, respectively (P < 0.001-0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF