Publications by authors named "S Santagati"

The tick Ixodes ricinus is responsible for the transmission of a number of bacterial, protozoan and viral diseases to humans and animals in Europe and Northern Africa. Female I. ricinus from England, Switzerland and Italy have been found to harbour an intracellular alpha-proteobacterium, designated IricES1, within the cells of the ovary.

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We have recently demonstrated that 17beta-estradiol (E2) opposes cytokine-dependent increase of inducible nitric oxide synthase (iNOS) activity in rat smooth muscle cells and proposed that this effect might be associated to an antiinflammatory activity of this hormone. In the present study, we examine the E2 effects on a well-known in vivo model of inflammation. We show that, in carrageenan treatment of ovariectomized rats, prior exposure to E2 significantly attenuated inflammatory response as measured by histological examination and exudate production.

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Carrageenan causes enhanced formation of reactive oxygen species, which contribute to the pathophysiology of inflammation. We have investigated the effects of tempol, a membrane-permeable radical scavenger, in rats subjected to carrageenan-induced pleurisy. Treatment of rats with tempol (10, 30, or 100 mg/kg 15 min prior to carrageenan) attenuated the pleural exudation and the migration of polymorphonuclear cells caused by carrageenan dose dependently.

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Several studies have provided evidence for a direct effect of 17beta-estradiol on vessel wall via interaction with the constitutively expressed nitric oxide synthase (NOS) by endothelium. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of 17beta-estradiol on inducible NOS (NOS II) in primary culture of smooth muscle cells (SMC) from rat aorta. We here prove that 17beta-estradiol decreases the content and activity of NOS II in SMC.

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The alpha-estrogen receptor (ER alpha) transcriptional activity can be regulated either by binding to the cognate ligand or by intracellular signaling pathways responsive to a variety of factors acting through cell membrane receptors. Studies carried out in HeLa and COS-1 cells demonstrated that the cross-coupling between estrogen and growth factor receptors is mediated by p21ras and requires phosphorylation of a specific serine residue (Ser 118 in the human ER alpha and Ser 122 in mouse ER alpha) located in the ER alpha N-terminal activation function 1 (AF-1). Likewise, in the SK-N-BE neuroblastoma cell line p21ras is involved in the cross-coupling between insulin and ER alpha receptors.

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