Publications by authors named "Stefania D' Agostino"

Oxidative stress and fibrosis are important stress responses that characterize bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD), a disease for which only a therapy but not a cure has been developed. In this work, we investigated the effects of mesenchymal stromal cells-derived extracellular vesicles (MSC-EVs) on lung and brain compartment in an animal model of hyperoxia-induced BPD. Rat pups were intratracheally injected with MSC-EVs produced by human umbilical cord-derived MSC, following the Good Manufacturing Practice-grade (GMP-grade).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although a rare disease, rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) is one of the most common cancers in children the more aggressive and metastatic subtype is the alveolar RMS (ARMS). Survival outcomes with metastatic disease remain dismal and the need for new models that recapitulate key pathological features, including cell-extracellular matrix (ECM) interactions, is warranted. Here, we report an organotypic model that captures cellular and molecular determinants of invasive ARMS.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Perinatal tissues, such as placenta and umbilical cord contain a variety of somatic stem cell types, spanning from the largely used hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells to the most recently described broadly multipotent epithelial and stromal cells. As perinatal derivatives (PnD), several of these cell types and related products provide an interesting regenerative potential for a variety of diseases. Within COST SPRINT Action, we continue our review series, revising and summarizing the modalities of action and proposed medical approaches using PnD products: cells, secretome, extracellular vesicles, and decellularized tissues.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aims: The main cause of low back pain is the intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration. Designing an effective disc regeneration strategy still remains a major challenge, especially for the lack of effective self-healing capacity. Understanding the properties of IVD cells in the degenerate microenvironment could help to develop in situ regeneration strategies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • - The study focuses on advancing 3D cell culture systems using hydrogels to better mimic the natural environment of cells, specifically targeting alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ARMS) cells to understand their migration behavior.
  • - A biocompatible hydrogel made from hyaluronic acid and polyethylene glycol was created and optimized for cell growth by assessing factors like degradation time and cell distribution, with insights gained from proteomic analysis of ARMS xenografts revealing important extracellular matrix proteins.
  • - The research validates the role of ITGA5, a receptor related to cell migration, and highlights the potential of the developed 3D ARMS model in exploring how cancer cells can evade therapies, resist immune responses, and dissemin
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Many applications in plasmonics are related to the coupling between metallic nanoparticles (MNPs) or between an emitter and a MNP. The theoretical analysis of such a coupling is thus of fundamental importance to analyze the plasmonic behavior and to design new systems. While classical methods neglect quantum and spill-out effects, time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) considers all of them and with Kohn-Sham orbitals delocalized over the whole system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: The interplay between neoplastic cells and surrounding extracellular matrix (ECM) is one of the determinant elements for cancer growth. The remodeling of the ECM by cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) shapes tumor microenvironment by depositing and digesting ECM proteins, hence promoting tumor growth and invasion. While for epithelial tumors CAFs are well characterized, little is known about the stroma composition of mesenchymal cancers, such as in rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS), the most common soft tissue sarcoma during childhood and adolescence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Regenerative therapies for intervertebral disc (IVD) injuries are currently a major challenge that is addressed in different ways by scientists working in this field. Extracellular matrix (ECM) deriving from decellularized non-autologous tissues has been established as a biomaterial with remarkable regenerative capacity and its potential as a therapeutic agent is rising. In the present study, we investigated the potential of decellularized Wharton's jelly matrix (DWJM) from human umbilical cord to act as an ECM-based scaffold for IVD cell culturing.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In cancer research, it is an urgent need in the obtainment of a simple and reproducible model that mimics in all the complexity the pathological microenvironment. Specifically, the will to improve the overall survival of young patients affected by rhabdomyosarcoma compels researchers to develop new models resembling the multifaceted environment of the pathology to deeply study the disease under novel and different aspects. To this end, we developed a decellularization protocol for alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (ARMS) able to maintain the three-dimensional structure.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this paper, we report on the effect of metal oxidation on strong coupling interactions between silver nanostructures and a J-aggregated cyanine dye. We show that metal oxidation can sensibly affect the plexcitonic system, inducing a change in the coupling strength. In particular, we demonstrate that the presence of oxide prevents the appearance of Rabi splitting in the extinction spectra for thick spacers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Imprinted, distributed feedback lasers are demonstrated on individual, active electrospun polymer nanofibers. In addition to advantages related to miniaturization, optical confinement and grating nanopatterning lead to a significant threshold reduction compared to conventional thin-film lasers. The possibility of imprinting arbitrary photonic crystal geometries on electrospun lasing nanofibers opens new opportunities for realizing optical circuits and chips.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this work sharp silver nanotips are analyzed and proposed as useful plasmonic tools to reduce the threshold for the onset of strong coupling in the electromagnetic interaction of a point-like emitter with localized surface plasmons. If compared to similarly-sized spherical nanoparticles, conically-shaped nanoparticles turn out to be extremely useful to reduce the oscillator strength requirements for the emitting dipole, a reduction of the threshold by one sixth being obtained in a double cone configuration. Moreover the transition to the strong coupling regime is analyzed for several cone apertures, revealing a nonmonotonic behavior with the appearance of an optimal cone geometry.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the realm of semiconductor nanomaterials, a crystal lattice heavily doped with cation/anion vacancies or ionized atomic impurities is considered to be a general prerequisite to accommodating excess free carriers that can support localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR). Here, we demonstrate a surfactant-assisted nonaqueous route to anisotropic copper sulfide nanocrystals, selectively trapped in the covellite phase, which can exhibit intense, size-tunable LSPR at near-infrared wavelengths despite their stoichiometric, undoped structure. Experimental extinction spectra are satisfactorily reproduced by theoretical calculations performed by the discrete dipole approximation method within the framework of the Drude-Sommerfeld model.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this paper a theoretical study of polarization properties of a silver nanosphere touching a homogeneous silver substrate and covered by oxide layers of increasing thickness, is reported. Oxide layers are often deposited on metallic nanostructures in metal-enhanced fluorescence (MEF) or surface-enhanced raman scattering experiments to avoid nonradiative energy transfer from emitters to the metal, and to increase the nanoparticles stability against thermal processes and laser exposure. Not much has been said on the effect of the oxide on the field enhancement of such kind of plasmonic systems.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The realization of white-light sources with a combination of high color rendering index (CRI), which is the average of the first eight rendering indices, and the deep-red color rendering R9 is an important challenge in the field of solid-state lighting. Herein, we report on a pure white hybrid light-emitting device combining a deep-blue emission from a polymer with blue, green, and red emissions from ternary CdSe/ZnS quantum dots. By carefully designing the device structure and tuning the ratio of QDs with different sizes, high CRI of 94 and R9 of 92 at 525 cd/m(2) were achieved.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We investigate the metal enhanced fluorescence by silver nanospheres on a thin silver substrate. Experimental measurements for core/shell colloidal nanocrystals embedded in a polymer matrix show a fluorescence enhancement factor of about 9. We apply the discrete dipole approximation method to describe the local-field enhancement factor (LFEF).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effects of nitric oxide-active drugs on the anticonvulsant action of the antiepileptic drug levetiracetam in an experimental model of partial complex seizures named maximal dentate gyrus activation were studied in rats. Levetiracetam was given alone or in combination with 7-nitroindazole, a preferential inhibitor of neuronal nitric oxide synthase, or with L: -arginine, the precursor of nitric oxide synthesis. The maximal dentate activation parameters were the time of latency and the durations of maximal dentate activation and afterdischarge responses.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The nitric oxide (NO)-active drugs influence on the bioelectric activity of neurons of the pars reticulata of the substantia nigra was studied in urethane-anesthetized rats. A first group of animals was treated with 7-nitro-indazole (7-NI), a preferential inhibitor of neuronal NO synthase. In a second group of rats, electrophysiological recordings were coupled with microiontophoretic administration of Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME, a NO synthase inhibitor), 3-morpholino-sydnonimin-hydrocloride (SIN-1, a NO donor) and 8-Br-cGMP (a cell-permeable analogue of cGMP, the main second-messenger of NO neurotransmission).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We have previously described modulatory effects of nitric oxide (NO)-active drugs on subthalamic nucleus (STN) neurons. In this study, the effects of microiontophoretically applied NO-active compounds on GABA-evoked responses were investigated in subthalamic neurons extracellularly recorded from anesthetized rats: 45 of 62 cells were excited by S-nitroso-glutathione (SNOG), an NO donor, whereas 28 of 43 neurons were inhibited by Nomega-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester (L-NAME), a NOS inhibitor. Nearly all neurons responding to SNOG and/or L-NAME showed significant inhibitory responses to the administration of iontophoretic GABA.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The presence of nitric oxide (NO) synthase and of soluble guanylyl cyclase, the main NO-activated metabolic pathway, has been demonstrated in many cells of the subthalamic nucleus. In this study, the effects induced on the firing of 96 subthalamic neurons by microiontophoretically administering drugs modifying NO neurotransmission were explored in anaesthetized rats. Recorded neurons were classified into regularly and irregularly discharging on the basis of their firing pattern.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In order to investigate the mechanism by which oligodendrogliomas cause neuronal damage, media conditioned by G26/24 oligodendroglioma cells, were fractionated into shed vesicles and vesicle-free supernatants, and added to primary cultures of rat fetal cortical neurons. After one night treatment with vesicles, a reproducible, dose-dependent, inhibitory effect on neurite outgrowth was already induced and, after 48-72 h of incubation, neuronal apoptosis was evident. Vesicle-free supernatants and vesicles shed by NIH-3T3 cells had no inhibitory effects on neurons.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The effects induced on the discharge of subthalamic spontaneously active neurons by inhibiting the enzyme nitric oxide synthase was studied in two groups of urethane-anesthetized rats. In the first group of animals (n = 10), the activity of subthalamic single units was recorded before and after the systemic administration of 7-nitro-indazole (7-NI, 50 mg/kg i.p.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Retinal degeneration is an early and progressive event in many forms of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs), a heterogeneous group of neurodegenerative disorders with unknown pathogenesis. We here used the mutant motor neuron degeneration (mnd) mouse, a late-infantile NCL variant, to investigate the retinal oxidative state and apoptotic cell death as a function of age and sex. Total superoxide dismutase (SOD) activities and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substance (TBARS) levels revealed progressive increases in retinal oxyradicals and lipid peroxides of mnd mice of both sexes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF