24 results match your criteria: "Advanced Biotechnology Centre[Affiliation]"
Genome Res
May 2022
KOKORO-Biology Group, Laboratories for Integrated Biology, Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Suita, Osaka, 565-0871, Japan.
De novo mutations accumulate with zygotic cell divisions. However, the occurrence of these mutations and the way they are inherited by somatic cells and germ cells remain unclear. Here, we present a novel method to reconstruct cell lineages.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
October 2018
Faculty of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Yamanashi, Yamanashi, 400-8510, Japan.
Sci Rep
July 2018
Faculty of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Yamanashi, Yamanashi, 400-8510, Japan.
Freeze-drying has been frequently used to preserve food and microorganisms at room temperature (RT) for extended periods of time; however, its application to mammalian species is difficult. Here, we developed a method to prolong the stability of freeze-dried (FD) mice spermatozoa at RT for more than one year without using any cryoprotectant agents. Our data showed that maintaining a vacuum in ampoules is critical to ensuring the viability of FD spermatozoa, as the stability of spermatozoa DNA increased when imperfectly vacuumed ampoules were detected using a non-destructive test and eliminated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Total gastrectomy (TG) is responsible for symptoms or disturbance of alimentary status (changes in body weight, food intake per meal and frequency of meal per day) which, in turn are responsible for weight loss and malnutrition. The study evaluates the gut hormone responses in totally gastrectomized (TG) patients after a liquid meal test.
Methods: Twenty total gastrectomized cancer-free patients (12 M, 8 F, 56.
J Tissue Eng Regen Med
March 2018
Stem Cell Laboratory, Department of Experimental Medicine (Di.Me.S.), University of Genova, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genova, Italy.
Articular chondrocytes derived from osteoarthritic tissues (OA HAC) show a severely reduced chondrogenic commitment. This impairment undermines their use for tissue-engineered cartilage repair, which relies on cell proliferation and growth to meet therapeutic needs, but also on efficient cell plasticity to recover the chondrogenic phenotype. Reversine (Rev), a 2,6-disubstituted purine inhibitor of spindle-assembly checkpoints, was described to convert differentiated mesenchymal cells to their undifferentiated precursors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiomater Sci
November 2016
Stem Cell Laboratory, Dept. of Experimental Medicine, University of Genova, c/o Advanced Biotechnology Centre, L.go R. Benzi, 10, 16132-Genova, Italy.
Three different heterologous substitutes for bone regeneration, manufactured with equine-derived cortical powder (CP), cancellous chips (CC) and demineralized bone matrix granules (DBM), were compared in in vitro and in vivo settings. We tested: a commercially available bone paste (Osteoplant-Activagen™, consisting of aqueous collagenous carrier, CP, DBM; named A); a second-generation injectable paste (20 kDa polyethylene glycol/hydroxypropyl-methyl cellulose-based hydrogel, CP, DBM; B); a pre-formed bone filler (400 kDa polyethylene oxide/hydroxypropyl-methyl cellulose-based hydrogel, CP, CC, DBM; C). Vitamin C acted as a visco-modulator during C and B β-rays sterilization, modifying graft injectability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
February 2010
Laboratory of Recombinant Therapeutic Proteins, CBA - Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genoa, Italy.
Background: Fibronectin (FN) is a multi-domain molecule involved in many cellular processes, including tissue repair, embryogenesis, blood clotting, and cell migration/adhesion. The biological activities of FN are mediated by exposed loops located mainly at the interdomain interfaces that interact with various molecules such as, but not only, integrins. Different FN isoforms arise from the alternative splicing of the pre-mRNA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Biol Chem
September 2009
Laboratory of Recombinant Therapeutic Proteins, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Istituto G Gaslini, Genoa, Italy.
We report a novel strategy to engineer and express stable and soluble human recombinant polyvalent/polyspecific fusion proteins. The procedure is based on the use of a central skeleton of uteroglobin, a small and very soluble covalently linked homodimeric protein that is very resistant to proteolytic enzymes and to pH variations. Using a human recombinant antibody (scFv) specific for the angiogenesis marker domain B of fibronectin, interleukin 2, and an scFv able to neutralize tumor necrosis factor-alpha, we expressed various biologically active uteroglobin fusion proteins.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCancer Genomics Proteomics
January 2006
Unit of Translational Paediatric Oncology, National Institute for Cancer Research (IST), Genoa.
Neuroblastoma (NB) is one of the most common paediatric solid tumours and displays a broad variety of genomic alterations. Recently, array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) has emerged as a novel technology enabling high-resolution detection of DNA copy number aberrations. We have previously optimized a custom cDNA-array to detect MYCN gain and chromosome 1p36 loss, two molecular markers of tumour aggressiveness in NB.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOncogene
April 2005
Laboratory of Neuroblastoma Research, Fondazione Italiana per la Lotta al Neuroblastoma, c/o Advanced Biotechnology Centre, L.go R. Benzi 10, 16132 Genoa, Italy.
Neuroblastoma (NB) is a childhood malignancy originating from neural crest cells, which seldom occurs in association with other neurocristopathies. Owing to the rarity of familial NB cases, only a few linkage data are available and no mutations in candidate genes have been demonstrated up till now. Germline mutations in a small proportion of NB patients have been recently reported in the paired-like homeobox 2B (PHOX2B) gene, suggesting its role in NB predisposition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStructure
May 2002
Department of Physics, INFM, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, University of Genova, Largo Rosanna Benzi 10, I-16146 Genova, Italy.
A very short hemoglobin (CerHb; 109 amino acids) binds O(2) cooperatively in the nerve tissue of the nemertean worm Cerebratulus lacteus to sustain neural activity during anoxia. Sequence analysis suggests that CerHb tertiary structure may be unique among the known globin fold evolutionary variants. The X-ray structure of oxygenated CerHb (R factor 15.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Exp Immunol
April 2002
Unit of Viral Immunology, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genoa, Italy.
The loss of CD4 lymphocytes in HIV disease associates with opportunistic infections. Since diverse CD4 T cell clones respond to an opportunistic pathogen, we asked whether CD4 depletion deletes selected clones in the repertoire (vertical depletion) or it affects all clones by reducing the cell number in each progeny without affecting the overall number of clones (horizontal depletion). Understanding this point may help explain the mode of CD4 depletion and the mode of immunoreconstitution after therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurochem Int
July 2002
Pharmacology and Neuroscience, National Cancer Research Institute c/o Advanced Biotechnology Centre, L.go R. Benzi 10, 16132 Genova, Italy.
The present findings show that an atypical non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug, such as acetaminophen, retains the ability to recover amyloid beta-peptides driven neuronal apoptosis through the impairment of oxidative stress. Moreover, this compound reduces the increased NF-kappaB binding activity, which occurs in these degenerative conditions. Therapeutic interventions aimed at reducing the inflammatory response in Alzheimer's disease (AD) recently suggested the application of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr
April 2002
Department of Physics-INFM, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, University of Genova, Largo Rosanna Benzi 10, I-16146 Genova, Italy.
The three-dimensional structure of recombinant haemoglobin from the trematode Paramphistomum epiclitum, displaying the highest oxygen affinity so far observed for (non)vertebrate haemoglobins, has previously been determined at 1.17 A resolution (orthorhombic space group P2(1)2(1)2(1)). In the present communication, the three-dimensional structure of wild-type P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr
December 2001
Department of Physics - INFM, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, University of Genova, Largo Rosanna Benzi 10, I-16146 Genova, Italy.
The nemertean worm Cerebratulus lacteus neural tissue haemoglobin (109 amino acids, the shortest known haemoglobin) has been overexpressed in Escherichia coli, purified and crystallized. A highly redundant native data set has been collected at the Cu K(alpha) wavelength to 2.05 A resolution.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Mol Biol
June 2001
Department of Physics-INFM, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, University of Genova, Largo Rosanna Benzi, 10, Genova, I-16132, Italy.
Monomeric hemoglobin from the trematode Paramphistomum epiclitum displays very high oxygen affinity (P(50)<0.001 mm Hg) and an unusual heme distal site containing tyrosyl residues at the B10 and E7 positions. The crystal structure of aquo-met P.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Exp Immunol
February 2001
Immunology Laboratory, San Martino Hospital and Unit of Retroviral Immunology, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genoa, Italy.
Lymphoproliferation of healthy donors was tested against mycobacterial antigens (PPD, Ag85, Ag85 peptides). All PPD responders recognized the secretory antigen Ag85 and the peptide specificity for Ag85B was defined. Peptide 91-108 was recognized by 85% of donors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Dev Neurosci
July 2000
Unit of Pharmacology and Neuroscience National Cancer Institute, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Department of Oncology, Section of Pharmacology University of Genoa, Largo Rosanna Benzi 10, 16132, Genoa, Italy.
Prion encephalopathies include fatal diseases of the central nervous system of men and animals characterized by nerve cell loss, glial proliferation and deposition of amyloid fibrils into the brain. During these diseases a cellular glycoprotein (the prion protein, PrP(C)) is converted, through a not yet completely clear mechanism, in an altered isoform (the prion scrapie, PrP(Sc)) that accumulates within the brain tissue by virtue of its resistance to the intracellular catabolism. PrP(Sc) is believed to be responsible for the neuronal loss that is observed in the prion disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurochem
December 1999
Neuroscience Unit, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genova, Italy.
Chemokines are a family of proteins that chemoattract and activate cells by interacting with specific receptors on the surface of their targets. The chemokine stromal cell-derived factor 1, (SDF1), binds to the seven-transmembrane G protein-coupled CXCR4 receptor and acts to modulate cell migration, differentiation, and proliferation. CXCR4 and SDF1 are reported to be expressed in various tissues including brain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn N Y Acad Sci
June 1999
Neuroscience Unit, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genova, Italy.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV-1) infects the brain and causes a progressive encephalopathy in 20 to 30% of infected children and adults called AIDS dementia complex. Evidence from in vitro and in vivo studies suggests a role for the viral envelope glycoprotein gp120, as a mediator of neurotoxicity. However, the site of interaction of gp120 with neurons and astrocytes to mediate neuronal death is still unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImmunol Lett
March 1999
Unit of Retroviral Immunology, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genoa, Italy.
HIV infection leads to decrease of CD4 lymphocytes. In particular, loss of CD4 cells specific for opportunistic pathogens results in active opportunistic infections, that are the chief cause of morbidity and mortality in AIDS. Highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART) has been shown to have dramatic effects in a large fraction of treated individuals, such as decrease of viral load and increase of CD4 cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBr J Haematol
March 1999
Immunopharmacology Division, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, National Institute for Cancer Research, Genoa, Italy.
Phenotypic and functional abnormalities within the residual non-B-cell compartment of B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (CLL) suggest an interaction between tumour cells and host immune effectors. To explore the possibility of a polarized Th1/Th2 response we have studied CD30 antigen expression and the pattern of cytokine production by purified CLL T cells. Activated T cells from CLL patients showed a significant increase in the expression of CD30 compared to normal controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Cancer
October 1997
Unit of Solid Tumour Biology, G. Gaslini Institute/Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genoa, Italy.
Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) and deletion of chromosome 1p are very often found in sporadic neuroblastoma. Nevertheless, very few data are available concerning 1p LOH in familial neuroblastoma. Families with recurrent neuroblastoma are rare and analysis of chromosome 1p in these families might give useful information for identifying the putative neuroblastoma suppressor gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnticancer Drug Des
June 1997
Transgenic Unit, Advanced Biotechnology Centre, Genoa, Italy.
Resistance-modifying agents (RMAs) such as Verapamil have been proved to be effective in reversing multi-drug resistance (MDR) in many in vitro assays. In this study we have investigated the efficacy of Dex-Verapamil, the R-isomer of Verapamil, as a chemosensitizer in a murine leukemia cell line (P388) and in its resistant counterpart (P388/Dx) expressing a typical MDR phenotype. We have examined in vivo the effect of the co-administration of Dex-Verapamil and Doxorubicin in mice transplanted with P388 or P388/Dx cells.
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