37 results match your criteria: "IRCCS Foundation C. Besta Neurological Institute[Affiliation]"
Int J Mol Sci
May 2021
Research Laboratory of Medical Cytogenetics and Molecular Genetics, IRCCS Istituto Auxologico Italiano, Via Ariosto 13, 20145 Milan, Italy.
Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome (RSTS) is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder caused by mutations in or genes encoding CBP/p300 lysine acetyltransferases. We investigated the efficacy of the histone deacetylase inhibitor (HDACi) Trichostatin A (TSA) in ameliorating morphological abnormalities of iPSC-derived young neurons from P149 and P34 -mutated patients and hypoexcitability of mature neurons from P149. Neural progenitors from both patients' iPSC lines were cultured one week with TSA 20 nM and, only P149, for 6 weeks with TSA 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurol Sci
October 2020
Multiple Sclerosis Clinical Care and Research Centre, Department of Neuroscience, Reproductive Sciences and Odontostomatology, "Federico II" University of Naples, Via Sergio Pansini 5, edificio 17 piano terra, 80131, Naples, Italy.
Background: Botulinum toxin (BT) is an effective and safe treatment for spasticity, with limited evidence in multiple sclerosis (MS). We aim to describe the use of BT for the management of MS spasticity in the clinical practice, its combination with other anti-spastic treatments in MS and possible MS clinical correlates.
Methods: This is a multicentre cross-sectional observational study including 386 MS patients, receiving BT for spasticity in 19 Italian centres (age 53.
Metab Brain Dis
December 2019
Pediatric Neurology Unit, V. Buzzi Children's Hospital, Via Castelvetro 32, 20154, Milan, Italy.
Mutations in the thyroid hormone transporter MCT8 cause severe intellectual and motor disability and abnormal serum thyroid function tests, a syndrome known as MCT8 deficiency (or: Allan-Herndon-Dudley syndrome, AHDS). Although the majority of patients are unable to sit or walk independently and do not develop any speech, some are able to walk and talk in simple sentences. Here, we report on two cases with such a less severe clinical phenotype and consequent gross delay in diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStroke
February 2019
Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Neurology, Lund University, Sweden (M.S., A.L.).
Background and Purpose- We sought to explore the effect of genetic imbalance on functional outcome after ischemic stroke (IS). Methods- Copy number variation was identified in high-density single-nucleotide polymorphism microarray data of IS patients from the CADISP (Cervical Artery Dissection and Ischemic Stroke Patients) and SiGN (Stroke Genetics Network)/GISCOME (Genetics of Ischaemic Stroke Functional Outcome) networks. Genetic imbalance, defined as total number of protein-coding genes affected by copy number variations in an individual, was compared between patients with favorable (modified Rankin Scale score of 0-2) and unfavorable (modified Rankin Scale score of ≥3) outcome after 3 months.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain
January 2019
Consultant in Neuropathology, Centro Hospitalar São João, Porto, Portugal.
Kufs disease is the major adult form of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, but is rare and difficult to diagnose. Diagnosis was traditionally dependent on the demonstration of characteristic storage material, but distinction from normal age-related accumulation of lipofuscin can be challenging. Mutation of CLN6 has emerged as the most important cause of recessive Kufs disease but, remarkably, is also responsible for variant late infantile ceroid lipofuscinosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrphanet J Rare Dis
August 2018
Child Neurology and Psychiatry Unit, IRCCS Mondino Foundation, Pavia, Italy.
Background: We present a group of patients affected by a paediatric onset genetic encephalopathy with cerebral calcification of unknown aetiology studied with Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) genetic analyses.
Methods: We collected all clinical and radiological data. DNA samples were tested by means of a customized gene panel including fifty-nine genes associated with known genetic diseases with cerebral calcification.
Neurology
August 2018
From the Department of Neuro-oncology (A.C.), Netherlands Cancer Institute/Antoni van Leeuwenhoek; Department of Neurology (A.C.), MC Slotervaart, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; University of Bordeaux (S.S., S.D.); Bordeaux Population Health (S.S., S.D.), INSERM Center U1219, France; Department of Neurology (C.J.V., B.G.-S., H.S., S.J., U.F., M.A.), University Hospital Inselspital and University of Bern; Division of Neuropediatrics (B.G.-S.), San Giovanni Hospital Bellinzona, Switzerland; Department of Neurology (T.M.M., T.T.), Helsinki University Central Hospital, Finland; Departments of Neurology and Public Health Sciences (A.S., B.B.W.), University of Virginia, Charlottesville; Department of Clinical and Experimental Sciences (A.P.), Neurology Clinic, University of Brescia, Italy; Department of Neurology (M.K., C.G.-G., C.L.), Heidelberg University Hospital, Germany; Normandie Université (E.T.), Unicaen, CHU Caen, Inserm U1237; Université Paris Descartes (E.T.), CH Ste Anne, Inserm U894, Paris, France; Stroke Division (V.T.), Florey Institute for Neuroscience and Mental Health, University of Melbourne; Department of Neurology (V.T.), Austin Health, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia; Department of Neurology (Y.B.), Dijon University Hospital; Department of Neurology (P.R., H.C., M.-G.B.), Lariboisière Hospital, Paris 7 University, DHU Neurovasc Sorbonne Paris Cité, France; Cerebrovascular Unit (A.B.), IRCCS Foundation C. Besta Neurological Institute, Milan, Italy; Suva/Swiss National Accident Insurance Fund (T.B.), Lucerne, Switzerland; Stroke Unit and Division of Internal and Cardiovascular Medicine (V.C.), University of Perugia, Italy; Department of Neurology and Stroke Center (P.A.L., C.T., S.T.E.), Department of Clinical Research, University Hospital and University of Basel, Switzerland; Neurology Clinic (C.L.), Memmingen Hospital, Germany; Department of Neurology (J.J.M.), Sanatorio Allende, Cordoba, Argentina; Department of Neurology (D.L.), Lille University, INSERM U1171, France; NeuroCentre (R.W.B.), Clinic Hirslanden Zürich, Switzerland; Neurorehabilitation Unit (S.T.E.), University Center for Medicine of Aging and Rehabilitation, Felix Platter Hospital, University of Basel, Switzerland; INSERM 1176 (J.D.), Institut Pasteur de Lille, France; Department of Clinical Neuroscience (T.T.), Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology, Sahlgrenska Academy at University of Gothenburg; Department of Neurology (T.T.), Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden; and Department of Neurology-Memory Clinic (S.D.), Bordeaux University Hospital, France.
Objective: To assess putative risk factors and outcome of multiple and early recurrent cervical artery dissection (CeAD).
Methods: We combined data from 2 multicenter cohorts and compared patients with multiple CeAD at initial diagnosis, early recurrent CeAD within 3 to 6 months, and single nonrecurrent CeAD. Putative risk factors, clinical characteristics, functional outcome, and risk of recurrent ischemic events were assessed.
J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry
June 2019
Oxford Autoimmune Neurology Group, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Eur J Neurol
November 2018
Department of Medical Sciences and Public Health, University of Cagliari, Cagliari, Italy.
Background And Purpose: Adult-onset laryngeal dystonia (LD) can be isolated or can be associated with dystonia in other body parts. Combined forms can be segmental at the onset or can result from dystonia spread to or from the larynx. The aim of this study was to identify the main clinical and demographic features of adult-onset idiopathic LD in an Italian population with special focus on dystonia spread.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStem Cell Res
July 2018
Laboratory of Medical Cytogenetics and Molecular Genetics, Centro di Ricerche e Tecnologie Biomediche, IRCCS Istituto Auxologico Italiano, 20145 Milano, Italy. Electronic address:
Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome (RSTS) is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by distinctive facial features, growth retardation, broad thumbs and toes and mild to severe intellectual disability, caused by heterozygous mutations in either CREBBP or EP300 genes, encoding the homologous CBP and p300 lysine-acetyltransferases and transcriptional coactivators. No RSTS in vitro induced Pluripotent Stem Cell (iPSC)-neuronal model is available yet to achieve mechanistic insights on cognitive impairment of RSTS patients. We established iPSC-derived neurons (i-neurons) from peripheral blood cells of three CREBBP- and two EP300-mutated patients displaying different levels of intellectual disability, and four unaffected controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neurol
May 2018
Department of Neurology, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany.
Background And Purpose: We investigated whether university education is more likely in cervical artery dissection (CeAD)-patients than in age- and sex-matched patients with ischemic stroke (IS) due to other causes (non-CeAD-IS-patients).
Methods: Patients from the Cervical Artery Dissection and Ischemic Stroke Patients study with documented self-reported profession before onset of IS due to CeAD (n = 715) or non-CeAD causes (n = 631) were analyzed. In the reported profession, the absence or presence of university education was assessed.
Cell Rep
February 2018
Division of Neuroscience, San Raffaele Scientific Institute, 20132 Milan, Italy; National Research Council (CNR), Institute of Neuroscience, 20129 Milan, Italy. Electronic address:
Dysfunctions in mitochondrial dynamics and metabolism are common pathological processes associated with Parkinson's disease (PD). It was recently shown that an inherited form of PD and dementia is caused by mutations in the OPA1 gene, which encodes for a key player in mitochondrial fusion and structure. iPSC-derived neural cells from these patients exhibited severe mitochondrial fragmentation, respiration impairment, ATP deficits, and heightened oxidative stress.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Syst
December 2017
Department of Biochemistry, University of Regina, Regina, SK S4S 0A2, Canada. Electronic address:
Mitochondrial protein (MP) dysfunction has been linked to neurodegenerative disorders (NDs); however, the discovery of the molecular mechanisms underlying NDs has been impeded by the limited characterization of interactions governing MP function. Here, using mass spectrometry (MS)-based analysis of 210 affinity-purified mitochondrial (mt) fractions isolated from 27 epitope-tagged human ND-linked MPs in HEK293 cells, we report a high-confidence MP network including 1,964 interactions among 772 proteins (>90% previously unreported). Nearly three-fourths of these interactions were confirmed in mouse brain and multiple human differentiated neuronal cell lines by primary antibody immunoprecipitation and MS, with many linked to NDs and autism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
October 2017
From the Department of Neurophysiopathology and Epilepsy Centre (L.C., C.T., F.P., S.F.) and Pediatric Neurology (T.G.), IRCCS Foundation C. Besta Neurological Institute, Milan; Department of Medical and Surgical Sciences (E.F., A.G., U.A.), Magna Graecia University, Catanzaro; Regional Epilepsy Centre (E.F., U.A.), Bianchi-Melacrino-Morelli Hospital, Reggio Calabria; Unit of Neurology (R.M., E.P., P.R.), IRCCS Institute of Neurological Sciences, Bellaria Hospital, Bologna; Pediatric Neurology and Muscular Diseases Unit (P.S.), DINOGMI-Department of Neurosciences, Rehabilitation, Ophthalmology, Genetics, Maternal and Child Health, University of Genoa, G. Gaslini Institute; Department of Neuroscience and Epilepsy Centre (A.M.), G. Martino Policlinico AOU, University of Messina; Institute of Neurological Sciences (A.G.), National Research Council, Mangone, Cosenza; Department of Neurology (V.B.), S. Anna Hospital, Como; Department of Neurology and Psychiatry (M.F.), Neurology Unit, Sapienza University, Rome; Epilepsy Center (F.B.), Department of Child Neuropsychiatry, C. Poma Hospital, Mantua; and Department of Neurology and Epilepsy Centre (A.B.), San Donato Hospital, Arezzo, Italy.
Objective: To explore the course of Unverricht-Lundborg disease (EPM1) and identify the risk factors for severity, we investigated the time course of symptoms and prognostic factors already detectable near to disease onset.
Methods: We retrospectively evaluated the features of 59 Italian patients carrying the expansion mutation, and coded the information every 5 years after the disease onset in order to describe the cumulative time-dependent probability of reaching disabling myoclonus, relevant cognitive impairment, and inability to work, and evaluated the influence of early factors using the log-rank test. The risk factors were included in a Cox multivariate proportional hazards regression model.
Am J Med Genet B Neuropsychiatr Genet
October 2017
Department of Molecular Biotechnology and Health Sciences, Molecular Biotechnology Center, University of Torino, Torino, Italy.
FLVCR1 encodes for a ubiquitous heme exporter, whose recessive mutations cause posterior column ataxia with retinitis pigmentosa (PCARP). Recently, FLVCR1 recessive mutations were also found in two sporadic children with hereditary sensory-autonomic neuropathy (HSAN). We report the unique case of a 33-year-old Italian woman with a combination of typical PCARP, sensory-autonomic neuropathy with sensory loss to all modalities and multiple autonomic dysfuctions, and acute lymphocytic leukemia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurogenetics
July 2017
Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, IRCCS Foundation C. Besta Neurological Institute, Via L. Temolo n. 4, 20126, Milan, Italy.
Mutations in PSEN1 are responsible for familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) inherited as autosomal dominant trait, but also de novo mutations have been rarely reported in sporadic early-onset dementia cases. Parkinsonism in FAD has been mainly described in advanced disease stages. We characterized a patient presenting with early-onset dystonia-parkinsonism later complicated by dementia and myoclonus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Genomics
April 2017
Department of Neurology and Stroke Center, Basel University Hospital, Basel, Switzerland;; Neurorehabilitation Unit, University Center for Medicine of Aging and Rehabilitation, Felix Platter-Spital, Basel, Switzerland.
Background: Genetic and environmental risk factors are assumed to contribute to the susceptibility to cervical artery dissection (CeAD). To explore the role of genetic imbalance in the etiology of CeAD, copy number variants (CNVs) were identified in high-density microarrays samples from the multicenter CADISP (Cervical Artery Dissection and Ischemic Stroke Patients) study and from control subjects from the CADISP study and the German PopGen biobank. Microarray data from 833 CeAD patients and 2040 control subjects (565 subjects with ischemic stroke due to causes different from CeAD and 1475 disease-free individuals) were analyzed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
April 2017
From the Department of Neurology and Stroke Center (C.T., H.G., P.L., S.T.E.), University Hospital Basel and University of Basel; Department of Neurology (D.D., B.G.S., M.A.), University Hospital Berne; Ospedale San Giovanni (B.G.S.), Bellinzona, Switzerland; Department of Neurology (T.M.M., T.T.), Helsinki University Central Hospital, Finland; Department of Neurology (S.D.), Bordeaux University Hospital; Inserm U1219 (S.D.), Bordeaux; Bordeaux University (S.D.), France; Department of Neurology (S.D.), Boston University School of Medicine, MA; Department of Clinical and Experimental Sciences (A.P.), Neurology Clinic, University of Brescia, Italy; Department of Neurology (M.K., C.G.-G.), Heidelberg University Hospital, Germany; Department of Neurology (J.J.M.), University of Utah, Salt Lake City; Departments of Neurology and Public Health Sciences (B.B.W., A.M.S.), University of Virginia Health System, Charlottesville; Univ Lille 2 (D.L.), INSERM U 1171, CHU Lille, France; Neuro Center (R.B.), Clinic Hirslanden, Zurich, Switzerland; Stroke Unit and Division of Internal and Cardiovascular Medicine (V.C.), University of Perugia, Italy; Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Le Bocage (Y.B.), Dijon, France; Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery (A.C.), Brain Centre Rudolf Magnus, University Medical Centre Utrecht, the Netherlands; Department of Neurology (P.R., H.C.), Lariboisière Hospital, Paris 7 University, DHU Neurovasc Sorbonne Paris Cité, France; Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health (V.T.); Department of Neurology (V.T.), Austin Health, Heidelberg, Australia; Cerebrovascular Unit (A.B.), IRCCS Foundation C. Besta Neurological Institute, Milan, Italy; Clinics for Neurologic Rehabilitation (T.B.), Kliniken Schmieder, Heidelberg, Germany; Normandie Univ (E.T.), UNICAEN, Inserm U919, Department of Neurology, CHU Caen; Department of Neurology (E.T.), CH Sainte-Anne, University Paris Descartes, France; Department of Neurology (J.J.M.), Sanatorio Allende, Cordoba, Argentina; Department of Neurology (T.T.), Sahlgrenska University Hospital and Institute for Neuroscience and Physiology, Sahlgrenska Academy at University of Gothenburg, Sweden; and Neurorehabilitation Unit (S.T.E.), University of Basel and University Center for Medicine of Aging and Rehabilitation, Felix Platter Hospital, Basel, Switzerland.
Objective: In a cohort of patients diagnosed with cervical artery dissection (CeAD), to determine the proportion of patients aged ≥60 years and compare the frequency of characteristics (presenting symptoms, risk factors, and outcome) in patients aged <60 vs ≥60 years.
Methods: We combined data from 3 large cohorts of consecutive patients diagnosed with CeAD (i.e.
Brain Topogr
May 2017
Department of Neurophysiopathology, IRCCS Foundation C. Besta Neurological Institute, Via Celoria 11, 20133, Milan, Italy.
EPM1 (epilepsy, progressive myoclonic 1; Unverricht-Lundborg disease, OMIM #254800) is the most frequent form of progressive myoclonus epilepsy. Previous findings have suggested that its pathophysiology mainly involves the cerebellum, but the evaluation of cerebellar dysfunction is still unsatisfactory. The aim of this study was to assess the structural and functional involvement of the cerebellum in EPM1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Paediatr Neurol
March 2017
Molecular Neurogenetics Unit, IRCCS Foundation C. Besta Neurological Institute, Milan, Italy. Electronic address:
Background: Mutations in HPCA, a gene implicated in calcium signaling in the striatum, have been recently described in recessive dystonia cases previously grouped under the term "DYT2 dystonia". Positive patients reported so far show focal onset during childhood with subsequent generalization and a slowly progressive course to adulthood.
Methods: 73 patients with isolated dystonia of various distribution, manifesting within 21 years of age, were enrolled in this Italian study and underwent a mutational screening of HPCA gene by means of Sanger sequencing.
Epileptic Disord
September 2016
Department of Pharmacology, University of Tartu, Tartu, Estonia.
We first review the clinical presentation and current therapeutic approaches available for treating Unverricht-Lundborg disease (ULD), a progressive myoclonus epilepsy. Next, we describe the identification of disease causing mutations in the gene encoding cystatin B (CSTB). A Cstb-deficient mouse model, which recapitulates the key features of ULD including myoclonic seizures, ataxia, and neuronal loss, was generated to shed light on the mechanisms contributing to disease pathophysiology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeuropharmacology
November 2016
Institute of Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology (IPMC), CNRS UMR7275, 06560, Valbonne-Sophia Antipolis, France; University of the Côte d'Azur (UCA), 06560, Valbonne-Sophia Antipolis, France; Inserm, 06560, Valbonne-Sophia Antipolis, France. Electronic address:
Voltage-gated Na(+) channels (NaV) are involved in pathologies and are important targets of drugs (NaV-blockers), e.g. some anti-epileptic drugs (AEDs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOrphanet J Rare Dis
July 2016
Department of Neuroscience, Center of Myology and Neurodegenerative Disorders, Istituto Giannina Gaslini, Genoa, Italy.
Background: Myosin heavy chain 7 (MYH7)-related myopathies are emerging as an important group of muscle diseases of childhood and adulthood, with variable clinical and histopathological expression depending on the type and location of the mutation. Mutations in the head and neck domains are a well-established cause of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy whereas mutation in the distal regions have been associated with a range of skeletal myopathies with or without cardiac involvement, including Laing distal myopathy and Myosin storage myopathy. Recently the spectrum of clinical phenotypes associated with mutations in MYH7 has increased, blurring this scheme and adding further phenotypes to the list.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Genet
October 2016
Population Health and Immunity Division, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Melbourne, VIC, 3052, Australia.
Familial adult myoclonus epilepsy (FAME) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by adult onset, involuntary muscle jerks, cortical myoclonus and occasional seizures. FAME is genetically heterogeneous with more than 70 families reported worldwide and five potential disease loci. The efforts to identify potential causal variants have been unsuccessful in all but three families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Neurol
July 2016
Department of Neurology, Heidelberg University Hospital, Heidelberg, Germany.
Background And Purpose: Our aim was to investigate whether pulsatile tinnitus (PT) in cervical artery dissection (CeAD) has prognostic significance.
Methods: All CeAD patients from the CADISP (Cervical Artery Dissection and Ischemic Stroke Patients) study with documentation of PT were analysed. The presence of PT was systematically assessed using a standardized questionnaire.