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Dive into the research topics where A. Di Palma is active.

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Featured researches published by A. Di Palma.


British Journal of Cancer | 2003

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs in colorectal cancer: from prevention to therapy

Paolo Ricchi; Raffaele Zarrilli; A. Di Palma; Angela M. Acquaviva

In this review, we discuss the available experimental evidences supporting the chemopreventive efficacy of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) on colorectal cancer and the biological basis for their possible role as anticancer agents. Although the comprehension of the mechanisms underlying the effects of these drugs on colon cancer cells is incomplete, research efforts in identifying the biochemical pathway by which NSAIDs exert their chemopreventive effect have provided a rationale for the potential use of NSAIDs alone or in combination with conventional and experimental anticancer agents in the treatment of colorectal cancer. In this paper, we review three main issues: (i) the role of COX-2 in colon cancer; (ii) the common death pathways between NSAIDs and anticancer drugs; and (iii) the biological basis for the combination therapy with COX-2 selective inhibitors and new selective inhibitors of growth factor signal transduction pathways.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Air pollution monitoring using emission inventories combined with the moss bag approach.

P. Iodice; Paola Adamo; F. Capozzi; A. Di Palma; A. Senatore; Valeria Spagnuolo; S. Giordano

Inventory of emission sources and biomonitoring with moss transplants are two different methods to evaluate air pollution. In this study, for the first time, both these approaches were simultaneously applied in five municipalities in Campania (southern Italy), deserving attention for health-oriented interventions as part of a National Interest Priority Site. The pollutants covered by the inventory were CO, NOx, particulate matter (PM10), volatile organic compounds (VOCs), and some heavy metals (As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Hg, Ni, Pb, Se, and Zn). The biomonitoring survey was based on the use of the devitalized moss Hypnum cupressiforme transplanted into bags, following a harmonized protocol. The exposure covered 40 agricultural and urban/residential sites, with half of them located in proximity to roads. The pollutants monitored were Al, As, Cd, Cr, Cu, Fe, Hg, Ni, Pb, Se, and Zn, as well as total polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) only in five sites. Using the emission inventory approach, high emission loads were detected for all the major air pollutants and the following heavy metals: Cr, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn, over the entire study area. Arsenic, Pb, and Zn were the elements most accumulated by moss. Total PAH postexposure contents were higher than the preexposure values (~20-50% of initial value). Moss uptakes did not differ substantially among municipalities or within exposure sites. In the five municipalities, a similar spatial pattern was evidenced for Pb by emission inventory and moss accumulation. Both approaches indicated the same most polluted municipality, suggesting their combined use as a valuable resource to reveal contaminants that are not routinely monitored.


British Journal of Cancer | 2002

Effect of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs on colon carcinoma Caco-2 cell responsiveness to topoisomerase inhibitor drugs

P Ricchi; T Di Matola; Giuseppina Ruggiero; D Zanzi; Anna Apicella; A. Di Palma; M Pensabene; Sandro Pignata; Raffaele Zarrilli; Angela Maria Acquaviva

Numerous studies demonstrate that the chemopreventive effect of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs on colon cancer is mediated through inhibition of cell growth and induction of apoptosis. For these effects non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs have been recently employed as sensitising agents in chemotherapy. We have shown previously that treatments with aspirin and NS-398, a cyclo-oxygenase-2 selective inhibitor, affect proliferation, differentiation and apoptosis of the human colon adenocarcinoma Caco-2 cells. In the present study, we have evaluated the effects of aspirin and NS-398 non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs on sensitivity of Caco-2 cells to irinotecan (CPT 11) and etoposide (Vp-16) topoisomerase poisons. We find that aspirin co-treatment is able to prevent anticancer drug-induced toxicity, whereas NS-398 co-treatment poorly affects anticancer drug-induced apoptosis. These effects correlate with the different ability of aspirin and NS-398 to interfere with cell cycle during anticancer drug co-treatment. Furthermore, aspirin treatment is associated with an increase in bcl-2 expression, which persists in the presence of the anticancer drugs. Our data indicate that aspirin, but not NS-398, determines a cell cycle arrest associated with death suppression. This provides a plausible mechanism for the inhibition of apoptosis and increase in survival observed in anticancer drug and aspirin co-treatment.


Chemosphere | 2016

Biomonitoring of atmospheric pollution by moss bags: Discriminating urban-rural structure in a fragmented landscape.

F. Capozzi; S. Giordano; A. Di Palma; Valeria Spagnuolo; F De Nicola; Paola Adamo

In this paper we investigated the possibility to use moss bags to detect pollution inputs - metals, metalloids and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) - in sites chosen for their different land use (agricultural, urban/residential scenarios) and proximity to roads (sub-scenarios), in a fragmented conurbation of Campania (southern Italy). We focused on thirty-nine elements including rare earths. For most of them, moss uptake was higher in agricultural than in urban scenarios and in front road sites. Twenty PAHs were analyzed in a subset of agricultural sites; 4- and 5-ringed PAHs were the most abundant, particularly chrysene, fluoranthene and pyrene. Overall results indicated that investigated pollutants have a similar spatial distribution pattern over the entire study area, with road traffic and agricultural practices as the major diffuse pollution sources. Moss bags proved a very sensitive tool, able to discriminate between different land use scenarios and proximity to roads in a mixed rural-urban landscape.


Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy | 1994

Regression of left ventricular hypertrophy and improvement of renal hemodynamics in hypertensive patients treated with quinapril

L. De Caprio; M. L. De Rosa; A. Di Palma; C. Lirato; P. Caccese; M. Sestito; S. Lastoria; A. M. Cicatiello; F. Rengo

SummaryOf 17 patients with mild to moderate essential hypertension, 8 showed echocardiographic evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy. Cardiac and renal function evaluated by glomerular filtration rate (GFR) were studied in all patients before and after 20 weeks of quinapril treatment. Systolic pressure decreased from 174.7±16.7 to 131.7±7.7 mmHg (p<.0001) and diastolic pressure decreased from 101.8±9.8 to 80±4.3 mmHg (p<.0001). Left ventricular mass index decreased in the eight patients with left ventricular hypertrophy (p<.01). Basal values of GFR were lower than normal in 41% of all patients; GFR increased significantly after 20 weeks of treatment (from 96.5±32.3 to 108.6±31.12 ml/min, p<.01); it decreased in only one patient. Patients reported few adverse effects to quinapril, and no important clinical laboratory abnormality was observed. Quinapril not only lowered arterial pressure, but it had a distinct effect on regression of left ventricular hypertrophy and favorable effects on renal function.


Environmental Pollution | 2018

Geochemistry and carbon isotopic ratio for assessment of PM10 composition, source and seasonal trends in urban environment

A. Di Palma; F. Capozzi; D. Agrelli; C. Amalfitano; S. Giordano; Valeria Spagnuolo; Paola Adamo

Investigating the nature of PM10 is crucial to differentiate sources and their relative contributions. In this study we compared the levels, and the chemical and mineralogical properties of PM10 particles sampled in different seasons at monitoring stations representative of urban background, urban traffic and suburban traffic areas of Naples city. The aims were to relate the PM10 load and characteristics to the location of the monitoring stations, to investigate the different sources contributing to PM10 and to highlight PM10 seasonal variability. Bulk analyses of chemical species in the PM10 fraction included total carbon and nitrogen, δ13C and other 20 elements. Both natural and anthropogenic sources were found to contribute to the exceedances of the EU PM10 limit values. The natural contribution was mainly related to marine aerosols and soil dust, as highlighted by X-ray diffractometry and SEM-EDS microscopy. The percentage of total carbon suggested a higher contribution of biogenic components to PM10 in spring. However, this result was not supported by the δ13C values which were seasonally homogeneous and not sufficient to extract single emission sources. No significant differences, in terms of PM10 load and chemistry, were observed between monitoring stations with different locations, suggesting a homogeneous distribution of PM10 on the studied area in all seasons. The anthropogenic contribution to PM10 seemed to dominate in all sites and seasons with vehicular traffic acting as a main source mostly by generation of non-exhaust emissions Our findings reinforce the need to focus more on the analysis of PM10 in terms of quality than of load, to reconsider the criteria for the classification and the spatial distribution of the monitoring stations within urban and suburban areas, with a special attention to the background location, and to emphasize all the policies promoting sustainable mobility and reduction of both exhaust and not-exhaust traffic-related emissions.


Ecological Indicators | 2016

Molecular and chemical characterization of a Sphagnum palustre clone: Key steps towards a standardized and sustainable moss bag technique

A. Di Palma; D. Crespo Pardo; Valeria Spagnuolo; Paola Adamo; Roberto Bargagli; D. Cafasso; F. Capozzi; J.R. Aboal; Aridane G. González; Oleg S. Pokrovsky; Anna K. Beike; Ralf Reski; Mauro Tretiach; Z. Varela; S. Giordano


Environmental Pollution | 2016

Best options for the exposure of traditional and innovative moss bags: A systematic evaluation in three European countries

F. Capozzi; S. Giordano; J.R. Aboal; Paola Adamo; Roberto Bargagli; T. Boquete; A. Di Palma; Carlos Real; Ralf Reski; Valeria Spagnuolo; Klaus Steinbauer; Mauro Tretiach; Z. Varela; Harald G. Zechmeister; J.A. Fernández


Environmental Pollution | 2017

Sphagnum palustre clone vs native Pseudoscleropodium purum: A first trial in the field to validate the future of the moss bag technique ☆

F. Capozzi; Paola Adamo; A. Di Palma; J.R. Aboal; Roberto Bargagli; J.A. Fernández; P. López Mahía; Ralf Reski; Mauro Tretiach; Valeria Spagnuolo; S. Giordano


Atmospheric Environment | 2017

Monitoring chronic and acute PAH atmospheric pollution using transplants of the moss Hypnum cupressiforme and Robinia pseudacacia leaves

F. Capozzi; A. Di Palma; Paola Adamo; Valeria Spagnuolo; S. Giordano

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F. Capozzi

University of Naples Federico II

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Paola Adamo

University of Naples Federico II

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S. Giordano

University of Naples Federico II

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Valeria Spagnuolo

University of Naples Federico II

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L. De Caprio

University of Naples Federico II

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F. Rengo

Northwestern University

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J.R. Aboal

University of Santiago de Compostela

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Ralf Reski

University of Freiburg

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