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Featured researches published by A. Nesti.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2003

Clinical features of X linked juvenile retinoschisis associated with new mutations in the XLRS1 gene in Italian families.

Francesca Simonelli; G. Cennamo; Carmela Ziviello; Francesco Testa; G. De Crecchio; A. Nesti; Maria Pia Manitto; Alfredo Ciccodicola; Sandro Banfi; R. Brancato; Ernesto Rinaldi

Aims: To describe the clinical phenotype of X linked juvenile retinoschisis in eight Italian families with six different mutations in the XLRS1 gene. Methods: Complete ophthalmic examinations, electroretinography and A and B-scan standardised echography were performed in 18 affected males. The coding sequences of the XLRS1 gene were amplified by polymerase chain reaction and directly sequenced on an automated sequencer. Results: Six different XLRS1 mutations were identified; two of these mutations Ile81Asn and the Trp122Cys, have not been previously described. The affected males showed an electronegative response to the standard white scotopic stimulus and a prolonged implicit time of the 30 Hz flicker. In the families with Trp112Cys and Trp122Cys mutations we observed a more severe retinoschisis (RS) clinical picture compared with the other genotypes. Conclusion: The severe RS phenotypes associated with Trp112Cys and to Trp122Cys mutations suggest that these mutations determine a notable alteration in the function of the retinoschisin protein.


Ophthalmic Research | 2005

Genotype-Phenotype Correlation in Italian Families with Stargardt Disease

Francesca Simonelli; Francesco Testa; Jana Zernant; A. Nesti; Settimio Rossi; Rando Allikmets; Ernesto Rinaldi

Autosomal recessive Stargardt disease (STGD) has been associated with substantial genetic and phenotypic heterogeneity. By systematic clinical analyses of STGD patients with complete genetic data (i.e. identified mutations on both alleles of the ABCA4 gene), we set out to determine phenotypic subtypes and to correlate these with specific ABCA4 alleles. Twenty-eight patients from 18 families with STGD/fundus flavimaculatus were investigated. All patients were submitted to complete ophthalmologic examination, electrophysiology, fluorescein angiography and ABCA4 gene chip analysis. Two main clinical phenotypes were observed among the examined patients. The severe phenotype was characterized by the onset of the disease <20 years and reduced ERG response, whereas the mild phenotype presented with later onset of the disease and a normal ERG response. Genetic analysis of the ABCA4 gene revealed, in the severe group, more frequently deletions, stop codons and insertions as compared to the mild phenotype group (p = 0.0113 by Fisher’s exact test). Moreover, the compound heterozygous mutations G1961E/5018 + 2T → C found in 7 patients from 3 unrelated STGD families were associated with a mild phenotype in all subjects, except 1. This study documented variability of the clinical expression of STGD in relation to the age of onset of the disease, fundus appearance and the ERG response and allowed to subdivide patients into a severe and a mild phenotype group. These findings suggest that an extensive and comprehensive genetic analysis of STGD patients combined with thorough clinical evaluation, including the careful recording of the age of onset of the disease, would allow a more precise prognostic evaluation.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011

Evaluation of Italian patients with leber congenital amaurosis due to AIPL1 mutations highlights the potential applicability of gene therapy.

Francesco Testa; Enrico Maria Surace; Settimio Rossi; Elena Marrocco; Annagiusi Gargiulo; Valentina Di Iorio; Carmela Ziviello; A. Nesti; Simona Fecarotta; Maria Laura Bacci; Massimo Giunti; Michele Della Corte; Sandro Banfi; Alberto Auricchio; Francesca Simonelli

PURPOSE To evaluate the suitability of gene delivery-based approaches as potential treatment of Leber congenital amaurosis 4 (LCA4) due to AIPL1 mutations. METHODS Genomic DNA from patients was analyzed using a microarray chip and direct sequencing. A detailed clinical evaluation including fundus autofluorescence (FAF) and optical coherence tomography (OCT) was performed in patients with AIPL1 mutations. Aipl1 null mice and porcine eyes were subretinally injected with adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors harboring the human AIPL1 coding sequence. RESULTS We identified 10 LCA4 patients with mutations in AIPL1. The p.W278X sequence variation was the one most frequently found. Clinical assessment revealed common features including diffuse retinal dystrophies and maculopathy. However, optical coherence tomography showed partially retained photoreceptors in extramacular regions at all ages. The fundus autofluorescence was elicitable at the posterior pole and absent in the fovea. AAV-mediated gene transfer in Aipl1 -/- mice was associated with restoration of AIPL1 and βPDE expression in photoreceptors and protection from degeneration. Administration of a clinically relevant dose of AAV2/8-AIPL1 to the preclinical large porcine retina resulted in high level of AIPL1 photoreceptor expression in the absence of toxicity. CONCLUSIONS Using advanced imaging diagnostics we showed that maculopathy is a main feature of LCA4. We identified retinal areas at the posterior pole with surviving photoreceptors present even in adult LCA4 patients, which could be the target of gene therapy. The possible use of gene therapy for LCA4 is additionally supported by the protection from photoreceptor degeneration observed in Aipl 1-/- mice and by the high levels of photoreceptor transduction in the absence of toxicity observed after AAV2/8 delivery to the large porcine retina.


Ophthalmic Research | 2004

Association of a Homozygous Nonsense Mutation in the ABCA4 (ABCR) Gene with Cone-Rod Dystrophy Phenotype in an Italian Family

Francesca Simonelli; Francesco Testa; Jana Zernant; A. Nesti; Settimio Rossi; Ernesto Rinaldi; Rando Allikmets

Genetic variation in the ABCA4 (ABCR) gene has been associated with several distinct retinal phenotypes, including Stargardt disease/fundus flavimaculatus (STGD/FFM), cone-rod dystrophy (CRD), retinitis pigmentosa (RP) and age-related macular degeneration. The current model of genotype/phenotype association suggests that patients harboring deleterious mutations in both ABCR alleles would develop RP-like retinal pathology. Here we describe ABCA4-associated phenotypes, including a proband with a homozygous nonsense mutation in a family from Southern Italy. The proband had been originally diagnosed with STGD. Ophthalmologic examination included kinetic perimetry, electrophysiological studies and fluorescein angiography. DNA of the affected individual and family members was analyzed for variants in all 50 exons of the ABCA4 gene by screening on the ABCR400 microarray. A homozygous nonsense mutation 2971G>T (G991X) was detected in a patient initially diagnosed with STGD based on funduscopic evidence, including bull’s eye depigmentation of the fovea and flecks at the posterior pole extending to the mid-peripheral retina. Since this novel nucleotide substitution results in a truncated, nonfunctional, ABCA4 protein, the patient was examined in-depth for the severity of the disease phenotype. Indeed, subsequent electrophysiological studies determined severely reduced cone amplitude as compared to the rod amplitude, suggesting the diagnosis of CRD. ABCR400 microarray is an efficient tool for determining causal genetic variation, including new mutations. A homozygous protein-truncating mutation in ABCA4 can cause a phenotype ranging from STGD to CRD as diagnosed at an early stage of the disease. Only a combination of comprehensive genotype/phenotype correlation studies will determine the proper diagnosis and prognosis of ABCA4-associated pathology.


Journal of Pediatric Ophthalmology & Strabismus | 2002

An Italian family affected by autosomal dominant microcephaly with chorioretinal degeneration.

Francesca Simonelli; Francesco Testa; A. Nesti; Giuseppe de Crecchio; Mario Bifani; Maria Luisa Cavaliere; Ernesto Rinaldi; Maria Michela Rinaldi

PURPOSE We studied an Italian family affected by the autosomal dominant form of microcephaly and chorioretinal degeneration that was characterized by various degrees of clinical expression. METHODS An ophthalmologic examination, including visual acuity, visual field testing, an electroretinogram, and fundus photography, and a neurologic examination, including neurodevelopmental status and neuroimaging studies, were performed for all subjects. Skeletal radiography, chromosome studies, and serologic investigations were also performed. RESULTS In this family, only two of the six affected members had an association of microcephaly, myopia, and chorioretinal degeneration. The other family members showed microcephaly, slight mental retardation, and short stature, but not chorioretinopathy. CONCLUSIONS The significant finding in members from this dominant pedigree of microcephaly was the association of short stature and high myopia, heretofore seen only in families with recessive microcephaly. These findings could be useful for genetic counseling in the apparently isolated forms of microcephaly with chorioretinopathy.


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 2005

A novel mutation in the RDS gene in an Italian family with pattern dystrophy

Francesco Testa; Valeria Marini; Settimio Rossi; E. Interlandi; A. Nesti; Michele Rinaldi; M. Varano; Cecilia Garrè; Francesca Simonelli

The term “pattern dystrophy” (PD) of the retina refers to a group of inherited dystrophies characterised by deposition of abnormal pigment at the level of retinal pigment epithelium (RPE).1 Several studies have correlated PD with mutations in the RDS gene.2–7 Therefore, mutations in the same RDS gene have been reported to be associated with other retinal diseases.3,4 Here we report the clinical features of an Italian family (fig 1) affected by autosomal dominant PD associated with a new mutation in the RDS gene. Figure 1  Pedigree of family with autosomal dominant pattern dystrophy. Square: male; circle: female; solid symbol: affected; open symbol: unaffected. The proband I-1 is a 76 year old man who referred with progressive reduction of visual acuity at approximately 50 years of age; he showed an uncorrected visual acuity of 20/400 in the right eye and 20/100 in the left eye in lateral gaze position. Examination of the retina showed pink optic nerve heads, normal retinal vessels, …


British Journal of Ophthalmology | 1998

Ocular signs associated with a rhodopsin mutation (Cys-167→Arg) in a family with autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa

Francesca Simonelli; Michele Rinaldi; A. Nesti; Francesco Testa; Ernesto Rinaldi; A. Ciccodicola; L. Flagiello; M. G. Miano; V. Ventruto; M. D'urso

Editor,—Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) comprises a group of hereditary progressive retinal degenerative conditions characterised by typical fundus alterations, loss in visual field, and severely reduced or unrecordable electroretinograms (ERG) The first reported disease related mutations in the human rhodopsin gene, described in 1990 by Dryja et al ,1 was a heterozygous C→A tranversion in the second nucleotide of codon 23. Since than many further mutations has been identified to a current total of about 90.2 Here we describe, for the first time in the literature, the clinical phenotype associated with a Cys-167→Arg mutation (TGC→CGC in exon 2) in an Italian family affected by autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (ADRP). The same mutation was noted by Dryja et al ,3 but there has been no report of correlated clinical data. ### CASE REPORT Four patients (see Fig 1) of a family from the Campania region of southern Italy, have been studied. Figure 1 SSCP analysis and pedigree of the family. To detect point mutations, the entire rhodopsin coding sequence, including the five exons and their exon-intron junctions, was amplified using a “multiplex-PCR”.3 Shaded symbols represent those affected. ### Patient II-1 The patient, a 45 …


PLOS Genetics | 2018

Peculiar combinations of individually non-pathogenic missense mitochondrial DNA variants cause low penetrance Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy

Leonardo Caporali; Luisa Iommarini; Chiara La Morgia; Anna Olivieri; Alessandro Achilli; Alessandra Maresca; Maria Lucia Valentino; Mariantonietta Capristo; Francesca Tagliavini; Valentina Del Dotto; Claudia Zanna; Rocco Liguori; Piero Barboni; Michele Carbonelli; Veronica Cocetta; Monica Montopoli; Andrea Martinuzzi; Giovanna Cenacchi; Giuseppe De Michele; Francesco Testa; A. Nesti; Francesca Simonelli; Anna Maria Porcelli; Antonio Torroni; Valerio Carelli

We here report on the existence of Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) associated with peculiar combinations of individually non-pathogenic missense mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) variants, affecting the MT-ND4, MT-ND4L and MT-ND6 subunit genes of Complex I. The pathogenic potential of these mtDNA haplotypes is supported by multiple evidences: first, the LHON phenotype is strictly inherited along the maternal line in one very large family; second, the combinations of mtDNA variants are unique to the two maternal lineages that are characterized by recurrence of LHON; third, the Complex I-dependent respiratory and oxidative phosphorylation defect is co-transferred from the proband’s fibroblasts into the cybrid cell model. Finally, all but one of these missense mtDNA variants cluster along the same predicted fourth E-channel deputed to proton translocation within the transmembrane domain of Complex I, involving the ND1, ND4L and ND6 subunits. Hence, the definition of the pathogenic role of a specific mtDNA mutation becomes blurrier than ever and only an accurate evaluation of mitogenome sequence variation data from the general population, combined with functional analyses using the cybrid cell model, may lead to final validation. Our study conclusively shows that even in the absence of a clearly established LHON primary mutation, unprecedented combinations of missense mtDNA variants, individually known as polymorphisms, may lead to reduced OXPHOS efficiency sufficient to trigger LHON. In this context, we introduce a new diagnostic perspective that implies the complete sequence analysis of mitogenomes in LHON as mandatory gold standard diagnostic approach.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017

The effects of oral carbonic anhydrase inhibitors in patients affected by X-linked Retinoschisis

Francesco Testa; Beatrice Gallo; Mario Marchese; Valentina Di lorio; A. Nesti; Michele Della Corte; Paolo Melillo; Francesca Simonelli


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2016

Comparison of en-face Optical Coherence Tomography and Fundus Autofluorescence for assessment of macular lesion area in Stargardt disease

Paolo Melillo; Ada Orrico; Valentina Di Iorio; A. Nesti; Settimio Rossi; Michele Della Corte; Francesco Testa; Francesca Simonelli

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Francesco Testa

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Francesca Simonelli

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Settimio Rossi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Ernesto Rinaldi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Michele Rinaldi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Sandro Banfi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Michele Della Corte

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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V. Di Iorio

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Valentina Di Iorio

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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E. Maggio

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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