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Dive into the research topics where Aldo Giannotti is active.

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Featured researches published by Aldo Giannotti.


Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition | 2001

Prevalence and clinical picture of celiac disease in italian down syndrome patients: a multicenter study.

Margherita Bonamico; P. Mariani; Helene Maria Danesi; Massimo Crisogianni; Pinella Failla; Gerolamo Gemme; Alberto Rasore Quartino; Aldo Giannotti; M. Castro; Fiorella Balli; Margherita Lecora; Generoso Andria; Graziella Guariso; Orazio Gabrielli; Carlo Catassi; Rosanna Lazzari; Nicoletta Ansaldi Balocco; Stefano De Virgiliis; Franco Culasso; Corrado Romano

Background A multicenter research study of Down syndrome patients was carried out to estimate the prevalence of celiac disease in patients with Down syndrome and to show clinical characteristics and laboratory data of Down syndrome patients. Methods The authors studied 1,202 Down syndrome patients. Fifty-five celiac disease patients (group 1) were compared with 55 immunoglobulin A antigliadin–positive antiendomysium antibodies–negative patients (group 2) and with 57 immunoglobulin A antigliadin–negative antiendomysium antibodies–negative patients (group 3). Results Celiac disease was diagnosed in 55 of 1,202 Down syndrome patients (4.6%). In group 1, weight and height percentiles were shifted to the left, whereas these parameters were normally distributed in groups 2 and 3. In celiac patients, diarrhea, vomiting, failure to thrive, anorexia, constipation, and abdominal distension were higher than in the other two groups. Low levels of hemoglobinemia, serum iron, and calcium were observed more frequently in group 1. The diagnosis of celiac disease was made after a mean period of 3.8 years from the initiation of symptoms. Sixty-nine percent of patients showed a classic presentation, 11% had atypical symptoms, and 20% had silent celiac disease. Autoimmune disorders were more frequent (30.9%) in group 1 than in the other two groups examined (15%;P < 0.05). Conclusions This study reconfirms a high prevalence of celiac disease in Down syndrome. However, the diagnostic delay, the detection of atypical symptoms or silent form in one third of the cases, and the increased incidence of autoimmune disorders suggest the need for the screening of celiac disease in all Down syndrome patients.


Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 1996

Apparent preferential loss of heterozygosity at TSC2 over TSC1 chromosomal region in tuberous sclerosis hamartomas

Caterina Carbonara; Lucia Longa; Enrico Grosso; Gianna Mazzucco; Carla Borrone; Maria Luisa Garrè; Massimo Brisigotti; Giorgio Filippi; Aldo Scabar; Aldo Giannotti; Piero Falzoni; Guido Monga; Gianni Garini; Marzio Gabrielli; Peter Riegler; Cesare Danesino; Martino Ruggieri; Gaetano Magro; Nicola Migone

To investigate the molecular mechanisms of tuberous sclerosis (TSC) histopathologic lesions, we have tested for loss of heterozygosity the two TSC loci (TSC1 and TSC2) and seven tumor suppressor gene‐containing regions (TP53, NF1, NF2, BRCA1, APC, VHL, and MLM) in 20 hamartomas from 18 TSC patients. Overall, eight angiomyolipomas, eight giant cell astrocytomas, one cortical tuber, and three rhabdomyomas were analyzed. Loss of heterozygosity at either TSC locus was found in a large fraction of the informative patients, both sporadic (7/14) and familial (1/4). Interestingly, a statistically significant preponderance of loss of heterozygosity at TSC2 was observed in the sporadic group (P < 0.01). Among the possible explanations considered, the bias in the selection for TSC patients with the most severe organ impairment seems particularly appealing. According to this view, a TSC2 defect might confer a greater risk for early kidney failure or, possibly, a more rapid growth of a giant cell astrocytoma. None of the seven antioncogenes tested showed loss of heterozygosity, indicating that the loss of either TSC gene product may be sufficient to promote hamartomatous cell growth. Finally, the observation of loss of heterozygosity at different markers in an astrocytoma and in an angiomyolipoma from the same patient might suggest the multifocal origin of the second‐hit mutation. Genes Chromosom Cancer 15:18–25 (1996).


Human Genetics | 1995

22q11 deletions in isolated and syndromic patients with tetralogy of Fallot

Francesca Amati; Aldo Mari; Maria Cristina Digilio; Rita Mingarelli; Bruno Marino; Aldo Giannotti; Giuseppe Novelli; Bruno Dallapiccola

Tetralogy of Fallot (TF) is a congenital conotruncal heart defect commonly found in DiGeorge (DGS) and velo-cardio-facial (VCFS) syndromes. The deletion of chromosome 22q11 (de122q11) is a well established cause of DGS and VCFS, and it has been demonstrated also in sporadic or familial cases of TF. In order to investigate the prevalence of de122q11 in patients with TF, we analyzed the DNA of 137 consecutive patients with syndromic and isolated TF, using the HD7k probe, which detects hemizygosity for the D22S134 locus. De122q11 has been detected in 11/26 (42%) syndromic patients. Evidence for hemizygosity was obtained in all patients with DGS and in 8/15 patients with VCFS. None of the 107 patients with isolated TF had de122q11. Our experience suggests that children with TF and de122q11 always present major or minor extracardiac anomalies. These features, including subtle facial dysmorphisms, should be checked routinely in patients with TF and other conotruncal heart defects.


Genetics in Medicine | 2001

Anatomic patterns of conotruncal defects associated with deletion 22q11

Bruno Marino; Maria Cristina Digilio; Alessandra Toscano; Silvia Anaclerio; Aldo Giannotti; Cristiana Feltri; Maria Antonietta De Ioris; Adriano Angioni; Bruno Dallapiccola

Purpose: Patients with cardiovascular malformations (CVMs) and deletion 22q11 from our series were studied in order to (1) analyze the association with dysmorphic features and noncardiac anomalies, (2) identify specific cardiac patterns and the distinctive association with additional CVMs.Methods: From 1993 to 2000, 931 patients with CVM (95 with a clinical diagnosis of DiGeorge/velocardiofacial syndrome (DG/VCFS), 208 with different genetic syndromes, 628 without dysmorphic features) underwent accurate cardiac assessment, clinical and phenotypical examination, and screening for deletion 22q11 by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH).Results: Deletion 22q11 was detected in 88 of the total patients, and in 87 of the 95 patients with a clinical diagnosis of DG/VCFS. Only one patient among the 628 without dysmorphic features had deletion 22q11. Conotruncal heart defects were the most common CVMs, often presenting in association with additional anomalies in four areas of the cardiovascular system: (1) the aortic arch can be right sided, cervical, double, and the subclavian artery can be aberrant, (2) the pulmonary arteries can present discontinuity, diffuse hypoplasia, discrete stenosis, defect of arborization and major aortopulmonary collateral arteries (MAPCA), (3) the infundibular septum can be malaligned, hypoplastic, or absent, (4) the semilunar valves can be bicuspid, severely dysplastic, insufficient, or stenotic.Conclusion: In subjects with deletion 22q11 CVM is virtually always associated with one or more noncardiac anomalies. Deletion 22q11 is exceptionally rare in children with nonsyndromic CVMs. Specific patterns of CVMs are observed in patients with deletion 22q11, including (1) anomalies of the aortic arch, (2) anomalies of the pulmonary arteries and of the pulmonary blood supply, (3) defects of the infundibular septum, (4) malformations of the semilunar valves. These additional CVMs may influence the surgical treatment of these patients.


Circulation | 2000

Deletion of a 5-cM Region at Chromosome 8p23 Is Associated With a Spectrum of Congenital Heart Defects

Sabrina Giglio; Sharon Graw; Giorgio Gimelli; Barbara Pirola; Paolo Varone; Lucille Voullaire; Franco Lerzo; Elena Rossi; Claudia Dellavecchia; Maria Clara Bonaglia; Maria Cristina Digilio; Aldo Giannotti; Bruno Marino; Romeo Carrozzo; Julie R. Korenberg; Cesare Danesino; Eva Sujansky; Bruno Dallapiccola; Orsetta Zuffardi

BACKGROUND Cytogenetic evidence suggests that the haploinsufficiency of > or =1 gene located in 8p23 behaves as a dominant mutation, impairing heart differentiation and leading to a wide spectrum of congenital heart defects (CHDs), including conotruncal lesions, atrial septal defects, atrioventricular canal defects, and pulmonary valve stenosis. An 8p heart-defect-critical region was delineated, and the zinc finger transcription factor GATA4 was considered a likely candidate for these defects. We narrowed this region and excluded a major role of GATA4 in these CHDs. METHODS AND RESULTS We studied 12 patients (7 had CHD and 5 did not) with distal 8p deletions from 9 families by defining their chromosome rearrangements at the molecular level by fluorescent in situ hybridization and short-tandem repeat analysis. Subjects with 8p deletions distal to D8S1706, at approximately 10 cM from the 8p telomere, did not have CHD, whereas subjects with a deletion that included the more proximal region suffered from the spectrum of heart defects reported in patients with 8p distal deletions. The 5-cM critical region is flanked distally by D8S1706 and WI-8327, both at approximately 10 cM, and proximally by D8S1825, at 15 cM. Neither GATA4 nor angiopoietin-2 (ANGPT2; a gene in 8p23 involved in blood vessel formation) were found to be deleted in some of the critical patients. We also found that CHDs are not related to the parental origin of deletion. CONCLUSIONS Haploinsufficiency for a gene between WI-8327 and D8S1825 is critical for heart development. A causal relationship does not seem to exist between GATA4 and ANGPT2 haploinsufficiency and CHDs.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2001

Coeliac disease in Williams syndrome

Aldo Giannotti; Giovanni Tiberio; M. Castro; Fabio Virgilii; Franco Colistro; F. Ferretti; Maria Cristina Digilio; M. Gambarara; Bruno Dallapiccola

BACKGROUND Coeliac disease (CD) has been reported in several patients affected by chromosomal disorders, including Down syndrome (DS) and Turner syndrome (TS). CD has also been found in sporadic Williams syndrome (WS) patients. In this study, CD was evaluated in a consecutive series of patients with WS, in order to estimate if the prevalence of CD in WS patients is higher than in the general population. METHODS AND RESULTS A consecutive series of 63 Italian patients with WS was studied by analysing the dosage of antigliadin antibodies (AGA) IgA and antiendomisium antibodies (AEA). In patients with positive AGA and AEA, small bowel biopsy was performed. The prevalence of CD in our WS population was compared with that estimated in a published series of 17 201 Italian students. Seven WS patients were found to be positive for AGA IgA and AEA. Six of them underwent small bowel biopsy, which invariably disclosed villous atrophy consistent with CD. The prevalence of CD in the present series of WS patients was 9.5% (6/63), compared to 0.54% (1/184) in the Italian students (p<0.001). CONCLUSION The present results suggest that the prevalence of CD in WS is higher than in the general population and is comparable to that reported in DS and TS. AGA and AEA screening is recommended in patients with WS.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 1999

Detection of an atypical 7q11.23 deletion in Williams syndrome patients which does not include the STX1A and FZD3 genes

Annalisa Botta; Giuseppe Novelli; Aldo Mari; Antonio Novelli; M Sabani; J Korenberg; L R Osborne; Maria Cristina Digilio; Aldo Giannotti; Bruno Dallapiccola

We present two patients with the full Williams syndrome (WS) phenotype carrying a smaller deletion than typically observed. The deleted region spans from the elastin gene to marker D7S1870. This observation narrows the minimal region of deletion in WS and suggests that the syntaxin 1A and frizzled genes are not responsible for the major features of this developmental disorder and provides important insight into understanding the genotype-phenotype correlation in WS.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1999

Atrioventricular canal defect without down syndrome : A heterogeneous malformation

Maria Cristina Digilio; Bruno Marino; Alessandra Toscano; Aldo Giannotti; Bruno Dallapiccola

The atrioventricular canal defect (AVCD) is one of the congenital heart defects most frequently associated with extracardiac anomalies. The association of AVCD with Down syndrome and heterotaxy has been studied extensively. However, little information is available about the prevalence of genetic syndromes and additional cardiac malformations in patients with AVCD and visceroatrial situs solitus without Down syndrome. This paper reviews the genetic and cardiologic characteristics of patients with non-Down AVCD and situs solitus in the literature and our series of 203 consecutive patients. In our experience, 132 (65%) of the patients have nonsyndromic AVCD, while 71 (35%) have non-Down syndromic AVCD. Chromosomal imbalances were detected in 7 cases (3%), Mendelian syndromes or associations in 44 (22%), and extracardiac anomalies without an identifiable syndrome in 20 (10%). Deletion 8p is prevalent among those with chromosomal imbalances. Noonan, Ellis-van Creveld, oro-faciodigital, Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndromes and VACTERL cases are frequent among patients with recognizable or identifiable nonchromosomal conditions. Based on this analysis of the type of AVCD and prevalence of associated cardiac anomalies in the different groups of patients, we found that: 1) the complete form is prevalent in patients with chromosomal imbalances; 2) the complete form is more frequently associated with additional cardiac defects, mainly left side obstructive lesions; and 3) additional cardiac anomalies are prevalent in syndromic patients. In conclusion, AVCD is a congenital heart defect with great variability in the anatomic patterns and heterogeneity of causes also in the subset without Down syndrome and without heterotaxy. The peculiar anatomic subtypes of this cardiac defect are associated with specific genetic conditions.


American Journal of Cardiology | 1996

Comparison of Occurrence of Genetic Syndromes in Ventricular Septal Defect With Pulmonic Stenosis (Classic Tetralogy of Fallot) Versus Ventricular Septal Defect With Pulmonic Atresia

Maria Cristina Digilio; Bruno Marino; Sabina Grazioli; Domenico Agostino; Aldo Giannotti; Bruno Dallapiccola

Our results confirm that classic TF can be associated with many genetic conditions, but most patients are nonsyndromic. In contrast, children with TF-PA have a high incidence of genetic syndromes, particularly those related to CATCH22 syndrome.


The American Journal of Surgical Pathology | 2003

Malignant Pancreatic Endocrine Tumor in a Child With Tuberous Sclerosis

Paola Francalanci; Francesca Diomedi-Camassei; Cristina Purificato; Filippo M. Santorelli; Aldo Giannotti; Carlo Dominici; Alessandro Inserra; Renata Boldrini

Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is an autosomal dominant condition whose signs and symptoms may vary from a few hypopigmented skin spots to epilepsy, severe mental retardation, and renal failure. The disease is caused by mutations in either TSC1 or TSC2 gene, at chromosome 9q34 and 16p13.3. Inactivation of both alleles at TSC1 or TSC2 loci is associated with the development of hamartomas in different organs, and only rarely with malignant neoplasms. In this study we present a 6-year-old boy with TSC and with a malignant islet cell tumor of the pancreas. Mutation analysis of DNA extracted from peripheral blood cells of the patient identified an R1459X de novo mutation in exon 33 of the TSC2 gene. Immunohistochemical analysis with anti-tuberin antibodies on paraffin-embedded tissue sections showed loss of tuberin immunostaining in tumor cells but normal expression in residual normal pancreas. DNA analysis of tumor and normal cells showed chromosome 16p13 loss of heterozygosity in malignant pancreatic islet cell tumor but not in normal pancreas. These findings suggest a role for tuberin, the TSC2 gene product, in the pathogenesis of malignant pancreatic endocrine tumor.

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Bruno Marino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Bruno Dallapiccola

Sapienza University of Rome

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Bruno Dallapiccola

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giuseppe Novelli

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Aldo Mari

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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M. Castro

Boston Children's Hospital

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