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Dive into the research topics where Alessandra Bosutti is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandra Bosutti.


Nature Protocols | 2013

Isolation and expansion of human and mouse brain microvascular endothelial cells

Stefania Elena Navone; Giovanni Marfia; Gloria Invernici; Silvia Cristini; Sara Nava; Sergio Balbi; Simone Sangiorgi; Emilio Ciusani; Alessandra Bosutti; Giulio Alessandri; Mark Slevin; Eugenio Parati

Brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMVECs) have an important role in the constitution of the blood-brain barrier (BBB). The BBB is involved in the disease processes of a number of neurological disorders in which its permeability increases. Isolation of BMVECs could elucidate the mechanism involved in these processes. This protocol describes how to isolate and expand human and mouse BMVECs. The procedure covers brain-tissue dissociation, digestion and cell selection. Cells are selected on the basis of time-responsive differential adhesiveness to a collagen type I–precoated surface. The protocol also describes immunophenotypic characterization, cord formation and functional assays to confirm that these cells in endothelial proliferation medium (EndoPM) have an endothelial origin. The entire technique requires ∼7 h of active time. Endothelial cell clusters are readily visible after 48 h, and expansion of BMVECs occurs over the course of ∼60 d.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Targeting p35/Cdk5 Signalling via CIP-Peptide Promotes Angiogenesis in Hypoxia

Alessandra Bosutti; Jie Qi; Roberta Pennucci; David Bolton; Sabine Matou; Kamela Ali; Li-Huei Tsai; Jerzy Krupinski; Eugen Bogdan Petcu; Joan Montaner; Raid Al Baradie; Francesca Caccuri; Arnaldo Caruso; Giulio Alessandri; Shant Kumar; Cristina Rodríguez; José Martínez-González; Mark Slevin

Cyclin-dependent kinase-5 (Cdk5) is over-expressed in both neurons and microvessels in hypoxic regions of stroke tissue and has a significant pathological role following hyper-phosphorylation leading to calpain-induced cell death. Here, we have identified a critical role of Cdk5 in cytoskeleton/focal dynamics, wherein its activator, p35, redistributes along actin microfilaments of spreading cells co-localising with p(Tyr15)Cdk5, talin/integrin beta-1 at the lamellipodia in polarising cells. Cdk5 inhibition (roscovitine) resulted in actin-cytoskeleton disorganisation, prevention of protein co-localization and inhibition of movement. Cells expressing Cdk5 (D144N) kinase mutant, were unable to spread, migrate and form tube-like structures or sprouts, while Cdk5 wild-type over-expression showed enhanced motility and angiogenesis in vitro, which was maintained during hypoxia. Gene microarray studies demonstrated myocyte enhancer factor (MEF2C) as a substrate for Cdk5-mediated angiogenesis in vitro. MEF2C showed nuclear co-immunoprecipitation with Cdk5 and almost complete inhibition of differentiation and sprout formation following siRNA knock-down. In hypoxia, insertion of Cdk5/p25-inhibitory peptide (CIP) vector preserved and enhanced in vitro angiogenesis. These results demonstrate the existence of critical and complementary signalling pathways through Cdk5 and p35, and through which coordination is a required factor for successful angiogenesis in sustained hypoxic condition.


Vascular Cell | 2013

Human and mouse brain-derived endothelial cells require high levels of growth factors medium for their isolation, in vitro maintenance and survival

Stefania Elena Navone; Giovanni Marfia; Sara Nava; Gloria Invernici; Silvia Cristini; Sergio Balbi; Simone Sangiorgi; Emilio Ciusani; Alessandra Bosutti; Giulio Alessandri; Mark Slevin; Eugenio Parati

BackgroundBrain microvascular endothelial cells (BMVECs) constitute the primary limitation for passage of ions and molecules from the blood into the brain through the blood brain barrier. Numerous multi-step procedures for isolating and culturing BMVECs have been described. However, each one demonstrates major limitations in purity of culture and/or low proliferation rate. Our goal was to study the efficiency of our pending patent medium, Endothelial Proliferation Medium (EndoPM), on the isolation and purification of human and murine BMVECs.MethodsBMVECs, cultured in EndoPM were compared to those cultured in a commercial medium EBM. Cultures were characterized by flow cytometric analysis, lineage differentiation, the ability to form tube-like structure, immunofluorescence, molecular analyses and also in an in vivo model assay. Moreover permeability was assayed by monitoring the passage of Dextran-FITC through a tight monolayer of BMVECs grown to confluence in Boyden chambers. One way Anova two-tailed test was utilized for all statistical analyses.ResultsThe properties of ECs in human and murine BMVECs is confirmed by the expression of endothelial markers (CD31, CD105, CD146, Tie-2 and vWF), of representative proangiogenic genes (ICAM1, VCAM1 and integrin ITGAV), of considerable tube-forming ability, with low-density lipoprotein uptake, eNOS and GLUT-1 expression. Furthermore cells are able to express markers of the junctional architecture as VE-cadherin, β-catenin and Claudin-5 and greatly reduce dextran permeability as barrier functional test. Moreover BMVECs spontaneously organize in vascular-like structures and maintain the expression of endothelial markers in an in vivo xenograft model assay. The significant effect of EndoPM is confirmed by the study of proliferation index, survival index and the behaviour of BMVECs and fibroblasts in co-culture conditions.ConclusionHerein we describe a simple and reproducible method for the isolation and expansion of human and mouse BMVECs, based on a newly formulated medium (EndoPM) with optimized concentration of growth factors (EGF, FGF-2 and Bovine Brain Extract-BBE). This procedure should facilitate the isolation and expansion of human and mouse BMVECs with extended lifetime, good viability and purity. This approach may provide an effective strategy to aid phenotypical and functional studies of brain vessels under physiological and pathological conditions.


The Journal of Experimental Biology | 2015

Local capillary supply in muscle is not determined by local oxidative capacity

Alessandra Bosutti; Stuart Egginton; Yoann Barnouin; Bergita Ganse; Jörn Rittweger; Hans Degens

ABSTRACT It is thought that the prime determinant of global muscle capillary density is the mean oxidative capacity. However, feedback control during maturational growth or adaptive remodelling of local muscle capillarisation is likely to be more complex than simply matching O2 supply and demand in response to integrated tissue function. We tested the hypothesis that the maximal oxygen consumption (MO2,max) supported by a capillary is relatively constant, and independent of the volume of tissue supplied (capillary domain). We demonstrate that local MO2,max assessed by succinate dehydrogenase histochemistry: (1) varied more than 100-fold between individual capillaries and (2) was positively correlated to capillary domain area in both human vastus lateralis (R=0.750, P<0.001) and soleus (R=0.697, P<0.001) muscles. This suggests that, in contrast to common assumptions, capillarisation is not primarily dictated by local oxidative capacity, but rather by factors such as fibre size, or consequences of differences in fibre size such as substrate delivery and metabolite removal. Summary: Maximal oxygen demand from surrounding fibres supported by individual capillaries is highly variable in human muscle, suggesting that a fundamental review of determinants of muscle capillarisation is needed.


Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle | 2017

Coupling between skeletal muscle fiber size and capillarization is maintained during healthy aging

Yoann Barnouin; Jamie S. McPhee; Gillian Butler-Browne; Alessandra Bosutti; Giuseppe De Vito; David A. Jones; Marco V. Narici; Anthony Behin; Jean-Yves Hogrel; Hans Degens

As muscle capillarization is related to the oxidative capacity of the muscle and the size of muscle fibres, capillary rarefaction may contribute to sarcopenia and functional impairment in older adults. Therefore, it is important to assess how ageing affects muscle capillarization and the interrelationship between fibre capillary supply with the oxidative capacity and size of the fibres.


Pflügers Archiv: European Journal of Physiology | 2010

Changes in contractile properties of skinned single rat soleus and diaphragm fibres after chronic hypoxia

Hans Degens; Alessandra Bosutti; Sally F. Gilliver; Mark Slevin; Arno van Heijst; Rob C. I. Wüst


Journal of Musculoskeletal & Neuronal Interactions | 2014

Whey protein plus bicarbonate supplement has little effects on structural atrophy and proteolysis marker immunopatterns in skeletal muscle disuse during 21 days of bed rest.

D. Blottner; Alessandra Bosutti; Hans Degens; G. Schiffl; M. Gutsmann; J. Buehlmeier; Joern Rittweger; Bergita Ganse; M. Heer; M. Salanova


Archive | 2017

Coupling between skeletal muscle fiber size and capillarization is a fundamental characteristic that is maintained during healthy aging

Yoann Barnouin; Jamie S. McPhee; Gillian Butler-Browne; Alessandra Bosutti; G de Vito; David A. Jones; Marco V. Narici; Anthony Behin; J-Y Hogrel; Hans Degens


Stroke | 2012

Abstract 2387: Modulation Of P35/cyclin-dependent Kinase 5 Signaling Rectifies Defective Human Brain Endothelial Cell Migration Produced By In Vitro Simulation Of Ischemic Stroke

Alessandra Bosutti; Kamela Ali; David Bolton; Jie Qi; Roberta Pennucci; Sabine Matou-Nasri; Seth Love; Li-Huei Tsai; Karl Peter Giese; Hans Degens; Shant Kumar; Jerzy Krupinski; Mark Slevin


Stroke | 2011

Over-Expression Of Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 5 Stimulates Cell Migration But Not Cell Differentiation In Human Brain Microvascular Endothelial Cells

Alessandra Bosutti; Sabine Matou; Jie Qi; Roberta Pennucci; Li-Huei Tsai; Karl Peter Giese; Seth Love; Jerzy Krupinski; Shant Kumar; Mark Slevin

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Mark Slevin

Manchester Metropolitan University

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Hans Degens

Manchester Metropolitan University

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Roberta Pennucci

Manchester Metropolitan University

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Shant Kumar

University of Manchester

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Jerzy Krupinski

Spanish National Research Council

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Sabine Matou

Manchester Metropolitan University

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Seth Love

University of Bristol

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Jie Qi

Manchester Metropolitan University

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