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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Iannaccone is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Iannaccone.


Archives of Ophthalmology | 2012

Gene Therapy for Leber Congenital Amaurosis Caused by RPE65 Mutations: Safety and Efficacy in 15 Children and Adults Followed Up to 3 Years

Samuel G. Jacobson; Artur V. Cideciyan; R. Ratnakaram; Elise Héon; Sharon B. Schwartz; Alejandro J. Roman; Marc C. Peden; Tomas S. Aleman; Sanford L. Boye; Alexander Sumaroka; Thomas J. Conlon; Roberto Calcedo; Ji-jing Pang; Kirsten E. Erger; Melani B. Olivares; Cristina L. Mullins; Malgorzata Swider; Shalesh Kaushal; William J. Feuer; Alessandro Iannaccone; Gerald A. Fishman; Edwin M. Stone; Barry J. Byrne; William W. Hauswirth

OBJECTIVE To determine the safety and efficacy of subretinal gene therapy in the RPE65 form of Leber congenital amaurosis using recombinant adeno-associated virus 2 (rAAV2) carrying the RPE65 gene. DESIGN Open-label, dose-escalation phase I study of 15 patients (range, 11-30 years of age) evaluated after subretinal injection of the rAAV2- RPE65 vector into the worse-functioning eye. Five cohorts represented 4 dose levels and 2 different injection strategies. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Primary outcomes were systemic and ocular safety. Secondary outcomes assayed visual function with dark-adapted full-field sensitivity testing and visual acuity with Early Treatment Diabetic Retinopathy Study charts. Further assays included immune responses to the vector, static visual fields, pupillometry, mobility performance, and optical coherence tomography. RESULTS No systemic toxicity was detected; ocular adverse events were related to surgery. Visual function improved in all patients to different degrees; improvements were localized to treated areas. Cone and rod sensitivities increased significantly in the study eyes but not in the control eyes. Minor acuity improvements were recorded in many study and control eyes. Major acuity improvements occurred in study eyes with the lowest entry acuities and parafoveal fixation loci treated with subretinal injections. Other patients with better foveal structure lost retinal thickness and acuity after subfoveal injections. CONCLUSIONS Gene therapy for Leber congenital amaurosis caused by RPE65 mutations is sufficiently safe and substantially efficacious in the extrafoveal retina. There is no benefit and some risk in treating the fovea. No evidence of age-dependent effects was found. Our results point to specific treatment strategies for subsequent phases. APPLICATION TO CLINICAL PRACTICE Gene therapy for inherited retinal disease has the potential to become a future part of clinical practice. TRIAL REGISTRATION clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00481546.


Nature Genetics | 2001

Identification of the gene that, when mutated, causes the human obesity syndrome BBS4.

Kirk Mykytyn; Terry Braun; Rivka Carmi; Neena B. Haider; Charles Searby; Mythreyi Shastri; Gretel Beck; Alan F. Wright; Alessandro Iannaccone; Khalil Elbedour; Ruth Riise; Alfonso Baldi; Annick Raas-Rothschild; Susan W. Gorman; David Duhl; Samuel G. Jacobson; Thomas L. Casavant; Edwin M. Stone; Val C. Sheffield

Bardet–Biedl syndrome (BBS, MIM 209900) is a heterogeneous autosomal recessive disorder characterized by obesity, pigmentary retinopathy, polydactyly, renal malformations, mental retardation, and hypogenitalism. The disorder is also associated with diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and congenital heart disease. Six distinct BBS loci map to 11q13 (BBS1), 16q21 (BBS2), 3p13–p12 (BBS3), 15q22.3–q23 (BBS4), 2q31 (BBS5), and 20p12 (BBS6). Although BBS is rare in the general population (<1/100,000), there is considerable interest in identifying the genes causing BBS because components of the phenotype, such as obesity and diabetes, are common. We and others have demonstrated that BBS6 is caused by mutations in the gene MKKS (refs. 12,13), mutation of which also causes McKusick–Kaufman syndrome (hydrometrocolpos, post-axial polydactyly, and congenital heart defects). MKKS has sequence homology to the alpha subunit of a prokaryotic chaperonin in the thermosome Thermoplasma acidophilum. We recently identified a novel gene that causes BBS2. The BBS2 protein has no significant similarity to other chaperonins or known proteins. Here we report the positional cloning and identification of mutations in BBS patients in a novel gene designated BBS4.


Science | 2008

Human CHN1 Mutations Hyperactivate α2-Chimaerin and Cause Duane's Retraction Syndrome

Noriko Miyake; John K. Chilton; Maria Psatha; Long Cheng; Caroline Andrews; Wai-Man Chan; Krystal Law; Moira Crosier; Susan Lindsay; Michelle C.M. Cheung; James P. Allen; Nick J. Gutowski; Sian Ellard; Elizabeth Young; Alessandro Iannaccone; Binoy Appukuttan; J. Timothy Stout; Stephen P. Christiansen; Maria Laura Ciccarelli; Alfonso Baldi; Mara Campioni; Juan Carlos Zenteno; Dominic Davenport; Laura E. Mariani; Mustafa Sahin; Sarah Guthrie; Elizabeth C. Engle

Duanes retraction syndrome (DRS) is a complex congenital eye movement disorder caused by aberrant innervation of the extraocular muscles by axons of brainstem motor neurons. Studying families with a variant form of the disorder (DURS2-DRS), we have identified causative heterozygous missense mutations in CHN1, a gene on chromosome 2q31 that encodes α2-chimaerin, a Rac guanosine triphosphatase–activating protein (RacGAP) signaling protein previously implicated in the pathfinding of corticospinal axons in mice. We found that these are gain-of-function mutations that increase α2-chimaerin RacGAP activity in vitro. Several of the mutations appeared to enhance α2-chimaerin translocation to the cell membrane or enhance its ability to self-associate. Expression of mutant α2-chimaerin constructs in chick embryos resulted in failure of oculomotor axons to innervate their target extraocular muscles. We conclude that α2-chimaerin has a critical developmental function in ocular motor axon pathfinding.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003

Evaluation of Complex Inheritance Involving the Most Common Bardet-Biedl Syndrome Locus (BBS1)

Kirk Mykytyn; Darryl Y. Nishimura; Charles Searby; Gretel Beck; Kevin Bugge; Heidi Haines; Alberto S. Cornier; Gerald F. Cox; Anne B. Fulton; Rivka Carmi; Alessandro Iannaccone; Samuel G. Jacobson; Richard G. Weleber; Alan F. Wright; Ruth Riise; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Guven Luleci; Sibel Berker-Karauzum; Leslie G. Biesecker; Edwin M. Stone; Val C. Sheffield

Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is a genetic disorder with the primary features of obesity, pigmentary retinopathy, polydactyly, renal malformations, mental retardation, and hypogenitalism. Patients with BBS are also at increased risk for diabetes mellitus, hypertension, and congenital heart disease. BBS is known to map to at least six loci: 11q13 (BBS1), 16q21 (BBS2), 3p13-p12 (BBS3), 15q22.3-q23 (BBS4), 2q31 (BBS5), and 20p12 (BBS6). Although these loci were all mapped on the basis of an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance, it has recently been suggested-on the basis of mutation analysis of the identified BBS2, BBS4, and BBS6 genes-that BBS displays a complex mode of inheritance in which, in some families, three mutations at two loci are necessary to manifest the disease phenotype. We recently identified BBS1, the gene most commonly involved in Bardet-Biedl syndrome. The identification of this gene allows for further evaluation of complex inheritance. In the present study we evaluate the involvement of the BBS1 gene in a cohort of 129 probands with BBS and report 10 novel BBS1 mutations. We demonstrate that a common BBS1 missense mutation accounts for approximately 80% of all BBS1 mutations and is found on a similar genetic background across populations. We show that the BBS1 gene is highly conserved between mice and humans. Finally, we demonstrate that BBS1 is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner and is rarely, if ever, involved in complex inheritance.


Science | 2008

Human CHN1 Mutations Hyperactivate α2-Chimaerin and Cause Duanes Retraction Syndrome

Noriko Miyake; John K. Chilton; Maria Psatha; Long Cheng; Caroline Andrews; Wai-Man Chan; Krystal Law; Moira Crosier; Susan Lindsay; Michelle C.M. Cheung; James P. Allen; Nick J. Gutowski; Sian Ellard; Elizabeth Young; Alessandro Iannaccone; Binoy Appukuttan; J. Timothy Stout; Stephen P. Christiansen; Maria Laura Ciccarelli; Alfonso Baldi; Mara Campioni; Juan Carlos Zenteno; Dominic Davenport; Laura E. Mariani; Mustafa Sahin; Sarah Guthrie; Elizabeth C. Engle

Duanes retraction syndrome (DRS) is a complex congenital eye movement disorder caused by aberrant innervation of the extraocular muscles by axons of brainstem motor neurons. Studying families with a variant form of the disorder (DURS2-DRS), we have identified causative heterozygous missense mutations in CHN1, a gene on chromosome 2q31 that encodes α2-chimaerin, a Rac guanosine triphosphatase–activating protein (RacGAP) signaling protein previously implicated in the pathfinding of corticospinal axons in mice. We found that these are gain-of-function mutations that increase α2-chimaerin RacGAP activity in vitro. Several of the mutations appeared to enhance α2-chimaerin translocation to the cell membrane or enhance its ability to self-associate. Expression of mutant α2-chimaerin constructs in chick embryos resulted in failure of oculomotor axons to innervate their target extraocular muscles. We conclude that α2-chimaerin has a critical developmental function in ocular motor axon pathfinding.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

Comprehensive molecular diagnosis of 179 Leber congenital amaurosis and juvenile retinitis pigmentosa patients by targeted next generation sequencing.

Xia Wang; Hui Wang; Vincent Sun; Han Fang Tuan; Vafa Keser; Keqing Wang; Huanan Ren; Irma Lopez; Jacques Zaneveld; Sorath Noorani Siddiqui; Stephanie Bowles; Ayesha Khan; Jason S. Salvo; Samuel G. Jacobson; Alessandro Iannaccone; Feng Wang; David G. Birch; John R. Heckenlively; Gerald A. Fishman; Elias I. Traboulsi; Yumei Li; Dianna H. Wheaton; Robert K. Koenekoop; Rui Chen

Background Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) and juvenile retinitis pigmentosa (RP) are inherited retinal diseases that cause early onset severe visual impairment. An accurate molecular diagnosis can refine the clinical diagnosis and allow gene specific treatments. Methods We developed a capture panel that enriches the exonic DNA of 163 known retinal disease genes. Using this panel, we performed targeted next generation sequencing (NGS) for a large cohort of 179 unrelated and prescreened patients with the clinical diagnosis of LCA or juvenile RP. Systematic NGS data analysis, Sanger sequencing validation, and segregation analysis were utilised to identify the pathogenic mutations. Patients were revisited to examine the potential phenotypic ambiguity at the time of initial diagnosis. Results Pathogenic mutations for 72 patients (40%) were identified, including 45 novel mutations. Of these 72 patients, 58 carried mutations in known LCA or juvenile RP genes and exhibited corresponding phenotypes, while 14 carried mutations in retinal disease genes that were not consistent with their initial clinical diagnosis. We revisited patients in the latter case and found that homozygous mutations in PRPH2 can cause LCA/juvenile RP. Guided by the molecular diagnosis, we reclassified the clinical diagnosis in two patients. Conclusions We have identified a novel gene and a large number of novel mutations that are associated with LCA/juvenile RP. Our results highlight the importance of molecular diagnosis as an integral part of clinical diagnosis.


Age and Ageing | 2014

Macular pigment optical density is related to cognitive function in older people

Rohini Vishwanathan; Alessandro Iannaccone; Tammy Scott; Stephen B. Kritchevsky; Barbara J. Jennings; Giovannella Carboni; Gina Forma; Suzanne Satterfield; Tamara B. Harris; Karen C. Johnson; Wolfgang Schalch; Lisa M. Renzi; Caterina Rosano; Elizabeth J. Johnson

BACKGROUND the xanthophylls lutein (L) and zeaxanthin (Z) exist in relatively high concentration in multiple central nervous tissues (e.g. cortex and neural retina). L + Z in macula (i.e. macular pigment, MP) are thought to serve multiple functions, including protection and improvement of visual performance. Also, L + Z in the macula are related to L + Z in the cortex. OBJECTIVE to determine whether macular pigment optical density (MPOD, L + Z in the macula) is related to cognitive function in older adults. METHODS participants were older adults (n = 108, 77.6 ± 2.7 years) sampled from the age-related maculopathy ancillary study of the Health Aging and Body Composition Study (Memphis, TN, USA). Serum carotenoids were measured using high performance liquid chromatography. MPOD was assessed using heterochromatic flicker photometry. Eight cognitive tests designed to evaluate several cognitive domains including memory and processing speed were administered. Partial correlation coefficients were computed to determine whether cognitive measures were related to serum L + Z and MPOD. RESULTS MPOD levels were significantly associated with better global cognition, verbal learning and fluency, recall, processing speed and perceptual speed, whereas serum L + Z was significantly related to only verbal fluency. CONCLUSION MPOD is related to cognitive function in older people. Its role as a potential biomarker of cognitive function deserves further study.


Glia | 2001

Pigment epithelium-derived factor supports normal Müller cell development and glutamine synthetase expression after removal of the retinal pigment epithelium.

Monica M. Jablonski; Joyce Tombran-Tink; David A. Mrazek; Alessandro Iannaccone

In conditions in which the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) is dystrophic, carries a genetic mutation, or is removed physically, Müller cells undergo degenerative changes that contribute to the retinal pathology. We previously demonstrated that pigment epithelium‐derived factor (PEDF), a glycoprotein secreted by the RPE cells with neuroprotective and differentiation properties, protects against photoreceptor degeneration induced by RPE removal. The purpose of the present study was to analyze the putative gliosupportive activity of PEDF on Müller cells of RPE‐deprived retinas and assess whether protection of Müller cells was correlated with improved photoreceptor outer segment assembly. Eyes were dissected from Xenopus laevis tadpoles, and the RPE was removed before culturing in medium containing purified PEDF, PEDF plus anti‐PEDF, or medium alone. Control eyes matured with an adherent RPE or in medium containing PEDF plus nonimmune serum. Müller cell ultrastructure was examined. Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) and glutamine synthetase were localized immunocytochemically, and the corresponding protein levels were quantified. In control retinas, Müller cells were structurally intact and formed adherens junctions with neighboring photoreceptors. In addition, they did not express GFAP, whereas glutamine synthetase expression was high. RPE removal dramatically altered the ultrastructure and biosynthetic activity of Müller cells; Müller cells failed to form adherens junctions with photoreceptors and glutamine synthetase expression was suppressed. PEDF prevented the degenerative glial response; Müller cells were ultrastructurally normal and formed junctional complexes with photoreceptors. PEDF also preserved the expression of glutamine synthetase at near‐normal levels. The morphogenetic effects of PEDF were blocked by the anti‐PEDF antibody. Our study documents the glioprotective effects of PEDF and suggests that maintenance of the proper Müller cell ultrastructure and expression of glutamine synthetase may be necessary to support the proper assembly of photoreceptor outer segments. GLIA 35:14–25, 2001.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012

Mutations in RPGR and RP2 Account for 15% of Males with Simplex Retinal Degenerative Disease

Kari Branham; Mohammad Othman; Matthew Brumm; Athanasios J. Karoukis; Pelin Atmaca-Sonmez; Beverly M. Yashar; Sharon B. Schwartz; Niamh B. Stover; Karmen M Trzupek; Dianna H. Wheaton; Barbara J. Jennings; Maria Laura Ciccarelli; K. Thiran Jayasundera; Richard Alan Lewis; David G. Birch; Jean Bennett; Paul A. Sieving; Sten Andréasson; Jacque L. Duncan; Gerald A. Fishman; Alessandro Iannaccone; Richard G. Weleber; Samuel G. Jacobson; John R. Heckenlively; Anand Swaroop

PURPOSE To determine the proportion of male patients presenting simplex retinal degenerative disease (RD: retinitis pigmentosa [RP] or cone/cone-rod dystrophy [COD/CORD]) with mutations in the X-linked retinal degeneration genes RPGR and RP2. METHODS Simplex males were defined as patients with no known affected family members. Patients were excluded if they had a family history of parental consanguinity. Blood samples from a total of 214 simplex males with a diagnosis of retinal degeneration were collected for genetic analysis. The patients were screened for mutations in RPGR and RP2 by direct sequencing of PCR-amplified genomic DNA. RESULTS We identified pathogenic mutations in 32 of the 214 patients screened (15%). Of the 29 patients with a diagnosis of COD/CORD, four mutations were identified in the ORF15 mutational hotspot of the RPGR gene. Of the 185 RP patients, three patients had mutations in RP2 and 25 had RPGR mutations (including 12 in the ORF15 region). CONCLUSIONS This study represents mutation screening of RPGR and RP2 in the largest cohort, to date, of simplex males affected with RP or COD/CORD. Our results demonstrate a substantial contribution of RPGR mutations to retinal degenerations, and in particular, to simplex RP. Based on our findings, we suggest that RPGR should be considered as a first tier gene for screening isolated males with retinal degeneration.


Glia | 2000

Targeted disruption of Müller cell metabolism induces photoreceptor dysmorphogenesis.

Monica M. Jablonski; Alessandro Iannaccone

Within the retina, the Müller cells and photoreceptors are in close physical proximity and are metabolically coupled. It is unknown, however, whether Müller cells affect photoreceptor differentiation and outer segment membrane assembly. The objective of this study was to determine whether targeted disruption of Müller cell metabolism would induce photoreceptor dysmorphogenesis. Intact isolated Xenopus laevis embryonic eyes were cultured in medium with or without Müller cell‐specific inhibitors (i.e., α‐aminoadipic acid and fluorocitrate). To assess Müller cell injury, the gross retinal morphology was examined along with immunocytochemical assessment of Müller cell‐specific protein expression patterns. The steady‐state levels of opsin were quantified to determine whether the Müller cell inhibitors negatively affected photoreceptor protein synthesis. Müller and photoreceptor cell ultrastructure was scrutinized and the organization of the outer segment membranes was graded. In control retinas, there was no swelling of Müller cell cytoplasm. Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) was undetectable, whereas glutamine synthetase was abundant. The steady‐state level of opsin was high and photoreceptors elaborated properly folded outer segments. Exposure to both Müller cell‐specific inhibitors induced swelling of Müller cell endfeet, cytoplasmic paling and alterations of Müller cell‐specific protein expression patterns. The steady‐state level of opsin in retinas exposed to α‐aminoadipic acid was unchanged compared with control eyes, whereas, in eyes exposed to fluorocitrate, opsin levels were slightly reduced. The most significant finding was that targeted disruption of Müller cell metabolism adversely affected photoreceptor outer segment membrane assembly, causing dysmorphogenesis of nascent outer segments. These results suggest that the termination signal(s) necessary for proper outer segment folding were disrupted by targeted inhibition of Müller cells and support the hypothesis that Müller cells interact with photoreceptors through mechanisms that may regulate, at least in part, the assembly of photoreceptor outer segment membranes. GLIA 32:192–204, 2000.

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Monica M. Jablonski

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Marko Z. Radic

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Ivan C. Gerling

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Francesco Giorgianni

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Nataliya Lenchik

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Sarka Beranova-Giorgianni

University of Tennessee Health Science Center

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Alfonso Baldi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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