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Dive into the research topics where Alessandro Simonati is active.

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Featured researches published by Alessandro Simonati.


Nature Genetics | 2006

PLA2G6, encoding a phospholipase A2, is mutated in neurodegenerative disorders with high brain iron.

Neil V. Morgan; Shawn K. Westaway; Jenny Morton; Allison Gregory; Paul Gissen; Scott Sonek; Hakan Cangul; Jason Coryell; Natalie Canham; Nardo Nardocci; Giovanna Zorzi; Shanaz Pasha; Diana Rodriguez; Isabelle Desguerre; Amar Mubaidin; Enrico Bertini; Richard C. Trembath; Alessandro Simonati; Carolyn Schanen; Colin A. Johnson; Barbara Levinson; C. Geoffrey Woods; Beth Wilmot; Patricia L. Kramer; Jane Gitschier; Eamonn R. Maher; Susan J. Hayflick

Neurodegenerative disorders with high brain iron include Parkinson disease, Alzheimer disease and several childhood genetic disorders categorized as neuroaxonal dystrophies. We mapped a locus for infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD) and neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) to chromosome 22q12-q13 and identified mutations in PLA2G6, encoding a calcium-independent group VI phospholipase A2, in NBIA, INAD and the related Karak syndrome. This discovery implicates phospholipases in the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative disorders with iron dyshomeostasis.


Nature Genetics | 2002

The K-Cl cotransporter KCC3 is mutant in a severe peripheral neuropathy associated with agenesis of the corpus callosum

Heidi Carmen Howard; David B. Mount; Daniel Rochefort; Nellie Byun; Nicolas Dupré; Jianming Lu; Xuemo Fan; Luyan Song; Jean Baptiste Rivière; Claude Prévost; Jürgen Horst; Alessandro Simonati; Beate Lemcke; Rick Welch; Roger England; Frank Zhan; Adriana Mercado; W. B. Siesser; Alfred L. George; Michael P. McDonald; Jean-Pierre Bouchard; Jean Mathieu; Eric Delpire; Guy A. Rouleau

Peripheral neuropathy associated with agenesis of the corpus callosum (ACCPN) is a severe sensorimotor neuropathy associated with mental retardation, dysmorphic features and complete or partial agenesis of the corpus callosum. ACCPN is transmitted in an autosomal recessive fashion and is found at a high frequency in the province of Quebec, Canada. ACCPN has been previously mapped to chromosome 15q. The gene SLC12A6 (solute carrier family 12, member 6), which encodes the K+–Cl− transporter KCC3 and maps within the ACCPN candidate region, was screened for mutations in individuals with ACCPN. Four distinct protein-truncating mutations were found: two in the French Canadian population and two in non–French Canadian families. The functional consequence of the predominant French Canadian mutation (2436delG, Thr813fsX813) was examined by heterologous expression of wildtype and mutant KCC3 in Xenopus laevis oocytes; the truncated mutant is appropriately glycosylated and expressed at the cellular membrane, where it is non-functional. Mice generated with a targeted deletion of Slc12a6 have a locomotor deficit, peripheral neuropathy and a sensorimotor gating deficit, similar to the human disease. Our findings identify mutations in SLC12A6 as the genetic lesion underlying ACCPN and suggest a critical role for SLC12A6 in the development and maintenance of the nervous system.


Neurology | 2008

Neurodegeneration associated with genetic defects in phospholipase A2

Allison Gregory; Shawn K. Westaway; I. E. Holm; Paul T. Kotzbauer; Penny Hogarth; Scott Sonek; J. C. Coryell; T. M. Nguyen; Nardo Nardocci; Giovanna Zorzi; D. Rodriguez; Isabelle Desguerre; Enrico Bertini; Alessandro Simonati; Barbara Levinson; Cristina Dias; Clara Barbot; Inês Carrilho; Manuela Santos; Ibrahim Malik; Jane Gitschier; Susan J. Hayflick

Objective: Mutations in the gene encoding phospholipase A2 group VI (PLA2G6) are associated with two childhood neurologic disorders: infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD) and idiopathic neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA). INAD is a severe progressive psychomotor disorder in which axonal spheroids are found in brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves. High globus pallidus iron is an inconsistent feature of INAD; however, it is a diagnostic criterion of NBIA, which describes a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders that share this hallmark feature. We sought to delineate the clinical, radiographic, pathologic, and genetic features of disease resulting from defective phospholipase A2. Methods: We identified 56 patients clinically diagnosed with INAD and 23 with idiopathic NBIA and screened their DNA for PLA2G6 mutations. Results: Eighty percent of patients with INAD had mutations in PLA2G6, whereas mutations were found in only 20% of those with idiopathic NBIA. All patients with two null mutations had a more severe phenotype. On MRI, nearly all mutation-positive patients had cerebellar atrophy, and half showed brain iron accumulation. We observed Lewy bodies and neurofibrillary tangles in association with PLA2G6 mutations. Conclusion: Defects in phospholipase A2 lead to a range of phenotypes. PLA2G6 mutations are associated with nearly all cases of classic infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy but a minority of cases of idiopathic neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation, and genotype correlates with phenotype. Cerebellar atrophy predicts which patients are likely to be mutation-positive. The neuropathologic changes that are caused by defective phospholipase A2 suggest a shared pathogenesis with both Parkinson and Alzheimer diseases.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

Human pathology in NCL.

Glenn Anderson; Hans H. Goebel; Alessandro Simonati

In childhood the neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCL) are the most frequent lysosomal diseases and the most frequent neurodegenerative diseases but, in adulthood, they represent a small fraction among the neurodegenerative diseases. Their morphology is marked by: (i) loss of neurons, foremost in the cerebral and cerebellar cortices resulting in cerebral and cerebellar atrophy; (ii) an almost ubiquitous accumulation of lipopigments in nerve cells, but also in extracerebral tissues. Loss of cortical neurons is selective, indiscriminate depletion in early childhood forms occurring only at an advanced stage, whereas loss of neurons in subcortical grey-matter regions has not been quantitatively documented. Among the fourteen different forms of NCL described to date, CLN1 and CLN10 are marked by granular lipopigments, CLN2 by curvilinear profiles (CVPs), CLN3 by fingerprint profiles (FPPs), and other forms by a combination of these features. Among extracerebral tissues, lymphocytes, skin, rectum, skeletal muscle and, occasionally, conjunctiva are possible guiding targets for diagnostic identification, the precise type of NCL then requiring molecular analysis within the clinical and morphological context. Autosomal-recessive adult NCL has been linked molecularly to different childhood forms, i.e. CLN1, CLN5, and CLN6, whilst autosomal-dominant adult NCL, now designated as CLN4, is caused by a newly identified separate gene, DNAJC5. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinoses or Batten Disease.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2013

NCL diseases — clinical perspectives☆

Angela Schulz; Alfried Kohlschütter; Jonathan W. Mink; Alessandro Simonati; Ruth Williams

The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (NCLs) are lysosomal storage disorders and together are the most common degenerative brain diseases in childhood. They are a group of disorders linked by the characteristic accumulation of abnormal storage material in neurons and other cell types, and a degenerative disease course. All NCLs are characterized by a combination of dementia, epilepsy, and motor decline. For most childhood NCLs, a progressive visual failure is also a core feature. The characteristics of these symptoms can vary and the age at disease onset ranges from birth to young adulthood. Genetic heterogeneity, with fourteen identified NCL genes and wide phenotypic variability render diagnosis difficult. A new NCL classification system based on the affected gene and the age at disease onset allows a precise and practical delineation of an individual patients NCL type. A diagnostic algorithm to identify each NCL form is presented here. Precise NCL diagnosis is essential not only for genetic counseling, but also for the optimal delivery of care and information sharing with the family and other caregivers. These aspects are challenging because there are also potential long term complications which are specific to NCL type. Therefore care supported by a specifically experienced team of clinicians is recommended. As the underlying pathophysiological mechanism is still unclear for all NCL forms, the development of curative therapies remains difficult. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: The neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses or Batten Disease.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2011

GM1 gangliosidosis and Morquio B disease: an update on genetic alterations and clinical findings

Anna Caciotti; Scott C. Garman; Yadilette Rivera-Colón; Elena Procopio; Serena Catarzi; Lorenzo Ferri; Carmen Guido; Paola Martelli; Rossella Parini; Daniela Antuzzi; Roberta Battini; Michela Sibilio; Alessandro Simonati; Elena Fontana; Alessandro Salviati; Gulcin Akinci; Cristina Cereda; Carlo Dionisi-Vici; Francesca Deodato; Adele D'Amico; Alessandra d'Azzo; Enrico Bertini; Mirella Filocamo; Maurizio Scarpa; Maja Di Rocco; Cynthia J. Tifft; Federica Ciani; Serena Gasperini; Elisabetta Pasquini; Renzo Guerrini

GM1 gangliosidosis and Morquio B syndrome, both arising from beta-galactosidase (GLB1) deficiency, are very rare lysosomal storage diseases with an incidence of about 1:100,000-1:200,000 live births worldwide. Here we report the beta-galactosidase gene (GLB1) mutation analysis of 21 unrelated GM1 gangliosidosis patients, and of 4 Morquio B patients, of whom two are brothers. Clinical features of the patients were collected and compared with those in literature. In silico analyses were performed by standard alignments tools and by an improved version of GLB1 three-dimensional models. The analysed cohort includes remarkable cases. One patient with GM1 gangliosidosis had a triple X syndrome. One patient with juvenile GM1 gangliosidosis was homozygous for a mutation previously identified in Morquio type B. A patient with infantile GM1 gangliosidosis carried a complex GLB1 allele harbouring two genetic variants leading to p.R68W and p.R109W amino acid changes, in trans with the known p.R148C mutation. Molecular analysis showed 27 mutations, 9 of which are new: 5 missense, 3 microdeletions and a nonsense mutation. We also identified four new genetic variants with a predicted polymorphic nature that was further investigated by in silico analyses. Three-dimensional structural analysis of GLB1 homology models including the new missense mutations and the p.R68W and p.R109W amino acid changes showed that all the amino acid replacements affected the resulting protein structures in different ways, from changes in polarity to folding alterations. Genetic and clinical associations led us to undertake a critical review of the classifications of late-onset GM1 gangliosidosis and Morquio B disease.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2009

Friedreich's ataxia: Oxidative stress and cytoskeletal abnormalities

Marco Sparaco; Laura Maria Gaeta; Filippo M. Santorelli; Chiara Passarelli; Giulia Tozzi; Enrico Bertini; Alessandro Simonati; Francesco Scaravilli; Franco Taroni; Charles Duyckaerts; Michele Feleppa; Fiorella Piemonte

Friedreichs ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in the gene encoding frataxin, a mitochondrial protein implicated in iron metabolism. Current evidence suggests that loss of frataxin causes iron overload in tissues, and increase in free-radical production leading to oxidation and inactivation of mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes, particularly Complexes I, II, III and aconitase. Glutathione plays an important role in the detoxification of ROS in the Central Nervous System (CNS), where it also provides regulation of protein function by glutathionylation. The cytoskeletal proteins are particularly susceptible to oxidation and appear constitutively glutathionylated in the human CNS. Previously, we showed loss of cytoskeletal organization in fibroblasts of patients with FRDA found to be associated with increased levels of glutathione bound to cytoskeletal proteins. In this study, we analysed the glutathionylation of proteins in the spinal cord of patients with FRDA and the distribution of tubulin and neurofilaments in the same area. We found, for the first time, a significant rise of the dynamic pool of tubulin as well as abnormal distribution of the phosphorylated forms of human neurofilaments in FRDA motor neurons. In the same cells, the cytoskeletal abnormalities co-localized with an increase in protein glutathionylation and the mitochondrial proteins were normally expressed by immunocytochemistry. Our results suggest that in FRDA oxidative stress causes abnormally increased protein glutathionylation leading to prominent abnormalities of the neuronal cytoskeleton.


Human Mutation | 2009

Screening of ARHSP-TCC patients expands the spectrum of SPG11 mutations and includes a large scale gene deletion.

Paola S. Denora; David Schlesinger; Carlo Casali; Fernando Kok; Alessandra Tessa; Amir Boukhris; Hamid Azzedine; Maria Teresa Dotti; Claudio Bruno; Jeremy Truchetto; Roberta Biancheri; Estelle Fedirko; Maja Di Rocco; Clarissa Bueno; Alessandro Malandrini; Roberta Battini; Elisabeth Sickl; Maria Fulvia de Leva; Odile Boespflug-Tanguy; Gabriella Silvestri; Alessandro Simonati; Edith Said; Andreas Ferbert; Chiara Criscuolo; Karl Heinimann; Anna Modoni; Peter Weber; Silvia Palmeri; Martina Plasilova; Flavia Pauri

Autosomal recessive spastic paraplegia with thinning of corpus callosum (ARHSP‐TCC) is a complex form of HSP initially described in Japan but subsequently reported to have a worldwide distribution with a particular high frequency in multiple families from the Mediterranean basin. We recently showed that ARHSP‐TCC is commonly associated with mutations in SPG11/KIAA1840 on chromosome 15q. We have now screened a collection of new patients mainly originating from Italy and Brazil, in order to further ascertain the spectrum of mutations in SPG11, enlarge the ethnic origin of SPG11 patients, determine the relative frequency at the level of single Countries (i.e., Italy), and establish whether there is one or more common mutation. In 25 index cases we identified 32 mutations; 22 are novel, including 9 nonsense, 3 small deletions, 4 insertions, 1 in/del, 1 small duplication, 1 missense, 2 splice‐site, and for the first time a large genomic rearrangement. This brings the total number of SPG11 mutated patients in the SPATAX collection to 111 cases in 44 families and in 17 isolated cases, from 16 Countries, all assessed using homogeneous clinical criteria. While expanding the spectrum of mutations in SPG11, this larger series also corroborated the notion that even within apparently homogeneous population a molecular diagnosis cannot be achieved without full gene sequencing.


Acta Neuropathologica | 2003

MELAS: clinical phenotype and morphological brain abnormalities.

M. Sparaco; Alessandro Simonati; Tiziana Cavallaro; L. Bartolomei; M. Grauso; F. Piscioli; L. Morelli; N. Rizzuto

We describe the clinical and neuropathological findings of three unrelated autopsy cases of MELAS harboring the A3243G transition in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). Using immunohistochemical techniques, we studied the expression of several subunits of the respiratory chain in various brain regions from the same cases. In all three cases there was a reduced immunocytochemical staining for mtDNA-encoded subunits of the respiratory chain, confirming the presence of a defective mitochondrial protein synthesis in this disease. Mitochondrial abnormalities were mostly confined to multiple areas of different size and shape, in agreement with the focal character of the brain pathology in MELAS, and were most prominent in the cerebral cortex, providing a morphological contribution to the explanation of the cognitive regression of the patients. Immunoreactivity for mtDNA-encoded subunits was reduced in the walls of many pial and intracerebral arterioles of different brain regions but there was no clear correlation between territories of affected vessels and distribution of the histological and immunohistochemical lesions. Cerebral focal lesions in MELAS might have a metabolic nature and several pathogenetic mechanisms might be involved in the genesis of stroke-like episodes when there is a local increased ATP demand.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 1999

Congenital hypomyelination neuropathy with Ser72Leu substitution in PMP22

Alessandro Simonati; Gian Maria Fabrizi; A Pasquinelli; Federica Taioli; Tiziana Cavallaro; Michela Morbin; G Marcon; M Papini; N. Rizzuto

We describe a patient with congenital hypomyelination neuropathy. The pathological and morphometrical findings in the sural nerve biopsy were consistent with a defect of myelin formation and maintenance. Direct sequence analysis of the genomic regions coding the peripheral myelin proteins P0 and PMP22 disclosed a heterozygous missense point mutation that leads to a Ser72Leu substitution in the second transmembrane of PMP22. Codon 72 mutations of PMP22 are associated with different phenotypes encompassing the Dejerine-Sottas syndrome and including congenital hypomyelination neuropathy.

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Enrico Bertini

Boston Children's Hospital

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Nardo Nardocci

Carlo Besta Neurological Institute

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Alessandra Tessa

Boston Children's Hospital

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