Anna Berrini
University of Milan
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Featured researches published by Anna Berrini.
Endocrinology | 2012
Paola Pocar; Nadia Fiandanese; Camillo Secchi; Anna Berrini; Bernd Fischer; Juliane S. Schmidt; Kristina Schaedlich; Vitaliano Borromeo
The present study examined the effects in mice of exposure to di(2-ethyl-hexyl) phthalate (DEHP) throughout pregnancy and lactation on the development and function of the pituitary-gonadal axis in male and female offspring once they have attained adulthood. Groups of two to three dams were exposed with the diet from gestational d 0.5 until the end of lactation, at 0, 0.05, 5, and 500 mg DEHP/kg · d. The experiment was repeated three times (total: seven to 10 dams per treatment). The 500-mg dose caused complete pregnancy failure, whereas exposure to doses of 0.05 and 5 mg did not affect pregnancy and litter size. In total, about 30 male and 30 female offspring per group were analyzed. Offspring of the DEHP-treated groups, compared with controls, at sexual maturity showed: 1) lower body weight (decrease 20-25%, P < 0.001); 2) altered gonad weight (testes were ∼13% lighter and ovaries ∼40% heavier; P < 0.001); 3) poor germ cell quality (semen was ∼50% less concentrated and 20% less viable, and ∼10% fewer oocytes reached MII stage, P < 0.001); 4) significant lower expression of steroidogenesis and gonadotropin-receptor genes in the gonads; and 5) up-regulated gonadotropin subunit gene expression in the pituitary. In conclusion, our findings suggest that, in maternally exposed male and female mice, DEHP acts on multiple pathways involved in maintaining steroid homeostasis. Specifically, in utero and lactational DEHP exposure may alter estrogen synthesis in both sexes. This, in turn, induces dysregulation of pituitary-gonadal feedback and alters the reproductive performance of exposed animals.
Toxicological Sciences | 2012
Paola Pocar; Nadia Fiandanese; Camillo Secchi; Anna Berrini; Bernd Fischer; Juliane-Susanne Schmidt; Kristina Schaedlich; Stewart M. Rhind; Zulin Zhang; Vitaliano Borromeo
Several studies indicate that in utero and perinatal exposure to polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) induces adverse reproductive effects, but it remains unclear whether such effects may be transmitted to subsequent generations. We therefore investigated the association between maternal exposure to PCBs and reproductive health in male and female offspring over three generations. Mouse dams were fed 0, 1, 10, and 100 μg/kg/day of a PCB mixture (101 + 118) during pregnancy and lactation. PCB levels were measured in the tissues of both dams and offspring. PCB concentrations at all doses investigated were greater in the offspring than in the dams (p ≤ 0.0001) confirming that the progeny were exposed as a result of maternal exposure. In F1 offspring, exposure to PCBs resulted in reductions in (1) testis weight (p ≤ 0.05) and seminiferous tubule diameter (p ≤ 0.05), (2) sperm viability (p ≤ 0.0001) and developmental capacity (p ≤ 0.05), (3) ovary weight (p ≤ 0.05), (4) oocyte developmental capacity (p ≤ 0.05), and (5) increased follicular atresia (p ≤ 0.0001). In females, adverse effects were observed only in the F1 animals. In contrast, male offspring exhibited reduced sperm viability and altered seminiferous tubule distribution up to the third generation, showing intergenerational transmission. In summary, our data indicate that exposure to PCBs at the time of gonadal sex determination perturbed, significantly, the reproductive physiology of male and female offspring in adulthood. Furthermore, male reproductive deficiencies may be observed in at least two further generations. These findings have significant implications for reproductive health and fertility of animals and humans.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 1988
Camillo Secchi; P.A. Biondi; Anna Berrini; Severino Ronchi
Purified pituitary bovine growth hormone (bGH) has been used to develop a homologous sandwich enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in which affinity-purified antibodies are immobilized on microtiter plates. Bovine GH bound to specific antibody is then revealed with a second anti-bGH antibody labeled with biotin and peroxidase-conjugated avidin. The method requires only 48 h, including the coating step, and has a sensitivity as low as 0.25 ng/ml of bGH. Statistical analyses (test of parallelism, cross-reactivity among bGH and GH of various species and bovine prolactin, recovery test, within- and between-assay variation, comparison with radioimmunoassay) confirm the high specificity and reproducibility of the method.
Theriogenology | 1996
Vitaliano Borromeo; S. Bramani; Anna Berrini; Giuseppe Sironi; M. Finazzi; F. Cremonesi; Camillo Secchi
Regulation of follicular growth and ovulation as well as steroid production by the ovary depends principally on gonadotropins. However nonsteroid systemic hormones and autocrine and paracrine factors contribute to the regulation of ovarian function. The objectives of the present work were 1) to asses the presence of growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) in fluid drawn from normal bovine ovarian follicles, cysts or cystic corpora lutea; 2) to relate the stage of luteinization of the cyst with the GH and PRL concentrations in fluids; and 3) to asses the feasibility of providing a defined nonsteroid hormone marker to distinguish between normal and pathological ovarian structures. Cysts were classified according to histological and morphological appearance as follicular or luteal. Concentrations of GH, PRL, estrogens (E2), progesterone (P4) and testosterone (T) were measured in follicular and cystic fluids. On the basis of the E2 to P4 ratio, ovarian formation classes were further divided into two subclasses (E2 dominant and P4 dominant). The results provide evidence of 1) the presence of immunoreactive GH and PRL in all the follicular and cystic fluids assayed, 2) an increasing concentration of GH correlated to the stage of luteinization of the cyst and a direct correlation between GH and P4 concentrations, 3) a significant variability of intraovarian fluid PRL concentration not related to the histological class of the cyst nor to the concentrations of steroid hormones examined, and 4) the possibility of distinguishing 6 different ovarian formation classes by merely measuring GH, P4, E2 and T concentrations in fluids. These data contribute to a better understanding of the endocrine milieu of bovine ovarian cystic degeneration.
Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Physiology | 1994
Vitaliano Borromeo; F. Cremonesi; E. Perucchetti; Anna Berrini; Camillo Secchi
The circadian and circannual secretory patterns of growth hormone (GH) and prolactin (PRL) in Fresian heifers were analysed to identify the significant pulses, the shape and the periodic components of the pulsatile signal that may be relevant to intercellular communication. The possible influence of temperature and photoperiod over these hormonal secretions has also been investigated. In the bovine GH (bGH) secretory patterns the basal levels and number, magnitude and amplitude of significant secretory peaks seem to be independent and not affected by seasonal changes. All the bGH circadian patterns show two periodic components with distinct frequencies. The bovine PRL (bPRL) circadian secretion shows basal levels, number and magnitude of the secretory peaks greater in summer than in winter; the periodic components are only one in winter, but two in summer. There is a significant increase of plasma bPRL in the May-July period and a correlation of the circannual hormone profile with both temperature and daylength.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 2003
Vitaliano Borromeo; Daniela Gaggioli; Anna Berrini; Camillo Secchi
Monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) were generated against pituitary porcine growth hormone (pGH). Ten mAbs were selected for their specificity and affinity for pGH. These mAbs were of the immunoglobulin G (IgG)(1) kappa subclass, with dissociation constants (K(d)) between 7.42 and 0.26 nM, and recognised seven non-overlapping epitopes. We measured whether the mAbs detected alterations of the pGH three-dimensional structure by comparing the antibody reactivity to native pGH and to pGH experimentally unfolded by heating at 50 degrees C, 75 degrees C and 100 degrees C or by reduction and S-carboxymethylation. The antibody-antigen interactions were studied with two enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA), based either on a direct binding or inhibition format. The results show that: 1) one mAb, mAb D12, is a conformation-sensitive antibody that recognises an epitope present only in the native pGH. Because the intact three-dimensional structure is essential for the expression of biological activity, mAb D12 could be used to detect altered pGH molecules in biological samples (blood, pituitary extracts or material produced with recombinant technology), and for the one-step purification of biologically active pGH by immunoaffinity chromatography; 2) one mAb, mAb I4, binds to a linear epitope that is not significantly modified in the denatured hormone. This mAb was able to detect the hormone in assays where protein conformation is usually strongly altered, i.e. immunoblotting and immunohistochemistry; 3) the performances of the other eight mAbs differed significantly in the competitive and non-competitive ELISA.
Journal of Chromatography B: Biomedical Sciences and Applications | 2001
Camillo Secchi; Anna Berrini; Daniela Gaggioli; Vitaliano Borromeo
Modified amino acid residues in porcine, canine and equine growth hormones purified from pituitary glands were characterised by tryptic mapping and high-performance liquid chromatography with on-line coupled electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry (HPLC-ESI-MS) detection. Hormones from all three species showed the same changes. Conversion of Asp128 to iso-Asp128 was a component of native hormones, while deamidation of Asn12 and Asn98 to Asp and iso-Asp, oxidation of Met4, and cyclisation to the pyroglutamyl derivative of Gln139, probably occurred in vitro, during isolation, storage or hydrolysis. Porcine and canine hormones had indistinguishable protein fingerprints, confirming the assumption, based on their cDNA sequences, that their mature primary structures are identical.
Analytica Chimica Acta | 1993
Gianfranco Brambilla; Anna Berrini; Vitaliano Borromeo; Camillo Secchi
Abstract The levels of bovine growth hormone (bGH) in the plasma of cows treated with recombinant bGH (r-bGH) were measured in order to discriminate between treated and untreated animals. bGH concentrations were detected with an enzyme immunoassay (EIA) that uses polyclonal antibodies raised against pituitary bGH. The method can detect levels of bGH as low as 0.25 ng ml−1. The r-bGH used for the animal treatment showed, in EIA, a cross-reactivity with the pituitary bGH of 77.23%. The animals were injected monthly with 640 mg of r-bGH in slow-release form, with a total of four injections. The experimental procedure showed, in the pattern of bGH concentrations of the treated cows, a peak on the seventh day after each injection. The increase was statistically significant in comparison with the basal level (56% increase; P
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology | 2017
Paola Pocar; Nadia Fiandanese; Anna Berrini; Camillo Secchi; Vitaliano Borromeo
&NA; Endocrine disruptors (EDs) are compounds known to promote transgenerational inheritance of adult‐onset disease in subsequent generations after maternal exposure during fetal gonadal development. This study was designed to establish whether gestational and lactational exposure to the plasticizer di(2‐ethylhexyl)phthalate (DEHP) at environmental doses promotes transgenerational effects on reproductive health in female offspring, as adults, over three generations in the mouse. Gestating F0 mouse dams were exposed to 0, 0.05, 5 mg/kg/day DEHP in the diet from gestational day 0.5 until the end of lactation. The incidence of adult‐onset disease in reproductive function was recorded in F1, F2 and F3 female offspring. In adult F1 females, DEHP exposure induced reproductive adverse effects with: i) altered ovarian follicular dynamics with reduced primordial follicular reserve and a larger growing pre‐antral follicle population, suggesting accelerated follicular recruitment; ii) reduced oocyte quality and embryonic developmental competence; iii) dysregulation of the expression profile of a panel of selected ovarian and pre‐implantation embryonic genes. F2 and F3 female offspring displayed the same altered reproductive morphological phenotype and gene expression profiles as F1, thus showing transgenerational transmission of reproductive adverse effects along the female lineage. These findings indicate that in mice exposure to DEHP at doses relevant to human exposure during gonadal sex determination significantly perturbs the reproductive indices of female adult offspring and subsequent generations. Evidence of transgenerational transmission has important implications for the reproductive health and fertility of animals and humans, significantly increasing the potential biohazards of this toxicant. HighlightsMaternal exposure to DEHP transgenerationally affects female reproductive health.DEHP reduced ovarian follicular reserve up to the third generation.DEHP reduced oocyte and blastocyst developmental competence up to F3.DEHP altered expression levels for key genes in ovary and blastocysts up to F4.DEHPs adverse effects were observed at doses relevant for human exposure.
Journal of Immunological Methods | 1991
Camillo Secchi; Anna Berrini; Vitaliano Borromeo
Highly purified pituitary bovine prolactin (bPRL) has been used in a sensitive non-competitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay of prolactin (PRL) concentrations in plasma. In this assay affinity purified polyclonal antibodies were immobilized to the solid phase in order to capture the antigen, and were also used biotinylated as the detector antibody. The method was found to be reproducible (3% variability between calibration curves) and has been optimized for measuring bPRL concentration in plasma samples, giving an intra-assay coefficient of variation of about 5% and an interassay coefficient of variation of about 9%. The sensitivity of the assay was found to be as low as 0.1 ng/ml of bPRL.