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Dive into the research topics where Antonello A. Romani is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonello A. Romani.


Biogerontology | 2008

Low-level caloric restriction rescues proteasome activity and Hsc70 level in liver of aged rats

Mara A. Bonelli; Silvia Desenzani; Gabriella Cavallini; Alessio Donati; Antonello A. Romani; Ettore Bergamini; Angelo F. Borghetti

Proteasome activity is known to decrease with aging in ad libitum (AL) fed rats. Severe caloric restriction (CR) significantly extends the maximum life-span of rats, and counteracts the age-associated decrease in liver proteasome activities. Since few investigations have explored whether lower CR diets might positively counteract the age associated decrease in proteasome activity, we then investigated the effects of a mild CR regimen on animal life-span, proteasome content and function. In addition, we addressed the question whether both CR regimens might also affect the expression of Hsc70 protein, a constitutive chaperone reported to share a role in the function of proteasome complex and in the repair of proteotoxic damage, and whose level decreased during aging. In contrast to severe CR, mild CR had a poor effect on life-span; however, it better counteracted the decrease of proteasome activities. Both regimens, however, maintain Hsc70 in liver of old rats at level comparable to that of young rats. Interestingly, the effects of aging and CRs on liver proteasome enzyme activities did not appear to be associated with parallel changes in the amount of proteasome proteins suggesting that the quality (molecular activity of the enzymes) rather than the quantity are likely to be modified with age. In conclusion, the results presented in this work show that a mild CR can have beneficial effects on liver function of aging rats because is adequate to counteract the decrease of proteasome function and Hsc70 chaperone level.


Biochemical Pharmacology | 2009

Zoledronic acid determines S-phase arrest but fails to induce apoptosis in cholangiocarcinoma cells.

Antonello A. Romani; Silvia Desenzani; Marina Morganti; Silvia La Monica; Angelo F. Borghetti; P. Soliani

Cholangiocarcinoma is the second most common primary hepatic neoplasia and the only curative therapy is surgical resection or liver transplantation. Biphosphonates (BPs) are an emerging class of drugs widely used to treat bone diseases and also appear to possess direct antitumor activity. In two human cholangiocarcinoma cell lines (TFK-1 and EGI-1) we investigated, for the first time, the activity of zoledronic acid by determining proliferation, cell cycle analysis and apoptosis. The results obtained indicate that zoledronic acid induces cell-narrowing and growth inhibition, both reversed by 25 microM GGOH, and significantly affects the colony-forming ability of these cells. The inhibition by zoledronic acid of Rap1A prenylation was reversed in cell co-treated with GGOH. At 10-50 microM zoledronic acid exerted an S-phase cell cycle arrest which was confirmed by changes in the level of cyclins and of regulators p27(KIP1) and pRb. Interestingly, the expression level of cyclin A (putative S-phase marker) shows a dose-dependent increment in contrast to the decrement of cyclin D1 (putative G1 phase marker). However, neither hypodiploid cells nor cleaved PARP or caspase-3 was detected. The lack of TP53 or loss of its function, the large constitutive expressions of anti-apoptotic proteins Bcl-xL and HSP27 together with the low level of the pro-apoptotic Bax are the likely factors which protect cells from apoptosis. In conclusion, our study indicates that zoledronic acid induces S-phase arrest and cell-narrowing, both reversed by GGOH and, by changing the delicate balance between pro- and anti-apoptotic proteins, allows survival of cholangiocarcinoma cells.


Journal of International Medical Research | 1995

Pulmonary endothelial cell modifications after storage in solid-organ preservation solutions.

Paolo Carbognani; Lorenzo Spaggiari; Michele Rusca; L. Cattelani; Piergiorgio Solli; Antonello A. Romani; F Alessandrini; P. Dell'Abate; M. Valente; P. Bobbio

During lung preservation, the vascular endothelium is probably the first site of damage and these lesions are considered the main limiting factor in solid-organ preservation. In the present study, the ultrastructural changes in the endothelial cells of human pulmonary artery hypothermically stored (at 4 °C) for 6 and 12 h in Euro-Collins, University of Wisconsin and Ringer-lactate solutions were compared. The arteries obtained from three patients who underwent pneumonectomy were divided into 20 segments and preserved in the three solutions mentioned. The specimens, which were fixed in osmic acid, were examined using transmission electron microscopy. Transmission electron microscopy indicated that the cells stored in the University of Wisconsin solution either for 6 or 12 h were the best preserved, while the most severely damaged cells were those stored in Euro-Collins solution, even after just 6 h. The cells stored in Ringer-lactate showed an intermediate level of damage. The data from an ultrastructural grading scale, which quantified the damage to the cytoplasm, mitochondria and nucleus, were in broad agreement with the general transmission electron microscopy observations. Analysis of variance of the grading scale data showed that there were statistically significant differences between the groups after both 6 and 12 h storage (P < 0.05).


Journal of Peptide Science | 2013

In vitro activity of novel in silico‐developed antimicrobial peptides against a panel of bacterial pathogens

Antonello A. Romani; M. C. Baroni; Simone Taddei; Francesca Ghidini; P. Sansoni; Sandro Cavirani; Clotilde Silvia Cabassi

Antimicrobial‐peptide‐based therapies could represent a reliable alternative to overcome antibiotic resistance, as they offer potential advantages such as rapid microbicidal activity and multiple activities against a broad spectrum of bacterial pathogens.


Oncology Letters | 2013

A single nucleotide polymorphism in EZH2 predicts overall survival rate in patients with cholangiocarcinoma

Elisa Paolicchi; Paola Pacetti; Elisa Giovannetti; Andrea Mambrini; Massimo Orlandi; Francesco Crea; Antonello A. Romani; Roberta Tartarini; Romano Danesi; Godefridus J. Peters; Maurizio Cantore

Cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) is a deadly disease arising from the malignant transformation of cholangiocytes. Enhancer of zeste homolog 2 (EZH2) is overexpressed in poorly differentiated CCA. Functional single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in this gene may affect the role of EZH2 in cholangiocarcinogenesis and chemoresistance. The aim of the current study was to evaluate the correlation between EZH2 SNPs and clinical outcome. Using PROMO3.0, GeneCard and MicroSNiper, 4 EZH2 SNPs with functional relevance in CCA were selected in silico. These SNPs were studied in genomic DNA extracted from the blood samples of 75 patients with advanced CCA, who were treated with epirubicin-cisplatin-xeloda (ECX regimen). SNP genotyping was performed with specific PCR assays. The rs887569 TT genotype was correlated with a significantly longer overall survival (OS; TT vs. CT-CC, P=0.026). Moreover, the TT genotype revealed a trend toward a significant association with a reduced risk of mortality (HR, 0.59; 95% CI, 0.33–1.05; P=0.075), by multivariate analysis. These results support future studies on the role of rs887569 EZH2 SNP as a possible predictive marker of OS in advanced CCA patients.


Veterinary Journal | 2013

Broad-spectrum activity of a novel antibiotic peptide against multidrug-resistant veterinary isolates

Clotilde Silvia Cabassi; Simone Taddei; Sandro Cavirani; Maria Cristina Baroni; Paolo Sansoni; Antonello A. Romani

The emergence of multidrug resistant (MDR) and extensively drug resistant (XDR) bacteria has become a medical and veterinary problem. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) show potential to overcome antibiotic resistance and could be used therapeutically. A novel AMP (AMP2041) was developed in silico and its microbiocidal activity against MDR clinical strains isolated from cattle (n=6), dogs (n=8), and pigs (n=20) was evaluated. AMP2041 showed strong antimicrobial activity against all Gram-positive and Gram-negative MDR clinical strains tested. Within 20 min of incubation, there was complete killing of Pseudomonas aeruginosa ATCC 27953 and a 90% reduction of colony count for Escherichia coli ATCC 25922. For Staphylococcus aureus ATCC 25923, a 90% reduction of colony count was observed within 120 min of incubation.


Cancer Chemotherapy and Pharmacology | 2011

The BH3-mimetic ABT-737 targets the apoptotic machinery in cholangiocarcinoma cell lines resulting in synergistic interactions with zoledronic acid

Antonello A. Romani; Silvia Desenzani; Marina Morganti; Maria Cristina Baroni; Angelo F. Borghetti; P. Soliani

PurposeIn TFK-1 and EGI-1 cholangiocarcinoma cell lines, zoledronic acid (ZOL) determines an S-phase block without apoptosis. Here, we investigated the occurrence of apoptosis stigmata when ZOL is associated to the BH3-mimetic ABT-737.MethodsIn EGI-1 and TFK-1 cholangiocarcinoma cell lines untreated or treated with ABT-737 alone or in combination with ZOL, the pro-survival protein’s pattern (BCL-2, BCL-XL, MCL-1, HSP72, HSP27) was investigated by biochemical criteria along with the occurrence of mitochondrial damage evaluated by cytofluorimetric analysis using a cationic dye.ResultsABT-737 induced growth inhibition and significantly affected the colony-forming ability of both EGI-1 and TFK-1 cells. However, activated PARP-1 or/and caspase-3 cleavage (apoptosis markers) were detected only at the highest ABT-737 concentrations used. Combined treatment showed synergistic effect by converting the predominant cytostatic effect of ZOL into a cytotoxic one as shown by striking increment of mitochondrial harmed cells along with PARP-1 activation and caspase-3 cleavage.ConclusionThe lack of apoptosis following ZOL treatment in these cholangiocarcinoma cell lines appears to be multifactorial and could be ascribed to the large constitutive expression of pro-survival proteins. The efficacy of ZOL treatment requires a concomitant unleashing of apoptosis using a selective BH3-mimetic as ABT-737. The rational targeting of specific components of the apoptotic pathway may appear a useful approach to improve the treatment of refractory or relapsed cholangiocarcinoma. Combined treatment could be further explored in in vivo tumor model of cholangiocarcinoma.


European Surgical Research | 1998

Expression of Human CD44v6 in Non-Small-Cell Lung Cancer

Paolo Carbognani; Lorenzo Spaggiari; Antonello A. Romani; Solli P; A. Corradi; Anna Maria Cantoni; Piergiorgio Petronini; Angelo F. Borghetti; Michele Rusca; P. Bobbio

Introduction: The CD44 is a membrane glycoprotein that functions as lymph node homing receptor in lymphocyte activation and is involved in homo- and heterotypic cell adhesion. In several tumor cell lines the expression of splice variants (CD44v6 and CD44v7) are correlated with the metastatic potential and confer an advantage in the early steps of the metastatic cascade. In our study we examined 35 cases of non-small-cell lung cancers (NSCLC) in order to detect the presence of CD44v6 and to compare its expression with the histologic type, degree of differentiation, stage of the tumor and survival of the patients. Methods: CD44v6 expression in frozen tissue sections of 35 patients with NSCLC who underwent pneumonectomy or lobectomy was analyzed with the VFF-7 monoclonal antibody that detected the CD44v6 variant. The data on survival were analyzed by the actuarial method and compared by the log rank test. Results: The expression of CD44v6 occurred in all the 20 cases of epidermoid carcinomas tested and in 2 out of the 3 cases of undifferentiated large cell carcinoma and was absent in all the 12 adenocarcinomas. No relationship was found between the presence of this marker and the grading or the stage of the pathology. The 3-year survival rate was 73% for CD44v6-positive and 65% for CD44v6-negative cancer and the comparison was not statistically significant. Conclusion: These results suggest that in lung cancer the expression of CD44v6 is not a useful prognostic factor.


Archive | 2013

In Vitro Blood Compatibility of Novel Hydrophilic Chitosan Films for Vessel Regeneration and Repair

Antonello A. Romani; Luigi Ippolito; Federica Riccardi; Silvia Pipitone; Marina Morganti; Maria Cristina Baroni; Angelo F. Borghetti; Ruggero Bettini

In the vascular field, currently, the best graft performance is given by saphenous vein auto‐ grafts [1] whose main failures are related to thrombosis development, emboli production, and intimal hyperplasia. Synthetic non-bio-resorbable vascular prosthesis (such as Dacron® or extended-PTFE) exhibited very low incidences of thrombosis or hyperplasia and showed good clinical results in mediumand large-diameter graft sites.


Journal of Surgical Oncology | 2006

The risk of developing metastatic disease in colorectal cancer is related to CD105-positive vessel count.

Antonello A. Romani; Angelo F. Borghetti; Paolo Del Rio; Mario Sianesi; P. Soliani

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Lorenzo Spaggiari

European Institute of Oncology

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