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Dive into the research topics where Antonietta Coppola is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonietta Coppola.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2008

Recurrent rearrangements of chromosome 1q21.1 and variable pediatric phenotypes

Mefford Hc; Andrew J. Sharp; Carl Baker; Andy Itsara; Zhaoshi Jiang; Karen Buysse; Shuwen Huang; Viv Maloney; John A. Crolla; Diana Baralle; Amanda L. Collins; Catherine L. Mercer; Koenraad K. Norga; Thomy de Ravel; Koenraad Devriendt; Ernie M.H.F. Bongers; Nicole de Leeuw; William Reardon; Stefania Gimelli; Frédérique Béna; Raoul C. M. Hennekam; Alison Male; Lorraine Gaunt; Jill Clayton-Smith; Ingrid Simonic; Soo Mi Park; Sarju G. Mehta; Serena Nik-Zainal; C. Geoffrey Woods; Helen V. Firth

BACKGROUND Duplications and deletions in the human genome can cause disease or predispose persons to disease. Advances in technologies to detect these changes allow for the routine identification of submicroscopic imbalances in large numbers of patients. METHODS We tested for the presence of microdeletions and microduplications at a specific region of chromosome 1q21.1 in two groups of patients with unexplained mental retardation, autism, or congenital anomalies and in unaffected persons. RESULTS We identified 25 persons with a recurrent 1.35-Mb deletion within 1q21.1 from screening 5218 patients. The microdeletions had arisen de novo in eight patients, were inherited from a mildly affected parent in three patients, were inherited from an apparently unaffected parent in six patients, and were of unknown inheritance in eight patients. The deletion was absent in a series of 4737 control persons (P=1.1x10(-7)). We found considerable variability in the level of phenotypic expression of the microdeletion; phenotypes included mild-to-moderate mental retardation, microcephaly, cardiac abnormalities, and cataracts. The reciprocal duplication was enriched in nine children with mental retardation or autism spectrum disorder and other variable features (P=0.02). We identified three deletions and three duplications of the 1q21.1 region in an independent sample of 788 patients with mental retardation and congenital anomalies. CONCLUSIONS We have identified recurrent molecular lesions that elude syndromic classification and whose disease manifestations must be considered in a broader context of development as opposed to being assigned to a specific disease. Clinical diagnosis in patients with these lesions may be most readily achieved on the basis of genotype rather than phenotype.


Neurology | 2007

An open-label trial of levetiracetam in severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy

Pasquale Striano; Antonietta Coppola; M. Pezzella; C. Ciampa; Nicola Specchio; Francesca Ragona; Maria Margherita Mancardi; Elena Gennaro; Francesca Beccaria; Giuseppe Capovilla; P. Rasmini; Dante Besana; Giangennaro Coppola; Maurizio Elia; Tiziana Granata; Marilena Vecchi; Federico Vigevano; Maurizio Viri; R. Gaggero; Salvatore Striano; Federico Zara

Objective: To conduct an open-label, add-on trial on safety and efficacy of levetiracetam in severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy (SMEI). Patients and Methods: SMEI patients were recruited from different centers according to the following criteria: age ≥3 years; at least four tonic-clonic seizures/month during the last 8 weeks; previous use of at least two drugs. Levetiracetam was orally administrated at starting dose of approximately 10 mg/kg/day up to 50 to 60 mg/kg/day in two doses. Treatment period included a 5- to 6-week up-titration phase and a 12-week evaluation phase. Efficacy variables were responder rate by seizure type and reduction of the mean number per week of each seizure type. Analysis was performed using Fisher exact and Wilcoxon tests. Results: Twenty-eight patients (mean age: 9.4 ± 5.6 years) entered the study. Sixteen (57.1%) showed SCN1A mutations. Mean number of concomitant drugs was 2.5. Mean levetiracetam dose achieved was 2,016 mg/day. Twenty-three (82.1%) completed the trial. Responders were 64.2% for tonic-clonic, 60% for myoclonic, 60% for focal, and 44.4% for absence seizures. Number per week of tonic-clonic (median: 3 vs 1; p = 0.0001), myoclonic (median: 21 vs 3; p = 0.002), and focal seizures (median: 7.5 vs 3; p = 0.031) was significantly decreased compared to baseline. Levetiracetam effect was not related to age at onset and duration of epilepsy, genetic status, and concomitant therapy. Levetiracetam was well tolerated by subjects who completed the study. To date, follow-up ranges 6 to 36 months (mean, 16.2 ± 13.4). Conclusion: Levetiracetam add-on is effective and well tolerated in severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy. Placebo-controlled studies should confirm these findings.


JAMA Neurology | 2012

Clinical Significance of Rare Copy Number Variations in Epilepsy A Case-Control Survey Using Microarray-Based Comparative Genomic Hybridization

Pasquale Striano; Antonietta Coppola; Roberta Paravidino; Michela Malacarne; Stefania Gimelli; Angela Robbiano; Monica Traverso; Marianna Pezzella; Vincenzo Belcastro; Amedeo Bianchi; Maurizio Elia; Antonio Falace; Elisabetta Gazzerro; Edoardo Ferlazzo; Elena Freri; Roberta Galasso; Giuseppe Gobbi; Cristina Molinatto; Simona Cavani; Orsetta Zuffardi; Salvatore Striano; Giovanni Battista Ferrero; Margherita Silengo; Maria Luigia Cavaliere; Matteo Benelli; Alberto Magi; Maria Piccione; Franca Dagna Bricarelli; Domenico Coviello; Marco Fichera

OBJECTIVE To perform an extensive search for genomic rearrangements by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization in patients with epilepsy. DESIGN Prospective cohort study. SETTING Epilepsy centers in Italy. PATIENTS Two hundred seventy-nine patients with unexplained epilepsy, 265 individuals with nonsyndromic mental retardation but no epilepsy, and 246 healthy control subjects were screened by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Identification of copy number variations (CNVs) and gene enrichment. RESULTS Rare CNVs occurred in 26 patients (9.3%) and 16 healthy control subjects (6.5%) (P = .26). The CNVs identified in patients were larger (P = .03) and showed higher gene content (P = .02) than those in control subjects. The CNVs larger than 1 megabase (P = .002) and including more than 10 genes (P = .005) occurred more frequently in patients than in control subjects. Nine patients (34.6%) among those harboring rare CNVs showed rearrangements associated with emerging microdeletion or microduplication syndromes. Mental retardation and neuropsychiatric features were associated with rare CNVs (P = .004), whereas epilepsy type was not. The CNV rate in patients with epilepsy and mental retardation or neuropsychiatric features is not different from that observed in patients with mental retardation only. Moreover, significant enrichment of genes involved in ion transport was observed within CNVs identified in patients with epilepsy. CONCLUSIONS Patients with epilepsy show a significantly increased burden of large, rare, gene-rich CNVs, particularly when associated with mental retardation and neuropsychiatric features. The limited overlap between CNVs observed in the epilepsy group and those observed in the group with mental retardation only as well as the involvement of specific (ion channel) genes indicate a specific association between the identified CNVs and epilepsy. Screening for CNVs should be performed for diagnostic purposes preferentially in patients with epilepsy and mental retardation or neuropsychiatric features.


Journal of Neurology | 2008

Familial mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (FMTLE) : a clinical and genetic study of 15 Italian families.

Pasquale Striano; Antonio Gambardella; Antonietta Coppola; C. Di Bonaventura; Giorgia Bovo; Erica Diani; F. Boaretto; Gabriella Egeo; Clotilde Ciampa; Angelo Labate; S. Testoni; D. Passarelli; Ida Manna; C. Sferro; Umberto Aguglia; F. Caranci; A. T. Giallonardo; Salvatore Striano; Carlo Nobile; Roberto Michelucci

AbstractIntroductionFamilial mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (FMTLE) is characterized by prominent psychic and autonomic seizures, often without hippocampal sclerosis (HS) or a previous history of febrile seizures (FS), and good prognosis. The genetics of this condition is largely unknown.We present the electroclinical and genetic findings of 15 MTLE Italian families.Patients and methodsFMTLE was defined when two or more first-degree relatives had epilepsy suggesting a mesial temporal lobe origin. The occurrence of seizures with auditory auras was considered an exclusion criterion. Patients underwent video-EEG recordings, 1.5-Tesla MRI particularly focused on hippocampal analysis, and neuropsychological evaluation. Genetic study included genotyping and linkage analysis of candidate loci at 4q, 18q, 1q, and 12q as well as screening for LGI1/Epitempin mutations.ResultsMost of the families showed an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern with incomplete penetrance. Fifty-four (32 F) affected individuals were investigated. Twenty-one (38.8 %) individuals experienced early FS. Forty-eight individuals fulfilled the criteria for MTLE. Epigastric/visceral sensation (72.9 %) was the most common type of aura, followed by psychic symptoms (35.4 %), and déjà vu (31.2 %). HS occurred in 13.8% of individuals, three of whom belonged to the same family. Prognosis of epilepsy was generally good. Genetic study failed to show LGI1/Epitempin mutations or significative linkage to the investigated loci.DiscussionFMTLE may be a more common than expected condition, clinically and genetically heterogeneous. Some of the reported families, grouped on the basis of a specific aura, may represent an interesting subgroup on whom to focus future linkage studies.


Acta neuropathologica communications | 2014

Evidence for mTOR pathway activation in a spectrum of epilepsy-associated pathologies

Joan Liu; Cheryl Reeves; Zuzanna Michalak; Antonietta Coppola; Beate Diehl; Sanjay M. Sisodiya; Maria Thom

IntroductionActivation of the mTOR pathway has been linked to the cytopathology and epileptogenicity of malformations, specifically Focal Cortical Dysplasia (FCD) and Tuberous Sclerosis (TSC). Experimental and clinical trials have shown than mTOR inhibitors have anti-epileptogenic effects in TS. Dysmorphic neurones and balloon cells are hallmarks of FCDIIb and TSC, but similar cells are also occasionally observed in other acquired epileptogenic pathologies, including hippocampal sclerosis (HS) and Rasmussen’s encephalitis (RE). Our aim was to explore mTOR pathway activation in a range of epilepsy-associated pathologies and in lesion-negative cases.Results50 epilepsy surgical pathologies were selected including HS ILAE type 1 with (5) and without dysmorphic neurones (4), FCDIIa (1), FCDIIb (5), FCDIIIa (5), FCDIIIb (3), FCDIIId (3), RE (5) and cortex adjacent to cavernoma (1). We also included pathology-negative epilepsy cases; temporal cortex (7), frontal cortex (2), paired frontal cortical samples with different ictal activity according to intracranial EEG recordings (4), cortex with acute injuries from electrode tracks (5) and additionally non-epilepsy surgical controls (3). Immunohistochemistry for phospho-S6 (pS6) ser240/244 and ser235/236 and double-labelling for Iba1, neurofilament, GFAP, GFAPdelta, doublecortin, and nestin were performed. Predominant neuronal labelling was observed with pS6 ser240/244 and glial labelling with pS6 ser235/236 in all pathology types but with evidence for co-expression in a proportion of cells in all pathologies. Intense labelling of dysmorphic neurones and balloon cells was observed in FCDIIb, but dysmorphic neurones were also labelled in RE and HS. There was no difference in pS6 labelling in paired samples according to ictal activity. Double-labelling immunofluorescent studies further demonstrated the co-localisation of pS6 with nestin, doublecortin, GFAPdelta in populations of small, immature neuroglial cells in a range of epilepsy pathologies.ConclusionsAlthough mTOR activation has been more studied in the FCDIIb and TSC, our observations suggest this pathway is activated in a variety of epilepsy-associated pathologies, and in varied cell types including dysmorphic neurones, microglia and immature cell types. There was no definite evidence from our studies to suggest that pS6 expression is directly related to disease activity.


Brain | 2015

CHD2 variants are a risk factor for photosensitivity in epilepsy

Elizabeth C. Galizia; Candace T. Myers; Costin Leu; Carolien G.F. de Kovel; Tatiana Afrikanova; María Lorena Cordero-Maldonado; Teresa Gonçalves Martins; M Jacmin; Suzanne Drury; V. Krishna Chinthapalli; Hiltrud Muhle; Manuela Pendziwiat; Thomas Sander; Ann Kathrin Ruppert; Rikke S. Møller; Holger Thiele; Roland Krause; Julian Schubert; Anna-Elina Lehesjoki; Peter Nürnberg; Holger Lerche; Aarno Palotie; Antonietta Coppola; Salvatore Striano; Luigi Del Gaudio; Christopher Boustred; Amy Schneider; Nicholas Lench; Bosanka Jocic-Jakubi; Athanasios Covanis

Photosensitivity in epilepsy is common and has high heritability, but its genetic basis remains uncertain. Galizia et al. reveal an overrepresentation of unique variants of CHD2 — which encodes the transcriptional regulator ‘chromodomain helicase DNA-binding protein 2’ — in photosensitive epilepsies, and show that chd2 knockdown in zebrafish causes photosensitivity.


Epilepsia | 2008

A pilot trial of levetiracetam in eyelid myoclonia with absences (Jeavons syndrome)

Pasquale Striano; Vito Sofia; Giuseppe Capovilla; Guido Rubboli; Carlo Di Bonaventura; Antonietta Coppola; Giuseppina Vitale; Luis Fontanillas; Anna Teresa Giallonardo; Roberto Biondi; Antonino Romeo; Maurizio Viri; Federico Zara; Salvatore Striano

Objective: Eyelid myoclonia with absences (EMA) or Jeavons syndrome characterized by eyelid myoclonia (EM) (with or without absences), eye closure‐induced EEG paroxysms, and photosensitivity. We conducted an open‐label trial of levetiracetam in EMA.


Neurology | 2011

West syndrome associated with 14q12 duplications harboring FOXG1

Pasquale Striano; R Paravidino; F Sicca; Pietro Chiurazzi; S Gimelli; Antonietta Coppola; Angela Robbiano; M Traverso; M Pintaudi; S Giovannini; F Operto; P Vigliano; T Granata; Giangennaro Coppola; A Romeo; N Specchio; L Giordano; Lr Osborne; G Gimelli; Carlo Minetti; Federico Zara

West syndrome (WS) is characterized by infantile-onset flexor and extensor spasms, an EEG pattern of a high amplitude with asynchronous activity of spikes and theta/delta waves (hypsarrhythmia), and impaired psychomotor development.1 In about 70%–80% of the children, WS develops as a consequence of metabolic disorders or brain lesions, but in many cases the etiology is unknown.2 ### Methods. See also appendices e-1 (Methods) and e-2 (case descriptions) on the Neurology ® Web site at www.neurology.org. We screened by high-resolution comparative genomic hybridization (array-CGH) 38 (20 male, 18 female) consecutively collected patients with WS of unknown etiology (table e-1). Diagnosis was based on 1) absence of prenatal or postnatal etiologic factors, 2) normal development and absence of neurologic abnormalities before the onset, and 3) normal laboratory and MRI findings at onset.1 Patients showing dysmorphisms or other birth defects were excluded. Mutations in ARX and CDKL5 / STK9 genes2 were excluded in all the patients. The Ethics Committees of involved centers approved the study and an informed consent was signed by the parents. …


Neurology | 2011

Familial temporal lobe epilepsy with psychic auras associated with a novel LGI1 mutation

Pasquale Striano; Giorgia Busolin; Lia Santulli; Emanuela Leonardi; Antonietta Coppola; Libero Vitiello; Laura Rigon; Roberto Michelucci; Salvatore Striano; Carlo Nobile

Background: Autosomal dominant lateral temporal epilepsy (ADLTE) is characterized by focal seizures with auditory features or aphasia. Mutations in the LGI1 gene have been reported in up to 50% of ADLTE pedigrees. We report a family with temporal lobe epilepsy characterized by psychic symptoms associated with a novel LGI1 mutation. Methods: All participants were personally interviewed and underwent neurologic examination and video-EEG recordings. LGI1 exons were sequenced by standard methods. Mutant cDNA was transfected into human embryonic kidney 293 cells; both cell lysates and media were analyzed by Western blot. In silico modeling of the Lgi1 protein EPTP domain was carried out using the structure of WD repeat protein and manually refined. Results: Three affected family members were ascertained, 2 of whom had temporal epilepsy with psychic symptoms (déjà vu, fear) but no auditory or aphasic phenomena, while the third had complex partial seizures without any aura. In all patients, we found a novel LGI1 mutation, Arg407Cys, which did not hamper protein secretion in vitro. Mapping of the mutation on a 3-dimensional protein model showed that this mutation does not induce large structural rearrangements but could destabilize interactions of Lgi1 with target proteins. Conclusions: The Arg407Cys is the first mutation with no effect on Lgi1 protein secretion. The uncommon, isolated psychic symptoms associated with it suggests that ADLTE encompasses a wider range of auras of temporal origin than hitherto reported.


Hematology | 2006

Iron deficiency in childhood and adolescence: Retrospective review

Mara Ferrara; Ludovico Coppola; Antonietta Coppola; L. Capozzi

Abstract Two hundred and thirty-eight subjects of both sexes, age range 7.5 months–16 years, with iron deficiency (ID), were included in a retrospective review of ID causes, to determine the best treatment. Inadequate iron intake was the cause of ID or iron deficiency anemia (IDA) in 59 subjects from the first months of life to adolescence. Blood loss linked to cows milk intolerance was the cause of ID or IDA in 37 younger children. Meckels diverticulum (MD) (6 cases), reflux esophagitis (RE) (10 cases), some drugs such as acetyl salicylic acid (11 cases) induced bleeding with ID or IDA in children and adolescents. In pubertal females with ID or IDA, polymenorrhea was observed in 16 cases. Coelic disease (CD) (37 cases), Helicobacter pylori infection (HPI) (39 cases), association of HPI and CD (8 cases), enteromonas infection (15 cases), determining particularly malabsorption, were causes of ID or IDA in patients of a wide age range, unresponsive to iron therapy. Our findings show that iron replacement therapy was not always required and should not be prescribed until the diagnosis is certain.

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Salvatore Striano

University of Naples Federico II

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Federico Zara

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Lia Santulli

University of Naples Federico II

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Carlo Minetti

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Luigi Del Gaudio

University of Naples Federico II

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C. Ciampa

University of Naples Federico II

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Mara Ferrara

University of Naples Federico II

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