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Dive into the research topics where C. Badulli is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Badulli.


International Journal of Immunopathology and Pharmacology | 2006

Hierarchy of baby-linked immunogenetic risk factors in the vertical transmission of hepatitis C virus

Miryam Martinetti; Ilaria Pacati; Mariaclara Cuccia; C. Badulli; Annamaria Pasi; Laura Salvaneschi; E. Minola; A. De Silvestri; A. M. Iannone; Anna Maccabruni

Mother-to-infant transmission of Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) represents the major cause of pediatric HCV infection today. Immunogenetic influence has been poorly investigated and mainly confined to HLA-class II serological polymorphisms. Among 290 parities, 135 from Pavia and 155 from Bergamo, of HCV-RNA-infected Italian women, 21 babies (7.24%) were HCV-RNA positive at birth and steadily positive over 20 months of life. All the 21 infected babies and 44 randomly selected uninfected ones, born to HCV-RNA+ mothers but steadily negative for HCV-RNA during a follow-up of 2 years, and their mothers were investigated for HLA-G, -C, -DRB1, -DQA1 and -DQB1 genomic polymorphisms. Among the different covariates, HLA-Cw*07, -G*010401, -DRB1*0701, -DRB1*1401 and homozigosity for HLA-G 14bp deletion can be considered as risk factors for HCV vertical transmission. On the contrary, protection was conferred by the HLA-DQB1*06, -G*0105N, -Cw*0602, DRB1*1104 and -DRB1*1302 alleles. Our initial question was: has the immunogenetic profile any role in the protection of the fetus growing in an infected milieu and, if so, is it independent from the other non-immunogenetic parameters? The answer to both questions should be yes.


Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology | 2012

Influence of HLA-DQ2 and DQ8 on severity in celiac Disease.

Federico Biagi; P.I. Bianchi; C. Vattiato; A. Marchese; L. Trotta; C. Badulli; Annalisa De Silvestri; Miryam Martinetti; Gino Roberto Corazza

Background HLA-DQB1*02 homozygosity was shown to be more common in patients with complicated rather than uncomplicated celiac disease (CD). Goals To study HLA-DQA1 and DQB1 profile in adult patients with different forms of CD, including patients with complicated and potential CD, the most affected and the most preserved histologic end of the pathologic celiac spectrum. Study HLA-DQA1 and DQB1 molecular typing was performed in 218 adult CD patients (169 with uncomplicated CD, 27 with complicated CD, and 22 with potential CD) and 224 healthy stem cell donors. HLA-DQA1 and DQB1 gene polymorphism was analyzed using polymerase chain reaction sequence-specific primers and/or reverse polymerase chain reaction sequence-specific oligonucleotides techniques. Results As expected, the frequency of HLA-DQB1*02 allele, DQB1*02 homozygosity, and DQB1*0302 gene were statistically different in the 4 groups. However, multivariate analysis demonstrated that patients with potential CD have a higher frequency of both HLA-DQB1*0302 and HLA-DQB1*0603 alleles and a reduced frequency of DQB1*02 homozygosity compared with patients with uncomplicated and complicated CD. Conclusions The increased frequency of DQB1*0302 and the reduced frequency of DQB1*02 homozygosity in potential CD is consistent with the idea that different clinical/pathologic evolutions might be related to different immunogeneses. This could be clinically relevant in the future.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2008

The prevalence and the causes of minimal intestinal lesions in patients complaining of symptoms suggestive of enteropathy. A follow-up study.

Federico Biagi; P.I. Bianchi; Jonia Campanella; C. Badulli; Myriam Martinetti; Catherine Klersy; Costanza Alvisi; Ombretta Luinetti; Gino Roberto Corazza

Aims: Although they are non-specific, minimal intestinal lesions are at the end of the coeliac histological damage spectrum. To investigate whether minimal intestinal lesions in patients without endomysial antibodies are due to coeliac disease, their prevalence, causes and risk of evolving into frank coeliac disease were studied. Methods: From January 2000 to December 2005, 645 duodenal biopsies were performed. In 209 patients, duodenal biopsies were performed independently of endomysial antibody results. Clinical data and HLA-typing of all the patients negative to endomysial antibodies but with minimal mucosal lesions were re-evaluated. Three years later, they were offered to be seen again, and further investigations were proposed. Results: 14 out of 209 patients had minimal mucosal lesions and negative endomysial antibodies. Two patients were lost to follow-up; in 7/12 patients, symptoms and histological lesions were due to a different condition, not related to coeliac disease. In 11/12 patients, HLA-typing made diagnosis of coeliac disease very unlikely. Only one patient was on a gluten-free diet because of gluten-sensitive symptoms and was DQ2+/DQ8+. Conclusions: Minimal duodenal lesions in patients negative to endomysial antibodies are rare and are likely to be due to conditions unrelated to coeliac disease.


British Journal of Haematology | 2006

Specific polymorphisms of cytokine genes are associated with different risks to develop single-system or multi-system childhood Langerhans cell histiocytosis.

Paola De Filippi; C. Badulli; Mariaclara Cuccia; Annalisa De Silvestri; Ennia Dametto; Annamaria Pasi; Alberto Garaventa; Adalberto Brach del Prever; Alessandra Todesco; Antonino Trizzino; Cesare Danesino; Miryam Martinetti; Maurizio Aricò

Cytokines and chemokines determine mobilisation of Langerhans cells and their dysregulation is implicated in the pathogenesis of Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH). Twenty point mutations of 12 different cytokine genes were studied in 41 Italian children, 15 with single‐system (SS) and 26 with multi‐system disease. The allele and genotype distributions of interleukin‐4 (IL‐4) and interferon‐γ (IFNγ) were significantly different in patients vs. 140 controls (P = 0.007, and P = 0.018). Older children with single‐system disease shared the ‘anti‐inflammatory profile’ determined by the intermediate producer genotype IFNγ +874A/T (P = 0.029) and the high‐producer genotypes IL‐4 –590C/T and T/T (P = 0.029). Our findings suggest that specific cytokine gene variants affect susceptibility to LCH and its clinical heterogeneity.


Stem Cell Research & Therapy | 2015

Ex vivo immunosuppressive effects of mesenchymal stem cells on Crohn’s disease mucosal T cells are largely dependent on indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase activity and cell-cell contact

Rachele Ciccocioppo; Giuseppina Cristina Cangemi; Peter Kruzliak; A. Gallia; E. Betti; C. Badulli; Miryam Martinetti; Marila Cervio; Alessandro Pecci; Valeria Bozzi; Paolo Dionigi; Livia Visai; Antonella Gurrado; Costanza Alvisi; Cristina Picone; Manuela Monti; Maria Ester Bernardo; Paolo G. Gobbi; Gino Roberto Corazza

IntroductionCrohn’s disease (CD) is a disabling chronic enteropathy sustained by a harmful T-cell response toward antigens of the gut microbiota in genetically susceptible subjects. Growing evidence highlights the safety and possible efficacy of mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) as a new therapeutic tool for this condition. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the effects of bone marrow-derived MSCs on pathogenic T cells with a view to clinical application.MethodsT-cell lines from both inflamed and non-inflamed colonic mucosal specimens of CD patients and from healthy mucosa of control subjects were grown with the antigen muramyl-dipeptide in the absence or presence of donors’ MSCs. The MSC effects were evaluated in terms of T-cell viability, apoptotic rate, proliferative response, immunophenotype, and cytokine profile. The role of the indoleamine 2,3-dioxygenase (IDO) was established by adding a specific inhibitor, the 1-methyl-DL-tryptophan, and by using MSCs transfected with the small interfering RNA (siRNA) targeting IDO. The relevance of cell-cell contact was evaluated by applying transwell membranes.ResultsA significant reduction in both cell viability and proliferative response to muramyl-dipeptide, with simultaneous increase in the apoptotic rate, was found in T cells from both inflamed and non-inflamed CD mucosa when co-cultured with MSCs and was reverted by inhibiting IDO activity and expression. A reduction of the activated CD4+CD25+ subset and increase of the CD3+CD69+ population were also observed when T-cell lines from CD mucosa were co-cultured with MSCs. In parallel, an inhibitory effect was evident on the expression of the pro-inflammatory cytokines tumor necrosis factor-α, interferon-γ, interleukin-17A and -21, whereas that of the transforming growth factor-β and interleukin-6 were increased, and production of the tolerogenic molecule soluble HLA-G was high. These latter effects were almost completely eliminated by blocking the IDO, whose activity was upregulated in MSCs co-cultured with CD T cells. The use of a semipermeable membrane partially inhibited the MSC immunosuppressive effects. Finally, hardly any effects of MSCs were observed when T cells obtained from control subjects were used.ConclusionMSCs exert potent immunomodulant effects on antigen-specific T cells in CD through a complex paracrine and cell-cell contact-mediated action, which may be exploited for widespread therapeutic use.


Autoimmunity | 2012

Common immunogenetic profile in children with multiple autoimmune diseases: the signature of HLA-DQ pleiotropic genes

Daniela Larizza; Valeria Calcaterra; Catherine Klersy; C. Badulli; C. Caramagna; Antonio Ricci; Paola Brambilla; Laura Salvaneschi; Miryam Martinetti

Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), celiac disease (CD) and autoimmune thyroid disease (ATD) are autoimmune conditions relatively common in paediatric age and frequently occur in association in the same subject. This event is not by chance and requires an explanation. Here, we studied the distribution of HLA-DQ αβ heterodimers in 334 Italian children with T1DM, ATD and CD alone or in association and in 224 Italian healthy controls. In particular, 164 patients had T1DM (133 alone, 20+ATD, 7+CD and 4+CD+ATD), 118 had ATD (110 alone, 8+CD) and 52 had CD (40 alone, 11+ATD and 1+T1DM). 51 patients suffered from multiple autoimmune diseases. The risk for multiple autoimmune diseases was significantly associated with the increased number of HLA-DQ markers of susceptibility for both T1DM (p = 0.003) and CD (p = 0.006). The presence of one or more diabetogenic DQ molecules significantly increased the probability of developing not only T1DM (p < 0.001) but also CD (p < 0.001) and ATD (p = 0.001). Similarly, the presence of one or more celiac HLA-DQ heterodimers significantly increased the likelihood of developing not only CD (p < 0.001), but also T1DM (p < 0.001) and ATD (p < 0.001). We confirm that the sharing of the immunogenetic background is responsible for the development of multiple autoimmune diseases although with a different risk according to the number and type of susceptible HLA-DQ heterodimers as reported in the algorithm proposed here. It is likely that combinations of DQA1 and DQB1 alleles are the real culprits of the progression towards multiple autoimmune diseases and HLA-DQ genomic typing will improve the capability to predict associated autoimmune diseases in infancy.


Pharmacogenomics | 2012

Tag SNPs of the ancestral haplotype 57.1 do not substitute HLA-B*57:01 typing for eligibility to abacavir treatment in the Italian population

C. Badulli; Roberta Sestini; Ilaria Sbarsi; Marta Baroncelli; Cinzia Pizzochero; Miryam Martinetti; Berardino Porfirio

A letter in response to: Sanchez-Giron F, Villegas-Torres B, Jaramillo-Villafuerte K et al. Association of the genetic marker for abacavir hypersensitivity HLA-B*5701 with HCP5 rs2395029 in Mexican Mestizos. Pharmacogenomics 12(6), 809–814 (2011).


American Journal of Reproductive Immunology | 2014

Temporal Variation in Soluble Human Leukocyte Antigen‐G (sHLA‐G) and Pregnancy‐Associated Plasma Protein A (PAPP‐A) in Pregnancies Complicated by Gestational Diabetes Mellitus and in Controls

Fausta Beneventi; Margherita Simonetta; Elena Locatelli; Chiara Cavagnoli; C. Badulli; Elisabetta Lovati; Giulia Garbin; Emilia Genini; Riccardo Albertini; Carmine Tinelli; Miryam Martinetti; Arsenio Spinillo

To target gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) by means of temporal variation in pregnancy‐associated plasma protein A (PAPP‐A) and soluble human leukocyte antigen‐G (sHLA‐G).


Tissue Antigens | 2009

HLA haplotypes and birth weight variation: Is your future going to be light or heavy?

Cristina Capittini; Annamaria Pasi; Paola Bergamaschi; Carmine Tinelli; A. De Silvestri; M. P. Mercati; C. Badulli; F. Garlaschelli; Ilaria Sbarsi; M. Guarene; Miryam Martinetti; L. Salvaneschi; Mariaclara Cuccia

Birth weight is known to be a direct indicator of perinatal mortality and a clear predictor of adult pathologies too. It has been correlated with several causes of mortality in adulthood: low birth weight with diabetes, nephropathy and cardiovascular diseases and high birth weight with autoimmune diseases and cancer. In genome-wide studies, an extended human leucocyte antigen (HLA) region has been linked to birth weight variation. We focused our attention on the HLA haplotypes marked by HLA-A, HLA-B and HLA-DRB1 polymorphisms in 1206 healthy Caucasian newborns belonging to the Cord Blood Bank of Pavia (Italy) and their mothers, aiming to investigate the association between this restricted HLA region and birth weight variation. In our study, the HLA-B*38;DRB1*13 haplotype showed an ascending trend among centiles addressing to the high foetal weight. The HLA-A*02;B*15 haplotype showed a descending trend among centiles addressing to the low foetal weight. Besides the acknowledged correlation between the HLA-A*02 and HLA-B*15 alleles (as well as low birth weight) and type I diabetes and between the HLA-B*38 and HLA-DRB1*13 alleles (as well as high birth weight) and several autoimmune diseases, we cannot predict if our babies, healthy at birth, will suffer from these pathologies during life. Nevertheless, our data point to the HLA telomeric end for markers linked to the low birth weight and to the HLA centromeric end for markers linked to the high birth weight, thus limiting the region involved in birth weight variation, which still represents a useful predictor of disease risk in adulthood.


Journal of The European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology | 2014

Immunogenetic factors in mycosis fungoides: can the HLA system influence the susceptibility and prognosis of the disease? Long-term follow-up study of 46 patients.

Valeria Brazzelli; N. Rivetti; C. Badulli; A. Carugno; Vincenzo Grasso; A. De Silvestri; Miryam Martinetti; Giovanni Borroni

Mycosis fungoides (MF) is the most common and one of the least aggressive forms of cutaneous T‐cell lymphoma. Several studies have demonstrated the influence of human leucocyte antigen (HLA) genes on the susceptibility of MF, highlighting the importance of certain alleles but, until today, no studies have evaluated the relationship between HLA alleles and the prognosis of patients with MF.

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