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Dive into the research topics where Carlo Casali is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlo Casali.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2003

A homoplasmic mitochondrial transfer ribonucleic acid mutation as a cause of maternally inherited hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Robert W. Taylor; Carla Giordano; Mercy M. Davidson; Giulia d'Amati; Hugh H. Bain; Christine Hayes; Helen Leonard; Martin J. Barron; Carlo Casali; Filippo M. Santorelli; Michio Hirano; Robert N. Lightowlers; Salvatore DiMauro; Douglass M. Turnbull

OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to understand the clinical and molecular features of familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in which a mitochondrial abnormality was strongly suspected. BACKGROUND Defects of the mitochondrial genome are responsible for a heterogeneous group of clinical disorders, including cardiomyopathy. The majority of pathogenic mutations are heteroplasmic, with mutated and wild-type mitochondrial deoxyribonucleic acid (mtDNA) coexisting within the same cell. Homoplasmic mutations (present in every copy of the genome within the cell) present a difficult challenge in terms of diagnosis and assigning pathogenicity, as human mtDNA is highly polymorphic. METHODS A detailed clinical, histochemical, biochemical, and molecular genetic analysis was performed on two families with HCM to investigate the underlying mitochondrial defect. RESULTS Cardiac tissue from an affected child in the presenting family exhibited severe deficiencies of mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes, whereas histochemical and biochemical studies of the skeletal muscle were normal. Mitochondrial DNA sequencing revealed an A4300G transition in the mitochondrial transfer ribonucleic acid (tRNA)(Ile) gene, which was shown to be homoplasmic by polymerase chain reaction/restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis in all samples from affected individuals and other maternal relatives. In a second family, previously reported as heteroplasmic for this base substitution, the mutation has subsequently been shown to be homoplasmic. The pathogenic role for this mutation was confirmed by high-resolution Northern blot analysis of heart tissue from both families, revealing very low steady-state levels of the mature mitochondrial tRNA(Ile). CONCLUSIONS This report documents, for the first time, that a homoplasmic mitochondrial tRNA mutation may cause maternally inherited HCM. It highlights the significant contribution that homoplasmic mitochondrial tRNA substitutions may play in the development of cardiac disease. A restriction of the biochemical defect to the affected tissue has important implications for the screening of patients with cardiomyopathy for mitochondrial disease.


Neurology | 2006

ALLOGENEIC STEM CELL TRANSPLANTATION CORRECTS BIOCHEMICAL DERANGEMENTS IN MNGIE

Michio Hirano; Ramon Martí; Carlo Casali; Saba Tadesse; T. Uldrick; B. Fine; Diana M. Escolar; M. L. Valentino; I. Nishino; C. Hesdorffer; Joseph E. Schwartz; R. G. Hawks; D. L. Martone; M. S. Cairo; Salvatore DiMauro; M. Stanzani; James Garvin; D. G. Savage

Mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy (MNGIE) is a multisystemic autosomal recessive disease due to primary thymidine phosphorylase (TP) deficiency. To restore TP activity, we performed reduced intensity allogeneic stem cell transplantations (alloSCTs) in two patients. In the first, alloSCT failed to engraft, but the second achieved mixed donor chimerism, which partially restored buffy coat TP activity and lowered plasma nucleosides. Thus, alloSCT can correct biochemical abnormalities in the blood of patients with MNGIE, but clinical efficacy remains unproven.


Neurology | 2006

Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2: A clinical, pathologic, and genetic study

Chiara Criscuolo; L. Chessa; S. Di Giandomenico; Pietro Mancini; Francesco Saccà; Gaetano S. Grieco; M. Piane; Francesca Barbieri; G. De Michele; Sandro Banfi; F. Pierelli; N. Rizzuto; Filippo M. Santorelli; L. Gallosti; Alessandro Filla; Carlo Casali

Background: Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2 (AOA2) is characterized by onset between age 10 and 22 years, cerebellar atrophy, peripheral neuropathy, oculomotor apraxia (OMA), and elevated serum alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) levels. Recessive mutations in SETX have been described in AOA2 patients. Objective: To describe the clinical features of AOA2 and to identify the SETX mutations in 10 patients from four Italian families. Methods: The patients underwent clinical examination, routine laboratory tests, nerve conduction studies, sural nerve biopsy, and brain MRI. All were screened for SETX mutations. Results: All the patients had cerebellar features, including limb and truncal ataxia, and slurred speech. OMA was observed in two patients, extrapyramidal symptoms in two, and mental impairment in three. High serum AFP levels, motor and sensory axonal neuropathy, and marked cerebellar atrophy on MRI were detected in all the patients who underwent these examinations. Sural nerve biopsy revealed a severe depletion of large myelinated fibers in one patient, and both large and small myelinated fibers in another. Postmortem findings are also reported in one of the patients. Four different homozygous SETX mutations were found (a large-scale deletion, a missense change, a single-base deletion, and a splice-site mutation). Conclusions: The clinical phenotype of oculomotor apraxia type 2 is fairly homogeneous, showing only subtle intrafamilial variability. OMA is an inconstant finding. The identification of new mutations expands the array of SETX variants, and the finding of a missense change outside the helicase domain suggests the existence of at least one more functional region in the N-terminus of senataxin.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2011

Allogeneic hematopoietic SCT as treatment option for patients with mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy (MNGIE): a consensus conference proposal for a standardized approach.

Joerg Halter; W M M Schüpbach; Carlo Casali; Ronit Elhasid; Keith Fay; Simon Hammans; Isabel Illa; L Kappeler; S Krähenbühl; T Lehmann; Hanna Mandel; Ramon Martí; H Mattle; Kim H. Orchard; David G. Savage; Carolyn M. Sue; David Valcárcel; Alois Gratwohl; Michio Hirano

Allogeneic hematopoietic SCT (HSCT) has been proposed as a treatment for patients with mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy (MNGIE). HSCT has been performed in nine patients using different protocols with varying success. Based on this preliminary experience, participants of the first consensus conference propose a common approach to allogeneic HSCT in MNGIE. Standardization of the transplant protocol and the clinical and biochemical assessments will allow evaluation of the safety and efficacy of HSCT as well as optimization of therapy for patients with MNGIE.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 1999

Maternally inherited cardiomyopathy: an atypical presentation of the mtDNA 12S rRNA gene A1555G mutation.

Filippo M. Santorelli; Kurenai Tanji; Panagiota Manta; Carlo Casali; Sindu Krishna; Arthur P. Hays; Donna Mancini; Salvatore DiMauro; Michio Hirano

We thank Dr. Eduardo Bonilla for critical comments. This work was partially supported by National Institute of Child Health and Human Development program project PO1 HD32062, Telethon-Italy grant 844-1996 (to C.C.), Italian Ministry of Health grant 97/02/G/009 (to F.M.S.), and by grants from the Muscular Dystrophy Association. M.H. is supported by National Institutes of Health grant 1RO1 HL59657 and by the Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center Irving Scholar program.


The Cerebellum | 2012

Gait pattern in inherited cerebellar ataxias

Mariano Serrao; Francesco Pierelli; Alberto Ranavolo; Francesco Draicchio; Carmela Conte; Romildo Don; Roberto Di Fabio; Margherita Lerose; Luca Padua; Giorgio Sandrini; Carlo Casali

Our aim was to perform a comprehensive analysis of the global and segmental features of gait in patients with genetically confirmed inherited ataxias. Sixteen patients with autosomal dominant (spinocerebellar ataxia, SCA1 or 2) or recessive (Friedreich’s ataxia, FRDA) ataxia were studied. We used a motion analysis system to record gait kinematic and kinetic data. We measured the mean values of global (time–distance parameters, COM displacement, support moment) and segmental gait parameters (joint displacement and inter-joint coordination), as both discrete and continuous variables, and their variability and correlations with International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS) scores. We found a marked difference in all global gait parameters between the ataxic patients and the controls and close correlations between longer stride and stance duration and lower gait, posture and total ICARS scores. The only difference between the two patient groups was a shorter step length in the FRDA patients. As regards the segmental features, we found a significantly different waveform shape for all continuous kinematic and kinetic measures between the ataxic patients and the healthy controls, but only minor differences for the discrete measures. Intersegmental coordination evaluated using the continuous relative phase method revealed an irregular alternating joint behaviour without clear evidence of the synchronous pattern of alternating proximal/distal joint seen in healthy subjects. For almost all gait parameters we observed a markedly higher intra-subject variability in the ataxic patients versus the controls, which was strongly related to the clinical ICARS scores. Patients with chronic, progressive inherited ataxias lose the ability to “stabilize” a walking pattern that can be repeated over time. The most peculiar aspect of the gait of inherited ataxia patients, regardless the different genetic forms, seems to be the presence of increased variability of all global and segmental parameters rather than an invariant abnormal gait pattern.


The Cerebellum | 2016

Consensus Paper: Revisiting the Symptoms and Signs of Cerebellar Syndrome

Florian Bodranghien; Amy J. Bastian; Carlo Casali; Mark Hallett; Elan D. Louis; Mario Manto; Peter Mariën; Dennis A. Nowak; Jeremy D. Schmahmann; Mariano Serrao; Katharina Marie Steiner; Michael Strupp; Caroline Tilikete; Dagmar Timmann; Kim van Dun

The cerebellum is involved in sensorimotor operations, cognitive tasks and affective processes. Here, we revisit the concept of the cerebellar syndrome in the light of recent advances in our understanding of cerebellar operations. The key symptoms and signs of cerebellar dysfunction, often grouped under the generic term of ataxia, are discussed. Vertigo, dizziness, and imbalance are associated with lesions of the vestibulo-cerebellar, vestibulo-spinal, or cerebellar ocular motor systems. The cerebellum plays a major role in the online to long-term control of eye movements (control of calibration, reduction of eye instability, maintenance of ocular alignment). Ocular instability, nystagmus, saccadic intrusions, impaired smooth pursuit, impaired vestibulo-ocular reflex (VOR), and ocular misalignment are at the core of oculomotor cerebellar deficits. As a motor speech disorder, ataxic dysarthria is highly suggestive of cerebellar pathology. Regarding motor control of limbs, hypotonia, a- or dysdiadochokinesia, dysmetria, grasping deficits and various tremor phenomenologies are observed in cerebellar disorders to varying degrees. There is clear evidence that the cerebellum participates in force perception and proprioceptive sense during active movements. Gait is staggering with a wide base, and tandem gait is very often impaired in cerebellar disorders. In terms of cognitive and affective operations, impairments are found in executive functions, visual-spatial processing, linguistic function, and affective regulation (Schmahmann’s syndrome). Nonmotor linguistic deficits including disruption of articulatory and graphomotor planning, language dynamics, verbal fluency, phonological, and semantic word retrieval, expressive and receptive syntax, and various aspects of reading and writing may be impaired after cerebellar damage. The cerebellum is organized into (a) a primary sensorimotor region in the anterior lobe and adjacent part of lobule VI, (b) a second sensorimotor region in lobule VIII, and (c) cognitive and limbic regions located in the posterior lobe (lobule VI, lobule VIIA which includes crus I and crus II, and lobule VIIB). The limbic cerebellum is mainly represented in the posterior vermis. The cortico-ponto-cerebellar and cerebello-thalamo-cortical loops establish close functional connections between the cerebellum and the supratentorial motor, paralimbic and association cortices, and cerebellar symptoms are associated with a disruption of these loops.


Neurology | 2004

Clinical and genetic studies in hereditary spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum

Carlo Casali; Enza Maria Valente; Enrico Bertini; Giorgia Montagna; Chiara Criscuolo; G. De Michele; Marcello Villanova; M. Damiano; Alberto Pierallini; Francesco Brancati; V. Scarano; Alessandra Tessa; Federica Cricchi; Gaetano S. Grieco; Maria Muglia; M. Carella; B. Martini; A. Rossi; G. A. Amabile; G. Nappi; Alessandro Filla; Bruno Dallapiccola; Filippo M. Santorelli

Background: A complicated form of recessive hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSPs) with thin corpus callosum (TCC) was first described in Japan, and most of the Japanese families showed linkage to chromosome 15q13–15. A recessive HSP locus (SPG11) has also been mapped to chromosome 15q13–15 in Italian and North American families with and without TCC, and it overlaps the region identified in the Japanese families. Objective: To study clinically and genetically 12 Italian families with HSP and TCC. Methods: The authors investigated 18 affected and 30 healthy individuals from 12 unrelated Italian families with recessive HSP-TCC. Clinical, neurophysiologic, and neuroradiologic studies were undertaken. All patients were negative for SPG7 mutations. Genetic linkage analyses were carried out with polymorphic DNA markers on 15q13–15. Results: Five families were consistent with linkage, thus defining a 19.8-cM region between markers D15S1007 and D15S978, encompassing the SPG11 interval. In one consanguineous family, linkage could be firmly excluded, confirming genetic heterogeneity. Two families appeared not linked to the region, but this could not be firmly proved because of the small family size. The remaining four families were uninformative for linkage purposes. Conclusion: HSP-TCC is common in Italy. The phenotype is fairly homogeneous and is associated with impaired cognition. There are at least two loci for HSP-TCC, one of which is on chromosome 15q13–15.


Neurology | 1998

Multiple mtDNA deletions features in autosomal dominant and recessive diseases suggest distinct pathogeneses

Rosalba Carrozzo; Michio Hirano; B. Fromenty; Carlo Casali; Filippo M. Santorelli; Eduardo Bonilla; Salvatore DiMauro; Eric A. Schon

Multiple mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletions have been described in patients with autosomal dominant progressive external ophthalmoplegia(AD-PEO) and in autosomal recessive disorders including mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy (MNGIE) and autosomal recessive cardiomyopathy ophthalmoplegia (ARCO). The pathogenic bases of these disorders are unknown. We studied three patients with AD-PEO and three patients with autosomal recessive (AR)-PEO (two patients with MNGIE and one patient with ARCO). Histochemistry and Southern blot analyses of DNA were performed in skeletal muscle from the patients. Muscle mtDNA was used to characterize the pattern and amounts of the multiple mtDNA rearrangements; PCR analysis was performed to obtain finer maps of the deleted regions in both conditions. The patients with AD-PEO had myopathic features; the patients with AR-PEO had multisystem disorders. The percentage of ragged-red and cytochrome c oxidase-negative fibers tended to be higher in muscle from the patients with AD-PEO (19% ± 13.9, 29.7 ± 26.3) than in muscle from the patients with AR-PEO (1.4% ± 1.4, 3.3% ± 3.2;p < 0.10). The sizes of the multiple mtDNA deletions ranged from approximately 4.0 to 10.0 kilobases in muscle from both groups of patients, and in both groups, we identified only deleted and no duplicated mtDNA molecules. Patients with AD-PEO harbored a greater proportion of deleted mtDNA species in muscle (31% ± 5.3) than did patients with AR-PEO (9.7%± 9.1; p < 0.05). In the patients with AD-PEO, we identified a deletion that included the mtDNA heavy strand promoter (HSP) region, which had been previously described as the HSP deletion was not present in the patients with AR-PEO. Our findings show the clinical, histologic, and molecular genetic heterogeneity of these complex disorders. In particular, the proportions of multiple mtDNA deletions were higher in muscle samples from patients with AD-PEO than in those from patients with AR-PEO.


Lancet Neurology | 2015

Riluzole in patients with hereditary cerebellar ataxia: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Silvia Romano; Giulia Coarelli; Christian Marcotulli; Luca Leonardi; Francesca Piccolo; Maria Spadaro; Marina Frontali; Michela Ferraldeschi; Maria Chiara Vulpiani; Federica Ponzelli; Marco Salvetti; Francesco Orzi; Antonio Petrucci; Nicola Vanacore; Carlo Casali; Giovanni Ristori

BACKGROUND Our previous study in patients with cerebellar ataxias of different causes showed significant benefit of riluzole after 8 weeks. We aimed to confirm these results in patients with spinocerebellar ataxia or Friedreichs ataxia in a 1-year trial. METHODS Patients with spinocerebellar ataxia or Friedreichs ataxia (2:1 ratio) from three Italian neurogenetic units were enrolled in this multicentre, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, and randomly assigned to riluzole (50 mg orally, twice daily) or placebo for 12 months. The randomisation list was computer-generated and a centralised randomisation system was implemented. Participants and assessing neurologists were masked to treatment allocation. The primary endpoint was the proportion of patients with improved Scale for the Assessment and Rating of Ataxia (SARA) score (a drop of at least one point) at 12 months. An intention-to-treat analysis was done. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01104649. FINDINGS Between May 22, 2010, and Feb 25, 2013, 60 patients were enrolled. Two patients in the riluzole group and three in the placebo group withdrew their consent before receiving treatment, so the intention-to-treat analysis was done on 55 patients (19 with spinocerebellar ataxia and nine with Friedreichs ataxia in the riluzole group, and 19 with spinocerebellar ataxia and eight with Friedreichs ataxia in the placebo group). The proportion with decreased SARA score was 14 (50%) of 28 patients in the riluzole group versus three (11%) of 27 in the placebo group (OR 8·00, 95% CI 1·95-32·83; p=0·002). No severe adverse events were recorded. In the riluzole group, two patients had an increase in liver enzymes (less than two times above normal limits). In two participants in the riluzole group and two participants in the placebo group, sporadic mild adverse events were reported. INTERPRETATION Our findings lend support to the idea that riluzole could be a treatment for cerebellar ataxia. Longer studies and disease-specific trials are needed to confirm whether these findings can be applied in clinical practice. FUNDING Agenzia Italiana del Farmaco.

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Francesco Pierelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Mariano Serrao

Sapienza University of Rome

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Alessandra Tessa

Boston Children's Hospital

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Alberto Ranavolo

Sapienza University of Rome

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Roberto Di Fabio

Sapienza University of Rome

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Luca Leonardi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Gaetano S. Grieco

Sapienza University of Rome

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