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Dive into the research topics where Carlo Guarnieri is active.

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Featured researches published by Carlo Guarnieri.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 1980

Role of oxygen in the cellular damage induced by re-oxygenation of hypoxic heart

Carlo Guarnieri; Flavio Flamigni; Claudio M. Caldarera

Abstract The role of oxygen in the induction of cellular damages during re-oxygenation of hypoxic hearts was studied in isolated Langendorff perfused rat hearts. An increase in the period of hypoxia of up to 80 min resulted in a decrease in both superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase activity. This decrease continued when the hearts perfused in hypoxia for periods of 40 and 60 min were re-oxygenated for an additional 20 min. Under these conditions, re-oxygenation caused an increase in lipid peroxidation which was evaluated as malondialdehyde formation. In comparison to aerobic hearts, the cellular contents of acid soluble thiol groups, insoluble thiol groups and reduced glutathione were all decreased by hypoxia, while oxidized glutathione remained unchanged. The re-admission of oxygen to hypoxic hearts produced a further reduction in thiol groups and reduced glutathione. In contrast to well-oxygenated rat hearts, perfusion with substrate-free hypoxic medium resulted in a marked release of reduced glutathione into coronary effluents, which also continued after re-oxygenation. In hypoxia the release of oxidized glutathione began after 30 min of perfusion and slightly increased during the next 60 min of hypoxia. Re-oxygenation after 60 min of hypoxia did not enhance hypoxic oxidized glutathione release. These results suggest that re-oxygenation is able to induce lipid peroxidative damage in cardiac rat tissue when hypoxic substrate-free perfusions had previously reduced the cellular defensive mechanisms capable of neutralizing the toxic reactions mediated by oxygen metabolites.


Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology | 1985

Oxygen-mediated myocardial damage during ischameia and reperfusion: Role of the cellular defences against oxygen toxicity

R. Ferrari; C. Ceconi; S. Curello; Carlo Guarnieri; Claudio M. Caldarera; A. Albertini; O. Visioli

The possibility that myocardial ischaemia alters the defence mechanisms against oxygen toxicity has been investigated. Ischaemia was induced in isolated, perfused rabbit hearts by reducing coronary flow from 25 ml/min to 1 ml/min for 90 min. Two different degrees of ischaemic damage have been achieved using either spontaneously beating or electrically stimulated hearts. The effects of post-ischaemic reperfusion were also followed for 30 min. Tissue activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase and reductase (GPD and GRD) have been determined together with tissue content of reduced and oxidized glutathione (GSH and GSSG) and of protein SH groups. The changes in myocardial ATP and CP content and release of CPK and of GSH and GSSG were also determined. Systolic and diastolic pressures were continuously monitored. In the spontaneously beating hearts ischaemia induced a reduction of tissue GSH and protein SH groups. On reperfusion there was a recovery of mechanical function, a transient release of GSH into the coronary effluent and an increase of tissue GSH. In the paced hearts, ischaemia resulted in 50% reduction of mitochondrial SOD activity together with a reduction of tissue GSH and protein SH groups. Reperfusion induced a massive release of CPK and of GSH and GSSG, a further reduction of tissue GSH concomitant with an increase of GSSG and no recovery of mechanical function. GPD and GRD activity were not affected by ischaemia and reperfusion. These data indicate that severe ischaemia induces a reduction of the protective mechanisms against oxygen toxicity.


Basic Research in Cardiology | 2005

Antiproliferative effect of sildenafil on human pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells

Benedetta Tantini; Alessandra Manes; Emanuela Fiumana; Carla Pignatti; Carlo Guarnieri; Romano Zannoli; Angelo Branzi; Nazzareno Galiè

AbstractPulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is characterized by vasoconstriction and by obstructive changes of the pulmonary vasculature including smooth muscle cell proliferation which leads to medial hypertrophy and subsequent luminal narrowing. Sildenafil, an orally active inhibitor of cGMP phosphodiesterase–type–5, exerts pulmonary vasodilator activity in PAH patients. We evaluated the effects of sildenafil on growth of cultured human pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMC). The results indicate that sildenafil reduced DNA synthesis stimulated by PDGF and dose dependently inhibited PASMC proliferation. These effects were paralleled by a progressive increase in cGMP content, followed by an accumulation of cAMP. The treatment with 8–bromo–cGMP or dibutyryl–cAMP mimicked all the effects of sildenafil. On the other hand, treatment of PASMC with inhibitors of cGMP–dependent protein kinase (PKG) or cAMP–dependent protein kinase (PKA) reversed the antiproliferative effect of sildenafil. In addition, sildenafil inhibited the phosphorylation of ERK, a converging point for several pathways leading to cell proliferation. This effect was partially reduced by PKG inhibition and completely abolished by PKA inhibition.We conclude that sildenafil exerts an antiproliferative effect on human PASMC that is mediated by an interaction between the cGMP–PKG and the cAMP–PKA activated pathways, leading to inhibition of PDGF–mediated activation of the ERK.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 1989

Opioid receptors in rat cardiac sarcolemma: effect of phenylephrine and isoproterenol

Carlo Ventura; Luciana Bastagli; Pasquale Bernardi; Claudio M. Caldarera; Carlo Guarnieri

The present study demonstrates the presence of opioid receptors in the rat cardiac sarcolemma isolated by the hypotonic LiBr-shock procedure. Opioid binding was measured by using [3H]U69 593, [3H](2-D-penicillamine,5-D-penicillamine)enkephalin ([3H]DPDPE) or [3H][D-Ala2,MePhe4,Gly-(ol)5]enkephalin ([3H]DAGO) as selective radioligands for K, delta and mu opioid receptors, respectively. Both the K- and delta-selective ligands exhibited highly specific (75-86%) binding, saturable at a concentration of about 20 nM. No specific binding for the selective agonist DAGO was observed. A marked increase in both [3H]U69 593 and [3H]DPDPE binding was observed after incubation of the sarcolemma with the alpha-adrenoceptor agonist phenylephrine or with the beta-adrenoceptor agonist isoproterenol. These stimulatory effects were associated with an increase in the Bmax values, a decrease in the Kd values, and were completely antagonized by the respective antagonists phentolamine and propranolol.


Pharmacology | 1993

Effect of Trimetazidine on Mitochondrial Function and Oxidative Damage during Reperfusion of Ischemic Hypertrophied Rat Myocardium

Carlo Guarnieri; Claudio Muscari

The mitochondria harvested at the end of perfusion of control hearts and assayed for respiratory activity had a better function after ischemia and reperfusion following trimetazidine injection when glutamate was used as substrate. The protective effect of trimetazidine was enhanced when the mitochondria were isolated from hypertrophied perfused rat hearts. In fact the drug improved both the RCI and QO2 parameters with glutamate or succinate as substrates and raised the glutamate-induced QO2 value of mitochondria extracted from the hypertrophied heart perfused in aerobic conditions. In the aerobically perfused heart trimetazidine did not change either the levels of tissue malondialdehyde and lipofuscin, or the rate of mitochondrial O.2 generation while it reduced the O.2 formation and malondialdehyde content in the hypertrophied heart. After ischemia and reperfusion, the drug reproduced these protective effects in the hypertrophied hearts and reduced the level of tissue malondialdehyde in control hearts. The protective effect of trimetazidine against MDA formation was dose-dependent, being more evident at a higher dose (10 mumol/l). Preincubation of rat heart mitochondria with 0.1-10 mumol/l trimetazidine did not affect NADH oxidase, NADH dehydrogenase and NADH-cytochrome c reductase, succinate oxidase and cytochrome c oxidase activities. These results indicate that trimetazidine injected into isolated rat hearts protects against the damage induced on cardiac energetics and oxidative injuries by moderate ischemia and reperfusion stress, particularly in monocrotaline-induced hypertrophy in the rat heart. We suggest that trimetazidine reduces the formation of oxidative damage by preserving cardiac mitochondrial function.


Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2002

Green tea protection of hypoxia/reoxygenation injury in cultured cardiac cells

Alessandra Bordoni; S. Hrelia; Cristina Angeloni; Emanuele Giordano; Carlo Guarnieri; Claudio M. Caldarera; Pier Luigi Biagi

Antioxidant-rich diets exert a protective effect in diseases involving oxidative damage. Among dietary components, green tea is an excellent source of antioxidants. In this study, cultured neonatal rat cardiomyocytes were used to clarify the protective effect of a green tea extract on cell damage and lipid peroxidation induced by different periods of hypoxia followed by reoxigenation. Cultures of neonatal rat cardiomyocytes were exposed to 2--8 hr hypoxia, eventually followed by reoxygenation, in the absence or presence of alpha-tocopherol or green tea. LDH release and the production of conjugated diene lipids were measured, and appeared linearly related to the duration of hypoxia. During hypoxia, both LDH release and conjugated diene production were reduced by alpha-tocopherol and, in a dose dependent manner, by green tea, the 50 &mgr;g/ml being the most effective dose. Reoxygenation caused no further increase in LDH leakage, while it caused a significant increase in conjugate dienes, which absolute value was lower in antioxidant supplemented cells. Anyway, the ratio between conjugated diene production after hypoxia and after reoxygenation was similar in all groups, indicating that the severity of free radical-induced reoxygenation injury is proportional to the severity of previous hypoxic injury. Since hypoxic damage is reduced by alpha-tocopherol and green tea, our data suggest that any nutritional intervention to attenuate reoxygenation injury must be directed toward the attenuation of the hypoxic injury. Therefore, recommendations about a high dietary intake of antioxidants may be useful not only in the prevention, but also in the reduction of cardiac injury following ischemia.


FEBS Letters | 2003

H9c2 cardiac myoblasts undergo apoptosis in a model of ischemia consisting of serum deprivation and hypoxia: inhibition by PMA

Francesca Bonavita; Claudio Stefanelli; Emanuele Giordano; Marta Columbaro; A. Facchini; Francesca Bonafè; Claudio M. Caldarera; Carlo Guarnieri

Cardiac myocytes undergo apoptosis under condition of ischemia. Little is known, however, about the molecular pathways that mediate this response. We show that serum deprivation and hypoxia, components of ischemia in vivo, resulted in apoptosis of rat ventricular myoblast cells H9c2. Hypoxia alone did not induce significant apoptosis for at least 48 h, but largely increased the proapoptotic action of serum deprivation. H9c2 cells apoptosis is evidenced by an increase in terminal (TdT)‐mediated dUTP nick end‐labeling‐positive nuclei and by activation of caspases 3, 6, 7 and 9, and loss of mitochondrial functions. In this model of simulated ischemia, represented by serum deprivation plus hypoxia, cardiomyoblasts apoptosis was associated with a p53‐independent Bax accumulation and with a down‐regulation of Bcl‐xL, whereas the levels of cIAP‐1, cIAP‐2 and X‐IAP proteins did not change. Phorbol‐12‐myristate‐13‐acetate significantly reduced the induction of apoptosis, inhibiting caspase 3 cleavage, Bax accumulation, Bcl‐xL down‐regulation as well as restoring cell viability.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

Nitric oxide down-regulates brain-derived neurotrophic factor secretion in cultured hippocampal neurons

Marco Canossa; Emanuele Giordano; Silvia Cappello; Carlo Guarnieri; Sergio Ferri

The regulation of neurotrophin (NT) secretion is critical for many aspects of NT-mediated neuronal plasticity. Neurons release NTs by activity-regulated secretion pathways, initiated either by neurotransmitters and/or by existing NTs by a positive-feedback mechanism. This process depends on calcium release from intracellular stores. Little is known, however, about potential pathways that down-regulate NT secretion. Here we demonstrate that nitric oxide (NO) induces a rapid down-regulation of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) secretion in cultured hippocampal neurons. Similar effects occur by activating a downstream target of intracellular NO, the soluble guanylyl cyclase, or by increasing the levels of its product, cGMP. Furthermore, down-regulation of BDNF secretion is mediated by cGMP-activated protein kinase G, which prevents calcium release from inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate-sensitive stores. Our data indicate that the NO/cGMP/protein kinase G pathway represents a signaling mechanism by which neurons can rapidly down-regulate BDNF secretion and suggest that, in hippocampal neurons, NT secretion is finely tuned by both stimulatory and inhibitory signals.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 1991

Scavenger effect of sulfasalazine, 5-aminosalicylic acid, and olsalazine on superoxide radical generation

Paolo Gionchetti; Carlo Guarnieri; Massimo Campieri; Andrea Belluzzi; C. Brignola; P. Iannone; Mario Miglioli; L. Barbara

Thein vitro antioxidant capacity of sulfasalazine (SASP), its metabolites (SP, 5-SSA), and olsalazine (OAZ), was studied by evaluating their effects on superoxide (O2−•) production. Assay systems were the xanthine-xanthine oxidase (X/XOD) reaction and phorbol myristate acetate (PMA)-activated polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNs), using the cytochromec (cyt-c) reduction assay and a luminol-dependent chemiluminescence method. 5-ASA, SASP, and OAZ showed a dose-dependent scavenger effect in both O2−• generating systems, 5-ASA being the most powerful (>50% of inhibition in the PMNs system and >70% in the X/XOD system at 10 μM concentration). SP had an inhibitory effect only in the PMNs system but did not modify the activity of xanthine oxidase, thus excluding a scavenger action. These data suggest that the scavenger effect of 5-ASA, SASP, and OAZ may be an important mechanism of action.


Biochemical Journal | 2000

Polyamines directly induce release of cytochrome c from heart mitochondria

Claudio Stefanelli; Ivana Stanic; Maddalena Zini; Francesca Bonavita; Flavio Flamigni; Laura Zambonin; Laura Landi; Carla Pignatti; Carlo Guarnieri; Claudio M. Caldarera

Cytochrome c release from mitochondria to the cytosol represents a critical step in apoptosis, correlated to the activation of the caspase cascade. In this report, we show that addition of micromolar concentrations of polyamines to isolated rat heart mitochondria induces the release of cytochrome c. Spermine, which is effective at concentrations of 10-100 microM, is more potent than spermidine, whereas putrescine has no effect up to 1 mM. The release of cytochrome c caused by spermine is a rapid, saturable and selective process that is independent of mitochondria damage. Spermine, unlike polylysine, is able to release a discrete amount of cytochrome c from intact, functional mitochondria. The cytochrome c-releasing power of spermine is not affected by cyclosporin A, differently from the effect of permeability transition inducers. In a cardiac cell-free model of apoptosis, the latent caspase activity of cytosolic extracts from cardiomyocytes could be activated by cytochrome c released from spermine-treated heart mitochondria. These data indicate a novel mechanism of cytochrome c release from the mitochondrion, and suggest that prolonged and sustained elevation of polyamines, characteristic of some pathologies such as heart hypertrophy, could be involved in the development of apoptosis.

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