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Dive into the research topics where Carmela Coccaro is active.

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Featured researches published by Carmela Coccaro.


Biochemical and Biophysical Research Communications | 2011

Aurora-C interacts with and phosphorylates the transforming acidic coiled-coil 1 protein.

Jean Charles Gabillard; Salvatore Ulisse; Enke Baldini; Salvatore Sorrenti; Jean Yves Cremet; Carmela Coccaro; Claude Prigent; Massimino D'Armiento; Yannick Arlot-Bonnemains

Aurora-C, a member of the Aurora kinase family, is implicated in the regulation of mitosis. In contrast to Aurora-A and Aurora-B its cellular localization and functions are poorly characterized. TACC1 protein belongs to the transforming acidic coiled-coil family shown to interact with the Aurora kinases. In the present study we analyzed the interaction between Aurora-C and TACC1 by means of immunofluorescence (IF), co-immunoprecipitation (IP) and in vitro phosphorylation experiments. We demonstrated that Aurora-C and TACC1 proteins co-localize to the midbody of HeLa cells during cytokinesis. Immunoprecipitated TACC1 from HeLa cell extracts was associated with Aurora-C. In addition, the interaction of the two proteins was tested by analyzing the phosphorylation of TACC1 in vitro. The results demonstrated that TACC1 is phosphorylated by Aurora-C on a serine at position 228. In conclusion, the study demonstrated that TACC1 localizes at the midbody during cytokinesis and interacts with and is a substrate of Aurora-C, which warrant further investigation in order to elucidate the functional significance of this interaction.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Deregulated expression of aurora kinases is not a prognostic biomarker in papillary thyroid cancer patients

Enke Baldini; Chiara Tuccilli; Natalie Prinzi; Salvatore Sorrenti; Falvo L; Corrado De Vito; Antonio Catania; Francesco Tartaglia; Renzo Mocini; Carmela Coccaro; Stefania Alessandrini; Susi Barollo; Caterina Mian; Alessandro Antonelli; Enrico De Antoni; Massimino D’Armiento; Salvatore Ulisse

A number of reports indicated that Aurora-A or Aurora-B overexpression represented a negative prognostic factor in several human malignancies. In thyroid cancer tissues a deregulated expression of Aurora kinases has been also demonstrated, butno information regarding its possible prognostic role in differentiated thyroid cancer is available. Here, weevaluated Aurora-A and Aurora-B mRNA expression and its prognostic relevance in a series of 87 papillary thyroid cancers (PTC), with a median follow-up of 63 months. The analysis of Aurora-A and Aurora-B mRNA levels in PTC tissues, compared to normal matched tissues, revealed that their expression was either up- or down-regulatedin the majority of cancer tissues. In particular, Aurora-A and Aurora-B mRNA levels were altered, respectively, in 55 (63.2%) and 79 (90.8%) out of the 87 PTC analyzed.A significant positive correlation between Aurora-A and Aurora-B mRNAswas observed (p=0.001). The expression of both Aurora genes was not affected by the BRAFV600E mutation. Univariate, multivariate and Kaplan-Mayer analyses documented the lack of association between Aurora-A or Aurora-B expression and clinicopathological parameterssuch as gender, age, tumor size, histology, TNM stage, lymph node metastasis and BRAF status as well asdisease recurrences or disease-free interval. Only Aurora-B mRNA was significantly higher in T(3-4) tissues, with respect to T(1-2) PTC tissues. The data reported here demonstrate that the expression of Aurora kinases is deregulated in the majority of PTC tissues, likely contributing to PTC progression. However, differently from other human solid cancers, detection of Aurora-A or Aurora-B mRNAs is not a prognostic biomarker inPTC patients.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Association of Thyroid Diseases with Primary Extra-Thyroidal Malignancies in Women: Results of a Cross-Sectional Study of 6,386 Patients

Natalie Prinzi; Salvatore Sorrenti; Enke Baldini; Corrado De Vito; Chiara Tuccilli; Antonio Catania; Carmela Coccaro; Marta Bianchini; Angela Nesca; Giorgio Grani; Renzo Mocini; Enrico De Antoni; Massimino D’Armiento; Salvatore Ulisse

We here analyzed the prevalence of extra-thyroidal malignancies (EM) in 6,386 female patients affected by different thyroid disease (TD). At first, an age-matched analysis of EM in all patients was performed. We then evaluated EM prevalence in four TD diagnostic categories: non-nodular TD (n = 2,159); solitary nodule (n = 905); multinodular TD (n = 2,871); differentiated thyroid cancers (n = 451). Finally, patients were grouped based on the absence (n = 3,820) or presence of anti-thyroglobulin (TgAb) and/or anti-thyroperoxidase (TPOAb) (n = 2,369), or anti-Thyroid Stmulating Hormone (TSH) receptor autoantibodies (n = 197). A total of 673 EM were recorded. EM prevalence in TD patients was higher compared to the general population (Odds Ratio, OR 3.21) and the most frequent EM was breast cancer (OR 3.94), followed by colorectal (OR 2.18), melanoma (OR 6.71), hematological (OR 8.57), uterus (OR 2.52), kidney (OR 3.40) and ovary (OR 2.62) neoplasms. Age-matched analysis demonstrated that the risk of EM was maximal at age 0–44 yr (OR 11.28), remaining lower, but significantly higher that in the general population, in the 45–59 and 60–74 year age range. Breast and hematological malignancies showed an increased OR in all TD, while other cancers associated with specific TD. An increased OR for melanoma, breast and hematological malignancies was observed in both TPOAb and/or TgAb autoantibody negative and positive patients, while colorectal, uterus, kidney and ovary cancers showed an increased OR only in thyroid autoantibody negative patients. In conclusions, women affected by both benign and malignant TD, especially at a younger age and in absence of thyroid autoimmunity, have an increased risk of developing primary EM, thus requiring a careful follow-up and surveillance.


Medicine | 2015

Grey-Scale Analysis Improves the Ultrasonographic Evaluation of Thyroid Nodules.

Giorgio Grani; Mimma D’Alessandri; Giovanni Carbotta; Angela Nesca; Marianna Del Sordo; Stefania Alessandrini; Carmela Coccaro; Roberta Rendina; Marta Bianchini; Natalie Prinzi; Angela Fumarola

AbstractUltrasonography is the main imaging method for the workup of thyroid nodules. However, interobserver agreement reported for echogenicity and echotexture is quite low. The aim of this study was to perform quantitative measurements of the degree of echogenicity and heterogeneity of thyroid nodules, to develop an objective and reproducible method to stratify these features to predict malignancy.A retrospective study of patients undergoing ultrasonography-guided fine-needle aspiration was performed in an University hospital thyroid center. From January 2010 to October 2012, 839 consecutive patients (908 nodules) underwent US-guided fine-needle aspiration. In a single ultrasound image, 3 regions of interest (ROIs) were drawn: the first including the nodule; the second including a portion of the adjacent thyroid parenchyma; the third, the strap muscle. Histogram analysis was performed, expressing the median, mean, and SD of the gray levels of the pixels comprising each region. Echogenicity was expressed as a ratio: the nodule/parenchyma, the nodule/muscle, and parenchyma/muscle median gray ratios were calculated. The heterogeneity index (HI) was calculated as the coefficient of variation of gray histogram for each of the 3 ROIs. Cytology and histology reports were recorded.Nodule/parenchyma median gray ratio was significantly lower (more hypoechoic) in nodules found to be malignant (0.45 vs 0.61; P = 0.002) and can be used as a continuous measure of hypoechogenicity (odds ratio [OR] 0.12; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.03–0.49). Using a cutoff derived from ROC curve analysis (<0.46), it showed a substantial inter-rater agreement (k = 0.74), sensitivity of 56.7% (95% CI 37.4–74.5%), specificity of 72.0% (67.8–75.9%), positive likelihood ratio (LR) of 2.023 (1.434–2.852), and negative LR of 0.602 (0.398–0.910) in predicting malignancy (diagnostic odds ratio 3.36; 1.59–7.10). Parenchymal HI was associated with anti-thyroperoxidase positivity (OR 19.69; 3.69–105.23). The nodule HI was significantly higher in malignant nodules (0.73 vs 0.63; P = 0.03) and, if above the 0.60 cutoff, showed sensitivity of 76.7% (57.7–90.1%), specificity of 46.8% (42.3–51.4%), positive LR of 1.442 (1.164–1.786), and negative LR of 0.498 (0.259–0.960).Evaluation of nodule echogenicity and echotexture according to a numerical estimate (nodule/parenchyma median gray ratio and nodule HI) allows for an objective stratification of nodule echogenicity and internal structure.


Asian Pacific Journal of Cancer Prevention | 2015

Thyroid autoantibodies and breast cancer

Natalie Prinzi; Enke Baldini; Salvatore Sorrenti; Corrado De Vito; Chiara Tuccilli; Antonio Catania; Sabino Carbotta; Renzo Mocini; Carmela Coccaro; Angela Nesca; Marta Bianchini; Enrico De Antoni; Massimino D'Armiento; Salvatore Ulisse

We read with great interest the recent article by Shi and colleagues (2014) reporting a meta-analysis on the relationship between thyroid hormones, thyroid autoantibodies and breast cancer. In the paper, the authors analyzed eight different cross-sectional studies, which included more than 4000 participants, and concluded that serum levels of free-triiodothyronine, thyroperoxidase and thyroglobulin autoantibodies are higher in patients affected by breast cancer, compared with the control group. These findings are well in agreement with the meta-analysis reported by Hardefeldt and colleagues, showing an increased risk of breast cancer in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease, and with a recent article by our group in which the prevalence of breast cancer in 3921 female patients affected by both benign and malignant thyroid diseases was evaluated (Hardefeldt et al., 2012; Prinzi et al., 2014). In the latter, we showed that the prevalence of breast cancer in patients affected by thyroid disease, as a whole, was significantly higher, compared to the general population (OR 3.3). Moreover, the agematched analysis showed that the risk of breast cancer was higher in younger patients (0–44 yr, OR 15.2), to decline with the increasing age. In the same study, when patients were dichotomized based on the presence or the absence of thyroglobulin and/or thyroperoxidase autoantibodies, both groups showed a higher risk of breast cancer, compared to the general female population. When the two groups were compared to each other, however, the risk of breast cancer was significantly lower in autoantibody positive patients. Thus, as clearly stated in our article, among patients affected by thyroid diseases, the presence of thyroid autoantibodies may have a protective role against breast cancer (Prinzi et al., 2014). As a consequence, the sentence reported by Shi and colleagues in the Discussion section of their article stating that their findings are in disagreement with our data is not correct and should be, if at all possible, amended.


Journal of clinical & translational endocrinology | 2016

Severe hypoglycemia in patients with known diabetes requiring emergency department care: A report from an Italian multicenter study

Alessandro Mantovani; Giorgio Grani; Giuseppe Vancieri; Ilaria Giordani; Roberta Rendina; Maria Elena Rinaldi; Aikaterini Andreadi; Carmela Coccaro; Chiara Boccardo; Costanza Fraenza; Giuliano Bertazzoni; Alfonso Bellia; Giacomo Zoppini; Giovanni Targher; Marco Giorgio Baroni; Davide Lauro; Massimino D'Armiento; Enzo Bonora

Highlights • Patients were frail and had a high prevalence of serious comorbidities.• Insulin treatment was the most important cause of severe hypoglycemia.• Among oral drugs, glibenclamide and repaglinide were the main used.• The rate of all-cause mortality was similar with that reported in other studies.• Liver and kidney diseases were the main predictors of hospitalization.


Breast Cancer Research and Treatment | 2014

Prevalence of breast cancer in thyroid diseases: results of a cross-sectional study of 3,921 patients

Natalie Prinzi; Enke Baldini; Salvatore Sorrenti; Corrado De Vito; Chiara Tuccilli; Antonio Catania; Sabino Carbotta; Renzo Mocini; Carmela Coccaro; Angela Nesca; Marta Bianchini; Enrico De Antoni; Massimino D’Armiento; Salvatore Ulisse


International Journal of Surgery | 2014

Emerging molecular markers for the prognosis of differentiated thyroid cancer patients.

Enke Baldini; Salvatore Sorrenti; Chiara Tuccilli; Natalie Prinzi; Carmela Coccaro; Antonio Catania; Angelo Filippini; Marco Bononi; Enrico De Antoni; Massimino D'Armiento; Salvatore Ulisse


Endocrine | 2016

Preclinical testing of selective Aurora kinase inhibitors on a medullary thyroid carcinoma-derived cell line

Chiara Tuccilli; Enke Baldini; Natalie Prinzi; Stefania Morrone; Salvatore Sorrenti; Angelo Filippini; Antonio Catania; Stefania Alessandrini; Roberta Rendina; Carmela Coccaro; Massimino D’Armiento; Salvatore Ulisse


Nutrition | 2016

Consumption of iodized salt may not represent a reliable indicator of iodine adequacy: Evidence from a cross-sectional study on schoolchildren living in an urban area of central Italy

Carmela Coccaro; Chiara Tuccilli; Natalie Prinzi; Eleonora D'Armiento; Mario Pepe; Francesca Del Maestro; Giovanni Cacciola; Benedetto Forlini; Sergio Verdolotti; Marco Bononi; Remo Nacca; Enke Baldini; Giovanni Cirillo; Salvatore Ulisse

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Natalie Prinzi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Salvatore Ulisse

Sapienza University of Rome

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Enke Baldini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Salvatore Sorrenti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Chiara Tuccilli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Antonio Catania

Sapienza University of Rome

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Enrico De Antoni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Renzo Mocini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Angela Nesca

Sapienza University of Rome

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