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Featured researches published by Concetta Tuccillo.


International Journal of Cancer | 2007

Chronic inflammation and oxidative stress in human carcinogenesis

Alessandro Federico; Floriana Morgillo; Concetta Tuccillo; Fortunato Ciardiello; Carmela Loguercio

A wide array of chronic inflammatory conditions predispose susceptible cells to neoplastic transformation. In general, the longer the inflammation persists, the higher the risk of cancer. A mutated cell is a sine qua non for carcinogenesis. Inflammatory processes may induce DNA mutations in cells via oxidative/nitrosative stress. This condition occurs when the generation of free radicals and active intermediates in a system exceeds the systems ability to neutralize and eliminate them. Inflammatory cells and cancer cells themselves produce free radicals and soluble mediators such as metabolites of arachidonic acid, cytokines and chemokines, which act by further producing reactive species. These, in turn, strongly recruit inflammatory cells in a vicious circle. Reactive intermediates of oxygen and nitrogen may directly oxidize DNA, or may interfere with mechanisms of DNA repair. These reactive substances may also rapidly react with proteins, carbohydrates and lipids, and the derivative products may induce a high perturbation in the intracellular and intercellular homeostasis, until DNA mutation. The main substances that link inflammation to cancer via oxidative/nitrosative stress are prostaglandins and cytokines. The effectors are represented by an imbalance between pro‐oxidant and antioxidant enzyme activities (lipoxygenase, cyclooxygenase and phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione‐peroxidase), hydroperoxides and lipoperoxides, aldehydes and peroxinitrite. This review focalizes some of these intricate events by discussing the relationships occurring among oxidative/nitrosative/metabolic stress, inflammation and cancer.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

Helicobacter pylori Up-regulates Cyclooxygenase-2 mRNA Expression and Prostaglandin E2 Synthesis in MKN 28 Gastric Mucosal Cells in Vitro

Marco Romano; Vittorio Ricci; Annamaria Memoli; Concetta Tuccillo; Anna Di Popolo; Patrizia Sommi; Angela M. Acquaviva; Camillo Del Vecchio Blanco; Carmelo B. Bruni; Raffaele Zarrilli

Helicobacter pylori has been suggested to play a role in the development of gastric carcinoma in humans. Also, mounting evidence indicates that cyclooxygenase-2 overexpression is associated with gastrointestinal carcinogenesis. We studied the effect of H. pylori on the expression and activity of cyclooxygenase-1 and cyclooxygenase-2 in MKN 28 gastric mucosal cells. H. pylori did not affect cyclooxygenase-1 expression, whereas cyclooxygenase-2 mRNA levels increased by 5-fold at 24 h after incubation of MKN 28 cells with broth culture filtrates or bacterial suspensions from wild-type H. pyloristrain. Also, H. pylori caused a 3-fold increase in the release of prostaglandin E2, the main product of cyclooxygenase activity. This effect was specifically related toH. pylori because it was not observed withEscherichia coli and was independent of VacA, CagA, or ammonia. H. pylori isogenic mutants specifically lackingpicA or picB, which are responsible for cytokine production by gastric cells, were less effective in the up-regulation of cyclooxygenase-2 mRNA expression and in the stimulation of prostaglandin E2 release compared with the parental wild-type strain. This study suggests that development of gastric carcinoma associated with H. pylori infection may depend on the activation of cyclooxygenase-2-related events.


Gut | 2005

Apple polyphenol extracts prevent damage to human gastric epithelial cells in vitro and to rat gastric mucosa in vivo

Giulia Graziani; Giuseppe D’Argenio; Concetta Tuccillo; C. Loguercio; A. Ritieni; F. Morisco; C. Del Vecchio Blanco; Vincenzo Fogliano; Marco Romano

Background: Fresh fruit and vegetables exert multiple biological effects on the gastrointestinal mucosa. Aim: To assess whether apple extracts counteract oxidative or indomethacin induced damage to gastric epithelial cells in vitro and to rat gastric mucosa in vivo. Methods: Apple extracts were obtained from freeze dried apple flesh of the “Annurca” variety. Cell damage was induced by incubating MKN 28 cells with xanthine-xanthine oxidase or indomethacin and quantitated by MTT. In vivo gastric damage was induced by indomethacin 35 mg/kg. Intracellular antioxidant activity was determined using the (2,2′-azinobis (3-ethylbenzothiazolin-6-sulfonate) method. Malondialdehyde intracellular concentration, an index of lipid peroxidation, was determined by high pressure liquid chromatography with fluorometric detection. Results: (1) Apple extracts decreased xanthine-xanthine oxidase or indomethacin induced injury to gastric epithelial cells by 50%; (2) catechin or chlorogenic acid (the main phenolic components of apple extracts) were equally effective as apple extracts in preventing oxidative injury to gastric cells; and (3) apple extracts (i) caused a fourfold increase in intracellular antioxidant activity, (ii) prevented its decrease induced by xanthine-xanthine oxidase, (iii) counteracted xanthine-xanthine oxidase induced lipid peroxidation, and (iv) decreased indomethacin injury to the rat gastric mucosa by 40%. Conclusions: Apple extracts prevent exogenous damage to human gastric epithelial cells in vitro and to the rat gastric mucosa in vivo. This effect seems to be associated with the antioxidant activity of apple phenolic compounds. A diet rich in apple antioxidants might exert a beneficial effect in the prevention of gastric diseases related to generation of reactive oxygen species.


Journal of Hepatology | 2001

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease in an area of southern Italy: main clinical, histological, and pathophysiological aspects

Carmela Loguercio; Vincenzo De Girolamo; Ilario de Sio; Concetta Tuccillo; Antonio Ascione; Feliciano Baldi; Gabriele Budillon; Lucia Cimino; Antonio Di Carlo; Maria Marino; F. Morisco; F.P. Picciotto; Luigi Terracciano; Raffaella Vecchione; Veronica Verde; Camillo Del Vecchio Blanco

BACKGROUND/AIMS Studies on non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) have included chronic liver damage attributed to various causes. Our investigation was held to observe the main clinical, histological, and pathophysiological aspects of NAFLD in patients not exposed to any known cause of chronic liver disease. METHODS We evaluated, in 84 in-patients (male/female, 66/18; median age, 36 years), the clinical and biochemical characteristics of NAFLD, and particularly its association with diabetes, dyslipidemia, hyperinsulinemia and/or with the increase of parameters of oxidative stress (blood levels of malonyldialdehyde, 4-hydroxynonenal and total plasma antioxidant capacity). RESULTS Ninety percent of patients had an increased body mass index (BMI), 35% had dyslipidemia, 40% had sub-clinical diabetes (only 3% had overt diabetes), 60% had hyperinsulinemia, and more than 90% had enhanced levels of lipid peroxidation markers. In 48 patients who had consented to liver biopsy, we found: 14 with simple steatosis, 32 with steatohepatitis, and two with cirrhosis. CONCLUSIONS Our data indicate that in our country, NAFLD may occur in young males with an increased BMI, with or without hyperinsulinemia, dyslipidemia and diabetes, generally associated with disorders of redox status, and that it may be differentiated from steatosis to steatohepatitis or cirrhosis only with a liver biopsy.


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2012

Silybin combined with phosphatidylcholine and vitamin E in patients with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: A randomized controlled trial

Carmela Loguercio; Pietro Andreone; Ciprian Brisc; Michaela Cristina Brisc; Elisabetta Bugianesi; M. Chiaramonte; C. Cursaro; Mirela Danila; Ilario de Sio; Annarosa Floreani; Maria Antonietta Freni; Antonio Grieco; Marzia Groppo; Roberta Delasta Lazzari; S. Lobello; E. Lorefice; Marzia Margotti; Luca Miele; Stefano Milani; L. Okolicsanyi; Giuseppe Palasciano; Piero Portincasa; P. Saltarelli; Antonina Smedile; Francesco Somalvico; Aldo Spadaro; Ioan Sporea; Paolo Sorrentino; Raffaela Vecchione; Concetta Tuccillo

The only currently recommended treatment for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is lifestyle modification. Preliminary studies of silybin showed beneficial effects on liver function. Realsil (RA) comprises the silybin phytosome complex (silybin plus phosphatidylcholine) coformulated with vitamin E. We report on a multicenter, phase III, double-blind clinical trial to assess RA in patients with histologically documented NAFLD. Patients were randomized 1:1 to RA or placebo (P) orally twice daily for 12 months. Prespecified primary outcomes were improvement over time in clinical condition, normalization of liver enzyme plasma levels, and improvement of ultrasonographic liver steatosis, homeostatic model assessment (HOMA), and quality of life. Secondary outcomes were improvement in liver histologic score and/or decrease in NAFLD score without worsening of fibrosis and plasma changes in cytokines, ferritin, and liver fibrosis markers. We treated 179 patients with NAFLD; 36 were also HCV positive. Forty-one patients were prematurely withdrawn and 138 patients analyzed per protocol (69 per group). Baseline patient characteristics were generally well balanced between groups, except for steatosis, portal infiltration, and fibrosis. Adverse events (AEs) were generally transient and included diarrhea, dysgeusia, and pruritus; no serious AEs were recorded. Patients receiving RA but not P showed significant improvements in liver enzyme plasma levels, HOMA, and liver histology. Body mass index normalized in 15% of RA patients (2.1% with P). HCV-positive patients in the RA but not the P group showed improvements in fibrogenesis markers. This is the first study to systematically assess silybin in NAFLD patients. Treatment with RA but not P for 12 months was associated with improvement in liver enzymes, insulin resistance, and liver histology, without increases in body weight. These findings warrant further investigation.


The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2002

Gut-liver axis: a new point of attack to treat chronic liver damage?

Carmela Loguercio; Teresa De Simone; Alessandro Federico; F. Terracciano; Concetta Tuccillo; Mauro Di Chicco; Maria Cartenì; Camillo Del Vecchio Blanco

excision without further waiting for repeat endoscopy and “blind” tissue biopsy. Figure 1 shows a midtransverse lesion (Japanese Research Society Classification Isp) that was treated with EMR (8) after exclusion of a submucosally invasive type V pit pattern within an area of central depression. HRMC postresection demonstrated residual tissue with a type IIIs pit pattern. The resection margin was subsequently extended using a second lateralized submucosal saline “lift.” Resection margins at this point were then reassessed after a second dye spray with 0.5% indigo carmine. After this, a mucosal toilet with normal saline was applied with subsequent mucolysis using 5 mL of acetylcystine (2 mg/mL) and localized application of crystal violet (0.05%) using a steel tipped catheter (Olympus 111019, Tokyo, Japan) around the remaining circumferential border. Type I pit was evident, indicative of complete resection margins. Histological examination confirmed the complete excision of colonic adenocarcinoma, with clear vertical and horizontal margins. Further studies assessing the efficacy of this technique in a large prospective cohort are required.


Oncogene | 2000

IGF-II/IGF-I receptor pathway up-regulates COX-2 mRNA expression and PGE2 synthesis in Caco-2 human colon carcinoma cells

Anna Di Popolo; Annamaria Memoli; Anna Apicella; Concetta Tuccillo; Antonella di Palma; Paolo Ricchi; Angela Maria Acquaviva; Raffaele Zarrilli

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs reduce the risk of colon cancer and this effect is mediated in part through inhibition of type 2 prostaglandin endoperoxide synthase/cyclo-oxygenase (COX-2). In the present study, we demonstrate that COX-2 expression and PGE2 synthesis are up-regulated by an IGF-II/IGF-I receptor autocrine pathway in Caco-2 colon carcinoma cells. COX-2 mRNA and PGE2 levels are higher in proliferating cells compared with post-confluent differentiated cells and in cells that constitutively overexpress IGF-II. Up-regulation of COX-2 expression by IGF-II is mediated through activation of IGF-I receptor because: (i) treatment of Caco-2 cells with a blocking antibody to the IGF-I receptor inhibits COX-2 mRNA expression; (ii) transfection of Caco-2 cells with a dominant negative IGF-I receptor reduces COX-2 expression and activity. Also, the blockade of the PI3-kinase, that mediates the proliferative effect of IGF-I receptor in Caco-2 cells, inhibits IGF-II-dependent COX-2 up-regulation and PGE2 synthesis. Moreover, COX-2 expression and activity inversely correlate with the increase of apoptosis in parental, IGF-II and dominant-negative IGF-I receptor transfected cells. This study suggests that induction of proliferation and tumor progression of colon cancer cells by the IGF-II/IGF-I receptor pathway may depend on the activation of COX-2-related events.


Digestive and Liver Disease | 2011

Gut microbiota and probiotics in chronic liver diseases

Claudia Cesaro; Angelo Tiso; Anna Del Prete; Rita Cariello; Concetta Tuccillo; Gaetano Cotticelli; Camillo Del Vecchio Blanco; C. Loguercio

There is a strong relationship between liver and gut: the portal system receives blood from the gut, and intestinal blood content activates liver functions. The liver, in turn, affects intestinal functions through bile secretion into the intestinal lumen. Alterations of intestinal microbiota seem to play an important role in induction and promotion of liver damage progression, in addition to direct injury resulting from different causal agents. Bacterial overgrowth, immune dysfunction, alteration of the luminal factors, and altered intestinal permeability are all involved in the pathogenesis of complications of liver cirrhosis, such as infections, hepatic encephalopathy, spontaneous bacterial peritonitis, and renal failure. Probiotics have been suggested as a useful integrative treatment of different types of chronic liver damage, for their ability to augment intestinal barrier function and prevent bacterial translocation. This review summarizes the main literature findings about the relationships between gut microbiota and chronic liver disease, both in the pathogenesis and in the treatment by probiotics of the liver damage.


Digestive Diseases and Sciences | 2007

The effect of a silybin-vitamin e-phospholipid complex on nonalcoholic fatty liver disease: a pilot study.

Carmela Loguercio; Alessandro Federico; Marco Trappoliere; Concetta Tuccillo; Ilario de Sio; Agnese Di Leva; Marco Niosi; Mauro Valeriano D’Auria; Rita Capasso; Camillo Del Vecchio Blanco

Oxidative stress leads to chronic liver damage. Silybin has been conjugated with vitamin E and phospholipids to improve its antioxidant activity. Eighty-five patients were divided into 2 groups: those affected by nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (group A) and those with HCV-related chronic hepatitis associated with nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (group B), nonresponders to treatment. The treatment consisted of silybin/vitamin E/phospholipids. After treatment, group A showed a significant reduction in ultrasonographic scores for liver steatosis. Liver enzyme levels, hyperinsulinemia, and indexes of liver fibrosis showed an improvement in treated individuals. A significant correlation among indexes of fibrosis, body mass index, insulinemia, plasma levels of transforming growth factor-β, tumor necrosis factor-α, degree of steatosis, and γ-glutamyl transpeptidase was observed. Our data suggest that silybin conjugated with vitamin E and phospholipids could be used as a complementary approach to the treatment of patients with chronic liver damage.


Hormone Research in Paediatrics | 1995

Longitudinal Study of Antibodies against Thyroid in Patients Undergoing Interferon-α Therapy for HCV Chronic Hepatitis

Carlo Carella; Giovanni Amato; Bernadette Biondi; Mario Rotondi; F. Morisco; Concetta Tuccillo; Nicola Chiuchiolo; Giuseppe Signoriello; N. Caporaso; Gaetano Lombardi

Seventy-five patients (50 M, 25 F), affected by chronic hepatitis caused by hepatitis C virus (HCV), without clinically overt thyroid disease, underwent r-interferon (IFN)-alpha-2a treatment (3-6 MU, 3 times/week) for 12 months. They were tested for thyroid function and for thyroid autoantibodies before (A), 6 (B) and 12 (C) months after the beginning of treatment and after 6 (D) months off therapy. Antithyroglobulin antibodies (Tg-Ab) and TSH were measured by IRMA, antiperoxidase antibodies (TPO-Ab), free T3 (FT3) and free T4 (FT4) by RIA, thyrotropin receptor antibodies (TR-Ab) by RRA. None of the patients showed TR-Ab positivity throughout the study. The number of the patients with one or both antithyroid antibodies progressively increased during treatment (A 10.7%; B 26.7%; C 45.3%) and decreased when off therapy (D 22.7%) with none of them positive for Tg-Ab alone (TPO-Ab 6.7%; Tg-Ab+TPO-Ab 16%). Tg-Ab increased during rIFN (median: A 29.0; B 35.0; C 73.0 U/ml) but decreased when off therapy (D 29.0 U/ml). Instead, TPO-Ab significantly increased throughout the study (A 1.0; B 3.0; C 6.0; D 7.0 U/ml). However, some patients showed for the first time an appearance of antibodies when off therapy. Five patients showed both antibodies and thyroid dysfunction: 2 at B, 2 at C, and 1 at D. Only 1 developed mild transient hyperthyroidism while the other 4 developed hypothyroidism, persistent however only in 1 case. Our study confirms that rIFN-alpha-2a frequently induces thyroid autoimmunity. TPO-Ab seems more useful than Tg-Ab in monitoring the immunological response.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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N. Caporaso

University of Naples Federico II

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Marco Romano

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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F. Morisco

University of Naples Federico II

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C. Loguercio

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Alessandro Federico

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Carmela Loguercio

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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A.G. Gravina

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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C. Del Vecchio Blanco

University of Naples Federico II

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A. Federico

University of Naples Federico II

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Camillo Del Vecchio Blanco

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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