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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Fantini is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Fantini.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Platelet-rich plasma and skeletal muscle healing: a molecular analysis of the early phases of the regeneration process in an experimental animal model.

Ivan Dimauro; Loredana Grasso; Simona Fittipaldi; Cristina Fantini; Neri Mercatelli; Silvia Racca; Stefano Geuna; Alessia Di Gianfrancesco; Daniela Caporossi; Fabio Pigozzi; Paolo Borrione

Platelet-rich plasma (PRP) has received increasing interest in applied medicine, being widely used in clinical practice with the aim of stimulating tissue healing. Despite the reported clinical success, there is still a lack of knowledge when considering the biological mechanisms at the base of the activity of PRP during the process of muscle healing. The aim of the present study was to verify whether the local delivery of PRP modulates specific molecular events involved in the early stages of the muscle regeneration process. The right flexor sublimis muscle of anesthetized Wistar rats was mechanically injured and either treated with PRP or received no treatment. At day 2 and 5 after surgery, the animals were sacrificed and the muscle samples evaluated at molecular levels. PRP treatment increased significantly the mRNA level of the pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-1β, and TGF-β1. This phenomenon induced an increased expression at mRNA and/or protein levels of several myogenic regulatory factors such as MyoD1, Myf5 and Pax7, as well as the muscular isoform of insulin-like growth factor1 (IGF-1Eb). No effect was detected with respect to VEGF-A expression. In addition, PRP application modulated the expression of miR-133a together with its known target serum response factor (SRF); increased the phosphorylation of αB-cristallin, with a significant improvement in several apoptotic parameters (NF-κB-p65 and caspase 3), indexes of augmented cell survival. The results of the present study indicates that the effect of PRP in skeletal muscle injury repair is due both to the modulation of the molecular mediators of the inflammatory and myogenic pathways, and to the control of secondary pathways such as those regulated by myomiRNAs and heat shock proteins, which contribute to proper and effective tissue regeneration.


Redox biology | 2016

Resistance training and redox homeostasis: Correlation with age-associated genomic changes

Ivan Dimauro; Mattia Scalabrin; Cristina Fantini; Elisa Grazioli; Maria Reyes Beltran Valls; Neri Mercatelli; Attilio Parisi; Stefania Sabatini; Luigi Di Luigi; Daniela Caporossi

Regular physical activity is effective as prevention and treatment for different chronic conditions related to the ageing processes. In fact, a sedentary lifestyle has been linked to a worsening of cellular ageing biomarkers such as telomere length (TL) and/or specific epigenetic changes (e.g. DNA methylation), with increase of the propensity to aging-related diseases and premature death. Extending our previous findings, we aimed to test the hypothesis that 12 weeks of low frequency, moderate intensity, explosive-type resistance training (EMRT) may attenuate age-associated genomic changes. To this aim, TL, global DNA methylation, TRF2, Ku80, SIRT1, SIRT2 and global protein acetylation, as well as other proteins involved in apoptotic pathway (Bcl-2, Bax and Caspase-3), antioxidant response (TrxR1 and MnSOD) and oxidative damage (myeloperoxidase) were evaluated before and after EMRT in whole blood or peripheral mononuclear cells (PBMCs) of elderly subjects. Our findings confirm the potential of EMRT to induce an adaptive change in the antioxidant protein systems at systemic level and suggest a putative role of resistance training in the reduction of global DNA methylation. Moreover, we observed that EMRT counteracts the telomeres’ shortening in a manner that proved to be directly correlated with the amelioration of redox homeostasis and efficacy of training regime, evaluated as improvement of both muscles power/strength and functional parameters.


Mutation Research-genetic Toxicology and Environmental Mutagenesis | 1998

Sister chromatid exchanges and DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors: effect of low concentrations of etoposide (VP-16) in ataxia telangiectasia lymphoblastoid cell lines

Cristina Fantini; Patrizia Vernole; Bruna Tedeschi; Daniela Caporossi

The correlation between etoposide (VP-16) cytotoxicity and the induction of sister chromatid exchanges (SCEs) suggested that the promotion of DNA recombination events may be crucial for the activity of antitopoisomerase drugs. To further evaluate this hypothesis, we investigated the correlation between VP-16 induction of SCEs, chromosomal aberrations and cell cycle alterations in lymphoblastoid cell lines derived from patients affected by ataxia telangiectasia (AT), whose cells are known as hypersensitive to the cytotoxic and clastogenic activity of DNA topoisomerase II inhibitors. Our present study has shown that AT homozygous and heterozygous cell lines exposed to low VP-16 concentrations, although hypersensitive to the induction of chromosomal aberrations, exhibit an induction of SCEs comparable to that found in normal cell lines. Moreover, while the clastogenic effect of the drug was directly correlated to the reduction of the mitotic index, the enhancement of SCE frequencies, obtained over the same range of VP-16 concentrations, was not paralleled by a modification of proliferation index. Thus, these results suggest that etoposide retains in AT cells a strong clastogenic and cytostatic activity which is independent from DNA recombination events and which may be important for the induction of cell death by this kind of drug.


Free Radical Research | 2018

Telomere length is independently associated with age, oxidative biomarkers, and sport training in skeletal muscle of healthy adult males

Fiorenza Magi; Ivan Dimauro; Fabrizio Margheritini; Guglielmo Duranti; Neri Mercatelli; Cristina Fantini; Francesca Romana Ripani; Stefania Sabatini; Daniela Caporossi

Abstract In skeletal muscle, which mainly contains postmitotic myonuclei, it has been suggested that telomere length remains roughly constant throughout adult life, or shortens in response to physiopathological conditions in muscle diseases or in the elderly. However, telomere length results from both the replicative history of a specific tissue and the exposure to environmental, DNA damage-related factors, therefore the predictive biological significance of telomere measures should combine the analysis of the various interactive factors. In the present study, we analysed any relationship between telomere length [mean and minimum terminal restriction fragment (TRF) length] chronological age, oxidative damage (4-HNE, protein carbonyls), catalase activity, and heat shock proteins expression (αB-crystallin, Hsp27, Hsp90) in semitendinous muscle biopsies of 26 healthy adult males between 20 and 50 years of age, also exploring the influence of regular exercise participation. The multiple linear regression analysis identified age, 4-HNE, catalase, and training status as significant independent variables associated with telomere length and jointly accounting for ∼30–36% of interindividual variation in mean and/or minimum TRF length. No association has been identified between telomere length and protein carbonyl, αB-crystallin, Hsp27, and Hsp90, as well as between age and the variables related to stress response. Our results showed that skeletal muscle from healthy adults displays an age-dependent telomere attrition and that oxidised environment plays an age-independent contribution, partially influenced by exercise training.


BMC Research Notes | 2017

The p75NTR-mediated effect of nerve growth factor in L6C5 myogenic cells

Alessandra de Perini; Ivan Dimauro; Guglielmo Duranti; Cristina Fantini; Neri Mercatelli; Roberta Ceci; Luigi Di Luigi; Stefania Sabatini; Daniela Caporossi

ObjectiveDuring muscle development or regeneration, myocytes produce nerve growth factor (NGF) as well as its tyrosine-kinase and p75-neurotrophin (p75NTR) receptors. It has been published that the p75NTR receptor could represent a key regulator of NGF-mediated myoprotective effect on satellite cells, but the precise function of NGF/p75 signaling pathway on myogenic cell proliferation, survival and differentiation remains fragmented and controversial. Here, we verified the role of NGF in the growth, survival and differentiation of p75NTR-expressing L6C5 myogenic cells, specifically inquiring for the putative involvement of the nuclear factor κB (NFκB) and the small heat shock proteins (sHSPs) αB-crystallin and Hsp27 in these processes.ResultsAlthough NGF was not effective in modulating myogenic cell growth or survival in both standard or stress conditions, we demonstrated for the first time that, under serum deprivation, NGF sustained the activity of some key enzymes involved in energy metabolism. Moreover, we confirmed that NGF promotes myogenic fusion and expression of the structural protein myosin heavy chain while modulating NFκB activation and the content of sHSPs correlated with the differentiation process. We conclude that p75NTR is sufficient to mediate the modulation of L6C5 myogenic differentiation by NGF in term of structural, metabolic and functional changes.


Free Radical Research | 2013

Exercise-induced oxidative stress in elderly subjects: the effect of red orange supplementation on the biochemical and cellular response to a single bout of intense physical activity

Monica Pittaluga; Antonio Sgadari; Barbara Tavazzi; Cristina Fantini; Stefania Sabatini; R Ceci; Angela Maria Amorini; Paolo Parisi; Daniela Caporossi


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2018

Exercise and extracellular vesicles content: a focus on antioxidants, stress proteins and miRNAs

Ivan Dimauro; Ambra Antonioni; Elisa Grazioli; Cristina Fantini; Laura Capranica; Daniela Caporossi


Journal of Endocrinological Investigation | 2017

Short-term, supra-physiological rhGH administration induces transient DNA damage in peripheral lymphocytes of healthy women

Cristina Fantini; Paolo Sgrò; M. Pittaluga; A. de Perini; Ivan Dimauro; Alessandro Sartorio; Daniela Caporossi; L. Di Luigi


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2017

Regular exercise participation improves genomic stability in diabetic patients: an exploratory study to analyse telomere length and DNA damage

Ivan Dimauro; Antonella Sgura; Monica Pittaluga; Fiorenza Magi; Cristina Fantini; Rosa Mancinelli; Antonio Sgadari; Stefania Fulle; Daniela Caporossi


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2016

O-17 - The impact of EMRT on elderly subjects: Focus on epigenetic changing and DNA integrity

Ivan Dimauro; Elisa Grazioli; Cristina Fantini; Mattia Scalabrin; Maria Reyes Beltran Valls; Stefania Sabatini; Luigi Di Luigi; Daniela Caporossi

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Daniela Caporossi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Ivan Dimauro

Sapienza University of Rome

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Stefania Sabatini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Elisa Grazioli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Luigi Di Luigi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Neri Mercatelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Guglielmo Duranti

Sapienza University of Rome

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Antonio Sgadari

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Fiorenza Magi

Sapienza University of Rome

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