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Dive into the research topics where Cristina Giuliani is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristina Giuliani.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2016

Systemic Age-Associated DNA Hypermethylation of ELOVL2 Gene: In Vivo and In Vitro Evidences of a Cell Replication Process.

Maria Giulia Bacalini; Joris Deelen; Chiara Pirazzini; Marco De Cecco; Cristina Giuliani; Catia Lanzarini; Francesco Ravaioli; Elena Marasco; Diana van Heemst; H. Eka D. Suchiman; Roderick C. Slieker; Enrico Giampieri; Rina Recchioni; Fiorella Mercheselli; Stefano Salvioli; Giovanni Vitale; Fabiola Olivieri; Annemieke M. W. Spijkerman; Martijn E.T. Dollé; John M. Sedivy; Gastone Castellani; Claudio Franceschi; P.E. Slagboom; Paolo Garagnani

Epigenetic remodeling is one of the major features of the aging process. We recently demonstrated that DNA methylation of ELOVL2 and FHL2 CpG islands is highly correlated with age in whole blood. Here we investigated several aspects of age-associated hypermethylation of ELOVL2 and FHL2. We showed that ELOVL2 methylation is significantly different in primary dermal fibroblast cultures from donors of different ages. Using epigenomic data from public resources, we demonstrated that most of the tissues show ELOVL2 and FHL2 hypermethylation with age. Interestingly, ELOVL2 hypermethylation was not found in tissues with very low replication rate. We demonstrated that ELOVL2 hypermethylation is associated with in vitro cell replication rather than with senescence. We confirmed intra-individual hypermethylation of ELOVL2 and FHL2 in longitudinally assessed participants from the Doetinchem Cohort Study. Finally we showed that, although the methylation of the two loci is not associated with longevity/mortality in the Leiden Longevity Study, ELOVL2 methylation is associated with cytomegalovirus status in nonagenarians, which could be informative of a higher number of replication events in a fraction of whole-blood cells. Collectively, these results indicate that ELOVL2 methylation is a marker of cell divisions occurring during human aging.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2016

Epigenetic Variability across Human Populations: A Focus on DNA Methylation Profiles of the KRTCAP3, MAD1L1 and BRSK2 Genes

Cristina Giuliani; Marco Sazzini; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Chiara Pirazzini; Elena Marasco; Elisa Fontanesi; Claudio Franceschi; Donata Luiselli; Paolo Garagnani

Abstract Natural epigenetic diversity has been suggested as a key mechanism in microevolutionary processes due to its capability to create phenotypic variability within individuals and populations. It constitutes an important reservoir of variation potentially useful for rapid adaptation in response to environmental stimuli. The analysis of population epigenetic structure represents a possible tool to study human adaptation and to identify external factors that are able to naturally shape human DNA methylation variability. The aim of this study is to investigate the dynamics that create epigenetic diversity between and within different human groups. To this end, we first used publicly available epigenome-wide data to explore population-specific DNA methylation changes that occur at macro-geographic scales. Results from this analysis suggest that nutrients, UVA exposure and pathogens load might represent the main environmental factors able to shape DNA methylation profiles. Then, we evaluated DNA methylation of candidate genes (KRTCAP3, MAD1L1, and BRSK2), emerged from the previous analysis, in individuals belonging to different populations from Morocco, Nigeria, Philippines, China, and Italy, but living in the same Italian city. DNA methylation of the BRSK2 gene is significantly different between Moroccans and Nigerians (pairwise t-test: CpG 6 P-value = 5.2*10 −3; CpG 9 P-value = 2.6*10 −3; CpG 10 P-value = 3.1*10 −3; CpG 11 P-value = 2.8*10 −3). Comprehensively, these results suggest that DNA methylation diversity is a source of variability in human groups at macro and microgeographical scales and that population demographic and adaptive histories, as well as the individual ancestry, actually influence DNA methylation profiles.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2016

Inferring chronological age from DNA methylation patterns of human teeth

Cristina Giuliani; Elisabetta Cilli; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Chiara Pirazzini; Marco Sazzini; Giorgio Gruppioni; Claudio Franceschi; Paolo Garagnani; Donata Luiselli

OBJECTIVEnCurrent methods to determine chronological age from modern and ancient remains rely on both morphological and molecular approaches. However, low accuracy and the lack of standardized protocols make the development of alternative methods for the estimation of individuals age even more urgent for several research fields, such as biological anthropology, biodemography, forensics, evolutionary genetics, and ancient DNA studies. Therefore, the aim of this study is to identify genomic regions whose DNA methylation level correlates with age in modern teeth.nnnMETHODSnWe used MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry to analyze DNA methylation levels of specific CpGs located in the ELOVL2, FHL2, and PENK genes. We considered methylation data from cementum, dentin and pulp of 21 modern teeth (from 17 to 77 years old) to construct a mathematical model able to exploit DNA methylation values to predict age of the individuals.nnnRESULTSnThe median difference between the real age and that estimated using DNA methylation values is 1.20 years (SDu2009=u20091.9) if DNA is recovered from both cementum and pulp of the same modern teeth, 2.25 years (SDu2009=u20092.5) if DNA is recovered from dental pulp, 2.45 years (SDu2009=u20093.3) if DNA is extracted from cementum and 7.07 years (SDu2009=u20097.0) when DNA is recovered from dentin only.nnnDISCUSSIONnWe propose for the first time the evaluation of DNA methylation at ELOVL2, FHL2, and PENK genes as a powerful tool to predict age in modern teeth for anthropological applications. Future studies are needed to apply this method also to historical and relatively ancient human teeth.


Biogerontology | 2017

The epigenetic landscape of age-related diseases: the geroscience perspective

Noémie Gensous; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Chiara Pirazzini; Elena Marasco; Cristina Giuliani; Francesco Ravaioli; Giacomo Mengozzi; Claudia Bertarelli; Maria Giustina Palmas; Claudio Franceschi; Paolo Garagnani

In this review, we summarize current knowledge regarding the epigenetics of age-related diseases, focusing on those studies that have described DNA methylation landscape in cardio-vascular diseases, musculoskeletal function and frailty. We stress the importance of adopting the conceptual framework of “geroscience”, which starts from the observation that advanced age is the major risk factor for several of these pathologies and aims at identifying the mechanistic links between aging and age-related diseases. DNA methylation undergoes a profound remodeling during aging, which includes global hypomethylation of the genome, hypermethylation at specific loci and an increase in inter-individual variation and in stochastic changes of DNA methylation values. These epigenetic modifications can be an important contributor to the development of age-related diseases, but our understanding on the complex relationship between the epigenetic signatures of aging and age-related disease is still poor. The most relevant results in this field come from the use of the so called “epigenetics clocks” in cohorts of subjects affected by age-related diseases. We report these studies in final section of this review.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Complex interplay between neutral and adaptive evolution shaped differential genomic background and disease susceptibility along the Italian peninsula

Marco Sazzini; Guido Alberto Gnecchi Ruscone; Cristina Giuliani; Stefania Sarno; Andrea Quagliariello; Sara De Fanti; Alessio Boattini; Davide Gentilini; Giovanni Fiorito; Mariagrazia Catanoso; Luigi Boiardi; Stefania Croci; Pierluigi Macchioni; Vilma Mantovani; Anna Maria Di Blasio; Giuseppe Matullo; Carlo Salvarani; Claudio Franceschi; Davide Pettener; Paolo Garagnani; Donata Luiselli

The Italian peninsula has long represented a natural hub for human migrations across the Mediterranean area, being involved in several prehistoric and historical population movements. Coupled with a patchy environmental landscape entailing different ecological/cultural selective pressures, this might have produced peculiar patterns of population structure and local adaptations responsible for heterogeneous genomic background of present-day Italians. To disentangle this complex scenario, genome-wide data from 780 Italian individuals were generated and set into the context of European/Mediterranean genomic diversity by comparison with genotypes from 50 populations. To maximize possibility of pinpointing functional genomic regions that have played adaptive roles during Italian natural history, our survey included also ~250,000 exomic markers and ~20,000 coding/regulatory variants with well-established clinical relevance. This enabled fine-grained dissection of Italian population structure through the identification of clusters of genetically homogeneous provinces and of genomic regions underlying their local adaptations. Description of such patterns disclosed crucial implications for understanding differential susceptibility to some inflammatory/autoimmune disorders, coronary artery disease and type 2 diabetes of diverse Italian subpopulations, suggesting the evolutionary causes that made some of them particularly exposed to the metabolic and immune challenges imposed by dietary and lifestyle shifts that involved western societies in the last centuries.


Radiation and Environmental Biophysics | 2017

Assessing the combined effect of extremely low-frequency magnetic field exposure and oxidative stress on LINE-1 promoter methylation in human neural cells

Gianfranco Giorgi; Chiara Pirazzini; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Cristina Giuliani; Paolo Garagnani; Miriam Capri; Ferdinando Bersani; Brunella Del Re

Extremely low frequency magnetic fields (ELF-MF) have been classified as “possibly carcinogenic”, but their genotoxic effects are still unclear. Recent findings indicate that epigenetic mechanisms contribute to the genome dysfunction and it is well known that they are affected by environmental factors. To our knowledge, to date the question of whether exposure to ELF-MF can influence epigenetic modifications has been poorly addressed. In this paper, we investigated whether exposure to ELF-MF alone and in combination with oxidative stress (OS) can affect DNA methylation, which is one of the most often studied epigenetic modification. To this end, we analyzed the DNA methylation levels of the 5′untranslated region (5′UTR) of long interspersed nuclear element-1s (LINE-1 or L1), which are commonly used to evaluate the global genome methylation level. Human neural cells (BE(2)C) were exposed for 24 and 48xa0h to extremely low frequency pulsed magnetic field (PMF; 50xa0Hz, 1xa0mT) in combination with OS. The methylation levels of CpGs located in L1 5′UTR region were measured by MassARRAY EpiTYPER. The results indicate that exposures to the single agents PMF and OS induced weak decreases and increases of DNA methylation levels at different CpGs. However, the combined exposure to PMF and OS lead to significant decrease of DNA methylation levels at different CpG sites. Most of the changes were transient, suggesting that cells can restore homeostatic DNA methylation patterns. The results are discussed and future research directions outlined.


Mechanisms of Ageing and Development | 2017

Centenarians as extreme phenotypes: An ecological perspective to get insight into the relationship between the genetics of longevity and age-associated diseases

Cristina Giuliani; Chiara Pirazzini; Massimo Delledonne; Luciano Xumerle; Patrick Descombes; Julien Marquis; Giacomo Mengozzi; Daniela Monti; Dina Bellizzi; Giuseppe Passarino; Donata Luiselli; Claudio Franceschi; Paolo Garagnani

In this review, we address the genetic continuum between aging and age-related diseases, with particular attention to the ecological perspective. We describe the connections between genes that promote longevity and genes associated with age-related diseases considering tradeoff mechanisms in which the same genetic variants could have different effects according to the tissue considered and could be involved in several biological pathways. Then we describe mechanisms of antagonistic pleiotropy, focusing on the complex interplay between genetic variants and environmental changes (internal or external). We sustain the use of centenarians as super-controls for the study of the major age-related diseases, starting from the concept that the maximization of the phenotypic differences in the considered cohort, achieved by selecting the most divergent phenotypes, could be useful for increasing the significant differences observed in the genetic association study. We describe the potential impact of the population genetic variability in the study of human longevity and the possible contribution of the past selective pressures in shaping the current genomic background of individuals. In conclusion, we illustrate recent findings emerged from whole-genome sequencing of long-lived individuals and future perspectives for interpreting the huge amount of genetic data that will be generated in the next future.


Aging | 2018

Genes associated with Type 2 Diabetes and vascular complications

Alberto Montesanto; Anna Rita Bonfigli; Paolina Crocco; Paolo Garagnani; Maria De Luca; Massimo Boemi; Elena Marasco; Chiara Pirazzini; Cristina Giuliani; Claudio Franceschi; Giuseppe Passarino; Roberto Testa; Fabiola Olivieri; Giuseppina Rose

Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) is a chronic disease associated with a number of micro- and macrovascular complications that increase the morbidity and mortality of patients. The risk of diabetic complications has a strong genetic component. To this end, we sought to evaluate the association of 40 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 21 candidate genes with T2D and its vascular complications in 503 T2D patients and 580 healthy controls. The genes were chosen because previously reported to be associated with T2D complications and/or with the aging process. We replicated the association of T2D risk with IGF2BP rs4402960 and detected novel associations with TERT rs2735940 and rs2736098. The addition of these SNPs to a model including traditional risk factors slightly improved risk prediction. After stratification of patients according to the presence/absence of vascular complications, we found significant associations of variants in the CAT, FTO, and UCP1 genes with diabetic retinopathy and nephropathy. Additionally, a variant in the ADIPOQ gene was found associated with macrovascular complications. Notably, these genes are involved in some way in mitochondrial biology and reactive oxygen species regulation. Hence, our findings strongly suggest a potential link between mitochondrial oxidative homeostasis and individual predisposition to diabetic vascular complications.


Appetite | 2017

A bio-cultural approach to the study of food choice: The contribution of taste genetics, population and culture

Davide S. Risso; Cristina Giuliani; Marco Antinucci; Paolo Garagnani; Sergio Tofanelli; Donata Luiselli

The study of food choice, one of the most complex human traits, requires an integrated approach that takes into account environmental, socio-cultural and biological diversity. We recruited 183 volunteers from four geo-linguistic groups and highly diversified in terms of both genetic background and food habits from whom we collected genotypes and phenotypes tightly linked to taste perception. We confirmed previous genetic associations, in particular with stevioside perception, and noted significant differences in food consumption: in particular, broccoli, mustard and beer consumption scores were significantly higher (Adjusted Pxa0=xa00.02, Adjusted Pxa0<xa00.0001 and Adjusted Pxa0=xa00.01, respectively) in North Europeans, when compared to the other groups. Licorice and Parmesan cheese showed lower consumption and liking scores in the Sri Lankan group (Adjusted Pxa0=xa00.001 and Adjusted Pxa0<xa00.001, respectively). We also highlighted how rs860170 (TAS2R16) strongly differentiated populations and was associated to salicin bitterness perception. Identifying genetic variants on chemosensory receptors that vary across populations and show associations with taste perception and food habits represents a step towards a better comprehension of this complex trait, aimed at improving the individual health status. This is the first study that concurrently explores the contribution of genetics, population diversity and cultural aspects in taste perception and food consumption.


American Journal of Physical Anthropology | 2016

Positive selection of lactase persistence among people of Southern Arabia.

Riad Bayoumi; Sara De Fanti; Marco Sazzini; Cristina Giuliani; Andrea Quagliariello; Eugenio Bortolini; Alessio Boattini; Molham Al-Habori; Adel Sharaf Al-Zubairi; Jeffrey I. Rose; Giovanni Romeo; Abdulrahim Al-Abri; Donata Luiselli

OBJECTIVEnFrequency patterns of the lactase persistence (LP)-associated -13,915 G allele and archaeological records pointing to substantial role played by southern regions in the peopling and domestication processes that involved the Arabian Peninsula suggest that Southern Arabia plausibly represented the center of diffusion of such adaptive variant. Nevertheless, a well-defined scenario for evolution of Arabian LP is still to be elucidated and the burgeoning archaeological picture of complex human migrations occurred through the peninsula is not matched by an equivalent high-resolution description of genetic variation underlying this adaptive trait. To fill this gap, we investigated diversity at a wide genomic interval surrounding the LCT gene in different Southern Arabian populations.nnnMETHODSn40 SNPs were genotyped to characterize LCT profiles of 630 Omani and Yemeni individuals to perform population structure, linkage disequilibrium, population differentiation-based and haplotype-based analyses.nnnRESULTSnTypical Arabian LP-related variation was found in Dhofaris and Yemenis, being characterized by private haplotypes carrying the -13,915 G allele, unusual differentiation with respect to northern groups and conserved homozygous haplotype-blocks, suggesting that the adaptive allele was likely introduced in the Arabian gene pool in southern populations and was then subjected to prolonged selective pressure.nnnCONCLUSIONnBy pointing to Yemen as one of the best candidate centers of diffusion of the Arabian-specific adaptive variant, obtained results indicate the spread of indigenous groups as the main process underlying dispersal of LP along the Arabian Peninsula, supporting a refugia model for Arabian demic movements occurred during the Terminal Pleistocene and Early Holocene.

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