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Dive into the research topics where Daniela Regazzo is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniela Regazzo.


PLOS Genetics | 2013

A Novel Mutation in the Upstream Open Reading Frame of the CDKN1B Gene Causes a MEN4 Phenotype

Gianluca Occhi; Daniela Regazzo; Giampaolo Trivellin; Francesca Boaretto; Denis Ciato; Sara Bobisse; Sergio Ferasin; Filomena Cetani; Elena Pardi; Márta Korbonits; Natalia Pellegata; Viktoryia Sidarovich; Alessandro Quattrone; Giuseppe Opocher; Franco Mantero; Carla Scaroni

The CDKN1B gene encodes the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27KIP1, an atypical tumor suppressor playing a key role in cell cycle regulation, cell proliferation, and differentiation. Impaired p27KIP1 expression and/or localization are often observed in tumor cells, further confirming its central role in regulating the cell cycle. Recently, germline mutations in CDKN1B have been associated with the inherited multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 4, an autosomal dominant syndrome characterized by varying combinations of tumors affecting at least two endocrine organs. In this study we identified a 4-bp deletion in a highly conserved regulatory upstream ORF (uORF) in the 5′UTR of the CDKN1B gene in a patient with a pituitary adenoma and a well-differentiated pancreatic neoplasm. This deletion causes the shift of the uORF termination codon with the consequent lengthening of the uORF–encoded peptide and the drastic shortening of the intercistronic space. Our data on the immunohistochemical analysis of the patients pancreatic lesion, functional studies based on dual-luciferase assays, site-directed mutagenesis, and on polysome profiling show a negative influence of this deletion on the translation reinitiation at the CDKN1B starting site, with a consequent reduction in p27KIP1 expression. Our findings demonstrate that, in addition to the previously described mechanisms leading to reduced p27KIP1 activity, such as degradation via the ubiquitin/proteasome pathway or non-covalent sequestration, p27KIP1 activity can also be modulated by an uORF and mutations affecting uORF could change p27KIP1 expression. This study adds the CDKN1B gene to the short list of genes for which mutations that either create, delete, or severely modify their regulatory uORFs have been associated with human diseases.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2010

The (193-209) 17-residues peptide of bovine β-casein is transported through Caco-2 monolayer.

Daniela Regazzo; Daniel Mollé; Gianfranco Gabai; Daniel Tomé; Didier Dupont; Joëlle Léonil; Rachel Boutrou

Although the bioavailability of large peptides with biological activity is of great interest, the intestinal transport has been described for peptides up to only nine residues. β-casein (β-CN, 193-209) is a long and hydrophobic peptide composed of 17 amino acid residues (molecular mass 1881 Da) with immunomodulatory activity. The present work examined the transport of the β-CN (193-209) peptide across Caco-2 cell monolayer. In addition, we evaluated the possible routes of the β-CN (193-209) peptide transport, using selective inhibitors of the different routes for peptide transfer through the intestinal barrier. The results showed that the β-CN (193-209) peptide resisted the action of brush-border membrane peptidases, and that it was transported through the Caco-2 cell monolayer. The main route involved in transepithelial transport of the β-CN (193-209) peptide was transcytosis via internalized vesicles, although the paracellular transport via tight-junctions could not be excluded. Our results demonstrated the transport of an intact long-chain bioactive peptide in an in vitro model of intestinal epithelium, as an important step to prove the evidence for bioavailability of this peptide.


Endocrinology | 2014

Activation of the Dopamine Receptor Type-2 (DRD2) Promoter by 9-Cis Retinoic Acid in a Cellular Model of Cushing's Disease Mediates the Inhibition of Cell Proliferation and ACTH Secretion Without a Complete Corticotroph-to-Melanotroph Transdifferentiation

Gianluca Occhi; Daniela Regazzo; Nora Albiger; Filippo Ceccato; Sergio Ferasin; Massimo Scanarini; Luca Denaro; Chiara Cosma; Mario Plebani; Maria Francesca Cassarino; Giovanna Mantovani; Günter K. Stalla; Francesca Pecori Giraldi; Marcelo Paez-Pareda; Carla Scaroni

Cushings disease (CD) is a rare condition in which hypercortisolemia is secondary to excessive ACTH release from a pituitary corticotroph adenoma. CD is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, and a safe therapy that effectively targets the pituitary tumor is still lacking. Retinoic acid (RA) and dopamine agonists (DAs) have recently been considered as monotherapy in CD patients, and satisfactory results have been reported, albeit in a limited number of patients. Given the permissive role of RA on the dopamine receptor type-2 (DRD2), the aim of the present study was to see whether a combination of 9-cis RA and the DA bromocriptine (Br) might represent a possible treatment for CD. Here we show that 9-cis RA induces a functional DRD2 in the pituitary corticotroph cell line AtT20, and increases cell sensitivity to Br via a mechanism only partially related to corticotroph-to-melanotroph transdifferentiation. In addition, 9-cis RA and Br act synergistically to modulate cell viability, with favorable implications for clinical use. In nearly 45% of corticotropinoma-derived primary cultures, the combined administration of 9-cis RA and Br lowered the steady-state level of the ACTH precursor proopiomelanocortin (POMC) more efficiently than either of the drugs alone. In conclusion, the effects of a combination of 9-cis RA and Br on ACTH synthesis/secretion and cell viability in AtT20, and on POMC transcriptional activity in human corticotropinomas might represent a suitable starting point for assessing the potential of this treatment regimen for ACTH-secreting pituitary adenomas. This study thus has potentially important implications for novel therapeutic approaches to CD.


Journal of Neuroendocrinology | 2011

The Glucose‐Dependent Insulinotropic Polypeptide Receptor is Overexpressed Amongst GNAS1 Mutation‐Negative Somatotropinomas and Drives Growth Hormone (GH)‐Promoter Activity in GH3 Cells

Gianluca Occhi; Marco Losa; Nora Albiger; G. Trivellin; Daniela Regazzo; M. Scanarini; J. L. Monteserin-Garcia; B. Fröhlich; Sergio Ferasin; M. R. Terreni; Ambrogio Fassina; Libero Vitiello; Günter K. Stalla; Franco Mantero; Carla Scaroni

Somatic mutations in the GNAS1 gene, encoding the α‐subunit of the heterotrimeric stimulatory G protein (Gαs), occur in approximately 40% of growth hormone (GH)‐secreting pituitary tumours. By altering the adenylate cyclase‐cAMP‐protein kinase A pathway, they unequivocally give somatotroph cells a growth advantage. Hence, the pathogenesis of somatotropinomas could be linked to anomalies in receptors coupled to the cAMP second‐messenger cascade. Among them, the glucose‐dependent insulinotropic polypeptide receptor (GIPR) is already known to play a primary role in the impaired cAMP‐dependent cortisol secretion in patients affected by food‐dependent Cushing’s syndrome. In the present study, 43 somatotropinomas and 12 normal pituitary glands were investigated for GIPR expression by quantitative reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction, western blotting and immunohistochemistry. Tumoural specimens were also evaluated for GNAS1 mutational status. The effect of GIPR overexpression on cAMP levels and GH transcription was evaluated in an in vitro model of somatotropinomas, the GH‐secreting pituitary cell line GH3. GIPR was expressed at higher levels compared to normal pituitaries in 13 GNAS1 mutation‐negative somatotropinomas. GIP stimulated adenylyl cyclase and GH‐promoter activity in GIPR‐transfected GH3 cells, confirming a correct coupling of GIPR to Gαs. In a proportion of acromegalic patients, GIPR overexpression appeared to be associated with a paradoxical increase in GH after an oral glucose tolerance test. Whether GIPR overexpression in acromegalic patients may be associated with this paradoxical response or more generally involved in the pathogenesis of acromegaly, as suggested by the mutually exclusive high GIPR levels and GNAS1 mutations, remains an open question.


Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2017

Large Genomic Rearrangements of Desmosomal Genes in Italian Arrhythmogenic Cardiomyopathy Patients

Kalliopi Pilichou; Elisabetta Lazzarini; Ilaria Rigato; Rudy Celeghin; Marzia De Bortoli; Marina Perazzolo Marra; Marco Cason; Jan D. H. Jongbloed; Martina Calore; Stefania Rizzo; Daniela Regazzo; Giulia Poloni; Sabino Iliceto; Luciano Daliento; Pietro Delise; Domenico Corrado; J. Peter van Tintelen; Gaetano Thiene; Alessandra Rampazzo; Cristina Basso; Barbara Bauce; Alessandra Lorenzon; Gianluca Occhi

Background: Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (AC) is an inherited heart muscle disease associated with point mutations in genes encoding for cardiac desmosome proteins. Conventional mutation screening is positive in ≈50% of probands. Copy number variations (CNVs) have recently been linked to AC pointing to the need to determine the prevalence of CNVs in desmosomal genes and to evaluate disease penetrance by cosegregation analysis in family members. Methods and Results: A total of 160 AC genotype-negative probands for 5 AC desmosomal genes by conventional mutation screening underwent multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. Nine heterozygous CNVs were identified in 11 (6.9%) of the 160 probands. Five carried a deletion of the entire plakophilin-2 (PKP2) gene, 2 a deletion of only PKP2 exon 4, 1 a deletion of the PKP2 exons 6 to 11, 1 a PKP2 duplication of 5′ untranslated region till exon 1, 1 the desmocollin-2 (DSC2) duplication of exons 7 to 9, and 1 a large deletion of chromosome 18 comprising both DSC2 and desmoglein-2 genes. All probands were affected by moderate-severe forms of the disease, whereas 10 (32%) of the 31 family members carrying one of these deletions fulfilled the diagnostic criteria. Conclusions: Genomic rearrangements were detected in ≈7% of AC probands negative for pathogenic point mutations in desmosomal genes, highlighting the potential of CNVs analysis to substantially increase the diagnostic yield of genetic testing. Genotype–phenotype correlation demonstrated the presence of the disease in about one third of family members carrying the CNV, underlying the role of other factors in the development and progression of the disease.


PLOS ONE | 2014

AHR Over-Expression in Papillary Thyroid Carcinoma: Clinical and Molecular Assessments in a Series of Italian Acromegalic Patients with a Long-Term Follow-Up

Caterina Mian; Filippo Ceccato; Susi Barollo; Sara Watutantrige-Fernando; Nora Albiger; Daniela Regazzo; Paola De Lazzari; Gianmaria Pennelli; Sandra Rotondi; Davide Nacamulli; Maria Rosa Pelizzo; Marie-Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Franco Grimaldi; Gianluca Occhi; Carla Scaroni

Aim Acromegaly reportedly carries an increased risk of malignant and benign thyroid tumors, with a prevalence of thyroid cancer of around 3–7%. Germline mutations in the aryl-hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) interacting protein (AIP) have been identified in familial forms of acromegaly. The molecular and endocrine relationships between follicular thyroid growth and GH-secreting pituitary adenoma have yet to be fully established. Our aim was to study the prevalence of differentiated thyroid cancer (DTC) in acromegaly, focusing on the role of genetic events responsible for the onset of thyroid cancer. Methods Germline mutations in the AIP gene were assessed in all patients; BRAF and H-N-K RAS status was analyzed by direct sequencing in thyroid specimens, while immunohistochemistry was used to analyze the protein expression of AIP and AHR. A set of PTCs unrelated to acromegaly was also studied. Results 12 DTCs (10 papillary and 2 follicular carcinomas) were identified in a cohort of 113 acromegalic patients. No differences in GH/IGF-1 levels or disease activity emerged between patients with and without DTC, but the former were older and more often female. BRAF V600E was found in 70% of the papillary thyroid cancers; there were no RAS mutations. AIP protein expression was similar in neoplastic and normal cells, while AHR protein was expressed more in PTCs carrying BRAF mutations than in normal tissue, irrespective of acromegaly status. Conclusions The prevalence of DTC in acromegaly is around 11% and endocrinologists should bear this in mind, especially when examining elderly female patients with uninodular goiter. The DTC risk does not seem to correlate with GH/IGF-1 levels, while it may be associated with BRAF mutations and AHR over-expression. Genetic or epigenetic events probably play a part in promoting thyroid carcinoma.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2016

Acromegaly Is More Severe in Patients With AHR or AIP Gene Variants Living in Highly Polluted Areas.

Serafinella P. Cannavò; Marta Ragonese; Soraya Puglisi; Placido Romeo; Maria Luisa Torre; Angela Alibrandi; Carla Scaroni; Gianluca Occhi; Filippo Ceccato; Daniela Regazzo; E. De Menis; Paola Sartorato; Giorgio Arnaldi; L. Trementino; Francesco Trimarchi; Francesco Ferraù

CONTEXT An increased prevalence of acromegaly was found some years ago in a highly polluted area in North-Eastern Sicily, where high concentration of nonmethane hydrocarbons, volatile organic compounds, and cadmium was found. Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) pathway has a key role in detoxification of these compounds and in tumorigenesis. OBJECTIVE We correlated the occurrence of AHR and/or AHR-interacting protein (AIP) gene variants with acromegaly severity according to pollution exposition. DESIGN, SETTING, and PATIENTS This was an observational, perspective study conducted over 7 years in four Italian referral centers for pituitary diseases in which 210 patients with acromegaly were enrolled between 2008 and 2015. INTERVENTION Genetic screening of patients for AHR and AIP variants. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Clinical, biochemical, and radiological data of patients with and without AIP and/or AHR gene variants, living in polluted (high-risk for health, [HR]) or nonpolluted (NP) areas of five Italian regions were evaluated and compared. RESULTS Among the 23 patients from HR areas, nine showed AHR or AIP variants. Mean IGF-I levels and pituitary tumor diameter were significantly higher in these nine patients (HR/VAR+) than in the other 14 (HR/VAR−) and in the 187 from NP areas (44 NP/VAR+). Somatostatin analogs significantly decreased mean GH and IGF-I levels in patients from NP areas and in HR/VAR− (GH P < .05; IGF-I times the upper limit of normal P < .01) but not in HR/VAR+ group. CONCLUSIONS Genetic variants potentially inducing functional abnormalities of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) pathway are associated with a more severe acromegaly, increased pituitary tumor size, and somatostatin analog resistance in patients living in HR areas.


Oncotarget | 2015

A constitutive active MAPK/ERK pathway due to BRAFV600E positively regulates AHR pathway in PTC.

Gianluca Occhi; Susi Barollo; Daniela Regazzo; Loris Bertazza; Francesca Galuppini; Vincenza Guzzardo; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Federica Vianello; Denis Ciato; Filippo Ceccato; Sara Watutantrige-Fernando; Andrea Bisognin; Stefania Bortoluzzi; Gianmaria Pennelli; Marco Boscaro; Carla Scaroni; Caterina Mian

The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) is a ligand-activated transcription factor mediating the toxicity and tumor-promoting properties of dioxin. AHR has been reported to be overexpressed and constitutively active in a variety of solid tumors, but few data are currently available concerning its role in thyroid cancer. In this study we quantitatively explored a series of 51 paired-normal and papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) tissues for AHR-related genes. We identified an increased AHR expression/activity in PTC, independently from its nuclear dimerization partner and repressor but strictly related to a constitutive active MAPK/ERK pathway. The AHR up-regulation followed by an increased expression of AHR target genes was confirmed by a meta-analysis of published microarray data, suggesting a ligand-independent active AHR pathway in PTC. In-vitro studies using a PTC-derived cell line (BCPAP) and HEK293 cells showed that BRAFV600E may directly modulate AHR localization, induce AHR expression and activity in an exogenous ligand-independent manner. The AHR pathway might represent a potential novel therapeutic target for PTC in the clinical practice.


Endocrine | 2018

Daily salivary cortisol and cortisone rhythm in patients with adrenal incidentaloma

Filippo Ceccato; Mattia Barbot; Nora Albiger; Giorgia Antonelli; Marialuisa Zilio; Marco Todeschini; Daniela Regazzo; Mario Plebani; Carmelo Lacognata; Maurizio Iacobone; Franco Mantero; Marco Boscaro; Carla Scaroni

Background and aimImpaired cortisol rhythm is a characteristic feature of Cushing’s Syndrome, nevertheless late night salivary cortisol (LNSC) is not suitable to detect subclinical hypercortisolism in patients with adrenal incidentaloma (AI). We studied daily salivary cortisol (F) and cortisone (E) rhythm in patients with AI.Materials and methodsSix saliva samples were collected from awakening to night in 106 patients with AI and 40 controls. F and E were measured with LC-MS/MS and daily F exposure was calculated with the area under the curve (AUC).ResultsPatients with serum cortisol after dexamethasone suppression test (DST) > 50 nmol/L showed higher morning F (15.5 ± 14.5 vs. 8.6 ± 5.5 nmol/L, p = 0.001), suppressed corticotropin levels (76 vs. 35%, p < 0.001) and increased daily F exposure (3795 ± 1716 vs. 2898 ± 1478, p = 0.012), especially in the morning (2035 ± 1267 vs. 1365 ± 777, p = 0.003), otherwise LNSC levels were similar. Salivary E and AUC levels were higher in patients with DST > 50 nmol/L. AUC was not correlated with urinary cortisol levels or adenoma size. F and E levels were similar among patients with unilateral or bilateral adenoma, or considering the presence of hypertension, dyslipidemia, diabetes, or cardiovascular events.ConclusionDaily cortisol exposure, evaluated with AUC from multiple saliva collections, is increased in AI patients with serum cortisol > 50 nmol/L after DST, especially in the morning, leading to reduced corticotropin levels. Cortisol rhythm is preserved in patients with AI, remarking that LNSC is not a screening test for subclinical hypercortisolism.


Hormones (Greece) | 2014

Gonadotropin secreting pituitary adenoma associated with erythrocytosis: case report and literature review

Filippo Ceccato; Gianluca Occhi; Daniela Regazzo; Maria Luigia Randi; Diego Cecchin; Marina Gardiman; Renzo Manara; Giuseppe Lombardi; Luca Denaro; Franco Mantero; Carla Scaroni

BACKGROUNDMost pituitary adenomas with FSH- or LH-positive immunohistochemistry are endocrinologically silent, and neurological symptoms due to their large volume are the first clinical signs; they are rarely reported to be secreting gonadotropins, this usually occurring in cases with clinical endocrine findings. Gonadotropinomas are often treated surgically because they are unresponsive to conventional medical therapies. Temozolomide was recently recommended for non-responder aggressive pituitary adenoma management.CASE REPORTA 43-year-old male with a history of 5 years of erythrocytosis presented with severe headache, orthostatic dizziness, and difficulty walking. MRI documented a giant pituitary adenoma and high uptake of 111In-pentetreotide indicated somatostatin receptor (SSR) expression. Biochemical tests revealed a secreting gonadotropinoma. Therapy with somatostatin analogs and dopamine agonists improved the patient’s headache, achieved partial hormone control, slightly reduced the size of the adenoma, and controlled erythrocytosis. Six months after the diagnosis, hormone escape occurred despite therapy, thus neurosurgery was performed. After the procedure the patient died of untreatable intracranial hypertension. The surgical specimen revealed SSR 2 and 3 expression, and temozolomide did not induce apoptosis in primary cell culture.REVIEW OF LITERATUREAmong gonadotropinomas, female gender (77%), macroadenoma (84%), young age at diagnosis (28 ± 12 years), delay from first symptoms to diagnosis (up to 15 years), and ovarian cysts/menstrual disorders in females or macro-orchidism in males were the foremost clinical and neuroimaging features.CONCLUSIONSMale gonadotropin-secreting pituitary adenomas may have a variable clinical expression secondary to testosterone excess. Somatostatin analogs, dopamine agonists or temozolomide may have a role that needs to be assessed case by case.

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