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Featured researches published by Elena Venturi.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2015

Elevated Plasma Levels of MMP-12 Are Associated With Atherosclerotic Burden and Symptomatic Cardiovascular Disease in Subjects With Type 2 Diabetes

Isabel Gonçalves; Eva Bengtsson; Helen M. Colhoun; Angela C. Shore; Carlo Palombo; Andrea Natali; Andreas Edsfeldt; Pontus Dunér; Gunilla Nordin Fredrikson; Harry Björkbacka; Gerd Östling; Kunihiko Aizawa; Francesco Casanova; Margaretha Persson; Km Gooding; David Strain; Faisel Khan; Helen C. Looker; Fiona Adams; J. J. F. Belch; Silvia Pinnoli; Elena Venturi; Michaela Kozakova; Li Ming Gan; Volker Schnecke; Jan Nilsson

Objective— Matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) degrade extracellular matrix proteins and play important roles in development and tissue repair. They have also been shown to have both protective and pathogenic effects in atherosclerosis, and experimental studies have suggested that MMP-12 contributes to plaque growth and destabilization. The objective of this study was to investigate the associations between circulating MMPs, atherosclerosis burden, and incidence of cardiovascular disease with a particular focus on type 2 diabetes mellitus. Approach and Results— Plasma levels of MMP-1, -3, -7, -10, and -12 were analyzed by the Proximity Extension Assay technology in 1500 subjects participating in the SUMMIT (surrogate markers for micro- and macrovascular hard end points for innovative diabetes tools) study, 384 incident coronary cases, and 409 matched controls in the Malmö Diet and Cancer study and in 205 carotid endarterectomy patients. Plasma MMP-7 and -12 were higher in subjects with type 2 diabetes mellitus, increased with age and impaired renal function, and was independently associated with prevalent cardiovascular disease, atherosclerotic burden (as assessed by carotid intima-media thickness and ankle-brachial pressure index), arterial stiffness, and plaque inflammation. Baseline MMP-7 and -12 levels were increased in Malmö Diet and Cancer subjects who had a coronary event during follow-up. Conclusions— The plasma level of MMP-7 and -12 are elevated in type 2 diabetes mellitus, associated with more severe atherosclerosis and an increased incidence of coronary events. These observations provide clinical support to previous experimental studies, demonstrating a role for these MMPs in plaque development, and suggest that they are potential biomarkers of atherosclerosis burden and cardiovascular disease risk.


BMC Cardiovascular Disorders | 2016

Association between renin and atherosclerotic burden in subjects with and without type 2 diabetes

Isabel Gonçalves; Andreas Edsfeldt; Helen M. Colhoun; Angela C. Shore; Carlo Palombo; Andrea Natali; Gunilla Nordin Fredrikson; Harry Björkbacka; Maria Wigren; Eva Bengtsson; Gerd Östling; Kunihiko Aizawa; Francesco Casanova; Margaretha Persson; Km Gooding; Phil Gates; Faisel Khan; Helen C. Looker; Fiona Adams; J. J. F. Belch; Silvia Pinnola; Elena Venturi; Michaela Kozakova; Li Ming Gan; Volker Schnecke; Jan Nilsson

BackgroundActivation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone-system (RAAS) has been proposed to contribute to development of vascular complications in type 2 diabetes (T2D). The aim of the present study was to determine if plasma renin levels are associated with the severity of vascular changes in subjects with and without T2D.MethodsRenin was analyzed by the Proximity Extension Assay in subjects with (n = 985) and without (n = 515) T2D participating in the SUMMIT (SUrrogate markers for Micro- and Macro-vascular hard endpoints for Innovative diabetes Tools) study and in 205 carotid endarterectomy patients. Vascular changes were assessed by determining ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI), carotid intima-media thickness (IMT), carotid plaque area, pulse wave velocity (PWV) and the reactivity hyperemia index (RHI).ResultsPlasma renin was elevated in subjects with T2D and demonstrated risk factor-independent association with prevalent cardiovascular disease both in subjects with and without T2D. Renin levels increased with age, body mass index, HbA1c and correlated inversely with HDL. Subjects with T2D had more severe carotid disease, increased arterial stiffness, and impaired endothelial function. Risk factor-independent associations between renin and APBI, bulb IMT, carotid plaque area were observed in both T2D and non-T2D subjects. These associations were independent of treatment with RAAS inhibitors. Only weak associations existed between plasma renin and the expression of pro-inflammatory and fibrous components in plaques from 205 endarterectomy patients.ConclusionsOur findings provide clinical evidence for associations between systemic RAAS activation and atherosclerotic burden and suggest that this association is of particular importance in T2D.


Journal of Internal Medicine | 2015

Measures of atherosclerotic burden are associated with clinically manifest cardiovascular disease in type 2 diabetes: a European cross-sectional study

Angela C. Shore; Helen M. Colhoun; Andrea Natali; Carlo Palombo; Gerd Östling; Kunihiko Aizawa; Cecilia Kennbäck; Francesco Casanova; Margaretha Persson; Km Gooding; Phillip E. Gates; Ferdous Khan; Helen C. Looker; Fiona Adams; J. J. F. Belch; S. Pinnoli; Elena Venturi; C. Morizzo; Isabel Gonçalves; Claes Ladenvall; Jan Nilsson

There is a need to develop and validate surrogate markers of cardiovascular disease (CVD) in subjects with diabetes. The macrovascular changes associated with diabetes include aggravated atherosclerosis, increased arterial stiffness and endothelial dysfunction. The aim of this study was to determine which of these factors is most strongly associated with clinically manifest cardiovascular events.


Nutrition Metabolism and Cardiovascular Diseases | 2014

HDL lipid composition is profoundly altered in patients with type 2 diabetes and atherosclerotic vascular disease.

Cecilia Morgantini; D. Meriwether; Simona Baldi; Elena Venturi; Silvia Pinnola; Ac Wagner; Am Fogelman; Eleuterio Ferrannini; Andrea Natali; Srinivasa T. Reddy

BACKGROUND AND AIMS We have previously shown that the anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant functions of HDL are impaired in T2D patients. In this study, we examined whether HDL from T2D patients contains elevated levels of oxidized fatty acids and whether those levels correlate with cardiovascular disease (CVD). METHODS AND RESULTS HETEs and HODEs on HDL were determined by LC-MS/MS in 40 non-diabetic controls (ND), 40 T2D without CVD (D⁺CVD⁻) and 38 T2D with known history of CVD (D⁺CVD⁺). HDL oxidant index was evaluated by a cell-free assay using dichlorofluorescein. Twenty-six randomly selected subjects from the three groups underwent coronary calcium score evaluation (CAC). Major cardiovascular risk factors were similar among the groups. HETEs and HODEs content were significantly increased in HDL from D⁺CVD⁺ when compared to D⁺CVD⁻ and ND patients. HDL oxidant index was not different among the three groups; however, it was significantly higher in patients with CAC score >100 when compared to patients with CAC score <100. CONCLUSION Patients with D⁺CVD⁻ and D⁺CVD⁺ are characterized by a severe, graded enrichment of oxidized fatty acids on HDL. In the present study, a loss of HDL function (as estimated by the HDL oxidant index) is observed only in patients with more advanced atherosclerosis.


Experimental Diabetes Research | 2016

Abnormal Glucose Tolerance Is Associated with a Reduced Myocardial Metabolic Flexibility in Patients with Dilated Cardiomyopathy

Domenico Tricò; Simona Baldi; Silvia Frascerra; Elena Venturi; Paolo Marraccini; Danilo Neglia; Andrea Natali

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is characterized by a metabolic shift from fat to carbohydrates and failure to increase myocardial glucose uptake in response to workload increments. We verified whether this pattern is influenced by an abnormal glucose tolerance (AGT). In 10 patients with DCM, 5 with normal glucose tolerance (DCM-NGT) and 5 with AGT (DCM-AGT), and 5 non-DCM subjects with AGT (N-AGT), we measured coronary blood flow and arteriovenous differences of oxygen and metabolites during Rest, Pacing (at 130 b/min), and Recovery. Myocardial lactate exchange and oleate oxidation were also measured. At Rest, DCM patients showed a reduced nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA) myocardial uptake, while glucose utilization increased only in DCM-AGT. In response to Pacing, glucose uptake promptly rose in N-AGT (from 72 ± 21 to 234 ± 73 nmol/min/g, p < 0.05), did not change in DCM-AGT, and slowly increased in DCM-NGT. DCM-AGT sustained the extra workload by increasing NEFA oxidation (from 1.3 ± 0.2 to 2.9 ± 0.1 μmol/min/gO2 equivalents, p < 0.05), while DCM-NGT showed a delayed increase in glucose uptake. Substrate oxidation rates paralleled the metabolites data. The presence of AGT in patients with DCM exacerbates both the shift from fat to carbohydrates in resting myocardial metabolism and the reduced myocardial metabolic flexibility in response to an increased workload. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrial.gov NCT02440217.


Experimental and Clinical Endocrinology & Diabetes | 2012

Effects of Short and Prolonged Mild Intracellular Nitric Oxide Manipulations on Various Aspects of Insulin Secretion in INS-1E β-Cells

Andrea Natali; Eleonora Santini; A. Delbarba; Simona Baldi; Elena Venturi; A. Tulipani; E. Nisoli; Eleuterio Ferrannini

OBJECTIVE We aimed at evaluating the impact of short and prolonged mild manipulations of intracellular nitric oxide (NO) bioavailability on the main features of insulin secretion and whether NO promotes mitochondrial biogenesis in isolated β-cells. MATERIALS/METHODS INS-1E β-cells were exposed to either the intracellular NO donor, hydroxylamine (HA), or the NO synthase inhibitor, L-nitro-arginine-methyl-ester (L-NAME), at concentrations lower than 2.0 mM. Glucose and arginine-induced insulin secretion (GIIS and AIIS) were measured after short (1 h) or prolonged (48 h) exposure to L-NAME 1.0 and 2.0 mM or HA 0.4 and 0.8 mM, lower concentrations were also evaluated for the 1 h effects. Basal insulin secretion (BIS), with either HA or L-NAME added to culture media, and peroxisome proliferators-activated receptor γ coactivator 1α (PGC-1α), nuclear respiratory factor-1 (NRF-1), and mitochondrial DNA transcription factor-A (Tfam) gene expression during chronic HA supplementation were also measured. RESULTS Neither L-NAME nor HA affected insulin release at glucose 3.3 mM or in cell culture (BIS). Both short and prolonged cell exposure to L-NAME potentiated GIIS though with a flat dose-response curve while HA inhibited GIIS only at the highest concentration. AIIS was prevented by short exposure to L-NAME and potentiated by HA, while it did not respond to prolonged incubations. Prolonged cell exposure to HA had no effect on PGC-1α, NRF-1 or Tfam gene expression. CONCLUSION In INS1E cells an intact NO synthesis is necessary to limit insulin release in response to acute glucose gradients and to fully respond to arginine while intracellular NO enrichment above the physiologic levels further inhibits GIIS and potentiate AIIS only when excessive. Prolonged NO manipulations do not affect AIIS, BIS or mitochondrial biogenesis.


Microcirculation | 2016

Clinical Phenotype and Microvascular Dynamics of Subjects with Endothelial Dysfunction as Assessed by Peripheral Tonometry

Elena Venturi; Silvia Pinnola; C. Morizzo; Beatrice Boldrini; Monica Rossi; Silvia Trifirò; Domenico Tricò; Andrea Natali

To evaluate the characteristics and the determinants of ED, as measured by PAT.


Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism | 2018

Metformin is the key factor in elevated plasma growth differentiation factor-15 levels in type 2 diabetes: A nested, case-control study

Andrea Natali; Lorenzo Nesti; Elena Venturi; Angela C. Shore; Faisel Khan; Km Gooding; Phillip E. Gates; Helen C. Looker; Fiona Dove; Isabel Gonçalves; Margaretha Persson; Jan Nilsson

Produced as a tissue defence response to hypoxia and inflammation, growth differentiation factor‐15 (GDF‐15) is elevated in people receiving metformin treatment. To gain insight into the relationship of GDF‐15 with metformin and major cardiovascular risk factors, we analysed the data from the SUMMIT cohort (n = 1438), a four‐centre, nested, case–control study aimed at verifying whether biomarkers of atherosclerosis differ according to the presence of type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. While in univariate analysis, major cardiovascular risk factors, with the exception of gender and cholesterol, increased similarly and linearly across GDF‐15 quartiles, the independent variables associated with GDF‐15, both in participants with and without diabetes, were age, plasma creatinine, N‐terminal pro‐brain natriuretic peptide, diuretic use, smoking exposure and glycated haemoglobin. In participants with diabetes, metformin treatment was associated with a 40% rise in GDF‐15 level, which was independent of the other major factors, and largely explained their elevated GDF‐15 levels. The relatively high GDF‐15 bioavailability might partly explain the protective cardiovascular effects of metformin.


Diabetes Care | 2018

Use of Vascular Assessments and Novel Biomarkers to Predict Cardiovascular Events in Type 2 Diabetes: The SUMMIT VIP Study

Angela C. Shore; Helen M. Colhoun; Andrea Natali; Carlo Palombo; Faisel Khan; Gerd Östling; Kunihiko Aizawa; Cecilia Kennbäck; Francesco Casanova; Margaretha Persson; Kim Gooding; Phillip E. Gates; Helen C. Looker; Fiona Dove; J. J. F. Belch; Silvia Pinnola; Elena Venturi; Michaela Kozakova; Isabel Gonçalves; Jasmina Kravic; Harry Björkbacka; Jan Nilsson

OBJECTIVE Cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk prediction represents an increasing clinical challenge in the treatment of diabetes. We used a panel of vascular imaging, functional assessments, and biomarkers reflecting different disease mechanisms to identify clinically useful markers of risk for cardiovascular (CV) events in subjects with type 2 diabetes (T2D) with or without manifest CVD. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS The study cohort consisted of 936 subjects with T2D recruited at four European centers. Carotid intima-media thickness and plaque area, ankle-brachial pressure index, arterial stiffness, endothelial function, and circulating biomarkers were analyzed at baseline, and CV events were monitored during a 3-year follow-up period. RESULTS The CV event rate in subjects with T2D was higher in those with (n = 440) than in those without (n = 496) manifest CVD at baseline (5.53 vs. 2.15/100 life-years, P < 0.0001). New CV events in subjects with T2D with manifest CVD were associated with higher baseline levels of inflammatory biomarkers (interleukin 6, chemokine ligand 3, pentraxin 3, and hs-CRP) and endothelial mitogens (hepatocyte growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor A), whereas CV events in subjects with T2D without manifest CVD were associated with more severe baseline atherosclerosis (median carotid plaque area 30.4 mm2 [16.1–92.2] vs. 19.5 mm2 [9.5–40.5], P = 0.01). Conventional risk factors, as well as measurements of arterial stiffness and endothelial reactivity, were not associated with CV events. CONCLUSIONS Our observations demonstrate that markers of inflammation and endothelial stress reflect CV risk in subjects with T2D with manifest CVD, whereas the risk for CV events in subjects with T2D without manifest CVD is primarily related to the severity of atherosclerosis.


Diabetologia | 2013

Systemic inhibition of nitric oxide synthesis in non-diabetic individuals produces a significant deterioration in glucose tolerance by increasing insulin clearance and inhibiting insulin secretion

Andrea Natali; Rogério José Tavares Ribeiro; Simona Baldi; A. Tulipani; Mauro Rossi; Elena Venturi; Andrea Mari; Mp Macedo; Eleuterio Ferrannini

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