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Featured researches published by Elisabetta Pilotti.


Blood | 2012

Stable changes in CD4+ T lymphocyte miRNA expression after exposure to HIV-1

Fabio Bignami; Elisabetta Pilotti; Linda Bertoncelli; Paola Ronzi; Mariolina Gullì; Nelson Marmiroli; Giacomo Magnani; Marcello Pinti; Lucia Lopalco; Cristina Mussini; Roberta Ruotolo; Massimo Galli; Andrea Cossarizza; Claudio Casoli

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) inhibit HIV-1 expression by either modulating host innate immunity or by directly interfering with viral mRNAs. We evaluated the expression of 377 miRNAs in CD4(+) T cells from HIV-1 élite long-term nonprogressors (éLTNPs), naive patients, and multiply exposed uninfected (MEU) patients, and we observed that the éLTNP patients clustered with naive patients, whereas all MEU subjects grouped together. The discriminatory power of miRNAs showed that 21 miRNAs significantly differentiated éLTNP from MEU patients and 23 miRNAs distinguished naive from MEU patients, whereas only 1 miRNA (miR-155) discriminated éLTNP from naive patients. We proposed that miRNA expression may discriminate between HIV-1-infected and -exposed but negative patients. Analysis of miRNAs expression after exposure of healthy CD4(+) T cells to gp120 in vitro confirmed our hypothesis that a miRNA profile could be the result not only of a productive infection but also of the exposure to HIV-1 products that leave a signature in immune cells. The comparison of normalized Dicer and Drosha expression in ex vivo and in vitro condition revealed that these enzymes did not affect the change of miRNA profiles, supporting the existence of a Dicer-independent biogenesis pathway.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Antiretroviral Activity of Thiosemicarbazone Metal Complexes

Giorgio Pelosi; Franco Bisceglie; Fabio Bignami; Paola Ronzi; Pasqualina Schiavone; Maria Carla Re; Claudio Casoli; Elisabetta Pilotti

Thiosemicarbazones display a wide antimicrobial activity by targeting bacteria, fungi, and viruses. Here, we report our studies on the antiviral activity of two thiosemicarbazone metal complexes, [bis(citronellalthiosemicarbazonato)nickel(II)] and [aqua(pyridoxalthiosemicarbazonato)copper(II)] chloride monohydrate, against the retroviruses HIV-1 and HTLV-1/-2. Both compounds exhibit antiviral properties against HIV but not against HTLVs . In particular, the copper complex shows the most potent anti-HIV activity by acting at the post-entry steps of the viral cycle.


PLOS ONE | 2008

Antibody complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) can display differential antimicrobial, antiviral and antitumor activities.

Luciano Polonelli; José Pontón; Natalia Elguezabal; María D. Moragues; Claudio Casoli; Elisabetta Pilotti; Paola Ronzi; Andrey Sergee Dobroff; Elaine G. Rodrigues; Maria A. Juliano; Domenico Leonardo Maffei; Walter Magliani; Stefania Conti; Luiz R. Travassos

Background Complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) are immunoglobulin (Ig) hypervariable domains that determine specific antibody (Ab) binding. We have shown that synthetic CDR-related peptides and many decapeptides spanning the variable region of a recombinant yeast killer toxin-like antiidiotypic Ab are candidacidal in vitro. An alanine-substituted decapeptide from the variable region of this Ab displayed increased cytotoxicity in vitro and/or therapeutic effects in vivo against various bacteria, fungi, protozoa and viruses. The possibility that isolated CDRs, represented by short synthetic peptides, may display antimicrobial, antiviral and antitumor activities irrespective of Ab specificity for a given antigen is addressed here. Methodology/Principal Findings CDR-based synthetic peptides of murine and human monoclonal Abs directed to: a) a protein epitope of Candida albicans cell wall stress mannoprotein; b) a synthetic peptide containing well-characterized B-cell and T-cell epitopes; c) a carbohydrate blood group A substance, showed differential inhibitory activities in vitro, ex vivo and/or in vivo against C. albicans, HIV-1 and B16F10-Nex2 melanoma cells, conceivably involving different mechanisms of action. Antitumor activities involved peptide-induced caspase-dependent apoptosis. Engineered peptides, obtained by alanine substitution of Ig CDR sequences, and used as surrogates of natural point mutations, showed further differential increased/unaltered/decreased antimicrobial, antiviral and/or antitumor activities. The inhibitory effects observed were largely independent of the specificity of the native Ab and involved chiefly germline encoded CDR1 and CDR2 of light and heavy chains. Conclusions/Significance The high frequency of bioactive peptides based on CDRs suggests that Ig molecules are sources of an unlimited number of sequences potentially active against infectious agents and tumor cells. The easy production and low cost of small sized synthetic peptides representing Ig CDRs and the possibility of peptide engineering and chemical optimization associated to new delivery mechanisms are expected to give rise to a new generation of therapeutic agents.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2006

Coinfection with HIV-1 and human T-Cell lymphotropic virus type II in intravenous drug users is associated with delayed progression to AIDS

Marco Turci; Elisabetta Pilotti; Paola Ronzi; Giacomo Magnani; Antonio Boschini; Saverio Giuseppe Parisi; Donato Zipeto; Antonella Lisa; Claudio Casoli; Umberto Bertazzoni

Human T-cell lymphotropic virus (HTLV) type II has spread among intravenous drug users (IDUs), many of whom are coinfected with HIV-1. We have investigated the rate of HTLV-II infection in 3574 Italian IDUs screened for HIV-1, HTLV-I, and HTLV-II from 1986 to the present. HTLV-II proviral load was determined by a real-time polymerase chain reaction specifically designed for tax amplification. The frequency of HTLV-II infection was 6.7% among HIV-1-positive subjects and 1.1% among HIV-1-negative subjects (P < 0.0001). For examination of AIDS progression, a group of 437 HIV-1-monoinfected subjects and another group of 96 HIV-1/HTLV-II-coinfected subjects were monitored. Enrollees were matched at entry by CD4 cell counts and followed for an average of 13 years. HIV-1/HTLV-II coinfection was associated with older age (P < 0.0001) and higher CD4 (P < 0.0001) and CD8 (P < 0.001) cell counts compared with monoinfected IDUs. The number of long-term nonprogressors for AIDS was significantly higher (P < 0.0001) among coinfected patients (13 [13.5%] of 96 patients) than HIV monoinfected patients (5 [1.1%] of 437 patients), showing that HTLV-II exerts a protective role. An increased incidence of liver disease and hepatitis C virus positivity among coinfected IDUs was observed. Five coinfected subjects undergoing antiretroviral therapy showed a significant (P < 0.05) increase in HTLV-II proviral load concomitant to a decrease in HIV-1 viremia, suggesting that the treatment is ineffective against HTLV-II infection.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 2012

Serum adipokine zinc α2-glycoprotein and lipolysis in cachectic and noncachectic heart failure patients: relationship with neurohormonal and inflammatory biomarkers

Stefano Tedeschi; Elisabetta Pilotti; Elisabetta Parenti; Vanni Vicini; Pietro Coghi; Alberto Montanari; Giuseppe Regolisti; Enrico Fiaccadori; Aderville Cabassi

Chronic heart failure is often complicated by the development of cachexia with the loss of fat mass. Zinc α2-glycoprotein (ZAG) is a serum adipokine with lipolytic effects in cancer cachexia. We evaluated in patients with advanced heart failure with (CxHF) or without cachexia (nCxHF) the relationship of ZAG with circulating free fatty acid (FFA), as an index of lipolysis, and with other neurohormonal and inflammatory biomarkers. Two groups, nCxHF (n = 46) and CxHF (n = 18), the latter having a documented, involuntary, edema-free loss of body weight of at least 7.5% in the previous 6 months, underwent plasma determination of FFA, ZAG, norepinephrine (NE), tumor necrosis factor-α, and natriuretic peptide levels (atrial natriuretic, B-type natriuretic peptide). The patients were compared with age-matched healthy controls (CTR) (n = 21). Zinc α2-glycoprotein, atrial natriuretic peptide, B-type natriuretic peptide, and tumor necrosis factor-α circulating levels were similarly greater in CxHF and nCxHF than in CTR. Free fatty acid and NE were higher in CxHF than in nCxHF. A positive correlation between FFA and NE was found in both CxHF (r = 0.73, P < .01) and nCxHF (r = 0.48, P < .01) but only in CxHF between ZAG and FFA (r = 0.54, P = .02) and between ZAG and NE (r = 0.70, P < .01). No correlations between natriuretic peptides and ZAG were found. Serum ZAG levels are increased in advanced heart failure patients compared with CTR, without differences between CxHF and nCxHF. Only in CxHF, ZAG levels are directly correlated to circulating levels of FFA and NE, suggesting a close interaction of ZAG with sympathetic-mediated lipolysis.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2004

Screening of HIV-1 isolates by reverse heteroduplex mobility assay and identification of non-B subtypes in Italy

Luigi Buonaguro; Maria Tagliamonte; Maria Lina Tornesello; Elisabetta Pilotti; Claudio Casoli; Adriano Lazzarin; Giuseppe Tambussi; Massimo Ciccozzi; Giovanni Rezza; Franco M. Buonaguro

ObjectiveThe increasing prevalence of HIV-1 transmission through heterosexual contacts and the growing number of immigrants from non-Western countries, where non-B subtypes and recombinant forms are prevalent, suggest the possible emergence in Italy of a new epidemic wave of HIV-1 non-B subtypes as well as recombinant forms. MethodsThe distribution of HIV-1 subtypes has been evaluated in 63 seropositive individuals residing in Italy, most of whom were infected through a sexual route during the last 5 years. A modified heteroduplex mobility assay (HMA) strategy, reverse HMA (rHMA), has been developed in our laboratory, allowing rapid identification of divergent-from-B-subtype isolates, which have been subsequently characterized by detailed molecular and phylogenetic analyses. ResultsFive samples show, on rHMA, an electrophoretic pattern compatible with a non-B subtype classification. Their phylogenetic analysis, performed on both env and gag regions, confirms the rHMA subtyping prediction, given that 3 samples fall into the “A-family” subtype and 2 into the G subtype. The 5 non-B-subtype HIV-1 isolates have been identified among 23 variants (prevalence, 21.74%) isolated during the 2000 to 2001 period in heterosexuals. In parallel, B-subtype isolates show high levels of intrasubtype nucleotide divergence, compatible with a constant HIV-1 molecular diversification. ConclusionThe Italian HIV-1 epidemic is still mostly attributable to the B subtype, which shows an increasing nucleotide heterogeneity. Heterosexual transmission and the interracial blending, however, are slowly introducing novel HIV-1 subtypes, and the data indicate that rHMA represents a powerful tool for HIV-1 biomolecular screening in epidemics characterized by a mono-/dual-subtype predominance.


Journal of Immunology | 2002

Retroviral Interference on STAT Activation in Individuals Coinfected with Human T Cell Leukemia Virus Type 2 and HIV-1

Chiara Bovolenta; Elisabetta Pilotti; Massimiliano Mauri; Barbara Panzeri; Monica Sassi; Pierpaolo Dall'Aglio; Umberto Bertazzoni; Guido Poli; Claudio Casoli

Human T cell leukemia virus (HTLV) type-2 is a human retrovirus whose infection has not been tightly linked to human diseases. However, the fairly high prevalence of this infection among HIV-1-positive individuals indicates the importance of better understanding the potential interference of HTLV-2 infection on HIV-1 infection and AIDS. We previously demonstrated that one signature of PBMC freshly derived from HIV-1-infected individuals is the constitutive activation of a C-terminal truncated STAT5 (STAT5Δ). Therefore, we analyzed the potential activation of STATs in HTLV-2 monoinfected and HTLV-2/HIV-1 dually infected individuals. We observed that PBMC of HTLV-2-infected individuals do not show STAT activation unless they are cultivated ex vivo, in the absence of any mitogenic stimuli, for at least 8 h. The emergence of STAT activation, namely of STAT1, in culture was mostly related to the secretion of IFN-γ. Of note, this phenomenon is not only a characteristic feature of HTLV-2-infected individuals but also occurred with PBMC of HIV-1+ individuals. Surprisingly, HTLV-2/HIV-1 coinfection resulted in low/absent STAT activation in vivo that paralleled a diminished secretion of IFN-γ after ex vivo cultivation. Our findings indicate that both HTLV-2 and HIV-1 infection prime T lymphocytes for STAT1 activation, but they also highlight an interference exerted by HTLV-2 on HIV-1-induced STAT1 activation. Although the nature of such a phenomenon is unclear at the present, these findings support the hypothesis that HTLV-2 may interfere with HIV-1 infection at multiple levels.


AIDS | 2006

A killer mimotope with therapeutic activity against AIDS-related opportunistic micro-organisms inhibits ex-vivo HIV-1 replication.

Claudio Casoli; Elisabetta Pilotti; Carlo Federico Perno; Emanuela Balestra; Eugenia Polverini; Antonio Cassone; Stefania Conti; Walter Magliani; Luciano Polonelli

Objective:To verify whether a synthetic therapeutic killer decapeptide (KP), a functional mimotope of a yeast killer toxin with wide-spectrum microbicidal activity, inclusive of AIDS-related opportunistic micro-organisms, through interaction with β-glucan receptors, which has been found to possess sequence homology with critical segments in gp160 V1/V2 and V3 loops, may also be inhibiting HIV-1 replication. Methods:Primary peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) cultures established from HIV-1-infected patients were treated with KP in comparison with zidovudine and supernatants and cells were harvested for analysis of HIV RNA and proviral contents, respectively. Virus production in exogenous in-vitro PBMCs infection with lymphocytotropic and monocytotropic HIV-1 strains was also assessed in presence of KP by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay HIV p24 gag antigen detection. The binding affinity of KP to CD4, CCR5 and CXCR4 was evaluated on CD4-CCR5 or CD4-CXCR4 transfected astroglioma cell lines. Results:KP was shown to be devoid of cytotoxicity on PBMCs and to inhibit HIV-1 replication in PBMCs of a patient in the acute phase of infection. The antiretroviral activity of KP, which proved to be more potent than zidovudine at micromolar concentrations, is abolished by β 1,3-glucan but not by β 1,6-glucan. Down-regulation of CCR5 co-receptor, and/or physical block of the gp120-receptor interaction are possible mechanisms of KP activity. Conclusion:KP appears to be the first antibody-derived short peptide displaying an inhibitory activity against HIV-1 and related opportunistic micro-organisms by different mechanisms of action.


Infectious Agents and Cancer | 2008

Molecular and phylogenetic analysis of HIV-1 variants circulating in Italy

Luigi Buonaguro; Annacarmen Petrizzo; Maria Tagliamonte; Francesca Vitone; Maria Carla Re; Elisabetta Pilotti; Claudio Casoli; Costanza Sbreglia; Oreste Perrella; Maria Lina Tornesello; Franco M. Buonaguro

ObjectiveThe continuous identification of HIV-1 non-B subtypes and recombinant forms in Italy indicates the need of constant molecular epidemiology survey of genetic forms circulating and transmitted in the resident population.MethodsThe distribution of HIV-1 subtypes has been evaluated in 25 seropositive individuals residing in Italy, most of whom were infected through a sexual route during the 1995–2005 period. Each sample has been characterized by detailed molecular and phylogenetic analyses.Results18 of the 25 samples were positive at HIV-1 PCR amplification. Three samples showed a nucleotide divergence compatible with a non-B subtype classification. The phylogenetic analysis, performed on both HIV-1 env and gag regions, confirms the molecular sub-typing prediction, given that 1 sample falls into the C subtype and 2 into the G subtype. The B subtype isolates show high levels of intra-subtype nucleotide divergence, compatible with a long-lasting epidemic and a progressive HIV-1 molecular diversification.ConclusionThe Italian HIV-1 epidemic is still mostly attributable to the B subtype, regardless the transmission route, which shows an increasing nucleotide heterogeneity. Heterosexual transmission and the interracial blending, however, are slowly introducing novel HIV-1 subtypes. Therefore, a molecular monitoring is needed to follow the constant evolution of the HIV-1 epidemic.


AIDS | 2007

Dynamics of HIV viral load in blood and semen of patients under HAART: impact of therapy in assisted reproduction procedures.

Giovanni Battista La Sala; Elisabetta Pilotti; Alessia Nicoli; Silvana Pinelli; Maria Teresa Villani; Paola Ronzi; Enrico Zendri; Maria Carla Re; Giacomo Magnani; Claudio Casoli

We examined the efficacy and effect of HAART in HIV-1-infected men confronted with assisted fertilization procedures. We showed that HAART did not always reduce the HIV-1-RNA level in blood and semen compartments, and that a significant upward shift in mitochondrial DNA was observed in spermatozoa from a HAART-treated patient group compared with spermatozoa from HAART-untreated or HIV-1-uninfected groups (P < 0.001). These findings emphasize the negative role of HAART, but not of HIV-1 infection, in determining semen alterations.

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Guido Poli

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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