Emanuela Maserati
University of Pavia
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Featured researches published by Emanuela Maserati.
Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2002
Emanuela Maserati; Fiorenza Aprili; Fabrizio Vinante; Franco Locatelli; Giovanni Amendola; Adriana Zatterale; Giuseppe Milone; Antonella Minelli; Franca Bernardi; Francesco Lo Curto; Francesco Pasquali
The trisomy 8 found in malignancies may derive from a constitutional trisomy 8 mosaicism (CT8M), and in these cases the trisomy itself may be regarded as the first mutation in a multistep carcinogenetic process. To assess the frequency of CT8M in hematological dysplastic and neoplastic disorders with trisomy 8, an informative sample of 14 patients was collected. The data ascertained included chromosome analyses of fibroblast cultures and of PHA‐stimulated blood cultures in patients with normal blood differential count, as well as possible CT8M clinical signs. One patient showed trisomy 8 in all cell types analyzed and undoubtedly has a CT8M; a second patient consistently showed trisomy 8 in PHA‐stimulated blood cultures when no immature myeloid cells were present in blood and should be considered as having CT8M; a third patient, with Philadelphia‐positive chronic myelocytic leukemia, was more difficult to interpret, but the possibility that she had CT8M is likely. A few clinical signs of CT8M were also present in these three patients. Our data indicate that the frequency of CT8M in hematological dysplastic and neoplastic disorders with trisomy 8 is approximately 15–20%.
Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 1996
Laura Seghezzi; Emanuela Maserati; Antonella Minelli; Claudia Dellavecchia; Paola Addis; Franco Locatelli; Adriano Angioni; Pietro Balloni; Crescenzo Miano; Pietro Cavalli; Cesare Danesino; Francesco Pasquali
Three patients, with constitutional trisomy 8 mosaicism (CT8M), who developed a malignancy are reported. The diagnoses were refractory anaemia, acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, and idiopathic myelofibrosis. In the child with acute leukaemia, the CT8M was diagnosed at birth due to severe dysmorphisms and malformations; the other two patients showed a milder phenotype, and the CT8M was diagnosed only after the finding of trisomy 8 in neoplastic cells. The review of eight similar, previously reported cases and the clinical, cytogenetic, and molecular studies performed in our patients led us to make the following observations: (1) CT8M predisposes to neoplasms, preferentially to myelo‐ or lymphoproliferative diseases; (2) a gene dosage effect for glutathione reductase in red blood cells was seen in two of our patients; (3) the wide phenotypic variation of CT8M was confirmed: trisomy 8 in neoplastic cells of phenotypically near‐normal cases may be misinterpreted as acquired; and (4) molecular studies suggested a postzygotic origin of the trisomy in our three cases, with the supernumerary chromosome being of paternal origin in one case and of maternal origin in the other two. We postulate that the trisomy 8 in neoplasms may often occur by mitotic nondisjunction in an early embryonic multipotent cell and that what is usually interpreted as an acquired trisomy 8 may in fact be CT8M. The constitutional trisomy 8 would act as a pathogenetically important first mutation in multistep carcinogenesis. Whenever trisomy 8 is found in malignancies, the patient should be reevaluated clinically to exclude CT8M, and CT8M patients should be monitored for the possible development of malignancies. Genes Chromosom Cancer 17:94–101 (1996).
British Journal of Haematology | 2009
Emanuela Maserati; Barbara Pressato; Roberto Valli; Antonella Minelli; Laura Sainati; Francesco Patitucci; Cristina Marletta; Angela Mastronuzzi; Furio Poli; Francesco Lo Curto; Franco Locatelli; Cesare Danesino; Francesco Pasquali
An investigation of 22 new patients with Shwachman‐Diamond syndrome (SDS) and the follow‐up of 14 previously reported cases showed that (i) clonal chromosome changes of chromosomes 7 and 20 were present in the bone marrow (BM) of 16 out of 36 cases, but if non‐clonal changes were taken into account, the frequency of anomalies affecting these chromosomes was 20/36: a specific SDS karyotype instability was thus confirmed; (ii) the recurrent isochromosome i(7)(q10) did not include short arm material, whereas it retained two arrays of D7Z1 alphoid sequences; (iii) the deletion del(20)(q11) involved the minimal region of deletion typical of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and acute myeloid leukaemia (AML); (iv) only one patient developed MDS, during the rapid expansion of a BM clone with a chromosome 7 carrying additional material on the short arms; (v) the acquisition of BM clonal chromosome anomalies was age‐related. We conclude that karyotype instability is part of the natural history of SDS through a specific mutator effect, linked to lacking SBDS protein, with consequent clonal anomalies of chromosomes 7 and 20 in BM, which may eventually promote MDS/AML with the patients’ ageing.
Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 2001
Antonella Minelli; Emanuela Maserati; Giovanni Giudici; Sabrina Tosi; Carla Olivieri; Livia Bonvini; Paola De Filippi; Andrea Biondi; Francesco Lo Curto; Francesco Pasquali; Cesare Danesino
Two sisters are reported, both with a myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) associated with partial monosomy 7. A trisomy 8 was also present in one of them, who later developed an acute myeloid leukemia (AML) of the M0 FAB-type and died, whereas the other died with no evolution into AML. Besides FISH studies, microsatellite analysis was performed on both sisters to gather information on the parental origin of the chromosome 7 involved in partial monosomy and of the extra chromosome 8. The chromosomes 7 involved were of different parental origin in the two sisters, thus confirming that familial monosomy 7 is not explained by a germ-line mutation of a putative tumor-suppressor gene. Similar results were obtained in two other families out of the 12 reported in the literature. Noteworthy is the association with a mendelian disease in 3 out of 12 monosomy 7 families, which suggest that a mutator gene, capable of inducing both karyotype instability and a mendelian disorder, might act to induce chromosome 7 anomalies in the marrow. We postulate that, in fact, an inherited mutation in any of a group of mutator genes causes familial monosomy 7 also in the absence of a recognized mendelian disease, and that marrow chromosome 7 anomalies, in turn, lead to MDS/AML.
Leukemia | 2009
Antonella Minelli; Emanuela Maserati; E. Nicolis; Marco Zecca; Laura Sainati; D. Longoni; F Lo Curto; Giuseppe Menna; Furio Poli; E De Paoli; M. Cipolli; F Locatelli; Francesco Pasquali; Cesare Danesino
Shwachman–Diamond syndrome (SDS) is an autosomal recessive disorder, characterized by exocrine pancreatic insufficiency, skeletal abnormalities and bone marrow (BM) dysfunction with an increased risk to develop myelodysplastic syndrome and/or acute myeloid leukaemia (MDS/AML). SDS is caused, in nearly 90% of cases, by two common mutations (that is, c.183_184TA>CT and c.258+2T>C) in exon 2 of the SBDS gene, localized on chromosome 7. Clonal chromosome anomalies are often found in the BM of SDS patients; the most frequent is an isochromosome for long arms of chromosome 7, i(7)(q10). We studied eight patients with SDS carrying the i(7)(q10) who were compound heterozygotes for SBDS mutations. By assessing the parental origin of the i(7)(q10) using microsatellite analysis, we inferred from the results which mutation was present in double dose in the isochromosome. We demonstrate that in all cases the i(7)(q10) carries a double dose of the c.258+2T>C, and we suggest that, as the c.258+2T>C mutation still allows the production of some amount of normal protein, this may contribute to the low incidence of MDS/AML in this subset of SDS patients.
Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2006
Emanuela Maserati; Antonella Minelli; Barbara Pressato; Roberto Valli; Barbara Crescenzi; Maurizio Stefanelli; Giuseppe Menna; Laura Sainati; Furio Poli; Claudio Panarello; Marco Zecca; Francesco Lo Curto; Cristina Mecucci; Cesare Danesino; Francesco Pasquali
An investigation of 14 patients with Shwachman syndrome (SS), using standard and molecular cytogenetic methods and molecular genetic techniques, showed that (1) the i(7)(q10) is not, or not always, an isochromosome but may arise from a more complex mechanism, retaining part of the short arm; (2) the i(7)(q10) has no preferential parental origin; (3) clonal chromosome changes, such as chromosome 7 anomalies and del(20)(q11), may be present in the bone marrow (BM) for a long time without progressing to myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS)/acute myeloid leukemia (AML); (4) the del(20)(q11) involves the minimal region of deletion typical of MDS/AML; (5) the rate of chromosome breaks is not significantly higher than in controls, from which it is concluded that SS should not be considered a breakage syndrome; (6) a specific kind of karyotype instability is present in SS, with chromosome changes possibly found in single cells or small clones, often affecting chromosomes 7 and 20, in the BM. Hence, we have confirmed our previous hypothesis that the SS mutation itself implies a mutator effect that is responsible for MDS/AML through these specific chromosome anomalies. This conclusion supports the practice of including cytogenetic monitoring in the follow‐up of SS patients.
Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 2000
Emanuela Maserati; Antonella Minelli; Carla Olivieri; Livia Bonvini; Antonietta Marchi; Mauro Bozzola; Cesare Danesino; Susi Scappaticci; Francesco Pasquali
Shwachman syndrome (SS) is an autosomal recessive disorder in which bone marrow dysfunction is observed, with development of myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS) and acute myeloid leukemias (AML) in up to one third of the cases. Inconclusive data are available as to increased chromosome breakage in SS, while chromosome 7 anomalies, and often an isochromosome (7)(q10), are frequent in cases with MDS/AML. We report on the consistent presence of an i(7)(q10) in the bone marrow and blood lymphocytes in one of two sisters affected with SS without any clinical or cytological signs of MDS/AML. Thus, this patient was either a case of constitutional mosaicism for the i(7)(q10), or this had to be acquired in a nondysplastic and non-neoplastic marrow clone. DNA polymorphism analysis demonstrated the paternal origin of the i(7q). We postulate that the SS mutation acts as a mutator gene, and causes karyotype instability; abnormal clones would thus arise in the marrow, and chromosome 7 anomalies, i(7q) in particular, will in turn lead to MDS/AML. If this interpretation is correct, it would be also an indication to consider chromosome 7 anomalies in general, out of SS, as primary changes in MDS/AML pathogenesis.
Clinical Genetics | 2008
Emanuela Maserati; A. Ottolini; P. Veggiotti; G. Lanzi; Francesco Pasquali
Two sisters, 11 and 9 years old respectively, had the clinical features of a progressive neurological disorder similar to the ataxia‐telangiectasia (AT) syndrome. The two patients have ataxia and chromosome instability with rearrangements of chromosomes 7 and 14 but no telangiectasia, nor the range of immunological anomalies typical of AT. Comparison with similar cases from the literature leads to the conclusion that either there is a specific disorder characterized by ataxia‐without‐telangiectasia and with the same cytogenetic pattern of AT, or AT shows a wider variability of phenotypic expression than thought before.
Genes, Chromosomes and Cancer | 2004
Antonella Minelli; Emanuela Maserati; Gabriele Rossi; Maria Ester Bernardo; Piero De Stefano; Maria Paola Cecchini; Roberto Valli; Veronica Albano; Paolo Pierani; Anna Leszl; Laura Sainati; Francesco Lo Curto; Cesare Danesino; Franco Locatelli; Francesco Pasquali
Familial platelet disorder with propensity to acute myelogenous leukemia, or FPD/AML (OMIM #601399), is a rare autosomal dominant condition, with only 12 families reported. It is characterized by qualitative and quantitative platelet defects and predisposition to the development of myeloid malignancies. Causal mutations have been identified in the RUNX1 gene (also known as AML1, CBFA2) in the 11 families so far analyzed. RUNX1 is a gene frequently involved in the pathogenesis of sporadic leukemia and myelodysplastic syndromes, through acquired chromosome rearrangements and point mutations. We report an Italian family with three members affected with FPD/AML, two sibs and their father, who developed myelodysplastic syndromes (which in one subsequently evolved into AML). Direct sequencing and polymorphisms haplotype analysis of the region of chromosome 21 where RUNX1 is mapped demonstrated that FPD/AML in this family was not caused by any mutation of the RUNX1 gene, thus providing evidence for the genetic heterogeneity of this disorder. Cytogenetic studies showed monosomy 7 in the marrow of all the three affected subjects, as well as an independent clone with trisomy 8 in the father. The importance of mutator effects in the pathogenesis of familial myeloid malignancies characterized by relevant chromosome changes, in the presence or absence of an underlying Mendelian disorder, has already been suggested. Our results and a review of the cytogenetic literature led us to postulate that mutations also causing FPD/AML may have a mutator effect that could give origin to myelodysplastic syndromes and acute myeloid leukemias through acquired chromosome changes.
Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics | 1992
Emanuela Maserati; Monica Casali; Francesco Pasquali; Franco Locatelli; Simona Giani; Luisella Prete; Marco Zecca; Rosangela Invernizzi; Renato Bassan
We report two cases of refractory anemia with excess of blasts in transformation (RAEB-T) with the translocation (8;21), which is frequent in ANLL but not in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). A review of such cases leads us to conclude that myeloproliferative disorders characterized by the t(8;21) may be preceded by an MDS phase.