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Dive into the research topics where Emanuele Berardi is active.

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Featured researches published by Emanuele Berardi.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

NF-κB-mediated Pax7 dysregulation in the muscle microenvironment promotes cancer cachexia

Wei A. He; Emanuele Berardi; Veronica Cardillo; Swarnali Acharyya; Paola Aulino; Jennifer Thomas-Ahner; Jingxin Wang; Mark Bloomston; Peter Muscarella; Peter Nau; Nilay Shah; Matthew E.R. Butchbach; Katherine J. Ladner; Sergio Adamo; Michael A. Rudnicki; Charles Keller; Dario Coletti; Federica Montanaro; Denis C. Guttridge

Cachexia is a debilitating condition characterized by extreme skeletal muscle wasting that contributes significantly to morbidity and mortality. Efforts to elucidate the underlying mechanisms of muscle loss have predominantly focused on events intrinsic to the myofiber. In contrast, less regard has been given to potential contributory factors outside the fiber within the muscle microenvironment. In tumor-bearing mice and patients with pancreatic cancer, we found that cachexia was associated with a type of muscle damage resulting in activation of both satellite and nonsatellite muscle progenitor cells. These muscle progenitors committed to a myogenic program, but were inhibited from completing differentiation by an event linked with persistent expression of the self-renewing factor Pax7. Overexpression of Pax7 was sufficient to induce atrophy in normal muscle, while under tumor conditions, the reduction of Pax7 or exogenous addition of its downstream target, MyoD, reversed wasting by restoring cell differentiation and fusion with injured fibers. Furthermore, Pax7 was induced by serum factors from cachectic mice and patients, in an NF-κB-dependent manner, both in vitro and in vivo. Together, these results suggest that Pax7 responds to NF-κB by impairing the regenerative capacity of myogenic cells in the muscle microenvironment to drive muscle wasting in cancer.


Frontiers in Physiology | 2014

Molecular and cell-based therapies for muscle degenerations: a road under construction

Emanuele Berardi; Daniela Annibali; Marco Cassano; Stefania Crippa; Maurilio Sampaolesi

Despite the advances achieved in understanding the molecular biology of muscle cells in the past decades, there is still need for effective treatments of muscular degeneration caused by muscular dystrophies and for counteracting the muscle wasting caused by cachexia or sarcopenia. The corticosteroid medications currently in use for dystrophic patients merely help to control the inflammatory state and only slightly delay the progression of the disease. Unfortunately, walkers and wheel chairs are the only options for such patients to maintain independence and walking capabilities until the respiratory muscles become weak and the mechanical ventilation is needed. On the other hand, myostatin inhibition, IL-6 antagonism and synthetic ghrelin administration are examples of promising treatments in cachexia animal models. In both dystrophies and cachectic syndrome the muscular degeneration is extremely relevant and the translational therapeutic attempts to find a possible cure are well defined. In particular, molecular-based therapies are common options to be explored in order to exploit beneficial treatments for cachexia, while gene/cell therapies are mostly used in the attempt to induce a substantial improvement of the dystrophic muscular phenotype. This review focuses on the description of the use of molecular administrations and gene/stem cell therapy to treat muscular degenerations. It reviews previous trials using cell delivery protocols in mice and patients starting with the use of donor myoblasts, outlining the likely causes for their poor results and briefly focusing on satellite cell studies that raise new hope. Then it proceeds to describe recently identified stem/progenitor cells, including pluripotent stem cells and in relationship to their ability to home within a dystrophic muscle and to differentiate into skeletal muscle cells. Different known features of various stem cells are compared in this perspective, and the few available examples of their use in animal models of muscular degeneration are reported. Since non coding RNAs, including microRNAs (miRNAs), are emerging as prominent players in the regulation of stem cell fates we also provides an outline of the role of microRNAs in the control of myogenic commitment. Finally, based on our current knowledge and the rapid advance in stem cell biology, a prediction of clinical translation for cell therapy protocols combined with molecular treatments is discussed.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Aerobic Exercise and Pharmacological Treatments Counteract Cachexia by Modulating Autophagy in Colon Cancer

Eva Pigna; Emanuele Berardi; Paola Aulino; Emanuele Rizzuto; Sandra Zampieri; Ugo Carraro; Helmut Kern; Stefano Merigliano; Mario Gruppo; Mathias Mericskay; Zhenlin Li; Marco Rocchi; Rosario Barone; Filippo Macaluso; Valentina Di Felice; Sergio Adamo; Dario Coletti; Viviana Moresi

Recent studies have correlated physical activity with a better prognosis in cachectic patients, although the underlying mechanisms are not yet understood. In order to identify the pathways involved in the physical activity-mediated rescue of skeletal muscle mass and function, we investigated the effects of voluntary exercise on cachexia in colon carcinoma (C26)-bearing mice. Voluntary exercise prevented loss of muscle mass and function, ultimately increasing survival of C26-bearing mice. We found that the autophagic flux is overloaded in skeletal muscle of both colon carcinoma murine models and patients, but not in running C26-bearing mice, thus suggesting that exercise may release the autophagic flux and ultimately rescue muscle homeostasis. Treatment of C26-bearing mice with either AICAR or rapamycin, two drugs that trigger the autophagic flux, also rescued muscle mass and prevented atrogene induction. Similar effects were reproduced on myotubes in vitro, which displayed atrophy following exposure to C26-conditioned medium, a phenomenon that was rescued by AICAR or rapamycin treatment and relies on autophagosome-lysosome fusion (inhibited by chloroquine). Since AICAR, rapamycin and exercise equally affect the autophagic system and counteract cachexia, we believe autophagy-triggering drugs may be exploited to treat cachexia in conditions in which exercise cannot be prescribed.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2012

miRNAs in ESC differentiation

Emanuele Berardi; Matthias Pues; Lieven Thorrez; Maurilio Sampaolesi

MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are small sequences of noncoding RNAs that regulate gene expression by two basic processes: direct degradation of mRNA and translation inhibition. miRNAs are key molecules in gene regulation for embryonic stem cells, since they are able to repress target pluripotent mRNA genes, including Oct4, Sox2, and Nanog. miRNAs are unlike other small noncoding RNAs in their biogenesis, since they derive from precursors that fold back to form a distinctive hairpin structure, whereas other classes of small RNAs are formed from longer hairpins or bimolecular RNA duplexes (siRNAs) or precursors without double-stranded character (piRNAs). An increasing amount of evidence suggests that miRNAs may have a critical role in the maintenance of the pluripotent cell state and in the regulation of early mammalian development. This review gives an overview of the current state of the art of miRNA expression and regulation in embryonic stem cell differentiation. Current insights on controlling stem cell fate toward mesodermal, endodermal and ectodermal differentiation, and cell reprogramming are also highlighted.


Development | 2011

Alpha sarcoglycan is required for FGF-dependent myogenic progenitor cell proliferation in vitro and in vivo

Marco Cassano; Arianna Dellavalle; Francesco Saverio Tedesco; Mattia Quattrocelli; Stefania Crippa; Flavio Ronzoni; Agnese Salvadè; Emanuele Berardi; Yvan Torrente; Giulio Cossu; Maurilio Sampaolesi

Mice deficient in α-sarcoglycan (Sgca-null mice) develop progressive muscular dystrophy and serve as a model for human limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 2D. Sgca-null mice suffer a more severe myopathy than that of mdx mice, the model for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. This is the opposite of what is observed in humans and the reason for this is unknown. In an attempt to understand the cellular basis of this severe muscular dystrophy, we isolated clonal populations of myogenic progenitor cells (MPCs), the resident postnatal muscle progenitors of dystrophic and wild-type mice. MPCs from Sgca-null mice generated much smaller clones than MPCs from wild-type or mdx dystrophic mice. Impaired proliferation of Sgca-null myogenic precursors was confirmed by single fiber analysis and this difference correlated with Sgca expression during MPC proliferation. In the absence of dystrophin and associated proteins, which are only expressed after differentiation, SGCA complexes with and stabilizes FGFR1. Deficiency of Sgca leads to an absence of FGFR1 expression at the membrane and impaired MPC proliferation in response to bFGF. The low proliferation rate of Sgca-null MPCs was rescued by transduction with Sgca-expressing lentiviral vectors. When transplanted into dystrophic muscle, Sgca-null MPCs exhibited reduced engraftment. The reduced proliferative ability of Sgca-null MPCs explains, at least in part, the severity of this muscular dystrophy and also why wild-type donor progenitor cells engraft efficiently and consequently ameliorate disease.


Neurological Research | 2008

Skeletal muscle is enriched in hematopoietic stem cells and not inflammatory cells in cachectic mice.

Emanuele Berardi; Paola Aulino; Ivana Murfuni; Angelica Toschi; Fabrizio Padula; Bianca Maria Scicchitano; Dario Coletti; Sergio Adamo

Abstract Objective: Cachexia, a debilitating syndrome characterized by skeletal muscle wasting, is associated to many chronic diseases and diminishes the quality of life and survival of patients. Tumor-derived factors and proinflammatory cytokines, including TNF-alpha, IL-6 and IL-1beta, mediate cachexia. In response to elevated cytokine levels, increased proteasome-mediated proteolysis and auto-phagocytosis result in muscle wasting. The histologic features of muscle cachexia are not fully elucidated. Therefore, we analysed alterations of different cell populations in cachectic muscle. Methods: By immunohistochemical and cytological approaches, we characterized changes in the abundance of cellular populations in the musculature of a murine model of cancer cachexia (C26-bearing mice). Results: Cachectic muscle displayed a decreased DNA content proportional to muscle mass wastage. A decrease in the number of nuclei occurred in the muscular but not in the stromal compartment. Cachectic muscle showed: mild modulation of myeloperoxidase activity, a neutrophil marker; reduction of macrophages in the endomysium; decrease in CD3+ lymphocyte number. Conversely, a statistically significant enrichment in Sca-1+ CD45+ hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) occurred in cachectic muscle. Discussion: The elevated levels of cytokines which characterize cachexia may represent a trigger for inflammatory cell activation. However, we find that in cachexia, inflammatory cells in muscle are not increased while muscle tissue nuclei decline. Our data suggest that the inflammatory cell-mediated stress is not an etiologic component of muscle wasting in cachexia. The relative increase in HSCs in cachectic skeletal muscle suggests an attempt to maintain muscle homeostasis by recruitment and/or activation of stem cells.


The Scientific World Journal | 2013

Substrains of Inbred Mice Differ in Their Physical Activity as a Behavior

Dario Coletti; Emanuele Berardi; Paola Aulino; Eleonora Rossi; Viviana Moresi; Zhenlin Li; Sergio Adamo

Recent studies strengthen the belief that physical activity as a behavior has a genetic basis. Screening wheel-running behavior in inbred mouse strains highlighted differences among strains, showing that even very limited genetic differences deeply affect mouse behavior. We extended this observation to substrains of the same inbred mouse strain, that is, BALB/c mice. We found that only a minority of the population of one of these substrains, the BALB/c J, performs spontaneous physical activity. In addition, the runners of this substrain cover a significantly smaller distance than the average runners of two other substrains, namely, the BALB/c ByJ and the BALB/c AnNCrl. The latter shows a striking level of voluntary activity, with the average distance run/day reaching up to about 12 kilometers. These runners are not outstanders, but they represent the majority of the population, with important scientific and economic fallouts to be taken into account during experimental planning. Spontaneous activity persists in pathological conditions, such as cancer-associated cachexia. This important amount of physical activity results in a minor muscle adaptation to endurance exercise over a three-week period; indeed, only a nonsignificant increase in NADH transferase+ fibers occurs in this time frame.


Cell Transplantation | 2012

Alteration of cardiac progenitor cell potency in GRMD dogs

Marco Cassano; Emanuele Berardi; Stefania Crippa; Jaan Toelen; Inès Barthélémy; Rudi Micheletti; Marinee Chuah; Thierry Vandendriessche; Zeger Debyser; Stéphane Blot; Maurilio Sampaolesi

Among the animal models of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the Golden Retriever muscular dystrophy (GRMD) dog is considered the best model in terms of size and pathological onset of the disease. As in human patients presenting with DMD or Becker muscular dystrophies (BMD), the GRMD is related to a spontaneous X-linked mutation of dystrophin and is characterized by myocardial lesions. In this respect, GRMD is a useful model to explore cardiac pathogenesis and for the development of therapeutic protocols. To investigate whether cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) isolated from healthy and GRMD dogs may differentiate into myocardial cell types and to test the feasibility of cell therapy for cardiomyopathies in a preclinical model of DMD, CPCs were isolated from cardiac biopsies of healthy and GRMD dogs. Gene profile analysis revealed an active cardiac transcription network in both healthy and GRMD CPCs. However, GRMD CPCs showed impaired self- renewal and cardiac differentiation. Population doubling and telomerase analyses highlighted earlier senescence and proliferation impairment in progenitors isolated from GRMD cardiac biopsies. Immunofluorescence analysis revealed that only wt CPCs showed efficient although not terminal cardiac differentiation, consistent with the upregulation of cardiac-specific proteins and microRNAs. Thus, the pathological condition adversely influences the cardiomyogenic differentiation potential of cardiac progenitors. Using PiggyBac transposon technology we marked CPCs for nuclear dsRed expression, providing a stable nonviral gene marking method for in vivo tracing of CPCs. Xenotransplantation experiments in neonatal immunodeficient mice revealed a valuable contribution of CPCs to cardiomyogenesis with homing differences between wt and dystrophic progenitors. These results suggest that cardiac degeneration in dystrophinopathies may account for the progressive exhaustion of local cardiac progenitors and shed light on cardiac stemness in physiological and pathological conditions. Furthermore, we provide essential information that canine CPCs may be used to alleviate cardiac involvement in a large preclinical model of DMD.


Experimental and Toxicologic Pathology | 2008

Differential modulation of PPARα and γ target gene expression in the liver and kidney of rats treated with aspirin

Marco Fidaleo; Emanuele Berardi; Claudia Sartori

Aspirin modified peroxisomal enzymatic activities both in the liver and renal cortex of rats, producing typical effects of peroxisomal proliferators (PPs). Although similar increments in beta-oxidation system and catalase activities were observed in both organs, induction of mRNA-Cyp4a10 and mRNA-FAT/CD36, target genes for peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors alpha (PPARalpha) and gamma (PPARgamma), respectively, was only present in the liver. There was no effect on liver mRNA-PPARalpha, while mRNA-PPARgamma was down-regulated, probably as a result of enzymatic inhibition of cyclooxygenases (COXs) by aspirin which has been shown to decrease the levels of PGJ2 and its metabolites, known as strong endogenous ligands for PPARgamma. Typical PP alterations in cell replication and apoptosis were not found during aspirin treatment or after withdrawal, suggesting that peroxisome proliferation occurs without inducing cell cycle alterations. Probably, the synergic action of both PPARalpha and PPARgamma receptors might reduce the impact on cell proliferation and apoptosis.


Stem Cells International | 2016

Spontaneous Physical Activity Downregulates Pax7 in Cancer Cachexia

Dario Coletti; Paola Aulino; Eva Pigna; Fabio Barteri; Viviana Moresi; Daniela Annibali; Sergio Adamo; Emanuele Berardi

Emerging evidence suggests that the muscle microenvironment plays a prominent role in cancer cachexia. We recently showed that NF-kB-induced Pax7 overexpression impairs the myogenic potential of muscle precursors in cachectic mice, suggesting that lowering Pax7 expression may be beneficial in cancer cachexia. We evaluated the muscle regenerative potential after acute injury in C26 colon carcinoma tumor-bearing mice and healthy controls. Our analyses confirmed that the delayed muscle regeneration observed in muscles form tumor-bearing mice was associated with a persistent local inflammation and Pax7 overexpression. Physical activity is known to exert positive effects on cachectic muscles. However, the mechanism by which a moderate voluntary exercise ameliorates muscle wasting is not fully elucidated. To verify if physical activity affects Pax7 expression, we hosted control and C26-bearing mice in wheel-equipped cages and we found that voluntary wheel running downregulated Pax7 expression in muscles from tumor-bearing mice. As expected, downregulation of Pax7 expression was associated with a rescue of muscle mass and fiber size. Our findings shed light on the molecular basis of the beneficial effect exerted by a moderate physical exercise on muscle stem cells in cancer cachexia. Furthermore, we propose voluntary exercise as a physiological tool to counteract the overexpression of Pax7 observed in cancer cachexia.

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Maurilio Sampaolesi

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Paola Aulino

Sapienza University of Rome

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Dario Coletti

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Sergio Adamo

American Board of Legal Medicine

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Veronica Cardillo

Sapienza University of Rome

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Dario Coletti

Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai

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Peter Nau

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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Viviana Moresi

Sapienza University of Rome

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