Esteban Mocetti
Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires
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Featured researches published by Esteban Mocetti.
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2004
Marikena G. Risso; Gloria Garbarino; Esteban Mocetti; Oscar Campetella; Stella M. Gonzlez Cappa; Carlos A. Buscaglia; Susana M. Leguizamn
The clinical outcome of Chagas disease is highly variable, mainly because of the heterogeneity of Trypanosoma cruzi, a parasite for which 2 major phylogenetic groups (I and II) were recently defined. Epidemiological and immunological data indicate that the prevalence of T. cruzi II in patients living in the southern cone of South America correlates with the alterations caused by Chagas disease. We report here that infection with T. cruzi II isolates induces 100% mortality in mice, in contrast to infection with T. cruzi I isolates, in which almost all mice enter the chronic phase even when a 1000-fold higher inoculum is administered. Trypomastigotes from T. cruzi II strains express and shed significantly higher amounts of trans-sialidase than do those from the T. cruzi I lineage. Disorganization of the thymus histoarchitecture associated with the circulating enzyme was observed after infection with T. cruzi II strains, in contrast to transient thymus lesions found in mice infected with T. cruzi I strains. Therefore, trans-sialidase becomes the first T. cruzi virulence factor identified that is differentially expressed by the main parasite groups and that contributes to their contrasting behaviors.
Gastroenterology | 2003
Tiina E. Raevaara; Carlos Vaccaro; Wael M. Abdel-Rahman; Esteban Mocetti; Shashi Bala; Karin E. Lönnqvist; Reetta Kariola; Henry T. Lynch; Päivi Peltomäki; Minna Nyström-Lahti
BACKGROUND & AIMS Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer is associated with mismatch repair deficiency. Most predisposing mutations prevent the production of functional mismatch repair protein. Thus, when the wild-type copy is also inactivated, the cell becomes mismatch repair deficient, and this leads to a high degree of microsatellite instability in tumors. However, tumors linked to nontruncating mutations may display positive or partly positive immunohistochemical staining of the mutated protein and low or atypical microsatellite instability status, which suggests impaired functional activity but not a total lack of mismatch repair. We found human mutL homology (hMLH) 1 del616, one of the most widespread recurring mutations in hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer, segregating in a large hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer family. Because the predicted coding change is a deletion of only 1 amino acid, the pathogenicity of the mutation was evaluated. METHODS Many analyses were performed to assess the pathogenicity of hMLH1 del616 and to study the expression and function of the mutated messenger RNA and protein. RESULTS Genetic and immunohistochemical evidence supported hMLH1-linked cancer predisposition in this family. Microsatellite instability varied from low to high, and the hMLH1 protein was lost in 2 tumors but was partly detectable in 1 tumor. Whereas similar optimal amounts of mutated hMLH1 del616 and wild-type hMLH1 proteins were equally functional in an in vitro mismatch repair assay, the amount of in vivo-expressed hMLH1 del616 was much lower than the amount of wild-type protein; this suggests that the deletion imparts instability to the mutant protein. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that the pathogenicity of hMLH1 del616 is not linked to nonfunctionality, but to shortage of the functional protein.
Journal of Immunology | 2005
Juan Mucci; Esteban Mocetti; María Susana Leguizamón; Oscar Campetella
Sialylation is emerging as an important issue in developing thymocytes and is considered among the most significant cell surface modifications, although its physiologic relevance is far from being completely understood. It is regulated by the concerted expression of sialyl transferases along thymocyte development. After in vivo administration of trans-sialidase, a virulence factor from the American trypanosomatid Trypanosoma cruzi that directly transfers the sialyl residue among macromolecules, we found that the alteration of the sialylation pattern induces thymocyte apoptosis inside the “nurse cell complex.” This suggests a glycosylation survey in the development of the T cell compartment. In this study, we report that this thymocyte apoptosis mechanism requires the presence of androgens. No increment in apoptosis was recorded after trans-sialidase administration in females or in antiandrogen-treated, gonadectomized, or androgen receptor mutant male mice. The androgen receptor presence was required only in the thymic epithelial cells as determined by bone marrow chimeric mouse approaches. The presence of the CD43 surface mucin, a molecule with a still undefined function in thymocytes, was another absolute requirement. The trans-sialidase-induced apoptosis proceeds through the TNF-α receptor 1 deathly signaling leading to the activation of the caspase 3. Accordingly, the production of the cytokine was increased in thymocytes. The ability of males to delete thymocytes altered in their sialylation pattern reveals a sexual dimorphism in the glycosylation survey during the development of the T cell compartment that might be related to the known differences in the immune response among sexes.
Acta Orthopaedica Scandinavica | 2003
Martin Buttaro; Alejandro González Della Valle; Laura Piñeiro; Esteban Mocetti; Ana Morandi; Francisco Piccaluga
We compared the incorporation of bone allografts with or without vancomycin in tibial defects of 18 pigs. High-quality radiographs, histological examination, immunological expression of metalloproteinase-13 (MMP-13) and transforming growth factor-beta 2 (TGFß2) indicated that there was no significant difference in bone allograft incorporation between up to 220 times the MIC (minimum inhibitory concentration) in bone allografts with 1 g of vancomycin in each 300 g of allograft or without this supplement.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002
Juan Mucci; Alejandra Hidalgo; Esteban Mocetti; Pablo Argibay; M. Susana Leguizamón; Oscar Campetella
The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999
M. Susana Leguizamón; Esteban Mocetti; Hernán García Rivello; Pablo Argibay; Oscar Campetella
Glycobiology | 2002
Pablo Argibay; Javier M. Di Noia; Alejandra Hidalgo; Esteban Mocetti; Mariana Barbich; Alicia Lorenti; Daniel Bustos; Monica L. Tambutti; Sung H. Hyon; Alberto C.C. Frasch; Daniel O. Sánchez
Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 2007
Carlos Vaccaro; Fernando Bonadeo; Analía V. Roverano; Päivi Peltomäki; Shashi Bala; Elise Renkonen; Maria Ana Redal; Esteban Mocetti; Eduardo Mullen; Guillermo Ojea-Quintana; Mario Benati; Hernán García Rivello; Mary Beth Clark; Jane F. Lynch; Henry T. Lynch
Medicina-buenos Aires | 2007
Carlos Vaccaro; Jorge E Sección de Coloproctología Carrozzo; Esteban Mocetti; Mariana Berho; Paula Valdemoros; Eduardo Mullen; Myriam Oviedo; Maria Ana Redal
In Vitro Cellular & Developmental Biology – Animal | 2000
Mariana Barbich; Alicia Lorenti; Patricia Sorroche; Esteban Mocetti; Alejandra Hidalgo; Catalina C. Bianchi de Di Risio; S.H. Hyon; Pablo Argibay