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Dive into the research topics where Eva Masiero is active.

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Featured researches published by Eva Masiero.


Cell Metabolism | 2009

Autophagy Is Required to Maintain Muscle Mass

Eva Masiero; Lisa Agatea; Cristina Mammucari; Bert Blaauw; Emanuele Loro; Masaaki Komatsu; Daniel Metzger; Carlo Reggiani; Stefano Schiaffino; Marco Sandri

The ubiquitin-proteasome and autophagy-lysosome pathways are the two major routes for protein and organelle clearance. In skeletal muscle, both systems are under FoxO regulation and their excessive activation induces severe muscle loss. Although altered autophagy has been observed in various myopathies, the specific role of autophagy in skeletal muscle has not been determined by loss-of-function approaches. Here, we report that muscle-specific deletion of a crucial autophagy gene, Atg7, resulted in profound muscle atrophy and age-dependent decrease in force. Atg7 null muscles showed accumulation of abnormal mitochondria, sarcoplasmic reticulum distension, disorganization of sarcomere, and formation of aberrant concentric membranous structures. Autophagy inhibition exacerbated muscle loss during denervation and fasting. Thus, autophagy flux is important to preserve muscle mass and to maintain myofiber integrity. Our results suggest that inhibition/alteration of autophagy can contribute to myofiber degeneration and weakness in muscle disorders characterized by accumulation of abnormal mitochondria and inclusions.


The EMBO Journal | 2010

Mitochondrial fission and remodelling contributes to muscle atrophy.

Vanina Romanello; Eleonora Guadagnin; Ligia C. Gomes; Ira V. Röder; Claudia Sandri; Yvonne Petersen; Giulia Milan; Eva Masiero; Paola Del Piccolo; Marc Foretz; Luca Scorrano; Rüdiger Rudolf; Marco Sandri

Mitochondria are crucial organelles in the production of energy and in the control of signalling cascades. A machinery of pro‐fusion and fission proteins regulates their morphology and subcellular localization. In muscle this results in an orderly pattern of intermyofibrillar and subsarcolemmal mitochondria. Muscular atrophy is a genetically controlled process involving the activation of the autophagy‐lysosome and the ubiquitin–proteasome systems. Whether and how the mitochondria are involved in muscular atrophy is unknown. Here, we show that the mitochondria are removed through autophagy system and that changes in mitochondrial network occur in atrophying muscles. Expression of the fission machinery is per se sufficient to cause muscle wasting in adult animals, by triggering organelle dysfunction and AMPK activation. Conversely, inhibition of the mitochondrial fission inhibits muscle loss during fasting and after FoxO3 overexpression. Mitochondrial‐dependent muscle atrophy requires AMPK activation as inhibition of AMPK restores muscle size in myofibres with altered mitochondria. Thus, disruption of the mitochondrial network is an essential amplificatory loop of the muscular atrophy programme.


The FASEB Journal | 2009

Inducible activation of Akt increases skeletal muscle mass and force without satellite cell activation

Bert Blaauw; Marta Canato; Lisa Agatea; Luana Toniolo; Cristina Mammucari; Eva Masiero; Reimar Abraham; Marco Sandri; Stefano Schiaffino; Carlo Reggiani

A better understanding of the signaling pathways that control muscle growth is required to identify appropriate countermeasures to prevent or reverse the loss of muscle mass and force induced by aging, disuse, or neuromuscular diseases. However, two major issues in this field have not yet been fully addressed. The first concerns the pathways involved in leading to physiological changes in muscle size. Muscle hypertrophy based on perturbations of specific signaling pathways is either characterized by impaired force generation, e.g., myostatin knockout, or incompletely studied from the physiological point of view, e.g., IGF‐1 overexpression. A second issue is whether satellite cell proliferation and incorporation into growing muscle fibers is required for a functional hypertrophy. To address these issues, we used an inducible transgenic model of muscle hypertrophy by short‐term Akt activation in adult skeletal muscle. In this model, Akt activation for 3 wk was followed by marked hypertrophy (̃50% of muscle mass) and by increased force generation, as determined in vivo by ankle plantar flexor stimulation, ex vivo in intact isolated diaphragm strips, and in single‐skinned muscle fibers. No changes in fiber‐type distribution and resistance to fatigue were detectable. Bromodeoxyuridine incorporation experiments showed that Akt‐dependent muscle hypertrophy was accompanied by proliferation of interstitial cells but not by satellite cell activation and new myonuclei incorporation, pointing to an increase in myonuclear domain size. We can conclude that during a fast hyper‐trophic growth myonuclear domain can increase without compromising muscle performance.—Blaauw, B., Canato, M., Agatea, L., Toniolo, L., Mammucari, C., Masiero, E., Abraham, R., Sandri, M., Schiaffino, S., Reggiani, C. Inducible activation of Akt increases skeletal muscle mass and force without satellite cell activation. FASEBJ. 23, 3896‐3905 (2009). www.fasebj.org


Autophagy | 2010

Autophagy inhibition induces atrophy and myopathy in adult skeletal muscles.

Eva Masiero; Marco Sandri

Autophagy is required for cellular survival and for the clearance of damaged proteins and altered organelles. Excessive autophagy activation contributes to muscle loss in different catabolic conditions. However, the function of basal autophagy for homeostasis of skeletal muscle was unknown. To clarify this issue we have generated conditional and inducible knockout mice for the critical gene Atg7, to block autophagy specifically in skeletal muscle. Atg7 null muscles reveal an unexpected phenotype which is characterized by muscle atrophy, weakness and features of myofiber degeneration. Morphological, biochemical, and molecular analyses of our autophagy knockout mice show the presence of protein aggregates, abnormal mitochondria, accumulation of membrane bodies, sarcoplasmic reticulum distension, vacuolization, oxidative stress and apoptosis. Moreover, autophagy inhibition does not protect skeletal muscles from atrophy during denervation and fasting, but instead promotes greater muscle loss. In conclusion, autophagy plays a critical role for myofiber maintenance and its activation is crucial to avoid accumulation of toxic proteins and dysfunctional organelles that, in the end, would lead to atrophy and weakness.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2010

JunB transcription factor maintains skeletal muscle mass and promotes hypertrophy

Anna Raffaello; Giulia Milan; Eva Masiero; Silvia Carnio; Donghoon M. Lee; Gerolamo Lanfranchi; Alfred L. Goldberg; Marco Sandri

Decreasing JunB expression causes muscle atrophy, whereas overexpression induces hypertrophy and blocks atrophy via myostatin inhibition and regulation of atrogin-1 and MuRF expression via FoxO3.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2012

The role of autophagy in the pathogenesis of glycogen storage disease type II (GSDII)

Annachiara Nascimbeni; Marina Fanin; Eva Masiero; Corrado Angelini; Marco Sandri

Regulated removal of proteins and organelles by autophagy–lysosome system is critical for muscle homeostasis. Excessive activation of autophagy-dependent degradation contributes to muscle atrophy and cachexia. Conversely, inhibition of autophagy causes accumulation of protein aggregates and abnormal organelles, leading to myofiber degeneration and myopathy. Defects in lysosomal function result in severe muscle disorders such as Pompe (glycogen storage disease type II (GSDII)) disease, characterized by an accumulation of autophagosomes. However, whether autophagy is detrimental or not in muscle function of Pompe patients is unclear. We studied infantile and late-onset GSDII patients and correlated impairment of autophagy with muscle wasting. We also monitored autophagy in patients who received recombinant α-glucosidase. Our data show that infantile and late-onset patients have different levels of autophagic flux, accumulation of p62-positive protein aggregates and expression of atrophy-related genes. Although the infantile patients show impaired autophagic function, the late-onset patients display an interesting correlation among autophagy impairment, atrophy and disease progression. Moreover, reactivation of autophagy in vitro contributes to acid α-glucosidase maturation in both healthy and diseased myotubes. Together, our data suggest that autophagy protects myofibers from disease progression and atrophy in late-onset patients.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2010

Normal myogenesis and increased apoptosis in myotonic dystrophy type-1 muscle cells

Emanuele Loro; Fabrizio Rinaldi; Adriana Malena; Eva Masiero; Giuseppe Novelli; Corrado Angelini; Romeo; Marco Sandri; Annalisa Botta; Lodovica Vergani

Myotonic dystrophy (DM) is caused by a (CTG)n expansion in the 3′-untranslated region of DMPK gene. Mutant transcripts are retained in nuclear RNA foci, which sequester RNA binding proteins thereby misregulating the alternative splicing. Controversy still surrounds the pathogenesis of the DM1 muscle distress, characterized by myotonia, weakness and wasting with distal muscle atrophy. Eight primary human cell lines from adult-onset (DM1) and congenital (cDM1) patients, (CTG)n range 90–1800, were successfully differentiated into aneural-immature and contracting-innervated-mature myotubes. Morphological, immunohistochemical, RT-PCR and western blotting analyses of several markers of myogenesis indicated that in vitro differentiation–maturation of DM1 myotubes was comparable to age-matched controls. In all pathological muscle cells, (CTG)n expansions were confirmed by long PCR and RNA fluorescence in situ hybridization. Moreover, the DM1 myotubes showed the splicing alteration of insulin receptor and muscleblind-like 1 (MBNL1) genes associated with the DM1 phenotype. Considerable myotube loss and atrophy of 15-day-differentiated DM1 myotubes indicated activated catabolic pathways, as confirmed by the presence of apoptotic (caspase-3 activation, cytochrome c release, chromatin fragmentation) and autophagic (P62/LC3) markers. Z-VAD treatment significantly reduced the decrease in myonuclei number and in average width in 15-day-differentiated DM1 myotubes. We thus propose that the muscle wasting typical in DM1 is due to impairment of muscle mass maintenance–regeneration, through premature apoptotic–autophagic activation, rather than altered myogenesis.


Autophagy | 2012

Impaired autophagy contributes to muscle atrophy in glycogen storage disease type II patients

Anna Chiara Nascimbeni; Marina Fanin; Eva Masiero; Corrado Angelini; Marco Sandri

The autophagy-lysosome system is essential for muscle cell homeostasis and its dysfunction has been linked to muscle disorders that are typically distinguished by massive autophagic buildup. Among them, glycogen storage disease type II (GSDII) is characterized by the presence of large glycogen-filled lysosomes in the skeletal muscle, due to a defect in the lysosomal enzyme acid α-glucosidase (GAA). The accumulation of autophagosomes is believed to be detrimental for myofiber function. However, the role of autophagy in the pathogenesis of GSDII is still unclear. To address this issue we monitored autophagy in muscle biopsies and myotubes of early and late-onset GSDII patients at different time points of disease progression. Moreover we also analyzed muscles from patients treated with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). Our data suggest that autophagy is a protective mechanism that is required for myofiber survival in late-onset forms of GSDII. Importantly, our findings suggest that a normal autophagy flux is important for a correct maturation of GAA and for the uptake of recombinant human GAA. In conclusion, autophagy failure plays an important role in GSDII disease progression, and the development of new drugs to restore the autophagic flux should be considered to improve ERT efficacy.


Cell Metabolism | 2007

FoxO3 controls autophagy in skeletal muscle in vivo.

Cristina Mammucari; Giulia Milan; Vanina Romanello; Eva Masiero; Ruediger Rudolf; Paola Del Piccolo; Steven J. Burden; Raffaella Di Lisi; Claudia Sandri; Jinghui Zhao; Alfred L. Goldberg; Stefano Schiaffino; Marco Sandri


Neurology | 2012

Glycogen Storage Disease Type II (GSDII): Is Autophagy Beneficial or Detrimental? (PD6.002)

Anna Chiara Nascimbeni; Marina Fanin; Eva Masiero; Corrado Angelini; Marco Sandri

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