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Dive into the research topics where Fabrizia Bonacina is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabrizia Bonacina.


Cardiovascular Research | 2014

HDL in innate and adaptive immunity

Alberico L. Catapano; Angela Pirillo; Fabrizia Bonacina; Giuseppe Danilo Norata

During infections or acute conditions high-density lipoproteins cholesterol (HDL-C) levels decrease very rapidly and HDL particles undergo profound changes in their composition and function. These changes are associated with poor prognosis following endotoxemia or sepsis and data from genetically modified animal models support a protective role for HDL. The same is true for some parasitic infections, where the key player appears to be a specific and minor component of HDL, namely apoL-1. The ability of HDL to influence cholesterol availability in lipid rafts in immune cells results in the modulation of toll-like receptors, MHC-II complex, as well as B- and T-cell receptors, while specific molecules shuttled by HDL such as sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P) contribute to immune cells trafficking. Animal models with defects associated with HDL metabolism and/or influencing cell cholesterol efflux present features related to immune disorders. All these functions point to HDL as a platform integrating innate and adaptive immunity. The aim of this review is to provide an overview of the connection between HDL and immunity in atherosclerosis and beyond.


Cell Metabolism | 2017

Obesity-induced metabolic stress leads to biased effector memory CD4+ T cell differentiation via PI3K p110δ/Akt-mediated signals

Claudio Mauro; Joanne Smith; Danilo Cucchi; David Coe; Hongmei Fu; Fabrizia Bonacina; Andrea Baragetti; Gaia Cermenati; Donatella Caruso; Nico Mitro; Alberico L. Catapano; Enrico Ammirati; Maria P. Longhi; Klaus Okkenhaug; Giuseppe Danilo Norata; Federica M. Marelli-Berg

Summary Low-grade systemic inflammation associated to obesity leads to cardiovascular complications, caused partly by infiltration of adipose and vascular tissue by effector T cells. The signals leading to T cell differentiation and tissue infiltration during obesity are poorly understood. We tested whether saturated fatty acid-induced metabolic stress affects differentiation and trafficking patterns of CD4+ T cells. Memory CD4+ T cells primed in high-fat diet-fed donors preferentially migrated to non-lymphoid, inflammatory sites, independent of the metabolic status of the hosts. This was due to biased CD4+ T cell differentiation into CD44hi-CCR7lo-CD62Llo-CXCR3+-LFA1+ effector memory-like T cells upon priming in high-fat diet-fed animals. Similar phenotype was observed in obese subjects in a cohort of free-living people. This developmental bias was independent of any crosstalk between CD4+ T cells and dendritic cells and was mediated via direct exposure of CD4+ T cells to palmitate, leading to increased activation of a PI3K p110δ-Akt-dependent pathway upon priming.


Immunity | 2017

Regulatory T Cell Migration Is Dependent on Glucokinase-Mediated Glycolysis

Madhav Kishore; Kenneth Cheung; Hongmei Fu; Fabrizia Bonacina; Guosu Wang; David Coe; Eleanor Jayne Ward; Alessandra Colamatteo; Maryam Jangani; Andrea Baragetti; Giuseppe Matarese; David M. Smith; Robert Haas; Claudio Mauro; David C. Wraith; Klaus Okkenhaug; Alberico L. Catapano; Veronica De Rosa; Giuseppe Danilo Norata; Federica M. Marelli-Berg

SUMMARY Migration of activated regulatory T (Treg) cells to inflamed tissue is crucial for their immune‐modulatory function. While metabolic reprogramming during Treg cell differentiation has been extensively studied, the bioenergetics of Treg cell trafficking remains undefined. We have investigated the metabolic demands of migrating Treg cells in vitro and in vivo. We show that glycolysis was instrumental for their migration and was initiated by pro‐migratory stimuli via a PI3K‐mTORC2‐mediated pathway culminating in induction of the enzyme glucokinase (GCK). Subsequently, GCK promoted cytoskeletal rearrangements by associating with actin. Treg cells lacking this pathway were functionally suppressive but failed to migrate to skin allografts and inhibit rejection. Similarly, human carriers of a loss‐of‐function GCK regulatory protein gene—leading to increased GCK activity—had reduced numbers of circulating Treg cells. These cells displayed enhanced migratory activity but similar suppressive function, while conventional T cells were unaffected. Thus, GCK‐dependent glycolysis regulates Treg cell migration. HIGHLIGHTSMigration of regulatory T (Treg) cells requires glycolysisThis is mediated by the enzyme glucokinase induced by a PI3K‐mTORC2 pathwayTreg cells lacking this pathway are unable to localize to inflammatory sitesA loss‐of‐function GCK regulator gene causes enhanced motility of human Treg cells Regulatory T cell localization to inflammatory sites is key to their homeostatic function. Kishore and colleagues demonstrate that Treg cell migration requires the activation of glycolysis by the enzyme glucokinase induced via a Treg cell‐selective PI3K‐mTORC2 pathway.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2016

Vascular pentraxin 3 controls arterial thrombosis by targeting collagen and fibrinogen induced platelets aggregation

Fabrizia Bonacina; Silvia S. Barbieri; Lucia Cutuli; Patrizia Amadio; Andrea Doni; Marina Sironi; Silvia Tartari; Alberto Mantovani; Barbara Bottazzi; Cecilia Garlanda; Elena Tremoli; Alberico L. Catapano; Giuseppe Danilo Norata

Aim The long pentraxin PTX3 plays a non-redundant role during acute myocardial infarction, atherosclerosis and in the orchestration of tissue repair and remodeling during vascular injury, clotting and fibrin deposition. The aim of this work is to investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying the protective role of PTX3 during arterial thrombosis. Methods and results PTX3 KO mice transplanted with bone marrow from WT or PTX3 KO mice presented a significant reduction in carotid artery blood flow following FeCl3 induced arterial thrombosis (− 80.36 ± 11.5% and − 95.53 ± 4.46%), while in WT mice transplanted with bone marrow from either WT or PTX3 KO mice, the reduction was less dramatic (− 45.55 ± 1.37% and − 53.39 ± 9.8%), thus pointing to a protective effect independent of a hematopoietic cells derived PTX3. By using P-selectin/PTX3 double KO mice, we further excluded a role for P-selectin, a target of PTX3 released by neutrophils, in vascular protection played by PTX3. In agreement with a minor role for hematopoietic cell-derived PTX3, platelet activation (assessed by flow cytometric expression of markers of platelet activation) was similar in PTX3 KO and WT mice as were haemostatic properties. Histological analysis indicated that PTX3 localizes within the thrombus and the vessel wall, and specific experiments with the N-terminal and the C-terminal PTX3 domain showed the ability of PTX3 to selectively dampen either fibrinogen or collagen induced platelet adhesion and aggregation. Conclusion PTX3 interacts with fibrinogen and collagen and, by dampening their pro-thrombotic effects, plays a protective role during arterial thrombosis.


Current Atherosclerosis Reports | 2018

The Interplay of Lipids, Lipoproteins, and Immunity in Atherosclerosis

Angela Pirillo; Fabrizia Bonacina; Giuseppe Danilo Norata; Alberico L. Catapano

Purpose of ReviewAtherosclerosis is an inflammatory disorder of the arterial wall, in which several players contribute to the onset and progression of the disease. Besides the well-established role of lipids, specifically cholesterol, and immune cell activation, new insights on the molecular mechanisms underlying the atherogenic process have emerged.Recent FindingsMeta-inflammation, a condition of low-grade immune response caused by metabolic dysregulation, immunological memory of innate immune cells (referred to as “trained immunity”), cholesterol homeostasis in dendritic cells, and immunometabolism, i.e., the interplay between immunological and metabolic processes, have all emerged as new actors during atherogenesis. These observations reinforced the interest in directly targeting inflammation to reduce cardiovascular disease.SummaryThe novel acquisitions in pathophysiology of atherosclerosis reinforce the tight link between lipids, inflammation, and immune response, and support the benefit of targeting LDL-C as well as inflammation to decrease the CVD burden. How this will translate into the clinic will depend on the balance between costs (monoclonal antibodies either to PCSK9 or to IL-1ß), side effects (increased incidence of death due to infections for anti-IL-1ß antibody), and the benefits for patients at high CVD risk.


Journal of Molecular Biomarkers & Diagnosis | 2013

The Long Pentraxin PTX3: A Biomarker Spanning From Cardiovascular Disorders to Cancer

Marco Falasca; Fabrizia Bonacina; Alberico L. Catapano; Giuseppe Danilo Norata

Inflammatory mediators may play key roles in both atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disorders and in cancer development. Pentraxins are a family of proteins characterized by the structural motif pentraxin domain. Long pentraxin 3 (PTX3), a protein that in humans is encoded by the PTX3 gene, is rapidly produced and released by several cell types in response to inflammatory stimuli. This review discusses the evidence supporting the role of PTX3 in predicting primary cardiovascular events and diagnosis and prognosis of cancer.


Scientific Reports | 2018

Cluster-assembled zirconia substrates promote long-term differentiation and functioning of human islets of Langerhans

Alessandra Galli; Elisa Maffioli; Elisa Sogne; S. Moretti; Eliana S. Di Cairano; Armando Negri; Simona Nonnis; Giuseppe Danilo Norata; Fabrizia Bonacina; Francesca Borghi; Alessandro Podestà; Federico Bertuzzi; Paolo Milani; Cristina Lenardi; Gabriella Tedeschi; Carla Perego

Ex vivo expansion and differentiation of human pancreatic β-cell are enabling steps of paramount importance for accelerating the development of therapies for diabetes. The success of regenerative strategies depends on their ability to reproduce the chemical and biophysical properties of the microenvironment in which β-cells develop, proliferate and function. In this paper we focus on the biophysical properties of the extracellular environment and exploit the cluster-assembled zirconia substrates with tailored roughness to mimic the nanotopography of the extracellular matrix. We demonstrate that β-cells can perceive nanoscale features of the substrate and can convert these stimuli into mechanotransductive processes which promote long-term in vitro human islet culture, thus preserving β-cell differentiation and function. Proteomic and quantitative immunofluorescence analyses demonstrate that the process is driven by nanoscale topography, via remodelling of the actin cytoskeleton and nuclear architecture. These modifications activate a transcriptional program which stimulates an adaptive metabolic glucose response. Engineered cluster-assembled substrates coupled with proteomic approaches may provide a useful strategy for identifying novel molecular targets for treating diabetes mellitus and for enhancing tissue engineering in order to improve the efficacy of islet cell transplantation therapies.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Fatty acid metabolism complements glycolysis in the selective regulatory T cell expansion during tumor growth

Ilenia Pacella; Claudio Procaccini; Chiara Focaccetti; Stefano Miacci; Eleonora Timperi; Deriggio Faicchia; Martina Severa; Fabiana Rizzo; Eliana M. Coccia; Fabrizia Bonacina; Nico Mitro; Giuseppe Danilo Norata; Grazisa Rossetti; Valeria Ranzani; Massimiliano Pagani; Ezio Giorda; Yu Wei; Giuseppe Matarese; Vincenzo Barnaba; Silvia Piconese

Significance Recent studies have established that metabolic restrains, such as glucose restriction, impair the activities of effector T cells in the tumor microenvironment. In the same context, a huge expansion of activated Treg cells in tumor tissues has been described in mice and humans, contributing to the suppression of protective antitumor immunity. Our data demonstrate that Tregs are committed to survive and proliferate in such a hostile milieu thanks to a metabolic advantage based on the combination of glycolysis and fatty acid synthesis and oxidation. This allows Tregs to prevail over conventional T cells that rely primarily on the glycolytic pathway for their metabolic demands. Awareness of the metabolic dynamics of Tregs in tumor could provide a means for cancer immunotherapy. The tumor microenvironment restrains conventional T cell (Tconv) activation while facilitating the expansion of Tregs. Here we showed that Tregs’ advantage in the tumor milieu relies on supplemental energetic routes involving lipid metabolism. In murine models, tumor-infiltrating Tregs displayed intracellular lipid accumulation, which was attributable to an increased rate of fatty acid (FA) synthesis. Since the relative advantage in glucose uptake may fuel FA synthesis in intratumoral Tregs, we demonstrated that both glycolytic and oxidative metabolism contribute to Tregs’ expansion. We corroborated our data in human tumors showing that Tregs displayed a gene signature oriented toward glycolysis and lipid synthesis. Our data support a model in which signals from the tumor microenvironment induce a circuitry of glycolysis, FA synthesis, and oxidation that confers a preferential proliferative advantage to Tregs, whose targeting might represent a strategy for cancer treatment.


European Heart Journal | 2018

PCSK9 deficiency reduces insulin secretion and promotes glucose intolerance: the role of the low-density lipoprotein receptor

Lorenzo Da Dalt; Massimiliano Ruscica; Fabrizia Bonacina; G. Balzarotti; A. Dhyani; Eliana S. Di Cairano; Andrea Baragetti; Lorenzo Arnaboldi; Simona De Metrio; Fabio Pellegatta; Liliana Grigore; Margherita Botta; Chiara Macchi; Patrizia Uboldi; Carla Perego; Alberico L. Catapano; Giuseppe Danilo Norata

Aims PCSK9 loss of function genetic variants are associated with lower low-density lipoprotein cholesterol but also with higher plasma glucose levels and increased risk of Type 2 diabetes mellitus. Here, we investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying this association. Methods and results Pcsk9 KO, WT, Pcsk9/Ldlr double KO (DKO), Ldlr KO, albumin AlbCre+/Pcsk9LoxP/LoxP (liver-selective Pcsk9 knock-out mice), and AlbCre-/Pcsk9LoxP/LoxP mice were used. GTT, ITT, insulin and C-peptide plasma levels, pancreas morphology, and cholesterol accumulation in pancreatic islets were studied in the different animal models. Glucose clearance was significantly impaired in Pcsk9 KO mice fed with a standard or a high-fat diet for 20 weeks compared with WT animals; insulin sensitivity, however, was not affected. A detailed analysis of pancreas morphology of Pcsk9 KO mice vs. controls revealed larger islets with increased accumulation of cholesteryl esters, paralleled by increased insulin intracellular levels and decreased plasma insulin, and C-peptide levels. This phenotype was completely reverted in Pcsk9/Ldlr DKO mice implying the low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR) as the proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin Type 9 (PCSK9) target responsible for the phenotype observed. Further studies in albumin AlbCre+/Pcsk9LoxP/LoxP mice, which lack detectable circulating PCSK9, also showed a complete recovery of the phenotype, thus indicating that circulating, liver-derived PCSK9, the principal target of monoclonal antibodies, does not impact beta-cell function and insulin secretion. Conclusion PCSK9 critically controls LDLR expression in pancreas perhaps contributing to the maintenance of a proper physiological balance to limit cholesterol overload in beta cells. This effect is independent of circulating PCSK9 and is probably related to locally produced PCSK9.


EMBO Reports | 2018

Zc3h10 is a novel mitochondrial regulator

Matteo Audano; Silvia Pedretti; Gaia Cermenati; Elisabetta Brioschi; Giuseppe R. Diaferia; Serena Ghisletti; Alessandro Cuomo; Tiziana Bonaldi; Franco Salerno; Marina Mora; Liliana Grigore; Katia Garlaschelli; Andrea Baragetti; Fabrizia Bonacina; Alberico L. Catapano; Giuseppe Danilo Norata; Maurizio Crestani; Donatella Caruso; Enrique Saez; Emma De Fabiani; Nico Mitro

Mitochondria are the energy‐generating hubs of the cell. In spite of considerable advances, our understanding of the factors that regulate the molecular circuits that govern mitochondrial function remains incomplete. Using a genome‐wide functional screen, we identify the poorly characterized protein Zinc finger CCCH‐type containing 10 (Zc3h10) as regulator of mitochondrial physiology. We show that Zc3h10 is upregulated during physiological mitochondriogenesis as it occurs during the differentiation of myoblasts into myotubes. Zc3h10 overexpression boosts mitochondrial function and promotes myoblast differentiation, while the depletion of Zc3h10 results in impaired myoblast differentiation, mitochondrial dysfunction, reduced expression of electron transport chain (ETC) subunits, and blunted TCA cycle flux. Notably, we have identified a loss‐of‐function mutation of Zc3h10 in humans (Tyr105 to Cys105) that is associated with increased body mass index, fat mass, fasting glucose, and triglycerides. Isolated peripheral blood mononuclear cells from individuals homozygotic for Cys105 display reduced oxygen consumption rate, diminished expression of some ETC subunits, and decreased levels of some TCA cycle metabolites, which all together derive in mitochondrial dysfunction. Taken together, our study identifies Zc3h10 as a novel mitochondrial regulator.

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David Coe

Queen Mary University of London

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