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Featured researches published by Federica Penco.


PLOS ONE | 2011

Role of IL-1 Beta in the Development of Human TH17 Cells: Lesson from NLPR3 Mutated Patients

Denise Lasigliè; Elisabetta Traggiai; Silvia Federici; Maria Alessio; Antonella Buoncompagni; Andrea Accogli; Sabrina Chiesa; Federica Penco; Alberto Martini; Marco Gattorno

Background T helper 17 cells (TH-17) represent a lineage of effector T cells critical in host defence and autoimmunity. In both mouse and human IL-1β has been indicated as a key cytokine for the commitment to TH-17 cells. Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) are a group of inflammatory diseases associated with mutations of the NLRP3 gene encoding the inflammasome component cryopyrin. In this work we asked whether the deregulated secretion of IL-1β secondary to mutations characterizing these patients could affect the IL-23/IL-17 axis. Methodology/Principal Findings A total of 11 CAPS, 26 systemic onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis (SoJIA) patients and 20 healthy controls were analyzed. Serum levels of IL-17 and IL-6 serum were assessed by ELISA assay. Frequency of TH17 cells was quantified upon staphylococcus enterotoxin B (SEB) stimulation. Secretion of IL-1β, IL-23 and IL-6 by monocyte derived dendritic cells (MoDCs), were quantified by ELISA assay. A total of 8 CAPS and 11 SoJIA patients were also analysed before and after treatment with IL-1β blockade. Untreated CAPS patients showed significantly increased IL-17 serum levels as well as a higher frequency of TH17 compared to control subjects. On the contrary, SoJIA patients displayed a frequency of TH17 similar to normal donors, but were found to have significantly increased serum level of IL-6 when compared to CAPS patients or healthy donors. Remarkably, decreased IL-17 serum levels and TH17 frequency were observed in CAPS patients following in vivo IL-1β blockade. On the same line, MoDCs from CAPS patients exhibited enhanced secretion of IL-1β and IL-23 upon TLRs stimulation, with a reduction after anti-IL-1 treatment. Conclusion/Significance These findings further support the central role of IL-1β in the differentiation of TH17 in human inflammatory conditions.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Cell stress increases ATP release in NLRP3 inflammasome-mediated autoinflammatory diseases, resulting in cytokine imbalance.

Sonia Carta; Federica Penco; Rosa Lavieri; Alberto Martini; Charles A. Dinarello; Marco Gattorno; Anna Rubartelli

Significance Single amino acid mutations in NLRP3 in patients with cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) lead to oversecretion of IL-1β, resulting in severe inflammatory manifestations. How this occurs is unclear. We show here that cellular stress in blood monocytes contributes to CAPS pathophysiology, allowing copious release of ATP in response to minute concentrations of inflammatory stimuli. As a consequence, the released ATP enhances NLRP3-mediated secretion of IL-1β and IL-18 by activating P2X purinoceptor 7. Later, CAPS cells undergo oxidative stress, which impairs secretion of the anti-inflammatory IL-1 receptor antagonist, worsening the clinical picture. Antioxidants rescue the reduced production of the antagonist. Blocking extracellular ATP and improving stress tolerance may represent novel therapeutic strategies in autoinflammatory diseases. Cell stress is implicated in triggering bouts of systemic inflammation in patients with autoinflammatory disorders. Blood monocytes from patients affected by NLRP3-mediated cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes (CAPS) release greater amounts of IL-1β than monocytes from unaffected subjects. Here we show that stress lowers the threshold of activation; blood monocytes from CAPS patients maintain the high levels of secreted IL-1β (fivefold) and IL-18 (10-fold) when stimulated with 1,000-fold less LPS than that required for full IL-1β secretion in control subjects. Unexpectedly, IL-1α secretion is increased 10-fold, indicating that inflammatory episodes in CAPS may not be entirely a result of IL-1β but may also involve IL-1α. In CAPS monocytes, LPS induces the externalization of copious amounts of ATP (10-fold), which drive IL-1β, IL-18, and IL-1α release via activation of the P2X purinoceptor 7. This enhanced ATP release appears to be the link between cell stress and increased cytokine secretion in CAPS. In the later phase after LPS stimulation, CAPS monocytes undergo oxidative stress, which impairs production of the anti-inflammatory IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra). Remarkably, IL-1Ra secretion is fully restored by treatment with antioxidants. In two patients with the same NLRP3 mutation, but different disease severity, monocytes from the mildly affected patient exhibited more efficient redox response, lower ATP secretion, and more balanced cytokine production. Thus, the robustness of the individual antioxidant response increases the tolerance to stress and reduces the negative effect of the disease. Pharmacologic block of P2X purinoceptor 7 and improved stress tolerance may represent novel treatment strategies in stress-associated inflammatory diseases.


Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases | 2017

ADA2 deficiency (DADA2) as an unrecognised cause of early onset polyarteritis nodosa and stroke: a multicentre national study

Roberta Caorsi; Federica Penco; Alice Grossi; Antonella Insalaco; Alessia Omenetti; Maria Alessio; Giovanni Conti; Federico Marchetti; Paolo Picco; Alberto Tommasini; Silvana Martino; Clara Malattia; Romina Gallizi; Rosa Anna Podda; Annalisa Salis; Fernanda Falcini; Francesca Schena; Francesca Garbarino; Alessia Morreale; Manuela Pardeo; Claudia Ventrici; Chiara Passarelli; Qing Zhou; Mariasavina Severino; Carlo Gandolfo; Gianluca Damonte; Alberto Martini; Angelo Ravelli; Ivona Aksentijevich; Isabella Ceccherini

Objectives To analyse the prevalence of CECR1 mutations in patients diagnosed with early onset livedo reticularis and/or haemorrhagic/ischaemic strokes in the context of inflammation or polyarteritis nodosa (PAN). Forty-eight patients from 43 families were included in the study. Methods Direct sequencing of CECR1 was performed by Sanger analysis. Adenosine deaminase 2 (ADA2) enzymatic activity was analysed in monocyte isolated from patients and healthy controls incubated with adenosine and with or without an ADA1 inhibitor. Results Biallelic homozygous or compound heterozygous CECR1 mutations were detected in 15/48 patients. A heterozygous disease-associated mutation (p.G47V) was observed in two affected brothers. The mean age of onset of the genetically positive patients was 24 months (6 months to 7 years). Ten patients displayed one or more cerebral strokes during their disease course. Low immunoglobulin levels were detected in six patients. Thalidomide and anti-TNF (tumour necrosis factor) blockers were the most effective drugs. Patients without CECR1 mutations had a later age at disease onset, a lower prevalence of neurological and skin manifestations; one of these patients displayed all the clinical features of adenosine deaminase 2deficiency (DADA2) and a defective enzymatic activity suggesting the presence of a missed mutation or a synthesis defect. Conclusions DADA2 accounts for paediatric patients diagnosed with PAN-like disease and strokes and might explain an unrecognised condition in patients followed by adult rheumatologist. Timely diagnosis and treatment with anti-TNF agents are crucial for the prevention of severe complications of the disease. Functional assay to measure ADA2 activity should complement genetic testing in patients with non-confirming genotypes.


Rheumatology | 2016

Disease activity accounts for long-term efficacy of IL-1 blockers in pyogenic sterile arthritis pyoderma gangrenosum and severe acne syndrome

Alessia Omenetti; Sonia Carta; Roberta Caorsi; M Finetti; Daniela Marotto; Bianca Lattanzi; Mauro Jorini; Laura Delfino; Federica Penco; Paolo Picco; Antonella Buoncompagni; Alberto Martini; Anna Rubartelli; Marco Gattorno

OBJECTIVE To provide a rationale for anti-IL-1 treatment in pyogenic sterile arthritis, pyoderma gangrenosum and acne (PAPA) by defining whether IL-1β secretion is enhanced; requires NLRP3; and correlates with proline-serine-threonine phosphatase-interacting protein 1 mutations, disease activity and/or the clinical picture in PAPA. METHODS Monocytes were isolated from 13 patients and 35 healthy donors and studied at baseline and following activation. Secretion pattern of IL-1β, IL-1α, IL-1Ra, IL-6, IL-18 and TNF-α was assessed in supernatants by ELISA. The NLRP3 requirement for IL-1β secretion was investigated by silencing technique in PAPA and healthy donor monocytes. Long-term follow-up (mean 26 months, range 4-38) was performed in five patients enrolled in an anti-IL-1 regimen. RESULTS IL-1β secretion in PAPA is increased, requires NLRP3 and correlates with disease activity. Patients with a history of osteoarticular flares release more IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α compared with those with predominant cutaneous recurrences. Monocytes from patients in anti-IL-1 treatment dramatically reduced IL-1β secretion after ex vivo activation, and long-term follow-up demonstrated decreased frequency of flares and normalization of acute phase reactants in all the patients. A straightforward correlation between genotype and IL-1β signalling was not observed suggesting that factors other than mutation itself may play a role in regulating IL-1β secretion and response to treatment in PAPA. CONCLUSION PAPA patients with active lesions display increased NLRP3-mediated IL-1β secretion, and long-term efficacy of IL-1 blockade was demonstrated. Even if other mechanisms related to the complex proline-serine-threonine phosphatase-interacting protein 1 protein networking might play additional roles, this study further supports the potential of IL-1 blockade as an effective therapeutic strategy in PAPA syndrome.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2017

Regulation of Human Macrophage M1–M2 Polarization Balance by Hypoxia and the Triggering Receptor Expressed on Myeloid Cells-1

Federica Raggi; Simone Pelassa; Daniele Pierobon; Federica Penco; Marco Gattorno; Francesco Novelli; Alessandra Eva; Luigi Varesio; Mirella Giovarelli; Maria Carla Bosco

Macrophages (Mf) are a heterogeneous population of tissue-resident professional phagocytes and a major component of the leukocyte infiltrate at sites of inflammation, infection, and tumor growth. They can undergo diverse forms of activation in response to environmental factors, polarizing into specialized functional subsets. A common hallmark of the pathologic environment is represented by hypoxia. The impact of hypoxia on human Mf polarization has not been fully established. The objective of this study was to elucidate the effects of a hypoxic environment reflecting that occurring in vivo in diseased tissues on the ability of human Mf to polarize into classically activated (proinflammatory M1) and alternatively activated (anti-inflammatory M2) subsets. We present data showing that hypoxia hinders Mf polarization toward the M1 phenotype by decreasing the expression of T cell costimulatory molecules and chemokine homing receptors and the production of proinflammatory, Th1-priming cytokines typical of classical activation, while promoting their acquisition of phenotypic and secretory features of alternative activation. Furthermore, we identify the triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells (TREM)-1, a member of the Ig-like immunoregulatory receptor family, as a hypoxia-inducible gene in Mf and demonstrate that its engagement by an agonist Ab reverses the M2-polarizing effect of hypoxia imparting a M1-skewed phenotype to Mf. Finally, we provide evidence that Mf infiltrating the inflamed hypoxic joints of children affected by oligoarticular juvenile idiopatic arthritis express high surface levels of TREM-1 associated with predominant M1 polarization and suggest the potential of this molecule in driving M1 proinflammatory reprogramming in the hypoxic synovial environment.


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2016

Clinical characteristics of patients carrying the Q703K variant of the NLRP3 Gene: A 10-year multicentric national study

Aldo Naselli; Federica Penco; Luca Cantarini; Antonella Insalaco; Mariolina Alessio; Alberto Tommasini; Cristina Maggio; Laura Obici; Romina Gallizi; Marco A. Cimmino; Sara Signa; Orso Maria Lucherini; Sonia Carta; Francesco Caroli; Alberto Martini; Anna Rubartelli; Isabella Ceccherini; Marco Gattorno

Objective. The aim of our study was to analyze the clinical and functional effect of the p.Q703K (p. Q705K, c. 2107C>A) variant of the NLRP3 gene in a population of patients screened for suspected cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome (CAPS). Methods. Since 2002, 580 patients underwent molecular analysis for NLRP3. Data on clinical presentation, response to treatment, and longterm followup were collected using a uniform questionnaire. The pattern of cytokine secretion after lipopolysaccharide stimulation from isolated monocytes was analyzed in 3 patients carrying the p.Q703K variant and 1 patient with a chronic infantile neurologic, cutaneous, articular syndrome phenotype carrying both the p.M406I and p.Q703K, and compared with 7 patients with CAPS with sure pathogenic variants and 6 healthy controls. Results. The p.Q703K variant was found in 57 screened patients with an overall allelic frequency of 5%. The frequency in normal controls was 5.5%. Clinical data at the moment of molecular analysis and at followup were available in 36 patients. Two patients displayed additional mutations of NLRP3. The mean followup was 2.5 years. Thirteen patients (39%) had a final diagnosis different from the original suspicion of CAPS. The remaining 21 patients displayed a mild phenotype mainly characterized by recurrent episodes of urticarial rash and arthralgia. Only 8 patients were treated with anti-interleukin (IL)-1 treatment, with a complete response in 5 patients. The pattern of secretion of IL-1β and other cytokines (IL-6 and IL-1 receptor antagonist) in patients did not display the aberrancies observed in patients with CAPS and was similar to that observed in healthy controls. Conclusion. The present study confirms the weak clinical and functional effect of the p.Q703K variant.


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2017

Cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes in Italian Patients: Evaluation of the rate of somatic NLRP3 mosaicism and phenotypic characterization

Denise Lasigliè; Anna Mensa-Vilaro; Denise Ferrera; Roberta Caorsi; Federica Penco; Giuseppe Santamaria; Marco Di Duca; Giulia Amico; Kenji Nakagawa; Francesca Antonini; Alberto Tommasini; Rita Consolini; Antonella Insalaco; Marco Cattalini; Laura Obici; Romina Gallizzi; Francesca Santarelli; Genny Del Zotto; Mariasavina Severino; Anna Rubartelli; Roberto Ravazzolo; Alberto Martini; Isabella Ceccherini; Ryuta Nishikomori; Marco Gattorno; Juan I. Aróstegui; Silvia Borghini

Objective. To evaluate the rate of somatic NLRP3 mosaicism in an Italian cohort of mutation-negative patients with cryopyrin-associated periodic syndrome (CAPS). Methods. The study enrolled 14 patients with a clinical phenotype consistent with CAPS in whom Sanger sequencing of the NLRP3 gene yielded negative results. Patients’ DNA were subjected to amplicon-based NLRP3 deep sequencing. Results. Low-level somatic NLRP3 mosaicism has been detected in 4 patients, 3 affected with chronic infantile neurological cutaneous and articular syndrome and 1 with Muckle-Wells syndrome. Identified nucleotide substitutions encode for 4 different amino acid exchanges, with 2 of them being novel (p.Y563C and p.G564S). In vitro functional studies confirmed the deleterious behavior of the 4 somatic NLRP3 mutations. Among the different neurological manifestations detected, 1 patient displayed mild loss of white matter volume on brain magnetic resonance imaging. Conclusion. The allele frequency of somatic NLRP3 mutations occurs generally under 15%, considered the threshold of detectability using the Sanger method of DNA sequencing. Consequently, routine genetic diagnostic of CAPS should be currently performed by next-generation techniques ensuring high coverage to identify also low-level mosaicism, whose actual frequency is yet unknown and probably underestimated.


Pediatric Rheumatology | 2015

B cells characterization in ADA2 Deficiency patients

Francesca Schena; Stefano Volpi; Roberta Caorsi; C Pastorino; Federica Penco; F Kalli; Alessia Omenetti; Sabrina Chiesa; A Bertoni; Paolo Picco; G Filaci; Ivona Aksentijevich; A Grossi; Isabella Ceccherini; Alberto Martini; Elisabetta Traggiai; M Gattorno

ADA2 deficiency, a recently described disease, is characterized by systemic vasculopathy and episodes of strokes. The defect is due to a loss of function mutation of CECR1 gene, codifying for Adenosine Deaminase 2 protein. This protein regulates the catabolism of extracellular adenosine, which we have recently shown is an important regulator of Class Switch Recombination in B lymphocytes. Accordingly DADA2 patients can present hypogammaglobulinemia.


Pediatric Rheumatology | 2015

Cryopyrin associated periodic syndromes (CAPS): Immunological characterization of knock-in mouse model to exploit novel approaches for the modulation of the NLRP3 inflammasome

A Bertoni; Sonia Carta; E Balza; P Catellani; C Pellecchia; Federica Penco; Francesca Schena; S Borghini; Ml Trotta; C Pastorino; Isabella Ceccherini; Alberto Martini; Anna Rubartelli; M Gattorno; Sabrina Chiesa

Question CAPS are autoinflammatory diseases characterized by recurrent episodes of fever and systemic inflammation, subdivides into three different severity phenotypes (FCAS, MWS, CINCA). These syndromes are caused by mutations of NLRP3 gene coding for an intracellular multiprotein complex that mediates IL-1b processing and secretion. These mutations are gain-of-function, resulting in an inflammasome hyperactivity and IL-1b hypersecretion. We aimed to: increase the knowledge on pathologic consequences of NLRP3 mutations in CAPS patients; understand the molecular and regulatory mechanisms of CAPS disease; identify novel molecular targets for the treatment of cryopyrin/NLRP3 related disorders.


Pediatric Rheumatology | 2015

Recruitment of abundant NK cells to the PFAPA tonsils support the crucial role of innate immunity in pathogenesis of PFAPA syndrome

Sabrina Chiesa; Roberta Caorsi; I Ingrosso; F Bellora; Federica Penco; A Bertoni; C Pastorino; Alessia Omenetti; M Finetti; S Borghini; A Sementa; R D'Agostino; Alberto Martini; M Gattorno

Periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and cervical adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome is a more frequent cause of recurrent fever in children. The exact etiology of this pediatric disorder is still unknown. Palatine tonsils are sites where innate immunity leads to the onset of adaptive immunity, mediated by B and T lymphocytes.

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Alberto Martini

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Marco Gattorno

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Roberta Caorsi

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Anna Rubartelli

National Cancer Research Institute

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Sabrina Chiesa

Istituto Giannina Gaslini

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Sonia Carta

National Cancer Research Institute

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M Gattorno

University of Paris-Sud

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