Francesca Delucchi
Harvard University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Francesca Delucchi.
Nature Medicine | 2007
John Muraski; Marcello Rota; Yu Misao; Jenna Fransioli; Christopher T. Cottage; Natalie Gude; Grazia Esposito; Francesca Delucchi; Michael L. Arcarese; Roberto Alvarez; Sailay Siddiqi; Gregory Emmanuel; Weitao Wu; Kimberlee Fischer; Joshua J. Martindale; Christopher C. Glembotski; Annarosa Leri; Jan Kajstura; Nancy S. Magnuson; Anton Berns; Remus M Beretta; Steven R. Houser; Erik Schaefer; Piero Anversa; Mark A. Sussman
The serine-threonine kinases Pim-1 and Akt regulate cellular proliferation and survival. Although Akt is known to be a crucial signaling protein in the myocardium, the role of Pim-1 has been overlooked. Pim-1 expression in the myocardium of mice decreased during postnatal development, re-emerged after acute pathological injury in mice and was increased in failing hearts of both mice and humans. Cardioprotective stimuli associated with Akt activation induced Pim-1 expression, but compensatory increases in Akt abundance and phosphorylation after pathological injury by infarction or pressure overload did not protect the myocardium in Pim-1–deficient mice. Transgenic expression of Pim-1 in the myocardium protected mice from infarction injury, and Pim-1 expression inhibited cardiomyocyte apoptosis with concomitant increases in Bcl-2 and Bcl-XL protein levels, as well as in Bad phosphorylation levels. Relative to nontransgenic controls, calcium dynamics were significantly enhanced in Pim-1–overexpressing transgenic hearts, associated with increased expression of SERCA2a, and were depressed in Pim-1–deficient hearts. Collectively, these data suggest that Pim-1 is a crucial facet of cardioprotection downstream of Akt.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008
Alessandro Boni; Konrad Urbanek; Angelo Nascimbene; Toru Hosoda; Hanqiao Zheng; Francesca Delucchi; Katsuya Amano; Arantxa Gonzalez; Serena Vitale; Caroline Ojaimi; Roberto Rizzi; Roberto Bolli; Katherine E. Yutzey; Marcello Rota; Jan Kajstura; Piero Anversa; Annarosa Leri
The Notch receptor mediates cell fate decision in multiple organs. In the current work we tested the hypothesis that Nkx2.5 is a target gene of Notch1 and raised the possibility that Notch1 regulates myocyte commitment in the adult heart. Cardiac progenitor cells (CPCs) in the niches express Notch1 receptor, and the supporting cells exhibit the Notch ligand Jagged1. The nuclear translocation of Notch1 intracellular domain (N1ICD) up-regulates Nkx2.5 in CPCs and promotes the formation of cycling myocytes in vitro. N1ICD and RBP-Jk form a protein complex, which in turn binds to the Nkx2.5 promoter initiating transcription and myocyte differentiation. In contrast, transcription factors of vascular cells are down-regulated by Jagged1 activation of the Notch1 pathway. Importantly, inhibition of Notch1 in infarcted mice impairs the commitment of resident CPCs to the myocyte lineage opposing cardiomyogenesis. These observations indicate that Notch1 favors the early specification of CPCs to the myocyte phenotype but maintains the newly formed cells in a highly proliferative state. Dividing Nkx2.5-positive myocytes correspond to transit amplifying cells, which condition the replicative capacity of the heart. In conclusion, Notch1 may have critical implications in the control of heart homeostasis and its adaptation to pathologic states.
Circulation Research | 2010
Konrad Urbanek; Mauricio C Cabral-Da-Silva; Noriko Ide-Iwata; Silvia Maestroni; Francesca Delucchi; Hanqiao Zheng; João Ferreira-Martins; Barbara Ogorek; Domenico D'Amario; Michael Bauer; Gianpaolo Zerbini; Marcello Rota; Toru Hosoda; Ronglih Liao; Piero Anversa; Jan Kajstura; Annarosa Leri
Rationale Physiological hypertrophy in the developing heart has been considered the product of an increase in volume of preexisting fetal cardiomyocytes in the absence of myocyte formation. Objective In this study, we tested whether the mouse heart at birth has a pool of cardiac stem cells (CSCs) that differentiate into myocytes contributing to the postnatal expansion of the parenchymal cell compartment. Methods and Results We have found that the newborn heart contains a population of c-kit–positive CSCs that are lineage negative, self-renewing, and multipotent. CSCs express the Notch1 receptor and show the nuclear localization of its active fragment, N1ICD. In 60% of cases, N1ICD was coupled with the presence of Nkx2.5, indicating that the commitment of CSCs to the myocyte lineage is regulated by Notch1. Importantly, overexpression of N1ICD in neonatal CSCs significantly expanded the proportion of transit-amplifying myocytes. To establish whether these in vitro findings had a functional counterpart in vivo, the Notch pathway was blocked in newborn mice by administration of a &ggr;-secretase inhibitor. This intervention resulted in the development of a dilated myopathy and high mortality rates. Ventricular decompensation was characterized by a 62% reduction in amplifying myocytes, which resulted in a 54% decrease in myocyte number. After cessation of Notch blockade and recovery of myocyte regeneration, cardiac anatomy and function were largely restored. Conclusions Notch1 signaling is a critical determinant of CSC growth and differentiation; when this cascade of events is altered, cardiomyogenesis is impaired, physiological cardiac hypertrophy is prevented, and a life-threatening myopathy supervenes.
Archive | 2010
Hua Yun Chen; Xueyin N. Huang; Jorge L. Sepulveda; Albergaria Pereira; Sheila Aparecida Coelho Siqueira; Rosely A. Patzina; F. S. Ibuki; Mari Cleide Sogayar; Maria Lúcia Corrêa-Giannella; Marcel Cerqueira Cesar Machado; Karin Krogh; Madson Q. Almeida; Donatella Stilli; Roberta Berni; Monia Savi; Leonardo Bocchi; Francesca Delucchi; Ezio Musso; Christine Chaponnier; Giulio Gabbiani; Sophie Clément; John Zagorski; Maria Obraztsova; Michael A. Gellar; Jeffrey A. Kline; John A. Watts; Xiao Wu; Zheng Sun; Andrew Foskett; Jerome P. Trzeciakowski
Circulation | 2009
Federico Quaini; Leonardo Bocchi; Monia Savi; Roberta Berni; Francesca Delucchi; Caterina Frati; Cosatanza Lagrasta; Francesca Stillitano; Aldo Agnetti; Silvana Baruffi; Stefano Rossi; Umberto Squarcia; Elisabetta Cerbai; Emilio Macchi; Donatella Stilli; Ezio Musso
Circulation | 2009
Konrad Urbanek; Silvia Maestroni; Regina Lee Sohn; Francesca Delucchi; Federica del Monte; Ronglih Liao; Sabina Signoretti; Federico Quaini; Marcello Rota; Piero Anversa; Annarosa Leri
Nature Medicine | 2008
John Muraski; Marcello Rota; Yu Misao; Jenna Fransioli; Christopher T. Cottage; Natalie Gude; Grazia Esposito; Francesca Delucchi; Michael L. Arcarese; Roberto Alvarez; Sailay Siddiqi; Gregory Emmanuel; Weitao Wu; Kimberlee Fischer; Joshua J. Martindale; Christopher C. Glembotski; Annarosa Leri; Jan Kajstura; Nancy S. Magnuson; Anton Berns; Remus M Beretta; Steven R. Houser; Erik Schaefer; Piero Anversa; Mark A. Sussman
Circulation | 2008
Claudia Colussi; Roberta Berni; Leonardo Bocchi; Monia Savi; Francesca Delucchi; Donatella Stilli; Federico Quaini; Ezio Musso; Maurizio C. Capogrossi; Carlo Gaetano
Circulation | 2008
Konrad Urbanek; Silvia Maestroni; Regina Lee Sohn; Francesca Delucchi; Federica del Monte; Ronglih Liao; Sabina Signoretti; Robero Rizzi; Federico Quaini; Marcello Rota; Piero Anversa; Annarosa Leri
Circulation | 2007
Francesca Delucchi; Konrad Urbanek; Alessandro Boni; Robert W. Siggins; Katsuya Amano; Grazia Iaffaldano; Saori Yasuzawa-Amano; Nicole LeCapitaine; Serena Vitale; Arantxa González; Andrea Di Marco; Irina Trofimova; Roberto Rizzi; Yu Misao; Piero Anversa; Jan Kajstura; Annarosa Leri