Francesca Lunardi
University of Padua
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American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2008
Fiorella Calabrese; Simonetta Baraldo; Erica Bazzan; Francesca Lunardi; Federico Rea; Piero Maestrelli; Graziella Turato; Kim Lokar-Oliani; Alberto Papi; Renzo Zuin; Paolo Sfriso; Elisabetta Balestro; Charles A. Dinarello; Marina Saetta
RATIONALE Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the lung, yet the mechanisms that regulate this immune-inflammatory response are not fully understood. OBJECTIVES We investigated whether IL-32, a newly discovered cytokine, was related to markers of inflammation and clinical progression in COPD. METHODS Using immunohistochemistry, expression of IL-32 was examined in surgically resected specimens from 40 smokers with COPD (FEV(1) = 39 +/- 4% predicted), 11 smokers with normal lung function, and 9 nonsmoking control subjects. IL-32 was quantified in alveolar macrophages, alveolar walls, bronchioles, and arterioles, and confirmed by molecular analysis. The levels of IL-32 were correlated with the cellular infiltrates, markers of inflammation, and clinical data. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Macrophage staining for IL-32 was increased in smokers with COPD compared with control smokers and nonsmokers (P = 0.0014 and P < 0.0001, respectively), and similar differences were observed in alveolar walls (P = 0.0004 and P = 0.0005) and bronchiolar epithelium (P = 0.004 and P = 0.0009). This increase was also detected at the mRNA level (P = 0.007 vs. control smokers and P = 0.029 vs. nonsmokers) and was mainly due to non-alpha isoforms. Moreover, IL-32 expression was positively correlated with tumor necrosis factor-alpha (P = 0.004, r(s)=0.70), CD8(+)cells (P = 0.02, r(s)=0.46), phospho p38MAPK (P < 0.01, r(s)=0.60) and negatively with FEV(1) values (P = 0.004, r(s)= -0.53). CONCLUSIONS This is the first study to demonstrate increased expression of IL-32 in lung tissue of patients with COPD, where it was colocalized with tumor necrosis factor-alpha and correlated with the degree of airflow obstruction. These results suggest that IL-32 is implicated in the characteristic immune response of COPD, with a possible impact on disease progression.
Arthritis Research & Therapy | 2010
Ugo Fiocco; Paolo Sfriso; Francesca Oliviero; Pascale Roux-Lombard; Elena Scagliori; L Cozzi; Francesca Lunardi; Fiorella Calabrese; Maristella Vezzù; Serena Dainese; Beatrice Molena; Anna Scanu; Roberto Nardacchione; Leopoldo Rubaltelli; Jean-Michel Dayer; Leonardo Punzi
IntroductionThe purpose of this study was theevaluation of synovial effusion (SE), synovial fluid (SF) and synovial tissue (ST) biomarkers in relation to disease activity indexes to assess the response to intraarticular (IA) tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α blockers in psoriatic arthritis (PsA).MethodsSystemic and local disease activity indexes (disease activity score (DAS); the Ritchie articular index (mRAI), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and C-reactive protein (CRP); Thompson articular (THOMP) and joint articular (KJAI)-Index ) and ST samples were assessed at baseline, throughout treatment, and during the follow-up in 14 patients affected with PsA who underwent IA injections (0.5 ml to 12.5 mg) in the knee joint of etanercept (E) or placebo (P) once every two weeks for a 10-week period. Total SF white blood cell (WBC) counts (WBC/μl) and SF cytokine/chemokine (CK/CCK) levels were measured before IA-E at baseline, after IA-E, and as long as there were adequate amounts of SF for knee aspiration (post). Characterization of synovial mononuclear cell infiltration and synovial vessels was carried out in 8 out of 14 knees by staining serial sections of synovial tissue biopsies for CD45, CD3, CD68, CD31 and CD105.ResultsAt baseline, CRP and/or ESR were significantly correlated with SF-CK (interleukin- (IL-)1β, IL-1Ra, IL-6, IL-8) and CCK (CCL3). Post-IA injections, there was a decrease in SE in the knees in which aspiration following IA-E injection was possible as well as a significant reduction in SF WBC/μl and in SF-CK (IL-1β, IL-1Ra, IL-6 and IL-22). Pre- and post-IA-E injections, there were significant correlations between ST markers and SF-CK (IL-1β with CD45; IL-1β and IL-6 with CD31) and between SF-CCK (CCL4 and CCL3 with CD3). At the end of the study, there was a significant reduction in disease activity indexes (CRP, DAS, RAI, THOMP, KJAI) as well as in the ST markers (CD45; CD3).ConclusionsSynovial effusion regression is a reliable indicator of the response to IA TNF-α blockers in PsA patients as it is confirmed by the correlation between SF biomarkers to disease activity and synovial tissue inflammation.
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2010
Francesca Polverino; Simonetta Baraldo; Erica Bazzan; Simone Agostini; Graziella Turato; Francesca Lunardi; Elisabetta Balestro; Marco Damin; Alberto Papi; Piero Maestrelli; Fiorella Calabrese; Marina Saetta
RATIONALE Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a disorder characterized by an abnormal inflammatory response that persists even after smoking cessation, yet the underlying mechanisms are not fully understood. OBJECTIVES To investigate the expression of B-cell activating factor of tumor necrosis factor family (BAFF), a crucial mediator in the crosstalk between innate and adaptive immune responses, in patients with COPD and to explore its correlation with disease severity. METHODS Using immunohistochemistry, expression of BAFF was examined in lung specimens from 21 smokers with COPD (FEV(1) = 57 ± 5% predicted), 14 control smokers (FEV(1) = 99 ± 2% predicted) and 8 nonsmokers (FEV(1) = 104 ± 4% predicted). BAFF was quantified in alveolar macrophages and alveolar walls, in bronchiolar and parenchymal lymphoid follicles, and in peripheral airways and pulmonary arterioles. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS In alveolar macrophages and parenchymal lymphoid follicles, BAFF expression was increased in smokers with COPD compared with control smokers and nonsmokers (P < 0.05 for all comparisons). In both compartments, BAFF was also up-regulated in control smokers as compared with nonsmokers (P = 0.03 and P = 0.01). Moreover, BAFF was overexpressed in bronchiolar lymphoid follicles, alveolar walls, peripheral airways, and pulmonary arterioles from smokers with COPD compared with nonsmokers (P < 0.05 for all). Among patients with COPD, BAFF(+) macrophages were inversely related to FEV(1) (P = 0.03, Spearmans rho [r(S)] = -0.48), FEV(1)/FVC (P = 0.02, r(S) = -0.50), and Pa(O(2)) values (P = 0.01, r(S) = -0.55). CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrated overexpression of BAFF in peripheral lung of patients with COPD, mainly in alveolar macrophages and lymphoid follicles. Moreover, BAFF expression was correlated to the degree of lung function impairment and hypoxia, suggesting that it may have a possible impact on disease severity.
Joint Bone Spine | 2013
Ugo Fiocco; Paolo Sfriso; Francesca Oliviero; Francesca Lunardi; Fiorella Calabrese; Elena Scagliori; L Cozzi; Antonio Di Maggio; Roberto Nardacchione; Beatrice Molena; Mara Felicetti; Katia Gazzola; Roberto Stramare; Leopoldo Rubaltelli; Benedetta Accordi; Luisa Costa; Pascale Roux-Lombard; Leonardo Punzi; Jean-Michel Dayer
OBJECTIVES This open-label study is based on a translational approach with the aim of detecting changes in the clinical condition as well as in imaging and synovial biological markers in both synovial fluid (SF) and synovial tissue (ST) in peripheral spondyloarthritis (SpA) patients following intra-articular (IA) blockade of TNF-α by serial etanercept injections. METHODS Twenty-seven SpA patients with resistant knee synovitis underwent four biweekly IA injections of etanercept (E) (12.5 mg). The primary outcome of Thompsons Knee Index (THOMP), and secondary outcomes of Knee Joint Articular Index (KJAI), C-reactive protein (CRP), HAQ-Disability Index (HAQ-DI), maximal synovial thickness (MST) according to ultrasonography (US) and contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance (C+MR) imaging, ST-CD45+ mononuclear cells (MNC) and ST-CD31+ vessels, IL-1β, IL-1Ra and IL-6 levels in SF were assessed at baseline and at the end of the study. RESULTS At the study end, clinical and imaging outcomes as well as ST and SF biological markers were significantly reduced compared to baseline. There were significant correlations between clinical, imaging and biological markers (CRP with either THOMP, or KJAI, or HAQ-DI or SF-IL-1Ra; US-MST with KJAI, ST-CD45+ with either THOMP, or KJAI, or ST-CD31+, or SF-IL-1β; SF-IL-6 with either THOMP, or KJAI, or SF-IL-1β, or IL-1Ra). CONCLUSIONS The proof of concept study revealed early improvement either in local and systemic clinical scores, in synovial thickness measures by C+MR and US, or expression of synovial biological markers. CD45+, CD31+ in ST and IL-6 and IL-1β in SF may be considered potential biomarkers of the peripheral SpA response to IA TNF-α blocking.
Thorax | 2008
Fiorella Calabrese; Francesca Lunardi; Cinzia Giacometti; Giuseppe Marulli; Marianna Gnoato; Patrizia Pontisso; Marina Saetta; Marialuisa Valente; Federico Rea; Egle Perissinotto; Carlo Agostini
Background: Idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is a chronic progressive disorder with a poor prognosis. Epithelial instability is a crucial step in the development and progression of the disease, including neoplastic transformation. Few tissue markers for epithelial instability have been reported in IPF. Squamous cell carcinoma antigen (SCCA) is a serine protease inhibitor typically expressed by dysplastic and neoplastic cells of epithelial origin, more often in squamous cell tumours. At present, no information is available on its expression in IPF. Methods: SCCA and transforming growth factor β (TGFβ) expression in surgical lung biopsies from 22 patients with IPF and 20 control cases was examined. An in vitro study using A549 pneumocytes was also conducted to investigate the relationship between SCCA and TGFβ expression. SCCA and TGFβ epithelial expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry and reverse transcription–PCR (RT-PCR). SCCA values were correlated with different pathological and clinical parameters. Time course analysis of TGFβ expression in A549 pneumocytes incubated with different SCCA concentrations was assessed by real time RT–PCR. Results: SCCA was expressed in many metaplastic alveolar epithelial cells in all IPF cases with a mean value of 24.9% while it was seen in only two control patients in up to 5% of metaplastic cells. In patients with IPF, SCCA correlated positively with extension of fibroblastic foci (r = 0.49, p = 0.02), expression of TGFβ (r = 0.78, p<0.0001) and with carbon monoxide transfer factor decline after 9 months of follow-up (r = 0.59, p = 0.01). In vitro experiments showed that incubation of cultured cells with SCCA induced TGFβ expression, with a peak at 24 h. Conclusion: Our findings provide for the first time a potential mechanism by which SCCA secreted from metaplastic epithelial cells may exert a profibrotic effect in IPF. SCCA could be an important biomarker in this incurable disease.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Fiorella Calabrese; Anja Kipar; Francesca Lunardi; Elisabetta Balestro; Egle Perissinotto; Emanuela Rossi; Nazarena Nannini; Giuseppe Marulli; James P. Stewart; Federico Rea
Background Pulmonary hypertension (PH) represents an important complication of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) with a negative impact on patient survival. Herpes viruses are thought to play an etiological role in the development and/or progression of IPF. The influence of viruses on PH associated with IPF is unknown. We aimed to investigate the influence of viruses in IPF patients focusing on aspects related to PH. A laboratory mouse model of gamma-herpesvirus (MHV-68) induced pulmonary fibrosis was also assessed. Methods Lung tissue samples from 55 IPF patients and 41 controls were studied by molecular analysis to detect various viral genomes. Viral molecular data obtained were correlated with mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) and arterial remodelling. Different clinical and morphological variables were studied by univariate and multivariate analyses at time of transplant and in the early post-transplant period. The same lung tissue analyses were performed in MHV-68 infected mice. Results A higher frequency of virus positive cases was found in IPF patients than in controls (p = 0.0003) and only herpes virus genomes were detected. Viral cases showed higher mPAP (p = 0.01), poorer performance in the six minute walking test (6MWT; p = 0.002) and higher frequency of primary graft (PGD) dysfunction after lung transplant (p = 0.02). Increased arterial thickening, particularly of the intimal layer (p = 0.002 and p = 0.004) and higher TGF-β expression (p = 0.002) were demonstrated in viral cases. The remodelled vessels showed increased vessel cell proliferation (Ki-67 positive cells) in the proximity to metaplastic epithelial cells and macrophages. Viral infection was associated with higher mPAP (p = 0.03), poorer performance in the 6MWT (p = 0.008) and PGD (p = 0.02) after adjusting for other covariates/intermediate factors. In MHV-68 infected mice, morphological features were similar to those of patients. Conclusion Herpesviral infections may contribute to the development of PH in IPF patients.
Laboratory Investigation | 2011
Francesca Lunardi; G. Villano; Egle Perissinotto; Carlo Agostini; Federico Rea; Marianna Gnoato; Alice Bradaschia; Marialuisa Valente; Patrizia Pontisso; Fiorella Calabrese
SERPIN B3/B4, members of the serpin superfamily, are fundamental for the control of proteolysis through a known inhibitory function of different proteases. Several studies have documented an important role of SERPIN B3 in the modulation of inflammation, programmed cell death and fibrosis. To confirm the role of SERPIN B3 in lung fibrosis and overall investigate its influence on epithelial dysfunction, a stratified controlled trial randomly assigning bleomycin (BLM) treatment was performed on both SERPIN B3 transgenic (TG) and wild-type (WT) mice. TG and WT animals were killed 48 h (group T48 h) and 20 days (group T20d) after BLM treatment. Lung fibrosis was assessed by histology and hydroxyproline measurement. Architectural remodeling, inflammation, epithelial apoptosis and proliferation were quantified. Moreover, the profibrogenetic cytokine transforming growth factor (TGF)-β, cathepsin K, L and S were also investigated. No significant differences were observed between TG and WT mice of group T48 h in any parameters. In group T20d, less inflammation and a significant increase in epithelial proliferation were detected in treated TG than WT mice despite a similar apoptotic index, thus resulting in a different apoptosis/proliferation imbalance with a significant gain of epithelial proliferation. Moreover, TG mice showed higher TGF-β expression and more extended fibrosis. General linear model analysis, applied on morphological data, showed that interaction between SERPIN B3 expression and treatment was mainly significant for fibrosis. This study provides in vivo evidence for a role of SERPIN B3 in inhibiting inflammation and favoring epithelial proliferation with increased TGF-β secretion and thus the likelihood of consequent fibrogenesis.
Autoimmunity Reviews | 2010
Ugo Fiocco; Paolo Sfriso; Francesca Lunardi; Elisa Pagnin; Francesca Oliviero; Elena Scagliori; L Cozzi; Maristella Vezzù; Beatrice Molena; Anna Scanu; C Panziera; Roberto Nardacchione; Leopoldo Rubaltelli; Jm Dayer; Fiorella Calabrese; Leonardo Punzi
Diffuse-type tenosynovial giant cell tumors, also known as pigmented villonodular synovitis, are unique mesenchymal lesions that arise from the synovial tissue of the joints. They are predominantly intraarticular, aggressive, infiltrative processes, characterized by both inflammatory or neoplastic properties and local destructive progression. The pattern of synovial gene and protein expressions in pigmented villonodular synovitis, similar to those in activated macrophages in rheumatoid arthritis, and the phenotype of multinucleated giant cells, characteristic of osteoclasts, suggest that there is a common autocrine mechanism in osteoclast differentiation in both diseases and indicate the potential utility of tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha blockade. High synovial colony stimulating factor 1 (CSF1) messenger RNA (m RNA) expression in pigmented villonodular synovitis, unrelated to a chromosomal translocation involving CSF1 locus, may indicate that there is a synergic paracrine loop mediated by TNF-alpha and CSF1, as shown in both inflammatory and neoplastic conditions. The effects of a new therapeutic approach consisting in intraarticular TNF-alpha blockade were studied in four pigmented villonodular synovitis knees. Knee injections produced a rapid reduction in clinical and sonographic indexes and immunohistological alterations, confirmed by arthroscopic synovectomy. A delayed relapse in one of the four knees and unaltered synovial CSF1 expression were other important findings. In the light of these observations, CSF1/CSF1R interaction probably represents a more sensible therapeutic target than TNF-alpha blockade in the diffuse form of pigmented villonodular synovitis.
PLOS ONE | 2016
Elisabetta Balestro; Fiorella Calabrese; Graziella Turato; Francesca Lunardi; Erica Bazzan; Giuseppe Marulli; Davide Biondini; Emanuela Rossi; Alessandro Sanduzzi; Federico Rea; Chiara Rigobello; Dario Gregori; Simonetta Baraldo; Paolo Spagnolo; Manuel G. Cosio; Marina Saetta
The clinical course in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) is highly heterogeneous, with some patients having a slow progression and others an accelerated clinical and functional decline. This study aims to clinically characterize the type of progression in IPF and to investigate the pathological basis that might account for the observed differences in disease behavior. Clinical and functional data were analyzed in 73 IPF patients, followed long-time as candidates for lung transplantation. The forced vital capacity (FVC) change/year (< or ≥10% predicted) was used to define “slow” or “rapid” disease progression. Pathological abnormalities were quantified in the explanted lung of 41 out of 73 patients undergoing lung transplantation. At diagnosis, slow progressors (n = 48) showed longer duration of symptoms and lower FVC than rapid progressors (n = 25). Eleven slow and 3 rapid progressors developed an acute exacerbation (AE) during follow-up. Quantitative lung pathology showed a severe innate and adaptive inflammatory infiltrate in rapid progressors, markedly increased compared to slow progressors and similar to that observed in patients experiencing AE. The extent of inflammation was correlated with the yearly FVC decline (r = 0.52, p = 0.005). In conclusion an innate and adaptive inflammation appears to be a prominent feature in the lung of patients with IPF and could contribute to determining of the rate of disease progression.
Liver International | 2011
Massimo Bolognesi; Francesca Zampieri; Alberto Verardo; C. Turato; Fiorella Calabrese; Francesca Lunardi; Patrizia Pontisso; Paolo Angeli; Carlo Merkel; Angelo Gatta; David Sacerdoti
Background: Cirrhotic portal hypertension is characterized by mesenteric arterial vasodilation and hyporeactivity to vasoconstrictors.