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Dive into the research topics where Francesca Monardo is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesca Monardo.


Journal of General Virology | 1997

Live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus prevents super-infection by cloned SIVmac251 in cynomolgus monkeys.

Fausto Titti; Leonardo Sernicola; A. Geraci; G. Panzini; S. Di Fabio; Roberto Belli; Francesca Monardo; Alessandra Borsetti; Maria Teresa Maggiorella; Martin Luther Koanga-Mogtomo; Franco Corrias; R. Zamarchi; A. Amadori; L. Chieco-Bianchi; Paola Verani

The ability of a live attenuated simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) to protect against challenge with cloned SIVmac251/BK28 was evaluated in four cynomolgus macaques. The intravenous infection of the C8 variant of the SIVmac251/32H virus, carrying an in-frame 12 bp deletion in the nef gene, did not affect the CD4+ and CD8+ cell counts, and a persistent infection associated with an extremely low virus burden in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) was established. After 40 weeks, these monkeys were challenged intravenously with a 50 MID50 dose of SIVmac251/BK28 virus grown on macaque cells. Four naive monkeys were infected as controls. Monkeys were monitored for 62 weeks following challenge. Attempts to rescue virus from either PBMCs or bone marrow from the C8-vaccinated monkeys were unsuccessful, but in two cases virus was re-isolated from lymph node cells. The presence of the SIV provirus with the C8 variant genotype maintaining its original nef deletion was shown by differential PCR in PBMCs, lymph nodes and bone marrow. Furthermore, in contrast to the control monkeys, the vaccinated monkeys showed normal levels for CD4+ and CD8+ cells, minimal lymphoid hyperplasia and no clinical signs of infection. Our results confirm that vaccination with live attenuated virus can confer protection. This appears to be dependent on the ability of the C8 variant to establish a persistent but attenuated infection which is necessary for inducing an immune response, as suggested by the persistence of a strong immune B cell memory and by the over-expression of interleukin (IL)-2, interferon-gamma and IL-15 mRNAs in PBMCs of C8-vaccinated monkeys but not in those of control monkeys.


Virchows Archiv | 1988

Letterer-Siwe disease: immunohistochemical evidence for a proliferative disorder involving immature cells of Langerhans lineage.

Luigi Ruco; D. Remotti; Francesca Monardo; Stefania Uccini; M. L. Cristiani; Andrea Modesti; Carlo D. Baroni

The morphological, ultrastructural and immunophenotypic properties of Histiocytosis-X (H-X) cells were investigated in a lymph node involved by Letterer-Siwe (L-S) disease. H-X cells were T6+ (CD1a), S-100+, T4+ (CD4) and HLA-DR+; in addition they were consistently T11+ (CD2) and were stained by antibodies directed against receptors for transferrin (T9), C3bi (OKM-1/CD11b), IgG-Fc (Leu-11/CD16) and Interleukin-2 (IL-2R/CD25). On immunostained cytosmears, T6+ cells were highly polymorphic and a prominent fraction (45%) showed immature morphology, characterized by lymphoid appearance. Cells expressing macrophage markers (ANAE, AACT, Leu-M3/CD14, PAM-1) were 10-fold fewer than T6+ cells and did not show a lymphoid morphology. At TEM level, H-X cells were characterized by poor content of LC granules and by the presence of myelin-like laminated bodies and of lysosome-like dense bodies. The immunophenotypic properties of H-X cells were compared to those of epidermal Langerhans cells (LCs) and of LCs present in lymph nodes of three cases of dermatopathic lymphadenitis. Epidermal LCs were T6+/HLA-DR+, and sometimes faintly T4+. Lymph node LCs were T6+, S-100+, T4+, HLA-DR+, and showed the same variety of surface receptors detected in H-X cells; furthermore, in a case with massive infiltration of the paracortex by T6+ cells, lymph node LCs were faintly T11+ and some of the T6+ cells had lymphoid aspect. Our findings suggest that the H-X cell population of L-S disease is not homogeneous, but is composed of discrete cell subsets with distinctive antigenic and morphological traits closely resembling those of cells of LC lineage at different maturational stages.


Archive | 1989

Epstein-Barr Virus Antigens and Genome in Lymph Nodes from Patients with Persistent Generalized Lymphadenopathy (PGL)

Stefania Uccini; Domenico Vitolo; Francesca Monardo; Alberto Faggioni; Anna Maria Aglianò; Angela Gradilone; V. Manzario; Luigi Ruco; Carlo D. Baroni

The HIV associated persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (PGL) is characterized by enlarged lymph nodes with prominent activation of B germinal centers (1). Some patients affected by PGL develop B cell lymphomas, thus suggesting that PGL may be a predisposing condition. EBV infects and immortalizes B lymphocytes; it has been suggested that EBV may be associated with the development of B lymphomas in immunocompromised hosts. EBV-associated B lymphomas have been observed in patients with primary immunodeficiency (2); furthermore B lymphomas with integrated EBV genome have been described in patients receiving immunosuppressive therapy because of organ transplantation (3). AIDS-lymphomas show numerous analogies with EBV-lymphomas: they are B lymphoblastic and express similar chromosomal traslocations and c-myc rearrangments (4,5). Furthermore EBV sequences were found integrated in the DNA of leukemia cells of AIDS patients (6).


International Journal of Cancer | 1990

High frequency of Epstein-Barr virus genome detection in Hodgkin's disease of HIV-positive patients.

Stefania Uccini; Francesca Monardo; Antonella Stoppacciaro; Angela Gradilone; Anna Maria Aglianò; Alberto Faggioni; Vittorio Manzari; Luca Vago; Giulio Cosianzi; Luigi Ruco; Carlo D. Baroni


The Journal of Pathology | 1994

Co-expression of endothelial cell and macrophage antigens in Kaposi's sarcoma cells.

Stefania Uccini; Luigi Ruco; Francesca Monardo; Antonella Stoppacciaro; Elisabetta Dejana; Ilaria Lesnoni La Parola; D. Cerimele; Carlo D. Baroni


American Journal of Pathology | 1990

Cytokine production (IL-1α, IL-1β, and TNFα) and endothelial cell activation (ELAM-1 and HLA-DR) in reactive lymphadenitis, Hodgkin's Disease, and in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas. An immunocytochemical study

Luigi Ruco; Donatella Pomponi; Rod Pigott; Antonella Stoppacciaro; Francesca Monardo; Stefania Uccini; Diana Boraschi; Aldo Tagliabue; Angela Santoni; Elisabetta Dejana; Alberto Mantovani; Carlo D. Baroni


The Lancet | 1989

HIGH FREQUENCY OF EPSTEIN-BARR VIRUS GENOME IN HIV-POSITIVE PATIENTS WITH HODGKIN'S DISEASE

Stefania Uccini; Francesca Monardo; LuigiP. Ruco; CarloD. Baroni; Alberto Faggioni; AnnaM. Agliano; Angela Gradilone; Vittorio Manzari; Luca Vago; Antonino Carbone; Mauro Boiocchi; Vally De Re


The Journal of Pathology | 1993

Molecular mechanisms involved in intraepithelial lymphocyte migration: A comparative study in skin and tonsil

Stefania Uccini; Luigi Ruco; Francesca Monardo; Ilaria Lesnoni La Parola; D. Cerimele; Carlo D. Baroni


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 1989

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) antigens and genome in lymph nodes of HIV-positive patients affected by persistent generalized lymphadenopathy (PGL)

Stefania Uccini; Francesca Monardo; Domenico Vitolo; Alberto Faggioni; Angela Gradilone; Anna Maria Aglianò; Vittorio Manzari; Luigi Ruco; Carlo D. Baroni


Blood | 1998

Detection of Infectious Simian Immunodeficiency Virus in B- and T-Cell Lymphomas of Experimentally Infected Macaques

Maria Teresa Maggiorella; Francesca Monardo; Martin Luther Koanga-Mogtomo; Livia Cioe; Leonardo Sernicola; Franco Corrias; Carlo D. Baroni; Paola Verani; Fausto Titti

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Dive into the Francesca Monardo's collaboration.

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Stefania Uccini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Luigi Ruco

Sapienza University of Rome

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Carlo D. Baroni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Alberto Faggioni

Sapienza University of Rome

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Angela Gradilone

Sapienza University of Rome

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Fausto Titti

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Franco Corrias

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Carlo D. Baroni

Sapienza University of Rome

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