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Dive into the research topics where Francesco Villa is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesco Villa.


Rejuvenation Research | 2009

Association of the FOXO3A locus with extreme longevity in a southern Italian centenarian study.

Chiara Viviani Anselmi; Alberto Malovini; Roberta Roncarati; Valeria Novelli; Francesco Villa; Gianluigi Condorelli; Riccardo Bellazzi; Annibale Alessandro Puca

A number of potential candidate genes in a variety of biological pathways have been associated with longevity in model organisms. Many of these genes have human homologs and thus have the potential to provide insights into human longevity. Recently, several studies suggested that FOXO3A functions as a key bridge for various signaling pathways that influence aging and longevity. Interestingly, Willcox and colleagues identified several variants that displayed significant genotype-gender interaction in male human longevity. In particular, a nested case-control study was performed in an ethnic Japanese population in Hawaii, and five candidate longevity genes were chosen based on links to the insulin-insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) signaling pathway. In the Willcox study, the investigated genetic variations (rs2802292, rs2764264, and rs13217795) within the FOXO3A gene were significantly associated with longevity in male centenarians. We validated the association of FOXO3A polymorphisms with extreme longevity in males from the Southern Italian Centenarian Study. Particularly, rs2802288, a proxy of rs2802292, showed the best allelic association--minor allele frequency (MAF) = 0.49; p = 0.003; odds ratio (OR) = 1.51; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.15-1.98). Furthermore, we undertook a meta-analysis to explore the significance of rs2802292 association with longevity by combining the association results of the current study and the findings coming from the Willcox et al. investigation. Our data point to a key role of FOXO3A in human longevity and confirm the feasibility of the identification of such genes with centenarian-controls studies. Moreover, we hypothesize the susceptibility to the longevity phenotype may well be the result of complex interactions involving genes and environmental factors but also gender.


Rejuvenation Research | 2011

Association Study on Long-Living Individuals from Southern Italy Identifies rs10491334 in the CAMKIV Gene That Regulates Survival Proteins.

Alberto Malovini; Maddalena Illario; Guido Iaccarino; Francesco Villa; Anna Ferrario; Roberta Roncarati; Chiara Viviani Anselmi; Valeria Novelli; Erminia Cipolletta; Elena Leggiero; Alessandro Orro; Maria Rosaria Rusciano; Luciano Milanesi; Antonella Maione; Gianluigi Condorelli; Riccardo Bellazzi; Annibale Alessandro Puca

Long-living individuals (LLIs) are used to study exceptional longevity. A number of genetic variants have been found associated in LLIs to date, but further identification of variants would improve knowledge on the mechanisms regulating the rate of aging. Therefore, we performed a genome-wide association study on 410 LLIs and 553 young control individuals with a 317K single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) chip to identify novel traits associated with aging. Among the top (p < 1 × 10(-4)) SNPs initially identified, we found rs10491334 (CAMKIV) (odds ratio [OR] = 0.55; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.42-0.73; p = 2.88 × 10(-5)), a variant previously reported associated with diastolic blood pressure, associated also in a replication set of 116 LLIs and 160 controls (OR = 0.54; 95% CI 0.32-0.90; p = 9 × 10(-3)). Furthermore, in vitro analysis established that calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase IV (CAMKIV) activates the survival proteins AKT, SIRT1, and FOXO3A, and we found that homozygous carriers of rs10491334 have a significant reduction in CAMKIV expression. This, together with the observed reduction in minor-allele carriers among centenarians, points to a detrimental role for the SNP. In conclusion, prolongevity genes are activated by CAMKIV, the levels of which are influenced by rs10491334, a SNP associated with human longevity.


Immunity & Ageing | 2012

Endothelial nitric oxide synthase, vascular integrity and human exceptional longevity

Annibale Alessandro Puca; Albino Carrizzo; Anna Ferrario; Francesco Villa; Carmine Vecchione

Aging is the sum of the deleterious changes that occur as time goes by. It is the main risk factor for the development of cardiovascular disease, and aging of the vasculature is the event that most often impacts on the health of elderly people. The “free-radical theory of aging” was proposed to explain aging as a consequence of the accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). However, recent findings contradict this theory, and it now seems that mechanisms mediating longevity act through induction of oxidative stress. In fact, calorie restriction − a powerful way of delaying aging − increases ROS accumulation due to stimulation of the basal metabolic rate; moreover, reports show that antioxidant therapy is detrimental to healthy aging. We also now know that genetic manipulation of the insulin-like-growth-factor-1/insulin signal (IIS) has a profound impact on the rate of aging and that the IIS is modulated by calorie restriction and physical exercise. The IIS regulates activation of nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), the activity of which is essential to improving lifespan through calorie restriction, as demonstrated by experiments on eNOS knockout mice. Indeed, eNOS has a key role in maintaining vascular integrity during aging by activating vasorelaxation and allowing migration and angiogenesis. In this review, we will overview current literature on these topics and we will try to convince the reader of the importance of vascular integrity and nitric oxide production in determining healthy aging.


Circulation Research | 2015

Genetic Analysis Reveals a Longevity-Associated Protein Modulating Endothelial Function and Angiogenesis

Francesco Villa; Albino Carrizzo; Chiara Carmela Spinelli; Anna Ferrario; Alberto Malovini; Anna Maciąg; Antonio Damato; Alberto Auricchio; Gaia Spinetti; Elena Sangalli; Zexu Dang; Michele Madonna; Mariateresa Ambrosio; Leopoldo Sitia; Paolo Bigini; Gaetano Calì; Stefan Schreiber; Thomas T. Perls; Sergio Fucile; Francesca Mulas; Almut Nebel; Riccardo Bellazzi; Paolo Madeddu; Carmine Vecchione; Annibale Alessandro Puca

RATIONALE Long living individuals show delay of aging, which is characterized by the progressive loss of cardiovascular homeostasis, along with reduced endothelial nitric oxide synthase activity, endothelial dysfunction, and impairment of tissue repair after ischemic injury. OBJECTIVE Exploit genetic analysis of long living individuals to reveal master molecular regulators of physiological aging and new targets for treatment of cardiovascular disease. METHODS AND RESULTS We show that the polymorphic variant rs2070325 (Ile229Val) in bactericidal/permeability-increasing fold-containing-family-B-member-4 (BPIFB4) associates with exceptional longevity, under a recessive genetic model, in 3 independent populations. Moreover, the expression of BPIFB4 is instrumental to maintenance of cellular and vascular homeostasis through regulation of protein synthesis. BPIFB4 phosphorylation/activation by protein-kinase-R-like endoplasmic reticulum kinase induces its complexing with 14-3-3 and heat shock protein 90, which is facilitated by the longevity-associated variant. In isolated vessels, BPIFB4 is upregulated by mechanical stress, and its knock-down inhibits endothelium-dependent vasorelaxation. In hypertensive rats and old mice, gene transfer of longevity-associated variant-BPIFB4 restores endothelial nitric oxide synthase signaling, rescues endothelial dysfunction, and reduces blood pressure levels. Furthermore, BPIFB4 is implicated in vascular repair. BPIFB4 is abundantly expressed in circulating CD34(+) cells of long living individuals, and its knock-down in endothelial progenitor cells precludes their capacity to migrate toward the chemoattractant SDF-1. In a murine model of peripheral ischemia, systemic gene therapy with longevity-associated variant-BPIFB4 promotes the recruitment of hematopoietic stem cells, reparative vascularization, and reperfusion of the ischemic muscle. CONCLUSIONS Longevity-associated variant-BPIFB4 may represent a novel therapeutic tool to fight endothelial dysfunction and promote vascular reparative processes.


The International Journal of Biochemistry & Cell Biology | 2013

Vascular ageing: The role of oxidative stress

Annibale Alessandro Puca; Albino Carrizzo; Francesco Villa; Anna Ferrario; Manuel Casaburo; Anna Maciąg; Carmine Vecchione

Vascular ageing can be envisioned as the consequence of the accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) associated with generalized endothelial dysfunction. Oxidative stress arises when the balance between production and removal of ROS favours the pro-oxidation arm. Therefore, ROS have been traditionally considered to be only a toxic by-product of aerobic metabolism. However, it has become apparent that ROS might control many different physiological processes, such as stress response, pathogen defence and systemic signalling. This has lead to the hypothesis that a certain level of ROS is needed physiologically, so much so that an overly increased antioxidant potential might be deleterious for health. Recent evidence has strengthened this notion by correlating cellular response with oxidants and the mechanisms that regulate longevity. Here, we overview current literature on this topic and we will try to convince the reader of the importance of balanced oxidative stress for vascular integrity and healthy ageing.


Journals of Gerontology Series A-biological Sciences and Medical Sciences | 2017

Four Genome-Wide Association Studies Identify New Extreme Longevity Variants

Paola Sebastiani; Anastasia Gurinovich; Harold Bae; Stacy L. Andersen; Alberto Malovini; Gil Atzmon; Francesco Villa; Aldi T. Kraja; Danny Ben-Avraham; Nir Barzilai; Annibale Alessandro Puca; Thomas T. Perls

The search for the genetic determinants of extreme human longevity has been challenged by the phenotypes rarity and its nonspecific definition by investigators. To address these issues, we established a consortium of four studies of extreme longevity that contributed 2,070 individuals who survived to the oldest one percentile of survival for the 1900 U.S. birth year cohort. We conducted various analyses to discover longevity-associated variants (LAV) and characterized those LAVs that differentiate survival to extreme age at death (eSAVs) from those LAVs that become more frequent in centenarians because of mortality selection (eg, survival to younger years). The analyses identified new rare variants in chromosomes 4 and 7 associated with extreme survival and with reduced risk for cardiovascular disease and Alzheimers disease. The results confirm the importance of studying truly rare survival to discover those combinations of common and rare variants associated with extreme longevity and longer health span.


Immunity & Ageing | 2012

The application of genetics approaches to the study of exceptional longevity in humans: potential and limitations.

Anna Ferrario; Francesco Villa; Alberto Malovini; Fiorella Araniti; Annibale Alessandro Puca

The average life-span of the population of industrialized countries has improved enormously over the last decades. Despite evidence pointing to the role of food intake in modulating life-span, exceptional longevity is still considered primarily an inheritable trait, as pointed out by the description of families with centenarian clusters and by the elevated relative probability of siblings of centenarians to become centenarians themselves. However, rather than being two separate concepts, the genetic origin of exceptional longevity and the more recently observed environment-driven increase in the average age of the population could possibly be explained by the same genetic variants and environmentally modulated mechanisms (caloric restriction, specific nutrients). In support of this hypothesis, polymorphisms selected for in the centenarian population as a consequence of demographic pressure have been found to modulate cellular signals controlled also by caloric restriction. Here, we give an overview of the recent findings in the field of the genetics of human exceptional longevity, of how some of the identified polymorphisms modulate signals also influenced by food intake and caloric restriction, of what in our view have been the limitations of the approaches used over the past years to study genetics (sib-pair-, candidate gene association-, and genome-wide association-studies), and briefly of the limitations and the potential of the new, high-throughput, next-generation sequencing techniques applied to exceptional longevity.


International Journal of Cardiology | 2013

Polymorphisms of the antiapoptotic protein bag3 may play a role in the pathogenesis of tako-tsubo cardiomyopathy

Rodolfo Citro; Morena d’Avenia; Margot De Marco; Roberta Giudice; Marco Mirra; Amelia Ravera; Angelo Silverio; Rosario Farina; Francesco Silvestri; Paolo Gravina; Francesco Villa; Annibale Alessandro Puca; Leon J. De Windt; Vincenzo De Laurenzi; Eduardo Bossone; Maria Caterina Turco; Federico Piscione

following classes this dependence progressively increased up to the extremely high level in hrv7 class. Thiswaywe have obtained a set of HRV indiceswhich are associated in different extent with HR. Such parameters constitute a perfect material for investigations of the HR contribution to the HRV prognostic power [5]. Moreover, this may be applied not only to the spectral HRV analysis but also to any other analysis of heart rate dynamics which parameters are associated with HR — in such instances the RR-interval tachograms should rather be modified (i.e. divided or multiplied by avRRs) before a given heart rate dynamics is analyzed. Importantly, if one calculates average HRV indices from the indices corresponding to short RR interval segments (e.g. from Holter recordings), one should first obtain the global average HRV indices of all RR interval segments and then divide or multiply them by a global avRR — the division or multiplication for each segment separately may create the situation where a single RR interval segment with unusually slow or fast HR determines the results for a given patient (it is especially likely if one employs high powers of avRR). To conclude, the described approach opens new perspectives for the analysis of HR dynamics, i.e. it makes possible to separate clinical (e.g. prognostic) information coming from average heart rate and from its dynamics.


Immunity & Ageing | 2015

Serum BPIFB4 levels classify health status in long-living individuals

Francesco Villa; Alberto Malovini; Albino Carrizzo; Chiara Carmela Spinelli; Anna Ferrario; Anna Maciąg; Michele Madonna; Riccardo Bellazzi; Luciano Milanesi; Carmine Vecchione; Annibale Alessandro Puca

BackgroundPeople that reach extreme ages (Long-Living Individuals, LLIs) are object of intense investigation for increase/decrease of genetic variant frequencies, genetic methylation levels, protein abundance in serum and tissues. The aim of these studies is the discovery of the mechanisms behind LLIs extreme longevity and the identification of markers of well-being. We have recently associated a BPIFB4 haplotype (LAV) with exceptional longevity under a homozygous genetic model, and identified that CD34+ of LLIs subjects express higher BPIFB4 transcript as compared to CD34+ of control population. It would be of interest to correlate serum BPIFB4 protein levels with exceptional longevity and health status of LLIs.MethodsWestern blots on cellular medium to detect BPIFB4 secretion in transfected HEK293T cells with plasmid carrying BPIFB4 and ELISA on LLIs serum to detect BPIFB4 levels.ResultsHere we show that BPIFB4 is a secreted protein and its levels are increased in serum of LLIs, and high BPIFB4 levels classify their health status.ConclusionsSerum BPIFB4 protein levels classify longevity and health status in LLIs. Further studies are required to evaluate the possible role of BPIFB4 in monitoring disease progression.


Scientific Reports | 2017

A rare genetic variant of BPIFB4 predisposes to high blood pressure via impairment of nitric oxide signaling

Carmine Vecchione; Francesco Villa; Albino Carrizzo; Chiara Carmela Spinelli; Antonio Damato; Mariateresa Ambrosio; Anna Ferrario; Michele Madonna; Annachiara Uccellatore; Silvia Lupini; Anna Maciag; Larisa Ryskalin; Luciano Milanesi; Giacomo Frati; Sebastiano Sciarretta; Riccardo Bellazzi; Stefano Genovese; Antonio Ceriello; Alberto Auricchio; Alberto Malovini; Annibale Alessandro Puca

BPIFB4 is associated with exceptional longevity: four single-nucleotide polymorphisms distinguish the wild-type form from a longevity-associated variant conferring positive effects on blood pressure. The effect of a rare variant (RV; allele frequency, 4%) on blood pressure is unknown. Here, we show that overexpression of RV-BPIFB4 in ex-vivo mouse vessels impairs phosphorylation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), blunting acetylcholine-evoked vasorelaxation; in vivo, virally mediated overexpression of RV-BPIFB4 increases blood pressure, an action absent in eNOS-deficient mice. In humans, we found RV carriers to have increased diastolic blood pressure, a finding that was more marked in subjects on anti-hypertensive medication; moreover, recombinant RV-BPIFB4 protein impaired eNOS function in ex-vivo human vessels. Thus, RV-BPIFB4 acts directly on blood pressure homeostasis and may represent a novel biomarker of vascular dysfunction and hypertension.

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Anna Ferrario

National Research Council

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