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Dive into the research topics where Giovanna Mantovani is active.

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Featured researches published by Giovanna Mantovani.


Development | 2004

PTX3 plays a key role in the organization of the cumulus oophorus extracellular matrix and in in vivo fertilization

Antonietta Salustri; Cecilia Garlanda; Emilio Hirsch; Marika De Acetis; Alessia Maccagno; Barbara Bottazzi; Andrea Doni; Antonio Bastone; Giovanna Mantovani; Paolo Beck Peccoz; Giovanni Salvatori; David J. Mahoney; Anthony J. Day; Gregorio Siracusa; Luigina Romani; Alberto Mantovani

PTX3 is a prototypic long pentraxin that plays a non-redundant role in innate immunity against selected pathogens and in female fertility. Here, we report that the infertility of Ptx3–/– mice is associated with severe abnormalities of the cumulus oophorus and failure of in vivo, but not in vitro, oocyte fertilization. PTX3 is produced by mouse cumulus cells during cumulus expansion and localizes in the matrix. PTX3 is expressed in the human cumulus oophorus as well. Cumuli from Ptx3–/– mice synthesize normal amounts of hyaluronan (HA), but are unable to organize it in a stable matrix. Exogenous PTX3 restores a normal cumulus phenotype. Incorporation in the matrix of inter-α-trypsin inhibitor is normal in Ptx3–/– cumuli. PTX3 does not interact directly with HA, but it binds the cumulus matrix hyaladherin tumor necrosis factor α-induced protein 6 (TNFAIP6, also known as TSG6) and thereby may form multimolecular complexes that can cross-link HA chains. Thus, PTX3 is a structural constituent of the cumulus oophorus extracellular matrix essential for female fertility.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2010

Pseudohypoparathyroidism and GNAS Epigenetic Defects: Clinical Evaluation of Albright Hereditary Osteodystrophy and Molecular Analysis in 40 Patients

Giovanna Mantovani; Luisa de Sanctis; Anna Maria Barbieri; Francesca Elli; Valentina Bollati; Valentina Vaira; Pamela Labarile; Sara Bondioni; Erika Peverelli; Andrea Lania; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Anna Spada

CONTEXT The two main subtypes of pseudohypoparathyroidism (PHP), PHP-Ia and -Ib, are caused by mutations in GNAS exons 1-13 and methylation defects in the imprinted GNAS cluster, respectively. PHP-Ia patients show Albright hereditary osteodystrophy (AHO) and resistance toward PTH and additional hormones, whereas PHP-Ib patients do not have AHO, and hormone resistance appears to be limited to PTH and TSH. Recently, methylation defects have been detected in few patients with PHP and mild AHO, indicating a molecular overlap between the two forms. OBJECTIVES The aim of the study was to screen patients with clinically diagnosed PHP-Ia for methylation defects and to investigate the presence of correlations between the molecular findings and AHO severity. PATIENTS AND METHODS We investigated differential methylation of GNAS regions and STX16 microdeletions in genomic DNA from 40 patients with sporadic AHO and multihormone resistance, with no mutations in Gsalpha-coding GNAS exons. RESULTS Molecular analysis showed GNAS cluster imprinting defects in 24 of the 40 patients analyzed. No STX16 deletion was detected. The presence of imprinting defects was not associated with the severity of AHO or with specific AHO signs. CONCLUSIONS We report the largest series of the literature of patients with clinical AHO and multihormone resistance and no mutation in the Gsalpha gene. Our findings of frequent GNAS imprinting defects further confirm the existence of an overlap between molecular and clinical features of PHP-Ia and PHP-Ib and highlight the necessity of a new clinical classification of the disease that takes into account the recent knowledge on the molecular basis underlying these defects.


Clinical Endocrinology | 2000

Calcium-sensing receptor expression and signalling in human parathyroid adenomas and primary hyperplasia

Sabrina Corbetta; Giovanna Mantovani; Andrea Lania; Stefano Borgato; Leonardo Vicentini; Beretta; G. Faglia; Anna Maria Di Blasio; Anna Spada

Both in vivo and in vitro evidence indicates that primary hyperparathyroidism is characterized by a reduced sensitivity to extracellular calcium ([Ca2+]o). The existence of alterations in the expression and signalling of calcium sensing receptor (CaSR) in parathyroid neoplasia is still uncertain. In order to clarify the role of CaSR in the reduced [Ca2+]o sensing of parathyroid neoplasia we investigated PTH secretion and intracellular effectors triggered by CaSR activation as well as the levels of expression of CaSR and CaSR coupled G proteins (Gq/G11) in parathyroid adenomas and primary hyperplasia.


Cancer Research | 2004

Proliferation of Transformed Somatotroph Cells Related to Low or Absent Expression of Protein Kinase A Regulatory Subunit 1A Protein

Andrea Lania; Giovanna Mantovani; Stefano Ferrero; Caterina Pellegrini; Sara Bondioni; Erika Peverelli; Paola Braidotti; Marco Locatelli; Mario Zavanone; Emanuela Ferrante; Silvano Bosari; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Anna Spada

The two regulatory subunits (R1 and R2) of protein kinase A (PKA) are differentially expressed in cancer cell lines and exert diverse roles in growth control. Recently, mutations of the PKA regulatory subunit 1A gene (PRKAR1A) have been identified in patients with Carney complex. The aim of this study was to evaluate the expression of the PKA regulatory subunits R1A, R2A, and R2B in a series of 30 pituitary adenomas and the effects of subunit activation on cell proliferation. In these tumors, neither mutation of PRKAR1A nor loss of heterozygosity was identified. By real-time PCR, mRNA of the three subunits was detected in all of the tumors, R1A being the most represented in the majority of samples. By contrast, immunohistochemistry documented low or absent R1A levels in all tumors, whereas R2A and R2B were highly expressed, thus resulting in an unbalanced R1/R2 ratio. The low levels of R1A were, at least in part, due to proteasome-mediated degradation. The effect of the R1/R2 ratio on proliferation was assessed in GH3 cells, which showed a similar unbalanced pattern of R subunits expression, and in growth hormone-secreting adenomas. The R2-selective cAMP analog 8-Cl cAMP and R1A RNA silencing, stimulated cell proliferation and increased Cyclin D1 expression, respectively, in human and rat adenomatous somatotrophs. These data show that a low R1/R2 ratio promoted proliferation of transformed somatotrophs and are consistent with the Carney complex model in which R1A inactivating mutations further unbalance this ratio in favor of R2 subunits. These results suggest that low expression of R1A protein may favor cAMP-dependent proliferation of transformed somatotrophs.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2015

X-linked acrogigantism syndrome: clinical profile and therapeutic responses.

Albert Beckers; Maya Lodish; Giampaolo Trivellin; Liliya Rostomyan; Misu Lee; Fabio R. Faucz; Bo Yuan; Catherine S. Choong; Jean-Hubert Caberg; Elisa Verrua; Luciana A. Naves; Tim Cheetham; Jacques Young; Philippe A. Lysy; Patrick Petrossians; Andrew Cotterill; Nalini S. Shah; Daniel Metzger; Emilie Castermans; Maria Rosaria Ambrosio; Chiara Villa; Natalia Strebkova; Nadia Mazerkina; Stephan Gaillard; Gustavo Barcelos Barra; Luis Augusto Casulari; Sebastian Neggers; Roberto Salvatori; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Margaret Zacharin

X-linked acrogigantism (X-LAG) is a new syndrome of pituitary gigantism, caused by microduplications on chromosome Xq26.3, encompassing the gene GPR101, which is highly upregulated in pituitary tumors. We conducted this study to explore the clinical, radiological, and hormonal phenotype and responses to therapy in patients with X-LAG syndrome. The study included 18 patients (13 sporadic) with X-LAG and microduplication of chromosome Xq26.3. All sporadic cases had unique duplications and the inheritance pattern in two families was dominant, with all Xq26.3 duplication carriers being affected. Patients began to grow rapidly as early as 2-3 months of age (median 12 months). At diagnosis (median delay 27 months), patients had a median height and weight standard deviation scores (SDS) of >+3.9 SDS. Apart from the increased overall body size, the children had acromegalic symptoms including acral enlargement and facial coarsening. More than a third of cases had increased appetite. Patients had marked hypersecretion of GH/IGF1 and usually prolactin, due to a pituitary macroadenoma or hyperplasia. Primary neurosurgical control was achieved with extensive anterior pituitary resection, but postoperative hypopituitarism was frequent. Control with somatostatin analogs was not readily achieved despite moderate to high levels of expression of somatostatin receptor subtype-2 in tumor tissue. Postoperative use of adjuvant pegvisomant resulted in control of IGF1 in all five cases where it was employed. X-LAG is a new infant-onset gigantism syndrome that has a severe clinical phenotype leading to challenging disease management.


Experimental Biology and Medicine | 2003

Genetics of Pituitary Tumors: Focus on G-Protein Mutations

Andrea Lania; Giovanna Mantovani; Anna Spada

In recent years the demonstration that human pituitary adenomas are monoclonal in origin has provided further evidence that pituitary neoplasia arise from the replication of a single mutated cell in which growth advantage results from either activation of proto-oncogenes or inactivation of tumor suppressor genes. While common oncogenes, such as Ras, are only exceptionally involved, the only mutations identified in a significant proportion of pituitary tumors, and particular in GH-secreting adenomas, occur in the Gsα gene (GNAS1) and cause constitutive activation of the cAMP pathway (gsp oncogene). Moreover, pituitary tumors overexpress hypothalamic releasing hormones, growth factors, and their receptors as well as cyclins involved in cell cycle progression. As far as the role of tumor suppressor genes in pituitary tumorigenesis is concerned, reduced expression of these genes seems to frequently occur in pituitary tumors as a consequence of abnormal methylation processes. Although the only mutational change so far identified in pituitary tumors is the gsp oncogene, this oncogene is not associated with a clear phenotype in patients bearing positive tumors. Mechanisms able to counteract the cAMP pathway, such as high sensitivity to somatostatin, and induction of genes with opposite actions, such as phosphodiesterases, CREB end ICER, or instability of mutant Gsα, have been proposed to account for the lack of genotype/phenotype relationships.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Cell-specific Regulation of PTX3 by Glucocorticoid Hormones in Hematopoietic and Nonhematopoietic Cells

Andrea Doni; Giovanna Mantovani; Chiara Porta; Jan Tuckermann; Holger M. Reichardt; Anna Kleiman; Marina Sironi; Luca Rubino; Fabio Pasqualini; Manuela Nebuloni; Stefano Signorini; Giuseppe Peri; Antonio Sica; Paolo Beck-Peccoz; Barbara Bottazzi; Alberto Mantovani

PTX3 (prototypic long pentraxin 3) is a fluid phase pattern recognition receptor, which plays nonredundant roles in the resistance against diverse pathogens, in the assembly of a hyaluronic acid-rich extracellular matrix, and in female fertility. Inflammatory signals induce production of PTX3 in diverse cell types, including myeloid dendritic cells (DC), fibroblasts, and endothelial cells (EC). The present study was designed to explore the effect of glucocorticoid hormones (GC) on PTX3 production in different cellular contexts. In myeloid DC, GC inhibited the PTX3 production. In contrast, in fibroblasts and EC, GC alone induced and, under inflammatory conditions, enhanced and extended PTX3 production. In vivo administration of GC augmented the blood levels of PTX3 in mice and humans. Moreover, patients with Cushing syndrome had increased levels of circulating PTX3, whereas PTX3 levels were decreased in subjects affected by iatrogenic hypocortisolism. In nonhematopoietic cells, GC receptor (GR) functioned as a ligand-dependent transcription factor (dimerization-dependent) to induce PTX3 gene expression. In contrast, in hematopoietic cells, GR repressed PTX3 gene transcription by interfering (dimerization-independent) with the action of other signaling pathways, probably NFκB and AP-1. Thus, divergent effects of GC were found to be due to different GR mechanisms. The results presented here indicate that GC have divergent effects on PTX3 production in hematopoietic (DC and macrophages) and nonhematopoietic (fibroblasts and EC) cells. The divergent effects of GC on PTX3 production probably reflect the different functions of this multifunctional molecule in innate immunity and in the construction of the extracellular matrix.


Endocrine-related Cancer | 2015

Clinical and genetic characterization of pituitary gigantism: an international collaborative study in 208 patients

Liliya Rostomyan; Adrian Daly; Patrick Petrossians; Emil Nachev; Anurag Lila; Anne Lise Lecoq; Beatriz Lecumberri; Giampaolo Trivellin; Roberto Salvatori; Andreas G. Moraitis; Ian Holdaway; Dianne J. Kranenburg-Van Klaveren; Maria Chiara Zatelli; Nuria Palacios; Cécile Nozières; Margaret Zacharin; Tapani Ebeling; Marja Ojaniemi; Liudmila Rozhinskaya; Elisa Verrua; Marie Lise Jaffrain-Rea; Silvia Filipponi; Daria Gusakova; Vyacheslav Pronin; Jérôme Bertherat; Zhanna Belaya; Irena Ilovayskaya; Mona Sahnoun-Fathallah; Caroline Sievers; Günter K. Stalla

Despite being a classical growth disorder, pituitary gigantism has not been studied previously in a standardized way. We performed a retrospective, multicenter, international study to characterize a large series of pituitary gigantism patients. We included 208 patients (163 males; 78.4%) with growth hormone excess and a current/previous abnormal growth velocity for age or final height >2 s.d. above country normal means. The median onset of rapid growth was 13 years and occurred significantly earlier in females than in males; pituitary adenomas were diagnosed earlier in females than males (15.8 vs 21.5 years respectively). Adenomas were ≥10 mm (i.e., macroadenomas) in 84%, of which extrasellar extension occurred in 77% and invasion in 54%. GH/IGF1 control was achieved in 39% during long-term follow-up. Final height was greater in younger onset patients, with larger tumors and higher GH levels. Later disease control was associated with a greater difference from mid-parental height (r=0.23, P=0.02). AIP mutations occurred in 29%; microduplication at Xq26.3 - X-linked acrogigantism (X-LAG) - occurred in two familial isolated pituitary adenoma kindreds and in ten sporadic patients. Tumor size was not different in X-LAG, AIP mutated and genetically negative patient groups. AIP-mutated and X-LAG patients were significantly younger at onset and diagnosis, but disease control was worse in genetically negative cases. Pituitary gigantism patients are characterized by male predominance and large tumors that are difficult to control. Treatment delay increases final height and symptom burden. AIP mutations and X-LAG explain many cases, but no genetic etiology is seen in >50% of cases.


European Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2001

Somatostatin receptor subtype 2 and 5 in human GH-secreting pituitary adenomas: Analysis of gene sequence and mRNA expression

Sabrina Corbetta; Emilia Ballaré; Giovanna Mantovani; Andrea Lania; Marco Losa; A. M. Di Blasio; Anna Spada

The role of somatostatin receptor subtypes 2 and 5 (SSTR2 and SSTR5) in determining the secretory and proliferative phenotype as well as the sensitivity to somatostatin analogue treatment is not clearly established.


The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism | 2012

PRKAR1A and PDE4D Mutations Cause Acrodysostosis but Two Distinct Syndromes with or without GPCR-Signaling Hormone Resistance

Agnès Linglart; Helena Fryssira; Olaf Hiort; Paul Martin Holterhus; Guiomar Perez de Nanclares; Jesús Argente; Claudine Heinrichs; Alma Kuechler; Giovanna Mantovani; Bruno Leheup; Philippe Wicart; Virginie Chassot; Dorothée Schmidt; Oscar Rubio-Cabezas; Annette Richter-Unruh; Sara Berrade; Arrate Pereda; Emese Boros; M.T. Muñoz-Calvo; Marco Castori; Yasemin Gunes; Guylène Bertrand; Pierre Bougnères; Eric Clauser; Caroline Silve

CONTEXT Acrodysostosis is a rare skeletal dysplasia that is associated with multiple resistance to G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling hormones in a subset of patients. Acrodysostosis is genetically heterogeneous because it results from heterozygous mutations in PRKAR1A or PDE4D, two key actors in the GPCR-cAMP-protein kinase A pathway. OBJECTIVE Our objective was to identify the phenotypic features that distinguish the two genotypes causing acrodysostosis. PATIENTS AND METHODS Sixteen unrelated patients with acrodysostosis underwent a candidate-gene approach and were investigated for phenotypic features. RESULTS All patients had heterozygous de novo mutations. Fourteen patients carried a PRKAR1A mutation (PRKAR1A patients), five each a novel PRKAR1A mutation (p.Q285R, p.G289E, p.A328V, p.R335L, or p.Q372X), nine the reported PRKAR1A p.R368X mutation; two patients harbored a mutation in PDE4D (PDE4D patients) (one novel mutation, p.A227S; one reported, p.E590A). All PRKAR1A, but none of the PDE4D mutated patients were resistant to PTH and TSH. Two PRKAR1A patients each with a novel mutation presented a specific pattern of brachydactyly. One PDE4D patient presented with acroskyphodysplasia. Additional phenotypic differences included mental retardation in PDE4D patients. In addition, we report the presence of pigmented skin lesions in PRKAR1A and PDE4D patients, a feature not yet described in the acrodysostosis entity. CONCLUSIONS All PRKAR1A and PDE4D patients present similar bone dysplasia characterizing acrodysostosis. Phenotypic differences, including the presence of resistance to GPCR-cAMP signaling hormones in PRKAR1A but not PDE4D patients, indicate phenotype-genotype correlations and highlight the specific contributions of PRKAR1A and PDE4D in cAMP signaling in different tissues.

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Anna Spada

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Erika Peverelli

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Emanuele Ferrante

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Francesca Elli

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Elisa Verrua

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Marco Locatelli

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Elisa Sala

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Sabrina Corbetta

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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