Giuliana Trucco
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by Giuliana Trucco.
Sexually Transmitted Diseases | 2001
Roberta B. Ness; David E. Soper; Robert L. Holley; Jeffrey F. Peipert; Hugh Randall; Richard L. Sweet; Steven J. Sondheimer; Susan L. Hendrix; Sharon L. Hillier; Antonio J. Amortegui; Giuliana Trucco; Debra C. Bass
Background Douching has been related to risk of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID). Goal To examine the association between douching and PID in a large, multicenter, clinical trial of PID after adjustment for race/ethnicity. Study Design Interviews were conducted with 654 women who had signs and symptoms of PID. Vaginal Gram stains and upper genital tract pathology/cultures were obtained from all the women. Women with evidence of plasma cell endometritis and/or gonococcal or chlamydial upper genital tract infections were compared with women who had neither endometritis nor upper genital tract infection. Results Women with endometritis or upper genital tract infection were more likely to have douched more than once a month or within 6 days of enrollment than women who never douched. These associations remained after adjustment for confounding factors, after analysis of black women only; and among women with normal or intermediate vaginal flora but not bacterial vaginosis. Conclusion Among a predominantly black group of women with clinical PID, frequent and recent douching was associated with endometritis and upper genital tract infection.
Circulation | 1998
Patrizia Luppi; William A. Rudert; Maria M. Zanone; Giorgio Stassi; Giuliana Trucco; David N. Finegold; Gerard J. Boyle; Pedro J. del Nido; Francis X. McGowan; Massimo Trucco
BACKGROUND Many cases of idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC) result from an inflammatory myocarditis. The specific immunological mechanisms are not yet defined. Various autoimmune diseases are associated with superantigen-triggered immune responses, resulting in massive T-cell activation and tissue damage. We studied 3 cases in a search for evidence that such a phenomenon is also implicated in IDC. METHODS AND RESULTS Myocardial, lymph node, and thymic tissue samples were obtained from IDC patients who were undergoing heart transplantation. Infiltrating immune-cell phenotypes and gene expression of T-cell receptor (TCR) alpha- and beta-chain variable (Valpha and Vbeta) regions were analyzed by immunostaining and polymerase chain reaction. Similar technical approaches were used to assay the tissues for the presence of coxsackievirus B (CVB). In all the specimens analyzed, an overexpression of the TCR Vbeta3, Vbeta7, and Vbeta13.1 gene families was detected among the infiltrating T cells. These tissues were also found to be CVB3-positive. In vitro exposure of peripheral blood mononuclear cells to lysates of cells infected with CVB3 was capable of stimulating expansion of the same TCR Vbeta families. The TCR Valpha repertoire was never found to be skewed. CONCLUSIONS A superantigen-mediated immune response is involved in human heart disease. CVB3 may directly or indirectly trigger this response, suggesting a possible mechanistic link between CVB infection and myocarditis development progressing to IDC.
American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2012
David Cohen; David J. Dabbs; Kristine L. Cooper; Milon Amin; Terrell E. Jones; Mirka W. Jones; Mamatha Chivukula; Giuliana Trucco; Rohit Bhargava
The American Society of Clinical Oncology/College of American Pathologists (ASCO/CAP) guidelines recommend reporting of hormone receptor test results in a semiquantitative manner. This study used 74 resected estrogen receptor (ER)-positive invasive breast cancers to determine reproducibility of semiquantitative scoring of hormone receptors using the H-score method. Four pathologists independently scored each slide. Agreement among observers was analyzed via Fleiss κ statistics on ER and progesterone receptor (PR) categorical scores. Intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was used to estimate the interobserver agreement for ER and PR H-scores on a continuous scale (0-300). There was 100% agreement for categorical ER results (κ = 1) and 97% agreement (κ = 0.823, P < .001) for categorical PR results. For quantitative H-scores, ICC agreement was 0.85 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.79-0.90) for ER and 0.87 (95% CI = 0.82-0.92) for PR. Because the H-score provides a continuous measure of tumor hormone receptor content, we suggest universal adoption of this method.
Diabetes | 1989
Giuliana Trucco; Read Fritsch; Roberto Giorda; Massimo Trucco
The allelic forms of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA)–DQ β-chain (DQB1) have been recognized as the best markers of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) susceptibility. We describe a method that allows the recognition of these DQB1 alleles without the use of either allele-specific oligonucleotide probes or radioactive material. This method determines these alleles by electrophoretically separating restriction enzyme-generated fragments from the polymerase chain-reaction–amplified second exon of the HLA-DQB1 gene, which encodes the first domain of the protein chain. This digestion method, which is simpler and more rapid than the previously adopted hybridization method, is described in detail to enable individuals at any clinical laboratory to quickly ascertain IDDM susceptibility.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Samantha M. Bonner; Susan Pietropaolo; Yong Fan; Yigang Chang; Praveen Sethupathy; Michael P. Morran; Megan Beems; Nick Giannoukakis; Giuliana Trucco; Michael Palumbo; Michele Solimena; Alberto Pugliese; Constantin Polychronakos; Massimo Trucco; Massimo Pietropaolo
Background: Immunologic tolerance to tissue-restricted self-antigens primarily takes place in the thymus. Results: Sequence variation within the Ica1 promoter is associated with increased autoimmune regulator (AIRE) binding and transcription repression of ICA69 in medullary thymic epithelial cells. Conclusion: AIRE is a transcription repressor within the NOD mouse Ica1 promoter. Significance: A newly identified role for AIRE as a transcription repressor in medullary thymic epithelial cells. ICA69 (islet cell autoantigen 69 kDa) is a protein implicated in type 1 diabetes mellitus in both the non-obese diabetic (NOD) mouse model and humans. ICA69 is encoded by the Ica1 gene on mouse chromosome 6 A1-A2. We previously reported reduced ICA69 expression in the thymus of NOD mice compared with thymus of several non-diabetic mouse strains. We propose that reduced thymic ICA69 expression could result from variations in transcriptional regulation of the gene and that polymorphisms within the Ica1 core promoter may partially determine this transcriptional variability. We characterized the functional promoter of Ica1 in NOD mice and compared it with the corresponding portions of Ica1 in non-diabetic C57BL/6 mice. Luciferase reporter constructs demonstrated that the NOD Ica1 promoter region exhibited markedly reduced luciferase expression in transiently transfected medullary thymus epithelial (mTEC+) and B-cell (M12)-derived cell lines. However, in a non-diabetic strain, C57BL/6, the Ica1 promoter region was transcriptionally active when transiently transfected into the same cell lines. We concomitantly identified five single nucleotide polymorphisms within the NOD Ica1 promoter. One of these single nucleotide polymorphisms increases the binding affinity for the transcription factor AIRE (autoimmune regulator), which is highly expressed in thymic epithelial cells, where it is known to play a key role regulating self-antigen expression. We conclude that polymorphisms within the NOD Ica1 core promoter may determine AIRE-mediated down-regulation of ICA69 expression in medullary thymic epithelial cells, thus providing a novel mechanistic explanation for the loss of immunologic tolerance to this self-antigen in autoimmunity.
Endocrine Pathology | 1995
Mirjana Kocova; Selma F. Witchel; Michael A. Nalesnik; Peter A. Lee; Paul S. Dickman; Margaret H. MacGillivray; Edward O. Reiter; Giuliana Trucco; Massimo Trucco
We examined excised gonadal tissue obtained from two 45,X patients for evidence of Y chromosomal material. Both patients had features atypical for individuals with Turner syndrome, a large dysgerminoma in patient 1 and clitoromegaly in patient 2. Southern blot analysis of polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-amplified DNA was performed for five Y chromosome-specific probes (SRY, ZFY, DYZ3, KALY, and DYZ1). Fluorescencein situ hybridization (FISH) with a combination probe specific for the DYZ1/DYZ3 loci was utilized. For both patients, Southern blot analysis of PCR-amplified DNA with primers for the SRY gene was positive. No signals were detected with the other Y chromosome-specific probes for patient 1. For patient 2, positive signals were obtained for all Y-specific probes. FISH was negative in the gonadal specimen from patient 1, while rare cells were positive in the sections from patient 2. Turner syndrome and mixed gonadal dysgenesis may represent different points on a continuum of disorders of sexual differentiation. Although the risk for gonadal tumors is considered to be low in patients with Turner syndrome, prospective evaluation is critical to ascertain: The frequency of somatic cell mosaicism for cell lines carrying Y chromosomal material, and how the presence of Y chromosomal material in patients with Turner syndrome affects the propensity for virilization and gonadal neoplasms.
Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey | 2001
Jeffrey T. Peipert; Roberta B. Ness; Jeffrey D. Blume; David E. Soper; Robert L. Holley; Hugh Randall; Richard L. Sweet; Steven J. Sondheimer; Susan L. Hendrix; Antonio J. Amortegui; Giuliana Trucco; Debra C. Bass
OBJECTIVE Careful detection and treatment of pelvic inflammatory disease are essential for the prevention of adverse sequelae. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic test characteristics of clinical criteria for the diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease. STUDY DESIGN We performed a cross-sectional analysis of the baseline characteristics of 651 patients enrolled in a multicenter randomized treatment trial for pelvic inflammatory disease. Clinical and laboratory findings were recorded for all patients, and endometrial sampling was performed. We calculated sensitivity and specificity and performed receiver operating characteristic curve analysis and multivariate logistic regression, using histologic endometritis as the criterion standard. RESULTS The minimal criteria for pelvic inflammatory disease, as recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, had a sensitivity of 83%, in comparison with a 95% sensitivity for adnexal tenderness (P =.001). Of the supportive clinical criteria, the finding most highly associated with endometritis was a positive test result for Chlamydia trachomatis or Neisseria gonorrhoeae (adjusted odds ratio, 4.3; 95% confidence interval, 2.89--6.63). A multivariate logistic regression model indicated that combinations of criteria significantly improve the prediction of endometritis. CONCLUSION Sensitivity can be maximized by using the presence of adnexal tenderness as a minimal criterion for the diagnosis of pelvic inflammatory disease, and supportive criteria are helpful in estimating the probability of endometritis.
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 2002
Roberta B. Ness; David E. Soper; Robert L. Holley; Jeffrey T. Peipert; Hugh Randall; Richard L. Sweet; Steven J. Sondheimer; Susan L. Hendrix; Antonio J. Amortegui; Giuliana Trucco; Thomas J. Songer; Judith R. Lave; Sharon L. Hillier; Debra C. Bass; Sheryl F. Kelsey
Nature | 1994
Bernard Conrad; Eckhart Weidmann; Giuliana Trucco; William A. Rudert; Roubik Behboo; Camillo Ricordi; Horacio Rodriquez-Rilo; David N. Finegold; Massimo Trucco
Journal of Experimental Medicine | 1997
Giorgio Stassi; Ruggero De Maria; Giuliana Trucco; William A. Rudert; Roberto Testi; Aldo Galluzzo; Carla Giordano; Massimo Trucco