Giuseppe Pasquale Varano
University of Calabria
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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Pasquale Varano.
Current Eye Research | 2013
Marco Zeppieri; Maria Letizia Salvetat; Antonio Paolo Beltrami; Daniela Cesselli; Natascha Bergamin; Rossella Russo; Federica Cavaliere; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Ignacio Alcalde; Jesús Merayo; Paolo Brusini; Carlo Alberto Beltrami; Pier Camillo Parodi
Abstract Purpose: Adipose-derived stem cells (ADSC) are multipotent, safe, non-immunogenic and can differentiate into functional keratocytes in situ. The topical use of ADSC derived from human processed lipoaspirate was investigated for treating injured rat cornea. Methods: A total of 19 rats were used. Six animals initially underwent corneal lesion experiments with 0.5 N NaOH (right eye) and 0.2 N (left). The 0.2 NaOH protocol was then used in 13 rats. All 26 eyes of 13 rats eyes received topical azythromycin bid for 3 d and divided into five treatment groups (n = 5 eyes/group), which included: control, stem cells, serum, stem + serum and adipose (raw human lipoaspirate). The four treatment groups received topical treatment three times daily for 3 d. Stem cells were isolated and harvested from human lipoaspirate. Topical eye drops were prepared daily with 1 × 105 cells/treatment. Fluorescein positive defect area and light microscope assessment was performed at 20, 28, 45, 50 and 74 h. Animals were sacrificed at 74 h for histological evaluation. Data were statistically analyzed for differences amongst groups. Results: The stem cell-treated eyes had significantly smaller epithelial defects at each time point compared to control- and adipose-treated eyes (p < 0.05). This group showed slightly better epithelium healing than the serum and combined group, yet not significantly different. Histology showed that stem cell-treated corneas had complete re-epithelization, with less inflammatory cells and limited fibroblast activation structure compared with the control eyes. Conclusions: Our preliminary results show that topical treatment with ADSC seems to improve corneal wound healing.
European Journal of Pharmacology | 2016
Rossella Russo; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Annagrazia Adornetto; Carlo Nucci; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Giacinto Bagetta; Luigi Antonio Morrone
In clinical glaucoma, as well as in experimental models, the loss of retinal ganglion cells occurs by apoptosis. This final event is preceded by inflammatory responses involving the activation of innate and adaptive immunity, with retinal and optic nerve resident glial cells acting as major players. Here we review the current literature on the role of neuroinflammation in neurodegeneration, focusing on the inflammatory molecular mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis and progression of the optic neuropathy.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Rossella Russo; Maria Gilda Valentina Cassiano; Antonella Ciociaro; Annagrazia Adornetto; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Carlotta Chiappini; Laura Berliocchi; Cristina Tassorelli; Giacinto Bagetta; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti
Bergamot (Citrus bergamia, Risso et Poiteau) essential oil (BEO) is a well characterized, widely used plant extract. BEO exerts anxiolytic, analgesic and neuroprotective activities in rodents through mechanisms that are only partly known and need to be further investigated. To gain more insight into the biological effects of this essential oil, we tested the ability of BEO (0.005–0.03%) to modulate autophagic pathways in human SH-SY5Y neuroblastoma cells. BEO-treated cells show increased LC3II levels and appearance of dot-like formations of endogenous LC3 protein that colocalize with the lysosome marker LAMP-1. Autophagic flux assay using bafilomycin A1 and degradation of the specific autophagy substrate p62 confirmed that the observed increase of LC3II levels in BEO-exposed cells is due to autophagy induction rather than to a decreased autophagosomal turnover. Induction of autophagy is an early and not cell-line specific response to BEO. Beside basal autophagy, BEO also enhanced autophagy triggered by serum starvation and rapamycin indicating that the underlying mechanism is mTOR independent. Accordingly, BEO did not affect the phosphorylation of ULK1 (Ser757) and p70S6K (Thr389), two downstream targets of mTOR. Furthermore, induction of autophagy by BEO is beclin-1 independent, occurs in a concentration-dependent manner and is unrelated to the ability of BEO to induce cell death. In order to identify the active constituents responsible for these effects, the two most abundant monoterpenes found in the essential oil, d-limonene (125–750 µM) and linalyl acetate (62.5–375 µM), were individually tested at concentrations comparable to those found in 0.005–0.03% BEO. The same features of stimulated autophagy elicited by BEO were reproduced by d-limonene, which rapidly increases LC3II and reduces p62 levels in a concentration-dependent manner. Linalyl acetate was ineffective in replicating BEO effects; however, it greatly enhanced LC3 lipidation triggered by d-limonene.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Rossella Russo; Federica Cavaliere; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Marco Milanese; Annagrazia Adornetto; Carlo Nucci; Giambattista Bonanno; Luigi Antonio Morrone; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Giacinto Bagetta
Excitotoxicity has been implicated in the retinal neuronal loss in several ocular pathologies including glaucoma. Dysfunction of Excitatory Amino Acid Transporters is often a key component of the cascade leading to excitotoxic cell death. In the retina, glutamate transport is mainly operated by the glial glutamate transporter GLAST and the neuronal transporter GLT-1. In this study we evaluated the expression of GLAST and GLT-1 in a rat model of acute glaucoma based on the transient increase of intraocular pressure (IOP) and characterized by high glutamate levels during the reperfusion that follows the ischemic event associated with raised IOP. No changes were reported in GLAST expression while, at neuronal level, a reduction of glutamate uptake and of transporter reversal-mediated glutamate release was observed in isolated retinal synaptosomes. This was accompanied by modulation of GLT-1 expression leading to the reduction of the canonical 65 kDa form and upregulation of a GLT-1-related 38 kDa protein. These results support a role for neuronal transporters in glutamate accumulation observed in the retina following an ischemic event and suggest the presence of a GLT-1 neuronal new alternative splice variant, induced in response to the detrimental stimulus.
Molecular Pain | 2015
Laura Berliocchi; Maria Maiarù; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Rossella Russo; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Giacinto Bagetta; Cristina Tassorelli
BackgroundAutophagy is a homeostatic degradative process essential for basal turnover of long-lived proteins and organelles as well as for removal of dysfunctional cellular components. Dysregulation of the autophagic machinery has been recently associated to several conditions including neurodegenerative diseases and cancer, but only very few studies have investigated its role in pain processing.ResultsWe previously described autophagy impairment at the spinal cord in the experimental model of neuropathic pain induced by spinal nerve ligation (SNL). In this study, we characterized the main autophagic markers in two other common experimental models of neuropathic pain, the chronic constriction injury (CCI) and the spared nerve injury (SNI). The different modulation of LC3-I, Beclin 1 and p62 suggested that autophagy is differentially affected in the spinal dorsal horn depending on the type of peripheral injury. Confocal analysis of p62 distribution in the spinal dorsal horn indicated its presence mainly in NeuN-positive cell bodies and occasionally in glial processes, thus suggesting a predominant expression in the neuronal compartment. Finally, we investigated the consequences of autophagy impairment on pain behaviour by using the autophagy blocker cloroquine. Intrathecal chloroquine injection in naïve mice induced spinal accumulation of LC3 and p62 paralleled by significant mechanical hypersensitivity thus confirming the block in autophagosome clearance and suggesting the participation of the autophagic process in spinal mechanisms of pain processing. Altogether, our data indicate that spinal autophagy is differentially altered in different experimental pain models of neuropathic pain and that this process may be relevant for pain control.
Molecular Vision | 2015
Rossella Russo; Annagrazia Adornetto; Federica Cavaliere; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Dario Rusciano; Luigi Antonio Morrone; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Giacinto Bagetta; Carlo Nucci
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017
Annagrazia Adornetto; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Carlo Nucci; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Luigi Antonio Morrone; Giacinto Bagetta; Rossella Russo
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2017
Rossella Russo; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Annagrazia Adornetto; Francesca Nazio; Luigi Antonio Morrone; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Francesco Cecconi; Giacinto Bagetta; Carlo Nucci
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011
Rossella Russo; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Annagrazia Adornetto; Federica Cavaliere; Luigi Antonio Morrone; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti; Giacinto Bagetta
Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2010
Carlo Nucci; Rossella Russo; Federica Cavaliere; Giuseppe Pasquale Varano; Laura Rombolà; Luigi Antonio Morrone; Giacinto Bagetta; Maria Tiziana Corasaniti