Giuseppina Cappiello
Istituto Superiore di Sanità
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Featured researches published by Giuseppina Cappiello.
Antiviral Research | 2012
Valentina Svicher; V. Cento; Martina Bernassola; Maria Neumann-Fraune; Formijn J. van Hemert; Mengjie Chen; R. Salpini; Chang Liu; R. Longo; M. Visca; S. Romano; Valeria Micheli; A. Bertoli; Caterina Gori; Francesca Ceccherini-Silberstein; C. Sarrecchia; Massimo Andreoni; Mario Angelico; Antonella Ursitti; A. Spanò; Jing Maria Zhang; Jens Verheyen; Giuseppina Cappiello; Carlo Federico Perno
Occult HBV infection (OBI) is a threat for the safety of blood-supply, and has been associated with the onset of HBV-related hepatocellular carcinoma and lymphomagenesis. Nevertheless, genetic markers in HBsAg (particularly in D-genotype, the most common in Europe) significantly associated with OBI in vivo are missing. Thus, the goal of this study is to define: (i) prevalence and clinical profile of OBI among blood-donors; (ii) HBsAg-mutations associated with OBI; (iii) their impact on HBsAg-detection. OBI was searched among 422,278 blood-donors screened by Nucleic-Acid-Testing. Following Taormina-OBI-definition, 26 (0.006%) OBI-patients were identified. Despite viremia <50IU/ml, HBsAg-sequences were obtained for 25/26 patients (24/25 genotype-D). OBI-associated mutations were identified by comparing OBI-HBsAg with that of 82 chronically-infected (genotype-D) patients as control. Twenty HBsAg-mutations significantly correlated for the first time with OBI. By structural analysis, they localized in the major HBV B-cell-epitope, and in HBsAg-capsid interaction region. 14/24 OBI-patients (58.8%) carried in median 3 such mutations (IQR:2.0-6.0) against 0 in chronically-infected patients. By co-variation analysis, correlations were observed for R122P+S167L (phi=0.68, P=0.01), T116N+S143L (phi=0.53, P=0.03), and Y100S+S143L (phi=0.67, p<0.001). Mutants (obtained by site-directed mutagenesis) carrying T116N, T116N+S143L, R122P, R122P+Q101R, or R122P+S167L strongly decreased HBsAg-reactivity (54.9±22.6S/CO, 31.2±12.0S/CO, 6.1±2.4S/CO, 3.0±1.0S/CO and 3.9±1.3S/CO, respectively) compared to wild-type (306.8±64.1S/CO). Even more, Y100S and Y100S+S143L supernatants show no detectable-HBsAg (experiments in quadruplicate). In conclusions, unique HBsAg-mutations in genotype-D, different than those described in genotypes B/C (rarely found in western countries), tightly correlate with OBI, and strongly affect HBsAg-detection. By altering HBV-antigenicity and/or viral-particle maturation, they may affect full-reliability of universal diagnostic-assays for HBsAg-detection.
International Journal of Cancer | 1997
Giuseppina Cappiello; Anna Rosa Garbuglia; Roberto Salvi; Giovanni Rezza; Massimo Giuliani; Patrizio Pezzotti; Barbara Suligoi; Margherita Branca; Giovanna Migliore; Donatella Formigoni Pomponi; D'Ubaldo C; Giuseppe Ippolito; Giovanni Giacomini; Arrigo Benedetto
We assessed the association between different HPV genotypes, HIV infection, and cervical squamous intra‐epithelial lesions (SIL) in 236 women with known HIV serostatus enrolled in a longitudinal multicentric study in Italy. Of these women, 135 were HIV‐infected, and were not markedly different from HIV‐negative women with regard to demographic characteristics, sexual practices, smoking, or intravenous drug use. We obtained 232 cervical smears suitable for cytological examination and HPV‐genotype analysis (134 from HIV‐positive women and 98 from HIV‐negative women). For 86 HIV‐positive and 89 HIV‐negative women, the smears appeared normal at cytomorphological analysis. Cytological dysplasia of varying degrees was detected in 48 smears from HIV‐positive women and in 9 from HIV‐negative women. HPV prevalence, assessed using polymerase‐chain‐reaction analysis, did not significantly differ between HIV‐positive and HIV‐negative women. The prevalence of HPV‐associated SIL was much greater among HIV‐infected women. The most frequently detected genotypes in both groups were HPV 16 and HPV 18. The prevalence of HPV 16 among HIV‐positive women was similar to that for HIV‐negative women; this was also true for HPV 18. However, in the HIV‐positive group, most of these genotypes were associated with SIL. HIV‐positive women showed a wider spectrum of genotypes, including non‐oncogenic and rare types. An association between SIL and HIV infection was confirmed for all HPV genotype classes. Int. J. Cancer 72:982–986, 1997.
Journal of Hepatology | 2009
Valentina Svicher; Caterina Gori; Maria Trignetti; M. Visca; Valeria Micheli; Martina Bernassola; R. Salpini; G. Gubertini; R. Longo; Fosca Niero; Francesca Ceccherini-Silberstein; Giuseppe Maria De Sanctis; A. Spanò; Giuseppina Cappiello; Carlo Federico Perno
BACKGROUND/AIMS To investigate the different clusters of mutations associated with lamivudine resistance in HBV genotypes D and A. METHODS HBV reverse transcriptase sequences of 89 HBV-infected patients failing lamivudine treatment were analyzed. The association of mutations with HBV genotypes was assessed by Chi-Squared test and multivariate logistic regression analysis. Covariate analysis was based on hierarchical clustering. RESULTS In genotype A, the rtM204V (prevalence: 68.2%) was the main sign of lamivudine failure. Multivariate analysis confirmed that genotype A is the only predictor for rtM204V emergence (OR: 14.5 [95% CI: 1.3-158], P=0.02). Covariate analysis showed that rtM204V clusters with rtL180M, rtL229V (corresponding to sF220L in the HBsAg), and, interestingly, with HBsAg mutation sS207N (bootstrap=0.95). Both sF220L and sS207N co-localized in the fourth transmembrane HBsAg domain. In contrast, in genotype D the primary mutations rtM204V and rtM204I occurred with similar prevalence (39.1% versus 45.3%, P=0.47), and showed a distinct pattern of compensatory mutations. rtM204V clusters with mutations localized in the RT-B domain (rtV173L, rtL180M, and rtT184A/S) (bootstrap=0.94), while rtM204I clusters with mutations localized in the RT-A domain (rtS53N, rtT54Y, and rtL80I/V) (bootstrap=0.96) (without associations with HBsAg specific mutations). CONCLUSIONS HBV genotype plays an important role in driving RT evolution under lamivudine treatment, and thus can be relevant for therapeutic sequencing, immunological response and disease progression.
Digestive and Liver Disease | 2011
Valentina Svicher; V. Cento; R. Salpini; Fabio Mercurio; Maria Fraune; Bastian Beggel; Y. Han; Caterina Gori; Linda Wittkop; A. Bertoli; Valeria Micheli; G. Gubertini; R. Longo; S. Romano; M. Visca; V. Gallinaro; Nicoletta Marino; Francesco Mazzotta; Giuseppe Maria De Sanctis; Hervé Fleury; Pascale Trimoulet; Mario Angelico; Giuseppina Cappiello; X.X. Zhang; Jens Verheyen; Francesca Ceccherini-Silberstein; Carlo Federico Perno
BACKGROUND Impact of hepatitis B virus genetic barrier, defined as the number and type of nucleotide substitutions required to overcome drug/immune selective pressure, on drug-resistance/immune-escape development is unknown. METHODS Genetic barrier was calculated according to Van de Vijver (2006) in 3482 hepatitis B virus-reverse transcriptase/HBV surface antigen sequences from 555 drug-naïve patients and 2927 antiviral-treated patients infected with hepatitis B virus genotypes A-G. RESULTS Despite high natural variability, genetic barrier for drug-resistance development is identical amongst hepatitis B virus genotypes, but varies according to drug-resistance mutation type. Highest genetic barrier is found for secondary/compensatory mutations (e.g. rtL80I/V-rtL180M-rtV173L), whilst most primary mutations (including rtM204V-rtA181T/V-rtI169T-rtA194T) are associated with low genetic barrier. An exception is rtM204I, which can derive from a transition or a transversion. Genotypes A and G are more prone to develop immune/diagnostic-escape mutations sT114R and sG130N. Vaccine-escape associated sT131N-mutation is a natural polymorphism in both A and G genotypes. CONCLUSION Genetic barrier and reverse transcriptase/HBV surface antigen overlapping can synergistically influence hepatitis B virus drug-resistance/immune-escape development. The different immune-escape potential of specific hepatitis B virus genotypes could have important clinical consequences in terms of disease progression, vaccine strategies and correct HBV surface antigen detection.
Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2002
Alessandra Amendola; Licia Bordi; Claudio Angeletti; Ubaldo Visco-Comandini; Isabella Abbate; Giuseppina Cappiello; Mohamed A. Budabbus; Osama A. Eljhawi; Mahdi I. Mehabresh; Enrico Girardi; Andrea Antinori; Giuseppe Ippolito; Maria Rosaria Capobianchi
The authors studied the correlation and agreement of commercially available assays in detection and quantification of the HIV-1 intersubtype A/G circulating recombinant form CRF02. The assays under comparison were Bayer Versant HIV-1 RNA, version 3.0; Roche Amplicor HIV-1 Monitor, version 1.5 (standard procedure); and Organon Teknika NucliSens HIV-1 RNA QT. Plasma samples from 114 patients infected with CRF02 were tested by the three assays under standard conditions. Although correlation among the assays was high and statistically significant for subtype B and CRF02, in the latter instance, NucliSens measured average viral load values (3.29 +/- 0.71 log(10) copies/mL) about 4 and >8 times lower than those obtained by Versant (3.90 +/- 0.90 log(10) copies/mL) and Amplicor (4.22 +/- 1.05 log(10) copies/mL), respectively. Furthermore, in a statistically significant percentage of CRF02-harboring samples, NucliSens produced viral load values undetectable or 1 log(10) lower than those obtained in Versant and Amplicor assays. Altogether, these data underline a low performance of NucliSens in detecting and quantifying viremia in plasma samples harboring the CRF02. These results are potentially important as global distribution of new HIV-1 subtypes is expanding, and recombinant strains, particularly CRF02, are emerging and becoming highly prevalent.
Journal of General Virology | 2013
V. Cento; Carmen Mirabelli; Salvatore Dimonte; R. Salpini; Y. Han; Pascale Trimoulet; A. Bertoli; Valeria Micheli; G. Gubertini; Giuseppina Cappiello; A. Spanò; R. Longo; Martina Bernassola; Francesco Mazzotta; G. De Sanctis; X.X. Zhang; Jens Verheyen; A d'Arminio Monforte; Francesca Ceccherini-Silberstein; Carlo-Federico Perno; Valentina Svicher
How the overlap between the hepatitis B virus (HBV) reverse transcriptase (RT) and HBV S antigen (HBsAg) genes modulates the extent of HBV genetic variability is still an open question, and was investigated here. The rate of nucleotide conservation (≤1% variability) followed an atypical pattern in the RT gene, due to an overlap between RT and HBsAg (69.9% nucleotide conservation in the overlapping region vs 41.2% in the non-overlapping region; P<0.001), with a consequently lower rate of synonymous substitution within the overlapping region [median(interquartile range)dS=3.1(1.5-7.4) vs 20.1(10.6-30.0); P=3.249×10(-22)]. The most conserved RT regions were located within the YMDD motif and the N-terminal parts of the palm and finger domains, critical for RT functionality. These regions also corresponded to highly conserved HBsAg domains that are critical for HBsAg secretion. Conversely, the genomic region encoding the HBsAg antigenic loop (where immune-escape mutations are localized) showed a sharp decrease in the extent of conservation (40.6%), which was less pronounced in the setting of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-driven immune suppression (48.8% in HIV-HBV co-infection vs 21.5% in mono-infected patients; P=0.020). In conclusion, the overlapping reading frame and the immune system appear to have shaped the patterns of RT and HBsAg genetic variability. Highly conserved regions in RT and HBsAg may deserve further attention as novel therapeutic targets.
Journal of Infection | 2013
V. Cento; Formijn J. van Hemert; Maria Neumann-Fraune; Carmen Mirabelli; Velia Chiara Di Maio; R. Salpini; A. Bertoli; Valeria Micheli; G. Gubertini; S. Romano; M. Visca; Giuseppe Maria De Sanctis; Ben Berkhout; Nicoletta Marino; Francesco Mazzotta; Giuseppina Cappiello; A. Spanò; C. Sarrecchia; Francesca Ceccherini-Silberstein; Massimo Andreoni; Mario Angelico; Jens Verheyen; Carlo Federico Perno; Valentina Svicher
INTRODUCTION The identification of novel reverse-transcriptase (RT) drug-resistance mutations is critical in predicting the probability of success to anti-HBV treatment. Furthermore, due to HBV-RT/HBsAg gene-overlap, they can have an impact on HBsAg-detection and quantification. METHODS 356 full-length HBV-RT sequences from 197 drug-naive patients and 159 patients experiencing virological-breakthrough to nucleoside/nucleotide-analogs (NUCs) were analyzed. Mutants and wild-type HBs-antigens were expressed in HuH7-hepatocytes and quantified in cell-supernatants and cell-lysates by Architect HBsAg-assay. RESULTS Ten novel RT-mutations (rtN53T-rtS78T-rtS85F-rtS135T-rtA181I-rtA200V-rtK212Q-rtL229V/F-rtM309K) correlated with specific NUC-treatments and classical drug-resistance mutations on divergent evolutionary pathways. Some of them reduced RT-binding affinity for anti-HBV drugs and altered S-antigen structure. Indeed, rtS78T (prevalence: 1.1% in drug-naïve and 12.2% in adefovir-failing patients) decreased the RT-affinity for adefovir more than the classical adefovir-resistance mutations rtA181 T/V (WT:-9.63 kcal/mol, rtA181T:-9.30 kcal/mol, rtA181V:-7.96 kcal/mol, rtS78T:-7.37 kcal/mol). Moreover, rtS78T introduced a stop-codon at HBsAg-position 69, and completely abrogated HBsAg-quantification in both supernatants and cell-lysates, indicating an impaired HBsAg-secretion/production. Furthermore, the HBsAg-mutation sP217L, silent in RT, significantly correlated with M204V/I-related virological-breakthrough and increased HBsAg-quantification in cell-lysate. CONCLUSIONS Mutations beyond those classically known can affect drug-binding affinity of mutated HBV-RT, and may have potential effects on HBsAg. Their cumulative effect on resistance and HBV-pathogenicity indicates the importance of preventing therapeutic failures.
AIDS | 1996
Anna Rosa Garbuglia; Roberto Salvi; Antonino Di Caro; Giuseppina Cappiello; Francesco Montella; Fiorella Di Sora; Olga Recchia; Filippo Lauria; Arrigo Benedetto
ObjectivesWe investigated a selected group of 11 non-progressor, HIV-infected individuals 20 months prior to this study and found that they all had undetectable levels of viral RNA expression in their peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). Phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate (PMA) and phytohaemagglutinin (PHA) stimulation of PBL produced easily detectable amounts of HIV RNA in only two out of five of these patients. Here we report the results of the virological and clinical follow-up of nine non-progressors from this group. We verified the stability of their non-progressive status and attempted to correlate it to specific virological markers. MethodsProviral DNA in lymphocytes was tested by semi-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Detection of unspliced (US) and multiple spliced (MS) HIV RNA species in unstimulated and stimulated lymphocytes was performed by reverse transcriptase-PCR (RT-PCR). The amount of p24 antigen released into the media of lymphocyte cultures was measured using a standard procedure. Lymphocyte populations were depleted of CD8 cells by immunomagnetic purging. ResultsFollow-up of nine of these subjects showed that the patients who previously showed viral RNA activation following lymphocyte stimulation in vitro, developed a clinical and immunological progression characterized by CD4 count decline and lymphadenopathy. In contrast, all the other subjects maintained progression-free status throughout the follow-up period, with no detectable levels of HIV RNA in the PBL. Notably, this group of subjects showed no activation of viral RNA expression following stimulation of either undepleted or CD8-depleted lymphocytes in vitro. ConclusionThe group of non-progressors studied was found to be heterogeneous regarding the stability of the non-progressive status during the follow-up period. Our results suggest that the activation of HIV RNA expression following PMA-PHA treatment of lymphocytes in vitro is an early marker for future progression of the disease.
Digestive and Liver Disease | 2010
Valentina Svicher; Claudia Alteri; Caterina Gori; R. Salpini; Fabbio Marcuccilli; A. Bertoli; R. Longo; Martina Bernassola; V. Gallinaro; S. Romano; M. Visca; Antonella Ursitti; Marcello Feasi; Valeria Micheli; Mario Angelico; Giovanni Cassola; Giustino Parruti; G. Gubertini; Giuseppe Maria De Sanctis; Francesca Ceccherini-Silberstein; Giuseppina Cappiello; A. Spanò; Carlo Federico Perno
OBJECTIVE To investigate lamivudine (LAM)-resistance profiles of hepatitis B virus (HBV) at the early stages of virological breakthrough (serum HBV-DNA 12-345IU/ml) or when HBV-DNA is undetectable. METHODS Sixty-four HBV-mono-infected patients were enrolled: 25 had virological breakthrough with serum HBV-DNA ranging from 12 to 345IU/ml during first-line LAM-monotherapy; 24 were on LAM-monotherapy, and 15 were on LAM+adefovir dipivoxil (ADV) with undetectable serum HBV-DNA (<12IU/ml). RESULTS HBV-reverse transcriptase was successfully sequenced in 22 (88.0%) LAM-treated patients with HBV-DNA between 12 and 345IU/ml, and in 12 (30.8%) patients receiving LAM (±ADV) with HBV-DNA<12IU/ml. Drug-resistance mutations were observed in 17 (77.2%) LAM-treated patients with virological breakthrough: 8 M204V, 7 M204I, 1 M204I/V, and 1 A181T. One or ≥2 compensatory mutations were found in 10 (58.8%) and in 4 (23.5%) patients. Drug-resistance mutations were present also in patients with undetectable serum HBV-DNA: M204I was detected in 2 patients receiving LAM-monotherapy, and V84M in 1 patient receiving LAM+ADV. CONCLUSION Overall findings support the existence of drug-resistance mutations even at very low levels of viral replication. The persistence of low-level HBV replication and consequent drug-resistance emergence should be considered when choosing therapeutic strategies.
Journal of Virological Methods | 2007
Claudia Minosse; Marina Selleri; Maria S. Zaniratti; Francesco Lauria; V. Puro; Fabrizio Carletti; Giuseppina Cappiello; Gina Gualano; Nazario Bevilacqua; Maria Rosaria Capobianchi
Abstract RT-PCR is the most sensitive assay for diagnosis of influenza, due to enhanced rapidity and sensitivity as compared to classical methods. Hemi-nested RT-PCR was developed, targeting NP gene for influenza A and NS gene for influenza B, based on a previous single round RT-PCR method. The new method was compared with the previous technique for analytical sensitivity and specificity, and was applied to clinical samples from the lower and upper respiratory tract. The analytical sensitivity of hemi-nested RT-PCR was 10 (influenza A) and 4 times (influenza B) higher than the previous method. A high specificity of the new hemi-nested RT-PCR assay was observed by using whole respiratory viruses. When applied to lower respiratory tract specimens, the new method showed an increased rate of positivity as compared to the previous technique (9.3% versus 0.7% for influenza A, and 0.9% versus 0.2% for influenza B). Screening of upper respiratory tract samples collected during the seasonal 2005–2006 outbreak indicated 26.4% and 5.8% positivity for influenza A and B, respectively. The results were confirmed by sequence analysis: apart from influenza B, both influenza A subtypes H3N2 and H1N1, associated with the seasonal outbreak, were detected.