Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jessica Perugini is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jessica Perugini.


Cell Metabolism | 2012

The vascular endothelium of the adipose tissue gives rise to both white and brown fat cells.

Khanh-Van Tran; Olga Gealekman; Andrea Frontini; Maria Cristina Zingaretti; Manrico Morroni; Antonio Giordano; Arianna Smorlesi; Jessica Perugini; Rita De Matteis; Andrea Sbarbati; Silvia Corvera; Saverio Cinti

Adipose tissue expansion involves the enlargement of existing adipocytes, the formation of new cells from committed preadipocytes, and the coordinated development of the tissue vascular network. Here we find that murine endothelial cells (ECs) of classic white and brown fat depots share ultrastructural characteristics with pericytes, which are pluripotent and can potentially give rise to preadipocytes. Lineage tracing experiments using the VE-cadherin promoter reveal localization of reporter genes in ECs and also in preadipocytes and adipocytes of white and brown fat depots. Furthermore, capillary sprouts from human adipose tissue, which have predominantly EC characteristics, are found to express Zfp423, a recently identified marker of preadipocyte determination. In response to PPARγ activation, endothelial characteristics of sprouting cells are progressively lost, and cells form structurally and biochemically defined adipocytes. Together these data support an endothelial origin of murine and human adipocytes, suggesting a model for how adipogenesis and angiogenesis are coordinated during adipose tissue expansion.


Journal of Lipid Research | 2013

Obese adipocytes show ultrastructural features of stressed cells and die of pyroptosis

Antonio Giordano; Incoronata Murano; Eleonora Mondini; Jessica Perugini; Arianna Smorlesi; Ilenia Severi; Rocco Barazzoni; Philipp E. Scherer; Saverio Cinti

We previously suggested that, in obese animals and humans, white adipose tissue inflammation results from the death of hypertrophic adipocytes; these are then cleared by macrophages, giving rise to distinctive structures we denominated crown-like structures. Here we present evidence that subcutaneous and visceral hypertrophic adipocytes of leptin-deficient (ob/ob and db/db) obese mice exhibit ultrastructural abnormalities (including calcium accumulation and cholesterol crystals), many of which are more common in hyperglycemic db/db versus normoglycemic ob/ob mice and in visceral versus subcutaneous depots. Degenerating adipocytes whose intracellular content disperses in the extracellular space were also noted in obese mice; in addition, increased anti-reactive oxygen species enzyme expression in obese fat pads, documented by RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry, suggests that ultrastructural changes are accompanied by oxidative stress. RT-PCR showed NLRP3 inflammasome activation in the fat pads of both leptin-deficient and high-fat diet obese mice, in which formation of active caspase-1 was documented by immunohistochemistry in the cytoplasm of several hypertrophic adipocytes. Notably, caspase-1 was not detected in FAT-ATTAC transgenic mice, where adipocytes die of apoptosis. Thus, white adipocyte overexpansion induces a stress state that ultimately leads to death. NLRP3-dependent caspase-1 activation in hypertrophic adipocytes likely induces obese adipocyte death by pyroptosis, a proinflammatory programmed cell death.


Metabolism-clinical and Experimental | 2014

Fibroblast growth factor-21 is expressed in neonatal and pheochromocytoma-induced adult human brown adipose tissue.

Elayne Hondares; José M. Gallego-Escuredo; Pavel Flachs; Andrea Frontini; Rubén Cereijo; Alberto Goday; Jessica Perugini; Pavel Kopecky; Marta Giralt; Saverio Cinti; Jan Kopecky; Francesc Villarroya

OBJECTIVE In rodents, brown (BAT) and white (WAT) adipose tissues are targets and expression sites for fibroblast growth factor-21 (FGF21). In contrast, human WAT expresses negligible levels of FGF21. We examined FGF21 expression in human BAT samples, including the induced BAT found in adult patients with pheochromocytoma, and interscapular and visceral BAT from newborns. METHODS The expression of FGF21 and uncoupling protein-1 (UCP1, a brown adipocyte marker), was determined by quantitative real-time-PCR and immunoblotting. The transcript levels of marker genes for developmentally-programmed BAT (zinc-finger-protein of the cerebellum-1, ZIC1) and inducible-BAT (cluster of differentiation-137, CD137) were also determined. RESULTS FGF21 and UCP1 are significantly expressed in visceral adipose tissue from pheochromocytoma patients, but not in visceral fat from healthy individuals. In neonates, FGF21 and UCP1 are both expressed in visceral and interscapular fat, and their expression levels show a significant positive correlation. Marker gene expression profiles suggest that inducible BAT is present in visceral fat from pheochromocytoma patients and neonates, whereas developmentally-programmed BAT is present in neonatal interscapular fat. CONCLUSIONS Human BAT, but not WAT, expresses FGF21. The expression of FGF21 is especially high in inducible, also called beige/brite, neonatal BAT, but it is also found in the interscapular, developmentally-programmed, BAT of neonates.


Stem Cells | 2014

Molecular aspects of adipoepithelial transdifferentiation in mouse mammary gland.

Andreas Prokesch; Arianna Smorlesi; Jessica Perugini; Monia Manieri; Pasquapina Ciarmela; Eleonora Mondini; Zlatko Trajanoski; Karsten Kristiansen; Antonio Giordano; Juliane G. Bogner-Strauss; Saverio Cinti

The circular, reversible conversion of the mammary gland during pregnancy and involution is a paradigm of physiological tissue plasticity. The two most prominent cell types in mammary gland, adipocytes and epithelial cells, interact in an orchestrated way to coordinate this process. Previously, we showed that this conversion is at least partly achieved by reciprocal transdifferentiation between mammary adipocytes and lobulo‐alveolar epithelial cells. Here, we aim to shed more light on the regulators of mammary transdifferentiation. Using immunohistochemistry with cell type‐specific lipid droplet‐coating markers (Perilipin1 and 2), we show that cells with an intermediate adipoepithelial phenotype exist during and after pregnancy. Nuclei of cells with similar transitional structural characteristics are highly positive for Elf5, a master regulator of alveologenesis. In cultured adipocytes, we could show that transient and stable ectopic expression of Elf5 induces expression of the milk component whey acidic protein, although the general adipocyte phenotype is not affected suggesting that additional pioneering factors are necessary. Furthermore, the lack of transdifferentiation of adipocytes during pregnancy after clearing of the epithelial compartment indicates that transdifferentiation signals must emanate from the epithelial part. To explore candidate genes potentially involved in the transdifferentiation process, we devised a high‐throughput gene expression study to compare cleared mammary fat pads with developing, contralateral controls at several time points during pregnancy. Incorporation of bioinformatic predictions of secretory proteins provides new insights into possible paracrine signaling pathways and downstream transdifferentiation factors. We discuss a potential role for osteopontin (secreted phosphoprotein 1 [Spp1]) signaling through integrins to induce adipoepithelial transdifferentiation. Stem Cells 2014;32:2756–2766


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2013

Opposite effects of a high-fat diet and calorie restriction on ciliary neurotrophic factor signaling in the mouse hypothalamus.

Ilenia Severi; Jessica Perugini; Eleonora Mondini; Arianna Smorlesi; Andrea Frontini; Saverio Cinti; Antonio Giordano

In the mouse hypothalamus, ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) is mainly expressed by ependymal cells and tanycytes of the ependymal layer covering the third ventricle. Since exogenously administered CNTF causes reduced food intake and weight loss, we tested whether endogenous CNTF might be involved in energy balance regulation. We thus evaluated CNTF production and responsiveness in the hypothalamus of mice fed a high-fat diet (HFD), of ob/ob obese mice, and of mice fed a calorie restriction (CR) regimen. RT-PCR showed that CNTF mRNA increased significantly in HFD mice and decreased significantly in CR animals. Western blotting confirmed that CNTF expression was higher in HFD mice and reduced in CR mice, but high interindividual variability blunted the significance of these differences. By immunohistochemistry, hypothalamic tuberal and mammillary region tanycytes stained strongly for CNTF in HFD mice, whereas CR mice exhibited markedly reduced staining. RT-PCR and Western blotting disclosed that changes in CNTF expression were paralleled by changes in the expression of its specific receptor, CNTF receptor α (CNTFRα). Injection of recombinant CNTF and detection of phospho-signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 (P-STAT3) showed that CNTF responsiveness by the ependymal layer, mainly by tanycytes, was higher in HFD than CR mice. In addition, in HFD mice CNTF administration induced distinctive STAT3 signaling in a large neuron population located in the dorsomedial and ventromedial nuclei, perifornical area and mammillary body. The hypothalamic expression of CNTF and CNTFRα did not change in the hyperphagic, leptin-deficient ob/ob obese mice; accordingly, P-STAT3 immunoreactivity in CNTF-treated ob/ob mice was confined to ependymal layer and arcuate neurons. Collectively, these data suggest that hypothalamic CNTF is involved in controlling the energy balance and that CNTF signaling plays a role in HFD obese mice at specific sites.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2017

Human white adipocytes convert into "rainbow" adipocytes in vitro

Giulia Maurizi; Antonella Poloni; Domenico Mattiucci; Spartaco Santi; Angela Maurizi; Valerio Izzi; Angelica Giuliani; Stefania Mancini; Maria Cristina Zingaretti; Jessica Perugini; Ilenia Severi; M. Falconi; Marco Vivarelli; Maria Rita Rippo; Silvia Corvera; Antonio Giordano; Pietro Leoni; Saverio Cinti

White adipocytes are plastic cells able to reversibly transdifferentiate into brown adipocytes and into epithelial glandular cells under physiologic stimuli in vivo. These plastic properties could be used in future for regenerative medicine, but are incompletely explored in their details. Here, we focused on plastic properties of human mature adipocytes (MA) combining gene expression profile through microarray analysis with morphologic data obtained by electron and time lapse microscopy. Primary MA showed the classic morphology and gene expression profile of functional mature adipocytes. Notably, despite their committed status, MA expressed high levels of reprogramming genes. MA from ceiling cultures underwent transdifferentiation toward fibroblast‐like cells with a well‐differentiated morphology and maintaining stem cell gene signatures. The main morphologic aspect of the transdifferentiation process was the secretion of large lipid droplets and the development of organelles necessary for exocrine secretion further supported the liposecretion process. Of note, electron microscope findings suggesting liposecretion phenomena were found also in explants of human fat and rarely in vivo in fat biopsies from obese patients. In conclusion, both MA and post‐liposecretion adipocytes show a well‐differentiated phenotype with stem cell properties in line with the extraordinary plasticity of adipocytes in vivo. J. Cell. Physiol. 232: 2887–2899, 2017.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2017

Mammary Alveolar Epithelial Cells Convert to Brown Adipocytes in Post-lactating Mice

Antonio Giordano; Jessica Perugini; David Møbjerg Kristensen; Loris Sartini; Andrea Frontini; Shingo Kajimura; Karsten Kristiansen; Saverio Cinti

During pregnancy and lactation, subcutaneous white adipocytes in the mouse mammary gland transdifferentiate reversibly to milk‐secreting epithelial cells. In this study, we demonstrate by transmission electron microscopy that in the post‐lactating mammary gland interscapular multilocular adipocytes found close to the mammary alveoli contain milk protein granules. Use of the Cre‐loxP recombination system allowed showing that the involuting mammary gland of whey acidic protein‐Cre/R26R mice, whose secretory alveolar cells express the lacZ gene during pregnancy, contains some X‐Gal‐stained and uncoupling protein 1‐positive interscapular multilocular adipocytes. These data suggest that during mammary gland involution some milk‐secreting epithelial cells in the anterior subcutaneous depot may transdifferentiate to brown adipocytes, highlighting a hitherto unappreciated feature of mouse adipose organ plasticity.


Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience | 2017

Levetiracetam affects differentially presynaptic proteins in rat cerebral cortex

Daniele Marcotulli; Giorgia Fattorini; Luca Bragina; Jessica Perugini; Fiorenzo Conti

Presynaptic proteins are potential therapeutic targets for epilepsy and other neurological diseases. We tested the hypothesis that chronic treatment with the SV2A ligand levetiracetam affects the expression of other presynaptic proteins. Results showed that in rat neocortex no significant difference was detected in SV2A protein levels in levetiracetam treated animals compared to controls, whereas levetiracetam post-transcriptionally decreased several vesicular proteins and increased LRRK2, without any change in mRNA levels. Analysis of SV2A interactome indicates that the presynaptic proteins regulation induced by levetiracetam reported here is mediated by this interactome, and suggests that LRRK2 plays a role in forging the pattern of effects.


Frontiers in Neuroscience | 2016

Action of Administered Ciliary Neurotrophic Factor on the Mouse Dorsal Vagal Complex

Martina Senzacqua; Ilenia Severi; Jessica Perugini; Samantha Acciarini; Saverio Cinti; Antonio Giordano

Ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) induces weight loss in obese rodents and humans through activation of the hypothalamic Jak-STAT (Janus kinase-signal transducer and activator of transcription) signaling pathway. Here, we tested the hypothesis that CNTF also affects the brainstem centers involved in feeding and energy balance regulation. To this end, wild-type and leptin-deficient (ob/ob and db/db) obese mice were acutely treated with intraperitoneal recombinant CNTF. Coronal brainstem sections were processed for immunohistochemical detection of STAT3, STAT1, STAT5 phosphorylation and c-Fos. In wild-type mice, CNTF treatment for 45 min induced STAT3, STAT1, and STAT5 phosphorylation in neurons as well as glial cells of the area postrema; here, the majority of CNTF-responsive cells activated multiple STAT isoforms, and a significant proportion of CNTF-responsive glial cells bore the immaturity and plasticity markers nestin and vimentin. After 120 min CNTF treatment, c-Fos expression was intense in glial cells and weak in neurons of the area postrema, it was intense in several neurons of the rostral and caudal solitary tract nucleus (NTS), and weak in some cholinergic neurons of the dorsal motor nucleus of the vagus. In the ob/ob and db/db mice, Jak-STAT activation and c-Fos expression were similar to those induced in wild-type mouse brainstem. Treatment with CNTF (120 min, to induce c-Fos expression) and leptin (25 min, to induce STAT3 phosphorylation) demonstrated the co-localization of the two transcription factors in a small neuron population in the caudal NTS portion. Finally, weak immunohistochemical CNTF staining, detected in funiculus separans, and meningeal glial cells, matched the modest amount of CNTF found by RT-qPCR in micropunched area postrema tissue, which in contrast exhibited a very high amount of CNTF receptor. Collectively, the present findings show that the area postrema and the NTS exhibit high, distinctive responsiveness to circulating exogenous and, probably, endogenous CNTF.


The EMBO Journal | 2018

Hypothalamic CNTF volume transmission shapes cortical noradrenergic excitability upon acute stress

Alán Alpár; Péter Zahola; János Hanics; Zsófia Hevesi; Solomiia Korchynska; Marco Benevento; Christian Pifl; Gergely Zachar; Jessica Perugini; Ilenia Severi; Patrick Leitgeb; Joanne Bakker; András G. Miklósi; Evgenii Tretiakov; Erik Keimpema; Gloria Arque; Ramon Tasan; Günther Sperk; Katarzyna Malenczyk; Zoltán Máté; Ferenc Erdélyi; Gábor Szabó; Gert Lubec; Miklós Palkovits; Antonio Giordano; Tomas Hökfelt; Roman A. Romanov; Tamas L. Horvath; Tibor Harkany

Stress‐induced cortical alertness is maintained by a heightened excitability of noradrenergic neurons innervating, notably, the prefrontal cortex. However, neither the signaling axis linking hypothalamic activation to delayed and lasting noradrenergic excitability nor the molecular cascade gating noradrenaline synthesis is defined. Here, we show that hypothalamic corticotropin‐releasing hormone‐releasing neurons innervate ependymal cells of the 3rd ventricle to induce ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) release for transport through the brains aqueductal system. CNTF binding to its cognate receptors on norepinephrinergic neurons in the locus coeruleus then initiates sequential phosphorylation of extracellular signal‐regulated kinase 1 and tyrosine hydroxylase with the Ca2+‐sensor secretagogin ensuring activity dependence in both rodent and human brains. Both CNTF and secretagogin ablation occlude stress‐induced cortical norepinephrine synthesis, ensuing neuronal excitation and behavioral stereotypes. Cumulatively, we identify a multimodal pathway that is rate‐limited by CNTF volume transmission and poised to directly convert hypothalamic activation into long‐lasting cortical excitability following acute stress.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jessica Perugini's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Saverio Cinti

Marche Polytechnic University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Andrea Frontini

Marche Polytechnic University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Antonio Giordano

College of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ilenia Severi

Marche Polytechnic University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Eleonora Mondini

Marche Polytechnic University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Incoronata Murano

Marche Polytechnic University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Mario Guerrieri

Marche Polytechnic University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge