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Dive into the research topics where Lucia Dora Notarangelo is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucia Dora Notarangelo.


Nature Immunology | 2012

B cell–helper neutrophils stimulate the diversification and production of immunoglobulin in the marginal zone of the spleen

Irene Puga; Montserrat Cols; Carolina M. Barra; Bing-Yang He; Linda Cassis; Maurizio Gentile; Laura Comerma; Alejo Chorny; Meimei Shan; Weifeng Xu; Giuliana Magri; Daniel M. Knowles; Wayne Tam; April Chiu; James B. Bussel; Sergi Serrano; José A. Lorente; Beatriz Bellosillo; Josep Lloreta; Nuria Juanpere; Francesc Alameda; Teresa Baró; Cristina Díaz de Heredia; Nuria Toran; Albert Catala; Montserrat Torrebadell; Clàudia Fortuny; Victoria Cusí; Carmen Carreras; George A. Diaz

Neutrophils utilize immunoglobulins (Igs) to clear antigen, but their role in Ig production is unknown. Here we identified neutrophils around the marginal zone (MZ) of the spleen, a B cell area specialized in T-independent Ig responses to circulating antigen. Neutrophils colonized peri-MZ areas after post-natal mucosal colonization by microbes and enhanced their B-helper function upon receiving reprogramming signals from splenic sinusoidal endothelial cells, including interleukin 10 (IL-10). Splenic neutrophils induced Ig class switching, somatic hypermutation and antibody production by activating MZ B cells through a mechanism involving the cytokines BAFF, APRIL and IL-21. Neutropenic patients had fewer and hypomutated MZ B cells and less preimmune Igs to T-independent antigens, which indicates that neutrophils generate an innate layer of antimicrobial Ig defense by interacting with MZ B cells.Neutrophils use immunoglobulins to clear antigen, but their role in immunoglobulin production is unknown. Here we identified neutrophils around the marginal zone (MZ) of the spleen, a B cell area specialized in T cell–independent immunoglobulin responses to circulating antigen. Neutrophils colonized peri-MZ areas after postnatal mucosal colonization by microbes and enhanced their B cell–helper function after receiving reprogramming signals, including interleukin 10 (IL-10), from splenic sinusoidal endothelial cells. Splenic neutrophils induced immunoglobulin class switching, somatic hypermutation and antibody production by activating MZ B cells through a mechanism that involved the cytokines BAFF, APRIL and IL-21. Neutropenic patients had fewer and hypomutated MZ B cells and a lower abundance of preimmune immunoglobulins to T cell–independent antigens, which indicates that neutrophils generate an innate layer of antimicrobial immunoglobulin defense by interacting with MZ B cells.


The Lancet | 1996

In-utero transplantation of parental CD34 haematopoietic progenitor cells in a patient with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCIDX1)

Georg S. Wengler; Arnalda Lanfranchi; Tiziana Frusca; Rosanna Verardi; Arabella Neva; Duilio Brugnoni; Silvia Giliani; Maurilia Fiorini; Patrizia Mella; Fabiola Guandalini; Evelina Mazzolari; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Sergio Pecorelli; Fulvio Porta; Alberto G. Ugazio

BACKGROUND X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCIDXI) is an inherited immune defect which leads to death in infancy from severe infections. The defect is caused by mutations of the IL-2RG gene that encodes for the common gamma chain shared by several cytokine receptors. The disease is characterised by lack of T and NK cells with normal numbers of B cells. SCIDXI can be cured by bone marrow transplantation (BMT) or prevented by abortion after prenatal diagnosis. METHODS A male fetus was diagnosed as having SCIDXI by molecular, immunophenotypic, and functional analyses. The fetus was injected intraperitoneally under ultrasound guidance with CD34 haematopoietic progenitor cells purified from paternal bone marrow and T-cell depleted by E rosetting. Chimerism analysis was by HLA-DQ alpha typing and gamma-chain staining on cord blood. FINDINGS A healthy 3.6 kg boy was delivered by caesarean section at 38 weeks of gestation with no clinical or laboratory signs of graft-versus-host disease. Engraftment of donor-derived CD2 cells was found at birth. At 3.5 months of age the infant is well and his T-cell counts and function are normal. INTERPRETATION In-utero transplantation of haematopoietic progenitor cells allowed immune reconstitution of a fetus with SCIDXI and may be an alternative to elective abortion. Our report should encourage applications of this method to other inherited disorders curable by BMT.


Blood | 2010

X-linked thrombocytopenia (XLT) due to WAS mutations: clinical characteristics, long-term outcome, and treatment options

Michael H. Albert; Tanja C. Bittner; Shigeaki Nonoyama; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Siobhan O. Burns; Kohsuke Imai; Teresa Espanol; Anders Fasth; Isabelle Pellier; Gabriele Strauss; Tomohiro Morio; Benjamin Gathmann; Jeroen G. Noordzij; Cristina Fillat; Manfred Hoenig; Michaela Nathrath; Alfons Meindl; Philipp Pagel; Uwe Wintergerst; Alain Fischer; Adrian J. Thrasher; Bernd H. Belohradsky; Hans D. Ochs

A large proportion of patients with mutations in the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) protein gene exhibit the milder phenotype termed X-linked thrombocytopenia (XLT). Whereas stem cell transplantation at an early age is the treatment of choice for patients with WAS, therapeutic options for patients with XLT are controversial. In a retrospective multicenter study we defined the clinical phenotype of XLT and determined the probability of severe disease-related complications in patients older than 2 years with documented WAS gene mutations and mild-to-moderate eczema or mild, infrequent infections. Enrolled were 173 patients (median age, 11.5 years) from 12 countries spanning 2830 patient-years. Serious bleeding episodes occurred in 13.9%, life-threatening infections in 6.9%, autoimmunity in 12.1%, and malignancy in 5.2% of patients. Overall and event-free survival probabilities were not significantly influenced by the type of mutation or intravenous immunoglobulin or antibiotic prophylaxis. Splenectomy resulted in increased risk of severe infections. This analysis of the clinical outcome and molecular basis of patients with XLT shows excellent long-term survival but also a high probability of severe disease-related complications. These observations will allow better decision making when considering treatment options for individual patients with XLT.


Advances in Genetics | 2001

Primary immunodeficiency mutation databases

Mauno Vihinen; Fx Arredondo-Vega; Jean-Laurent Casanova; Amos Etzioni; Silvia Giliani; Lennart Hammarström; Hershfield; Pg Heyworth; Amy P. Hsu; Aleksi Lähdesmäki; Ilkka Lappalainen; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Jennifer M. Puck; Walter Reith; Dirk Roos; Richard Fabian Schumacher; Klaus Schwarz; Paolo Vezzoni; Anna Villa; Jouni Väliaho; C. I. E. Smith

Primary immunodeficiencies are intrinsic defects of immune systems. Mutations in a large number of cellular functions can lead to impaired immune responses. More than 80 primary immunodeficiencies are known to date. During the last years genes for several of these disorders have been identified. Here, mutation information for 23 genes affected in 14 immunodefects is presented. The proteins produced are employed in widely diverse functions, such as signal transduction, cell surface receptors, nucleotide metabolism, gene diversification, transcription factors, and phagocytosis. Altogether, the genetic defect of 2,140 families has been determined. Diseases with X-chromosomal origin constitute about 70% of all the cases, presumably due to full penetrance and because the single affected allele causes the phenotype. All types of mutations have been identified; missense mutations are the most common mutation type, and truncation is the most common effect on the protein level. Mutational hotspots in many disorders appear in CPG dinucleotides. The mutation data for the majority of diseases are distributed on the Internet with a special database management system, MUTbase. Despite large numbers of mutations, it has not been possible to make genotype-phenotype correlations for many of the diseases.


Bone Marrow Transplantation | 2006

Stem cell transplantation for the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome: a single-center experience confirms efficacy of matched unrelated donor transplantation.

Sung-Yun Pai; DeMartiis D; Concetta Forino; Cavagnini S; Arnalda Lanfranchi; Silvia Giliani; Daniele Moratto; Cinzia Mazza; Fulvio Porta; Imberti L; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Evelina Mazzolari

The treatment of Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome (WAS), a once uniformly fatal disorder, has evolved considerably as the use of hematopoietic stem cell transplant has become more widespread. For the majority of patients who lack an human leukocyte antigen-identical sibling, closely matched unrelated donor bone marrow transplant (MUD BMT) at an early age is an excellent option that nevertheless is not uniformly chosen. We retrospectively analyzed our experience with transplantation in 23 patients with WAS from 1990 to 2005 at the University of Brescia, Italy, of whom 16 received MUD BMT. Myeloablative chemotherapy was well tolerated with median neutrophil engraftment at day 18, and no cases of grade III or IV graft-vs-host disease. Overall survival was very good with 78.2% (18/23) of the whole cohort and 81.2% (13/16) of MUD BMT recipients surviving. Among 18 survivors, full donor engraftment was detected in 12 patients, and stable mixed chimerism in all blood lineages in four patients. Deaths were limited to patients who had received mismatched related BMT or who had severe clinical symptomatology at the time of transplantation, further emphasizing the safety and efficacy of MUD BMT when performed early in the clinical course of WAS.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2013

Whole-exome sequencing identifies tetratricopeptide repeat domain 7A (TTC7A) mutations for combined immunodeficiency with intestinal atresias

Rui Chen; Silvia Giliani; Gaetana Lanzi; George Mias; Silvia Lonardi; Kerry Dobbs; John P. Manis; Hogune Im; Jennifer E.G. Gallagher; Douglas H. Phanstiel; Ghia Euskirchen; Philippe Lacroute; Keith Bettinger; Daniele Moratto; Katja G. Weinacht; Davide Montin; Eleonora Gallo; Giovanna Mangili; Fulvio Porta; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Stefania Pedretti; Waleed Al-Herz; Anne Marie Comeau; Russell S. Traister; Sung-Yun Pai; Graziella Carella; Fabio Facchetti; Kari C. Nadeau; Michael Snyder; Luigi D. Notarangelo

BACKGROUND Combined immunodeficiency with multiple intestinal atresias (CID-MIA) is a rare hereditary disease characterized by intestinal obstructions and profound immune defects. OBJECTIVE We sought to determine the underlying genetic causes of CID-MIA by analyzing the exomic sequences of 5 patients and their healthy direct relatives from 5 unrelated families. METHODS We performed whole-exome sequencing on 5 patients with CID-MIA and 10 healthy direct family members belonging to 5 unrelated families with CID-MIA. We also performed targeted Sanger sequencing for the candidate gene tetratricopeptide repeat domain 7A (TTC7A) on 3 additional patients with CID-MIA. RESULTS Through analysis and comparison of the exomic sequence of the subjects from these 5 families, we identified biallelic damaging mutations in the TTC7A gene, for a total of 7 distinct mutations. Targeted TTC7A gene sequencing in 3 additional unrelated patients with CID-MIA revealed biallelic deleterious mutations in 2 of them, as well as an aberrant splice product in the third patient. Staining of normal thymus showed that the TTC7A protein is expressed in thymic epithelial cells, as well as in thymocytes. Moreover, severe lymphoid depletion was observed in the thymus and peripheral lymphoid tissues from 2 patients with CID-MIA. CONCLUSIONS We identified deleterious mutations of the TTC7A gene in 8 unrelated patients with CID-MIA and demonstrated that the TTC7A protein is expressed in the thymus. Our results strongly suggest that TTC7A gene defects cause CID-MIA.


European Journal of Immunology | 2005

Reduced thymic output, increased spontaneous apoptosis and oligoclonal B cells in polyethylene glycol-adenosine deaminase-treated patients

Fabio Malacarne; Tiziana Benicchi; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Luigi Mori; Silvia Parolini; Luigi Caimi; Michael S. Hershfield; Luigi D. Notarangelo; Luisa Imberti

Impairment of purine metabolism due to adenosine deaminase (ADA) deficiency is associated with a severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). Polyethylene glycol‐modified ADA (PEG‐ADA) has provided noncurative, life‐saving treatment for these patients, but full immune recovery is not achieved with this therapy. Since ADA‐SCID is perhaps the most difficult form of SCID to handle clinically, understanding the benefits and limitations of PEG‐ADA therapy may be relevant for treatment selection. To this purpose, we analyzed the rate of thymic output, T and B cell repertoires, number of T cell divisions, IFN‐γ and IL‐4 production, and the extent of cell death in five ADA‐SCID patients following a prolonged period of treatment with PEG‐ADA. We found that thymic output was low in these patients. However, their T cell repertoire was heterogeneous, and their T lymphocytes produced cytokines upon activation and responded to mitogen stimulation, although with different kinetics. Furthermore, a high number of peripheral T lymphocytes were committed to apoptosis. Anomalies were also observed in the B cell compartment, with oligoclonal expansions of B cell clonotypes in two patients. Our data indicate that decreased thymic function, B cell oligoclonality, and increased spontaneous apoptosis may be the mechanisms by which the immunodeficiency of ADA‐SCID patients persists in spite of treatment with PEG‐ADA.


Blood | 2014

Platelet diameters in inherited thrombocytopenias: analysis of 376 patients with all known disorders.

Patrizia Noris; Ginevra Biino; Alessandro Pecci; Elisa Civaschi; Anna Savoia; Marco Seri; Federica Melazzini; Giuseppe Loffredo; Giovanna Russo; Valeria Bozzi; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Paolo Gresele; Paula G. Heller; Nuria Pujol-Moix; Shinji Kunishima; Marco Cattaneo; James B. Bussel; Erica De Candia; Claudia Cagioni; Ugo Ramenghi; Serena Barozzi; Fabrizio Fabris; Carlo L. Balduini

Abnormalities of platelet size are one of the distinguishing features of inherited thrombocytopenias (ITs), and evaluation of blood films is recommended as an essential step for differential diagnosis of these disorders. Nevertheless, what we presently know about this subject is derived mainly from anecdotal evidence. To improve knowledge in this field, we evaluated platelet size on blood films obtained from 376 patients with all 19 forms of IT identified so far and found that these conditions differ not only in mean platelet diameter, but also in platelet diameter distribution width and the percentage of platelets with increased or reduced diameters. On the basis of these findings, we propose a new classification of ITs according to platelet size. It distinguishes forms with giant platelets, with large platelets, with normal or slightly increased platelet size, and with normal or slightly decreased platelet size. We also measured platelet diameters in 87 patients with immune thrombocytopenia and identified cutoff values for mean platelet diameter and the percentage of platelets with increased or reduced size that have good diagnostic accuracy in differentiating ITs with giant platelets and with normal or slightly decreased platelet size from immune thrombocytopenia and all other forms of IT.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

The Different Extent of B and T Cell Immune Reconstitution after Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation and Enzyme Replacement Therapies in SCID Patients with Adenosine Deaminase Deficiency

Federico Serana; Alessandra Sottini; Marco Chiarini; Cinzia Zanotti; Claudia Ghidini; Arnalda Lanfranchi; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; Luigi Caimi; Luisa Imberti

The lack of adenosine deaminase (ADA) leads to the accumulation of toxic metabolites, resulting in SCID. If the disease is left untreated, it is likely to have a fatal outcome in early infancy. Because hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) and enzyme replacement therapy with pegylated bovine ADA (PEG-ADA) are both provided in our hospital, we undertook a retrospective longitudinal comparative study of the extent of lymphocyte recovery in two groups of treated ADA-SCID children. Together with classical immunological parameters, we quantified the output of the new B and T cells from the production sites using the κ-deleting recombination excision circle and TCR excision circle assay, and we monitored T cell repertoire diversification. We found that immune reconstitution was different following the two treatments. The stable production of κ-deleting recombination excision circle+ lymphocytes sustained an increase in B cell number in HSCT-treated patients, whereas in PEG-ADA–treated patients, it was accompanied by a significant and progressive decrease in circulating CD19+ lymphocytes, which never reached the levels observed in age-matched children. The mobilization of TCR excision circle+ cells, though lower than in controls, was stable with time after HSCT treatment, leading to a constant peripheral T cell number and to the diversification of the T cell repertoire; however, it was compromised in children receiving prolonged PEG-ADA therapy, whose T cells showed progressively narrowing T cell repertoires.


Human Genetics | 1989

Close linkage of probe p212 (DXS178) to X-linked agammaglobulinemia.

S. Guioli; Benoit Arveiler; B. Bardoni; Lucia Dora Notarangelo; P. Panina; Marzia Duse; Alberto G. Ugazio; I. Oberlé; G. de Saint Basile; Jean-Louis Mandel; G. Camerino

SummarySegregation analysis was performed in three families affected in X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) with five polymorphic DNA probes linked to the disease locus. In agreement with previous studies, no recombination was observed with either pXG12 (DXS94) or S21 (DXS17). Segregation analysis was also performed with a marker, p212 (DXS178), which has been shown to be closely linked to pXG12 in normal families. No cross-over with XLA was observed in these three families and in five additional families previously analyzed with DXS17 and DXS94 (z = 5.92 at θ = 0). These data provide evidence against genetic heterogeneity in XLA and indicate the value of probe p212 for carrier detection and prenatal diagnosis of XLA. We were able to estimate the carrier status of six females (out of six) in the three previously unreported families.

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Marzia Duse

Sapienza University of Rome

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