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Dive into the research topics where Lucia Rocco is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucia Rocco.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2004

Assessment of environmental stress by the micronucleus test and the Comet assay on the genome of teleost populations from two natural environments.

Consiglia Russo; Lucia Rocco; Maria Alessandra Morescalchi; Vincenzo Stingo

The aim of the present paper was to assess the biological damage caused by exposure of the test organism (Gambusia holbrooki: Cyprinodontiformes, Poecilidae) to various mutagenic agents present in the polluted waters of the Sarno River. For this purpose, we performed a micronuclei (MN) test and single cell gel electrophoresis (the Comet assay), testing DNA migration in an electrophoretic field using erythrocytes of G. holbrooki specimens both from the Sarno River and from the waters of the crater of the Astroni natural reserve as negative controls. The results indicate statistically higher values for both MN and DNA migration in the samples from the Sarno River compared with those from Astroni and point to a strong genotoxic action of the mixture of pollutants present in the Sarno River. These data were compared with the values found in the G. holbrooki specimens from the Sarno River kept under laboratory conditions for 100 days in clean water.


Aquatic Toxicology | 2014

Interactive effects of n-TiO2 and 2,3,7,8-TCDD on the marine bivalve Mytilus galloprovincialis

Laura Canesi; Giada Frenzilli; Teresa Balbi; Margherita Bernardeschi; Caterina Ciacci; Simonetta Corsolini; Camilla Della Torre; Rita Fabbri; Claudia Faleri; Silvano Focardi; Patrizia Guidi; Anton Kočan; Antonio Marcomini; Michela Mariottini; Marco Nigro; Karla Pozo-Gallardo; Lucia Rocco; Arianna Smerilli; Ilaria Corsi

Despite the growing concern over the potential biological impact of nanoparticles (NPs) in the aquatic environment, little is known about their interactions with other pollutants. The bivalve Mytilus sp, largely utilized as a sentinel for marine contamination, has been shown to represent a significant target for different types of NP, including n-TiO2, one of the most widespread in use. In this work, the possible interactive effects of n-TiO2 and 2,3,7,8-TCDD, chosen as models of NP and organic contaminant, respectively, were investigated in Mytilus galloprovincialis. In vitro experiments with n-TiO2 and TCDD, alone and in combination, were carried out in different conditions (concentrations and times of exposure), depending on the target (hemocytes, gill cells and biopsies) and the endpoint measured. Mussels were also exposed in vivo to n-TiO2 (100 μg L(-1)) or to TCDD (0.25 μg L(-1)), alone and in combination, for 96 h. A wide range of biomarkers, from molecular to tissue level, were measured: lysosomal membrane stability and phagocytosis in hemocytes, ATP-binding cassette efflux transporters in gills (gene transcription and efflux activity), several biomarkers of genotoxicity in gill and digestive cells (DNA damage, random amplified polymorphic DNA-RAPD changes), lysosomal biomarkers and transcription of selected genes in the digestive gland. The results demonstrate that n-TiO2 and TCDD can exert synergistic or antagonistic effects, depending on experimental condition, cell/tissue and type of measured response. Some of these interactions may result from a significant increase in TCDD accumulation in whole mussel organisms in the presence of n-TiO2, indicating a Trojan horse effect. The results represent the most extensive data obtained so far on the sub-lethal effects of NPs and organic contaminants in aquatic organisms. Moreover, these data extend the knowledge on the molecular and cellular targets of NPs in bivalves.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2010

Evaluation of zebrafish DNA integrity after exposure to pharmacological agents present in aquatic environments

Lucia Rocco; Giada Frenzilli; Dominique Fusco; Carmela Peluso; Vincenzo Stingo

Over the past few years, the increasing and uncontrolled use of pharmaceutical substances in agriculture, fish farming, human health and in veterinary medicine, together with an improper use of out-of-date medicines, has led to a consequent increase in the environmental problems linked to their disposal. In some Italian waste water treatment plants were found furosemide, a diuretic; ranitidine, an antiulcer drug; bezafibrate, a lipid regulator and ibuprofen, a painkiller. The present paper shows, by means of the synergic application of three tests (the Comet Test, the Diffusion Assay and the RAPD-PCR technique), how the DNA of zebrafish can be damaged after exposure to the above mentioned drugs. The data from the Comet Test, the Diffusion Assay and the RAPD-PCR technique were generally in agreement; these results show that all four drugs are genotoxic.


Journal of Hazardous Materials | 2015

Titanium dioxide nanoparticles modulate the toxicological response to cadmium in the gills of Mytilus galloprovincialis

Camilla Della Torre; Teresa Balbi; Giacomo Grassi; Giada Frenzilli; Margherita Bernardeschi; Arianna Smerilli; Patrizia Guidi; Laura Canesi; Marco Nigro; Fabrizio Monaci; Lucia Rocco; Silvano Focardi; Marco P. Monopoli; Ilaria Corsi

We investigated the influence of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (nano-TiO2) on the response to cadmium in the gills of the marine mussel Mytilus galloprovincialis in terms of accumulation and toxicity. Mussels were in vivo exposed to nano-TiO2, CdCl2, alone and in combination. Several cellular biomarkers were investigated in gills: ABC transport proteins and metallothioneins at gene/protein (abcb1, abcc-like and mt-20) and functional level, GST activity, NO production and DNA damage (Comet assay). Accumulation of total Cd and titanium in gills as in whole soft tissue was also investigated. Significant responses to Cd exposure were observed in mussel gills as up-regulation of abcb1 and mt-20 gene transcription, increases in total MT content, P-gp efflux and GST activity, DNA damage and NO production. Nano-TiO2 alone increased P-gp efflux activity and NO production. When combined with Cd, nano-TiO2 reduced the metal-induced effects by significantly lowering abcb1 gene transcription, GST activity, and DNA damage, whereas, additive effects were observed on NO production. A lower concentration of Cd was observed in the gills upon co-exposure, whereas, Ti levels were unaffected. A competitive effect in uptake/accumulation of nano-TiO2 and Cd seems to occur in gills. A confirmation is given by the observed absence of adsorption of Cd onto nano-TiO2 in sea water media.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 2006

Molecular Organization of 5S rDNAs in Rajidae (Chondrichthyes): Structural Features and Evolution of Piscine 5S rRNA Genes and Nontranscribed Intergenic Spacers

Paola Pasolini; Domenico Costagliola; Lucia Rocco; Fausto Tinti

The genomic and gene organisation of 5S rDNA clusters have been extensively characterized in bony fish and eukaryotes, providing general issues for understanding the molecular evolution of this multigene DNA family. By contrast, the 5S rDNA features have been rarely investigated in cartilaginous fish (only three species). Here, we provide evidence for a dual 5S rDNA gene system in the Rajidae by sequence analysis of the coding region (5S) and adjacent nontranscribed spacer (NTS) in five Mediterranean species of rays (Rajidae), and in a large number of piscine taxa including lampreys and bony fish. As documented in several bony fish, two functional 5S rDNA types were found here also in the rajid genome: a short one (I) and a long one (II), distinguished by distinct 5S and NTS sequences. That the ancestral piscine genome had these two 5S rDNA loci might be argued from the occurrence of homologous dual gene systems that exist in several fish taxa and from 5S phylogenetic relationships. An extensive analysis of NTS-II sequences of Rajidae and Dasyatidae revealed the occurrence of large simple sequence repeat (SSR) regions that are formed by microsatellite arrays. The localization and organization of SSR within the NTS-II are conserved in Rajiformes since the Upper Cretaceous. The direct correlation between the SSRs extension and the NTS length indicated that they might play a role in the maintenance of the larger 5S rDNA clusters in rays. The phylogenetic analysis indicated that NTS-II is a valuable systematic tool limited to distantly related taxa of Rajiformes.


Environmental Toxicology | 2012

Genotoxic effects in fish induced by pharmacological agents present in the sewage of some Italian water-treatment plants

Lucia Rocco; Giada Frenzilli; Giovanna Zito; Aristea Archimandritis; Carmela Peluso; Vincenzo Stingo

The presence of pharmaceutical substances in the municipal effluents is currently considered the principal source of bio‐active molecule emissions into aquatic environments. This study analyzes the genotoxic damage caused by gemfibrozil and atorvastatin, two regulators of the hematic level of lipids, and sildenafil citrate, a vasodilator, on the teleost Danio rerio. The genotoxicity of these three compounds was evaluated using the comet assay, diffusion assay, and RAPD‐PCR. The alkaline version (pH 12.1) of the comet assay was used for the erythrocytes of the zebrafish to evaluate the presence of single strand DNA breaks. Furthermore, the diffusion assay was used to estimate the number of apoptotic cells. The fish were treated with the three pharmacological agents at the average concentrations previously found at some Italian treatment plants and were then sacrificed from 5 to 35 days after exposure. The data of the comet assay showed a statistically significant loss of DNA integrity after 5 days of exposure to atorvastatin and after one week of exposure to gemfibrozil. This damage was, however, repaired after 14 days. Sildenafil citrate produced, instead, a statistically significant loss of DNA integrity at the concentrations found only after 35 days of exposure. The genotoxicity at the molecular level was tested by RAPD‐PCR. The results from this investigation are in agreement with those from two other tests, confirming the efficacy of the use of the three experimental approaches for the complete evaluation of genotoxic damage.


Gene | 2002

Karyotype and genome characterization in four cartilaginous fishes.

Lucia Rocco; Maria Alessandra Morescalchi; Domenico Costagliola; Vincenzo Stingo

Different approaches can be used to elucidate the unsolved questions concerning taxonomic evolution in cartilaginous fish. The study of the karyological characteristics of these vertebrates by combining molecular and traditional techniques of chromosome preparation and banding has been demonstrated to be a very effective method. In this paper we studied the localization and the composition of the constitutive heterochromatin by using C- and restriction endonuclease-banding in four selachian species, belonging to two of the four superorders. We also characterized two different types of repetitive genomic sequences in these species: satellite DNA and (TTAGGG)(n) telomeric sequences. Finally, we analysed the nuclear ribosomal gene to determine the number of the nucleolar organizers and their position on chromosomes by using silver staining, chromomycin A(3), and FISH (fluorescent in situ hybridization). The results showed a prevailingly telomeric localization of constitutive heterochromatin in the Galeomorphii, the presence of additional nucleolar organizer sites in Raja asterias, an exclusively telomeric localization of the (TTAGGG)(n) sequences in Scyliorhinus stellaris and both telomeric and interstitial in Taeniura lymma. These data, together with those concerning the conservation of the satellite DNA, seem to support the hypothesis that Chondrichthyes have an evolutionary history leading them to the acquisition of large genomes rich in highly repeated sequences and subjected to some selective pressures favoring the conservation of this DNA fraction.


Heredity | 2001

TTAGGG) n telomeric sequence in selachian chromosomes

Lucia Rocco; Domenico Costagliola; Vincenzo Stingo

The distribution of telomeric sequence (TTAGGG)n in the genomes of Chondrichthian species at different stages of evolution was investigated both by DNA genomic hybridization, and by fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) of metaphase chromosomes. The sequence is highly conserved in all the species examined. FISH revealed a label uptake only by the telomeres in Raja asterias. However, in Torpedo ocellata, we revealed pericentromeric and interstitial sequence localization on some chromosome pairs in addition to the hybridization signal on telomeres. These findings confirm that the karyotype evolution of these fish began by Robertsonian fusion.


Ecotoxicology and Environmental Safety | 2015

Genotoxicity assessment of TiO2 nanoparticles in the teleost Danio rerio.

Lucia Rocco; Marianna Santonastaso; Filomena Mottola; Domenico Costagliola; Teresa Suero; Severina Pacifico; Vincenzo Stingo

Titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO2 NPs), widely used in paints, pharmaceutical preparations and in many consumer products, have been shown to induce cytotoxicity, genotoxicity and carcinogenic responses both in vitro and in vivo. Numerous studies have shown the potential impact of nanoparticles on a series of aquatic organisms and their toxicity has been linked to their dissolution, surface properties and size. In vitro studies have raised concerns about the toxicity of TiO2 NPs, but there are very limited data on ecotoxicity to aquatic life. This in vivo study aimed to describe the genotoxicity of TiO2 NPs in the zebrafish Danio rerio. After 2 weeks of adaptation, groups of zebrafish were exposed to TiO2 NPs (1 and 10μg/L) for 5, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days. The genotoxic potential of TiO2 NPs was assessed by the Comet assay, the Diffusion assay and RAPD-PCR technique. The use of multi-biomarkers has become an important aspect of ecotoxicology to evaluate environmental quality through a wide panel of biological responses triggered by contaminants. The highest genotoxic effect was observed at the maximum concentrations of nanoparticles (10μg/L) with all three tests at 14 and 21 days of exposure. The results suggests the presence of mechanisms that can reduce the n-TiO2 genotoxicity. Future studies are necessary to analyze the DNA repairing capacity in zebrafish cells and so verify the role of the antioxidant defence system in modulating the response to exposure to n-TiO2 in fish.


Journal of Environmental and Analytical Toxicology | 2011

Genotoxicity in Zebrafish (Danio rerio) Exposed to two Pharmacological Products from an Impacted Italian River

Lucia Rocco; Angelina Izzo; Giovanna Zito; Carmela Peluso; Vincenzo Stingo

The aim of this study was to identify the pharmaceutical substances in the waters of the river Volturno in Campania and to identify the genetic alterations that they induce in fish. These vertebrates, living in water, are particularly sensitive to polluting substances dissolved in their water that interact with DNA leading to the formation of additions or breaks, as well as to the loss or chemical modifications of the bases, because they can conserve and concentrate the substances discharged into their natural habitat. A preventive chemical analysis was carried out on the waters of the river Volturno. The results showed the presence of various drugs, among which Carbamazepine, a known antiepileptic and Diclofenac, a non-steroid anti-inflammatory agent. The genotoxicity of these two compounds was evaluated in 155 individuals of Danio rerio using the Comet Test, the Diffusion Assay and RAPD-PCR. The alkaline version of the Comet Test was used for the erythrocytes of the zebrafish to evaluate the presence of DNA breaks of a single strand. Furthermore, the Diffusion Assay was used to estimate the number of apoptotic cells. The specimens were treated with Carbamazepine and Diclofenac at the same average concentrations found in the river Volturno and were killed after three, seven and fifteen days. The results of the Comet Test showed a statistically significant loss of DNA integrity after only three days of exposure to the drugs. Also the percentage of apoptotic cells reached its maximum values after three days of exposure to Carbamazepine and after one week to Diclofenac. By RAPD-PCR the genotoxicity was evaluated at the molecular level. The amplification products from the individuals exposed to the same concentrations of the environmental pollutants showed significant changes in their electrophoretic pattern with respect to the negative controls. The results of all three tests clearly show the genotoxicity of the compounds analyzed.

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Vincenzo Stingo

University of Naples Federico II

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Domenico Costagliola

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Carmela Peluso

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Filomena Mottola

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Maria Alessandra Morescalchi

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Marianna Santonastaso

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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