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Dive into the research topics where Luigi Giusto Spagnoli is active.

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Featured researches published by Luigi Giusto Spagnoli.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Fhit Interaction with Ferredoxin Reductase Triggers Generation of Reactive Oxygen Species and Apoptosis of Cancer Cells

Francesco Trapasso; Flavia Pichiorri; Marco Gaspari; Tiziana Palumbo; Rami I. Aqeilan; Eugenio Gaudio; Hiroshi Okumura; Rodolfo Iuliano; Giampiero Di Leva; Muller Fabbri; David E. Birk; Cinzia Raso; Kari B. Green-Church; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli; Salvatore Venuta; Kay Huebner; Carlo M. Croce

Fhit protein is lost in most cancers, its restoration suppresses tumorigenicity, and virus-mediated FHIT gene therapy induces apoptosis and suppresses tumors in preclinical models. We have used protein cross-linking and proteomics methods to characterize a Fhit protein complex involved in triggering Fhit-mediated apoptosis. The complex includes Hsp60 and Hsp10 that mediate Fhit stability and may affect import into mitochondria, where it interacts with ferredoxin reductase, responsible for transferring electrons from NADPH to cytochrome P450 via ferredoxin. Viral-mediated Fhit restoration increases production of intracellular reactive oxygen species, followed by increased apoptosis of lung cancer cells under oxidative stress conditions; conversely, Fhit-negative cells escape apoptosis, carrying serious oxidative DNA damage that may contribute to an increased mutation rate. Characterization of Fhit interacting proteins has identified direct effectors of the Fhit-mediated apoptotic pathway that is lost in most cancers through loss of Fhit.


Nephron | 1983

Plasma and Muscle Carnitine Levels in Haemodialysis Patients with Morphological-Ultrastructural Examination of Muscle Samples

Vincenzo Savica; Guido Bellinghieri; Carmelo Di Stefano; Elio Corvaja; Fausto Consolo; Marco Corsi; Franco Maccari; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli; Sergio Villaschi; Giampiero Palmieri

The present study investigates 14 patients on intermittent haemodialysis. Pre-dialysis blood and muscle samples taken for determining plasma free- and acetylcarnitine levels. The tissue fragments were used for light and electron microscopy studies. Our results support the findings of other investigators that patients on haemodialysis generally display decreased free- and acetylcarnitine levels both in plasma and skeletal muscle when compared with control values. Muscle carnitine deficiency was apparently more severe in the longer-term haemodialysis patients. Moreover, a significant correlation (p less than 0.05) between plasma and muscle free-carnitine values was found. Morphologically no pathological alterations were observed in the muscle fibres in 13 of the patients. Light and electron microscopic studies of the muscle fibre of the 14th patient showed a typical nemaline myopathy with rod bodies in the cytoplasm. The muscle free-carnitine concentration in this patient was among the lowest of the group.


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2000

Aging Influences Development and Progression of Early Aortic Atherosclerotic Lesions in Cholesterol-Fed Rabbits

Augusto Orlandi; Marcella Marcellini; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli

The arterial wall in aged animals shows an increased susceptibility to develop atherosclerotic lesions, although the mechanisms by which aging acts are still unclear. We investigated early aortic lesions in aged rabbits (5 to 6 years old, AH group) and young rabbits (2 months old, YH group) after 2 months of 0.2% cholesterol feeding. Fatty streaks or spots mainly in the proximal segments occupied a relative surface area that was greater in AH than in YH rabbits, although plasma cholesterol and lipoprotein levels did not differ. YH lesions showed an irregular endothelial profile mainly from accumulations of large, rounded, RAM 11-positive macrophagic foam cells. There was a higher percentage of myocytic, CD-5-positive, proliferating, and terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated dUTP nick end-labeling (TUNEL)-positive cells and larger accumulation of glycosaminoglycans in AH fatty streaks than in YH lesions. Ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction confirmed differences in apoptosis. Early fibromuscular coats and subendothelial plasma-like insudate were also observed in AH lesions. Aged-matched normocholesterolemic rabbits showed a diffuse aortic intimal thickening composed of myocytic cells with a synthetic phenotype and extracellular matrix rich in glycosaminoglycans. In addition, in aged rabbits, we observed a spontaneous increase of monocytes adhering to the endothelial surface and a reduced expression of endothelial nitric oxide synthase in areas distant from the branches. These plasma cholesterol-independent spontaneous changes in the aortic wall of aged rabbits seem to act as a multiple atherogenic risk factor. Moreover, age-related differences in the distribution, composition, and proliferative and apoptotic rates represent crucial events during the progression of early fatty streaks to advanced plaques.


Atherosclerosis | 2012

Age-related increase of stem marker expression influences vascular smooth muscle cell properties

Amedeo Ferlosio; Gaetano Arcuri; Elena Doldo; Maria Giovanna Scioli; Sandro De Falco; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli; Augusto Orlandi

OBJECTIVEnAging represents a major risk factor for vascular disease development. With aging, changes of the biological properties of vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs) are observed. Stem marker expression characterizes SMCs during developmental growth and atherosclerosis, but the contribution of SMCs with stem features to the age-related arterial remodeling remains largely unknown.nnnMETHODS AND RESULTSnImmunostaining revealed rare vascular growth factor receptor-1(+) (flt-1(+)) and c-kit(+) cells in tunica media of grossly normal human young (17-30 years old) large arteries and 2-month old rat aorta, whereas CD133(+) cells were absent. In large arteries of human aged donors (64-77 years), flt-1(+) and c-kit(+) cell number increased in the intimal thickening and tunica media. Double immunofluorescence revealed that 30.6 ± 3% of flt-1(+) intimal cells co-expressed α-smooth muscle actin. Immunostaining, blots and RT-PCR documented the increased expression of flt-1 and c-kit in 20-24-month old rat aortic media. In vitro, old rat aortic SMCs proliferated and migrated more with greater flt-1, c-kit, NF-κB, VCAM-1, IAP-1 and MCP-1 levels and less α-smooth muscle actin and myosin compared to young SMCs. Old SMCs were also more susceptible to all-trans retinoic and NF-κB inhibition-induced apoptosis compared to young SMCs. Anti-flt-1 blocking antibody reduced migration and placental growth factor-induced but not serum and PDGF-BB-stimulated proliferation of old SMCs.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThe increase of flt-1(+) and c-kit(+) SMCs characterizes large arteries of aged donors; the blocking of flt-1 signaling influences the behavior of old SMCs, suggesting that the accumulation of SMCs with a stem phenotype contributes to the age-dependent adverse arterial remodeling.


The Journal of Pathology | 2006

Cardiac myxoma cells exhibit embryonic endocardial stem cell features.

Augusto Orlandi; Alessandro Ciucci; Amedeo Ferlosio; R Genta; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli; Giulio Gabbiani

The origin of myxoma, the most frequent tumour of the heart, remains uncertain. Previous phenotypic characterizations have shown heterogeneous results and the most recent hypothesis suggests that cardiac myxoma originates from a primitive pluripotential cardiogenic cell. We investigated the expression of actin isoforms in 30 left atrial myxomas by immunohistochemistry and in eight consecutive tumours by RT‐PCR. α‐Smooth muscle actin (α‐SMA) protein and/or transcripts were detected in all cases, whereas α‐cardiac actin was observed in few cases and α‐skeletal actin was always absent. Besides classical features, vessel‐like structures were characterized by cells expressing CD34 and, less frequently, α‐SMA. Confocal microscopy showed focal co‐expression of CD34 and α‐SMA in myxoma cells, suggesting a gradual loss of stem endothelial markers and the acquisition of myocytic antigens. In order to confirm this hypothesis, early cardiac differentiation markers were also investigated. RT‐PCR documented the presence of transcripts for Sox9 (100%), Notch1 (87.5%), NFATc1 (37.5%), Smad6, metalloproteinases 1 and 2 alone or in variable combinations and the absence of ErbB3 and WT1. Myxoma cells maintained phenotypic heterogeneity in vitro, including the expression of α‐SMA and the presence of stress fibres. These findings document in cardiac myxoma cells phenotypic markers of the embryonic endothelial‐to‐mesenchymal transformation that precedes terminal differentiation of endocardial cushions, supporting the hypothesis that cardiac myxoma cells may derive from adult developmental remnants. Copyright


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2004

Modulation of Clusterin Isoforms Is Associated With All-Trans Retinoic Acid–Induced Proliferative Arrest and Apoptosis of Intimal Smooth Muscle Cells

Augusto Orlandi; Sabina Pucci; Alessandro Ciucci; Flavia Pichiorri; Amedeo Ferlosio; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli

Objectives— Clusterin is a heterodimeric glycoprotein which is implicated in several biological processes. The nuclear (n-CLU) and cytoplasmic secreted (s-CLU) isoforms have recently been described, but their role is still unclear. The aim of this study is to investigate the expression of clusterin and its isoforms during proliferative arrest and apoptosis of vascular smooth muscle cells (SMCs). Methods and Results— Clusterin expression was evaluated by immunohistochemistry and Western blotting in human arteries and rat aortas. In human diffuse myointimal thickening, clusterin was detected in cell cytoplasm and extracellular space, whereas it was practically absent in the media. In rat aortas 15 days after ballooning, intimal cells (IT cells) overexpressed s-CLU and n-CLU, the latter mainly in the inner neointima; clusterin expression decreased at 60 days. In vitro, IT cells maintained high clusterin expression and its antisense markedly reduced proliferation and increased apoptosis. Western blotting showed that all-trans retinoic acid-induced proliferative arrest and increased &agr;-smooth muscle actin expression did associate to s-CLU and B-myb reduction, whereas bax-related apoptosis was associated to a shift from the s-CLU to n-CLU isoform. Conclusions— Clusterin overexpression characterized neointimal SMCs; s-CLU expression decreased in IT cells during all-trans retinoic acid–induced proliferative arrest and redifferentiation, whereas n-CLU overexpression was characteristic of apoptosis.


Atherosclerosis | 2002

Propionyl-L-carnitine reduces intimal hyperplasia after injury in normocholesterolemic rabbit carotid artery by modulating proliferation and caspase 3-dependent apoptosis of vascular smooth muscle cells

Augusto Orlandi; Marcella Marcellini; Daniela Pesce; Menotti Calvani; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli

Previously we documented that propionyl-L-carnitine (PLC) reduces the growth of atherosclerotic lesions in cholesterol-fed aged rabbits in association with a decrease of plaque smooth muscle cell (SMC) proliferation and plasma triglycerides. To clarify whether PLC might influence SMC growth through mechanisms other than triglyceride lowering, we investigated the effect of a daily treatment per os with PLC on carotid intimal hyperplasia after ballooning in normocholesterolemic rabbits. PLC did not induce variations of plasma triglyceride and cholesterol. One week later, the number of proliferating SMCs was reduced in PLC as compared with controls. After 3 weeks, morphometric analysis demonstrated a reduced neointimal relative volume and percentage of stenosis but not vessel area in PLC as compared with controls. This associated with an intimal reduced SMC number and an increased apoptotic rate as detected by nick-end labelling (TUNEL) and ligation-mediated polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Western blotting also demonstrated an increase of caspase-3 cleavage in PLC carotids. Antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic effects of PLC were confirmed in vitro on actively proliferating and serum deprived SMCs, respectively. Molecules with an additional cell-specific, pro-apoptotic action may represent a new therapeutic tool in reducing intimal SMC hyperplasia following angioplasty or stenting procedures.


Differentiation | 2009

Alpha actin isoforms expression in human and rat adult cardiac conduction system.

Augusto Orlandi; Hiroyuki Hao; Amedeo Ferlosio; Sophie Clément; Seiichi Hirota; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli; Giulio Gabbiani; Christine Chaponnier

In the adult heart, cardiac muscle comprises the working myocardium and the conduction system (CS). The latter includes the sinoatrial node (SAN), the internodal tract or bundle (IB), the atrioventricular node (AVN), the atrioventricular bundle (AVB), the bundle branches (BB) and the peripheral Purkinje fibers (PF). Most of the information concerning the phenotypic features of CS tissue derives from the characterization of avian and rodent developing hearts; data concerning the expression of actin isoforms in adult CS cardiomyocytes are scarce. Using specific antibodies, we investigated the distribution of alpha-skeletal (alpha-SKA), alpha-cardiac (alpha-CA), alpha-smooth muscle (alpha-SMA) actin isoforms and other muscle-typical proteins in the CS of human and rat hearts at different ages. SAN and IB cardiomyocytes were characterized by the presence of alpha-SMA, alpha-CA, calponin and caldesmon, whereas alpha-SKA and vimentin were absent. Double immunofluorescence demonstrated the co-localisation of alpha-SMA and alpha-CA in I-bands of SAN cardiomyocytes. AVN, AVB, BB and PF cardiomyocytes were alpha-SMA, calponin, caldesmon and vimentin negative, and alpha-CA and alpha-SKA positive. No substantial differences in actin isoform distribution were observed in human and rat hearts, except for the presence of isolated subendocardial alpha-SMA positive cardiomyocytes co-expressing alpha-CA in the ventricular septum of the rat. Aging did not influence CS cardiomyocyte actin isoform expression profile. These findings support the concept that cardiomyocytes of SAN retain the phenotype of a developing myogenic cell throughout the entire life span.


Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica | 2007

Prevalence and genotyping of human papillomavirus infection in women with vulvodynia

Augusto Orlandi; Arianna Francesconi; Caterina Angeloni; Giampiero Palmieri; Gloria Fulvia; Marco Ciotti; Anna Criscuolo; Francesco Sesti; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli

Background. Evidence of vulvar human papillomavirus infection varies and the frequency of the different genotypes has not been adequately assessed. Methods. Fifty consecutive sexually active healthy patients with vulvodynia and suspected of human papillomavirus infection underwent a vulvoscopy and biopsy. Ten normal vulvar samples were also enrolled as control. Histological and vulvoscopic findings were compared in relation to human papillomavirus‐DNA presence and genotyping by a broad‐spectrum polymerase chain reaction and reverse hybridization line probe assay. Results. Although the clinical and histological diagnoses did not always coincide, a good association was found (p<0.0001). Human papillomavirus‐DNA was detected in 42% of all biopsies and in none of the controls, and less frequently in acetowhite‐positive patients (33.3%, p<0.03). Squamous papillomatosis (74%) was the most frequent histological diagnosis, followed by condyloma (20%). Condyloma (90%) but not squamous papillomatosis (29.7%) was significantly associated with human papillomavirus‐DNA presence. Out of the vulvoscopically normal patients, one (33%) was human papillomavirus‐DNA positive. Out of the recorded microscopic features, only koilocytosis was associated with human papillomavirus‐DNA presence. Eight different human papillomavirus genotypes were detected: high‐risk 16 (43%), 31 (19%), 52 (14.3%), 68, and 59 (4.8% each), and low‐risk types 6 (71.4%), 11, and 40 (4.8% each); 33.3% of infections were multiple, ranging from 2 to 4 genotypes. Out of the human papillomavirus‐DNA positive squamous papillomatosis, 72.7% showed a high‐risk type but the infection remained episomal. Conclusions. Our data confirm human papillomavirus as a frequent cause of vulvodynia and its frequent association with squamous papillomatosis or condyloma. The high‐risk human papillomavirus in squamous papillomatosis suggests screening for possible undiagnosed cervical infection.


Atherosclerosis | 1976

Cell proliferation in the atherosclerotic plaques of cholesterol-fed rabbits Part 3. Histological and radioautographic observations on glucocorticoids-treated rabbits☆

C. Cavallero; U. Di Tondo; P.L. Mingazzini; R. Nicosia; M.N. Pericoli; Paolo Sarti; Luigi Giusto Spagnoli; Sergio Villaschi

Tritiated thymidine radioautography was employed to study the effect of cortisol and other glucocorticoids on cellular proliferation in the aorta and pulmonary artery of rabbits with cholesterol atherosclerosis. Labelled cell counts showed that glucocorticoids, even after one day and at a relatively low dose, decrease sharply the deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis in the intimal plaques. The hormonal influence on [3H]thymidine uptake seems to be a dose-dependent process. The relative potency of these steroids in inhibiting DNA synthesis in the plaques parallels closely their anti-inflammatory effectiveness. Conversely mineralocorticoids, including aldosterone and deoxycorticosterone, increase the rate of DNA synthesis in the plaques. It is concluded that the antiatherogenic effect of glucocorticoids on cholesterol-fed rabbits may be due, at least partly, to the inhibitory effect of these steroids on the DNA synthesis of the cellular components of the intimal plaques.

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Augusto Orlandi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Amedeo Ferlosio

Sapienza University of Rome

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Sergio Villaschi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Giampiero Palmieri

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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