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Featured researches published by M. Curcio.


Journal of Drug Targeting | 2009

Imprinted hydrophilic nanospheres as drug delivery systems for 5-fluorouracil sustained release

Giuseppe Cirillo; Francesca Iemma; Francesco Puoci; Ortensia Ilaria Parisi; M. Curcio; Umile Gianfranco Spizzirri; Nevio Picci

Molecularly imprinted hydrogel nanospheres as devices for the controlled/sustained release of 5-fluororacil in biological fluids were synthesized employing one-pot precipitation technique as the polymerization method. Methacrylic acid as a functional monomer and ethylene glycole dimethacrylate as a cross-linker were used in polymeric feed. Morphological and hydrophilic properties were determined by scanning electron microscopy and water content measurement, and recognition and selectivity properties of spherical molecularly imprinted polymers were compared with the spherical non-imprinted polymers, both in organic (acetonitrile) and water media. Finally, in vitro release studies were performed in plasma simulating fluids.


Journal of General Virology | 1997

Analysis of the genetic diversity and phylogenetic relationship of Italian isolates of feline immunodeficiency virus indicates a high prevalence and heterogeneity of subtype B

Mauro Pistello; G. Cammarota; Elisa Nicoletti; Donatella Matteucci; M. Curcio; Daniela Del Mauro; Mauro Bendinelli

The genetic diversity of 32 Italian isolates of feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV) was studied. Isolates were obtained from domestic cats living in different areas. Sequence data were obtained from a 308 bp fragment of the p25 region of the gag gene. Phylogenetic relationships among these sequences and previously published sequences were determined. All the Italian isolates could be assigned to subtype B; however, four isolates formed two separate clusters and may represent genetic outliers. The reliability of classification results was confirmed by repeating the phylogenetic analysis with DNA sequences from the entire gag genes of two isolates and from the surface glycoprotein domain of the env gene of four isolates. It is concluded that the short segment of gag used permits reliable genotyping of FIV isolates. The study also shows that subtype B is largely prevalent in Italy.


Pharmaceutical Research | 2012

Dextran-Catechin Conjugate: A Potential Treatment Against the Pancreatic Ductal Adenocarcinoma

Orazio Vittorio; Giuseppe Cirillo; Francesca Iemma; Giovanni Di Turi; Emanuela Jacchetti; M. Curcio; Serena Barbuti; Niccola Funel; Ortensia Ilaria Parisi; Francesco Puoci; Nevio Picci

ABSTRACTPurposeA polysaccharide-flavonoid conjugate was developend and proposed for the treatment of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC).MethodsThe conjugate was synthesized by free radical grafting reaction between catechin and dextran. The chemical characterization of the conjugate was obtained by UV-Vis, 1H-NMR, FT-IR and GPC analyses, while the functionalization degree was determined by the Folin-Ciocalteu assay. The biological activity of the catechin-dextran conjugate was tested on two different cell lines derived from human pancreatic cancer (MIA PaCa-2 and PL45 cells), and the toxicity towards human pancreatic nestin-expressing cells evaluated.ResultsBoth the cancer cell lines are killed when exposed to the conjugate, and undergo apoptosis after the incubation with catechin-dextran which resulted more effective in killing pancreatic tumor cells compared to the catechin alone. Moreover, our experimental data indicate that the conjugate was less cytotoxic to human pancreatic nestin-expressing cells which are considered a good model of non-neoplastic pancreatic cells.ConclusionThe suitability of newly synthesized Dextran-Catechin conjugate in the treatment of PDAC was proved confirming the high potential application of the proposed macromolecula system in the cancer therapy.


Frontiers in Human Neuroscience | 2014

Hypnotizability and Catechol-O-Methyltransferase (COMT) polymorphysms in Italians

Silvano Presciuttini; Alessandro Gialluisi; Serena Barbuti; M. Curcio; Fabrizio Scatena; Giancarlo Carli; Enrica Laura Santarcangelo

Higher brain dopamine content depending on lower activity of Catechol-O-Methyltransferase (COMT) in subjects with high hypnotizability scores (highs) has been considered responsible for their attentional characteristics. However, the results of the previous genetic studies on association between hypnotizability and the COMT single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs4680 (Val158Met) were inconsistent. Here, we used a selective genotyping approach to re-evaluate the association between hypnotizability and COMT in the context of a two-SNP haplotype analysis, considering not only the Val158Met polymorphism, but also the closely located rs4818 SNP. An Italian sample of 53 highs, 49 low hypnotizable subjects (lows), and 57 controls, were genotyped for a segment of 805 bp of the COMT gene, including Val158Met and the closely located rs4818 SNP. Our selective genotyping approach had 97.1% power to detect the previously reported strongest association at the significance level of 5%. We found no evidence of association at the SNP, haplotype, and diplotype levels. Thus, our results challenge the dopamine-based theory of hypnosis and indirectly support recent neuropsychological and neurophysiological findings reporting the lack of any association between hypnotizability and focused attention abilities.


Tissue Antigens | 2012

A novel HLA-B*51:01:29 allele identified by sequence-based typing.

Serena Barbuti; S Fornaciari; Ml Mariotti; M. Curcio; F. Scatena

A novel HLA-B*51:01:29 allele differs from B*51:01:01 at one nucleotidic position in the exon 3.


Tissue Antigens | 2014

A novel allele, HLA‐DPB1*296:01, identified by sequence‐based typing in a Thai bone marrow donor

Silvano Presciuttini; R. Sciarrino; S Fornaciari; Ml Mariotti; F. Scatena; M. Curcio

A novel HLA-DPB1 allele, named DPB1*296:01, was identified in the Thai mother of a hematologic patient.


Journal of Periodontology | 2011

Real-Time Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction Analysis of Patients With Refractory Chronic Periodontitis

Simone Marconcini; Ugo Covani; Antonio Barone; Orazio Vittorio; M. Curcio; Serena Barbuti; Fabrizio Scatena; Lamberto Felli; Claudio Nicolini

BACKGROUND Periodontitis is a complex multifactorial disease and is typically polygenic in origin. Genes play a fundamental part in each biologic process forming complex networks of interactions. However, only some genes have a high number of interactions with other genes in the network and may, therefore, be considered to play an important role. In a preliminary bioinformatic analysis, five genes that showed a higher number of interactions were identified and termed leader genes. In the present study, we use real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) technology to evaluate the expression levels of leader genes in the leukocytes of 10 patients with refractory chronic periodontitis and compare the expression levels with those of the same genes in 24 healthy patients. METHODS Blood was collected from 24 healthy human subjects and 10 patients with refractory chronic periodontitis and placed into heparinized blood collection tubes by personnel trained in phlebotomy using a sterile technique. Blood leukocyte cells were immediately lysed by using a kit for total RNA purification from human whole blood. Complementary DNA (cDNA) synthesis was obtained from total RNA and then real-time quantitative PCR was performed. PCR efficiencies were calculated with a relative standard curve derived from a five cDNA dilution series in triplicate that gave regression coefficients >0.98 and efficiencies >96%. The standard curves were obtained using glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) and growth factor receptor binding protein 2 (GRB2), casitas B-lineage lymphoma (CBL), nuclear factor-KB1 (NFKB1), and REL-A (gene for transcription factor p65) gene primers and amplified with 1.6, 8, 40, 200, and 1,000 ng/μL total cDNA. Curves obtained for each sample showed a linear relationship between RNA concentrations and the cycle threshold value of real-time quantitative PCR for all genes. Data were expressed as mean ± SE (SEM). The groups were compared to the analysis of variance. A probability value <0.01 was considered statistically significant. RESULTS The present study agrees with the preliminary bioinformatics analysis. In our experiments, the association of pathology with the genes was statistically significant for GRB2 and CBL (P <0.01), and it was not statistically significant for REL-A and NFKB1. CONCLUSION This article lends support to our preliminary hypothesis that assigned an important role in refractory aggressive periodontitis to leader genes.


Tissue Antigens | 2013

A novel HLA‐DRB1 allele, DRB1*01:54, identified by sequence‐based typing

Serena Barbuti; M. Curcio; L. Marchetti; Orazio Vittorio; Ml Mariotti; Fabrizio Scatena

The new HLA DRB1*01:54 differs from DRB1*01:02:01 by one nucleotide at exon 2.


Neuroscience Letters | 2009

Promoter polymorphisms of the NOS3 gene are associated with hypnotizability-dependent vascular response to nociceptive stimulation

Silvano Presciuttini; M. Curcio; Roberta Chillemi; Serena Barbuti; Fabrizio Scatena; Giancarlo Carli; Brunello Ghelarducci; Enrica Laura Santarcangelo

Hypnotizability is associated with a few physiological characteristics also in the normal awake state. Differences in flow-mediated dilation (FMD) have been observed in subjects with high (Highs) or low (Lows) hypnotizability during nociceptive stimulation. FMD is largely due to the nitric oxide (NO) produced by vascular endothelium through the activity of NO synthase (eNOS). Endothelial NOS is encoded by the NOS3 locus. Aim of this pilot study was to investigate the association between genetic polymorphisms of NOS3 involved in NO blood levels and hypnotizability. Nine single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the NOS3 gene were analyzed in the DNA of 24 Highs, 22 Lows, and 61 newborns. Two SNPs, rs1800783 (-1474 T/A) and rs2070744 (-786 T/C), located in the upstream and promoter region of the gene, respectively, showed significant differences between Highs and Lows in allele frequency. Haplotype analysis showed that the newborns were in linkage equilibrium for these SNPs, whereas both Highs and Lows showed linkage disequilibrium. The A-C haplotype (associated with lower NO availability in the general population) was more frequent in Highs, and the T-T haplotype was more frequent in Lows. Thus, the lower FMD reduction observed in Highs during nociceptive stimulation, which is indicative of higher NO availability, should be due to greater efficacy of shear stress-related transcriptional factors and/or to lower effects of NOS inhibitory controls. A consequent theoretical proposal concerns the possible role of NO in the brain vessels where, in stimulation conditions, NO diffusion to the extracellular compartment might be involved in hypnotic responding.


computer-based medical systems | 2006

Mining HLA Patterns Explaining Liver Diseases

Michele Berlingerio; Francesco Bonchi; Silvia Chelazzi; M. Curcio; Fosca Giannotti; Fabrizio Scatena

Human leukocyte antigens (HLA), also known as histocompatibility antigens, are molecules found on all nucleated cells in the body. Histocompatibility antigens help the immune system to recognize whether or not a cell is foreign to the body, hence the success of an organ transplantation is strongly connected to the HLA systems of the donor-recipient pair. Beyond this important role, the HLA system seems to influence also the clinical course of hepatic cirrhosis, both on viral and autoimmune basis. However, not only different antigens have different importance w.r.t. hepatic cirrhosis, but, to make things more complicated, other not yet well characterized factors could play an important role. It is thus important to assess the existence of associations between haplotypic settings (possibly mixed with clinical and demographical information) and hepatic cirrhosis. Algorithms developed for frequent patterns discovery can help us achieve this goal. Thanks to their ability in handling a very large number of variables and the associated exponential search space, such techniques can discover interesting haplotypic patterns beyond traditional analysis methods capabilities

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F. Scatena

Gulf Coast Regional Blood Center

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Nevio Picci

University of Calabria

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Orazio Vittorio

University of New South Wales

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