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Dive into the research topics where Maria Feola is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Feola.


Haematologica | 2015

Extrahepatic sources of factor VIII potentially contribute to the coagulation cascade correcting the bleeding phenotype of mice with hemophilia A

Diego Zanolini; Simone Merlin; Maria Feola; Gabriella Ranaldo; Angela Amoruso; Gianluca Gaidano; Mauro Zaffaroni; Alessandro Ferrero; Sandra Brunelleschi; Guido Valente; Sanjeev Gupta; Maria Prat; Antonia Follenzi

A large fraction of factor VIII in blood originates from liver sinusoidal endothelial cells although extrahepatic sources also contribute to plasma factor VIII levels. Identification of cell-types other than endothelial cells with the capacity to synthesize and release factor VIII will be helpful for therapeutic approaches in hemophilia A. Recent cell therapy and bone marrow transplantation studies indicated that Küpffer cells, monocytes and mesenchymal stromal cells could synthesize factor VIII in sufficient amount to ameliorate the bleeding phenotype in hemophilic mice. To further establish the role of blood cells in expressing factor VIII, we studied various types of mouse and human hematopoietic cells. We identified factor VIII in cells isolated from peripheral and cord blood, as well as bone marrow. Co-staining for cell type-specific markers verified that factor VIII was expressed in monocytes, macrophages and megakaryocytes. We additionally verified that factor VIII was expressed in liver sinusoidal endothelial cells and endothelial cells elsewhere, e.g., in the spleen, lungs and kidneys. Factor VIII was well expressed in sinusoidal endothelial cells and Küpffer cells isolated from human liver, whereas by comparison isolated human hepatocytes expressed factor VIII at very low levels. After transplantation of CD34+ human cord blood cells into NOD/SCIDγNull-hemophilia A mice, fluorescence activated cell sorting of peripheral blood showed >40% donor cells engrafted in the majority of mice. In these animals, plasma factor VIII activity 12 weeks after cell transplantation was up to 5% and nine of 12 mice survived after a tail clip-assay. In conclusion, hematopoietic cells, in addition to endothelial cells, express and secrete factor VIII: this information should offer further opportunities for understanding mechanisms of factor VIII synthesis and replenishment.


Blood | 2017

Decreasing TfR1 expression reverses anemia and hepcidin suppression in β-thalassemic mice

Huihui Li; Tenzin Choesang; Weili Bao; Huiyong Chen; Maria Feola; Daniel Garcia-Santos; Jie Li; Shuming Sun; Antonia Follenzi; Petra Pham; Jing Liu; Jinghua Zhang; Prem Ponka; Xiuli An; Narla Mohandas; Robert E. Fleming; Stefano Rivella; Guiyuan Li; Yelena Ginzburg

Iron availability for erythropoiesis and its dysregulation in β-thalassemia are incompletely understood. We previously demonstrated that exogenous apotransferrin leads to more effective erythropoiesis, decreasing erythroferrone (ERFE) and derepressing hepcidin in β-thalassemic mice. Transferrin-bound iron binding to transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1) is essential for cellular iron delivery during erythropoiesis. We hypothesize that apotransferrins effect is mediated via decreased TfR1 expression and evaluate TfR1 expression in β-thalassemic mice in vivo and in vitro with and without added apotransferrin. Our findings demonstrate that β-thalassemic erythroid precursors overexpress TfR1, an effect that can be reversed by the administration of exogenous apotransferrin. In vitro experiments demonstrate that apotransferrin inhibits TfR1 expression independent of erythropoietin- and iron-related signaling, decreases TfR1 partitioning to reticulocytes during enucleation, and enhances enucleation of defective β-thalassemic erythroid precursors. These findings strongly suggest that overexpressed TfR1 may play a regulatory role contributing to iron overload and anemia in β-thalassemic mice. To evaluate further, we crossed TfR1+/- mice, themselves exhibiting iron-restricted erythropoiesis with increased hepcidin, with β-thalassemic mice. Resultant double-heterozygote mice demonstrate long-term improvement in ineffective erythropoiesis, hepcidin derepression, and increased erythroid enucleation in relation to β-thalassemic mice. Our data demonstrate for the first time that TfR1+/- haploinsufficiency reverses iron overload specifically in β-thalassemic erythroid precursors. Taken together, decreasing TfR1 expression during β-thalassemic erythropoiesis, either directly via induced haploinsufficiency or via exogenous apotransferrin, decreases ineffective erythropoiesis and provides an endogenous mechanism to upregulate hepcidin, leading to sustained iron-restricted erythropoiesis and preventing systemic iron overload in β-thalassemic mice.


Haematologica | 2016

Increased hepcidin in transferrin-treated thalassemic mice correlates with increased liver BMP2 expression and decreased hepatocyte ERK activation

Huiyong Chen; Tenzin Choesang; Huihui Li; Shuming Sun; Petra Pham; Weili Bao; Maria Feola; Mark Westerman; Guiyuan Li; Antonia Follenzi; Lionel Blanc; Stefano Rivella; Robert E. Fleming; Yelena Ginzburg

Iron overload results in significant morbidity and mortality in β-thalassemic patients. Insufficient hepcidin is implicated in parenchymal iron overload in β-thalassemia and approaches to increase hepcidin have therapeutic potential. We have previously shown that exogenous apo-transferrin markedly ameliorates ineffective erythropoiesis and increases hepcidin expression in Hbbth1/th1 (thalassemic) mice. We utilize in vivo and in vitro systems to investigate effects of exogenous apo-transferrin on Smad and ERK1/2 signaling, pathways that participate in hepcidin regulation. Our results demonstrate that apo-transferrin increases hepcidin expression in vivo despite decreased circulating and parenchymal iron concentrations and unchanged liver Bmp6 mRNA expression in thalassemic mice. Hepatocytes from apo-transferrin-treated mice demonstrate decreased ERK1/2 pathway and increased serum BMP2 concentration and hepatocyte BMP2 expression. Furthermore, hepatocyte ERK1/2 phosphorylation is enhanced by neutralizing anti-BMP2/4 antibodies and suppressed in vitro in a dose-dependent manner by BMP2, resulting in converse effects on hepcidin expression, and hepatocytes treated with MEK/ERK1/2 inhibitor U0126 in combination with BMP2 exhibit an additive increase in hepcidin expression. Lastly, bone marrow erythroferrone expression is normalized in apo-transferrin treated thalassemic mice but increased in apo-transferrin injected wild-type mice. These findings suggest that increased hepcidin expression after exogenous apo-transferrin is in part independent of erythroferrone and support a model in which apo-transferrin treatment in thalassemic mice increases BMP2 expression in the liver and other organs, decreases hepatocellular ERK1/2 activation, and increases nuclear Smad to increase hepcidin expression in hepatocytes.


Leukemia | 2018

Dysregulated iron metabolism in polycythemia vera: etiology and consequences

Yelena Ginzburg; Maria Feola; Eran Zimran; Judit Várkonyi; Tomas Ganz; Ronald Hoffman

Polycythemia vera (PV) is a chronic myeloproliferative neoplasm. Virtually all PV patients are iron deficient at presentation and/or during the course of their disease. The co-existence of iron deficiency and polycythemia presents a physiological disconnect. Hepcidin, the master regulator of iron metabolism, is regulated by circulating iron levels, erythroblast secretion of erythroferrone, and inflammation. Both decreased circulating iron and increased erythroferrone levels, which occur as a consequence of erythroid hyperplasia in PV, are anticipated to suppress hepcidin and enable recovery from iron deficiency. Inflammation which accompanies PV is likely to counteract hepcidin suppression, but the relatively low serum ferritin levels observed suggest that inflammation is not a major contributor to the dysregulated iron metabolism. Furthermore, potential defects in iron absorption, aberrant hypoxia sensing and signaling, and frequency of bleeding to account for iron deficiency in PV patients have not been fully elucidated. Insufficiently suppressed hepcidin given the degree of iron deficiency in PV patients strongly suggests that disordered iron metabolism is an important component of the pathobiology of PV. Normalization of hematocrit levels using therapeutic phlebotomy is the most common approach for reducing the incidence of thrombotic complications, a therapy which exacerbates iron deficiency, contributing to a variety of non-hematological symptoms. The use of cytoreductive therapy in high-risk PV patients frequently works more effectively to reverse PV-associated symptoms in iron-deficient relative to iron-replete patients. Lastly, differences in iron-related parameters between PV patients and mice with JAK2 V617F and JAK2 exon 12 mutations suggest that specific regions in JAK2 may influence iron metabolism by nuanced changes of erythropoietin receptor signaling. In this review, we comprehensively discuss the clinical consequences of iron deficiency in PV, provide a framework for understanding the potential dysregulation of iron metabolism, and present a rationale for additional therapeutic options for iron-deficient PV patients.


Blood | 2014

Changes in TfR1 Expression and Trafficking Correlate with Erythroid Effectiveness in β-Thalassemic Mice

Huihui Li; Lionel Blanc; Tenzin Choesang; Huiyong Chen; Maria Feola; Weili Bao; Petra Pham; Antonia Follenzi; Guiyuan Li; Yelena Ginzburg


Blood | 2016

Role of Activated Pleckstrin-2 and Down-Stream Effects on Ineffective Erythropoiesis in β-Thalassemic Mice

Maria Feola; Andrea Zamperone; Weili Bao; Tenzin Choesang; Huihui Li; Guiyuan Li; Shilpa M. Hattangadi; Christopher E. Mason; Peng Ji; Antonia Follenzi; Yelena Ginzburg


Blood | 2015

Characteristic Macrocytic Anemia, Ineffective Erythropoiesis, and Iron Overload in 5q-Mice and Effect of Exogenous Transferrin

Maria Feola; Tenzin Choesang; Weili Bao; Li Huihui; Huiyong Chen; Shuming Sun; Petra Pham; Guiyuan Li; Amit Verma; Antonia Follenzi; Yelena Ginzburg


Blood | 2015

Down-Regulation of TfR1 Increases Erythroid Precursor Enucleation and Hepatocyte Hepcidin Expression in ß-Thalassemic Mice

Huihui Li; Tenzin Choesang; Weili Bao; Lionel Blanc; Huiyong Chen; Maria Feola; Jie Li; Guiyuan Li; Shuming Sun; Antonia Follenzi; Petra Pham; Xiuli An; Narla Mohandas; Robert E. Fleming; Stefano Rivella; Yelena Ginzburg


Blood | 2015

Role of Pleckstrin 2 in Improved Erythropoiesis of Transferrin-Treated Beta-Thalassemic Mice

Maria Feola; Andrea Zamperone; Weili Bao; Tenzin Choesang; Huihui Li; Guiyuan Li; Antonia Follenzi; Shilpa M. Hattangadi; Christopher E. Mason; Peng Ji; Yelena Ginzburg


Blood | 2014

Increased Hepcidin Expression in β-Thalassemic Mice Treated with Apo-Transferrin Is Associated with Increased Smad1/5/8 and Decreased Erk1/2 Pathway Activation

Huiyong Chen; Tenzin Choesang; Petra Pham; Weili Bao; Maria Feola; Huihui Li; Mark Westerman; Guiyuan Li; Antonia Follenzi; Lionel Blanc; Stefano Rivella; Robert E. Fleming; Yelena Ginzburg

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Antonia Follenzi

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Weili Bao

New York Blood Center

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Guiyuan Li

Central South University

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Huihui Li

New York Blood Center

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Huiyong Chen

Central South University

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Stefano Rivella

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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