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Dive into the research topics where Maria Giulia Bacalini is active.

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Featured researches published by Maria Giulia Bacalini.


Aging Cell | 2015

Accelerated epigenetic aging in Down syndrome

Steve Horvath; Paolo Garagnani; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Chiara Pirazzini; Stefano Salvioli; Davide Gentilini; Anna Maria Di Blasio; Cristina Giuliani; Spencer Tung; Harry V. Vinters; Claudio Franceschi

Down Syndrome (DS) entails an increased risk of many chronic diseases that are typically associated with older age. The clinical manifestations of accelerated aging suggest that trisomy 21 increases the biological age of tissues, but molecular evidence for this hypothesis has been sparse. Here, we utilize a quantitative molecular marker of aging (known as the epigenetic clock) to demonstrate that trisomy 21 significantly increases the age of blood and brain tissue (on average by 6.6 years, P = 7.0 × 10−14).


Current Pharmaceutical Design | 2013

Immune System, Cell Senescence, Aging and Longevity - Inflamm-Aging Reappraised

Stefano Salvioli; Daniela Monti; Catia Lanzarini; Maria Conte; Chiara Pirazzini; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Paolo Garagnani; Cristina Giuliani; Elisa Fontanesi; Rita Ostan; Laura Bucci; Federica Sevini; Stella Lukas Yani; Annalaura Barbieri; Laura Lomartire; Vincenzo Borelli; Dario Vianello; Elena Bellavista; Morena Martucci; Elisa Cevenini; Elisa Pini; Maria Scurti; Fiammetta Biondi; Aurelia Santoro; Miriam Capri; Claudio Franceschi

Inflamm-aging, that is the age-associated inflammatory status, is considered one of the most striking consequences of immunosenescence, as it is believed to be linked to the majority of age-associated diseases sharing an inflammatory basis. Nevertheless, evidence is emerging that inflamm-aging is at least in part independent from immunological stimuli. Moreover, centenarians who avoided or delayed major inflammatory diseases display markers of inflammation. In this paper we proposed a reappraisal of the concept of inflamm-aging, suggesting that its pathological effects can be independent from the total amount of pro-inflammatory mediators, but they would be rather associated with the anatomical district and type of cells where they are produced and where they primarily act.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2014

From lifetime to evolution: timescales of human gut microbiota adaptation

Sara Quercia; Marco Candela; Cristina Giuliani; Silvia Turroni; Donata Luiselli; Simone Rampelli; Patrizia Brigidi; Claudio Franceschi; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Paolo Garagnani; Chiara Pirazzini

Human beings harbor gut microbial communities that are essential to preserve human health. Molded by the human genome, the gut microbiota (GM) is an adaptive component of the human superorganisms that allows host adaptation at different timescales, optimizing host physiology from daily life to lifespan scales and human evolutionary history. The GM continuously changes from birth up to the most extreme limits of human life, reconfiguring its metagenomic layout in response to daily variations in diet or specific host physiological and immunological needs at different ages. On the other hand, the microbiota plasticity was strategic to face changes in lifestyle and dietary habits along the course of the recent evolutionary history, that has driven the passage from Paleolithic hunter-gathering societies to Neolithic agricultural farmers to modern Westernized societies.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2014

TET2 gene expression and 5-hydroxymethylcytosine level in multiple sclerosis peripheral blood cells

Roberta Calabrese; Elisabetta Valentini; Fabio Ciccarone; Tiziana Guastafierro; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Vito A. G. Ricigliano; Michele Zampieri; Viviana Annibali; Rosella Mechelli; Claudio Franceschi; Marco Salvetti; Paola Caiafa

Aberrant DNA methylation can lead to genome destabilization and to deregulated gene expression. Recently, 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), derived from oxidation of 5-methylcytosine (5mC) by the Ten-Eleven Translocation (TET) enzymes, has been detected. 5hmC is now considered as a new epigenetic DNA modification with relevant roles in cell homeostasis regulating DNA demethylation and transcription. Our aim was to investigate possible changes in the DNA methylation/demethylation machinery in MS. We assessed the expression of enzymes involved in DNA methylation/demethylation in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from 40 subjects with MS and 40 matched healthy controls. We performed also, DNA methylation analysis of specific promoters and analysis of global levels of 5mC and 5hmC. We show that TET2 and DNMT1 expression is significantly down-regulated in MS PBMCs and it is associated with aberrant methylation of their promoters. Furthermore, 5hmC is decreased in MS PBMCs, probably as a result of the diminished TET2 level.


PLOS ONE | 2015

N-Glycomic Changes in Serum Proteins in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Correlate with Complications and with Metabolic Syndrome Parameters

Roberto Testa; Valerie Vanhooren; Anna Rita Bonfigli; Massimo Boemi; Fabiola Olivieri; Antonio Ceriello; Stefano Genovese; Liana Spazzafumo; Vincenzo Borelli; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Stefano Salvioli; Paolo Garagnani; Sylviane Dewaele; Claude Libert; Claudio Franceschi

Background Glycosylation, i.e the enzymatic addition of oligosaccharides (or glycans) to proteins and lipids, known as glycosylation, is one of the most common co-/posttranslational modifications of proteins. Many important biological roles of glycoproteins are modulated by N-linked oligosaccharides. As glucose levels can affect the pathways leading to glycosylation of proteins, we investigated whether metabolic syndrome (MS) and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), pathological conditions characterized by altered glucose levels, are associated with specific modifications in serum N-glycome. Methods We enrolled in the study 562 patients with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus (T2DM) (mean age 65.6±8.2 years) and 599 healthy control subjects (CTRs) (mean age, 58.5±12.4 years). N-glycome was evaluated in serum glycoproteins. Results We found significant changes in N-glycan composition in the sera of T2DM patients. In particular, α(1,6)-linked arm monogalactosylated, core-fucosylated diantennary N-glycans (NG1(6)A2F) were significantly reduced in T2DM compared with CTR subjects. Importantly, they were equally reduced in diabetic patients with and without complications (P<0.001) compared with CTRs. Macro vascular-complications were found to be related with decreased levels of NG1(6)A2F. In addition, NG1(6)A2F and NG1(3)A2F, identifying, respectively, monogalactosylated N-glycans with α(1,6)- and α(1,3)-antennary galactosylation, resulted strongly correlated with most MS parameters. The plasmatic levels of these two glycans were lower in T2DM as compared to healthy controls, and even lower in patients with complications and MS, that is the extreme “unhealthy” phenotype (T2DM+ with MS). Conclusions Imbalance of glycosyltransferases, glycosidases and sugar nucleotide donor levels is able to cause the structural changes evidenced by our findings. Serum N-glycan profiles are thus sensitive to the presence of diabetes and MS. Serum N-glycan levels could therefore provide a non-invasive alternative marker for T2DM and MS.


Briefings in Bioinformatics | 2016

Systems medicine of inflammaging

Gastone Castellani; Giulia Menichetti; Paolo Garagnani; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Chiara Pirazzini; Claudio Franceschi; Sebastiano Collino; Claudia Sala; Daniel Remondini; Enrico Giampieri; Ettore Mosca; Matteo Bersanelli; Silvia Vitali; Italo Faria do Valle; Pietro Liò; Luciano Milanesi

Systems Medicine (SM) can be defined as an extension of Systems Biology (SB) to Clinical-Epidemiological disciplines through a shifting paradigm, starting from a cellular, toward a patient centered framework. According to this vision, the three pillars of SM are Biomedical hypotheses, experimental data, mainly achieved by Omics technologies and tailored computational, statistical and modeling tools. The three SM pillars are highly interconnected, and their balancing is crucial. Despite the great technological progresses producing huge amount of data (Big Data) and impressive computational facilities, the Bio-Medical hypotheses are still of primary importance. A paradigmatic example of unifying Bio-Medical theory is the concept of Inflammaging. This complex phenotype is involved in a large number of pathologies and patho-physiological processes such as aging, age-related diseases and cancer, all sharing a common inflammatory pathogenesis. This Biomedical hypothesis can be mapped into an ecological perspective capable to describe by quantitative and predictive models some experimentally observed features, such as microenvironment, niche partitioning and phenotype propagation. In this article we show how this idea can be supported by computational methods useful to successfully integrate, analyze and model large data sets, combining cross-sectional and longitudinal information on clinical, environmental and omics data of healthy subjects and patients to provide new multidimensional biomarkers capable of distinguishing between different pathological conditions, e.g. healthy versus unhealthy state, physiological versus pathological aging.


DNA Repair | 2011

Poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation affects stabilization of Che-1 protein in response to DNA damage

Maria Giulia Bacalini; Debora Di Lonardo; Angela Catizone; Fabio Ciccarone; Tiziana Bruno; Michele Zampieri; Tiziana Guastafierro; Roberta Calabrese; Maurizio Fanciulli; Claudio Passananti; Paola Caiafa; Anna Reale

Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1 (PARP-1) catalyzes a post-translational modification that plays a crucial role in coordinating the signalling cascade in response to stress stimuli. During the DNA damage response, phosphorylation by ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) kinase and checkpoint kinase Chk2 induces the stabilization of Che-1 protein, which is critical for the maintenance of G2/M arrest. In this study we showed that poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation, beyond phosphorylation, is involved in the regulation of Che-1 stabilization following DNA damage. We demonstrated that Che-1 accumulation upon doxorubicin treatment is reduced after the inhibition of PARP activity in HCT116 cells and in PARP-1 knock-out or silenced cells. In accordance, impairment in Che-1 accumulation by PARP inhibition reduced Che-1 occupancy at p21 promoter and affected the expression of the corresponding gene. Epistasis experiments showed that the effect of poly(ADP-ribosyl)ation on Che-1 stabilization is independent from ATM kinase activity. Indeed we demonstrated that Che-1 protein co-immunoprecipitates with ADP-ribose polymers and that PARP-1 directly interacts with Che-1, promoting its modification in vitro and in vivo.


Aging Cell | 2016

Age-dependent expression of DNMT1 and DNMT3B in PBMCs from a large European population enrolled in the MARK-AGE study

Fabio Ciccarone; Marco Malavolta; Roberta Calabrese; Tiziana Guastafierro; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Anna Reale; Claudio Franceschi; Miriam Capri; Antti Hervonen; Mikko Hurme; Beatrix Grubeck-Loebenstein; Bernhard Koller; Jürgen Bernhardt; Christiane Schӧn; P. Eline Slagboom; Olivier Toussaint; Ewa Sikora; Efstathios S. Gonos; Nicolle Breusing; Tilman Grune; Eugene Jansen; Martijn E.T. Dollé; Maria Moreno-Villanueva; Thilo Sindlinger; Alexander Bürkle; Michele Zampieri; Paola Caiafa

Aging is associated with alterations in the content and patterns of DNA methylation virtually throughout the entire human lifespan. Reasons for these variations are not well understood. However, several lines of evidence suggest that the epigenetic instability in aging may be traced back to the alteration of the expression of DNA methyltransferases. Here, the association of the expression of DNA methyltransferases DNMT1 and DNMT3B with age has been analysed in the context of the MARK‐AGE study, a large‐scale cross‐sectional study of the European general population. Using peripheral blood mononuclear cells, we assessed the variation of DNMT1 and DNMT3B gene expression in more than two thousand age‐stratified women and men (35–75 years) recruited across eight European countries. Significant age‐related changes were detected for both transcripts. The level of DNMT1 gradually dropped with aging but this was only observed up to the age of 64 years. By contrast, the expression of DNMT3B decreased linearly with increasing age and this association was particularly evident in females. We next attempted to trace the age‐related changes of both transcripts to the influence of different variables that have an impact on changes of their expression in the population, including demographics, dietary and health habits, and clinical parameters. Our results indicate that age affects the expression of DNMT1 and DNMT3B as an almost independent variable in respect of all other variables evaluated.


Oncotarget | 2017

Acceleration of leukocytes’ epigenetic age as an early tumor and sex-specific marker of breast and colorectal cancer

Danielle Fernandes Durso; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Claudia Sala; Chiara Pirazzini; Elena Marasco; Massimiliano Bonafè; Italo Faria do Valle; Davide Gentilini; Gastone Castellani; Ana Maria Caetano Faria; Claudio Franceschi; Paolo Garagnani; Christine Nardini

Changes in blood epigenetic age have been associated with several pathological conditions and have recently been described to anticipate cancer development. In this work, we analyze a publicly available leukocytes methylation dataset to evaluate the relation between DNA methylation age and the prospective development of specific types of cancer. We calculated DNA methylation age acceleration using five state-of-the-art estimators (three multi-site: Horvath, Hannum, Weidner; and two CpG specific: ELOV2 and FHL2) in a cohort including 845 subjects from the EPIC-Italy project and we compared 424 samples that remained cancer-free over the approximately ten years of follow-up with 235 and 166 subjects who developed breast and colorectal cancer, respectively. We show that the epigenetic age estimated from blood DNA methylation data is statistically significantly associated to future breast and male colorectal cancer development. These results are corroborated by survival analysis that shows significant association between age acceleration and cancer incidence suggesting that the chance of developing age-related diseases may be predicted by circulating epigenetic markers, with a dependence upon tumor type, sex and age estimator. These are encouraging results towards the non-invasive and perspective usage of epigenetic biomarkers.


Aging (Albany NY) | 2016

Analysis of the machinery and intermediates of the 5hmC-mediated DNA demethylation pathway in aging on samples from the MARK-AGE Study

Elisabetta Valentini; Michele Zampieri; Marco Malavolta; Maria Giulia Bacalini; Roberta Calabrese; Tiziana Guastafierro; Anna Reale; Claudio Franceschi; Antti Hervonen; Bernhard Koller; Jürgen Bernhardt; P. Eline Slagboom; Olivier Toussaint; Ewa Sikora; Efstathios S. Gonos; Nicolle Breusing; Tilman Grune; Eugene Jansen; Martijn E.T. Dollé; Maria Moreno-Villanueva; Thilo Sindlinger; Alexander Bürkle; Fabio Ciccarone; Paola Caiafa

Gradual changes in the DNA methylation landscape occur throughout aging virtually in all human tissues. A widespread reduction of 5-methylcytosine (5mC), associated with highly reproducible site-specific hypermethylation, characterizes the genome in aging. Therefore, an equilibrium seems to exist between general and directional deregulating events concerning DNA methylation controllers, which may underpin the age-related epigenetic changes. In this context, 5mC-hydroxylases (TET enzymes) are new potential players. In fact, TETs catalyze the stepwise oxidation of 5mC to 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (5hmC), 5-formylcytosine (5fC) and 5-carboxylcytosine (5caC), driving the DNA demethylation process based on thymine DNA glycosylase (TDG)-mediated DNA repair pathway. The present paper reports the expression of DNA hydroxymethylation components, the levels of 5hmC and of its derivatives in peripheral blood mononuclear cells of age-stratified donors recruited in several European countries in the context of the EU Project ‘MARK-AGE’. The results provide evidence for an age-related decline of TET1, TET3 and TDG gene expression along with a decrease of 5hmC and an accumulation of 5caC. These associations were independent of confounding variables, including recruitment center, gender and leukocyte composition. The observed impairment of 5hmC-mediated DNA demethylation pathway in blood cells may lead to aberrant transcriptional programs in the elderly.

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Anna Maria Di Blasio

Laboratory of Molecular Biology

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