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Featured researches published by Maria-Grazia De Simoni.


Intensive Care Medicine Experimental | 2015

Shape descriptors of the "never resting" microglia in three different acute brain injury models in mice.

Elisa R. Zanier; Stefano Fumagalli; Carlo Perego; Francesca Pischiutta; Maria-Grazia De Simoni

BackgroundThe study of microglia and macrophage (M/M) morphology represents a key tool to understand the functional activation state and the pattern of distribution of these cells in acute brain injury. The identification of reliable quantitative morphological parameters is urgently needed to understand these cell roles in brain injury and to explore strategies aimed at therapeutically manipulating the inflammatory response.MethodsWe used three different clinically relevant murine models of focal injury, namely, controlled cortical impact brain injury (traumatic brain injury (TBI)) and transient and permanent occlusion of middle cerebral artery (tMCAo and pMCAo, respectively). Twenty-four hours after injury, M/M cells were labeled by CD11b, and ×40 photomicrographs were acquired by unbiased sampling of the lesion core using a motorized stage microscope. Images were processed with Fiji software to obtain shape descriptors.ResultsWe validated several parameters, including area, perimeter, Feret’s diameter (caliper), circularity, aspect ratio, and solidity, providing quantitative information on M/M morphology over wide tissue portions. We showed that the shape descriptors that best represent M/M ramification/elongation are area and perimeter, while circularity and solidity provide information on the ameboid shape. We also provide evidence of the involvement of different populations in local inflammatory events, with macrophages replacing microglia into the lesion core when reperfusion does not occur. Analysis of CD45high+ cell morphology, whose shape does not change, did not yield any difference, thus confirming the reliability of the approach.ConclusionsWe have defined specific morphological features that M/M acquire in response to different acute insults by applying a sensitive and readily applicable approach to cell morphological analysis in the brain tissue. Potential application of this method can be extended to all cell types able to change shape following activation, e.g., astrocytes, or to different disease states, including chronic pathologies.


Frontiers in Immunology | 2017

Lectin Pathway of Complement Activation Is Associated with Vulnerability of Atherosclerotic Plaques

Stefano Fumagalli; Carlo Perego; Rosalia Zangari; Daiana De Blasio; Marco Oggioni; Francesca De Nigris; Francesco Snider; Peter Garred; Angela Maria Rosaria Ferrante; Maria-Grazia De Simoni

Inflammatory mechanisms may be involved in atherosclerotic plaque rupture. By using a novel histology-based method to quantify plaque instability here, we assess whether lectin pathway (LP) of complement activation, a major inflammation arm, could represent an index of plaque instability. Plaques from 42 consecutive patients undergoing carotid endarterectomy were stained with hematoxylin-eosin and the lipid core, cholesterol clefts, hemorrhagic content, thickness of tunica media, and intima, including or not infiltration of cellular debris and cholesterol, were determined. The presence of ficolin-1, -2, and -3 and mannose-binding lectin (MBL), LP initiators, was assessed in the plaques by immunofluorescence and in plasma by ELISA. LP activation was assessed in plasma by functional in vitro assays. Patients presenting low stenosis (≤75%) had higher hemorrhagic content than those with high stenosis (>75%), indicating increased erosion. Increased hemorrhagic content and tunica media thickness, as well as decreased lipid core and infiltrated content were associated with vulnerable plaques and therefore used to establish a plaque vulnerability score that allowed to classify patients according to plaque vulnerability. Ficolins and MBL were found both in plaques’ necrotic core and tunica media. Patients with vulnerable plaques showed decreased plasma levels and intraplaque deposition of ficolin-2. Symptomatic patients experiencing a transient ischemic attack had lower plasma levels of ficolin-1. We show that the LP initiators are present within the plaques and their circulating levels change in atherosclerotic patients. In particular, we show that decreased ficolin-2 levels are associated with rupture-prone vulnerable plaques, indicating its potential use as marker for cardiovascular risk assessment in atherosclerotic patients.


Brain | 2018

Induction of a transmissible tau pathology by traumatic brain injury

Elisa R. Zanier; Ilaria Bertani; Eliana Sammali; Francesca Pischiutta; Maria Antonietta Chiaravalloti; Gloria Vegliante; Antonio Masone; Alessandro Corbelli; Douglas H. Smith; David K. Menon; Nino Stocchetti; Fabio Fiordaliso; Maria-Grazia De Simoni; William Stewart; Roberto Chiesa

Traumatic brain injury is a risk factor for subsequent neurodegenerative disease, including chronic traumatic encephalopathy, a tauopathy mostly associated with repetitive concussion and blast, but not well recognized as a consequence of severe traumatic brain injury. Here we show that a single severe brain trauma is associated with the emergence of widespread hyperphosphorylated tau pathology in a proportion of humans surviving late after injury. In parallel experimental studies, in a model of severe traumatic brain injury in wild-type mice, we found progressive and widespread tau pathology, replicating the findings in humans. Brain homogenates from these mice, when inoculated into the hippocampus and overlying cerebral cortex of naïve mice, induced widespread tau pathology, synaptic loss, and persistent memory deficits. These data provide evidence that experimental brain trauma induces a self-propagating tau pathology, which can be transmitted between mice, and call for future studies aimed at investigating the potential transmissibility of trauma associated tau pathology in humans.


Neurotherapeutics | 2014

Bone Marrow Mesenchymal Stromal Cells Drive Protective M2 Microglia Polarization After Brain Trauma

Elisa R. Zanier; Francesca Pischiutta; Loredana Riganti; Federica Marchesi; Elena Turola; Stefano Fumagalli; Carlo Perego; Emanuela Parotto; Paola Vinci; Pietro Veglianese; Giovanna D’Amico; Claudia Verderio; Maria-Grazia De Simoni


Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2018

Mannose-Binding Lectin Drives Platelet Inflammatory Phenotype and Vascular Damage After Cerebral Ischemia in Mice via IL (Interleukin)-1α

Franca Orsini; Stefano Fumagalli; Eszter Császár; Krisztina Tóth; Daiana De Blasio; Rosalia Zangari; Nikolett Lénárt; Adam Denes; Maria-Grazia De Simoni


Molecular Immunology | 2017

Pentraxins PTX3 and CRP recruit C1q to cholesterol crystals and co-localize with the terminal complement complex in human atherosclerotic plaques

Katrine Pilely; Stefano Fumagalli; Anne Rosbjerg; Mikkel-Ole Skjoedt; Carlo Perego; Angela Maria Rosaria Ferrante; Maria-Grazia De Simoni; Peter Garred


Molecular Immunology | 2017

Ficolin-2 circulating levels and intraplaque presence are associated with vulnerable atherosclerotic lesions

Stefano Fumagalli; Carlo Perego; Rosalia Zangari; Daiana De Blasio; Marco Oggioni; Francesca De Nigris; Francesco Snider; Peter Garred; Angela Maria Rosaria Ferrante; Maria-Grazia De Simoni


Molecular Immunology | 2017

Mannose-binding lectin drives vascular damage and interacts with platelet-derived IL-1α after cerebral ischemia in mice

Maria-Grazia De Simoni; Franca Orsini; S. Fumagalli; Eszter Császár; D. De Blasio; R. Zangari; Nikolett Lénárt; Adam Denes


Immunobiology | 2016

The lectin complement pathway in human contusions

Daiana De Blasio; Stefano Fumagalli; Luca Longhi; Franca Orsini; Fabrizio Ortolano; Elisa R. Zanier; Silvia Martina Ferrari; Giulio Goti; Peter Garred; Edoardo Picetti; Marco Locatelli; Anna Bernardi; Marco Gobbi; Nino Stocchetti; Maria-Grazia De Simoni


Immunobiology | 2016

Utility of MASP-2 inhibition in murine models of cerebral ischemia ☆

Franca Orsini; Elvina Chrysanthou; Thomas Dudler; Jason W. Cummings; Minoru Takahashi; Teizo Fujita; Gregory A. Demopulos; Maria-Grazia De Simoni; Wilhelm J. Schwaeble

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Franca Orsini

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Elisa R. Zanier

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Carlo Perego

Mario Negri Institute for Pharmacological Research

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Daiana De Blasio

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Nino Stocchetti

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Peter Garred

University of Copenhagen

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Angela Maria Rosaria Ferrante

The Catholic University of America

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