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Dive into the research topics where Marina Frontali is active.

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Featured researches published by Marina Frontali.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Localization of a novel locus for autosomal recessive early-onset parkinsonism, PARK6, on human chromosome 1p35-p36.

Enza Maria Valente; Anna Rita Bentivoglio; Peter H. Dixon; Alessandro Ferraris; Tamara Ialongo; Marina Frontali; Alberto Albanese; Nicholas W. Wood

The cause of Parkinson disease (PD) is still unknown, but genetic factors have recently been implicated in the etiology of the disease. So far, four loci responsible for autosomal dominant PD have been identified. Autosomal recessive juvenile parkinsonism (ARJP) is a clinically and genetically distinct entity; typical PD features are associated with early onset, sustained response to levodopa, and early occurrence of levodopa-induced dyskinesias, which are often severe. To date, only one ARJP gene, Parkin, has been identified, and multiple mutations have been detected both in families with autosomal recessive parkinsonism and in sporadic cases. The Parkin-associated phenotype is broad, and some cases are indistinguishable from idiopathic PD. In > or = 50% of families with ARJP that have been analyzed, no mutations could be detected in the Parkin gene. We identified a large Sicilian family with four definitely affected members (the Marsala kindred). The phenotype was characterized by early-onset (range 32-48 years) parkinsonism, with slow progression and sustained response to levodopa. Linkage of the disease to the Parkin gene was excluded. A genomewide homozygosity screen was performed in the family. Linkage analysis and haplotype construction allowed identification of a single region of homozygosity shared by all the affected members, spanning 12.5 cM on the short arm of chromosome 1. This region contains a novel locus for autosomal recessive early-onset parkinsonism, PARK6. A maximum LOD score 4.01 at recombination fraction .00 was obtained for marker D1S199.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Mutations in the mitochondrial protease gene AFG3L2 cause dominant hereditary ataxia SCA28

Daniela Di Bella; Federico Lazzaro; Massimo Plumari; Giorgio Battaglia; Annalisa Pastore; Adele Finardi; Claudia Cagnoli; Filippo Tempia; Marina Frontali; Liana Veneziano; Tiziana Sacco; Enrica Boda; Alessandro Brussino; Florian Bonn; Barbara Castellotti; Silvia Baratta; Caterina Mariotti; Cinzia Gellera; Valentina Fracasso; Stefania Magri; Thomas Langer; Paolo Plevani; Stefano Di Donato; Marco Muzi-Falconi; Franco Taroni

Autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) are genetically heterogeneous neurological disorders characterized by cerebellar dysfunction mostly due to Purkinje cell degeneration. Here we show that AFG3L2 mutations cause SCA type 28. Along with paraplegin, which causes recessive spastic paraplegia, AFG3L2 is a component of the conserved m-AAA metalloprotease complex involved in the maintenance of the mitochondrial proteome. We identified heterozygous missense mutations in five unrelated SCA families and found that AFG3L2 is highly and selectively expressed in human cerebellar Purkinje cells. m-AAA–deficient yeast cells expressing human mutated AFG3L2 homocomplex show respiratory deficiency, proteolytic impairment and deficiency of respiratory chain complex IV. Structure homology modeling indicates that the mutations may affect AFG3L2 substrate handling. This work identifies AFG3L2 as a novel cause of dominant neurodegenerative disease and indicates a previously unknown role for this component of the mitochondrial protein quality control machinery in protecting the human cerebellum against neurodegeneration.


Neurology | 2012

CAG repeat expansion in Huntington disease determines age at onset in a fully dominant fashion

Jong-Min Lee; Eliana Marisa Ramos; Ji Hyun Lee; Tammy Gillis; Jayalakshmi S. Mysore; Michael R. Hayden; Simon C. Warby; Patrick J. Morrison; Martha Nance; Christopher A. Ross; Russell L. Margolis; Ferdinando Squitieri; S. Orobello; S. Di Donato; Estrella Gomez-Tortosa; Carmen Ayuso; Oksana Suchowersky; Ronald J. Trent; Elizabeth McCusker; Andrea Novelletto; Marina Frontali; Randi Jones; Tetsuo Ashizawa; Samuel Frank; Marie Saint-Hilaire; Steven M. Hersch; H.D. Rosas; Diane Lucente; Madeline Harrison; Andrea Zanko

Objective: Age at onset of diagnostic motor manifestations in Huntington disease (HD) is strongly correlated with an expanded CAG trinucleotide repeat. The length of the normal CAG repeat allele has been reported also to influence age at onset, in interaction with the expanded allele. Due to profound implications for disease mechanism and modification, we tested whether the normal allele, interaction between the expanded and normal alleles, or presence of a second expanded allele affects age at onset of HD motor signs. Methods: We modeled natural log-transformed age at onset as a function of CAG repeat lengths of expanded and normal alleles and their interaction by linear regression. Results: An apparently significant effect of interaction on age at motor onset among 4,068 subjects was dependent on a single outlier data point. A rigorous statistical analysis with a well-behaved dataset that conformed to the fundamental assumptions of linear regression (e.g., constant variance and normally distributed error) revealed significance only for the expanded CAG repeat, with no effect of the normal CAG repeat. Ten subjects with 2 expanded alleles showed an age at motor onset consistent with the length of the larger expanded allele. Conclusions: Normal allele CAG length, interaction between expanded and normal alleles, and presence of a second expanded allele do not influence age at onset of motor manifestations, indicating that the rate of HD pathogenesis leading to motor diagnosis is determined by a completely dominant action of the longest expanded allele and as yet unidentified genetic or environmental factors. Neurology® 2012;78:690–695


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

Complete loss of P/Q calcium channel activity caused by a CACNA1A missense mutation carried by patients with episodic ataxia type 2

Serena Guida; Flavia Trettel; Stefano Pagnutti; E. Mantuano; Angelita Tottene; Liana Veneziano; Tommaso Fellin; Maria Spadaro; Kenneth A. Stauderman; Mark E. Williams; Stephen G. Volsen; Roel A. Ophoff; Rune R. Frants; Carla Jodice; Marina Frontali; Daniela Pietrobon

Familial hemiplegic migraine, episodic ataxia type 2 (EA2), and spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 are allelic disorders of the CACNA1A gene (coding for the alpha(1A) subunit of P/Q calcium channels), usually associated with different types of mutations (missense, protein truncating, and expansion, respectively). However, the finding of expansion and missense mutations in patients with EA2 has blurred this genotype-phenotype correlation. We report the first functional analysis of a new missense mutation, associated with an EA2 phenotype-that is, T-->C transition of nt 4747 in exon 28, predicted to change a highly conserved phenylalanine residue to a serine at codon 1491, located in the putative transmembrane segment S6 of domain III. Patch-clamp recording in HEK 293 cells, coexpressing the mutagenized human alpha(1A-2) subunit, together with human beta(4) and alpha(2)delta subunits, showed that channel activity was completely abolished, although the mutated protein is expressed in the cell. These results indicate that a complete loss of P/Q channel function is the mechanism underlying EA2, whether due to truncating or to missense mutations.


Archive | 2012

COHORT study oft the HSG. CAG repeat expansion in Huntington disease determines age at onset in al fully dominant fashion

Jong-Min Lee; Eliana Marisa Ramos; Ji Hyun Lee; Tammy Gillis; Jayalakshmi S. Mysore; Hayden; Simon C. Warby; Patrick J. Morrison; Martha Nance; Christopher A. Ross; Russell L. Margolis; Ferdinando Squitieri; S. Orobello; S Di Donato; Estrella Gomez-Tortosa; Carmen Ayuso; Oksana Suchowersky; Ronald J. Trent; Elizabeth McCusker; Andrea Novelletto; Marina Frontali; Randi Jones; Tetsuo Ashizawa; Samuel Frank; Marie-Helene Saint-Hilaire; Steven M. Hersch; H.D. Rosas; Diane Lucente; Madeline Harrison; Andrea Zanko

Objective: Age at onset of diagnostic motor manifestations in Huntington disease (HD) is strongly correlated with an expanded CAG trinucleotide repeat. The length of the normal CAG repeat allele has been reported also to influence age at onset, in interaction with the expanded allele. Due to profound implications for disease mechanism and modification, we tested whether the normal allele, interaction between the expanded and normal alleles, or presence of a second expanded allele affects age at onset of HD motor signs. Methods: We modeled natural log-transformed age at onset as a function of CAG repeat lengths of expanded and normal alleles and their interaction by linear regression. Results: An apparently significant effect of interaction on age at motor onset among 4,068 subjects was dependent on a single outlier data point. A rigorous statistical analysis with a well-behaved dataset that conformed to the fundamental assumptions of linear regression (e.g., constant variance and normally distributed error) revealed significance only for the expanded CAG repeat, with no effect of the normal CAG repeat. Ten subjects with 2 expanded alleles showed an age at motor onset consistent with the length of the larger expanded allele. Conclusions: Normal allele CAG length, interaction between expanded and normal alleles, and presence of a second expanded allele do not influence age at onset of motor manifestations, indicating that the rate of HD pathogenesis leading to motor diagnosis is determined by a completely dominant action of the longest expanded allele and as yet unidentified genetic or environmental factors. Neurology® 2012;78:690–695


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2003

A Genome Scan for Modifiers of Age at Onset in Huntington Disease: The HD MAPS Study

Jian Liang Li; Michael R. Hayden; Elisabeth W. Almqvist; Ryan R. Brinkman; Alexandra Durr; Catherine Dodé; Patrick J. Morrison; Oksana Suchowersky; Christopher A. Ross; Russell L. Margolis; Adam Rosenblatt; Estrella Gomez-Tortosa; David Mayo Cabrero; Andrea Novelletto; Marina Frontali; Martha Nance; Ronald J. Trent; Elizabeth McCusker; Randi Jones; Jane S. Paulsen; Madeline Harrison; Andrea Zanko; Ruth K. Abramson; Ana L. Russ; Beth Knowlton; Luc Djoussé; Jayalakshmi S. Mysore; Suzanne Tariot; Michael F. Gusella; Vanessa C. Wheeler

Huntington disease (HD) is caused by the expansion of a CAG repeat within the coding region of a novel gene on 4p16.3. Although the variation in age at onset is partly explained by the size of the expanded repeat, the unexplained variation in age at onset is strongly heritable (h2=0.56), which suggests that other genes modify the age at onset of HD. To identify these modifier loci, we performed a 10-cM density genomewide scan in 629 affected sibling pairs (295 pedigrees and 695 individuals), using ages at onset adjusted for the expanded and normal CAG repeat sizes. Because all those studied were HD affected, estimates of allele sharing identical by descent at and around the HD locus were adjusted by a positionally weighted method to correct for the increased allele sharing at 4p. Suggestive evidence for linkage was found at 4p16 (LOD=1.93), 6p21-23 (LOD=2.29), and 6q24-26 (LOD=2.28), which may be useful for investigation of genes that modify age at onset of HD.


Neurogenetics | 2004

A G301R Na+/K+-ATPase mutation causes familial hemiplegic migraine type 2 with cerebellar signs

Maria Spadaro; Simona Ursu; Frank Lehmann-Horn; Veneziano Liana; Antonini Giovanni; Giunti Paola; Marina Frontali; Karin Jurkat-Rott

Abstract.Familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) is an autosomal dominant subtype of migraine with hemiparesis during the aura. In over 50% of cases the causative gene is CACNA1A (FHM1), which in some cases produces a phenotype with cerebellar signs, including ataxia and nystagmus. Recently, mutations in ATP1A2 on chromosome 1q23 encoding a Na+/K+-ATPase subunit were identified in four families (FHM2). We now describe an FHM2 pedigree with a fifth ATP1A2 mutation coding for a G301R substitution. The phenotype was particularly severe and included hemiplegic migraine, seizure, prolonged coma, elevated temperature, sensory deficit, and transient or permanent cerebellar signs, such as ataxia, nystagmus, and dysarthria. A mild crossed cerebellar diaschisis during an attack further supported the clinical evidence of a cerebellar deficit. This is the first report suggesting cerebellar involvement in FHM2. A possible role for CACNA1A in producing the phenotype in this family was excluded by linkage studies to the FHM1 locus. The study of this family suggests that the absence of cerebellar signs may not be a reliable indicator to clinically differentiate FHM2 from FHM1.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2003

Interaction of normal and expanded CAG repeat sizes influences age at onset of Huntington disease

Luc Djoussé; Beth Knowlton; Michael R. Hayden; Elisabeth W. Almqvist; Ryan R. Brinkman; Christopher A. Ross; Russell L. Margolis; Adam Rosenblatt; Alexandra Durr; Catherine Dodé; Patrick J. Morrison; Andrea Novelletto; Marina Frontali; Ronald J. Trent; Elizabeth McCusker; Estrella Gomez-Tortosa; D. Mayo; Randi Jones; Andrea Zanko; Martha Nance; Ruth K. Abramson; Oksana Suchowersky; Jane S. Paulsen; Madeline Harrison; Qunying Yang; L. A. Cupples; James F. Gusella; Marcy E. MacDonald; Richard H. Myers

Huntington disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder caused by the abnormal expansion of CAG repeats in the HD gene on chromosome 4p16.3. Past studies have shown that the size of expanded CAG repeat is inversely associated with age at onset (AO) of HD. It is not known whether the normal Huntington allele size influences the relation between the expanded repeat and AO of HD. Data collected from two independent cohorts were used to test the hypothesis that the unexpanded CAG repeat interacts with the expanded CAG repeat to influence AO of HD. In the New England Huntington Disease Center Without Walls (NEHD) cohort of 221 HD affected persons and in the HD‐MAPS cohort of 533 HD affected persons, we found evidence supporting an interaction between the expanded and unexpanded CAG repeat sizes which influences AO of HD (P = 0.08 and 0.07, respectively). The association was statistically significant when both cohorts were combined (P = 0.012). The estimated heritability of the AO residual was 0.56 after adjustment for normal and expanded repeats and their interaction. An analysis of tertiles of repeats sizes revealed that the effect of the normal allele is seen among persons with large HD repeat sizes (47–83). These findings suggest that an increase in the size of the normal repeat may mitigate the expression of the disease among HD affected persons with large expanded CAG repeats.


Neurology | 2010

Riluzole in cerebellar ataxia A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot trial

Giovanni Ristori; Silvia Romano; Andrea Visconti; Stefania Cannoni; Maria Spadaro; Marina Frontali; F. E. Pontieri; Nicola Vanacore; Marco Salvetti

Background: The pleiotropic effects of riluzole may antagonize common mechanisms underlying chronic cerebellar ataxia, a debilitating and untreatable consequence of various diseases. Methods: In a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot trial, 40 patients presenting with cerebellar ataxias of different etiologies were randomly assigned to riluzole (100 mg/day) or placebo for 8 weeks. The following outcome measures were compared: proportion of patients with a decrease of at least 5 points in the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (ICARS) total score after 4 and 8 weeks compared with the baseline score; mean changes from the baseline to posttreatment ICARS (total score and subscores at 8 weeks); and occurrence of adverse events. Results: Riluzole and placebo groups did not differ in baseline characteristics. The number of patients with a 5-point ICARS drop was significantly higher in the riluzole group than in the placebo group after 4 weeks (9/19 vs 1/19; odds ratio [OR] = 16.2; 95% confidence interval [CI ] 1.8–147.1) and 8 weeks (13/19 vs 1/19; OR = 39.0; 95% CI 4.2–364.2). The mean change in the riluzole group ICARS after treatment revealed a decrease (p < 0.001) in the total score (−7.05 [4.96] vs 0.16 [2.65]) and major subscores (−2.11 [2.75] vs 0.68 [1.94] for static function, −4.11 [2.96] vs 0.37 [2.0] for kinetic function, and −0.74 [0.81] vs 0.05 [0.40] for dysarthria). Sporadic, mild adverse events occurred. Conclusions: These findings indicate the potential effectiveness of riluzole as symptomatic therapy in diverse forms of cerebellar ataxia. Classification of evidence: This study provides Class I evidence that riluzole reduces, by at least 5 points, the ICARS score in patients with a wide range of disorders that cause cerebellar ataxia (risk difference 63.2%, 95% CI 33.5%–79.9%).


Annals of Neurology | 2001

DYT13, a novel primary torsion dystonia locus, maps to chromosome 1p36.13–36.32 in an Italian family with cranial-cervical or upper limb onset

Enza Maria Valente; Anna Rita Bentivoglio; Emanuele Cassetta; Peter H. Dixon; Mary B. Davis; Alessandro Ferraris; Tamara Ialongo; Marina Frontali; Nicholas W. Wood; Alberto Albanese

Primary torsion dystonia (PTD) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of movement disorders, usually inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion with reduced penetrance. The DYT1 gene on chromosome 9q34 is responsible for most cases of early limb‐onset PTD. Two other PTD loci have been mapped to date. The DYT6 locus on chromosome 8 is associated with a mixed phenotype, whereas the DYT7 locus on chromosome 18p is associated with adult onset focal cervical dystonia. Several families have been described in which linkage to the known PTD loci have been excluded. We identified a large Italian PTD family with 11 definitely affected members. Phenotype was characterized by prominent cranial‐cervical and upper limb involvement and mild severity. A genome‐wide search was performed in the family. Linkage analysis and haplotype construction allowed us to identify a novel PTD locus (DYT13) within a 22 cM interval on the short arm of chromosome 1, with a maximum lod score of 3.44 between the disease and marker D1S2667. Ann Neurol 2001;49:362–366

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Andrea Novelletto

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Liana Veneziano

National Research Council

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Maria Spadaro

Sapienza University of Rome

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Carla Jodice

Sapienza University of Rome

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Paola Giunti

UCL Institute of Neurology

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Patrizia Malaspina

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Silvia Romano

Sapienza University of Rome

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Estrella Gomez-Tortosa

Autonomous University of Madrid

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Martha Nance

Hennepin County Medical Center

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