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Dive into the research topics where Marta Piantanida is active.

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Featured researches published by Marta Piantanida.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2009

Tomato allergy: detection of IgE-binding lipid transfer proteins in tomato derivatives and in fresh tomato peel, pulp, and seeds.

Valerio Pravettoni; Laura Primavesi; Laura Farioli; Oreste V. Brenna; Carlo Pompei; Amedeo Conti; Joseph Scibilia; Marta Piantanida; Ambra Mascheri; Elide A. Pastorello

There is an increasing consumption of tomatoes worldwide: fresh in salads, cooked in household sauces, or industrially processed. Although many tomato allergens have been identified, there is no information in the literature on the allergenic components found in commercial tomato products. The primary aim of the study was to evaluate the allergenic profile of commercial tomato products by skin prick tests (SPTs) and IgE/immunoblotting in tomato-allergic subjects. The secondary end point was the study of the IgE-binding profile of tomato peel, pulp, and seeds. Forty tomato-allergic patients, reporting oral allergy syndrome (OAS) at different grades of severity for fresh and, in some cases, also for cooked tomato, were selected on the basis of positive tomato allergy history or open food challenge (OFC). They were evaluated by SPTs with different experimental tomato extracts. SDS-PAGE/immunoblotting was performed to detect tomato allergens, which were then identified by Edman degradation. Twenty-three patients (57.5%) presented first-grade OAS at the OFC, whereas 17 (42.5%) reported severe symptoms. Ten of these 17 patients (25%) reported allergic reactions to cooked tomatoes; in immunoblotting tests, their sera reacted only to lipid transfer protein (LTP). In commercial products, LTP was the only detectable allergen. In contrast to other LTP-containing fruits, in tomato, an IgE-binding LTP was identified not only in the peel but also in the pulp and seeds. This study demonstrates that, in fresh tomato, different LTP isoforms are present and allergenic. Industrial tomato derivatives still contain LTP, thus presenting a problem for LTP-allergic patients.


International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2011

Pru p 3-Sensitised Italian Peach-Allergic Patients Are Less Likely to Develop Severe Symptoms When Also Presenting IgE Antibodies to Pru p 1 and Pru p 4

Elide A. Pastorello; Laura Farioli; Valerio Pravettoni; Joseph Scibilia; Ambra Mascheri; Linda Borgonovo; Marta Piantanida; Laura Primavesi; Chrysi Stafylaraki; Sara Pasqualetti; Jan Schroeder; Michele Nichelatti; Alessandro Marocchi

Background: The roles played by different peach allergens with respect to symptom severity have not been completely ascertained. We have evaluated the diagnostic efficacy of peach recombinant allergens ImmunoCAP compared to peach in the identification of subjects at an increased risk for severe reactions to peaches. Methods: 148 peach-allergic patients were divided based on their symptom severity into 2 groups: mild oral allergy syndrome (OAS) and severe OAS. Anti-rPru p 1, 3 and 4 IgE levels were measured. Statistical analyses were carried out using parametric and non-parametric tests. Results: anti-rPru p 1 and anti-rPru p 4 IgE levels were significantly higher in patients with mild OAS than in patients with severe OAS (p = 0.0001); in contrast, anti-rPru p 3 IgE levels were significantly higher in patients with severe OAS than in patients with mild OAS (p < 0.00005). Moreover, we found that any unitary increase in anti-rPru p 1 IgE values corresponded to a 2.48% reduction in the odds of having severe OAS (p = 0.048), whereas any unitary increase in anti-rPru p 3 IgE values corresponded to a 9.02% increase in the probability of having severe OAS (p = 0.001). Unexpectedly, we found that patients positive to rPru p 3 as well as rPru p 1 and 4 demonstrated a significant reduction of the odds of developing severe symptoms than those positive to rPru p 3 alone. Anti-rPru p 3 IgE levels were a significantly better indicator than anti-peach IgE values (p = 0.016) of patients with the highest risk for severe OAS. A cutoff of 2.69 kUA/l for anti-rPru p 3 IgE values better discriminated peach-allergic patients at a higher risk for symptoms. Conclusions: Italian patients with positive anti-rPru p 1, 4 and 3 IgE levels seemed less likely to experience the clinical effects of high anti-rPru p 3 IgE values.


The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology | 2014

Basal platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase: Prognostic marker of severe Hymenoptera venom anaphylaxis

Valerio Pravettoni; Marta Piantanida; Laura Primavesi; Stella Forti; Elide A. Pastorello

directional neutrophil migration. The nonadhesive phenotype of LAD-III neutrophils is not absolute, which may relate to the leukocyte defect of LAD-III being less severe in clinical terms as compared with that in LAD-I, caused by the complete absence of b2 integrins. Edith van de Vijver, MSc Anton T. J. Tool, PhD € Ozden Sanal, MD Mualla Çetin, MD Sule € Unal, MD Selin Aytac, MD Karl Seeger, MD Daria Pagliara, MD Sergio Rutella, MD Timo K. van den Berg, PhD Taco W. Kuijpers, MD, PhD


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2010

Green Bean (Phaseolus vulgaris): A New Source of IgE-Binding Lipid Transfer Protein

Elide A. Pastorello; Valerio Pravettoni; Laura Farioli; Laura Primavesi; Joseph Scibilia; Marta Piantanida; Ambra Mascheri; Amedeo Conti

Green beans belong to the Fabaceae family, which includes widely consumed species, such as beans, peanuts, and soybeans. In the literature, few cases have described allergic reactions upon the exposure to green bean boiling steam or ingestion. Here, we describe five patients reporting documented adverse reactions upon the ingestion of cooked green beans, and we characterize the responsible allergen. Fresh and cooked green beans were tested by a prick + prick technique. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and IgE immunoblotting were performed with boiled vegetable extract, and the N-terminal sequence of the immunoreactive protein was obtained by analyzing the excised band in a protein sequencer. Immunoblotting inhibition of cooked green bean with in-house-purified peach lipid transfer protein (LTP) Pru p 3 was performed. An interesting green bean protein was chromatographically purified, tested with a pool serum, and inhibited with Pru p 3. Moreover, its molecular mass was determined by mass spectrometry. Prick + prick tests with raw and cooked green beans were positive for all of the patients. IgE immunoblotting showed that all of the patients reacted toward a unique IgE-binding protein at about 9 kDa. The obtained N-terminal sequence revealed the following amino acids: Ala-Ile-Ser-X-Gly-Qln-Val-Thr-Ser-Ser-Leu-Ala, corresponding to an LTP. A complete inhibition of the IgE binding to this protein, in both raw and purified extract, was obtained by purified peach Pru p 3, confirming previous IgE immunoblotting results.


International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2013

Anti-rPru p 3 IgE Levels Are Inversely Related to the Age at Onset of Peach-Induced Severe Symptoms Reported by Peach-Allergic Adults

Elide A. Pastorello; Laura Farioli; Chrysi Stafylaraki; Ambra Mascheri; Joseph Scibilia; Valerio Pravettoni; Laura Primavesi; Marta Piantanida; Michele Nichelatti; Riccardo Asero

Sensitisation to peach lipid transfer protein (LTP; Pru p 3) is significantly associated with severe allergic symptoms in adults, but little is known about the age at onset of peach allergy. We investigated a possible correlation between specific IgE levels to Pru p 3 and the age at onset of peach allergy. One hundred and forty-eight patients allergic to peach were divided into 6 classes according to the age at onset. Sera were analyzed for IgE antibodies to peach, rPru p 3, rPru p 1, rPru p 4, rBet v 1, rBet v 2, total IgE titre, and tryptase; all collected data were statistically analysed. A significant inverse correlation was found between the age at onset of peach allergy and anti-rPru p 3 IgE levels at diagnosis (p < 0.0005; Spearmans ρ = -0.3833). In contrast, the age at onset was directly correlated with both anti-rPru p 1 IgE levels (p = 0.0001; Spearmans ρ = 0.3197) and anti-rBet v 1 IgE levels (p = 0.0006; Spearmans ρ = 0.2914) at diagnosis. No correlations were detected between the reported age at onset and anti-peach, anti-rPru p 4, anti-rBet v 2 IgE and total IgE values and serum tryptase levels. At diagnosis, when peach allergy starts at a younger age, it is likely associated with Pru p 3 sensitisation, and the younger the onset, the higher the IgE titres. When peach allergy starts at an older age, it is more likely the result of cross-reactivity to Bet v1.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2013

Fennel allergy is a lipid-transfer protein (LTP)-related food hypersensitivity associated with peach allergy.

Elide A. Pastorello; Laura Farioli; Chrysi Stafylaraki; Joseph Scibilia; Maria Gabriella Giuffrida; Ambra Mascheri; Marta Piantanida; Cristina Baro; Laura Primavesi; Michele Nichelatti; Jan Schroeder; Valerio Pravettoni

Fennel allergy has been rarely reported, and the association with peach allergy has never been described. Our aim was to (i) study the correlation between symptom severity of peach and fennel and (ii) identify fennel allergens and the role of rPru p 3 antibodies in severe reactions to fennel. In 148 patients with peach allergy, we investigated 58 patients with symptoms and IgE antibodies positive to fennel. IgE to rPru p 1, 3, and 4 and rBet v 1, 2, and 4 were measured by immunoblotting, and the N-terminal amino acid sequences and relevant allergens were determined. We found significant association between severe reactions to fennel and peach (p = 0.0009). A major allergen was ~9 kDa lipid-transfer protein (LTP), cross-reactive with Pru p 3, a 15 kDa protein identified as a pathogenesis-related protein 1 of the Bet v 1 family. In conclusion, peach and fennel severe allergic symptoms are significantly related, and LTP is a major fennel allergen. Fennel should be included in the LTP syndrome.


International Archives of Allergy and Immunology | 2013

Rice allergy demonstrated by double-blind placebo-controlled food challenge in peach-allergic patients is related to lipid transfer protein reactivity.

Elide A. Pastorello; Joseph Scibilia; Laura Farioli; Laura Primavesi; Maria Gabriella Giuffrida; Ambra Mascheri; Marta Piantanida; Corrado Mirone; Chrysi Stafylaraki; Marta Riva Violetta; Michele Nichelatti; Donatella Preziosi; Laura Michelina Losappio; Valerio Pravettoni

Background: The risk factors for sensitisation to rice and the involved allergens are still partially unknown. In this study we evaluated the clinically relevant aspects of rice allergy in DBPCF-positive patients, the major rice allergens, the severity of peach- and rice-induced symptoms in respect to Pru p 3 sensitisation and the role of anti-rPru p 3 IgE levels as a risk factor for rice allergy. Methods: In 148 peach-allergic subjects, patients with allergic reactions to rice and rice-positive serum IgE were selected. Symptoms were verified by double-blind placebo-controlled food challenges (DBPCFCs), performed at a maximum dosage of 25 g. Rice allergens, identified by IgE immunoblotting, were characterised by N-terminal amino acid sequencing. The relationship between anti-rPru p 3, 1 and 4 IgE levels and rice symptoms were statistically analysed. Results: Eight out of 10 recruited rice-allergic patients had positive DBPCFCs, while 2 patients were not challenged due to their previously documented severe reactions. All patients with rice-induced symptoms were Pru p 3 positive and presented with higher anti-rPru p 3 levels than the rice-sensitised but tolerant patients. A 9-kDa lipid transfer protein, which was highly homologous to Pru p 3, was identified as the major rice allergen and elicited a positive response in all of the patients. Five patients reacted to a putative 15- to 17-kDa rice allergenic protein, and 3 patients reacted to an [alpha]-amylase/subtilisin inhibitor that was approximately 20 kDa. Conclusion: Rarely, allergic reactions to rice can arise in patients with peach allergies who are sensitised to Pru p 3, particularly in patients with high anti-rPru p 3 IgE levels.


Polyphenols in Human Health and Disease | 2014

Studying Tea Polyphenols and Their Protective Effects on Skin

Laura Primavesi; Marta Piantanida; Valerio Pravettoni

Tea is the most consumed beverage worldwide, excluding water. Approximately 78% of the tea produced and consumed worldwide is black, 20–22% is green and less than 2% is oolong. These teas differ in their polyphenolic content due to fermentation during tea manufacturing, and green tea contains more catechins than black or oolong teas. The principal catechins, (−)-epicatechin, (−)-epicatechin-3-gallate, (−)-epigallocatechin and (−)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate, are shown to have the ability in many animal and in vitro models to protect the skin from the adverse effects of UV radiation, including lowering the risk of skin cancers. It has been suggested that tea catechins may favorably supplement sunscreen protection and be useful in skin diseases associated with solar UV radiation-induced inflammation, oxidative stress and DNA damage. Although research on green tea is very promising, future studies that take into consideration dietetic, environmental and life style factors are necessary to fully understand its contribution to human health.


International Journal of Occupational Medicine and Environmental Health | 2014

Shiitake mushroom (Lentinus edodes): A poorly known allergen in Western countries responsible for severe work-related asthma

Valerio Pravettoni; Laura Primavesi; Marta Piantanida

ObjectivesThe aim of this study was to investigate the IgE-mediated pathogenesis of severe asthma presented by a patient only after handling shiitake (Lentinus edodes) mushrooms (SM).Material and MethodsSkin tests were performed using in-house extracts from mushrooms that the patient usually handled, i.e., shiitake, porcini, oyster and black fungus mushroom varieties. Specific IgE to champignons and various molds were determined. Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) immunoblotting was performed to detect IgE-binding components. Four negative controls were included in the study.ResultsSkin prick tests performed with in-house mushroom extracts from varieties other than shiitake were completely negative, in contrast to the positive test obtained for shiitake mushrooms. Serum specific IgE levels for common molds and champignons were all negative. SDS-PAGE revealed many protein bands in the four mushroom extracts. Immunoblotting using the patient’s serum showed allergenic bands at about 15 and 24 kDa exclusively for SM that were not shared with negative controls. Another faint band was detectable at approximately 37 kDa for SM and porcini varieties.ConclusionsHere, we present the first European case of SM-induced occupational asthma, a disease more frequently occurring in Asia. Asthma attacks stopped when the patient avoided contact with shiitake mushrooms. No skin reactions and no IgE-binding proteins by immunoblotting were detectable with the other mushrooms tested. The positive skin test with shiitake mushrooms and IgE-binding components in the shiitake extract confirmed the IgE-mediated etiology of the reaction.


Clinical and Translational Allergy | 2011

Tmoato industrial derivatives: mallardo reaction and residual allergenicity.

Valerio Pravettoni; Laura Primavesi; Marta Piantanida; Oreste V. Brenna; Larua Farioli; Joseph Scibilia; Ambra Mascheri; Elide A. Pastorello

Methods The thermal damage index in all tomato derivatives was determined chromatographically by detecting furosine level, which allowed us to divide the commercial products in low, medium and highly thermally damaged. SDS-PAGE and immunoblotting on samples of these three groups was performed. We used the patients’ sera from our previous study after obtaining informed consent. Five patients had a documented positive history of severe allergic reactions to tomato, fresh or household cooked or industrially processed, and were exclusively reacting to tomato LTP. Other five patients experienced oral allergy syndrome (OAS) grade I-II when eating fresh tomatoes and were sufferings from birch pollinosis and not reacting to tomato LTP. Results In LTP-positive patients, no statistical difference between chemically peeled and raw extracts was detected by means of skin tests. Any grade of thermal damage (low, medium or high furosine index) induced a significant reduction in tomato allergenicity in birch pollen-positive LTP-negative patients, while none of the investigated technological processes reduced the IgEbinding to tomato LTP in LTP-positive patients.

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Valerio Pravettoni

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Laura Primavesi

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Michele Nichelatti

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Alessandro Marocchi

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Corrado Campochiaro

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Domenico Schiavino

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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Eleonora Nucera

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

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