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Dive into the research topics where Martina Ragazzi is active.

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Featured researches published by Martina Ragazzi.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2016

Intra-arterial transplantation of HLA-matched donor mesoangioblasts in Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Giulio Cossu; Stefano C. Previtali; Sara Napolitano; Maria Pia Cicalese; Francesco Saverio Tedesco; Francesca Nicastro; Maddalena Noviello; Urmas Roostalu; Maria Grazia Natali Sora; Marina Scarlato; Maurizio De Pellegrin; Claudia Godi; Serena Giuliani; Francesca Ciotti; Rossana Tonlorenzi; Isabella Lorenzetti; Cristina Rivellini; Sara Benedetti; Roberto Gatti; Sarah Marktel; Benedetta Mazzi; Andrea Tettamanti; Martina Ragazzi; Maria Adele Imro; Giuseppina Marano; Alessandro Ambrosi; Rossana Fiori; Maria Pia Sormani; Chiara Bonini; Massimo Venturini

Intra‐arterial transplantation of mesoangioblasts proved safe and partially efficacious in preclinical models of muscular dystrophy. We now report the first‐in‐human, exploratory, non‐randomized open‐label phase I–IIa clinical trial of intra‐arterial HLA‐matched donor cell transplantation in 5 Duchenne patients. We administered escalating doses of donor‐derived mesoangioblasts in limb arteries under immunosuppressive therapy (tacrolimus). Four consecutive infusions were performed at 2‐month intervals, preceded and followed by clinical, laboratory, and muscular MRI analyses. Two months after the last infusion, a muscle biopsy was performed. Safety was the primary endpoint. The study was relatively safe: One patient developed a thalamic stroke with no clinical consequences and whose correlation with mesoangioblast infusion remained unclear. MRI documented the progression of the disease in 4/5 patients. Functional measures were transiently stabilized in 2/3 ambulant patients, but no functional improvements were observed. Low level of donor DNA was detected in muscle biopsies of 4/5 patients and donor‐derived dystrophin in 1. Intra‐arterial transplantation of donor mesoangioblasts in human proved to be feasible and relatively safe. Future implementation of the protocol, together with a younger age of patients, will be needed to approach efficacy.


Nature Protocols | 2015

Efficient derivation and inducible differentiation of expandable skeletal myogenic cells from human ES and patient-specific iPS cells

S.M. Maffioletti; Mattia F M Gerli; Martina Ragazzi; Sumitava Dastidar; Sara Benedetti; Mariana Loperfido; Thierry Vandendriessche; Marinee Chuah; Francesco Saverio Tedesco

Skeletal muscle is the most abundant human tissue; therefore, an unlimited availability of myogenic cells has applications in regenerative medicine and drug development. Here we detail a protocol to derive myogenic cells from human embryonic stem (ES) and induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, and we also provide evidence for its extension to human iPS cells cultured without feeder cells. The procedure, which does not require the generation of embryoid bodies or prospective cell isolation, entails four stages with different culture densities, media and surface coating. Pluripotent stem cells are disaggregated to single cells and then differentiated into expandable cells resembling human mesoangioblasts. Subsequently, transient Myod1 induction efficiently drives myogenic differentiation into multinucleated myotubes. Cells derived from patients with muscular dystrophy and differentiated using this protocol have been genetically corrected, and they were proven to have therapeutic potential in dystrophic mice. Thus, this platform has been demonstrated to be amenable to gene and cell therapy, and it could be extended to muscle tissue engineering and disease modeling.


Cell Reports | 2018

Three-Dimensional Human iPSC-Derived Artificial Skeletal Muscles Model Muscular Dystrophies and Enable Multilineage Tissue Engineering

S.M. Maffioletti; Shilpita Sarcar; Alexander B.H. Henderson; Ingra Mannhardt; Luca Pinton; Louise A. Moyle; Heather B. Steele-Stallard; Ornella Cappellari; Kim E. Wells; Giulia Ferrari; Jamie S. Mitchell; Giulia E. Tyzack; Vassilios N. Kotiadis; Moustafa Khedr; Martina Ragazzi; Weixin Wang; Michael R. Duchen; Rickie Patani; Peter S. Zammit; Dominic J. Wells; Thomas Eschenhagen; Francesco Saverio Tedesco

Summary Generating human skeletal muscle models is instrumental for investigating muscle pathology and therapy. Here, we report the generation of three-dimensional (3D) artificial skeletal muscle tissue from human pluripotent stem cells, including induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from patients with Duchenne, limb-girdle, and congenital muscular dystrophies. 3D skeletal myogenic differentiation of pluripotent cells was induced within hydrogels under tension to provide myofiber alignment. Artificial muscles recapitulated characteristics of human skeletal muscle tissue and could be implanted into immunodeficient mice. Pathological cellular hallmarks of incurable forms of severe muscular dystrophy could be modeled with high fidelity using this 3D platform. Finally, we show generation of fully human iPSC-derived, complex, multilineage muscle models containing key isogenic cellular constituents of skeletal muscle, including vascular endothelial cells, pericytes, and motor neurons. These results lay the foundation for a human skeletal muscle organoid-like platform for disease modeling, regenerative medicine, and therapy development.


Stem cell reports | 2017

Enhanced energetic state and protection from oxidative stress in human myoblasts overexpressing BMI1.

Silvia Dibenedetto; Maria Victoria Niklison-Chirou; Claudia P. Cabrera; Matthew J. Ellis; Lesley Robson; Paul Knopp; Francesco Saverio Tedesco; Martina Ragazzi; Valentina Di Foggia; Michael R. Barnes; Aleksandar Radunovic; Silvia Marino

Summary The Polycomb group gene BMI1 is essential for efficient muscle regeneration in a mouse model of Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and its enhanced expression in adult skeletal muscle satellite cells ameliorates the muscle strength in this model. Here, we show that the impact of mild BMI1 overexpression observed in mouse models is translatable to human cells. In human myoblasts, BMI1 overexpression increases mitochondrial activity, leading to an enhanced energetic state with increased ATP production and concomitant protection against DNA damage both in vitro and upon xenografting in a severe dystrophic mouse model. These preclinical data in mouse models and human cells provide a strong rationale for the development of pharmacological approaches to target BMI1-mediated mitochondrial regulation and protection from DNA damage to sustain the regenerative potential of the skeletal muscle in conditions of chronic muscle wasting.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2017

Reversible immortalisation enables genetic correction of human muscle progenitors and engineering of next-generation human artificial chromosomes for Duchenne muscular dystrophy.

Sara Benedetti; Narumi Uno; H. Hoshiya; Martina Ragazzi; Giulia Ferrari; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Louise A. Moyle; Rossana Tonlorenzi; Angelo Lombardo; Soraya Chaouch; Vincent Mouly; Marc Moore; Linda Popplewell; Kanako Kazuki; Motonobu Katoh; Luigi Naldini; George Dickson; Graziella Messina; Mitsuo Oshimura; Giulio Cossu; Francesco Saverio Tedesco

Transferring large or multiple genes into primary human stem/progenitor cells is challenged by restrictions in vector capacity, and this hurdle limits the success of gene therapy. A paradigm is Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), an incurable disorder caused by mutations in the largest human gene: dystrophin. The combination of large‐capacity vectors, such as human artificial chromosomes (HACs), with stem/progenitor cells may overcome this limitation. We previously reported amelioration of the dystrophic phenotype in mice transplanted with murine muscle progenitors containing a HAC with the entire dystrophin locus (DYS‐HAC). However, translation of this strategy to human muscle progenitors requires extension of their proliferative potential to withstand clonal cell expansion after HAC transfer. Here, we show that reversible cell immortalisation mediated by lentivirally delivered excisable hTERT and Bmi1 transgenes extended cell proliferation, enabling transfer of a novel DYS‐HAC into DMD satellite cell‐derived myoblasts and perivascular cell‐derived mesoangioblasts. Genetically corrected cells maintained a stable karyotype, did not undergo tumorigenic transformation and retained their migration ability. Cells remained myogenic in vitro (spontaneously or upon MyoD induction) and engrafted murine skeletal muscle upon transplantation. Finally, we combined the aforementioned functions into a next‐generation HAC capable of delivering reversible immortalisation, complete genetic correction, additional dystrophin expression, inducible differentiation and controllable cell death. This work establishes a novel platform for complex gene transfer into clinically relevant human muscle progenitors for DMD gene therapy.


The Lancet | 2016

Reversible immortalisation, human artificial chromosomes, and induced pluripotency: new gene and cell therapy technologies for Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Sara Benedetti; H. Hoshiya; Narumi Uno; Giulia Ferrari; Yasuhiro Kazuki; S.M. Maffioletti; Tamara Casteels; Martina Ragazzi; Graziella Messina; Francesco Muntoni; Mitsuo Oshimura; Giulio Cossu; Francesco Saverio Tedesco

Abstract Background Duchenne muscular dystrophy is caused by mutations in the gene that encodes dystrophin, a major component of muscle fibres. The combination of gene therapy with cell therapy to treat the disorder is encouraging, but it is challenging because dystrophin is the largest human gene, and skeletal muscle the most abundant human tissue. We aimed to assess use of autologous stem cells with human artificial chromosomes (HACs) containing the entire dystrophin locus (DYS-HACs) as a solution to these challenges. Methods We describe two complementary strategies for the generation of genetically corrected myogenic stem cells from patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, one from muscle biopsy samples and the other from induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. We also describe the generation of a multifunctional DYS-HAC applicable in both strategies. Notably, these technologies are also being developed in genome-integration-free platforms. Findings Reversible immortalisation with lentivirally delivered excisable telomerase and BMI1 complementary DNAs allowed bypassing of replicative senescence and DYS-HAC transfer in muscle-derived cells. When isolation of tissue-derived progenitors proved challenging, we successfully derived skeletal myogenic cells from Duchenne muscular dystrophy iPS cells reprogrammed with non-integrating technologies and corrected them with the DYS-HAC. Finally we describe the engineering of a next-generation, multifunctional DYS-HAC that can provide complete genetic correction, enhanced proliferation, controllable cell death (as a safety system), and inducible myogenesis in both tissue-derived or iPS cell-derived stem cells. Interpretation This project provides the foundation for preclinical and clinical development of an autologous ex-vivo gene therapy protocol for Duchenne muscular dystrophy based on HACs and myogenic cells. Funding National Institute for Health Research, Medical Research Council, Takeda New Frontier Science, Muscular Dystrophy UK, Duchenne Childrens Trust, Duchenne Research Fund, Duchenne Parent Project Onlus.


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2018

Combining iPS cell-derived myogenic progenitors and human artificial chromosomes as a potential genomic integration-free cell and gene therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Giulia Ferrari; H. Hoshiya; Martina Ragazzi; T. Casteels; S.M. Maffioletti; Narumi Uno; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Francesco Muntoni; Mitsuo Oshimura; Francesco Saverio Tedesco


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2018

Generation of three-dimensional artificial skeletal muscle constructs from human pluripotent stem cells for complex disease modelling of muscular dystrophies

S.M. Maffioletti; Shilpita Sarcar; A.B.H. Henderson; Ingra Mannhardt; Luca Pinton; Louise A. Moyle; Heather B. Steele-Stallard; Ornella Cappellari; Kim E. Wells; Martina Ragazzi; W. Wang; Peter S. Zammit; Dominic J. Wells; Thomas Eschenhagen; Francesco Saverio Tedesco


Archive | 2017

GENERATION OF THREE-DIMENSIONAL HUMAN ARTIFICIAL SKELETAL MUSCLE TISSUE FROM IPS CELLS ENABLES COMPLEX DISEASE MODELLING FOR MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY

S.M. Maffioletti; Shilpita Sarcar; A.B.H. Henderson; Ingra Mannhardt; Luca Pinton; Louise A. Moyle; Heather B. Steele-Stallard; Ornella Cappellari; Kim E. Wells; Martina Ragazzi; W. Wang; Peter S. Zammit; Dominic J. Wells; Thomas Eschenhagen; Francesco Saverio Tedesco


Neuromuscular Disorders | 2017

Human artificial chromosomes combined with iPS cells: a genomic integration-free therapy for Duchenne muscular dystrophy

Giulia Ferrari; H. Hoshiya; Martina Ragazzi; T. Casteels; S.M. Maffioletti; Yasuhiro Kazuki; Mitsuo Oshimura; Francesco Saverio Tedesco

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Giulia Ferrari

University College London

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H. Hoshiya

University College London

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Giulio Cossu

University of Manchester

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Sara Benedetti

University College London

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Shilpita Sarcar

University College London

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