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Featured researches published by Mauro Pistello.


Journal of Clinical Microbiology | 2003

Human Metapneumovirus Associated with Respiratory Tract Infections in a 3-Year Study of Nasal Swabs from Infants in Italy

Fabrizio Maggi; Massimo Pifferi; Marialinda Vatteroni; Claudia Fornai; Elena Tempestini; Silvia Anzilotti; Letizia Lanini; Elisabetta Andreoli; Vincenzo Ragazzo; Mauro Pistello; Steven Specter; Mauro Bendinelli

ABSTRACT The newly described human metapneumovirus (hMPV) is reported here to be more commonly associated with lower respiratory tract disease. The present study examined nasal swab specimens from 90 infants with acute respiratory tract infections in Pisa, Italy, over a period of three respiratory virus seasons. The incidence of infection varied in each of the 3 years, with the rates of positivity for hMPV being 7% in 2001 but 37 and 43% in 2000 and 2002, respectively. hMPV was noted to occur seasonally in a pattern typical of the frequency of occurrence of respiratory syncytial virus. More than one-half (14 of 23) of the infants infected with hMPV had bronchopneumonia. One-third (9 of 23) of the hMPV-infected patients were also infected with another respiratory virus, a relationship that has not previously been reported. Mixed infections did not account for a higher percentage of cases of bronchopneumonia than hMPV infection alone did. Furthermore, 7 of 17 infants whose plasma was also tested for hMPV RNA were demonstrated to have virus in both nasal swab and blood specimens. The study indicates that hMPV is seen as commonly as other respiratory viruses, may be associated with severe respiratory disease in infants, can establish mixed infections with other respiratory viruses, and has a seasonal occurrence.


Clinical Microbiology Reviews | 2001

Molecular Properties, Biology, and Clinical Implications of TT Virus, a Recently Identified Widespread Infectious Agent of Humans

Mauro Bendinelli; Mauro Pistello; Fabrizio Maggi; Claudia Fornai; Giulia Freer; Maria Linda Vatteroni

SUMMARY TT virus (TTV) was first described in 1997 by representational difference analysis of sera from non-A to non-G posttransfusion hepatitis patients and hence intensively investigated as a possible addition to the list of hepatitis-inducing viruses. The TTV genome is a covalently closed single-stranded DNA of approximately 3.8 kb with a number of characteristics typical of animal circoviruses, especially the chicken anemia virus. TTV is genetically highly heterogeneous, which has led investigators to group isolates into numerous genotypes and subtypes and has limited the sensitivity of many PCR assays used for virus detection. The most remarkable feature of TTV is the extraordinarily high prevalence of chronic viremia in apparently healthy people, up to nearly 100% in some countries. The original hypothesis that it might be an important cause of cryptogenic hepatitis has not been borne out, although the possibility that it may produce liver damage under specific circumstances has not been excluded. The virus has not yet been etiologically linked to any other human disease. Thus, TTV should be considered an orphan virus.


Journal of Virology | 2003

TT virus in the nasal secretions of children with acute respiratory diseases: relations to viremia and disease severity.

Fabrizio Maggi; Massimo Pifferi; Claudia Fornai; Elisabetta Andreoli; Elena Tempestini; Marialinda Vatteroni; Silvano Presciuttini; Santino Marchi; Angelo Pietrobelli; Attilio L. Boner; Mauro Pistello; Mauro Bendinelli

ABSTRACT The natural history and pathogenic potential of the recently identified TT virus (TTV) are currently a matter of intensive investigation. In an attempt to shed some light on these issues, nasal and blood specimens of 1- to 24-month-old children hospitalized with a clinical diagnosis of acute respiratory disease (ARD) were examined for the presence, load, and genetic characteristics of TTV. The results have indicated that at least in young children, the respiratory tract not only represents a route by which abundant TTV can be shed into the environment but also may be a site of primary infection and continual replication. Although we found no compelling evidence that TTV was the direct cause of ARD in some of the children studied, the average loads of TTV were considerably higher in patients with bronchopneumonia (BP) than in those with milder ARD, raising interesting questions about the pathophysiological significance of TTV at this site. Furthermore, group 4 TTV was detected almost exclusively in children with BP.


Journal of General Virology | 1997

Differences in hepatitis C virus quasispecies composition between liver, peripheral blood mononuclear cells and plasma

Fabrizio Maggi; Claudia Fornai; Maria Linda Vatteroni; Massimo Giorgi; Antonietta Morrica; Mauro Pistello; G. Cammarota; Santino Marchi; P. Ciccorossi; A. Bionda; Mauro Bendinelli

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) exists in vivo as a highly variable mixture of closely related genomes (quasispecies), but the pathogenetic significance of such heterogeneity is still largely unknown. To investigate this issue, we compared the composition of HCV quasispecies found in the liver, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and plasma of ten patients by single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis of the E2/NS1 region and sequencing of the variants detected. We found considerable quasispecies differences between the liver and PBMC in all the patients, involving variant numbers, relative quantities and relative electrophoretic mobilities, but no apparent tissue-specific trend. Genome variants present in the liver and/or PBMC were not detected in the corresponding plasma samples, while certain HCV variants were present only in plasma. No dominant amino acids or amino acid pattern characteristic of variants present solely in the PBMC were detected in the E2/NS1 region sequenced.


Journal of Interferon and Cytokine Research | 1999

Correlation of Interferon-Induced Expression of MxA mRNA in Peripheral Blood Mononuclear Cells with the Response of Patients with Chronic Active Hepatitis C to IFN-alpha Therapy

Guido Antonelli; Eleonora Simeoni; Ombretta Turriziani; Ramon Tesoro; Alessandro Redaelli; Luigi Roffi; Laura Antonelli; Mauro Pistello; Ferdinando Dianzani

MxA, a protein with selective activity against certain viruses, is an accepted specific indicator of type I interferon (IFN) activity. We have developed an internally controlled quantitative-competitive PCR to measure the amounts of MxA mRNA expressed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). This assay is more sensitive, quantitative, and easily applied to serial clinical samples than previously described methods. We have applied this assay retrospectively to 27 patients with chronic active hepatitis C given IFN-alpha2. Most such patients gain no sustained benefit but nevertheless suffer from the side effects, expense, and inconvenience of the treatment. Fourteen of the 27 had been classified on clinical grounds as responders and 13 as nonresponders at the end of a 6 month treatment period. We measured MxA mRNA in PBMC obtained before and after 8 weeks of IFN-alpha2 treatment. All the patients expressed some level of mRNA before treatment began, and after 8 weeks of treatment, the level rose in 19. This increase was significant (p < 0.001) only in patients classified as responders. This strongly suggests that hepatitis C virus (HCV) patients who express increased amounts of MxA mRNA in their PBMC during IFN-alpha treatment are most likely to obtain long-term benefit. If this finding is confirmed in future prospective studies, it will provide an extremely important predictive marker for managing IFN-alpha therapy in patients with HCV.


American Journal of Physiology-heart and Circulatory Physiology | 2011

Ferritin as a reporter gene for in vivo tracking of stem cells by 1.5-T cardiac MRI in a rat model of myocardial infarction

M. Campan; Vincenzo Lionetti; Giovanni Donato Aquaro; Francesca Forini; Marco Matteucci; Laura Vannucci; Flavia Chiuppesi; Claudio Di Cristofano; Michela Faggioni; Margherita Maioli; Lucio Barile; Elisa Messina; Massimo Lombardi; Angela Pucci; Mauro Pistello; Fabio A. Recchia

The methods currently utilized to track stem cells by cardiac MRI are affected by important limitations, and new solutions are needed. We tested human ferritin heavy chain (hFTH) as a reporter gene for in vivo tracking of stem cells by cardiac MRI. Swine cardiac stem/progenitor cells were transduced with a lentiviral vector to overexpress hFTH and cultured to obtain cardiospheres (Cs). Myocardial infarction was induced in rats, and, after 45 min, the animals were subjected to intramyocardial injection of ∼200 hFTH-Cs or nontransduced Cs or saline solution in the border zone. By employing clinical standard 1.5-Tesla MRI scanner and a multiecho T2* gradient echo sequence, we localized iron-accumulating tissue only in hearts treated with hFTH-Cs. This signal was detectable at 1 wk after infarction, and its size did not change significantly after 4 wk (6.33 ± 3.05 vs. 4.41 ± 4.38 mm(2)). Cs transduction did not affect their cardioreparative potential, as indicated by the significantly better preserved left ventricular global and regional function and the 36% reduction in infarct size in both groups that received Cs compared with control infarcts. Prussian blue staining confirmed the presence of differentiated, iron-accumulating cells containing mitochondria of porcine origin. Cs-derived cells displayed CD31, α-smooth muscle, and α-sarcomeric actin antigens, indicating that the differentiation into endothelial, smooth muscle and cardiac muscle lineage was not affected by ferritin overexpression. In conclusion, hFTH can be used as a MRI reporter gene to track dividing/differentiating stem cells in the beating heart, while simultaneously monitoring cardiac morpho-functional changes.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 1999

High Prevalence of TT Virus Viremia in Italian Patients, Regardless of Age, Clinical Diagnosis, and Previous Interferon Treatment

Fabrizio Maggi; Claudia Fornai; Antonietta Morrica; Francesca Casula; Maria Linda Vatteroni; Santino Marchi; P. Ciccorossi; Lucrezia Riente; Mauro Pistello; Mauro Bendinelli

The pathogenic potential of the newly discovered TT virus (TTV) is currently a matter of conjecture. Its presence was investigated in the serum of 660 patients, by polymerase chain reaction. TTV was detected in 50% of 221 patients with unselected pathologies, and no significant differences related to age, sex, or organ disease were noted. TTV was present at a significantly higher rate in hemophiliacs (73%) and at lower rates in patients with cirrhosis (30%) and rheumatoid arthritis (28%). Patients with other liver diseases, systemic lupus erythematosus, or psoriasis or receiving hemodialysis had rates of infection similar to those in unselected patients. TTV-positive patients treated with interferon-alpha for underlying type C hepatitis showed no appreciable changes of TTV viremia levels. Type 1b was by far the most frequent viral genotype (92%), followed by types 2c (5%) and 1a (3%).


Journal of NeuroVirology | 1999

Detection and quasispecies analysis of hepatitis C virus in the cerebrospinal fluid of infected patients.

Fabrizio Maggi; Massimo Giorgi; Claudia Fornai; Antonietta Morrica; Maria Linda Vatteroni; Mauro Pistello; Gabriele Siciliano; Andrea Nuccorini; Mauro Bendinelli

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) is a leading cause of liver damage and has also been implicated in extrahepatic pathologies. We examined for HCV RNA paired CSF and plasma samples from 12 viremia positive patients using PCR. The CSF from 5/5 HIV-infected patients and 5/7 HIV-negative patients were HCV RNA positive. Branched DNA analysis showed that HCV loads in CSF were much lower than in plasma. Several HCV-positive CSF showed no evidence of blood contamination, impaired blood-brain barrier, or intrathecal IgG production. Comparison of HCV quasispecies in three sets of samples suggested that the virus in CSF was of plasma origin.


Journal of Virology | 2003

TT virus loads and lymphocyte subpopulations in children with acute respiratory diseases

Fabrizio Maggi; Massimo Pifferi; Elena Tempestini; Claudia Fornai; Letizia Lanini; Elisabetta Andreoli; Marialinda Vatteroni; Silvano Presciuttini; Angelo Pietrobelli; Attilio L. Boner; Mauro Pistello; Mauro Bendinelli

ABSTRACT TT virus (TTV) produces chronic plasma viremia in around 90% of healthy individuals of all ages and has, therefore, been proposed as a commensal human virus. We recently demonstrated that in children hospitalized for acute respiratory diseases high TTV loads were associated with severe forms of disease. Here, we report that in such children TTV loads showed an inverse correlation with the percentage of circulating total T and helper T cells and a direct correlation with the percentage of B cells. Thus, florid TTV replication might contribute to lymphocyte imbalances and, possibly, immunosuppressive effects, thus resembling related animal viruses.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Dynamics of Persistent TT Virus Infection, as Determined in Patients Treated with Alpha Interferon for Concomitant Hepatitis C Virus Infection

Fabrizio Maggi; Mauro Pistello; Marialinda Vatteroni; Silvano Presciuttini; Santino Marchi; Patrizia Isola; Claudia Fornai; Sabina Fagnani; Elisabetta Andreoli; Guido Antonelli; Mauro Bendinelli

ABSTRACT TT virus (TTV) is a recently identified widespread DNA virus of humans that produces persistent viremia in the absence of overt clinical manifestations. In an attempt to shed light on the dynamics of chronic infection, we measured the levels of TTV in the plasma of 25 persistently infected patients during the first 3 months of alpha interferon (IFN-α) treatment for concomitant hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. The first significant decline of TTV loads was observed at day 3 versus day 1 for HCV. Subsequently, the loads of TTV became progressively lower in most patients, but some initial responders relapsed before the end of the follow-up, suggesting that at least in some subjects the effects of IFN on TTV can be very short-lived. No correlation between the responses of TTV and HCV to therapy was found. Fitting the viremia data obtained during the first week of treatment into previously developed mathematical models showed that TTV sustains very active chronic infections, with over 90% of the virions in plasma cleared and replenished daily and a minimum of approximately 3.8 × 1010 virions generated per day. Low levels of TTV were occasionally detected in the peripheral blood mononuclear cells of patients who had cleared plasma viremia, thus corroborating previous results showing that these cells may support TTV replication and/or persistence.

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