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Dive into the research topics where Michele Equestre is active.

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Featured researches published by Michele Equestre.


Journal of Virology | 2007

Repression of Interferon Regulatory Factor 1 by Hepatitis C Virus Core Protein Results in Inhibition of Antiviral and Immunomodulatory Genes

Anna Rita Ciccaglione; Emilia Stellacci; Cinzia Marcantonio; Valentina Muto; Michele Equestre; Giulia Marsili; Maria Rapicetta; Angela Battistini

ABSTRACT Hepatitis C virus (HCV) proteins are known to interfere at several levels with both innate and adaptive responses of the host. A key target in these effects is the interferon (IFN) signaling pathway. While the effects of nonstructural proteins are well established, the role of structural proteins remains controversial. We investigated the effect of HCV structural proteins on the expression of interferon regulatory factor 1 (IRF-1), a secondary transcription factor of the IFN system responsible for inducing several key antiviral and immunomodulatory genes. We found substantial inhibition of IRF-1 expression in cells expressing the entire HCV replicon. Suppression of IRF-1 synthesis was mainly mediated by the core structural protein and occurred at the transcriptional level. The core protein in turn exerted a transcriptional repression of several interferon-stimulated genes, targets of IRF-1, including interleukin-15 (IL-15), IL-12, and low-molecular-mass polypeptide 2. These data recapitulate in a unifying mechanism, i.e., repression of IRF-1 expression, many previously described pathogenetic effects of HCV core protein and suggest that HCV core-induced IRF-1 repression may play a pivotal role in establishing persistent infection by dampening an effective immune response.


Eurosurveillance | 2013

Ongoing outbreak of hepatitis A in Italy: preliminary report as of 31 May 2013

Caterina Rizzo; Valeria Alfonsi; Roberto Bruni; Luca Busani; Anna Rita Ciccaglione; D. De Medici; S. Di Pasquale; Michele Equestre; Martina Escher; M C Montaño-Remacha; Gaia Scavia; Stefania Taffon; V Carraro; S Franchini; B Natter; M Augschiller; Maria Elena Tosti

Since January 2013, an unusual increase in hepatitis A cases has been detected in northern Italy. A total number of 352 cases were reported to the integrated surveillance system between January and the end of May 2013 and this represents a 70% increase compared to the same period of the previous year. The outbreak is ongoing and the public health authorities are continuing their investigations to establish the transmission vehicle and to control the outbreak.


Annals of Neurology | 2016

Cerebrospinal fluid real-time quaking-induced conversion is a robust and reliable test for sporadic creutzfeldt–jakob disease: An international study

Lynne McGuire; Anna Poleggi; Ilaria Poggiolini; Silvia Suardi; Katarina Grznarova; Song Shi; Bart De Vil; Shannon Sarros; Katsuya Satoh; Keding Cheng; Maria Cramm; Graham Fairfoul; Matthias Schmitz; Inga Zerr; Patrick Cras; Michele Equestre; Fabrizio Tagliavini; Ryuichiro Atarashi; David Knox; Steven J. Collins; Stéphane Haïk; Piero Parchi; Maurizio Pocchiari; Alison Green

Real‐time quaking‐induced conversion (RT‐QuIC) has been proposed as a sensitive diagnostic test for sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; however, before this assay can be introduced into clinical practice, its reliability and reproducibility need to be demonstrated. Two international ring trials were undertaken in which a set of 25 cerebrospinal fluid samples were analyzed by a total of 11 different centers using a range of recombinant prion protein substrates and instrumentation. The results show almost complete concordance between the centers and demonstrate that RT‐QuIC is a suitably reliable and robust technique for clinical practice. Ann Neurol 2016;80:160–165


Annals of Neurology | 2016

CSF RT‐QuIC is a robust and reliable test for sporadic CJD: An international study

Lynne McGuire; Anna Poleggi; Ilaria Poggiolini; Silvia Suardi; Katarina Grznarova; Song Shi; Bart De Vil; Shannon Sarros; Katsuya Satoh; Keding Cheng; Maria Cramm; Graham Fairfoul; Matthias Schmitz; Inga Zerr; Patrick Cras; Michele Equestre; Fabrizio Tagliavini; Ryuichiro Atarashi; David Knox; Steven J. Collins; Stéphane Haïk; Piero Parchi; Maurizio Pocchiari; Alison Green

Real‐time quaking‐induced conversion (RT‐QuIC) has been proposed as a sensitive diagnostic test for sporadic Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; however, before this assay can be introduced into clinical practice, its reliability and reproducibility need to be demonstrated. Two international ring trials were undertaken in which a set of 25 cerebrospinal fluid samples were analyzed by a total of 11 different centers using a range of recombinant prion protein substrates and instrumentation. The results show almost complete concordance between the centers and demonstrate that RT‐QuIC is a suitably reliable and robust technique for clinical practice. Ann Neurol 2016;80:160–165


BMC Infectious Diseases | 2014

Surveillance of hepatitis A virus in urban sewages and comparison with cases notified in the course of an outbreak, Italy 2013

Giuseppina La Rosa; Simonetta Della Libera; M. Iaconelli; Anna Rita Ciccaglione; Roberto Bruni; Stefania Taffon; Michele Equestre; Valeria Alfonsi; Caterina Rizzo; Maria Elena Tosti; Maria Chironna; Luisa Romanò; Alessandro Zanetti; Michele Muscillo

BackgroundOver the past 20 years, Hepatitis A notifications in Italy have been in decline. Since the beginning of 2013 however, Italy has been experiencing a foodborne hepatitis A outbreak caused by genotype IA, involving hundreds of cases. Consumption of frozen mixed berries was deemed the potential vehicle of infection.We aimed to investigate the spread of hepatitis A virus (HAV) in Italy through the monitoring of urban sewages collected at Wastewater Treatment Plants (WTPs) and a subsequent comparison of environmental surveillance data with data from the clinical surveillance performed during the epidemic.MethodsThe study covered 15 months, from July 2012 to September 2013, comprising the outbreak and the preceding six months. Environmental surveillance consisted of the analysis of urban sewage samples collected at 19 WTPs in seven of the Italian regions most affected by the epidemic. HAV isolates were detected and typed using a nested RT-PCR targeting the VP1/2A junction. Parallel clinical surveillance was performed by the sentinel surveillance system for acute viral hepatitis (SEIEVA) and by the ministerial Central Task Force on Hepatitis A, established with the purpose of determining the source of the outbreak and adopting appropriate outbreak control strategies.ResultsA total of 38/157 wastewater samples (24.2%) were positive for HAV, 16 collected in 2012 and 22 in 2013. Several HAV strains were detected, including the IA variant implicated in the outbreak and isolated from clinical cases over the same period. The vast majority of sequences belonged to genotype IB. Interestingly however, although these included variants related to strains that had been involved in past Italian epidemics, none were detected in recent clinical samples, probably due to underreporting or asymptomatic circulation. Conversely, a number of sequences were identified in clinical samples that were not found in wastewaters.ConclusionsThe percentage of sewage samples detected as HAV-positive in this study are consistent with the classification of Italy as a country with low/intermediate endemicity. A combined environmental/clinical surveillance is able to provide a more complete picture of the spread of HAV and of the genotypes circulating in the population, allowing a better understanding of changes in disease trends.


Journal of Medical Virology | 2012

Hepatitis C virus genotype 4d in Southern Italy: reconstruction of its origin and spread by a phylodynamic analysis.

Massimo Ciccozzi; Michele Equestre; Angela Costantino; Angela Quirino; Alessandra Lo Presti; Eleonora Cella; Roberto Bruni; Maria Carla Liberto; Alfredo Focà; Giulio Pisani; Gianguglielmo Zehender; Anna Rita Ciccaglione

Hepatitis C Virus (HCV) genotype 4 predominates in Middle East and Central Africa countries. Recently, it has become also prevalent in Southern European countries where it is thought to have been introduced through immigration and the movement of intravenous drug users. In Italy, the prevalence of genotype 4 is particularly high (4.5%) in Southern regions, such as Calabria, and reaches values of 8.4% in specific areas where there appears to be endemic circulation of this genotype. In the present study, the phylogeny of HCV subtype 4d isolated from 19 Italian patients in Calabria was investigated by analysing a fragment of the NS5B viral genomic region. A Bayesian coalescent‐based framework was used to estimate origin and spread of the HCV 4d in this area. The mean evolutionary rate HCV 4d NS5B sequences was estimated using a dataset of sequences sampled at known times and a relaxed clock constant model that best fitted the data. By using a Bayesian coalescent method, the Italian 4d isolates collected in Calabria were found to share a common ancestor with reference 4d isolates whose origin was traced back to 1940s. The genotype 4d epidemic in Southern Italy was maintained in a steady non‐expanding phase until the late 1970s after that it grew exponentially up to 1990s probably sustained by the vast increase of unsafe blood transfusions and the spread of illicit intravenous drug users. J. Med. Virol. 84:1613–1619, 2012.


Archives of Virology | 2005

Activation of endoplasmic reticulum stress response by hepatitis C virus proteins.

A.R. Ciccaglione; Angela Costantino; Elena Tritarelli; Cinzia Marcantonio; Michele Equestre; N. Marziliano; Maria Rapicetta

Summary.Flaviviruses utilize the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) as the main site for replication and protein synthesis and cause some level of ER stress. In the present study, we evaluated the ability of HCV proteins to induce ER stress response by using a tetracycline-regulated cell line expressing a region of HCV genome containing the structural genes. In this system different levels of HCV protein expression could be obtained by varying the concentration of tetracycline in the medium. Real Time PCR and Western blotting assay demonstrated that HCV mRNA and protein levels reach a maximum value at 24–48 h and decrease at 72 h postinduction. Cell proliferation analysis indicated that HCV synthesis causes cell growth inhibition. The effect was also observed in cells expressing lower levels of HCV proteins. The expression profile of specific genes, which are markers of ER stress response, revealed the upregulation of the chaperone GRP78 and the transcription factor GADD153. Induction of GADD153 correlates with the downregulation of the antiapoptotic Bcl-2 gene suggesting that synthesis of HCV proteins may influence cell fate through the activation of ER stress signaling pathway.


Journal of General Virology | 2001

Mutagenesis of hepatitis C virus E1 protein affects its membrane-permeabilizing activity

A.R. Ciccaglione; Angela Costantino; Cinzia Marcantonio; Michele Equestre; Andrea Geraci; Maria Rapicetta

The E1 glycoprotein of hepatitis C virus is a transmembrane glycoprotein with a C-terminal anchor domain. When expressed in Escherichia coli, E1 induces a change in membrane permeability that is toxic to the bacterial cell. The C-terminal hydrophobic region (aa 331-383) of E1 is mainly responsible for membrane association and for inducing changes in membrane permeability. These observed changes are similar to those produced in E. coli by influenza virus M2, human immunodeficiency virus gp41 and poliovirus 3AB proteins, whose hydrophobic domains are thought to cause pore formation in biological membranes. To further characterize the activity of E1 at a molecular level, the membrane-permeabilizing ability of a second internal hydrophobic region (aa 262-291) was examined by expressing different deletion mutants of E1 in an E. coli system that is widely used for analysing membrane-active proteins from other animal viruses. Moreover, highly conserved amino acids in the C-terminal hydrophobic region were mutated to identify residues that are critical for inducing changes in membrane permeability. Analysis of cell growth curves of recombinant cultures and membrane-permeability assays revealed that synthesis of this fragment increased the flux of small compounds through the membrane and caused progressive cell lysis, suggesting that this domain has membrane-active properties. Furthermore, analysis of C-terminal mutants indicated that the conserved amino acids Arg(339), Trp(368) and Lys(370) play a critical role in protein function, as both cell lysis and changes in membrane permeability induced by the wild-type clone could be blocked by substitutions in these positions.


Infection, Genetics and Evolution | 2011

Reconstruction of the evolutionary dynamics of the hepatitis C virus 1b epidemic in Turkey.

Massimo Ciccozzi; A.R. Ciccaglione; Alessandra Lo Presti; Tulay Yalcinkaya; Zeynep Pinar Taskan; Michele Equestre; Angela Costantino; Roberto Bruni; Erica Ebranati; Marco Salemi; Rebecca R. Gray; Giovanni Rezza; Massimo Galli; Gianguglielmo Zehender

Worldwide, 12.5% of the more than 170 million people infected by hepatitis C virus (HCV), live in Eastern Mediterranean countries. In Turkey, the prevalence of HCV infection ranges from 0.3% to 0.4% of the general population. We investigated the distribution of HCV subtype 1b in Turkey by analysing the NS5b viral genomic region, using a Bayesian coalescent-based framework and phylogeographical analysis to estimate the origin of the HCV 1b subtype epidemic and the genetic diversification of the virus in Turkey. The dataset consisted of 24 NS5b sequences obtained from patients chronically infected with HCV subtype 1b admitted to the different health districts of Ankara hospital plus the reference sequences for phylogenetic analysis. An independent dataset including the same 342-nt NS5b fragment from all over the world (203 sequences) was used to calibrate the evolutionary rate. Using the relaxed clock model, we estimated a mean evolutionary rate of 0.84 × 10(-3) sub/site/year (95% highest posterior density interval HPD 0.16-1.5 × 10(-3)). The results of the phylogeographical analysis suggested that the HCV epidemic probably originated in Greece during the first decade of 1900 and, a few years later (in the 1920s or 1930s), successfully spread to neighboring countries such as Turkey and Cyprus. The clustering of the majority of the Turkish strains in a single monophyletic group suggests the subsequent segregated circulation of the virus in the country during the years 1940-1999, which was probably due to unsafe medical parenteral procedures, with drug addiction playing a relatively negligible role. The Bayesian skyline plot (BSP) showed a growth in the number of effective infections between the 1940s and the 1990s, when the curve reached a plateau that still remains today, suggesting a partial success of improved transfusional policies. A coalescent-based approach to population dynamics can improve our understanding of the origin and spread of epidemics in a limited geographical area.


BMC Microbiology | 2008

Microbiological and 16S rRNA analysis of sulphite-reducing clostridia from river sediments in central Italy

Stefania Marcheggiani; M. Iaconelli; Annamaria D'angelo; Elio Pierdominici; Giuseppina La Rosa; Michele Muscillo; Michele Equestre; Laura Mancini

BackgroundMicrobiological indicators are commonly used in the assessment of public health risks associated with fecal contamination of freshwater ecosystems. Sediments are a reservoir of microorganisms, and can thus provide information on past pollution events, not obtainable through the testing of surface water. Moreover, pathogens present in sediment may represent future threats to human health. Clostridium perfringens, a typical colonizer of sediments, has been suggested as an alternative indicator of fecal pollution. In order to be suitable for such purpose, the microorganism should be widely distributed in contaminated environments. The objective of this study was thus to determine the composition of the anaerobic community in sediment samples of the lower Tiber basin, in central Italy, through a combined approach involving granulometric analysis of sediment samples, as well as a microbiological and molecular (16S rRNA) analysis of strains.ResultsGranulometry showed a similar, clayey sediment composition, in most sampling sites. The microbiological method, employing, an adaptation of the standard method, proved to be effective in isolating anaerobic bacteria from the environmental matrix for the purpose of genetic analysis. Eighty-three strains of bacteria were isolated and the partial 16S rRNA gene sequenced. While biochemical analysis detected only C. perfringens strains, phylogenetic analysis indicated the presence of three clusters: C. perfringens, C. bifermentans and B. cereus, comprising eight taxa. C. perfringens, the commonest in almost all sediment sampling sites, was present in all sites, and in both seasons (seasonal sampling was carried out only along the Tiber and Aniene rivers). None of the described genetic profiles showed complete similarity with GenBank sequences.ConclusionThe study underlines the value of C. perfringens as an alternative microbial indicator of fecal contamination in river sediments. This is supported by the bacteriums presence in all sampling sites, and in both seasons, coupled with its detectability using commercial diagnostic kits.The study also illustrates the presence of an anaerobic community of considerable biodiversity in the lower Tiber basin, with C. perfringens as its main component. The 16S rRNA analysis, while confirming the phylogenetic relationships among isolated species, also showed haplotype patterns different from those present in the NCBI database.

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Dive into the Michele Equestre's collaboration.

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Anna Rita Ciccaglione

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Roberto Bruni

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Angela Costantino

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Cinzia Marcantonio

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Stefania Taffon

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Maria Rapicetta

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Massimo Ciccozzi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Alessandra Lo Presti

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Eleonora Cella

Sapienza University of Rome

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Elena Tritarelli

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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