Paola Spinsanti
Sapienza University of Rome
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Publication
Featured researches published by Paola Spinsanti.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2007
R. Verani; I. Cappuccio; Paola Spinsanti; Roberto Gradini; Alessandra Caruso; M. C. Magnotti; Marta Motolese; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Daniela Melchiorri
Cultured mouse D3 embryonic stem (ES) cells differentiating into embryoid bodies (EBs) expressed several Wnt isoforms, nearly all isotypes of the Wnt receptor Frizzled and the Wnt/Dickkopf (Dkk) co‐receptor low‐density lipoprotein receptor‐related protein (LRP) type 5. A 4‐day treatment with retinoic acid (RA), which promoted neural differentiation of EBs, substantially increased the expression of the Wnt antagonist Dkk‐1, and induced the synthesis of the Wnt/Dkk‐1 co‐receptor LRP6. Recombinant Dkk‐1 applied to EBs behaved like RA in inducing the expression of the neural markers nestin and distal‐less homeobox gene (Dlx‐2). Recombinant Dkk‐1 was able to inhibit the Wnt pathway, as shown by a reduction in nuclear β‐catenin levels. Remarkably, the antisense‐ or small interfering RNA‐induced knockdown of Dkk‐1 largely reduced the expression of Dlx‐2, and the neuronal marker β‐III tubulin in EBs exposed to RA. These data suggest that induction of Dkk‐1 and the ensuing inhibition of the canonical Wnt pathway is required for neural differentiation of ES cells.
American Journal of Nephrology | 2007
Maurizio Muscaritoli; Alessio Molfino; Maria Grazia Chiappini; Alessandro Laviano; T. Ammann; Paola Spinsanti; Daniela Melchiorri; Akio Inui; Filippo Alegiani; Filippo Rossi Fanelli
Background: Anorexia is frequently found in end-stage renal disease and is a reliable predictor of morbidity and mortality in hemodialysis (HD) patients. The pathogenesis of anorexia is complex and the appetite-modulating hormone ghrelin could be involved. Two forms of circulating ghrelin have been described: acylated ghrelin (<10% of circulating ghrelin) which promotes food intake, and des-acyl ghrelin which induces a negative energy balance. The aim of this cross-sectional study is to clarify whether anorexia and body weight change in HD patients relate to plasma des-acyl ghrelin levels. Methods: 34 HD patients and 15 healthy controls were studied. The presence of anorexia was assessed by a questionnaire. Serum des-acyl ghrelin was measured in HD patients and in 15 body mass index-, sex- and age-matched controls by ELISA. Energy intake was assessed by a 3-day dietary diary, and fat-free mass (FFM) was evaluated by body impedance analysis. Data have been statistically analyzed and are presented as mean ± SD. Results: 14 patients (41%) were found to be anorexic, and 20 patients (59%) non-anorexic. Energy intake (kcal/day) was significantly lower in anorexic than in non-anorexic patients (1,682 ± 241 vs. 1,972.50 ± 490; p < 0.05). FFM (%) was lower in anorexic than in non-anorexic patients (65.8 ± 4.4 vs. 70.9 ± 8.7; p = 0.05). Plasma des-acyl ghrelin levels (fmol/ml) were significantly higher in HD patients than in controls (214.88 ± 154.24 vs. 128.93 ± 51.07; p < 0.05), and in anorexic HD patients than in non-anorexic (301.7 ± 162.4 vs. 159.1 ± 115.5; p < 0.01). Conclusion: Anorexia is highly prevalent among HD patients and des-acyl ghrelin could be involved in its pathogenesis.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2006
Luisa Iacovelli; Antonietta Arcella; Giuseppe Battaglia; Simonetta Pazzaglia; Eleonora Aronica; Paola Spinsanti; Alessandra Caruso; Enrico De Smaele; Anna Saran; Alberto Gulino; Mara D'Onofrio; Felice Giangaspero; Ferdinando Nicoletti
Moving from the evidence that activation of type 4 metabotropic glutamate (mGlu4) receptors inhibits proliferation and promotes differentiation of cerebellar granule cell neuroprogenitors, we examined the expression and function of mGlu4 receptors in medulloblastoma cells. mGlu4 receptors were expressed in 46 of 60 human medulloblastoma samples. Expression varied in relation to the histotype (nodular desmoplastic>classic≫large-cell anaplastic) and was inversely related to tumor severity, spreading, and recurrence. mGlu4 receptors were also found in D283med, D341med, and DAOY medulloblastoma cell lines, where receptor activation with the selective enhancer PHCCC inhibited adenylyl cyclase and the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase pathway without affecting the mitogen-activated protein kinase, Sonic Hedgehog, and Wnt pathways. Interestingly, mGlu4 receptor activation reduced DNA synthesis and cell proliferation in all three cell lines. This effect was abrogated by the phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase inhibitor LY294002 [2-(4-morpholinyl)-8-phenyl-4H-1-benzopyran-4-one]. In in vivo experiments, repeated subcutaneous injections of N-phenyl-7-(hydroxyimino)cyclopropa[b]chromen-1a-carboxamide (PHCCC) reduced the growth of D283med and DAOY cell xenografts in nude mice. More remarkably, subcutaneous or intracranial injections of PHCCC during the first week of life prevented the development of medulloblastomas in mice lacking one Patched-1 allele and x-irradiated 1 d after birth. These data suggest that mGlu4 receptor enhancers are promising drugs for the treatment of medulloblastomas.
Neuropharmacology | 2007
Daniela Melchiorri; Irene Cappuccio; Cinzia Ciceroni; Paola Spinsanti; P. Mosillo; Iran Sarichelou; Patrizio Sale; Ferdinando Nicoletti
Functional mGlu receptor subtypes are found in stem/progenitor cells, and regulate proliferation, differentiation, and survival of these cells. Activation of mGlu5 receptors supports self-renewal of embryonic stem cells, which are pluripotent cells isolated from the blastocyst capable of generating all the bodys cell lineages, including germ cells. Differentiation of embryonic stem cells into embryoid bodies is associated with the induction of mGlu4 receptors, the activation of which drives cell differentiation towards the mesoderm and endoderm lineages. Different mGlu receptor subtypes, mGlu3 and mGlu5 receptors in particular, are found in neural stem cells (stem cells resident in the CNS that give rise to neurons, astrocytes or oligodendrocytes) isolated from the developing brain or from regions of persistent neurogenesis of the adult brain (e.g. the subventricular zone lining the wall of the lateral ventricles). The evidence that activation of mGlu3 and mGlu5 receptors stimulates proliferation of these cells is particularly interesting because of the similarities between neural stem cells and putative cancer stem cells that support the growth of malignant gliomas. A link among mGlu receptors, stem cells and cancer is supported by the finding that mGlu4 receptors are expressed by cerebellar granule cell neuroprogenitors, which are the putative cells of origin of medulloblastomas. The study of mGlu receptors in stem/progenitor cells has potential applications in the optimisation of protocols of cell expansion and differentiation aimed at cell replacement strategies, and may gain new insights into the pathophysiology of neurodevelopmental disorders and brain tumours.
Neuropharmacology | 2005
Irene Cappuccio; Paola Spinsanti; Antonio Porcellini; Francesca Desiderati; Teresa De Vita; Marianna Storto; L Capobianco; Giuseppe Battaglia; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Daniela Melchiorri
Cultured mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells maintained under undifferentiated conditions (i.e. grown in medium containing 15% FCS and leukemia inhibitory factor--LIF) expressed mGlu5 metabotropic glutamate receptors. Activation of these receptors with quisqualate increased [Ca2+]i but only when cultures were deprived of extracellular glutamate, indicating that the receptor was saturated by the endogenous glutamate. Pharmacological blockade of mGlu5 receptors with 2-methyl-6-(phenylethynyl)pyridine (MPEP) or antisense-induced knock-down of mGlu5 receptors decreased the expression of the two main transcription factors that sustain ES cell self-renewal, i.e. Oct-4 and Nanog, as assessed by real-time PCR and immunoblotting. Exposure of ES cell cultures to MPEP also reduced alkaline phosphatase activity, a marker of undifferentiated ES cells. These data support a critical role for mGlu receptors in early development showing that mGlu5 receptors are expressed by ES cells and their activation sustains ES cell self-renewal in culture.
PLOS ONE | 2009
Giuseppe Battaglia; Gemma Molinaro; Barbara Riozzi; Marianna Storto; Carla L. Busceti; Paola Spinsanti; Domenico Bucci; Valentina Di Liberto; Giuseppina Mudò; Corrado Corti; Mauro Corsi; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Natale Belluardo; Valeria Bruno
Metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptors have been considered potential targets for the therapy of experimental parkinsonism. One hypothetical advantage associated with the use of mGlu receptor ligands is the lack of the adverse effects typically induced by ionotropic glutamate receptor antagonists, such as sedation, ataxia, and severe learning impairment. Low doses of the mGlu2/3 metabotropic glutamate receptor agonist, LY379268 (0.25–3 mg/kg, i.p.) increased glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) mRNA and protein levels in the mouse brain, as assessed by in situ hybridization, real-time PCR, immunoblotting, and immunohistochemistry. This increase was prominent in the striatum, but was also observed in the cerebral cortex. GDNF mRNA levels peaked at 3 h and declined afterwards, whereas GDNF protein levels progressively increased from 24 to 72 h following LY379268 injection. The action of LY379268 was abrogated by the mGlu2/3 receptor antagonist, LY341495 (1 mg/kg, i.p.), and was lost in mGlu3 receptor knockout mice, but not in mGlu2 receptor knockout mice. In pure cultures of striatal neurons, the increase in GDNF induced by LY379268 required the activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase pathways, as shown by the use of specific inhibitors of the two pathways. Both in vivo and in vitro studies led to the conclusion that neurons were the only source of GDNF in response to mGlu3 receptor activation. Remarkably, acute or repeated injections of LY379268 at doses that enhanced striatal GDNF levels (0.25 or 3 mg/kg, i.p.) were highly protective against nigro-striatal damage induced by 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine in mice, as assessed by stereological counting of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive neurons in the pars compacta of the substantia nigra. We speculate that selective mGlu3 receptor agonists or enhancers are potential candidates as neuroprotective agents in Parkinsons disease, and their use might circumvent the limitations associated with the administration of exogenous GDNF.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2005
Laura Calò; Valeria Bruno; Paola Spinsanti; G. Molinari; V. Korkhov; Z. Esposito; M. Patanè; Daniela Melchiorri; Michael Freissmuth; Ferdinando Nicoletti
We examined the interaction between ephrins and metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptors in the developing brain and cultured neurons. EphrinB2 coimmunoprecipitated with mGlu1a receptors, in all of the brain regions examined, and with mGlu5 receptors in the corpus striatum. In striatal slices, activation of ephrinB2 by a clustered form of its target receptor, EphB1, amplified the mGlu receptor-mediated stimulation of polyphosphoinositide (PI) hydrolysis. This effect was abolished in slices treated with mGlu1 or NMDA receptor antagonists but was not affected by pharmacological blockade of mGlu5 receptors. An interaction among ephrinB2, mGlu1 receptor, and NMDA was supported by the following observations: (1) the NR1 subunit of NMDA receptors coimmunoprecipitated with mGlu1a receptors and ephrinB2 in striatal lysates; (2) clustered EphB1 amplified excitatory amino acid-stimulated PI hydrolysis in cultured granule cells grown under conditions that favored the expression of mGlu1a receptors; and (3) clustered EphB1 amplified the enhancing effect of mGlu receptor agonists on NMDA toxicity in cortical cultures, and its action was sensitive to mGlu1 receptor antagonists. Finally, fluorescence resonance energy transfer and coclustering analysis in human embryonic kidney 293 cells excluded a physical interaction between ephrinB2 and mGlu1a (or mGlu5 receptors). A functional interaction between ephrinB and mGlu1 receptors, which likely involves adaptor or scaffolding proteins, might have an important role in the regulation of developmental plasticity.
Journal of Neurochemistry | 2006
Paola Spinsanti; Teresa De Vita; Sara Di Castro; Marianna Storto; Pietro Formisano; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Daniela Melchiorri
We have shown that endogenous activation of type 5 metabotropic glutamate (mGlu5) receptors supports the maintenance of a pluripotent, undifferentiated state in D3 mouse embryonic stem cells cultured in the presence of leukaemia inhibitory factor (LIF). Here, we examined the interaction between LIF and mGlu5 receptors using as a read‐out the immediate early gene, c‐Myc. The selective mGlu5 receptor antagonist, 2‐methyl‐6‐(phenylenthynyl)pyridine (MPEP; 1 μm), reduced the increase in c‐Myc protein levels induced by LIF by enhancing c‐Myc ubiquitination. A reduction in c‐Myc levels was also observed following small interfering RNA‐mediated mGlu5 receptor gene silencing. MPEP reduced glycogen synthase kinase‐3β phosphorylation on Ser9, but increased phosphorylation of the phosphatidylinositol‐3‐kinase (PI‐3‐K) substrate, AKT. In our hands, activated PI‐3‐K reduced the stability of c‐Myc, because (i) the PI‐3‐K inhibitor, LY294002, prevented the reduction in c‐Myc levels induced by MPEP; and (ii) over‐expression of AKT promoted c‐Myc ubiquitination. All effects of MPEP were mimicked by protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors and reversed by the PKC activator, tetradecanoylphorbol‐13‐acetate. We conclude that endogenous activation of mGlu5 receptors sustains the increase in c‐Myc induced by LIF in embryonic stem cells by inhibiting both glycogen synthase kinase‐3β and PI‐3‐K, both effects resulting from the activation of PKC.
Journal of Virology | 2001
Pankaj Trivedi; Paola Spinsanti; Laura Cuomo; Massimo Volpe; Kenzo Takada; Luigi Frati; Alberto Faggioni
ABSTRACT Epstein-Barr virus (EBV)-negative Burkitt lymphomas (BLs) can be infected in vitro with prototype EBV strains to study how the virus may affect the phenotype of tumor cells. Studies thus far have concentrated on the use of transforming B95-8 and nontransforming P3HR1 strains. Immunological and phenotypic differences between the sublines infected with these two strains were reported. The majority of these differences, if not all, can be attributed to the lack of EBNA-2 coding sequences in the P3HR1 strain. The recent development of a selectable Akata strain has opened up new possibilities for infecting epithelial and T cells as well. We infected five EBV-negative BL lines with the recombinant Akata virus. Our results indicate that the infected cell lines BL28, Ramos, and DG75 express EBNA-1, EBNA-2, and LMP1, the viral proteins associated with type III latency, and use both YUK and QUK splices. In contrast, two EBV-negative variants of Akata and Mutu when reinfected displayed restricted type I latency and expressed only EBNA-1. All clones of infected Mutu cells used the QUK splice exclusively. The usage of Qp was observed in a majority of Akata clones. Some Akata clones, however, were found to have double promoter usage (Qp and C/Wp) but at 4 months after infection did not express EBNA-2. The results demonstrate differential regulation of EBV latency in BLs with the same recombinant viral strain and suggest that the choice of latency type may be cell dependent. The restricted latency observed for infected Akata and Mutu cells indicates that a BL may opt for type I latency in the absence of immune pressure as well.
Neuropharmacology | 2006
Irene Cappuccio; Roberta Verani; Paola Spinsanti; Cristiano Niccolini; Roberto Gradini; Santa Costantino; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Daniela Melchiorri
The mGlu5 receptor is the only metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype expressed by mouse embryonic stem (ES) cells grown under non-differentiating conditions [Cappuccio, I., Spinanti, P. Porcellini, A., Desiderati, F., De Vita, T., Storto, M., Capobianco, L., Battaglia, G., Nicoletti, F., Melchiorri, D., 2005. Endogenous activation of mGlu5 metabotropic glutamate receptors supports self-renewal of cultured mouse embryonic stem cells. Neuropharmacology 1, 196-205]. We now report that ES cells differentiating into embryoid bodies (EBs) progressively lose mGlu5 receptors and begin to express mGlu4 receptors at both mRNA and proteinc level. A 4-day treatment of EBs with the mGlu4 receptor agonist, L-2-amino-4-phosphonobutanoate (L-AP4), increased mRNA levels of the mesoderm marker, brachyury and the endoderm marker, H19, and decreased the expression of the transcript for the primitive ectoderm marker, fibroblast-growth factor-5 (FGF-5). These effects were prevented by the mGlu4 receptor antagonists, alpha-methylserine-O-phosphate (MSOP). Plating of EBs for 4 days in vitro in ITSFn medium induced cell differentiation towards a neural lineage, as reflected by the expression of the intermediate filament protein, nestin, and the homeobox protein, Dlx-2. Pharmacological activation of mGlu4 receptors during cell incubation in ITSFn medium increased the expression of both neural markers. Similar results were obtained when neural differentiation was induced by exposure of EBs to retinoic acid. These data suggest that differentiation of cultured ES cells is associated with changes in the expression pattern of mGlu receptors and that activation of mGlu4 receptors affects cell differentiation in a context-dependent manner.