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Dive into the research topics where Paolo Romagnoli is active.

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Featured researches published by Paolo Romagnoli.


Cell Death & Differentiation | 2001

Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase inhibitors attenuate necrotic but not apoptotic neuronal death in experimental models of cerebral ischemia

Flavio Moroni; Elena Meli; Fiamma Peruginelli; Alberto Chiarugi; Andrea Cozzi; Roberta Picca; Paolo Romagnoli; Roberto Pellicciari; Domenico E. Pellegrini-Giampietro

An excessive activation of poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) has been proposed to play a key role in post-ischemic neuronal death. We examined the neuroprotective effects of the PARP inhibitors benzamide, 6(5H)-phenanthridinone, and 3,4-dihydro-5-[4-1(1-piperidinyl)buthoxy]-1(2H)-isoquinolinone in three rodent models of cerebral ischemia. Increasing concentrations of the three PARP inhibitors attenuated neuronal injury induced by 60 min oxygen-glucose deprivation (OGD) in mixed cortical cell cultures, but were unable to reduce CA1 pyramidal cell loss in organotypic hippocampal slices exposed to 30 min OGD or in gerbils following 5 min bilateral carotid occlusion. We then examined the necrotic and apoptotic features of OGD-induced neurodegeneration in cortical cells and hippocampal slices using biochemical and morphological approaches. Cortical cells exposed to OGD released lactate dehydrogenase into the medium and displayed ultrastructural features of necrotic cell death, whereas no caspase-3 activation nor morphological characteristics of apoptosis were observed at any time point after OGD. In contrast, a marked increase in caspase-3 activity was observed in organotypic hippocampal slices after OGD, together with fluorescence and electron microscope evidence of apoptotic neuronal death in the CA1 subregion. Moreover, the caspase inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK reduced OGD-induced CA1 pyramidal cell loss. These findings suggest that PARP overactivation may be an important mechanism leading to post-ischemic neurodegeneration of the necrotic but not of the apoptotic type. Cell Death and Differentiation (2001) 8, 921–932


Gastroenterology | 1992

Evidence for a Storage Pool Defect in Platelets From Cirrhotic Patients With Defective Aggregation

Giacomo Laffi; Fabio Marra; Paolo Gresele; Paolo Romagnoli; Anna Palermo; Olga Bartolini; Antonella Simoni; Luisa Orlandi; Maria Laura Selli; Giuseppe G. Nenci; Paolo Gentilini

The mechanisms underlying the defective platelet function in cirrhotic patients were investigated. Eleven cirrhotic patients with mild disease (group 1), 20 patients with severe cirrhosis (group 2), and 31 controls were studied. Platelet aggregation was significantly reduced in cirrhotics compared with controls. Compared with controls, cirrhotic patients in group 2 showed a significant reduction in the total content of adenosine triphosphate (57.8 +/- 7.8 vs. 26.1 +/- 6.3 mumol/10(11) platelets; P less than 0.05), 5-hydroxytryptamine (285 +/- 26 vs. 104 +/- 38 nmol/10(11) platelets; P less than 0.05), beta-thromboglobulin (2129 +/- 120 vs. 1223 +/- 161 ng/10(8) platelets; P less than 0.01), and platelet factor 4 (1389 +/- 108 vs. 805 +/- 176 ng/10(8) platelets; P less than 0.05). In patients with severe disease, an increase in plasma beta-thromboglobulin-platelet factor 4 ratio, an index of in vivo platelet activation, was observed (controls, 3.50 +/- 0.50; group 1, 4.02 +/- 0.80; and group 2, 6.59 +/- 1.15). Our data indicate the existence of a platelet storage pool defect, which may favor the bleeding tendency of cirrhotic patients.


Oral Surgery, Oral Medicine, Oral Pathology | 1988

Oral hairy leukoplakia among HIV-positive intravenous drug abusers: A clinicopathologic and ultrastructural study

Giuseppe Ficarra; Roberto Barone; Domenico Gaglioti; Domenico Milo; Rossella Riccardi; Paolo Romagnoli; Monica Zorn

During a prospective investigation of oral lesions of 120 consecutive patients positive for human immunodeficiency virus, belonging to the intravenous drug abuser risk group and other risk categories, we observed hairy leukoplakia (HL) in 23 cases (19%). The median age of the patients was 27 years (range, 20 to 50 years). Twenty patients were men and three were women. All but two of the twenty three patients used intravenous drugs for a median period of 6 years (range, 5 to 18 years) and were involved in several episodes of needle sharing. Eight men were also bisexual, one man was homosexual, and one man was hemophiliac and bisexual. Eleven patients had asymptomatic infection, five had lymphadenopathy syndrome, six had AIDS-related complex, and one had acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. In all patients, HL lesions were localized on the lateral borders of the tongue. In twelve patients, the lesion was unilateral, and in eleven patients, it was bilateral. Microscopically, hyperparakeratosis and the presence of koilocytes were observed in all cases. Surface candidiasis could be detected with staining with periodic acid-Schiff in two thirds of the cases. In four cases, electron microscopy showed the presence of intracellular and extracellular hyphae of Candida albicans in the parakeratin layer associated with coccobacilli in the spaces between surface epithelial cells. The spinous layer included koilocytes, which had a clear cytoplasmic matrix, sparse organelles and tonofilaments, and dispersed chromatin. These cells were found to be infected by a herpes-type virus in all cases examined. There was no ultrastructural evidence of human papillomavirus in the nuclei of the epithelial cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)


Oral Surgery Oral Medicine Oral Pathology Oral Radiology and Endodontology | 1997

Oral keratinocyte immune responses in HIV-associated candidiasis

Lewis R. Eversole; Peter A. Reichart; Giuseppe Ficarra; Andrea Schmidt-Westhausen; Paolo Romagnoli; Nicola Pimpinelli

INTRODUCTION Candidiasis is the most commonly encountered opportunistic infection among HIV-positive subjects. The purpose of this study was to assess specific keratinocyte immune parameters in the pseudomembranous and erythematous forms of HIV-associated oral candidiasis. MATERIAL/METHODS This collaborative study from three centers analyzed 25 HIV-positive and 10 HIV-negative subjects with either pseudomembranous or erythematous candidiasis. Oral biopsy specimens from lesional tissues were procured, and histopathologic features were correlated with immunohistochemical and in situ hybridization investigations for the expression of interleukin 1 alpha, interleukin 8, antimicrobial calprotectin, lymphocyte populations, and Candida antigen. RESULTS Both pseudomembranous and erythematous candidiasis among HIV-infected subjects showed a mild interface lymphocytic mucositis with the presence of neutrophilic subcorneal abscesses in the latter. Erythematous candidiasis cases that failed to show surface mycelia, did yield positive results for Candida antigens in the parakeratinized layer. The expression of inflammatory chemokines were positive in all groups and calprotectin appeared to serve as a keratinocyte barrier to hyphal penetration. CONCLUSIONS The erythematous form of candidiasis is often devoid of hyphae yet the presence of Candida antigens in the surface epithelium implicates an immune or allergic process. The intactness of chemokines and antimicrobial calprotectin in keratinocytes may explain why disseminated candidiasis is rarely encountered in HIV-infected patients.


Journal of Immunology | 2010

Inhibition of Immune Synapse by Altered Dendritic Cell Actin Distribution: A New Pathway of Mesenchymal Stem Cell Immune Regulation

Alessandra Aldinucci; Lisa Rizzetto; Laura Pieri; Daniele Nosi; Paolo Romagnoli; Tiziana Biagioli; Benedetta Mazzanti; Riccardo Saccardi; Luca Beltrame; Luca Massacesi; Duccio Cavalieri; Clara Ballerini

Immune synapse formation between dendritic cells (DCs) and T cells is one of the key events in immune reaction. In immunogenic synapses, the presence of fully mature DCs is mandatory; consequently, the modulation of DC maturation may promote tolerance and represents a valuable therapeutic approach in autoimmune diseases. In the field of cell therapy, bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been extensively studied for their immunoregulatory properties, such as inhibiting DC immunogenicity during in vitro differentiation and ameliorating in vivo models of autoimmune diseases (e.g., experimental allergic encephalomyelitis). MSCs seem to play different roles with regard to DCs, depending on cell concentration, mechanism of stimulation, and accompanying immune cells. The aim of this work was to elucidate the immunogenic effects of MSC/DC interactions during DC activation (LPS stimulation or Ag loading). Human monocyte-derived DCs, bone marrow-derived MSCs, and circulating lymphocytes obtained from healthy donors, as well as the laboratory-generated influenza virus hemagglutinin-derived peptide, aa 306–318 peptide-specific T cell line were used for this study. We demonstrate that MSCs mediate inhibition of DC function only upon cell–cell contact. Despite no modification observed in cell phenotype or cytokine production, MSC-treated DCs were unable to form active immune synapses; they retained endocytic activity and podosome-like structures, typical of immature DCs. The transcriptional program induced by MSC–DC direct interaction supports at the molecular pathway level the phenotypical features observed, indicating the genes involved into contact-induced rearrangement of DC cytoskeleton.


European Journal of Cell Biology | 2000

A possible role for the Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein in the regulation of epidermal basal cell proliferation.

Jens Hoffmann; Christiane Twiesselmann; Markus P. Kummer; Paolo Romagnoli; Volker Herzog

The regulation of epidermal growth involves a number of ions, growth factors and cytokines and possibly additional but as yet unknown factors. Here we report on the potential role of the secretory N-terminal domain (sAPP) of the Alzheimer amyloid precursor protein (APP) in the regulation of keratinocyte proliferation. In human skin APP was detectable predominantly in the basal cell layer of the epidermis whereas the immunocytochemical signal in the underlying mesenchymal tissue was very low. Cultured normal human keratinocytes expressed the three APP isoforms 695, 751 and 770 with highest values for the isoforms 751 and 770. HaCaT cells, a spontaneously immortalized human keratinocyte cell line, exhibited almost identical patterns in the expression of the APP isoforms and in the release of endogenous sAPP. In HaCaT cells, recombinant sAPP (sAPPrec) was found to compete with endogenous sAPP for the same binding sites. Binding of sAPPrec was specific and occurred in microdomains of approximately 0.1 to approximately 0.3 microm in diameter. At 10 nM, sAPPrec binding induced a 2- to 4-fold increase in the rate of cell growth. sAPP concentrations in the conditioned media were found to reach 5-20 nM which is in the mitogenic range of sAPPrec. The proliferative effect of sAPP was inhibited by approximately 50% when antisense oligonucleotides directed against the APP mRNA were applied. The predominant expression of


Diseases of The Colon & Rectum | 1985

Extracolonic polyps in familial polyposis coli and Gardner's syndrome

Francesco Tonelli; Francesco Nardi; Paolo Bechi; Gian Luigi Taddei; P. Gozzo; Paolo Romagnoli

Endoscopy and biopsy of the upper gastrointestinal tract and terminal ileum were performed in 24 patients with familial polyposis or Gardners syndrome in order to further define the incidence of extracolonic adenomatous polyps. Polyps, usually multiple and small in size, were detected in the gastric fundus (12.5 percent), antrum (29.1 percent), duodenum (66.6 percent), and terminal ileum (41.7 percent). Histology showed hyperplasia of the fundic glands and cystic dilatation in the polyps of gastric fundus, and adenomas in several cases of antral (three patients) or duodenal polyps (14 patients). Polyps of the terminal ileum were either adenomas (five patients) or lymphoid aggregates. Patients with stigmata of Gardners syndrome, desmoids or mesenteric fibromatosis presented a major incidence of adenomas in the duodenum, but not in other parts of the digestive tract investigated. Subsequent checkup after an average of 33 months in ten patients revealed an increase of lesions only in the duodenum in two patients. These findings confirm that adenomatous polyps are not limited to the colon and rectum, as previously believed, but can affect the whole gastrointestinal tract. Periodic surveillance of mucosa seems to be indicated, especially for the duodenum, since degeneration of adenomas into carcinoma is possible


Oral Oncology | 1997

Traumatic eosinophilic granuloma of the oral mucosa: a CD30+(Ki-1) lymphoproliferative disorder?☆

Giuseppe Ficarra; Francesca Prignano; Paolo Romagnoli

Traumatic eosinophilic granuloma of the oral mucosa, also known as eosinophilic ulcer, is considered to be a reactive lesion of unknown aetiology. It usually presents as a tongue ulcer and injury has been considered to play a role in its cause. We present a 72-year-old man who had suffered multiple episodes of recurrent eosinophilic ulcers of the oral mucosa which underwent self-healing. Biopsy specimens (including fresh tissue) were studied with a combination of histology, electron microscopy and immunohistochemistry. A dense cell infiltrate composed of eosinophilis, lymphocytes and large mononuclear cells was constantly shown. Immunostains showed that the infiltrate was mainly composed of CD3+,CD4+,CD8-T-cells and CD1a + dendritic cells. Approximately 70% of the T-cells expressed CD30 (Ki-1) antigen. On the basis of the clinical behaviour, histology and antigenic features, it seems reasonable to suggest that traumatic eosinophilic granuloma of the oral mucosa may represent the oral countpart of primary cutaneous CD30 (Ki-1)-positive lymphoproliferative disorders. This group of cutaneous lymphomas are indeed characterised by non-aggressive clinical behaviour (sequential evolution in ulceration, necrosis and self-regression) and expression of CD30 antigen by the infiltrating large T-cells.


Gastroenterology | 1987

Gastric histology and fasting bile reflux after partial gastrectomy

Paolo Bechi; Andrea Amorosi; Roberto Mazzanti; Paolo Romagnoli; Tonelli L

Abstract Forty-four randomized, partially gastrectomized subjects were studied to assess whether gastric histologie findings after partial gastrectomy were related to reflux. Gastric biopsy specimens (12) were taken at different distances from the anastomosis. Histologic findings were as follows: (a) hyperplastic changes of the foveolar epithelium and (b) loss of the chief and parietal gland cells with atrophy of gastric glands (chronic atrophic gastritis). Hyperplastic changes typical of the perianastomotic area gradually decreased with increasing distance from the anastomosis. Hyperplastic changes showed a greater prevalence in Billroth II than in Billroth I subjects (100% vs. 29.4%). No significant association was found between histologic findings and symptoms. Hourly bile acid quantity (fasting bile reflux) and concentration were determined in the gastric aspirates. Bile reflux was greater after Billroth II than after Billroth I (fasting bile reflux median values: 30.5 vs. 0.18 μmol/h, respectively). The same was true for bile acid concentration (mean bile acid concentration median values: 624.9 vs. 17.5 μmol/L, respectively). Moreover, Billroth I subjects with hyperplasia had a greater quantity and concentration of reflux than those without hyperplasia (fasting bile reflux and mean bile acid concentration median values: 2.6 vs. 0.8 μmol/h and 4.7 vs. 2.7 μmol/L, respectively). These findings show that bile reflux is correlated with hyperplastic changes of the foveolar epithelium, but prevalence and severity of atrophic gastritis were not related to reflux. Therefore, although we failed to show any relationship between chronic atrophic gastritis and reflux, foveolar hyperplasia was shown to be reflux related.


Head and Neck-journal for The Sciences and Specialties of The Head and Neck | 2009

CO2 laser therapy in Tis and T1 glottic cancer: Indications and results

Lucio Rucci; Paolo Romagnoli; Jacopo Scala

Laser cordectomy for glottic cancer is still hampered by recurrence, which is more frequent upon anterior commissure (AC) involvement. Analysis of results may be a step to improve the efficacy of this therapy for early glottic cancer.

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L. Domenici

University of Florence

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Laura Pieri

University of Florence

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