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Dive into the research topics where Pasqualina Buono is active.

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Featured researches published by Pasqualina Buono.


Obesity | 2010

miR-519d overexpression is associated with human obesity.

Rosanna Martinelli; Carmela Nardelli; Vincenzo Pilone; Tonia Buonomo; Rosario Liguori; Ilenia Castanò; Pasqualina Buono; Stefania Masone; Giovanni Persico; Pietro Forestieri; Lucio Pastore; Lucia Sacchetti

Obesity is a consequence of imbalance of food intake and energy expenditure that results in storage of energy as fat, primarily in adipose tissue. MicroRNAs are non‐coding RNAs that regulate gene expression in metabolic pathways and they are also involved in fat‐cell development. The aim of this study was to evaluate whether microRNA dysfunction contributes to obesity. We analyzed, by microarray, the expression profile of 1,458 microRNAs in subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) from nondiabetic severely obese (n = 20) and nonobese adults (n = 8). Among 42 differently expressed microRNAs, we confirmed by reverse‐transcription PCR (RT‐PCR) that miR‐519d was overexpressed whereas the protein levels of peroxisome proliferator‐activated receptor‐α (PPARA) (a predicted miR 519d target) were lower, at western analysis, in severely obese vs. nonobese subjects. We also show that miR‐519d specifically and dose‐dependently suppressed translation of the PPARA protein, and increased lipid accumulation during preadipocyte differentiation. Because PPARA plays a central role in fatty acid homeostasis, and in the transcriptional regulation of genes that are necessary for maintenance of the redox balance during the oxidative catabolism of fatty acids, we suggest that PPARA loss and miR‐519d overexpression could be associated with metabolic imbalance and subsequent adipocyte hypertrophy in SAT during obesity.


Molecules | 2015

Biological and Nutritional Properties of Palm Oil and Palmitic Acid: Effects on Health

Annamaria Mancini; Esther Imperlini; Ersilia Nigro; Concetta Montagnese; Aurora Daniele; Stefania Orrù; Pasqualina Buono

A growing body of evidence highlights the close association between nutrition and human health. Fat is an essential macronutrient, and vegetable oils, such as palm oil, are widely used in the food industry and highly represented in the human diet. Palmitic acid, a saturated fatty acid, is the principal constituent of refined palm oil. In the last few decades, controversial studies have reported potential unhealthy effects of palm oil due to the high palmitic acid content. In this review we provide a concise and comprehensive update on the functional role of palm oil and palmitic acid in the development of obesity, type 2 diabetes mellitus, cardiovascular diseases and cancer. The atherogenic potential of palmitic acid and its stereospecific position in triacylglycerols are also discussed.


European Journal of Endocrinology | 2013

Adiponectin oligomers as potential indicators of adipose tissue improvement in obese subjects.

Anna De Rosa; Maria Ludovica Monaco; Mario Capasso; Pietro Forestieri; Vincenzo Pilone; Carmela Nardelli; Pasqualina Buono; Aurora Daniele

OBJECTIVE Adiponectin is an adipocytokine that exerts beneficial effects on obesity and related disorders by two receptors (ADIPORs). Adiponectin is produced as a monomer that circulates in serum as different oligomers. The oligomerization state and the tissue expression of adiponectin and ADIPORs are linked to its biological activities. In this study, the levels of total adiponectin and its oligomers were evaluated in relation to obesity and surgical weight loss. The expression of adiponectin and ADIPORs was analyzed in visceral and subcutaneous adipose tissues of obese patients. DESIGN AND METHODS In 25 obese patients and 44 age- and sex-matched controls, the serum levels of adiponectin and its oligomers were measured and compared by ELISA, western blotting, and gel filtration. The expression of adiponectin and ADIPORs in both adipose tissues was evaluated by real-time quantitative PCR and western blotting. RESULTS The amount of each adiponectin oligomer, including the monomer, increases after weight loss. The reduced circulating levels of adiponectin and its oligomers are not associated with the adipose tissue depot-specific expression of adiponectin and ADIPORs. CONCLUSIONS Our results suggest that in patients, adiposity is associated with the serum concentrations of adiponectin and its oligomers but not with adipose tissue depot-specific expression of adiponectin and ADIPORs. In particular, the increase in adiponectin monomer levels could probably be related to the improvement of the whole-body energy metabolism then being involved in the improvement of adipose tissue function after weight loss. This work indicates the importance of assessing the whole adiponectin oligomeric profile as further potential indicators of adipose tissue functions in obesity.


Journal of Neurocytology | 2001

Differential distribution of aldolase A and C in the human central nervous system.

Pasqualina Buono; Francesco Paolo D'Armiento; Giuseppe Terzi; Andreina Alfieri; F. Salvatore

We have analyzed the distribution of aldolase A and C mRNAs and proteins in various areas of the human brain using Northern blot analyses and immunohistochemistry. Aldolase A mRNA expression was higher than aldolase C mRNA expression in all areas of the brain examined. Aldolase C mRNA expression was highest in the cerebellum. Aldolase C protein was present in well-delimited regions of the CNS, and was distributed in stripes in the Purkinje cell layer of the cerebellum, in the inferior olives and in the sensory neurons of the posterior horn of the spinal cord. The novel finding of aldolase C in well-delimited cell compartments of the human cerebellum and in several other areas of the CNS lends weight to the hypothesis that this protein exerts other functions (e.g. sensory transmission) besides those characteristic of a glycolytic enzyme.


Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism | 2008

Molecular Analysis of the Adiponectin Gene in Severely Obese Patients from Southern Italy

A. Daniele; R. Cammarata; Fabrizio Pasanisi; Carmine Finelli; G. Salvatori; Giuseppe Calcagno; R. Bracale; Giuseppe Labruna; Carmela Nardelli; Pasqualina Buono; Lucia Sacchetti; Franco Contaldo; G. Oriani

Background: Severe obesity is a major worldwide public health concern affecting 0.5–5% of the adult population. Adiponectin (Acpr30), an adipokine secreted from adipocytes, shows pleiotropic beneficial effects on obesity and related disorders. In this study, sequence analysis of Acpr30 gene (ACDC) was performed in a highly selected population of severely obese young adult patients from Southern Italy to investigate the associations between polymorphisms in the ACDC gene and the development of severe obesity concomitantly with other features of the metabolic syndrome. Methods: The ACDC gene was analyzed by direct sequencing in the severely obese patients (n = 220) and compared to healthy controls (n = 116). The associations between the ACDC gene single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and the levels of serum Acpr30 as well as the correlation with the presence of severe obesity jointly associated with other features of the metabolic syndrome were also investigated. Total serum Acpr30 concentrations were measured by the ELISA method. Results: ACDC gene molecular screening revealed the presence of previously described SNPs and a new nucleotide alteration, c.355T>G, leading to a protein variant, p.L119V. Measurement of serum concentration of Acpr30 demonstrated lower levels of Acpr30 in the obese population compared to controls (30.5 ± 28.3 vs. 43.9 ± 35.7 μg/ml, p < 0.01); in particular, significantly lower Acpr30 concentrations were observed in obese patients bearing c.–11377C>G SNP CG+GG genotypes than in those with CC genotype (22.9 ± 20.5 vs. 33.1 ± 29.4 μg/ml, p < 0.05). Conclusions: Our results confirmed that low serum levels of Acpr30 are related to severe obesity and a difference in protein expression is associated with variants in ACDC gene promoter region.


Proteomics | 2010

Androgen receptor signaling induced by supraphysiological doses of dihydrotestosterone in human peripheral blood lymphocytes

Esther Imperlini; Annamaria Mancini; Sara Spaziani; Domenico Martone; Andreina Alfieri; Marica Gemei; Luigi Del Vecchio; Pasqualina Buono; Stefania Orrù

Anabolic androgenic steroids, a class of steroid hormones related to testosterone, are natural ligands of androgen receptor (AR), a member of the nuclear receptor superfamily of ligand‐activated transcription factors. AR binds specific DNA elements, known as androgen–response elements. Testosterone, the main male sexual hormone, binds AR directly and indirectly, through conversion into dihydrotestosterone (DHT), its more active metabolite. Anabolic androgenic steroids are frequently detected in the urine of doped athletes; their consumption is also growing among sport amateurs and adolescents. The effects of androgens can differ depending on the target cells and/or tissues. To gain insight into transcription activation mechanisms of AR, we investigated AR protein signaling in human peripheral blood lymphocytes treated with supraphysiological doses of DHT. We performed a comparative proteomic analysis and we identified about 30 differentially expressed proteins. At least five species contained a consensus androgen–response elements sequence in the promoter region of related coding genes. The analysis also revealed that high doses of DHT activate the drug detoxification process, could stimulate an increase in cell motility and exert a prosurvival effect rather than an apoptotic one.


BioMed Research International | 2013

Haplogroup T Is an Obesity Risk Factor: Mitochondrial DNA Haplotyping in a Morbid Obese Population from Southern Italy

Carmela Nardelli; Giuseppe Labruna; Rosario Liguori; Cristina Mazzaccara; Maddalena Ferrigno; Valentina Capobianco; Massimo Pezzuti; Giuseppe Castaldo; Eduardo Farinaro; Franco Contaldo; Pasqualina Buono; Lucia Sacchetti; Fabrizio Pasanisi

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) haplogroups have been associated with the expression of mitochondrial-related diseases and with metabolic alterations, but their role has not yet been investigated in morbid obese Caucasian subjects. Therefore, we investigated the association between mitochondrial haplogroups and morbid obesity in patients from southern Italy. The mtDNA D-loop of morbid obese patients (n = 500; BMI > 40 kg/m2) and controls (n = 216; BMI < 25 kg/m2) was sequenced to determine the mtDNA haplogroups. The T and J haplogroup frequencies were higher and lower, respectively, in obese subjects than in controls. Women bearing haplogroup T or J had twice or half the risk of obesity. Binomial logistic regression analysis showed that haplogroup T and systolic blood pressure are risk factors for a high degree of morbid obesity, namely, BMI > 45 kg/m2 and in fact together account for 8% of the BMI. In conclusion, our finding that haplogroup T increases the risk of obesity by about two-fold, suggests that, besides nuclear genome variations and environmental factors, the T haplogroup plays a role in morbid obesity in our study population from southern Italy.


Proteomics | 2014

Insulin‐like growth factor 1 receptor signaling induced by supraphysiological doses of IGF‐1 in human peripheral blood lymphocytes

Sara Spaziani; Esther Imperlini; Annamaria Mancini; Marianna Caterino; Pasqualina Buono; Stefania Orrù

Insulin‐like growth factor‐1 (IGF‐1) mediates some of growth hormone anabolic functions through its receptor, IGF‐1R. Following ligand binding, intracellular signaling pathways are activated favouring proliferation, cell survival, tissue growth, development, and differentiation. IGF‐1 is included in the World Anti‐Doping Agency Prohibited List. While the evidence for IGF‐1 as performance‐enhancing substrate in healthy humans is still weak, clinical studies demonstrated that the endogenous growth hormone/IGF‐1 excess is associated with cardiovascular implications. Previously, we demonstrated that human peripheral blood lymphocytes represent a suitable system to identify a gene signature, related to dihydrotestosterone or IGF‐1 abuse, independent from the type of sport. In addition, in a proteomic study, we demonstrated that dihydrotestosterone hyperdosage affects cell motility and apoptosis. Here, we investigate the doping action of IGF‐1 by means of a differential proteomic approach and specific protein arrays, revealing an active cytoskeletal reorganization mediated by Stat‐1; moreover, IGF‐1 stimulation produces a sustained activation of different signaling pathways as well as an overproduction of cytokines positively related to immune response and inflammation. In conclusion, these data indicate that, following IGF‐1 hyperdosage, circulating peripheral blood lymphocytes could be more prone to transendothelial migration.


Marine Biotechnology | 2004

Genetic Typing of Corallium rubrum

D. del Gaudio; Giuliana Fortunato; M. Borriello; Josep Maria Gili; Pasqualina Buono; Giuseppe Calcagno; F. Salvatore; Lucia Sacchetti

Corallium rubrum taxonomy is based on morphologic criteria; little is known about its genome. We set up a rapid, easy method based on amplified fragment length polymorphism to characterize the genetic patterns of C. rubrum in an attempt to understand better the evolutionary relations between species from diverse geographic areas and to help define migration patterns. Applying this procedure to C. rubrum specimens from Spain and Italy, we identified 6 AFLP amplification fragments common to the 4 coral populations studied and 4 fragments that differentiated between these populations. Using this characterization we were able to plot a “genetic identity card” of this commercially harvested species, which is also a marker of pollution.


Gene | 2010

Functional analysis of melanocortin-4-receptor mutants identified in severely obese subjects living in Southern Italy

Andreina Alfieri; Fabrizio Pasanisi; Salvatore Salzano; Luciana Esposito; Domenico Martone; Domenico Tafuri; Aurora Daniele; Franco Contaldo; Lucia Sacchetti; Adriana Zagari; Pasqualina Buono

The melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) is involved in regulating energy homeostasis; mutations in this gene have been associated with 1-5% of early-onset human obesity. The aim of this study was to functionally characterize MC4R mutations identified in morbidly obese subjects living in Southern Italy. We studied their ligand binding, signaling pathway and subcellular localization. As expected, mutants Q43X and S19fsX51, which produce truncated forms of receptor, were devoid of activity. The activity of mutants W174C and A175T were very different even though the mutations are adjacent and are in the same transmembrane helix (TMH). In fact, the production and expression of mutant A175T on the plasma-membrane (PM) was similar to that of the wild-type (wt) receptor and the mutant retained 70% of wt receptor activity; on the contrary, the production of W174C mutant in the cytoplasm was similar to that of the wt receptor and mutant A175T but was only barely detectable on the PM and was devoid of activity. Confocal microscopy showed that W174C remained entrapped in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of the cells. Structural analysis showed that substitution of Trp174, located in the middle of TMH4 and 100% conserved in all known MC4Rs, with Cys could impair the relative orientation of TMH2 and TMH4 thereby affecting the overall protein architecture. Furthermore, co-expression studies showed that mutant A175T but not W174C had a dominant negative effect on the wt receptor activity.

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Andreina Alfieri

University of Naples Federico II

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Annamaria Mancini

University of Naples Federico II

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Stefania Orrù

University of Naples Federico II

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Lucia Sacchetti

University of Naples Federico II

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Aurora Daniele

Seconda Università degli Studi di Napoli

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Carmela Nardelli

University of Naples Federico II

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Fabrizio Pasanisi

University of Naples Federico II

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Domenico Martone

University of Naples Federico II

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Franco Contaldo

University of Naples Federico II

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