Rachele Manca
University of Pavia
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Publication
Featured researches published by Rachele Manca.
PLOS ONE | 2010
Claudia Scotti; Patrizia Sommi; Maria Valentina Pasquetto; Donata Cappelletti; Simona Stivala; Paola Mignosi; Monica Savio; Laurent R. Chiarelli; Giovanna Valentini; Victor M. Bolanos-Garcia; Douglas Scott Merrell; Silvia Franchini; Maria Luisa Verona; Cristina Bolis; Enrico Solcia; Rachele Manca; Diego Franciotta; Andrea Casasco; Paola Filipazzi; Elisabetta Zardini; Vanio Vannini
Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) is a major human pathogen causing chronic gastritis, peptic ulcer, gastric cancer, and mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue lymphoma. One of the mechanisms whereby it induces damage depends on its interference with proliferation of host tissues. We here describe the discovery of a novel bacterial factor able to inhibit the cell-cycle of exposed cells, both of gastric and non-gastric origin. An integrated approach was adopted to isolate and characterise the molecule from the bacterial culture filtrate produced in a protein-free medium: size-exclusion chromatography, non-reducing gel electrophoresis, mass spectrometry, mutant analysis, recombinant protein expression and enzymatic assays. L-asparaginase was identified as the factor responsible for cell-cycle inhibition of fibroblasts and gastric cell lines. Its effect on cell-cycle was confirmed by inhibitors, a knockout strain and the action of recombinant L-asparaginase on cell lines. Interference with cell-cycle in vitro depended on cell genotype and was related to the expression levels of the concurrent enzyme asparagine synthetase. Bacterial subcellular distribution of L-asparaginase was also analysed along with its immunogenicity. H. pylori L-asparaginase is a novel antigen that functions as a cell-cycle inhibitor of fibroblasts and gastric cell lines. We give evidence supporting a role in the pathogenesis of H. pylori-related diseases and discuss its potential diagnostic application.
Helicobacter | 2009
Vittorio Necchi; Rachele Manca; Vittorio Ricci; Enrico Solcia
Background: Despite extensive experimental investigation stressing the importance of bacterial interaction with dendritic cells (DCs), evidence regarding direct interaction of Helicobacter pylori or its virulence products with DCs in the human gastric mucosa is lacking.
Human Pathology | 2013
Alessandro Vanoli; Stefano La Rosa; Ombretta Luinetti; Catherine Klersy; Rachele Manca; Costanza Alvisi; Sandro Rossi; Erminio Trespi; Adriano Zangrandi; Fausto Sessa; Carlo Capella; Enrico Solcia
The role of putative preneoplastic enterochromaffin-like cell lesions, either hyperplastic or dysplastic, in the genesis of type 1 enterochromaffin-like cell neuroendocrine tumors associated with type A chronic atrophic gastritis, their actual neoplastic risk, and their precise histogenetic mechanism deserve further clarification by specific histopathologic studies coupled with patient follow-up. A total of 100 patients with severe type A chronic atrophic gastritis, enterochromaffin-like cell hyperplasia, and antral G-cell hyperplasia were endoscopically and histologically followed up for a median of 90.1 months (total of 9118 person-months). Preneoplastic enterochromaffin-like cell lesions and newly developed neuroendocrine tumors were investigated histologically and histochemically, in parallel with enterochromaffin-like cell lesions found in nontumor mucosa of another 32 well-characterized and previously reported type 1 neuroendocrine tumors. Both neuroendocrine and nonneuroendocrine mucosa changes were analyzed and statistically evaluated. During follow-up, 7 of 100 patients developed neuroendocrine tumors: 5 were in a group of 20 cases with previous enterochromaffin-like cell dysplasia and 2 were among 80 cases showing only enterochromaffin-like cell hyperplasia throughout the study (hazard ratio, 20.7; P < .001). The severity of enterochromaffin-like cell hyperplasia at first biopsy, with special reference to linear hyperplasia with 6 chains or more per linear millimeter, also increased the risk of neuroendocrine tumor development during follow-up (hazard ratio, 13.0; P < .001). Enterochromaffin-like cell microinvasive dysplastic lesions arising at the epithelial renewal zone level, in connection with immature proliferating mucous-neck cells, were found to be linked to early intramucosal neuroendocrine tumor histogenesis. Both enterochromaffin-like cell dysplasia and severe hyperplasia indicate increased risk of neuroendocrine tumor development in type A chronic atrophic gastritis with hypergastrinemia/G-cell hyperplasia.
Human Pathology | 2011
Elena Rossi; Catherine Klersy; Rachele Manca; Orsetta Zuffardi; Enrico Solcia
It is difficult to evaluate the prognostic value of histologic criteria in gastric cancer because of the high variability of morphologic patterns. Recently, histologic subtypes of low, intermediate, or high malignant potential have been identified, providing the basis for a prognostically informative grading system. Because array comparative genomic hybridization systems allow systematic analysis of chromosome alterations, which may be prognostically and pathogenetically informative, we applied high-resolution genome-wide array comparative genomic hybridization to archival material from 81 gastric cancer cases followed for a median of 150 months after surgery. The DNA extracted from paraffin sections gave useful results in 49 tumors, 18 of which were of low-grade, 24 of intermediate, and 7 of high-grade histotypes. Based on the number of chromosome aberrations and the presence/absence of amplifications, 3 tumor clusters of increasing genomic lesion severity were constructed, which proved to correlate significantly with histologic grade and stage as well as with patient survival. Further investigation documented the lower number and severity of genomic alterations in tumors with microsatellite DNA instability and high CD8-rich lymphoid response; the close association of 8p23.1 amplification with cardial cancer; the frequent amplification of genes involved in cell renewal (CDC6, HER2, GRB7, IGFBP4) at 17q12-q21.1, with close histochemical correlation with HER2 membranous expression; and more sporadic amplification of chromosome regions harboring important oncogenes like MYC, KRAS, NRAS, CRKL, CCNE1, or ZNF217. We conclude that genome-wide array comparative genomic hybridization of gastric cancer contributes prognostically relevant information providing a genetic background for histologic grading.
Neuroendocrinology | 2017
Alessandro Vanoli; Stefano La Rosa; Catherine Klersy; Federica Grillo; Luca Albarello; Frediano Inzani; Roberta Maragliano; Rachele Manca; Ombretta Luinetti; Massimo Milione; Claudio Doglioni; Guido Rindi; Carlo Capella; Enrico Solcia
Background: Several types of neuroendocrine neoplasms (NENs) have been described in the duodenal tract, from low-grade tumors (NETs) to high-grade neuroendocrine carcinomas (NECs). A comprehensive analysis of histology, hormonal profile and prognostic parameters of a sufficiently large duodenal NEN series to cover all main kinds of neoplasms is however lacking. Methods: We collected a retrospective series of 203 duodenal wall and ampullary region NENs, from six specialized endocrine pathology centers. All were characterized histopathologically and histochemically, and 190 were followed for a median of 9 years. Results: Twenty-seven poorly differentiated NECs, mostly from the ampullary region, were identified and shown to lead to patient demise in a median of 10 months. Among 176 NETs, four subtypes were characterized, including 20 gastrinomas, 37 ampullary-type somatostatin-producing NETs (ASTs), 12 gangliocytic paragangliomas (GPs) and 106 nonfunctioning NETs (nfNETs). ASTs and GPs were mostly localized in the ampullary/periampullary region, while gastrinomas and nfNETs were mainly from the proximal duodenum. ASTs and gastrinomas showed high rates of local infiltration (especially lymphoinvasion and deep duodenal wall/pancreatic tissue invasion) and lymph node metastasis, while nfNETs had significantly lower and more size-dependent local invasive potential. Disease-specific survival differed significantly between NETs and NECs, though not among NET subtypes. NET cases with distant metastases (n = 23) were significantly associated with larger size, higher proliferative grade, lymphovascular invasion, deep invasion and local lymph node metastasis. Conclusion: Our careful analysis of a large series of duodenal NENs identified five histologically and prognostically different histotypes of potential clinical relevance.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Vittorio Necchi; Patrizia Sommi; Alessandro Vanoli; Rachele Manca; Vittorio Ricci; Enrico Solcia
A novel cytoplasmic structure has been recently characterized by confocal and electron microscopy in H. pylori-infected human gastric epithelium, as an accumulation of barrel-like proteasome reactive particles colocalized with polyubiquitinated proteins, H. pylori toxins and the NOD1 receptor. This proteasome particle-rich cytoplasmic structure (PaCS), a sort of focal proteasome hyperplasia, was also detected in dysplastic cells and was found to be enriched in SHP2 and ERK proteins, known to play a role in H. pylori-mediated gastric carcinogenesis. However, no information is available on its occurrence in neoplastic growths. In this study, surgical specimens of gastric cancer and various other human epithelial neoplasms have been investigated for PaCSs by light, confocal and electron microscopy including correlative confocal and electron microscopy (CCEM). PaCSs were detected in gastric cohesive, pulmonary large cell and bronchioloalveolar, thyroid papillary, parotid gland, hepatocellular, ovarian serous papillary, uterine cervix and colon adenocarcinomas, as well as in pancreatic serous microcystic adenoma. H. pylori bodies, their virulence factors (VacA, CagA, urease, and outer membrane proteins) and the NOD1 bacterial proteoglycan receptor were selectively concentrated inside gastric cancer PaCSs, but not in PaCSs from other neoplasms which did, however, retain proteasome and polyubiquitinated proteins reactivity. No evidence of actual microbial infection was obtained in most PaCS-positive neoplasms, except for H. pylori in gastric cancer and capsulated bacteria in a colon cancer case. Particle lysis and loss of proteasome distinctive immunoreactivities were seen in some tumour cell PaCSs, possibly ending in sequestosomes or autophagic bodies. It is concluded that PaCSs are widely represented in human neoplasms and that both non-infectious and infectious factors activating the ubiquitin-proteasome system are likely to be involved in their origin. PaCS detection might help clarify the role of the ubiquitin-proteasome system in carcinogenesis.
Mayo Clinic Proceedings | 2012
Rachele Ciccocioppo; M.L. Russo; Maria Ester Bernardo; Federico Biagi; Laura Catenacci; Maria Antonietta Avanzini; Costanza Alvisi; Alessandro Vanoli; Rachele Manca; Ombretta Luinetti; Franco Locatelli; Gino Roberto Corazza
Adult autoimmune enteropathy (AIE) is a rare cause of malabsorption syndrome unresponsive to dietary restriction. Its diagnostic hallmarks are small-bowel villous atrophy and antienterocyte autoantibodies. Therapy is based mainly on nutritional support and immunosuppression. We treated a 61-year-old woman with corticosteroid-refractory AIE and life-threatening malabsorption syndrome with systemic infusions of autologous, bone marrow-derived, mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) as rescue therapy. The MSCs were expanded ex vivo following a previously used Good Manufacturing Practice procedure, and 2 intravenous infusions of 1.8 × 10(6) MSCs/kg body weight were administered 2 weeks apart. Analysis of circulating and mucosal regulatory T-and B-cell numbers, and of serum and secretory immunoglobulin levels, was performed before and after treatment. The MSC infusions were safe and effective, leading to disappearance of disease hallmarks and recovery from the life-threatening condition. Increases in mucosal regulatory T-cell numbers and secretory immunoglobulin levels were also observed. The benefit, however, was transient, and a further MSC infusion resulted in the same short efficacy. This case encourages the use of MSCs to treat patients with life-threatening, corticosteroid-refractory AIE and suggests that MSC infusion can attenuate, albeit transiently, the autoimmune attack.
Human Pathology | 2009
Anna Maria Chiaravalli; Catherine Klersy; Francesca Tava; Rachele Manca; Roberto Fiocca; Carlo Capella; Enrico Solcia
Diffuse gastric cancer, characterized by poorly cohesive, diffusely infiltrating cells with no or little gland formation, is known to show several morphologic variants, but their prognostic value, if any, is poorly documented. In this article, 119 cases of invasive (T1b to T4) diffuse gastric cancer, which had undergone potentially curative surgery and were followed postoperatively for a median time of more than 10 years, were investigated for histologic or histochemical patterns possibly predictive of survival. Among 5 histologic groups identified, a low-grade subtype (17 cases) with prominent desmoplasia closely surrounding individual tumor cells (tumor embedding desmoplasia) and no or scarce angio-lympho-neuroinvasion showed stage-independent improved survival compared with 36 non-low-grade desmoplastic, 24 signet ring, and 28 diffuse cancers not otherwise specified. Fourteen cases with anaplastic cells showed clinicopathologic patterns and outcome of highly malignant neoplasms. None of the tumor cell differentiation markers (including 6 mucins and 3 proteases) nor proliferative index or p53 protein expression had independent predictive power, although MUC1 was significantly less expressed in low-grade desmoplastic cases. Cox survival analysis showed the significantly better prognosis of 17 low-grade desmoplastic and worse prognosis of 14 anaplastic cancers compared with the remaining 88 cases. In conclusion, a low-grade desmoplastic and a high-grade anaplastic subtype should be separated histologically from the bulk of diffuse gastric cancers owing to their distinctive histologic, clinicopathologic, and prognostic aspects.
The American Journal of Gastroenterology | 2014
Antonio Di Sabatino; P. Giuffrida; Alessandro Vanoli; Ombretta Luinetti; Rachele Manca; Paolo Biancheri; Gaetano Bergamaschi; Costanza Alvisi; A. Pasini; C. Salvatore; Federico Biagi; Enrico Solcia; Gino Roberto Corazza
OBJECTIVES:Several immune-mediated gastrointestinal disorders, including celiac disease (CD), are associated with neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia. However, neuroendocrine cells have never been explored in refractory CD (RCD).METHODS:Serial duodenal sections from 17 patients with RCD (6 type 1 and 11 type 2), 16 uncomplicated CD patients before and after gluten-free diet, 14 patients with potential CD, 27 patients with non-CD villous atrophy, i.e., common variable immunodeficiency (n=12), Whipples disease (n=10) and giardiasis (n=5), and 16 healthy subjects were processed for the immunohistochemical detection of chromogranin A (CgA), serotonin, and somatostatin. Mucosal tryptophan hydroxylase (TpH)-1 and serotonin-selective reuptake transporter (SERT) transcripts were measured by quantitative reverse transcription-PCR. Serum CgA and 24-h urine 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) were assessed. Biopsies from treated CD patients were cultured with serotonin or peptic tryptic digest of gliadin (PT-gliadin), and interferon (IFN)-γ was detected by ELISA in culture supernatants.RESULTS:Epithelial cells positive for CgA and serotonin, but not somatostatin, were significantly increased in RCD. Raised mucosal transcripts of TpH-1, but not SERT, were found in RCD. On biopsies from treated CD patients, serotonin upregulated IFN-γ production at levels comparable to those induced by PT-gliadin. Serum CgA, but not urine 5-HIAA, was increased in RCD. No significant difference was found between RCD type 1 and type 2 in terms of neuroendocrine cells, mucosal TpH-1 transcripts, and serum CgA.CONCLUSIONS:Serotonin-producing neuroendocrine cells are increased in RCD mucosa. IFN-γ upregulation induced by serotonin suggests that this monoamine may have a role in sustaining the local inflammatory response in CD.
World Journal of Gastroenterology | 2013
Rachele Ciccocioppo; Alessandro Vanoli; Catherine Klersy; V. Imbesi; V. Boccaccio; Rachele Manca; E. Betti; Giuseppina Cristina Cangemi; E. Strada; Roberta Besio; Antonio Rossi; Colomba Falcone; Paolo Fociani; Piergiorgio Danelli; Gino Roberto Corazza
AIM To investigate the level of mucosal expression and the involvement of the receptor for the advanced glycation end products (RAGE) in delayed apoptosis and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α production in Crohns disease (CD). METHODS Surgical and endoscopic specimens from both inflamed and non-inflamed areas of the ileum and/or colon were collected from 20 and 14 adult CD patients, respectively, and used for the assessment of RAGE expression by means of immunohistochemistry and western blotting analysis. Normal tissues from 21 control subjects were used for comparison. The same polyclonal anti-human RAGE antibody (R and D System) was used in all experimental conditions. RAGE staining was quantized by a score including both the amount of positive cells and intensity of immunoreactivity; cellular pattern was also described. The effects of RAGE blocking on apoptotic rate and TNF-α production were investigated on immune cells freshly isolated from CD mucosa and incubated both with and without the muramyl dipeptide used as antigenic stimulus. Statistical analysis was performed via the test for trend, with regression models to account for intra-patient correlations. A 2-sided P < 0.05 was considered significant. RESULTS In inflamed areas, RAGE expression in both the epithelial and lamina propria compartments was higher than control tissues (P = 0.001 and 0.021, respectively), and a cluster of positive cells were usually found in proximity of ulcerative lesions. Similar results were obtained in the lamina propria compartment of non-inflamed areas (P = 0.025). The pattern of staining was membranous and granular cytosolic at the epithelial level, while in the lamina propria it was diffuse cytosolic. When evaluating the amount of protein expression by immunoblotting, a significant increase of both surface area and band intensity (P < 0.0001 for both) was observed in CD inflamed areas compared to control tissue, while in non-inflamed areas a significant increase was found only for band intensity (P < 0.005). Moreover, a significantly lower expression in non-inflamed areas in comparison with inflamed areas was found for both surface area and band intensity (P < 0.0006 for both). Finally, RAGE blocking largely affects both the apoptotic rate of mucosal cells (towards an increase in both non-inflamed and inflamed areas of P < 0.001 and < 0.0001, respectively) and TNF-α secretion (towards a decrease in both non-inflamed and inflamed areas of P < 0.05 and < 0.01, respectively), mainly in the presence of antigenic stimulation. CONCLUSION RAGE is up-regulated in CD, especially in inflamed areas, and it appears to play a role in the mechanisms involved in chronic inflammation.