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Featured researches published by Raffaella Crescenzo.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2003

Effect of high-fat feeding on metabolic efficiency and mitochondrial oxidative capacity in adult rats

Susanna Iossa; Lillà Lionetti; Maria Pina Mollica; Raffaella Crescenzo; Monica Botta; A. Barletta; Giovanna Liverini

The changes in metabolic efficiency, body composition, and nutrient partitioning induced by high-fat feeding were evaluated in adult rats (90 d of age). The alterations in serum free triiodothyronine, insulin, and leptin levels, as well as in hepatic and skeletal muscle metabolism, were also assessed. Rats were fed either a low- or a high-fat diet for 2 weeks. Relative to the low-fat feeding, energy intake and expenditure, as well as body-energy gain, lipid gain, and energetic efficiency, were increased by the high-fat feeding. Increased serum leptin levels accompanied these variations. A positive correlation between serum leptin levels and percentage of body fat was found in the rats fed the low- or high-fat diet, with a significant divergence between the slope of the regression lines. Furthermore, a negative correlation between serum leptin level and energy intake was found in the rats fed the low-fat diet, while a positive correlation was found in the rats fed the high-fat diet. Finally, the high-fat feeding decreased the hepatic and skeletal muscle mitochondrial oxidative capacity. It is concluded that, in adult rats, a nutritional factor such as a high level of fat in the diet induces obesity, leptin resistance, and impairment of mitochondrial capacity, all phenomena typical of unrestrained aged rats.


International Journal of Obesity | 2002

Skeletal muscle oxidative capacity in rats fed high-fat diet

Susanna Iossa; Maria Pia Mollica; Lillà Lionetti; Raffaella Crescenzo; Monica Botta; Giovanna Liverini

OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether young rats respond to high-fat feeding through changes in energy efficiency and fuel partitioning at the level of skeletal muscle, to avoid obesity development. In addition, to establish whether the two mitochondrial subpopulations, which exist in skeletal muscle, ie subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar, are differently affected by high-fat feeding.DESIGN: Weaning rats were fed a low-fat or a high-fat diet for 15 days.MEASUREMENTS: Energy balance and lipid partitioning in the whole animal. State 3 and state 4 oxygen consumption rates in whole skeletal muscle homogenate. State 3 and state 4 oxygen consumption rates, membrane potential and uncoupling effect of palmitate in subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar mitochondria from skeletal muscle.RESULTS: Rats fed a high-fat diet showed an increased whole body lipid utilization. Skeletal muscle NAD-linked and lipid oxidative capacity significantly increased at the whole-tissue level, due to an increase in lipid oxidative capacity in subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar mitochondria and in NAD-linked activity only in intermyofibrillar ones. In addition, rats fed a high-fat diet showed an increase in the uncoupling effect of palmitate in both the mitochondrial populations.CONCLUSIONS: In young rats fed a high-fat diet, skeletal muscle contributes to enhanced whole body lipid oxidation through an increased mitochondrial capacity to use lipids as metabolic fuels, associated with a decrease in energy coupling.


Diabetes | 2006

Altered Skeletal Muscle Subsarcolemmal Mitochondrial Compartment During Catch-Up Fat After Caloric Restriction

Raffaella Crescenzo; Lillà Lionetti; Maria Pina Mollica; Marialuisa Ferraro; Elvira D'andrea; Davide Mainieri; Abdul G. Dulloo; Giovanna Liverini; Susanna Iossa

An accelerated rate of fat recovery (catch-up fat) and insulin resistance are characteristic features of weight recovery after caloric restriction, with implications for the pathophysiology of catch-up growth and weight fluctuations. Using a previously described rat model of weight recovery in which catch-up fat and skeletal muscle insulin resistance have been linked to suppressed thermogenesis per se, we investigated alterations in mitochondrial energetics and oxidative stress in subsarcolemmal (SS) and intermyofibrillar (IMF) skeletal muscle mitochondria. After 2 weeks of semistarvation followed by 1 week of refeeding, the refed rats show persistent and selective reductions in SS mitochondrial mass (assessed from citrate synthase activity in tissue homogenate and isolated mitochondria) and oxidative capacity. Furthermore, the refed rats show, in both SS and IMF muscle mitochondria, a lower aconitase activity (whose inactivation is an index of increased reactive oxygen species [ROS]), associated with higher superoxide dismutase activity and increased proton leak. Taken together, these studies suggest that diminished skeletal muscle mitochondrial mass and function, specifically in the SS mitochondrial compartment, contribute to the high metabolic efficiency for catch-up fat after caloric restriction and underscore a potential link between diminished skeletal muscle SS mitochondrial energetics, increased ROS concentration, and insulin resistance during catch-up fat.


International Journal of Obesity | 2007

Skeletal muscle subsarcolemmal mitochondrial dysfunction in high-fat fed rats exhibiting impaired glucose homeostasis

Lillà Lionetti; Maria Pia Mollica; Raffaella Crescenzo; E D'Andrea; Marialuisa Ferraro; F Bianco; Giovanna Liverini; Susanna Iossa

Objective:To investigate whether changes in body energy balance induced by long-term high-fat feeding in adult rats could be associated with modifications in energetic behaviour and oxidative stress of skeletal muscle subsarcolemmal (SS) and intermyofibrillar (IMF) mitochondrial populations.Design:Adult rats were fed low-fat or high-fat diet for 7 weeks.Measurements:Body energy balance and composition analysis together with plasma insulin and glucose level determination in the whole animal. Oxidative capacity, basal and induced proton leaks as well as aconitase and superoxide dismutase activities in SS and IMF mitochondria from skeletal muscle.Results:High-fat fed rats exhibit increased body lipid content, as well as hyperinsulinemia, hyperglycaemia and higher plasma non-esterified fatty acids. In addition, SS mitochondria display lower respiratory capacity and a different behaviour of SS and IMF mitochondria is found in the prevention from oxidative damage.Conclusions:A deleterious consequence of decreased oxidative capacity in SS mitochondria from rats fed high-fat diet would be a reduced utilization of energy substrates, especially fatty acids, which may lead to intracellular triglyceride accumulation, lipotoxicity and insulin resistance development. Our results thus reveal a possible role for SS mitochondria in the impairment of glucose homeostasis induced by high-fat diet.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Rescue of Fructose-Induced Metabolic Syndrome by Antibiotics or Faecal Transplantation in a Rat Model of Obesity

Blanda Di Luccia; Raffaella Crescenzo; Arianna Mazzoli; Luisa Cigliano; P. Venditti; Jean-Claude Walser; Alex Widmer; Loredana Baccigalupi; Ezio Ricca; Susanna Iossa

A fructose-rich diet can induce metabolic syndrome, a combination of health disorders that increases the risk of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Diet is also known to alter the microbial composition of the gut, although it is not clear whether such alteration contributes to the development of metabolic syndrome. The aim of this work was to assess the possible link between the gut microbiota and the development of diet-induced metabolic syndrome in a rat model of obesity. Rats were fed either a standard or high-fructose diet. Groups of fructose-fed rats were treated with either antibiotics or faecal samples from control rats by oral gavage. Body composition, plasma metabolic parameters and markers of tissue oxidative stress were measured in all groups. A 16S DNA-sequencing approach was used to evaluate the bacterial composition of the gut of animals under different diets. The fructose-rich diet induced markers of metabolic syndrome, inflammation and oxidative stress, that were all significantly reduced when the animals were treated with antibiotic or faecal samples. The number of members of two bacterial genera, Coprococcus and Ruminococcus, was increased by the fructose-rich diet and reduced by both antibiotic and faecal treatments, pointing to a correlation between their abundance and the development of the metabolic syndrome. Our data indicate that in rats fed a fructose-rich diet the development of metabolic syndrome is directly correlated with variations of the gut content of specific bacterial taxa.


International Journal of Obesity | 2001

Fat balance and serum leptin concentrations in normal, hypothyroid, and hyperthyroid rats.

Susanna Iossa; Lillà Lionetti; Maria Pia Mollica; Raffaella Crescenzo; A. Barletta; Giovanna Liverini

OBJECTIVE: To study the influence of thyroid hormones on the relationship between serum leptin and fat mass, as well as on energy and macronutrient balance.DESIGN: Rats with different thyroid states were obtained by 7 and 15 days of treatment with the antithyroid drug propylthiouracil or with triiodothyronine (T3).MEASUREMENTS: Energy balance, macronutrient balance and serum leptin concentrations.RESULTS: In hypothyroid rats we found a decrease in metabolizable energy (ME) intake and energy expenditure together with an increase in lipid gain/lipid intake ratio and a decrease in protein gain/protein intake ratio. Consequently, body lipid percentage significantly increased compared to euthyroid rats. Hyperthyroid rats first increased energy expenditure and later ME intake, so that increased metabolism was balanced by increased intake, and energy gain was similar to that found in euthyroid rats.CONCLUSION: These results indicate that T3 plays a major role in the maintenance of energy and lipid balance. Our results also indicate that an inverse relationship exists between T3 and leptin serum concentrations, and that this relationship is not only the result of changes in body fat stores induced by changed T3 concentrations.


Experimental Physiology | 2014

Fructose supplementation worsens the deleterious effects of short-term high-fat feeding on hepatic steatosis and lipid metabolism in adult rats.

Raffaella Crescenzo; Francesca Bianco; Paola Coppola; Arianna Mazzoli; Margherita Tussellino; Rosa Carotenuto; Giovanna Liverini; Susanna Iossa

What is the central question of this study? In humans, ‘Western‐style’ diet is characterized by high levels of both saturated fats and fructose. Lipid oversupply to the liver typical of high‐fat diets could be exacerbated by the coexistence of high levels of fat and fructose in the diet, thus accelerating the development of metabolic deregulation. What is the main finding and its importance? Short‐term consumption of a Western diet, rich in saturated fats and fructose, is more conducive to the development of liver steatosis and deleterious to glucose homeostasis than a high‐fat diet. This result points to the harmful effect of adding fructose to the usual Western, high‐fat diet.


FEBS Letters | 2001

Differences in proton leak kinetics, but not in UCP3 protein content, in subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar skeletal muscle mitochondria from fed and fasted rats

Susanna Iossa; Lillà Lionetti; Maria Pia Mollica; Raffaella Crescenzo; Monica Botta; Sonia Samec; Abdul G. Dulloo; Giovanna Liverini

We have investigated the effect of 24‐h fasting on basal proton leak and uncoupling protein (UCP) 3 expression at the protein level in subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar skeletal muscle mitochondria. In fed rats, the two mitochondrial populations displayed different proton leak, but the same protein content of UCP3. In addition, 24‐h fasting, both at 24 and 29°C, induced an increase in proton leak only in subsarcolemmal mitochondria, while UCP3 content increased in both the populations. From the present data, it appears that UCP3 does not control the basal proton leak of skeletal muscle mitochondria.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2000

Effect of long-term high-fat feeding on energy balance and liver oxidative activity in rats.

Susanna Iossa; Lillà Lionetti; Maria Pina Mollica; Raffaella Crescenzo; A. Barletta; Giovanna Liverini

The purpose of this work was to study the effect of early long-term high-fat feeding on energy balance and liver oxidative activity. To this end, rats aged about 30 d were fed a high-fat or a low-fat diet for 15, 30 or 60 d. Full energy balance and energy partitioning measurements were carried out. In addition, we measured hepatic mitochondrial and peroxisomal oxidative capacities. Serum levels of free triiodothyronine (T3) and leptin were also determined. Rats fed a high-fat diet showed an increase in metabolizable energy intake as well as in energy expenditure, while lipid gain over the whole period was lower than that expected due to a decrease in metabolic efficiency. An increase in serum free T3 levels was also found in rats fed a high-fat diet after 15 and 30 d. Statistically significant correlations between serum leptin levels and body fat mass were found after 15, 30 and 60 d of high-fat feeding. Finally, no variation in hepatic mitochondrial and peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation capacity was found in rats fed a high-fat diet for 15, 30 or 60 d. In conclusion, the results of the present study show that young Wistar rats fed a high-fat diet for up to 60 d are able to counteract, at least in part, obesity development.


Frontiers in Physiology | 2015

Mitochondrial efficiency and insulin resistance

Raffaella Crescenzo; Francesca Bianco; Arianna Mazzoli; Antonia Giacco; Giovanna Liverini; Susanna Iossa

Insulin resistance, “a relative impairment in the ability of insulin to exert its effects on glucose, protein and lipid metabolism in target tissues,” has many detrimental effects on metabolism and is strongly correlated to deposition of lipids in non-adipose tissues. Mitochondria are the main cellular sites devoted to ATP production and fatty acid oxidation. Therefore, a role for mitochondrial dysfunction in the onset of skeletal muscle insulin resistance has been proposed and many studies have dealt with possible alteration in mitochondrial function in obesity and diabetes, both in humans and animal models. Data reporting evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction in type two diabetes mellitus are numerous, even though the issue that this reduced mitochondrial function is causal in the development of the disease is not yet solved, also because a variety of parameters have been used in the studies carried out on this subject. By assessing the alterations in mitochondrial efficiency as well as the impact of this parameter on metabolic homeostasis of skeletal muscle cells, we have obtained results that allow us to suggest that an increase in mitochondrial efficiency precedes and therefore can contribute to the development of high-fat-induced insulin resistance in skeletal muscle.

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Susanna Iossa

University of Naples Federico II

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Giovanna Liverini

University of Naples Federico II

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Arianna Mazzoli

University of Naples Federico II

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Francesca Bianco

University of Naples Federico II

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Lillà Lionetti

University of Naples Federico II

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Maria Pia Mollica

University of Naples Federico II

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Paola Coppola

University of Naples Federico II

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Luisa Cigliano

University of Naples Federico II

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Monica Botta

University of Naples Federico II

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