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Dive into the research topics where Renata Lonigro is active.

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Featured researches published by Renata Lonigro.


European Journal of Cancer | 1996

TTF-1 gene expression in human lung tumours

Dora Fabbro; C. Di Loreto; O. Stamerra; C.Alberto Beltrami; Renata Lonigro; Giuseppe Damante

Tissue-specific transcription factors control cell determination and differentiation. TTF-1 is a tissue-specific transcription factor expressed in the thyroid and lung. We investigated the expression of TTF-1 in normal human lung, and in various histopathological types of lung cancers by immunohistochemistry. In normal lung, TTF-1 expression was restricted to bronchial and alveolar epithelial cells. TTF-1 expression was found in 7 of the 29 cases of non-small cell lung carcinomas. In these tumours, the expression of TTF-1 did not correlate with the histological degree of differentiation. Results obtained using RNase protection assay confirmed that TTF-1 was expressed only in a subset of non-small cell carcinomas. TTF-1, as expected, was not expressed in neoplasms having a neuroendocrine cell origin, such as carcinoids. Interestingly, TTF-1 was always expressed in small cell lung carcinomas. These findings indicate that: (i) small cell lung carcinomas could originate from the endothermal cell lineage and (ii) dedifferentiation processes that operate in these neoplasms do not affect molecular mechanisms necessary for TTF-1 gene expression.


Clinical Genetics | 2001

Correlations between individual clinical manifestations and CTG repeat amplification in myotonic dystrophy.

Corrado Marchini; Renata Lonigro; Lorenzo Verriello; Lucia Pellizzari; P. Bergonzi; Giuseppe Damante

Myotonic dystrophy (DM) is a multisystemic disease caused by the expansion of a CTG repeat, located in the 3′‐untranslated region of the DMPK gene. The number of CTG repeats broadly correlates with the overall severity of the disease. However, correlations between CTG repeat number and presence/absence or severity of individual clinical manifestations in the same patients are yet scarce. In this study the number of CTG repeats detected in blood cells of 24 DM subjects was correlated with the severity of single clinical manifestations. The presence/absence of muscular atrophy, respiratory insufficiency, cardiac abnormalities, diabetes, cataract, sleep disorders, sterility or hypogonadism is not related to the number of CTG repeats. Muscular atrophy and respiratory insufficiency are present with the highest frequency, occurring in 96 and 92% of the cases, respectively. A significant correlation was found with age of onset (r=−0.57, p<0.01), muscular disability (r=0.46, p<0.05), intellective quotient (r=−0.58, p<0.01) and short‐term memory (r=−0.59, p<0.01). Therefore, the CTG repeat number has a predictive value only in the case of some clinical manifestations, this suggesting that pathogenetic mechanisms of DM may differ depending on the tissue.


Toxicology | 2010

The hOGG1 Ser326Cys polymorphism and Huntington's disease

Fabio Coppedè; Francesca Migheli; Roberto Ceravolo; Elisa Bregant; Anna Rocchi; Lucia Petrozzi; Elisa Unti; Renata Lonigro; Gabriele Siciliano; Lucia Migliore

Increasing evidence supports a role for oxidative DNA damage and impaired DNA repair mechanisms in the pathogenesis of age related neurodegenerative diseases. Within this context there is a current interest in the understanding of the role played by polymorphisms of DNA repair genes in the inter-individual risk to develop neurodegenerative pathologies, as well as in the onset and the progression of disease symptoms. Particularly, somatic CAG repeat expansion of the gene encoding for huntingtin has been observed in tissues of patients affected by Huntingtons disease (HD), including blood and brain. Recent evidence suggests that somatic CAG repeat expansion in HD cells might contribute to disease age at onset and is mediated by the DNA repair OGG1 enzyme, during the removal of 8-oxoguanine (8-oxoG) from the DNA. There is also evidence that the expression of hMTH1, which removes 8-oxoG from the nucleotide pool, protects mice from HD-like symptoms, and progenitor striatal cells from the toxic effects of the mutant huntingtin. The hOGG1 Ser326Cys polymorphism results in reduced OGG1 activity and increased 8-oxoG formation. In the present study, performed on blood DNA from 91 HD subjects, we observed that bearers of the mutant Cys326 allele (Ser326Cys+Cys326Cys) tend to have an increased number of CAG repeats of the expanded HD allele (P=0.049); moreover bearers of at least one copy of the mutant Cys326 allele, mainly heterozygous subjects, showed a significant (P=0.041) earlier disease onset than Ser326Ser wild-type individuals, suggesting a possible role of the hOGG1 Ser326Cys polymorphism in HD phenotype.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2001

Nestin Is a Neuroepithelial Target Gene of Thyroid Transcription Factor-1, a Homeoprotein Required for Forebrain Organogenesis

Renata Lonigro; Deborah Donnini; Emanuela Zappia; Giuseppe Damante; Marco Bianchi; Stefania Guazzi

Thyroid transcription factor-1 (TTF-1, also known as NKX2.1 and T/EBP), a transcription factor belonging to the NKX-2 family of homeodomain-containing genes, plays an essential role in the organogenesis of the thyroid gland, lung, and ventral forebrain. Nestin is an intermediate filament protein strongly expressed in multipotential neuroepithelial stem cells and rapidly down-regulated during postnatal life. Here we show that stable fibroblastic clones expressing TTF-1 acquire a phenotype reminiscent of neuroepithelial cells in culture and up-regulate the endogenous nestin gene. TTF-1 transactivates in HeLa and NIH3T3 cells a reporter gene driven by a central nervous system-specific enhancer element from the second intron of the rat nestin gene, where it recognizes a DNA-binding site (NestBS) whose sequence resembles a nuclear hormone/cAMP-responsive element very different from canonical TTF-1 binding sites. Nuclear extracts from the head of mouse embryos form a retarded complex with NestBS of the same mobility of the extracts obtained from TTF1-expressing clones, which is either abolished or supershifted in the presence of two different antibodies recognizing the TTF-1 protein. Thus, the neuroepithelial marker nestin is a direct central nervous system-specific target gene of TTF-1, leading to the hypothesis that it might be the effector through which TTF-1 plays its role in the organogenesis of the forebrain.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2016

Plastin 3 is upregulated in iPSC-derived motoneurons from asymptomatic SMN1-deleted individuals.

Ludwig Heesen; Michael Peitz; Laura Torres-Benito; Irmgard Hölker; Kristina Hupperich; Kristina Dobrindt; Johannes Jungverdorben; Swetlana Ritzenhofen; Beatrice Weykopf; Daniela Eckert; Seyyed Mohsen Hosseini-Barkooie; Markus Storbeck; Noemi Fusaki; Renata Lonigro; Raoul Heller; Min Jeong Kye; Oliver Brüstle; Brunhilde Wirth

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a devastating motoneuron (MN) disorder caused by homozygous loss of SMN1. Rarely, SMN1-deleted individuals are fully asymptomatic despite carrying identical SMN2 copies as their SMA III-affected siblings suggesting protection by genetic modifiers other than SMN2. High plastin 3 (PLS3) expression has previously been found in lymphoblastoid cells but not in fibroblasts of asymptomatic compared to symptomatic siblings. To find out whether PLS3 is also upregulated in MNs of asymptomatic individuals and thus a convincing SMA protective modifier, we generated induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) from fibroblasts of three asymptomatic and three SMA III-affected siblings from two families and compared these to iPSCs from a SMA I patient and control individuals. MNs were differentiated from iPSC-derived small molecule neural precursor cells (smNPCs). All four genotype classes showed similar capacity to differentiate into MNs at day 8. However, SMA I-derived MN survival was significantly decreased while SMA III- and asymptomatic-derived MN survival was moderately reduced compared to controls at day 27. SMN expression levels and concomitant gem numbers broadly matched SMN2 copy number distribution; SMA I presented the lowest levels, whereas SMA III and asymptomatic showed similar levels. In contrast, PLS3 was significantly upregulated in mixed MN cultures from asymptomatic individuals pinpointing a tissue-specific regulation. Evidence for strong PLS3 accumulation in shaft and rim of growth cones in MN cultures from asymptomatic individuals implies an important role in neuromuscular synapse formation and maintenance. These findings provide strong evidence that PLS3 is a genuine SMA protective modifier.


Genetic Testing and Molecular Biomarkers | 2009

A Simple Multiplex Real-Time PCR Methodology for the SMN1 Gene Copy Number Quantification

Nadia Passon; Federico Pozzo; Cristiano Molinis; Elisa Bregant; Cinzia Gellera; Giuseppe Damante; Renata Lonigro

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an autosomal recessive disease caused, in about 95% of SMA cases, by homozygous deletion of the survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene or its conversion to the highly homologous SMN2 gene. The molecular diagnosis of SMA is usually carried out by a PCR-Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) approach. However, this approach is not useful for identification of healthy deletion carriers. TaqMan technology is one of the most reliable and widely adopted techniques for the SMN1 copy number evaluation. However, several limitations of this technique have been described. Particularly, DNA extraction methods and accurate template quantification have been shown to be critical for reliable results. In this work, we set up a reliable, highly reproducible, and easy-to-perform TaqMan technology-based protocol to obtain the SMN1 gene copy number assessment. We demonstrate that PCR amplification of both target gene and reference gene in the same reaction mix, instead of separated mixes, greatly reduces reported criticisms of simplex TaqMan technology. The multiplex real-time PCR we describe allows interlaboratory samples and data exchange, without the need to equalize the DNA isolation technique. Further, the protocol described below requires fewer replica tests than the simplex methodology does, leading to reduced overall cost for the diagnostic assay.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2009

Down-regulation of SM22/transgelin gene expression during H9c2 cells differentiation

Elisa Bregant; Giovanni Renzone; Renata Lonigro; Nadia Passon; Carla Loreto; Maura Pandolfi; Andrea Scaloni; Gianluca Tell; Giuseppe Damante

The embryonic rat ventricle H9c2 cells maintain a proliferative state (P condition) in the presence of 10% FCS. However, by reducing serum concentration and in the presence of retinol acetate, proliferation is stopped, myogenic transdifferentiation is inhibited while cardiac differentiation is preserved (D condition). Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry analysis was used to define the modifications of the nuclear proteome occurring during the P-to-D transition. Among the proteins observed as modified, a reduced expression of the SM22/transgelin protein was associated with the D state. Also SM22 mRNA levels were reduced during P-to-D transition. Cell transfection experiments indicated that this decrease was partially due to a reduction of the SM22 promoter activity. GATA-4 had a repressive effect on SM22 promoter activity. Thus, since GATA-4 is known as a target of retinoids and may act as a transcriptional repressor, a mechanism to explain the SM22 reduction during the P-to-D transition is tentatively proposed. Immunohistochemical studies on heart cells confirmed the nuclear localization of SM22. Moreover, a differential expression of this protein in different districts of the human heart embryo was detected. Therefore, these data suggest that SM22 expression is regulated during heart development.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2006

Molecular analysis of a human PAX6 homeobox mutant

Angela Valentina D'Elia; Cinzia Puppin; Lucia Pellizzari; Annalisa Pianta; Elisa Bregant; Renata Lonigro; Gianluca Tell; Veronica van Heyningen; Giuseppe Damante

Pax6 controls eye, pancreas and brain morphogenesis. In humans, heterozygous PAX6 mutations cause aniridia and various other congenital eye abnormalities. Most frequent PAX6 missense mutations are located in the paired domain (PD), while very few missense mutations have been identified in the homeodomain (HD). In the present report, we describe a molecular analysis of the human PAX6 R242T missense mutation, which is located in the second helix of the HD. It was identified in a male child with partial aniridia in the left eye, presenting as a pseudo-coloboma. Gel-retardation assays revealed that the mutant HD binds DNA as well as the wild-type HD. In addition, the mutation does not modify the DNA-binding properties of the PD. Cell transfection assays indicated that the steady-state levels of the full length mutant protein are higher than those of the wild-type one. In cotransfection assays a PAX6 responsive promoter is activated to a higher extent by the mutant protein than by the wild-type protein. In vitro limited proteolysis assays indicated that the presence of the mutation reduces the sensitivity to trypsin digestion. Thus, we suggest that the R242T human phenotype could be due to abnormal increase of PAX6 protein, in keeping with the reported sensitivity of the eye phenotype to increased PAX6 dosage.


Human Mutation | 2001

Missense mutations of human homeoboxes: A review

Angela Valentina D’Elia; Gianluca Tell; Igor Paron; Lucia Pellizzari; Renata Lonigro; Giuseppe Damante


Nucleic Acids Research | 1996

In the TTF-1 Homeodomain the Contribution of Several Amino Acids to DNA Recognition Depends on the Bound Sequence

Dora Fabbro; Gianluca Tell; Antonio Leonardi; Lucia Pellizzari; Carlo Pucillo; Renata Lonigro; Silvestro Formisano; Giuseppe Damante

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