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Dive into the research topics where Stefania Battistini is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefania Battistini.


Neurology | 1999

A new CACNA1A gene mutation in acetazolamide-responsive familial hemiplegic migraine and ataxia

Stefania Battistini; Stefania Stenirri; M. Piatti; Cecilia Gelfi; Pier Giorgio Righetti; R. Rocchi; Fabio Giannini; N. Battistini; G.C. Guazzi; Maurizio Ferrari; Paola Carrera

Objective: To search for mutations in the calcium channel gene CACNA1A and to study the genotype–phenotype correlation in a family with a severe familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) phenotype and a slowly progressive cerebellar ataxia. Background: CACNA1A gene mutations on chromosome 19 are involved in approximately 50% of FHM families. The association of FHM and cerebellar ataxia has been reported in a small number of FHM families, all linked to chromosome 19. Methods: The proband, in addition to typical hemiplegic migraine attacks, experienced severe episodes during which hemiplegia was associated with acutely altered consciousness and fever lasting several days. She, as well as her affected sister, developed a permanent, late-onset cerebellar ataxia and cerebellar atrophy evident on MRI. Linkage analysis was performed and the whole CACNA1A gene, 47 exon–intron boundaries, was analyzed by double gradient–denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DG-DGGE). Results: Genetic studies suggested linkage to chromosome 19p13, and DG-DGGE analysis detected a heteroduplex fragment in exon 13 of the CACNA1A gene. By direct sequencing, a G-to-A substitution resulting in an arginine to glutamine change at codon 583 in the second putative voltage sensor domain of the channel α1A-subunit, was identified, possibly representing the disease-causing mutation. The proband and her affected sister were treated with acetazolamide, reporting freedom from new FHM attacks but no benefit in the progression of ataxia. Conclusions: The combination of episodic dysfunction and permanent deficit could depend on the variety of functions of calcium channels and their distribution in the nervous system.


Brain | 2012

Clinical characteristics of patients with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis carrying the pathogenic GGGGCC hexanucleotide repeat expansion of C9ORF72

Adriano Chiò; Giuseppe Borghero; Gabriella Restagno; Gabriele Mora; Carsten Drepper; Bryan J. Traynor; Michael Sendtner; Maura Brunetti; Irene Ossola; Andrea Calvo; Maura Pugliatti; Maria Alessandra Sotgiu; Maria Rita Murru; Maria Giovanna Marrosu; Francesco Marrosu; Kalliopi Marinou; Jessica Mandrioli; Patrizia Sola; Claudia Caponnetto; Gianluigi Mancardi; Paola Mandich; Vincenzo La Bella; Rossella Spataro; Amelia Conte; Maria Rosaria Monsurrò; Gioacchino Tedeschi; Fabrizio Pisano; Ilaria Bartolomei; Fabrizio Salvi; Giuseppe Lauria Pinter

A large hexanucleotide (GGGGCC) repeat expansion in the first intron of C9ORF72, a gene located on chromosome 9p21, has been recently reported to be responsible for ~40% of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis cases of European ancestry. The aim of the current article was to describe the phenotype of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis cases carrying the expansion by providing a detailed clinical description of affected cases from representative multi-generational kindreds, and by analysing the age of onset, gender ratio and survival in a large cohort of patients with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. We collected DNA and analysed phenotype data for 141 index Italian familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis cases (21 of Sardinian ancestry) and 41 German index familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis cases. Pathogenic repeat expansions were detected in 45 (37.5%) patients from mainland Italy, 12 (57.1%) patients of Sardinian ancestry and nine (22.0%) of the 41 German index familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis cases. The disease was maternally transmitted in 27 (49.1%) pedigrees and paternally transmitted in 28 (50.9%) pedigrees (P = non-significant). On average, children developed disease 7.0 years earlier than their parents [children: 55.8 years (standard deviation 7.9), parents: 62.8 (standard deviation 10.9); P = 0.003]. Parental phenotype influenced the type of clinical symptoms manifested by the child: of the 13 cases where the affected parent had an amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-frontotemporal dementia or frontotemporal dementia, the affected child also developed amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-frontotemporal dementia in nine cases. When compared with patients carrying mutations of other amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-related genes, those with C9ORF72 expansion had commonly a bulbar onset (42.2% compared with 25.0% among non-C9ORF72 expansion cases, P = 0.03) and cognitive impairment (46.7% compared with 9.1% among non-C9ORF72 expansion cases, P = 0.0001). Median survival from symptom onset among cases carrying C9ORF72 repeat expansion was 3.2 years lower than that of patients carrying TARDBP mutations (5.0 years; 95% confidence interval: 3.6-7.2) and longer than those with FUS mutations (1.9 years; 95% confidence interval: 1.7-2.1). We conclude that C9ORF72 hexanucleotide repeat expansions were the most frequent mutation in our large cohort of patients with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis of Italian, Sardinian and German ancestry. Together with mutation of SOD1, TARDBP and FUS, mutations of C9ORF72 account for ~60% of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in Italy. Patients with C9ORF72 hexanucleotide repeat expansions present some phenotypic differences compared with patients with mutations of other genes or with unknown mutations, namely a high incidence of bulbar-onset disease and comorbidity with frontotemporal dementia. Their pedigrees typically display a high frequency of cases with pure frontotemporal dementia, widening the concept of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

A two-stage genome-wide association study of sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis

Adriano Chiò; Jennifer C. Schymick; Gabriella Restagno; Sonja W. Scholz; Federica Lombardo; Shiao Lin Lai; Gabriele Mora; Hon Chung Fung; Angela Britton; Sampath Arepalli; J. Raphael Gibbs; Michael A. Nalls; Stephen Berger; Lydia Kwee; Eugene Z. Oddone; Jinhui Ding; Cynthia Crews; Ian Rafferty; Nicole Washecka; Dena Hernandez; Luigi Ferrucci; Stefania Bandinelli; Jack M. Guralnik; Fabio Macciardi; Federica Torri; Sara Lupoli; Stephen J. Chanock; Gilles Thomas; David J. Hunter; Christian Gieger

The cause of sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is largely unknown, but genetic factors are thought to play a significant role in determining susceptibility to motor neuron degeneration. To identify genetic variants altering risk of ALS, we undertook a two-stage genome-wide association study (GWAS): we followed our initial GWAS of 545 066 SNPs in 553 individuals with ALS and 2338 controls by testing the 7600 most associated SNPs from the first stage in three independent cohorts consisting of 2160 cases and 3008 controls. None of the SNPs selected for replication exceeded the Bonferroni threshold for significance. The two most significantly associated SNPs, rs2708909 and rs2708851 [odds ratio (OR) = 1.17 and 1.18, and P-values = 6.98 x 10(-7) and 1.16 x 10(-6)], were located on chromosome 7p13.3 within a 175 kb linkage disequilibrium block containing the SUNC1, HUS1 and C7orf57 genes. These associations did not achieve genome-wide significance in the original cohort and failed to replicate in an additional independent cohort of 989 US cases and 327 controls (OR = 1.18 and 1.19, P-values = 0.08 and 0.06, respectively). Thus, we chose to cautiously interpret our data as hypothesis-generating requiring additional confirmation, especially as all previously reported loci for ALS have failed to replicate successfully. Indeed, the three loci (FGGY, ITPR2 and DPP6) identified in previous GWAS of sporadic ALS were not significantly associated with disease in our study. Our findings suggest that ALS is more genetically and clinically heterogeneous than previously recognized. Genotype data from our study have been made available online to facilitate such future endeavors.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2009

Two Italian kindreds with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis due to FUS mutation

Adriano Chiò; Gabriella Restagno; Maura Brunetti; Irene Ossola; Andrea Calvo; Gabriele Mora; Mario Sabatelli; Maria Rosaria Monsurrò; Stefania Battistini; Jessica Mandrioli; Fabrizio Salvi; Rossella Spataro; Jennifer C. Schymick; Bryan J. Traynor; Vincenzo La Bella

Recently, fused in sarcoma/translated in liposarcoma (FUS/TLS) gene, located on chromosome 16p11.2, has been identified as a disease gene in familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS). We have analyzed FUS/TLS in a cohort of 52 index cases from seven Italian regions with non-SOD1 and non-TARDBP FALS. We identified a heterozygous c.G1542C missense mutation in a family of northern Italian origin, and a heterozygous c.C1574T missense mutation in a family of Sicilian origin. Both variants are located in exon 15 encoding the RNA-recognition motif, and result in a substitution of an arginine with a serine in position 514 (p.R514S) and substitution of a proline with a leucine at position 525 (p.P525L), respectively. Overall, the two mutations accounted for 3.8% of 52 non-SOD1 and non-TDP43 index cases of FALS. The clinical phenotype was similar within each of the families, with a predominantly upper limb onset in the family carrying the p.R514S mutation and bulbar onset, with very young age and a rapid course in the family carrying the p.P525L mutation.


Journal of Neurology | 2005

SOD1 mutations in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Results from a multicenter Italian study.

Stefania Battistini; Fabio Giannini; Giuseppe Greco; G. Bibbò; L. Ferrera; V. Marini; Renzo Causarano; M. Casula; G. Lando; Maria Cristina Patrosso; Claudia Caponnetto; Paola Origone; A. Marocchi; A Del Corona; Gabriele Siciliano; Paola Carrera; V. Mascia; M. Giagheddu; C. Carcassi; S. Orrù; C. Garrè; Silvana Penco

AbstractAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS), the most common form among motoneuron diseases, is characterized by a progressive neurodegenerative process involving motor neurons in the motor cortex, brain stem and spinal cord. Sporadic (SALS) accounts for the majority of patients but in about 10% of ALS cases the disease is inherited (FALS), usually as an autosomal dominant trait.In the present study we show the results of a referred based multicenter study on the distribution of SOD1 gene mutations in the largest cohort of Italian ALS patients described so far. Two hundred and sixty–four patients (39 FALS and 225 SALS) of Italian origin were studied. In 7 out of 39 FALS patients we found the following SOD1 gene mutations: i) a new G12R missense mutation in exon 1, found in a patient with a slowly progressive disease course; ii) the G41S mutation, in four unrelated patients with rapidly progressive course complicated with cognitive decline in two of them; iii) the L114F mutation, in a patient with a slowly progressive phenotype; iv) the D90A mutation, in a heterozygous patient with atypical phenotype. In addition, in one SALS patient a previously reported synonymous variant S59S was identified. In 17 (3 FALS and 14 SALS) out of 264 patients (6.4 %) the polymorphism A→C at position 34 of intron 3 (IVS3: + 34 A→C) was found, and in one FALS patient a novel variant IVS3 + 62 T→C was identified.The frequency of SOD1 gene mutations (17.9 %) in FALS cases was comparable with that found in other surveys with a similar sample size of ALS cases. No SOD1 gene mutations have been identified in SALS cases. Within FALS cases, The most frequent mutation was the G41S identified in four FALS.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2012

C9ORF72 hexanucleotide repeat expansions in the Italian sporadic ALS population.

Mario Sabatelli; Francesca Luisa Conforti; Marcella Zollino; Gabriele Mora; Maria Rosaria Monsurrò; Paolo Volanti; Kalliopi Marinou; Fabrizio Salvi; Massimo Corbo; Fabio Giannini; Stefania Battistini; Silvana Penco; Christian Lunetta; Aldo Quattrone; Antonio Gambardella; Giancarlo Logroscino; Isabella Laura Simone; Ilaria Bartolomei; Fabrizio Pisano; Gioacchino Tedeschi; Amelia Conte; Rossella Spataro; Vincenzo La Bella; Claudia Caponnetto; Gianluigi Mancardi; Paola Mandich; Patrizia Sola; Jessica Mandrioli; Alan E. Renton; Elisa Majounie

It has been recently reported that a large proportion of patients with familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal dementia (FTD) are associated with a hexanucleotide (GGGGCC) repeat expansion in the first intron of C9ORF72. We have assessed 1757 Italian sporadic ALS cases, 133 from Sardinia, 101 from Sicily, and 1523 from mainland Italy. Sixty (3.7%) of 1624 mainland Italians and Sicilians and 9 (6.8%) of the 133 Sardinian sporadic ALS cases carried the pathogenic repeat expansion. None of the 619 regionally matched control samples (1238 chromosomes) carried the expansion. Twenty-five cases (36.2%) had behavioral FTD in addition to ALS. FTD or unspecified dementia was also detected in 19 pedigrees (27.5%) in first-degree relatives of ALS patients. Cases carrying the C9ORF72 hexanucleotide expansion survived 1 year less than cases who did not carry this mutation. In conclusion, we found that C9ORF72 hexanucleotide repeat expansions represents a sizeable proportion of apparent sporadic ALS in the Italian and Sardinian population, representing by far the most common mutation in Italy and the second most common in Sardinia.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2011

FUS mutations in sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.

Shiao Lin Lai; Yevgeniya Abramzon; Jennifer C. Schymick; Dietrich A. Stephan; Travis Dunckley; Allissa Dillman; Mark R. Cookson; Andrea Calvo; Stefania Battistini; Fabio Giannini; Claudia Caponnetto; Giovanni Luigi Mancardi; Rossella Spataro; Maria Rosaria Monsurrò; Gioacchino Tedeschi; Kalliopi Marinou; Mario Sabatelli; Amelia Conte; Jessica Mandrioli; Patrizia Sola; Fabrizio Salvi; Ilaria Bartolomei; Federica Lombardo; Gabriele Mora; Gabriella Restagno; Adriano Chiò; Bryan J. Traynor

Mutations in the FUS gene have recently been described as a cause of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), but their role in the pathogenesis of sporadic ALS is unclear. We undertook mutational screening of all coding exons of FUS in 228 sporadic ALS cases, and, as previous reports suggest that exon 15 represents a mutational hotspot, we sequenced this exon in an additional 1295 sporadic cases. Six variants in six different cases were found, indicating that FUS mutations can underlie apparently sporadic ALS, but account for less than 1% of this form of disease.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2014

Genetic counselling in ALS: facts, uncertainties and clinical suggestions

Adriano Chiò; Stefania Battistini; Andrea Calvo; Claudia Caponnetto; Francesca Luisa Conforti; Massimo Corbo; Fabio Giannini; Jessica Mandrioli; Gabriele Mora; Mario Sabatelli; Clara Ajmone; Enza Mastro; Debora Pain; Paola Mandich; Silvana Penco; Gabriella Restagno; Marcella Zollino; Antonella Surbone

The clinical approach to patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) has been largely modified by the identification of novel genes, the detection of gene mutations in apparently sporadic patients, and the discovery of the strict genetic and clinical relation between ALS and frontotemporal dementia (FTD). As a consequence, clinicians are increasingly facing the dilemma on how to handle genetic counselling and testing both for ALS patients and their relatives. On the basis of existing literature on genetics of ALS and of other late-onset life-threatening disorders, we propose clinical suggestions to enable neurologists to provide optimal clinical and genetic counselling to patients and families. Genetic testing should be offered to ALS patients who have a first-degree or second-degree relative with ALS, FTD or both, and should be discussed with, but not offered to, all other ALS patients, with special emphasis on its major uncertainties. Presently, genetic testing should not be proposed to asymptomatic at-risk subjects, unless they request it or are enrolled in research programmes. Genetic counselling in ALS should take into account the uncertainties about the pathogenicity and penetrance of some genetic mutations; the possible presence of mutations of different genes in the same individual; the poor genotypic/phenotypic correlation in most ALS genes; and the phenotypic pleiotropy of some genes. Though psychological, social and ethical implications of genetic testing are still relatively unexplored in ALS, we recommend multidisciplinary counselling that addresses all relevant issues, including disclosure of tests results to family members and the risk for genetic discrimination.


Journal of Neurochemistry | 2004

Activity of protein phosphatase calcineurin is decreased in sporadic and familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosispatients.

Alberto Ferri; Monica Nencini; Stefania Battistini; Fabio Giannini; Gabriele Siciliano; Carlo Casali; Maria Damiano; Mauro Ceroni; Adriano Chiò; Giuseppe Rotilio; Maria Teresa Carrì

Calcineurin (CaN) is a Ser/Thr protein phosphatase involved in a wide range of cellular responses to calcium mobilizing signals. Previous evidence supports the notion that calcineurin is oxidatively inhibited by mutant Cu, Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) typical of familial ALS patients in vitro and in transgenic mice. We report that calcineurin activity is markedly inhibited in lymphocytes from 37 sporadic, eight familial ALS patients and an asymptomatic subject carrying an SOD1 mutation as compared to 28 healthy controls. Two other healthy subjects, heterozygous for the D90A mutation from a recessive pedigree, have normal calcineurin activity. Immunoreactive CaN protein, age, sex and riluzole treatment are not related to calcineurin activity in samples from patients. However, we have observed a marked increase in total protein oxidation in extracts from ALS lymphocytes, as compared to extracts from control subjects. These data confirm that modification of calcineurin activity and possibly of calcineurin‐mediated pathways of signal transduction (including modulation of apoptotic neuronal death) may contribute to the pathogenesis of ALS.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2015

CHCH10 mutations in an Italian cohort of familial and sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients

Adriano Chiò; Gabriele Mora; Mario Sabatelli; Claudia Caponnetto; Bryan J. Traynor; Janel O. Johnson; Michael A. Nalls; Andrea Calvo; Cristina Moglia; Giuseppe Borghero; Maria Rosaria Monsurrò; Vincenzo La Bella; Paolo Volanti; Isabella Laura Simone; Fabrizio Salvi; Francesco Logullo; Riva Nilo; Stefania Battistini; Jessica Mandrioli; Raffaella Tanel; Maria Rita Murru; Paola Mandich; Marcella Zollino; Francesca Luisa Conforti; Maura Brunetti; Marco Barberis; Gabriella Restagno; Silvana Penco; Christian Lunetta

Mutations in CHCHD10 have recently been described as a cause of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) comorbid with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). The aim of this study was to assess the frequency and clinical characteristics of CHCHD10 mutations in Italian patients diagnosed with familial (n = 64) and apparently sporadic ALS (n = 224). Three apparently sporadic patients were found to carry c.100C>T (p.Pro34Ser) heterozygous variant in the exon 2 of CHCHD10. This mutation had been previously described in 2 unrelated French patients with FTD-ALS. However, our patients had a typical ALS, without evidence of FTD, cerebellar or extrapyramidal signs, or sensorineural deficits. We confirm that CHCHD10 mutations account for ∼ 1% of Italian ALS patients and are a cause of disease in subjects without dementia or other atypical clinical signs.

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Gabriele Mora

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Jessica Mandrioli

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Mario Sabatelli

The Catholic University of America

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