Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Stefania Mariani is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Stefania Mariani.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2012

Effects of hemochromatosis and transferrin gene mutations on iron dyshomeostasis, liver dysfunction and on the risk of Alzheimer's disease

Federica Giambattistelli; Serena Bucossi; Carlo Salustri; Valentina Panetta; Stefania Mariani; Mariacristina Siotto; Mariacarla Ventriglia; Fabrizio Vernieri; Maria Luisa Dell'Acqua; Emanuele Cassetta; Paolo Maria Rossini; Rosanna Squitti

It is now accepted that transition metals, such as iron and copper, are involved in the pathogenesis of the Alzheimers disease (AD) through their participation in toxic oxidative phenomena. In this context, hemochromatosis (Hfe) and transferrin (Tf) genes are of particular importance, since they play a key role in iron homeostasis. Also, signs of liver distress which accompany metal dysmetabolisms have been shown to be linked to AD. In order to investigate whether and how all these factors are interconnected, in this study we have explored the relationship of the gene variants of Hfe H63D and C282Y and of Tf C2 with serum markers of iron status (iron, ferritin, TF, TF-saturation, ceruloplasmin -CP-, CP and TF serum concentrations (CP/TF) ratio), and of liver function (albumin, transaminases, prothrombin time-prothrombin time (PT)) in a sample of 160 AD patients and 79 healthy elderly controls. Albumin resulted in lower, PT longer and AST/ALT higher ratios in AD patients than in controls, indicating a distress of the liver. Also TF was lower and ferritin higher in AD. Multiple logistic regression backward analyses, performed to evaluate the effects of our biochemical variables upon the probability of developing AD, revealed that a one-unit TF serum-decrease increases the probability of AD by 80%, a one-unit albumin serum-decrease reduces this probability by 20%, and a one-unit increase of AST/ALT ratio generates a 4-fold probability increase. Patients who were carriers of the H63D mutation showed higher levels of iron, lower levels of TF and CP and higher CP/TF ratios, a panel resembling hemochromatosis. This picture was found neither in H63D non-carrier patients, nor in healthy controls. Our results suggest the existence of a link between Hfe mutations and iron abnormalities that increases the probability of developing AD when accompanied by a distress of the liver.


Neurobiology of Aging | 2013

Fe and Cu do not differ in Parkinson's disease: a replication study plus meta-analysis

Stefania Mariani; Mariacarla Ventriglia; Ilaria Simonelli; Silvia Donno; Serena Bucossi; Fabrizio Vernieri; Jean Marc Melgari; Patrizio Pasqualetti; Paolo Maria Rossini; Rosanna Squitti

To evaluate whether iron and copper levels in serum, plasma, and cerebrospinal fluid are disarranged in Parkinsons disease (PD), we performed meta-analyses of 33 studies on the topic published from 1987 to 2011 and contextually carried out a replication study in serum by ourselves as well. We found no variation in metals between PD patients and healthy controls, according to our replication study. The metaregression for sex revealed that serum copper differences found in some studies could be referred to the different percentage of women in the PD sample. Transferrin and transferrin saturation levels found increased in PD subjects underline the concept to extend the iron study in PD to iron master proteins.


Neuroscience Letters | 2012

GSTO1*E155del polymorphism associated with increased risk for late-onset Alzheimer's disease: association hypothesis for an uncommon genetic variant

Sara Piacentini; Renato Polimanti; Rosanna Squitti; Stefania Mariani; Simone Migliore; Fabrizio Vernieri; Paolo Maria Rossini; Dario Manfellotto; Maria Fuciarelli

Glutathione S-transferases are multifunctional enzymes involved in cellular detoxification. A genetic linkage was found between Alzheimers Disease (AD) and the chromosome 10q, where the GSTO1 and GSTO2 genes are located, leading to the hypothesis that GST Omega class (GSTO) genes may be an AD risk factor. Since it is still controversial, we decided to explore GSTO polymorphisms in Italian cohorts. We analyzed 119 AD patients and 114 healthy controls for the GSTO gene polymorphisms. In particular we investigated two common polymorphisms (GSTO1*A140D, GSTO2*N142D) and two uncommon variants (GSTO1*E155del, GSTO1*E208K) to find loci associated with AD risk. Detection of GSTO1*A140D and GSTO2*N142D was performed by PCR-RFLP, while GSTO1*E155del and GSTO1*E208K were detected using confronting two-pair primer and allele specific PCR, respectively. While GSTO1*A140D, GSTO1*E208K and GSTO2*N142D polymorphisms did not show significant outcomes, the GSTO1*E155del polymorphism is associated with AD [P=0.003; adjusted OR=3.70 (1.57-8.75)]. Our results suggest that GSTO1-1 plays a role in AD since the GSTO1*del155 variant is involved in changes in GSTO1-1 activities decreasing in enzyme stability. Specifically, three hypotheses may explain the role of GSTO1-1 in the pathophysiology of AD: the antioxidant activity of GSTO1-1 may protect brain tissue against oxidative stress; GSTO1-1 activity regulate interleukin-1β activation and its genetic variation may act to modulate inflammation in AD; GSTO1-1 is involved in the arsenic biotransformation pathway and gene polymorphisms may be implicated in the modulation of arsenic neurotoxicity. In conclusion, we hypothesized that GSTO1*E155del is an uncommon genetic variant associated with AD risk.


International Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2011

Association between the c. 2495 A>G ATP7B Polymorphism and Sporadic Alzheimer's Disease

Serena Bucossi; Stefania Mariani; Mariacarla Ventriglia; Renato Polimanti; Massimo Gennarelli; Cristian Bonvicini; Patrizio Pasqualetti; Federica Scrascia; Simone Migliore; Fabrizio Vernieri; Paolo Maria Rossini; Rosanna Squitti

Nonceruloplasmin-bound copper (“free”) is reported to be elevated in Alzheimers disease (AD). In Wilsons disease (WD) Cu-ATPase 7B protein tightly controls free copper body levels. To explore whether the ATP7B gene harbours susceptibility loci for AD, we screened 180 AD chromosomes for sequence changes in exons 2, 5, 8, 10, 14, and 16, where most of the Mediterranean WD-causing mutations lie. No WD mutation, but sequence changes corresponding to c.1216 T>G Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) and c.2495 A>G SNP were found. Thereafter, we genotyped 190 AD patients and 164 controls for these SNPs frequencies estimation. Logistic regression analyses revealed either a trend for the c.1216 SNP (P = .074) or a higher frequency for c.2495 SNP of the GG genotype in patients, increasing the probability of AD by 74% (P = .028). Presence of the GG genotype in ATP7B c.2495 could account for copper dysfunction in AD which has been shown to raise the probability of the disease.


Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2013

Effects of hemochromatosis and transferrin gene mutations on peripheral iron dyshomeostasis in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases

Stefania Mariani; Mariacarla Ventriglia; Ilaria Simonelli; G. Spalletta; Serena Bucossi; Mariacristina Siotto; F. Assogna; Jean Marc Melgari; Fabrizio Vernieri; Rosanna Squitti

Deregulation of iron metabolism has been observed in patients with neurodegenerative diseases. We have carried out a molecular analysis investigating the interaction between iron specific gene variants [transferrin (TF, P589S), hemochromatosis (HFE) C282Y and (H63D)], iron biochemical variables [iron, Tf, ceruloplasmin (Cp), Cp:Tf ratio and % of Tf saturation (% Tf-sat)] and apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene variants in 139 Alzheimers disease (AD), 27 Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), 78 Parkinsons disease (PD) patients and 139 healthy controls to investigate mechanisms of iron regulation or toxicity. No difference in genetic variant distributions between patients and controls was found in our Italian sample, but the stratification for the APOEε4 allele revealed that among the APOEε4 carriers was higher the frequency of those carriers of at least a mutated TF P589S allele. Decreased Tf in both AD and MCI and increased Cp:Tf ratio in AD vs. controls were detected. A multinomial logistic regression model revealed that increased iron and Cp:Tf ratio and being man instead of woman increased the risk of having PD, that increased values of Cp:Tf ratio corresponded to a 4-fold increase of the relative risk of having MCI, while higher Cp levels were protective for PD and MCI. Our study has some limitations: the small size of the samples, one ethnic group considered, the rarity of some alleles which prevent the statistical power of some genetic analysis. Even though they need confirmation in larger cohorts, our data suggest the hypothesis that deregulation of iron metabolism, in addition to other factors, has some effect on the PD disease risk.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2013

Intronic rs2147363 Variant in ATP7B Transcription Factor-Binding Site Associated with Alzheimer's Disease

Serena Bucossi; Renato Polimanti; Mariacarla Ventriglia; Stefania Mariani; Mariacristina Siotto; Francesca Ursini; Laura Trotta; Federica Scrascia; Antonio Callea; Fabrizio Vernieri; Rosanna Squitti

Copper homeostasis abnormalities have been shown to be associated with Alzheimers disease (AD), possibly by accelerating amyloid-β toxicity and plaque formation. The ATP7B gene plays a key role in controlling body copper balance. Our previous studies showed an association between ATP7B variants and AD risk. Among these variants, an intronic single nucleotide polymorphism, rs2147363, was associated with AD risk. In order to understand this intronic association, we screened a population of 286 AD patients and 283 healthy controls, and verified the presence of other functional coding variants in linkage disequilibrium (LD). Then we searched for a regulatory function region close to rs2147363. An LD analysis revealed the presence of an LD between rs2147363 and a Wilsons disease-causing variant, rs7334118. However, this mutation did not explain the observed genetic association. Conversely, in silico analyses of rs2147363 functionality highlighted that this variant is located in a binding site of a transcription factor, and is, consequently, associated with regulatory function. These data suggest that the genetic variation in cis-regulatory elements located in non-coding regions can have a role in determining ATP7B functionality and account for some of the AD missing hereditability.


Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2016

Association between Serum Ceruloplasmin Specific Activity and Risk of Alzheimer's Disease

Mariacristina Siotto; Ilaria Simonelli; Patrizio Pasqualetti; Stefania Mariani; Deborah Caprara; Serena Bucossi; Mariacarla Ventriglia; Rossana Molinario; Mirca Antenucci; Mauro Rongioletti; Paolo Maria Rossini; Rosanna Squitti

Meta-analyses demonstrate copper involvement in Alzheimers disease (AD), and the systemic ceruloplasmin status in relation to copper is an emerging issue. To deepen this matter, we evaluated levels of ceruloplasmin concentration, ceruloplasmin activity, ceruloplasmin specific activity (eCp/iCp), copper, non-ceruloplasmin copper iron, transferrin, the ceruloplasmin/transferrin ratio, and the APOE genotype in a sample of 84 AD patients and 58 healthy volunteers. From the univariate logistic analyses we found that ceruloplasmin concentration, eCp/iCp, copper, transferrin, the ceruloplasmin/transferrin ratio, and the APOE genotype were significantly associated with the probability of AD. In the multivariable logistic regression analysis, we selected the best subset of biological predictors by the forward stepwise procedure. The analysis showed a decrease of the risk of having AD for eCp/iCp (p = 0.001) and an increase of this risk for non-ceruloplasmin copper (p = 0.008), age (p = 0.001), and APOE-ɛ4 allele (p <  0.001). The estimated model showed a good power in discriminating AD patients from healthy controls (area under curve: 88% ; sensitivity: 66% ; specificity 93%). These data strength the breakdown of copper homeostasis and propose eCp/iCp as a reliable marker of ceruloplasmin status.


Molecular Neurobiology | 2017

Erratum to: Non-Ceruloplasmin Copper Distincts Subtypes in Alzheimer’s Disease: a Genetic Study of ATP7B Frequency

Rosanna Squitti; Mariacarla Ventriglia; Massimo Gennarelli; Nicola Antonio Colabufo; Imane Ghafir El Idrissi; Serena Bucossi; Stefania Mariani; Mauro Rongioletti; Orazio Zanetti; Chiara Congiu; Paolo Maria Rossini; Cristian Bonvicini

Meta-analyses show that serum copper non-boundto-ceruloplasmin (non-Cp-Cu) is higher in patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD). ATP7B gene variants associate with AD, modulating the size of non-Cp-Cu pool. However, a dedicated genetic study comparing AD patients after stratification for a copper biomarker to demonstrate the existence of a copper subtype of AD has not yet been carried out. An independent patient sample of 287 AD patients was assessed for non-Cp-Cu serum concentrations, rs1801243, rs1061472, and rs732774 ATP7B genetic variants and the APOE4 genotype. Patients were stratified into two groups based on a nonCp-Cu cutoff (1.9 μM). Single-locus and haplotype-group analyses were performed to define their frequencies in dependence of the non-Cp-Cu group. The two AD subgroups did not differ regarding age, sex, MMSE score, or APOE4 frequency allele, while they did differ regarding non-Cp-Cu concentrations in serum, allele, genotype, and haplotype frequencies of rs1061472 A>G and rs732774 C>T after multiple testing corrections. AD patients with a GG genotype had a 1.76-fold higher risk of having a non-Cp-Cu higher than 1.9 μmol/L (p=0.029), and those with a TT genotype for rs732774 C>T of 1.8-fold (p=0.018). After 100,000 permutations for multiple testing corrections, the haplotype containing the AC alleles appeared more frequently in AD patients with normal non-Cp-Cu [43 vs. 33 %; Pm=0.03], while the haplotype containing the GT risk alleles appeared more frequently in the higher non-Cp-Cu AD (66 vs. 55 %; Pm=0.01). Genetic heterogeneity sustains a copper AD metabolic subtype; non-Cp-Cu is a marker of this copper AD.


International Journal of Alzheimer's Disease | 2011

Glutamate-mediated primary somatosensory cortex excitability correlated with circulating copper and ceruloplasmin.

Franca Tecchio; Giovanni Assenza; Filippo Zappasodi; Stefania Mariani; Carlo Salustri; Rosanna Squitti

Objective. To verify whether markers of metal homeostasis are related to a magnetoencephalographic index representative of glutamate-mediated excitability of the primary somatosensory cortex. The index is identified as the source strength of the earliest component (M20) of the somatosensory magnetic fields (SEFs) evoked by right median nerve stimulation at wrist. Method. Thirty healthy right-handed subjects (51 ± 22 years) were enrolled in the study. A source reconstruction algorithm was applied to assess the amount of synchronously activated neurons subtending the M20 and the following SEF component (M30), which is generated by two independent contributions of gabaergic and glutamatergic transmission. Serum copper, ceruloplasmin, iron, transferrin, transferrin saturation, and zinc levels were measured. Results. Total copper and ceruloplasmin negatively correlated with the M20 source strength. Conclusion. This pilot study suggests that higher level of body copper reserve, as marked by ceruloplasmin variations, parallels lower cortical glutamatergic responsiveness.


International Journal of Neuroscience | 2016

Association between sex, systemic iron variation and probability of Parkinson's disease.

Stefania Mariani; Mariacarla Ventriglia; Ilaria Simonelli; Serena Bucossi; Mariacristina Siotto; Silvia Donno; Fabrizio Vernieri; Rosanna Squitti

Objective: Iron homeostasis appears altered in Parkinsons disease (PD). Recent genetic studies and meta-analyses have produced heterogeneous and inconclusive results. In order to verify the possible role of iron status in PD, we have screened some of the main metal gene variants, evaluated their effects on iron systemic status, and checked for possible interactions with PD. Materials and methods: In 92 PD patients and 112 healthy controls, we screened the D544E and R793H variants of the ceruloplasmin gene (CP), the P589S variant of the transferrin gene (TF), and the H63D and C282Y variants of the HFE gene, encoding for homologous proteins, respectively. Furthermore, we analyzed serum concentrations of iron, copper and their related proteins. Results: The genetic investigation revealed no significant differences in allelic and genotype distributions between patients and controls. Two different multivariable forward stepwise logistic models showed that, when the effect of sex is considered, an increase of the probability of having PD is associated with low iron concentration and Tf-saturation. Conclusions: This study provides new evidence of the involvement of iron metabolism in PD pathogenesis and reveals a biological effect of sex.

Collaboration


Dive into the Stefania Mariani's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rosanna Squitti

Sapienza University of Rome

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Fabrizio Vernieri

Università Campus Bio-Medico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Paolo Maria Rossini

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Carlo Salustri

Catholic University of the Sacred Heart

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dario Manfellotto

University of Rome Tor Vergata

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Federica Scrascia

Università Campus Bio-Medico

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Simone Migliore

Casa Sollievo della Sofferenza

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge