Stefano Vassanelli
University of Padua
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Publication
Featured researches published by Stefano Vassanelli.
Neurogastroenterology and Motility | 2007
Laura Martelli; Eugenio Ragazzi; F. Di Mario; Mario Martelli; Ignazio Castagliuolo; M. Dal Maschio; Giorgio Palù; Marta Maschietto; Michele Scorzeto; Stefano Vassanelli; Paola Brun
Abstract A protective role of the transient potential vanilloid receptor 1 (TRPV1) in intestinal inflammation induced by dinitrobenzene sulphonic acid (DNBS) has been recently demonstrated. Curcumin, the major active component of turmeric, is also able to prevent and ameliorate the severity of the damage in DNBS‐induced colitis. We evaluated the possibility that curcumin (45 mg kg−1 day p.o. for 2 days before and 5 days after the induction of colitis) was able to reduce DNBS‐induced colitis in mice, by acting as a TRPV1 agonist. Macroscopic damage score, histological damage score and colonic myeloperoxidase (MPO) activity were significantly lower (by 71%, 65% and 73%, respectively; P < 0.01), in animals treated with curcumin compared with untreated animals. Capsazepine (30 mg kg−1, i.p.), a TRPV1 receptor antagonist, completely abolished the protective effects of curcumin. To extend these data in vitro, Xenopus oocytes expressing rat TRPV1 were examined. Capsaicin‐evoked currents (3.3 μmol L−1) disappeared subsequent either to removal of the agonist or subsequent to the addition of capsazepine. However, curcumin (30 μmol L−1) was ineffective both as regard direct modification of cell membrane currents and as regard interference with capsaicin‐mediated effects. As sensitization of the TRPV1 receptor by mediators of inflammation in damaged tissues has been shown previously, our results suggest that in inflamed, but not in normal tissue, curcumin can interact with the TRPV1 receptor to mediate its protective action in DNBS‐induced colitis.
Nature Communications | 2016
Isha Gupta; Alexantrou Serb; Ali Khiat; Ralf Zeitler; Stefano Vassanelli; Themistoklis Prodromakis
Advanced brain-chip interfaces with numerous recording sites bear great potential for investigation of neuroprosthetic applications. The bottleneck towards achieving an efficient bio-electronic link is the real-time processing of neuronal signals, which imposes excessive requirements on bandwidth, energy and computation capacity. Here we present a unique concept where the intrinsic properties of memristive devices are exploited to compress information on neural spikes in real-time. We demonstrate that the inherent voltage thresholds of metal-oxide memristors can be used for discriminating recorded spiking events from background activity and without resorting to computationally heavy off-line processing. We prove that information on spike amplitude and frequency can be transduced and stored in single devices as non-volatile resistive state transitions. Finally, we show that a memristive device array allows for efficient data compression of signals recorded by a multi-electrode array, demonstrating the technologys potential for building scalable, yet energy-efficient on-node processors for brain-chip interfaces.
Autoimmunity | 2008
Marika Vianello; Giacomo Bisson; Marco Dal Maschio; Stefano Vassanelli; Stefano Girardi; Carla Mucignat; Kostantinos Fountzoulas; Bruno Giometto
Introduction: Anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies (GAD-Ab) are commonly considered the marker of autoimmune diabetes; they were first described in patients affected by stiff-person syndrome and recently, in ataxic or epileptic patients. The pathogenetic role of GAD-Ab remains unclear but inhibition of GABA synthesis or interference with GABA exocytosis are hypothesized. The aim of the study was to assess whether GAD-Ab interfere with neuronal transmission. Patients and methods: Serum from a GAD-Ab positive epileptic patient (by IHC and RIA), serum from a GAD-positive (only by RIA) diabetic case, sera from two epileptic GAD-Ab negative patients and a normal control were selected. Post-synaptic inhibitory potentials (IPSPs) were registered on hippocampal neurons in culture before and after the application of diluted sera in a patch clamp study. Results: A significant increase in the frequency of IPSPs was observed after application of GAD-positive epileptic serum, while no effect was noted using sera from negative controls. Conclusion: The inhibition in neuronal transmission only after application of GAD-positive epileptic serum, suggests an interference with GABA function and consequently with neuronal inhibition supporting a pathogenetic role of GAD-Ab in the development of epilepsy.
New Biotechnology | 2008
Stefano Vassanelli; L. Bandiera; M. Borgo; Giorgio Cellere; L. Santoni; C. Bersani; M. Salamon; Manuela Zaccolo; L. Lorenzelli; Stefano Girardi; Marta Maschietto; M. Dal Maschio; A. Paccagnella
Single-cell experiments represent the next frontier for biochemical and gene expression research. Although bulk-scale methods averaging populations of cells have been traditionally used to investigate cellular behavior, they mask individual cell features and can lead to misleading or insufficient biological results. We report on a single-cell electroporation microarray enabling the transfection of pre-selected individual cells at different sites within the same culture (space-resolved), at arbitrarily chosen time points and even sequentially to the same cells (time-resolved). Delivery of impermeant molecules by single-cell electroporation was first proven to be finely tunable by acting on the electroporation protocol and then optimized for transfection of nucleic acids into Chinese Hamster Ovary (CHO-K1) cells. We focused on DNA oligonucleotides (ODNs), short interfering RNAs (siRNAs), and DNA plasmid vectors, thus providing a versatile and easy-to-use platform for time-resolved gene expression experiments in single mammalian cells.
international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2010
Mufti Mahmud; Alessandra Bertoldo; Stefano Girardi; Marta Maschietto; Stefano Vassanelli
Advances in neuronal probe technology to record brain activity have posed a significant challenge in performing necessary processing and analysis of the recorded data. To be able to infer meaningful conclusions from the recorded signals through these probes, sophisticated signal processing and analysis tools are required. This paper presents a MATLAB-based novel tool, ‘SigMate’, capable of performing various processing and analysis incorporating the available standard tools and our in-house custom tools. The present features include, data display (2D and 3D), baseline correction, stimulus artifact removal, noise characterization, file operations (file splitter, file concatenator, and file column rearranger), latency estimation, determination of cortical layer activation order, spike detection, spike sorting, and are gradually growing. This tool has been tested extensively for the recordings using the standard micropipettes as well as implantable neural probes based on EOSFETs (Electrolyte-Oxide-Semiconductor Field Effect Transistors) and will be made available to the community shortly.
Acta Biomaterialia | 2013
Paola Brun; Michele Scorzeto; Stefano Vassanelli; Ignazio Castagliuolo; Giorgio Palù; Francesca Ghezzo; Grazia M. L. Messina; Giovanna Iucci; Valentina Battaglia; Stefano Sivolella; Andrea Bagno; G. Polzonetti; Giovanni Marletta; Monica Dettin
The features of implant devices and the reactions of bone-derived cells to foreign surfaces determine implant success during osseointegration. In an attempt to better understand the mechanisms underlying osteoblasts attachment and spreading, in this study adhesive peptides containing the fibronectin sequence motif for integrin binding (Arg-Gly-Asp, RGD) or mapping the human vitronectin protein (HVP) were grafted on glass and titanium surfaces with or without chemically induced controlled immobilization. As shown by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, human osteoblasts develop adhesion patches only on specifically immobilized peptides. Indeed, cells quickly develop focal adhesions on RGD-grafted surfaces, while HVP peptide promotes filopodia, structures involved in cellular spreading. As indicated by immunocytochemistry and quantitative polymerase chain reaction, focal adhesions kinase activation is delayed on HVP peptides with respect to RGD while an osteogenic phenotypic response appears within 24h on osteoblasts cultured on both peptides. Cellular pathways underlying osteoblasts attachment are, however, different. As demonstrated by adhesion blocking assays, integrins are mainly involved in osteoblast adhesion to RGD peptide, while HVP selects osteoblasts for attachment through proteoglycan-mediated interactions. Thus an interfacial layer of an endosseous device grafted with specifically immobilized HVP peptide not only selects the attachment and supports differentiation of osteoblasts but also promotes cellular migration.
BioMed Research International | 2010
Marta Canato; M. Dal Maschio; F. Sbrana; R. Raiteri; Carlo Reggiani; Stefano Vassanelli; Aram Megighian
This study aimed to analyse the sarcolemma of Col6a1−/− fibers in comparison with wild type and mdx fibers, taken as positive control in view of the known structural and functional alterations of their membranes. Structural and mechanical properties were studied in single muscle fibers prepared from FDB muscle using atomic force microscopy (AFM) and conventional electrophysiological techniques to measure ionic conductance and capacitance. While the sarcolemma topography was preserved in both types of dystrophic fibers, membrane elasticity was significantly reduced in Col6a1−/− and increased in mdx fibers. In the membrane of Col6a1−/− fibers ionic conductance was increased likely due to an increased leakage, whereas capacitance was reduced, and the action potential (ap) depolarization rate was reduced. The picture emerging from experiments on fibers in culture was consistent with that obtained on intact freshly dissected muscle. Mdx fibers in culture showed a reduction of both membrane conductance and capacitance. In contrast, in mdx intact FDB muscle resting conductance was increased while resting potential and ap depolarization rate were reduced, likely indicating the presence of a consistent population of severely altered fibers which disappear during the culture preparation.
Experimental Neurology | 2006
Marika Vianello; Bruno Giometto; Stefano Vassanelli; Marta Canato; Corrado Betterle; Carla Mucignat
Immunological derangement is assumed to be present in a subgroup of patients affected by drug-resistant epilepsy with serum harboring anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase autoantibodies (GAD-Ab). To further investigate the specific reactivity of GAD-Ab with target cells, we tested sera from drug-resistant epileptics harboring GAD-Ab on cultured fetal rat hippocampal neurons. As a control, we tested sera from GAD-Ab-negative epileptics and GAD-Ab-positive patients affected by Stiff Person Syndrome (SPS), ataxia or diabetes. A specific pattern of reactivity, varying according to disease, was detected on application of sera from GAD-Ab-positive patients with epilepsy, SPS and ataxia, but no specific labeling was found on application of sera from patients with GAD-Ab-negative epilepsy or from GAD-Ab-positive diabetic controls.
Cognitive Computation | 2012
Stefano Vassanelli; Mufti Mahmud; Stefano Girardi; Marta Maschietto
Brain-chip-interfaces (BCHIs) are hybrid entities where chips and nerve cells establish a close physical interaction allowing the transfer of information in one or both directions. Typical examples are represented by multi-site-recording chips interfaced to cultured neurons, cultured/acute brain slices, or implanted “in vivo”. This paper provides an overview on recent achievements in our laboratory in the field of BCHIs leading to enhancement of signals transmission from nerve cells to chip or from chip to nerve cells with an emphasis on in vivo interfacing, either in terms of signal-to-noise ratio or of spatiotemporal resolution. Oxide-insulated chips featuring large-scale and high-resolution arrays of stimulation and recording elements are presented as a promising technology for high spatiotemporal resolution interfacing, as recently demonstrated by recordings obtained from hippocampal slices and brain cortex in implanted animals. Finally, we report on an automated tool for processing and analysis of acquired signals by BCHIs.
international conference of the ieee engineering in medicine and biology society | 2010
Mufti Mahmud; Alessandra Bertoldo; Marta Maschietto; Stefano Girardi; Stefano Vassanelli
Whisking is the natural way by which rodents explore the environment. During whisking, microcircuits in the corresponding barrel columns get activated to segregate and integrate the tactile information through the information processing pathway. The local field potentials (LFPs) recorded from the barrel columns provide important information about this pathway. Different layers of the cortex get activated during this information processing, thus having precise information about the order of layer activation is desired. This work proposes an automated, computationally efficient and easy to implement method to determine the cortical layer activation for the signals recorded from barrel cortex of anesthetized rats upon mechanical whisker stimulation.