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Dive into the research topics where Valeria Pietropaolo is active.

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Featured researches published by Valeria Pietropaolo.


Virology Journal | 2009

Herpes simplex virus infection in pregnancy and in neonate: status of art of epidemiology, diagnosis, therapy and prevention.

Elena Anzivino; D. Fioriti; Monica Mischitelli; Anna Bellizzi; Valentina Barucca; F. Chiarini; Valeria Pietropaolo

Herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection is one of the most common viral sexually transmitted diseases worldwide. The first time infection of the mother may lead to severe illness in pregnancy and may be associated with virus transmission from mother to foetus/newborn.Since the incidence of this sexually transmitted infection continues to rise and because the greatest incidence of herpes simplex virus infections occur in women of reproductive age, the risk of maternal transmission of the virus to the foetus or neonate has become a major health concern.On these purposes the Authors of this review looked for the medical literature and pertinent publications to define the status of art regarding the epidemiology, the diagnosis, the therapy and the prevention of HSV in pregnant women and neonate. Special emphasis is placed upon the importance of genital herpes simplex virus infection in pregnancy and on the its prevention to avoid neonatal HSV infections.


Journal of General Virology | 2000

Polyomavirus persistence in lymphocytes: prevalence in lymphocytes from blood donors and healthy personnel of a blood transfusion centre.

Antonina Dolei; Valeria Pietropaolo; Eduarda Gomes; Cristiana Di Taranto; Maria Ziccheddu; Maria A. Spanu; Claudio Lavorino; Mario Manca; Anna Marta Degener

BK and JC polyomaviruses (BKV and JCV) are widespread in humans and are thought to persist and reactivate under immune alterations. In addition to the kidney, lymphoid cells have been proposed as a site of latency. However, while this was shown to occur in immunocompromised patients, discordant data were published for healthy humans. To help to solve this issue, an extensive study (231 healthy subjects) was carried out on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from blood donors of two towns and from operators of a blood transfusion centre. To discriminate between past and recent infection, nested PCRs for BKV and JCV non-coding control region (NCCR) and VP1 DNA sequences were carried out. Twenty-two per cent of subjects had BKV NCCR, but only 7% also had BKV VP1, as detected by PCR assays of similar sensitivities; the latter positivity was found to decrease with age. In both towns, the BKV WW archetypal DDP strain, subtype I, was found. Only 0.9% of subjects contained JCV DNA, for both NCCR and VP1. Blood operators presented a statistically significant increased prevalence of BKV NCCR (3. 0-fold) and BKV VP1 (9.4-fold) sequences with respect to blood donors of comparable ages, suggesting the possibility of occupational risk of BKV (re)infection or reactivation. Since the possibility of amplifying BKV VP1 sequences from PBMC of healthy humans is lost with age, this suggests that PBMC are not a site of polyomavirus persistence in healthy individuals and that detection of BKV VP1 DNA in PBMC is probably indicative of recent infection or reactivation.


Journal of Medical Virology | 1998

Transplacental transmission of human polyomavirus BK

Valeria Pietropaolo; Cristiana Di Taranto; Anna Marta Degener; Li Jin; L. Sinibaldi; Andrea Baiocchini; Marco Melis; N. Orsi

The presence of BK virus (BKV) and JC virus (JCV) in autopsy materials (placenta, brain, and kidney) of aborted fetuses was investigated by PCR using two sets of primers, specific for the regulatory region (RR) and for the capsid protein VP1, respectively. The RR of BKV was detected in 12 samples of placenta and brain and in nine samples of kidney obtained from 15 fetuses. Out of the 12 positive cases, four placentas, one brain, and three kidney samples also showed the presence of BKV DNA in the VP1 region. Of 12 placentas from a control group with a normal pregnancy outcome, the RR of BKV was detected in six samples, four of which were also positive for the VP1 region. None of the samples from either group was positive for the RR of JCV. In two cases, the nucleotide sequence of the BK RR demonstrated that the viruses isolated from maternal and fetal tissues showed a high homology with one another and had a characteristic deletion of the R63 box compared to the archetype strain. The results indicate that BKV may be transmitted vertically. J. Med. Virol. 56:372–376, 1998.


Clinical and Diagnostic Virology | 1995

Prevalence and distribution of BK virus subtypes in healthy people and immunocompromised patients detected by PCR-restriction enzyme analysis.

Li Jin; Valeria Pietropaolo; J.C. Booth; Kate Ward; David W. Brown

BACKGROUND Four antigenic subtypes of BK virus (BKV) have recently been characterised by both genomic subtyping and serological reactivity. OBJECTIVES To study the prevalence and distribution of subtypes of BKV in different groups of patients. STUDY DESIGN Urine specimens were collected from 33 bone marrow transplant (BMT) recipients, from 101 HIV-infected patients, from 15 children aged 2-5 and from 40 pregnant women were tested for BKV DNA by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and subtyped using a PCR-sequencing (PCR-S) and a modified PCR-restriction enzyme analysis (PCR-RE) methods. RESULTS BKV DNA was detected in 12/18 (67%) of BMT patients with haematuria and 5/15 (33%) without. Overall BKV DNA was detected in 45% of HIV-infected patients, the prevalence of BKV DNA increased with greater immunosuppression as defined by CD4 cell counts. BKV DNA was detected in urine samples from 27% of children and 47% of pregnant women. Four stable BKV subtypes were detected in these patient groups. Dual infections with more than one subtype were identified in urine samples from HIV-infected patients, children and pregnant women but not in the samples from bone marrow recipients. CONCLUSION This study has confirmed the high prevalence of BKV infection in immunocompromised patients and suggests that stable BKV subtypes with conserved sequences are circulating in the human population. The techniques of PCR-S and PCR-RE described in this study are sufficiently sensitive for subtyping BKV direct from clinical specimens.


Clinical & Developmental Immunology | 2013

New insights on human polyomavirus JC and pathogenesis of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy.

Anna Bellizzi; Elena Anzivino; Donatella Maria Rodio; Anna Teresa Palamara; Lucia Nencioni; Valeria Pietropaolo

John Cunningham virus (JCV) is a member of the Polyomaviridae family. It was first isolated from the brain of a patient with Hodgkin disease in 1971, and since then the etiological agent of the progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML) was considered. Until the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) pandemic, PML was rare: in fact HIV-induced immunodeficiency is the most common predisposing factor accounting for 85% of all instances of PML. This data led to intense research on JCV infection and resulted in better understanding of epidemiology and clinic-pathologic spectrum. Recently, cases of PML have been observed after the introduction of monoclonal antibodies, such as natalizumab, rituximab, efalizumab, and infliximab, in the treatment of autoimmune disease, underlining the important role of host immunity in PML pathogenesis. In this review current understanding of the JCV infection and the new findings relating to the pathogenesis of PML has been comprehensively revised, focusing our attention on the interaction between the cellular and viral molecular pathways implicated in the JCV infection and the modulating role of host immune surveillance in the viral reactivation from a latent state.


International Journal of Immunopathology and Pharmacology | 2003

Urothelial bladder carcinoma and viral infections: different association with human polyomaviruses and papillomaviruses.

D. Fioriti; Valeria Pietropaolo; S. Dal Forno; Cesare Laurenti; F. Chiarini; Anna Marta Degener

Bladder cancer is the second most commonly occurring genitourinary cancer in adults. The interaction of different carcinogenic and co-carcinogenic agents are responsible for bladder urothelial carcinoma: alcohol and smoking habits, Schistosoma haematobium infection, exposition to chemicals, analgesic and antineoplastic drugs prolonged use. Recently also viral infections have been associated to this pathology. In this study the correlation between viral infections and bladder carcinoma has been evaluated. A group of 32 patients affected by primary bladder neoplasia has been analysed. A control group of 20 autoptic samples of healthy bladder was analysed. The DNA of the following viruses has been searched by Polymerase chain reaction (PCR): Adenovirus, Herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), Herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2), Human Papillomaviruses (HPV), Polyomaviruses (BKV and JCV). In the examined population the association bladder carcinoma-HPV, found by others, has not been confirmed. The high percentage of human polyomaviruses present in the samples is a statistically significant data (p=0.0087) and allows to presume that BKV and JCV may play a role in the aetiology of bladder tumor. In particular the polyomavirus BK, which is found in significative percentage both in single infection (p=0.0036) and in co-infections with other viral species (p=0.035), may be an important co-factor in the pathogenesis of bladder carcinoma.


European Journal of Epidemiology | 1997

Detection of BK polyomavirus genotypes in healthy and HIV-positive children.

C. Di Taranto; Valeria Pietropaolo; Giovanni Battista Orsi; L. Lin; L. Sinibaldi; Anna Marta Degener

Urine samples from 211 community children (3–7 years age), from 33 HIV type-1 infected children and from 56 HIV- negative children were collected and analyzed for the presence of BK virus (BKV) DNA by PCR. PCR amplifications were carried out using primers specific for the BKV structural region VP1. We also investigated the distribution of BKV subtypes by a restriction fragment polymorphism assay (RFLP). We demonstrated BKV DNA in 3.8% of 211 community children with a higher prevalence of subtype I. In HIV-1 positive children we detected BKV DNA in 2 urine samples (6%) out of 33, both belonging to subtype I. The HIV-negative cluster did not show any positivity to BKV DNA. The results confirm a more frequent primary BKV infection in children of 3–5 years of age and a higher prevalence in hospitalized children affected by HIV-1. The most relevant finding was that among both the community and HIV-1 positive children the subtype I was the most frequently detected.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2005

The human polyomavirus BK: Potential role in cancer.

D. Fioriti; M. Videtta; Monica Mischitelli; Anna Marta Degener; Giuseppe Russo; Antonio Giordano; Valeria Pietropaolo

In human cancer, a role has been suggested for the human polyomavirus BK, primarily associated with tubulointerstitial nephritis and ureteric stenosis in renal transplant recipients, and with hemorrhagic cystitis in bone marrow transplant (BMT) recipients. After the initial infection, primarily unapparent and without clinical signs, the virus disseminates and establishes a persistent infection in the urinary tract and lymphocytes. There is correlative evidence regarding potential role of polyomavirus BK in cancer. In fact, the BK virus (BKV) DNA (complete genome and/or subgenomic fragments containing the early region) is able to transform embryonic fibroblasts and cells cultured from kidney and brain of hamster, mouse, rat, rabbit, and monkey. Nevertheless, transformation of human cells by BKV is inefficient and often abortive. Evidence supporting a possible role for BKV in human cancer has accumulated slowly in recent years, after the advent of polymerase chain reaction (PCR). BKV is known to commonly establish persistent infections in people and to be excreted in the urine by individuals who are asymptomatic, complicating the evaluation of its potential role in development of human cancer. Therefore, there is no certain proof that human polyomavirus BK directly causes the cancer in humans or acts as a cofactor in the pathogenesis of some types of human cancer.


Journal of NeuroVirology | 2003

Rearrangement patterns of JC virus noncoding control region from different biological samples

Valeria Pietropaolo; M. Videtta; D. Fioriti; Monica Mischitelli; A. Arancio; N. Orsi; Anna Marta Degener

The JC virus (JCV) is generally considered the etiological agent of progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML), a demyelinating brain illness, often associated with immunosuppression and significantly frequent in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients. The primary infection by JCV is usually asymptomatic and the virus can remain in a latent status in the kidney. As a consequence of immunological alterations of the host, the virus can show a genetic variability in the noncoding control region (NCCR) due to deletions, duplications, and insertions as compared with the archetype. The NCCR of the archetype strain can be divided into six regions, named boxes A to F. In this study, the authors evaluated the presence of the JCV genome in different biological samples, such as urine, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) and cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) by means of polymerase chain reaction (PCR). After sequencing of the PCR fragments, the NCCR structure of isolated JCV strains was analyzed in order to verify the presence of different viral variants. An analysis of the homology and of the multiple alignment of the obtained sequences in comparison with the archetype strain has been carried out. The results indicated the presence of different rearrangements among the analyzed samples. Whereas in the urine, the NCCR structure always appeared very similar to that of the archetype, in the PBMCs and CSF, the NCCR sequences showed specific and characteristic rearrangements as compared to the archetype. These different rearrangements could be correlated with the emerging of an NCCR organization more suitable for the development of PML.


Archives of Virology | 1990

Involvement of gangliosides in the interaction between BK virus and Vero cells

L. Sinibaldi; Paola Goldoni; Valeria Pietropaolo; Catia Longhi; N. Orsi

SummaryBK virus infectivity was inhibited by gangliosides extracted from Vero cells and by standard preparations of different gangliosides. Gangliosides were also able to restore the susceptibility of glycosidase-treated Vero cells to BK virus infection.

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Anna Bellizzi

Sapienza University of Rome

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Elena Anzivino

Sapienza University of Rome

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D. Fioriti

Sapienza University of Rome

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F. Chiarini

Sapienza University of Rome

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Monica Mischitelli

Sapienza University of Rome

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Anna Marta Degener

Sapienza University of Rome

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Ada Francia

Sapienza University of Rome

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