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Dive into the research topics where Wilma Barcellini is active.

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Featured researches published by Wilma Barcellini.


AIDS | 1994

TH1 and TH2 cytokine production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells from HIV-infected patients

Wilma Barcellini; Gian Paolo Rizzardi; Maria Orietta Borghi; Cristina Fain; Adriano Lazzarin; Pier Luigi Meroni

ObjectiveTo study the TH1->TH2 cytokine switch, thought to occur during the progression of HIV infection. DesignWe investigated interleukin (IL)-2, interferon (IFN)-γ, IL-4, IL-6 and IL-10 production by phytohaemagglutinin (PHA)-stimulated and unstimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) cultures from HIV-negative controls and HIV-positive subjects, stratified according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) criteria. We correlated the above parameters with markers of disease progression. MethodsCytokine production was measured in supernatants using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) in 40 patients and 17 controls. To evaluate disease progression, we also determined CD4+ cell counts, PHA-induced proliferative response, p24 release and spontaneous immunoglobulin (Ig) G and IgM production. ResultsIn agreement with the TH1->TH2 switch hypothesis, we found that in the course of HIV disease mitogen-stimulated IL-2 production decreased, spontaneous and stimulated IL-6 production and spontaneous IL-10 secretion increased; IL-4 showed an increasing trend, although it was reduced in HIV-positive subjects. Finally, immunoglobulin production increased over time. In contrast, mitogen-stimulated IFN-γ and IL-10 production did not change among the CDC categories, although the former decreased and the latter increased in comparison with HIV-negative controls. ConclusionsOur data partially agree with the TH1->TH2 switch hypothesis. Since IL-6 and IL-10 are produced by different cell types, whose proportions and functional features vary in the course of the disease, further experiments with purified lymphocyte subsets and monocytes are required. Nevertheless, as already suggested, we believe that a switch from a type 1 to a type 2 response occurs in HIV infection.


Human Mutation | 2009

Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II (CDAII) is caused by mutations in the SEC23B gene

Paola Bianchi; Elisa Fermo; Cristina Vercellati; Carla Boschetti; Wilma Barcellini; Anna Paola Marcello; Pier Giorgio Righetti; Alberto Zanella

Congenital dyserythropoietic anemia type II (CDAII) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by ineffective erythropoiesis, hemolysis, erythroblast morphological abnormalities, and hypoglycosylation of some red blood cell (RBC) membrane proteins. Recent studies indicated that CDAII is caused by a defect disturbing Golgi processing in erythroblasts. A linkage analysis located a candidate region on chromosome 20, termed the CDAN2 locus, in the majority of CDAII patients but the aberrant gene has not so far been elucidated. We used a proteomic‐genomic approach to identify SEC23B as the candidate gene for CDAII by matching the recently published data on the cytoplasmic proteome of human RBCs with the chromosomic localization of CDAN2 locus. Sequencing analysis of SEC23B gene in 13 CDAII patients from 10 families revealed 12 different mutations: six missense (c.40C>T, c.325G>A, c.1043A>C, c.1489C>T, c.1808C>T, and c.2101C>T), two frameshift (c.428_428delAinsCG and c.1821delT), one splicing (c.689+1G>A), and three nonsense (c.568C>T, c.649C>T, and c.1660C>T). Mutations c.40C>T and c.325G>A were detected in unrelated patients. SEC23B is a member of the Sec23/Sec24 family, a component of the COPII coat protein complex involved in protein transport through membrane vesicles. Abnormalities in this gene are likely to disturb endoplasmic reticulum (ER)‐to‐Golgi trafficking, affecting different glycosylation pathways and ultimately accounting for the cellular phenotype observed in CDAII. Hum Mutat 30:1–7, 2009.


Clinical and Experimental Immunology | 2008

Anti-endothelial cell antibodies in patients with Wegener's granulomatosis and micropolyarteritis.

G. Ferraro; P. L. Meroni; Angela Tincani; A. Sinico; Wilma Barcellini; Antonella Radice; G. Gregorini; M. Froldi; Maria Orietta Borghi; Genesio Balestrieri

Anti‐endothelial cell antibodies (AECA) have been detected by cell surface radioimmunoassay innine out of 15 patients with micropolyarteritis (MPA) and in two out of five patients with Wegenersgranulomatosis. AECA mostly belonged to the IgG isotype and were present in the active phase ofthe diseases. These antibodies were not detectable in 10 sera from patients with essential mixedcryoglobulinaemia. suggesting that they were not a mere epiphenomenon consequent to theinflammatory vascular injury. The binding activity was not related to ABH antigens or to HLA class Iantigens displayed by resting human endothelial cells in culture and was not influenced by removingimmune complexes. Absorption of the anti‐neutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA). present inMPA and Wegeners granulomatosis sera, did not affect the endothelial binding. AECA‐positive seradid not display lytic activity against endothelial cells, neither alone nor after addition of freshcomplement or normal human peripheral blood mononuelear cells. Although AECA arc notcytolytic for endothelial cell monolayers in vitro, the reactivity against intact endothelial cells suggeststheir possible involvement in in vivo pathological processes affecting vascular structures in smallvessel primary vasculitides.


Haematologica | 2008

Clinical and hematologic features of 300 patients affected by hereditary spherocytosis grouped according to the type of the membrane protein defect

Mariagabriella Mariani; Wilma Barcellini; Cristina Vercellati; Anna Paola Marcello; Elisa Fermo; Paola Pedotti; Carla Boschetti; Alberto Zanella

The molecular basis of hereditary spherocytosis is highly heterogeneous, involving the genes encoding for spectrin, ankyrin, band 3 and protein 4.2. The findings of this retrospective study show that splenectomy corrected anemia in patients with all molecular subtypes of hereditary spherocytosis. Thus, the definition of the red cell membrane defect in hereditary spherocytosis has no major clinical implications, but may be useful for a differential diagnosis from other hematologic disorders that mimic this hemolytic anemia. See related perspective article on page 1283. Background Hereditary spherocytosis is a very heterogeneous form of hemolytic anemia. The aim of this study was to relate the type of molecular defect with clinical and hematologic features and response to splenectomy using information from a large database of patients. Design and Methods Data from 300 consecutive patients with hereditary spherocytosis, grouped according to the results of sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, were analyzed and the sensitivity of red cell osmotic fragility tests was compared in various subsets of patients. Results Band 3 and spectrin deficiencies were the most common protein abnormalities (54% and 31%, respectively); 11% of cases were not classified by the electrophoretic analysis. Spectrin deficiency was more frequently diagnosed in childhood and band 3 deficiency in adulthood. Hemoglobin concentration was slightly lower, spherocyte number and hemolysis markers higher in spectrin deficiency than in band 3 deficiency. The sensitivity of the osmotic fragility tests ranged from 48% to 95%, and was independent of the type and amount of the membrane defect. The association of the acidified glycerol lysis test and the NaCl test on incubated blood reached a sensitivity of 99%. Splenectomy corrected the anemia in patients with all subtypes of hereditary spherocytosis although spectrin-deficient patients still showed increased reticulocyte numbers and levels of unconjugated bilirubin. Splenectomy allowed the identification of the membrane defect in all the previously unclassified patients, most of whom had spectrin and/or ankyrin deficiency. Conclusions The definition of the red cell membrane defect in hereditary spherocytosis has no major clinical implications, but may be useful for a differential diagnosis from other hematologic disorders that mimic this hemolytic anemia.


Haematologica | 2012

Diagnostic power of laboratory tests for hereditary spherocytosis: a comparison study in 150 patients grouped according to molecular and clinical characteristics

Paola Bianchi; Elisa Fermo; Cristina Vercellati; Anna Paola Marcello; Laura Porretti; Agostino Cortelezzi; Wilma Barcellini; Alberto Zanella

Background The laboratory diagnosis of hereditary spherocytosis commonly relies on NaCl-based or glycerol-based red cell osmotic fragility tests; more recently, an assay directly targeting the hereditary spherocytosis molecular defect (eosin-5′-maleimide-binding test) has been proposed. None of the available tests identifies all cases of hereditary spherocytosis. Design and Methods We compared the performances of the eosin-5′-maleimide-binding test, NaCl-osmotic fragility studies on fresh and incubated blood, the glycerol lysis test, the acidified glycerol lysis test, and the Pink test on a series of 150 patients with hereditary spherocytosis grouped according to clinical phenotype and the defective protein, with the final aim of finding the combination of tests associated with the highest diagnostic power, even in the mildest cases of hereditary spherocytosis. Results The eosin-5′-maleimide-binding test had a sensitivity of 93% and a specificity of 98% for detecting hereditary spherocytosis: the sensitivity was independent of the type and amount of molecular defect and of the clinical phenotype. The acidified glycerol lysis test and Pink test showed comparable sensitivity (95% and 91%). The sensitivity of NaCl osmotic fragility tests, commonly considered the gold standard for the diagnosis of hereditary spherocytosis, was 68% on fresh blood and 81% on incubated blood, and further decreased in compensated cases (53% and 64%, respectively). The combination of the eosin-5′-maleimide-binding test and acidified glycerol lysis test enabled all patients with hereditary spherocytosis to be identified. The eosin-5′-maleimide-binding test showed the greatest disease specificity. Conclusions Each type of test fails to diagnose some cases of hereditary spherocytosis. The association of an eosin-5′-maleimide-binding test and an acidified glycerol lysis test enabled identification of all patients with hereditary spherocytosis in this series and, therefore, represents a currently effective diagnostic strategy for hereditary spherocytosis including mild/compensated cases.


Clinical Immunology and Immunopathology | 1992

Antibodies to endothelial cells in primary vasculitides mediate in vitro endothelial cytotoxicity in the presence of normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells

N. Del Papa; P. L. Meroni; Wilma Barcellini; A. Sinico; Antonella Radice; T. Tincani; D. D'Cruz; Ferdinando Nicoletti; Maria Orietta Borghi; M.A. Khamashita; G. R. V. Hughes; G. Balestrieri

Twenty-eight out of 62 patients with Wegeners granulomatosis and micropolyarteritis display circulating antiendothelial cell antibodies (AECA) detectable by a cell surface radioimmunoassay. These antibodies do not induce an in vitro endothelial damage either alone or in the presence of fresh complement; however, 50% of IgG-AECA positive sera can be cytotoxic in the presence of human normal peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBM) at high effector/target ratios. The specificity of the PBM-mediated cytotoxicity is supported by the absence of the phenomenon in AECA negative sera, by the disappearance of the lytic effect after absorption of AECA, and by the finding that cellular-mediated cytotoxicity can be reproduced by purified IgG-AECA positive fractions. On the contrary, polymorphonuclear leukocytes or adherent mononuclear cells are not involved in such a cytotoxic activity. AECA seem to be directed against determinants consitutively expressed on the endothelial surface since the activation of endothelial cells by interleukin-1 beta or interferon-gamma affects neither the antibody binding nor their ability to mediate 51Cr release in the presence of PBM. These findings favor the hypothesis for a possible direct pathogenetic role of circulating AECA in the in vivo vascular damage.


Haematologica | 2014

Treatment of autoimmune hemolytic anemias

Alberto Zanella; Wilma Barcellini

Autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) is a relatively uncommon disorder caused by autoantibodies directed against self red blood cells. It can be idiopathic or secondary, and classified as warm, cold (cold hemagglutinin disease (CAD) and paroxysmal cold hemoglobinuria) or mixed, according to the thermal range of the autoantibody. AIHA may develop gradually, or have a fulminant onset with life-threatening anemia. The treatment of AIHA is still not evidence-based. The first-line therapy for warm AIHA are corticosteroids, which are effective in 70–85% of patients and should be slowly tapered over a time period of 6–12 months. For refractory/relapsed cases, the current sequence of second-line therapy is splenectomy (effective approx. in 2 out of 3 cases but with a presumed cure rate of up to 20%), rituximab (effective in approx. 80–90% of cases), and thereafter any of the immunosuppressive drugs (azathioprine, cyclophosphamide, cyclosporin, mycophenolate mofetil). Additional therapies are intravenous immunoglobulins, danazol, plasma-exchange, and alemtuzumab and high-dose cyclophosphamide as last resort option. As the experience with rituximab evolves, it is likely that this drug will be located at an earlier point in therapy of warm AIHA, before more toxic immunosuppressants, and in place of splenectomy in some cases. In CAD, rituximab is now recommended as first-line treatment.


Blood | 2012

Low-dose rituximab in adult patients with idiopathic autoimmune hemolytic anemia: clinical efficacy and biologic studies

Wilma Barcellini; Francesco Zaja; Anna Zaninoni; Francesca Guia Imperiali; Marta Lisa Battista; Eros Di Bona; Bruno Fattizzo; Dario Consonni; Agostino Cortelezzi; Renato Fanin; Alberto Zanella

This prospective study investigated the efficacy, safety, and response duration of low-dose rituximab (100 mg fixed dose for 4 weekly infusions) together with a short course of steroids as first- or second-line therapy in 23 patients with primary autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA). The overall response was 82.6% at month +2, and subsequently stabilized to ∼ 90% at months +6 and +12; the response was better in warm autoimmune hemolytic anemia (WAIHA; overall response, 100% at all time points) than in cold hemagglutinin disease (CHD; average, 60%); the relapse-free survival was 100% for WAIHA at +6 and +12 months versus 89% and 59% in CHD, respectively, and the estimated relapse-free survival at 2 years was 81% and 40% for the warm and cold forms, respectively. The risk of relapse was higher in CHD and in patients with a longer interval between diagnosis and enrollment. Steroid administration was reduced both as cumulative dose (∼ 50%) and duration compared with the patients past history. Treatment was well tolerated and no adverse events or infections were recorded; retreatment was also effective. The clinical response was correlated with amelioration biologic markers such as cytokine production (IFN-γ, IL-12, TNF-α, and IL-17), suggesting that low-dose rituximab exerts an immunomodulating activity. This study is registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as NCT01345708.


Blood | 2014

Clinical heterogeneity and predictors of outcome in primary autoimmune hemolytic anemia: a GIMEMA study of 308 patients

Wilma Barcellini; Bruno Fattizzo; Anna Zaninoni; Tommaso Radice; Ilaria Nichele; Eros Di Bona; Monia Lunghi; Cristina Tassinari; Fiorella Alfinito; Antonella Ferrari; Anna Paola Leporace; Pasquale Niscola; Monica Carpenedo; Carla Boschetti; Nicoletta Revelli; Maria Antonietta Villa; Dario Consonni; Laura Scaramucci; Paolo de Fabritiis; Giuseppe Tagariello; Gianluca Gaidano; Francesco Rodeghiero; Agostino Cortelezzi; Alberto Zanella

The clinical outcome, response to treatment, and occurrence of acute complications were retrospectively investigated in 308 primary autoimmune hemolytic anemia (AIHA) cases and correlated with serological characteristics and severity of anemia at onset. Patients had been followed up for a median of 33 months (range 12-372); 60% were warm AIHA, 27% cold hemagglutinin disease, 8% mixed, and 5% atypical (mostly direct antiglobulin test negative). The latter 2 categories more frequently showed a severe onset (hemoglobin [Hb] levels ≤6 g/dL) along with reticulocytopenia. The majority of warm AIHA patients received first-line steroid therapy only, whereas patients with mixed and atypical forms were more frequently treated with 2 or more therapy lines, including splenectomy, immunosuppressants, and rituximab. The cumulative incidence of relapse was increased in more severe cases (hazard ratio 3.08; 95% confidence interval, 1.44-6.57 for Hb ≤6 g/dL; P < .001). Thrombotic events were associated with Hb levels ≤6 g/dL at onset, intravascular hemolysis, and previous splenectomy. Predictors of a fatal outcome were severe infections, particularly in splenectomized cases, acute renal failure, Evans syndrome, and multitreatment (4 or more lines). The identification of severe and potentially fatal AIHA in a largely heterogeneous disease requires particular experienced attention by clinicians.


Toxicology Letters | 1999

Immune parameters in biological monitoring of pesticide exposure: current knowledge and perspectives

Claudio Colosio; Emanuela Corsini; Wilma Barcellini; Marco Maroni

Exposure to pesticides can cause a number of effects on the immune system, varying from a slight modulation of immune functions to the development of clinical immune diseases. The aim of this study has been reviewing published data on immune effects of pesticides in humans, with particular attention for effects observed in absence of any other change, and to the possibility of identifying a dose effect relationship. Some evidence of immunotoxic effects in man involve organophosphorus compounds, some organochlorine insecticides (OC), some carbamates, some phenoxy herbicides, dithiocarbamates, and pentachlorophenol (PCP). The alterations are usually observed in absence of any other change; in some cases, data suggest the presence of a dose effect relationship. The prognostic significance of the observed changes is still unclear. The Authors propose a tier approach to assess immune effects in humans.

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Alberto Zanella

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Agostino Cortelezzi

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Anna Zaninoni

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Elisa Fermo

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Paola Bianchi

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Cristina Vercellati

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Bruno Fattizzo

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Anna Paola Marcello

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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Francesca Guia Imperiali

Fondazione IRCCS Ca' Granda Ospedale Maggiore Policlinico

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