98 results on '"Izzo I"'
Search Results
2. Flexible and Convergent Enantioselective Total Synthesis of ( R )-Juglanaloids A and B: Two Phthalide Spiro Alkaloids with Potential Alzheimer's Disease Inhibitory Activity.
- Author
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Khettar I, Sinibaldi A, Schettini R, Gorini G, Siddiqa A, Litta AD, De Riccardis F, Izzo I, and Sala GD
- Subjects
- Stereoisomerism, Molecular Structure, Benzofurans chemistry, Benzofurans chemical synthesis, Benzofurans pharmacology, Alzheimer Disease drug therapy, Spiro Compounds chemistry, Spiro Compounds chemical synthesis, Spiro Compounds pharmacology, Alkaloids chemistry, Alkaloids chemical synthesis, Alkaloids pharmacology
- Abstract
Juglanaloids A and B are recently isolated natural products characterized by an unprecedented spiro bicyclic isobenzofuranone-tetrahydrobenzazepinone framework and a promising antiamyloid activity. Here reported is a straightforward convergent total synthesis of these natural products, which were obtained in high enantiomeric purity (94% and >99% ee for juglanaloids A and B, respectively) through an eight-step longest linear sequence, based on an efficient and reliable enantioselective phase-transfer-catalyzed alkylation step. Considering the interesting biological activity of juglanaloids, this convenient, highly enantioselective, flexible, and predictable synthetic strategy promises to be a powerful tool for accessing potentially bioactive spiro bicyclic phthalide-tetrahydrobenzazepinone derivatives.
- Published
- 2024
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3. Deconstructing Best-in-Class Neoglycoclusters as a Tool for Dissecting Key Multivalent Processes in Glycosidase Inhibition.
- Author
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Liang Y, Schettini R, Kern N, Manciocchi L, Izzo I, Spichty M, Bodlenner A, and Compain P
- Subjects
- Humans, alpha-Mannosidase, Structure-Activity Relationship, Glycoside Hydrolases metabolism, Imino Sugars chemistry
- Abstract
Multivalency represents an appealing option to modulate selectivity in enzyme inhibition and transform moderate glycosidase inhibitors into highly potent ones. The rational design of multivalent inhibitors is however challenging because global affinity enhancement relies on several interconnected local mechanistic events, whose relative impact is unknown. So far, the largest multivalent effects ever reported for a non-polymeric glycosidase inhibitor have been obtained with cyclopeptoid-based inhibitors of Jack bean α-mannosidase (JBα-man). Here, we report a structure-activity relationship (SAR) study based on the top-down deconstruction of best-in-class multivalent inhibitors. This approach provides a valuable tool to understand the complex interdependent mechanisms underpinning the inhibitory multivalent effect. Combining SAR experiments, binding stoichiometry assessments, thermodynamic modelling and atomistic simulations allowed us to establish the significant contribution of statistical rebinding mechanisms and the importance of several key parameters, including inhitope accessibility, topological restrictions, and electrostatic interactions. Our findings indicate that strong chelate-binding, resulting from the formation of a cross-linked complex between a multivalent inhibitor and two dimeric JBα-man molecules, is not a sufficient condition to reach high levels of affinity enhancements. The deconstruction approach thus offers unique opportunities to better understand multivalent binding and provides important guidelines for the design of potent and selective multiheaded inhibitors., (© 2024 The Authors. Chemistry - A European Journal published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
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- 2024
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4. Does the rapid initiation of antiretroviral therapy at HIV diagnosis impact virological response in a real-life setting? A single-centre experience in Northern Italy.
- Author
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Gregori N, Renzetti S, Izzo I, Faletti G, Fumarola B, Degli Antoni M, Arsuffi S, Storti S, Tiecco G, Calza S, Caruso A, Castelli F, Quiros-Roldan E, and Focà E
- Subjects
- Humans, Retrospective Studies, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, Italy, Viral Load, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, HIV Infections diagnosis, HIV Infections drug therapy, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use
- Abstract
Rapid initiation of antiretroviral therapy (ART) has been proven efficacious and safe, but more investigations are needed to define feasibility of rapid ART approach in real-life settings.We conducted a retrospective, observational study on newly HIVdiagnosed patients referred to our Infectious Diseases Department from September 1st, 2015, to July 31st, 2019. According to the timing of ART initiation, we distinguished 3 groups of patients (rapid, intermediate and late group) and represented the trend of virological response during a 400-days-period. The hazard ratios of each predictor on viral suppression were estimated through the Cox proportional hazard model.The median time from HIV diagnosis to the first medical referral was 15 days and the median time from the first care access to therapy start was 24 days. Among patients, 37.6% started ART within 7 days, 20.6% between 8 and 30 days, and 41.8% after 30 days. Longer time to ART start and higher baseline viral load were associated with a lower probability of viral suppression. After one year, all groups showed a high viral suppression rate (99%). In a high-income setting the rapid ART approach seems useful to accelerate viral suppression which is great over time regardless of ART initiation timing.
- Published
- 2023
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5. Skin Toxicities Associated with Botulin Toxin Injection for Aesthetic Procedures: Data from the European Spontaneous Reporting System.
- Author
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Nicoletti MM, Anatriello A, Liguori V, Cantone A, di Mauro G, Izzo I, Lettera N, Della Ragione JM, Campitiello MR, Cosenza V, and Scavone C
- Abstract
Botulinum toxin is a protein deriving from the bacteria Clostridium botulinum and it is widely used for the treatment of a variety of muscle hyperactivity syndromes and for cosmetic indications. Having a long-lasting effect, Botulinum toxin type A (BTA) is one of the most botulin toxin products used. Even if BTA has shown benefits in reducing the vertical lines between the eyebrows, Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) have been experienced as well, of which the most common ones are headache and drooping eyelids. In addition, since other local and systemic risks have been identified, a non-interventional post-authorization safety study (PASS) has been started. The aim of the present study was to report cases of skin toxicity associated with this drug, considering Individual Case Safety Reports (ICSRs) existing on the Eudravigilance website. Among 1464 ICSRs sent to the EV database, 718 ICSRs, including 5154 PTs, reported BTA as a suspected drug associated with cutaneous toxicity. The majority of patients experiencing BTA-induced skin toxicity were female (92.1%) belonging mostly to the age group of 18-64 years. The most serious criteria, when reported, were "Other Medically Important Condition" and "Caused/prolonged hospitalization", although the outcome was mainly reported as "Unknown". The most reported PTs, related to skin disorders, were: "Erythema", "Rash", "Pruritus", "Urticaria", "Swelling face", "Brow ptosis", "Eyelid ptosis", "Injection site pain", and "Angioedema". Considering that in most ICSRs, ADRs related to skin disorders were symptoms of hypersensitivity reactions which in some conditions could be life-threatening, further studies are required to better define the safety profile of BTA used for aesthetic procedures.
- Published
- 2023
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6. The Antimicrobial, Antibiofilm and Anti-Inflammatory Activities of P13#1, a Cathelicidin-like Achiral Peptoid.
- Author
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Cafaro V, Bosso A, Di Nardo I, D'Amato A, Izzo I, De Riccardis F, Siepi M, Culurciello R, D'Urzo N, Chiarot E, Torre A, Pizzo E, Merola M, and Notomista E
- Abstract
Cationic antimicrobial peptides (CAMPs) are powerful molecules with antimicrobial, antibiofilm and endotoxin-scavenging activities. These properties make CAMPs very attractive drugs in the face of the rapid increase in multidrug-resistant (MDR) pathogens, but they are limited by their susceptibility to proteolytic degradation. An intriguing solution to this issue could be the development of functional mimics of CAMPs with structures that enable the evasion of proteases. Peptoids ( N -substituted glycine oligomers) are an important class of peptidomimetics with interesting benefits: easy synthetic access, intrinsic proteolytic stability and promising bioactivities. Here, we report the characterization of P13#1, a 13-residue peptoid specifically designed to mimic cathelicidins, the best-known and most widespread family of CAMPs. P13#1 showed all the biological activities typically associated with cathelicidins: bactericidal activity over a wide spectrum of strains, including several ESKAPE pathogens; the ability to act in combination with different classes of conventional antibiotics; antibiofilm activity against preformed biofilms of Pseudomonas aeruginosa , comparable to that of human cathelicidin LL-37; limited toxicity; and an ability to inhibit LPS-induced proinflammatory effects which is comparable to that of "the last resource" antibiotic colistin. We further studied the interaction of P13#1 with SDS, LPSs and bacterial cells by using a fluorescent version of P13#1. Finally, in a subcutaneous infection mouse model, it showed antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory activities comparable to ampicillin and gentamicin without apparent toxicity. The collected data indicate that P13#1 is an excellent candidate for the formulation of new antimicrobial therapies.
- Published
- 2023
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7. Which is the top player for the cardiovascular safety? ibrutinib vs. obinutuzumab in CLL.
- Author
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Mascolo A, Di Napoli R, Balzano N, D'Alessio E, Izzo I, Rossi F, Paolisso G, Capuano A, and Sportiello L
- Abstract
Introduction: Ibrutinib, a Bruton's tyrosine kinase (BTK) inhibitor, is authorized for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL). This study aims to explore the cardiac safety profile of ibrutinib in comparison with obinutuzumab. Methods: A retrospective pharmacovigilance study was conducted on data retrieved from the European pharmacovigilance database (Eudravigilance) from 1 January 2014 to 30 September 2022. To compare the reporting frequency of cardiovascular events among ibrutinib, obinutuzumab, and the combination of both. Results: A total of 2 291 CV cases were retrieved, of which 1965 were related to ibrutinib, 312 to obinutuzumab, and 14 to the combination. Most cases referred to patients aged ≥65 years ( N = 1,454; 63.47%) and male ( N = 1,497; 65.34%). Most cases were serious ( N = 2,131; 93.02%). The most reported events were: atrial fibrillation ( N = 913; 31.31%) and haemorrhage ( N = 201; 6.89%). A higher reporting frequency of CV events was found when ibrutinib was compared to obinutuzumab (ROR, 3.22; 95% CI, 2.89-3.60) or combination (ROR, 1.77; 95% CI, 1.11-2.83). A lower reporting was observed when obinutuzumab was compared to combination (ROR, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.34-0.88). Discussion: A higher reporting frequency of CV events in patients exposed to ibrutinib in comparison with obinutuzumab was found. Further studies are needed to better explore the safety of ibrutinib., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Mascolo, Di Napoli, Balzano, D’Alessio, Izzo, Rossi, Paolisso, Capuano and Sportiello.)
- Published
- 2023
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8. Water-Soluble Chiral Cyclic Peptoids and Their Sodium and Gadolinium Complexes: Study of Conformational and Relaxometric Properties.
- Author
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D'Amato A, Jiang L, Della Sala G, Kirshenbaum K, Costabile C, Furlan C, Gianolio E, Izzo I, and De Riccardis F
- Abstract
Cyclic peptoids are macrocyclic oligomers of N-substituted glycines with specific folding abilities and excellent metal binding properties. In this work, we show how strategic positioning of chiral ( S )- and ( R )-(1-carboxyethyl)glycine units influences the conformational stability of water-soluble macrocyclic peptoids as sodium complexes. The reported results are based on nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, extensive computational studies, and X-ray diffraction analysis using single crystals grown from aqueous solutions. The studies include
1 H relaxometric investigations of hexameric cyclic peptoids in the presence of the Gd3+ ion to assess their thermodynamic stabilities and relaxivities.- Published
- 2023
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9. Atypical monkeypox presentation in a previously vaccinated MSM HIV-positive adult.
- Author
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Crosato V, Degli Antoni M, Izzo I, Cerini C, Pennati F, Gulletta M, Odolini S, Tomasoni LR, Matteelli A, and Castelli F
- Subjects
- Humans, Adult, Male, Middle Aged, Homosexuality, Male, Biopsy, Mpox (monkeypox), HIV Infections, Sexual and Gender Minorities
- Abstract
The outbreak of monkeypox virus (MPXV) in non-endemic countries is an international public health emergency, and the diversity in manifestations poses challenges for early diagnosis and isolation. We describe an atypical case of monkeypox (MPX) in a 46-year-old homosexual male living with HIV. He reported 1-day duration fever, a lesion on his chin that, over a period of 18 days, had gradually enlarged and ulcerated. Biopsy examination performed at an external centre revealed pyoderma gangrenosum, unconfirmed at a subsequent biopsy. When he reported to our hospital outpatients' clinic the chin lesion had a diameter of 5 × 5 cm, necrotic margins and ulcerated base and signs of superinfection. He was admitted for further investigations. Three swabs collected from pharynx, skin and chin lesion resulted positive for MPXV. He had a favourable clinical course and was discharged soon after. Pending the achievement of optimal vaccination coverage in at-risk groups, early identification and isolation of infectious patients represent the cornerstones of the containment strategy. Atypical cases of MPX manifestations are not uncommon, particularly in patients with HIV infection. A high level of suspicion should be maintained to identify infectious cases at an early stage and avoid further spread of the infection., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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10. COVID-19 Vaccines and Atrial Fibrillation: Analysis of the Post-Marketing Pharmacovigilance European Database.
- Author
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Ruggiero R, Donniacuo M, Mascolo A, Gaio M, Cappetta D, Rafaniello C, Docimo G, Riccardi C, Izzo I, Ruggiero D, Paolisso G, Rossi F, De Angelis A, and Capuano A
- Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) has been described in COVID-19 patients. Recently, some case reports and US pharmacovigilance analyses described AF onset as a rare adverse event following COVID-19 vaccination. The possible correlation is unclear. We systematically analyzed the reports of AF related to COVID-19 vaccines collected in the European pharmacovigilance database, EudraVigilance (EV), from 2020 to November 2022. We carried out descriptive and disproportionality analyses. Moreover, we performed a sensitivity analysis, excluding the reports describing other possible alternative AF causes (pericarditis, myocarditis, COVID-19, or other drugs that may cause/exacerbate AF). Overall, we retrieved 6226 reports, which represented only 0.3% of all those related to COVID-19 vaccines collected in EV during our study period. AF reports mainly referred to adults (in particular, >65 years old), with an equal distribution in sex. Reports were mainly related to tozinameran (54.04%), elasomeran (28.3%), and ChAdOx1-S (14.32%). The reported AF required patient hospitalization in 35% of cases and resulted in a life-threatening condition in 10% of cases. The AF duration (when reported) was highly variable, but the majority of the events had a short duration (moda = 24 h). Although an increased frequency of AF reporting with mRNA vaccines emerges from our study, other investigations are required to investigate the possible correlation between COVID-19 vaccination and the rare AF occurrence.
- Published
- 2023
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11. Reduced probability of improving viro-immunological state in subjects with vertical transmission of HIV reaching adult age: A multicenter retrospective cohort study.
- Author
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Pennati F, Calza S, Di Biagio A, Mussini C, Rusconi S, Bonora S, Borghetti A, Quiros-Roldan E, Sarteschi G, Menozzi M, Ferrara M, Celotti A, Ciccullo A, Giacomet V, Izzo I, Dotta L, Badolato R, Castelli F, and Focà E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Humans, Young Adult, HIV-1, Probability, Retrospective Studies, RNA, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, HIV Infections epidemiology
- Abstract
Introduction: Young adults with vertical transmission (VT) of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) represent a fragile population. This study evaluates factors associated with viro-immunological outcome of these patients., Methods: We performed a multicenter study including HIV-infected subjects with VT ≥ 18 years old from six Italian clinics. Subjects were observed from birth to death, lost to follow-up, or last visit until December 31, 2019. Condition of "optimal viro-immunological status" (OS) was defined as the simultaneous presence of HIV ribonucleic acid (RNA) < 50 copies/mL, CD4+ > 500 cells/mm
3 , and CD4+/CD8+ ratio ≥ 1., Results: A total of 126 subjects were enrolled. At 18 years of age, 52/126 (44.4%) had HIV-RNA > 50 copies/mL, 47/126 (38.2%) had CD4+ < 500/mm3 , and 78/126 (67.2%) had CD4+/CD8+ < 1; 28 subjects (23.7%) presented in the condition of OS. Having a CD4+/CD8+ ratio ≥ 1 at 18 years of age was related with an increased probability of shift from suboptimal viro-immunological status (SOS) to OS (HR: 7.7, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 4.23-14.04), and a reduced risk of shift from the OS to the SOS (HR: 0.49, 95% CI: 0.26-0.92). Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) diagnosis significantly reduced the probability of shift from a viro-immunological SOS to OS (HR: 0.09, 95% CI: 0.03-0.30). Subjects who had not achieved an OS at 18 years of age had an increased risk of discontinuation of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART, p = .019)., Conclusions: Only a small proportion of subjects with VT of HIV reached the adult age with "OS". Transition to the adult care with a compromised viro-immunological condition represents a negative driver for future optimal infection control, with a higher risk of discontinuation of cART and a reduced probability to improve the immunological status later in the years., (© 2023 The Authors. Immunity, Inflammation and Disease published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)- Published
- 2023
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12. Macrocyclic Triazolopeptoids: A Promising Class of Extended Cyclic Peptoids.
- Author
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Araszczuk AM, D'Amato A, Schettini R, Costabile C, Della Sala G, Pierri G, Tedesco C, De Riccardis F, and Izzo I
- Subjects
- Models, Molecular, Molecular Conformation, Cyclization, Peptoids chemistry
- Abstract
Head-to-tail cyclization of linear oligoamides containing 4-benzylaminomethyl-1 H -1,2,3-triazol-1-yl acetic acid monomers afforded a novel class of "extended macrocyclic peptoids". The identification of the conformation in solution for a cyclodimer and the X-ray crystal structure of a cyclic tetraamide are reported.
- Published
- 2022
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13. SARS-CoV-2 Infection and Vaccination Coverage among Fragile Populations in a Local Health Area of Northern Italy.
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Maifredi G, Izzo I, Gasparotti C, Sileo CV, Hiv-CoV Group, Castelli F, and Quiros-Roldan E
- Abstract
Italy was dramatically hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the province of Brescia was one of the epicenters of the outbreak. Furthermore, Brescia has one of the highest incidences of people living with HIV (PLWH) and a substantial presence of migrants. We conducted a retrospective cohort study involving all citizens connected to the Brescia Health Protection Agency, assessing the SARS-CoV-2 burden, COVID-19 prevalence, and vaccination coverage. A total of 1,004,210 persons were included, 3817 PLWH and 134,492 foreigners. SARS-CoV-2 infection, hospitalizations and death were more frequent among Italians than foreigners. SARS-CoV-2 infections and deaths were more frequent in HIV-uninfected people than in PLWH. PLWH and foreigners were less likely to have a SARS-CoV-2 diagnosis compared to HIV-negative patients. Migrants were more likely to be hospitalized but had a lower risk of death compared to HIV-negative patients. Regarding vaccination, 89.1% of the population received at least one dose of vaccine, while 70.4% of the Italian citizens and 36.3% of the foreigner subjects received three doses of vaccine. Foreigners showed a lower risk of being diagnosed with SARS-CoV-2 but a higher risk of complications. HIV infection was not associated with a higher risk of SARS-CoV-2 severe manifestations compared to the general population. COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy was not different between PLWH and HIV uninfected people, but foreigners were more hesitant.
- Published
- 2022
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14. Right- and left-handed PPI helices in cyclic dodecapeptoids.
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Pierri G, Schettini R, Summa FF, De Riccardis F, Monaco G, Izzo I, and Tedesco C
- Subjects
- Crystallography, X-Ray, Hydrogen Bonding, Models, Molecular, Protein Structure, Secondary, Peptoids chemistry
- Abstract
Enantiomorphic right- and left-handed polyproline type I helices in four cyclic dodecapeptoids with methoxyethyl and propargyl side chains are observed for the first time by single crystal X-ray diffraction. The peculiar absence of NH⋯OC hydrogen bonds in peptoids unveils the role of intramolecular backbone-to-backbone CO⋯CO interactions and CH⋯OC hydrogen bonds in the stabilization of the macrocycle conformation. Moreover, intramolecular backbone-side chain C5 CH⋯OC hydrogen bonds emerge as a stabilizing factor.
- Published
- 2022
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15. Immunological Evolution of a Cohort of HIV-2 Infected Patients: Peculiarities of an Underestimated Infection.
- Author
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Fumarola B, Calza S, Renzetti S, El Hamad I, Pezzoli MC, Izzo I, Degli Antoni M, Chiesa A, De Francesco M, Quiros-Roldan E, Caruso A, Castelli F, and Focà E
- Abstract
Background: Human Immunodeficiency Virus type 2 (HIV-2) affects a minority of patients in Italy; nevertheless, the increasing migratory flow from higher prevalence areas led to the spread of this virus into our Country. We evaluate clinical, viro-immunological, and therapeutic characteristics of patients with HIV-2 infection and HIV-1/HIV-2 dual-infection and the early treatment impact on overall survival and incidence of AIDS events., Methods: We retrospectively analyzed all HIV-2, and HIV-1/HIV-2 positive patients followed in a large Italian clinic from January 1987 to December 2020. We recorded demographic, viro-immunological, clinical, and therapeutic data. We performed a descriptive analysis followed by a longitudinal analysis to explore the factors associated with the CD4+ lymphocyte trend; lastly, we studied the possible predictors of death and AIDS in our cohort in a multivariable model., Results: 32 subjects were enrolled, 17 (53%) HIV-2 infected and 15 (46.8%) HIV-1/HIV-2 dual-infected; 12 patients were lost to follow up, while 3 died. We found a lack of HIV-2 viremia in 12/32 subjects (37.5%). Most of the patients at baseline had a good viro-immunological profile with HIV-2 RNA <200 copies/ml and CD4+ lymphocyte >200 cell/mcl. We found a CD4+ lymphocyte improvement over time, both in the absolute number ( β 472.61, 95%CI 383.05-562.18, p<0.001) and in percentage ( β 25.28, 95%CI 21.91 - 28.66, p<0.001). Nevertheless, subjects taking cART had CD4+ lymphocyte percentage increase over time, and this trend appeared significantly better than those who did not receive therapy. Lastly, in the multivariable model CD4+, T-cell count increase was negatively associated with AIDS (HR 0.34 95%CI 0.13-0.91, p=0.032)., Conclusion: We found a higher prevalence of HIV-1/2 dual infection than in previous observations. Subjects with HIV-2 infection showed a favorable immunological condition at diagnosis, and the benefits of cART in those who received treatment are undiscussed. Moreover, our data suggest a different disease course based on age at diagnosis, as in HIV-1 infections. We encourage starting cART at diagnosis in HIV-2 patients, regardless of CD4+ lymphocyte, because even in the new cART era, CD4+ lymphocyte decrease remains the strongest predictor of death and AIDS also in this population., Competing Interests: Competing interests: The authors declare no conflict of Interest.
- Published
- 2022
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16. C. vulgaris growth batch tests using winery waste digestate as promising raw material for biodiesel and stearin production.
- Author
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P S, F C I, M B, and C C
- Subjects
- Biofuels, Biomass, Sewage, Chlorella vulgaris, Microalgae
- Abstract
The recovery of high added value compound from waste stream is fundamental to keep biotechnological processes sustainable. In this study, anaerobic digestion of two highly produced organic waste was integrated with microalgae-based processes both to treat liquid digestate and recover high value compounds. Chlorella vulgaris growth was assessed for lipids accumulation and subsequent recovery, using two types of digestate: organic waste and sewage sludge digestate (DIG-OFMSW) and wine lees digestate (DIG-WL). Growth tests were carried out in batch mode and results showed a slightly higher final biomass concentration from DIG-WL (1.36 ± 0.09 g l
-1 ) compared to DIG-OFMSW (1.05 ± 0.13 g l-1 ) and a clearly different lipids accumulation yield (28.86 ± 0.05% in DIG-WL compared to 6.1 ± 0.2% of DIG-OFMSW, on total solids). Lipid characterization showed a high oleic acid accumulation (69.52 ± 0.50%w/w in DIG-WL) that positively influence biodiesel properties and a low linolenic acids content (below 0.30%w/w) that comply with European law EN14214 for biodiesel (linolenic acid content lower than 12%w/w). In addition, due to the high concentration of palmitic and stearic acids detected at the end of test, this oil can be used as new substrate to produce stearin, normally produced from palm oil., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2021
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17. Decrease in new diagnosis of HIV/AIDS in the two years period 2019-2020: impact of COVID-19 pandemic.
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Quiros-Roldan E, Izzo I, Carriero C, Degli Antoni M, Storti S, Tiecco G, Gardini G, Focà E, and Castelli F
- Abstract
The emergence SARS-CoV-2 in late 2019 and early 2020 has caused a pandemic of unprecedented proportions. Management of COVID-19 became emergent public health priorities, and the impact on other public health initiatives, such as expanded HIV screening and linkage to care, remain largely unknown. In this Single-Center retrospective observational study, we describe the characteristics and circumstance of the new HIV cases during 2020 compared to 2019. We observed a decrease of HIV diagnosis during this period. Interestingly, median age at HIV diagnosis decreased of one decade and percentage of female patients was higher. In addition, more patients received diagnosis during hospitalization and more AIDS-defining conditions, such as Pneumocystis pneumonia, were detected. We express our concern that HIV new diagnoses will increase as a result of people's inability to get tested or treated in this period. More efforts are needed to improve local screening programs both during and after COVID-19 pandemic.
- Published
- 2021
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18. Structural dynamism of chiral sodium peraza-macrocycle complexes derived from cyclic peptoids.
- Author
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Schettini R, D'Amato A, Araszczuk AM, Della Sala G, Costabile C, D'Ursi AM, Grimaldi M, Izzo I, and De Riccardis F
- Subjects
- Density Functional Theory, Stereoisomerism, Coordination Complexes chemistry, Coordination Complexes chemical synthesis, Aza Compounds chemistry, Aza Compounds chemical synthesis, Macrocyclic Compounds chemistry, Macrocyclic Compounds chemical synthesis, Peptides, Cyclic chemistry, Peptides, Cyclic chemical synthesis, Molecular Structure, Molecular Conformation, Models, Molecular, Peptoids chemistry, Peptoids chemical synthesis, Sodium chemistry
- Abstract
A variety of cyclen and hexacyclen derivatives decorated with (S)-1-phenylethyl side chains or (S)-pyrrolidine units have been prepared via a reductive approach from the corresponding cyclic peptoids containing N-(S)-(1-phenylethyl)glycine and l-proline residues. Spectroscopic and DFT studies on their Na
+ complexes show that point chirality and ring size play a crucial role in controlling the structural dynamism of 1,2-diaminoethylene units and pendant arms. The detection of highly symmetric C4 - and C3 -symmetric metalated species demonstrates that a full understanding of the relationship between the structure and conformational properties of peraza-macrocyclic metal complexes is possible.- Published
- 2021
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19. Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on HIV viremia: a single-center cohort study in northern Italy.
- Author
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Izzo I, Carriero C, Gardini G, Fumarola B, Chiari E, Castelli F, and Quiros-Roldan E
- Subjects
- COVID-19 virology, Cohort Studies, HIV Infections virology, Humans, Inpatients, Italy epidemiology, Outpatients, Public Health, SARS-CoV-2 isolation & purification, Viral Load, Viremia virology, COVID-19 epidemiology, HIV Infections epidemiology, Pandemics, Viremia epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: Brescia Province, northern Italy, was one of the worst epicenters of the COVID-19 pandemic. The division of infectious diseases of ASST (Azienda Socio Sanitaria Territoriale) Spedali Civili Hospital of Brescia had to face a great number of inpatients with severe COVID-19 infection and to ensure the continuum of care for almost 4000 outpatients with HIV infection actively followed by us. In a recent manuscript we described the impact of the pandemic on continuum of care in our HIV cohort expressed as number of missed visits, number of new HIV diagnosis, drop in ART (antiretroviral therapy) dispensation and number of hospitalized HIV patients due to SARS-CoV-2 infection. In this short communication, we completed the previous article with data of HIV plasmatic viremia of the same cohort before and during pandemic., Methods: We considered all HIV-patients in stable ART for at least 6 months and with at least 1 available HIV viremia in the time window March 01-November 30, 2019, and another group of HIV patients with the same two requisites but in different time windows of the COVID-19 period (March 01-May 31, 2020, and June 01-November 30, 2020). For patients with positive viremia (PV) during COVID-19 period, we reported also the values of viral load (VL) just before and after PV., Results: the percentage of patients with PV during COVID-19 period was lower than the previous year (2.8% vs 7%). Only 1% of our outpatients surely suffered from pandemic in term of loss of previous viral suppression., Conclusions: Our efforts to limit the impact of pandemic on our HIV outpatients were effective to ensure HIV continuum of care.
- Published
- 2021
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20. Circumferential dissection of deep fascia as ancillary technique in circumcision: is it possible to correct phimosis increasing penis size?
- Author
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Carmine P, Mario F, Antonio G, Vincenzo M, Elisa G, Angelo C, Gorizio P, and Sara I
- Subjects
- Adult, Fasciotomy, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Organ Size, Penis anatomy & histology, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult, Circumcision, Male methods, Foreskin surgery, Phimosis surgery
- Abstract
Background: Phimosis is the inability to retract the preputium downward over the glans penis. Despite the various techniques of preputial plasty described in literature, the most performed surgical treatment is still the conventional circumcision., Methods: In this paper we retrospectively reviewed data of a homogeneous population of 36 consecutive adult patients who underwent phimosis correction by circumcsion with dissection of the Deep Fascia. Patients were followed up by one independent plastic surgeon that measured penis length and circumference in nonerected state preoperatively and at 6 month time postoperatively., Results: The Wilcoxon Signed Rank Test showed a significant (p < 0.0001) difference between the two groups both in terms of length and circumference., Conclusions: In conclusion, the ancillary technique we described leads to an increase of penis size, is safe and easy to perform and does not increase significantly operative time nor complication rate to the conventional procedure.
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- 2021
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21. Peripheral Arterial Disease in Persons with Diabetic Foot Ulceration: a Current Comprehensive Overview.
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Marco M, Valentina I, Daniele M, Valerio DR, Andrea P, Roberto G, Laura G, and Luigi U
- Subjects
- Amputation, Surgical, Humans, Ischemia, Diabetes Mellitus, Diabetic Foot complications, Diabetic Foot diagnosis, Diabetic Foot epidemiology, Foot Ulcer, Peripheral Arterial Disease complications, Peripheral Arterial Disease epidemiology, Peripheral Arterial Disease therapy
- Abstract
In developed countries, the prevalence of persons with diabetes and peripheral arterial disease (PAD) is approximately 50%. The presence of PAD is associated with non-healing ulcers, major amputation, cardiovascular morbidity, and mortality. It is estimated that persons with diabetes, foot ulceration and PAD have 50% of 5-years mortality rate. Therefore, subjects with ischemic diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) should be considered a special group of patients with specific clinical characteristics, general health status and prognosis. In persons with ischemic DFUs, an early diagnosis and treatment are mandatory to reduce the risk of worse outcomes such as major amputation. Revascularization of occluded lower extremity arteries is the main treatment to restore blood flow in the foot and promote wound healing. Nonetheless, there are several unmet needs in the management of diabetic subjects with PAD and foot ulceration as medical therapy, diagnostic criteria and indications for revascularization, revascularization strategy and technical approach as well as the management of no-option critical limb ischemia patients. It is a common opinion that there is an evolution of PAD features in diabetic persons, which seems to present a more aggressive pattern. This may be related to the frequent presence of concomitant comorbidities such as renal failure which could influence the characteristics of atherosclerotic plaques and their distribution. The aim of this review is to commence a complete overview and state of the art in the treatment of patients with diabetes, PAD, and foot ulceration and to describe the current challenges and future perspectives., (Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at epub@benthamscience.net.)
- Published
- 2021
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22. Discharge ward during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic: an effective way to increase patient turnover when human resources are scarce.
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Castelnuovo F, Marchese V, Cristini G, Crosato V, Pennati F, Renisi G, Izzo I, Paraninfo G, Van Hauwermeiren E, and Castelli F
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bed Occupancy statistics & numerical data, COVID-19 mortality, Comorbidity, Female, Hospital Units organization & administration, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Length of Stay, Male, Medical Staff, Hospital organization & administration, Medical Staff, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Nursing Staff, Hospital organization & administration, Nursing Staff, Hospital statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Time Factors, COVID-19 epidemiology, Pandemics, Patient Discharge, SARS-CoV-2, Workforce
- Abstract
During the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, the province of Brescia (Italy) had a significant number of COVID-19 cases, which led to a subversion of the ordinary structure of the university hospital ASST Spedali Civili, driven by the need to hospitalize as many patients as possible in a narrow period of time. At the peak of the epidemic, a rapid hospitalization discharge area, the Discharge Ward (DW), was set up with the aim of facilitating the rapid turnover of patients in the wards where the most severe patients had to be hospitalized. The organization and activities carried out are described in the results of this reproducible experience during epidemic events.
- Published
- 2020
23. Propyne Gas Adsorption in a Cyclic Hexapeptoid: A Combined In Situ XRPD and DFTB Study*.
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Pierri G, Landi A, Macedi E, Izzo I, De Riccardis F, Dinnebier RE, and Tedesco C
- Abstract
Cyclic peptoids are macrocyclic N-substituted oligoglycines, with remarkable structural, chemical and physical properties. The gas adsorption properties of a permanently porous hexameric cyclopeptoid decorated with four propargyl and two methoxyethyl side chains were monitored by in situ X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD). High-resolution XRPD data together with Rietveld and density functional based tight binding (DFTB) method allowed us to locate propyne guest molecules inside the host channels, even though the powder sample contains more than one phase. We were able to characterize the host-guest interactions, providing useful information on the host recognition sites and discuss host adaptiveness and host-guest chemical affinity in comparison with analogous compounds., (© 2020 Wiley-VCH GmbH.)
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- 2020
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24. Aicardi Syndrome: Key Fetal MRI Features and Prenatal Differential Diagnosis.
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Masnada S, Chiara D, Giana I, Manuela F, Marco S, Andrea A, Patrizia A, Nadia BB, Valeria C, Mara C, Bernardo DB, Francesca D, Valentina G, Elisa F, Miguel FRL, Carlo F, Lucio G, Simona O, Lorenzo P, Erika R, Antonino R, Mariasavina S, Carlotta S, Pierangelo V, Anna P, Andrea R, and Cecilia P
- Subjects
- Diagnosis, Differential, Female, Humans, Infant, Newborn, Male, Pregnancy, Retrospective Studies, Aicardi Syndrome diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Malformations of Cortical Development diagnostic imaging, Prenatal Diagnosis
- Abstract
Objective: This study was aimed to investigate the prenatal findings in Aicardi syndrome (AIC) by intrauterine magnetic resonance imaging (iuMRI) suggesting possible diagnostic criteria and differential diagnosis., Methods: The iuMRI features of nine AIC confirmed cases were described and then compared with those of postnatal MRI. Furthermore, all iuMRI cases with both corpus callosum (CC) agenesis-dysgenesis and cortical malformation (AIC mimickers) were retrospectively reviewed and compared with iuMRI AIC cases, in order to identify possible neuroradiological predictors of AIC syndrome. For this purpose, Chi-square statistic and binary logistic regression analysis were performed., Results: In all AIC cases, iuMRI was able to detect CC agenesis-dysgenesis and cortical development anomalies. Postnatal MRI revealed some additional findings mainly including further cystic lesions and in two cases small coloboma. A statistically significant difference between AIC and AIC mimicker were found regarding sex, nodular heterotopias, posterior fossa abnormalities, coloboma, and cortical gyration abnormalities. The most predictive variables in the logistic regression model were cortical gyration abnormalities, coloboma, and sex., Conclusion: The iuMRI findings may suggest prenatal diagnosis of AIC syndrome with significant impact on parental counseling. Among possible differential diagnoses, tubulinopathies emerged., Competing Interests: The authors have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose., (Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York.)
- Published
- 2020
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25. An Entry to Enantioenriched 3,3-Disubstituted Phthalides through Asymmetric Phase-Transfer-Catalyzed γ-Alkylation.
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Sicignano M, Schettini R, Pierri G, Marino ML, Izzo I, De Riccardis F, Bernardi L, and Sala GD
- Abstract
A novel asymmetric phase-transfer-catalyzed γ-alkylation of phthalide 3-carboxylic esters has been developed, giving access to 3,3-disubstituted phthalide derivatives, which present a chiral quaternary γ-carbon in good to excellent yields and good enantioselectivities (74-88% ee). The enantiomeric purity could be substantially enhanced to 94-95% ee by recrystallization. Both electron-withdrawing and electron-releasing substituents are well tolerated on the phthalide core as well as on the aromatic moiety of the alkylating agent. This methodology, enabling the introduction of an unfunctionalized group at the phthalide γ-position, fully complements previously reported organocatalytic strategies involving functionalized electrophiles, thus expanding the scope of accessible 3,3-disubstituted products. The high synthetic value of this asymmetric reaction has been proven by the formal synthesis of the naturally occurring alkaloid (+)-(9 S ,13 R )-13-hydroxyisocyclocelabenzine.
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- 2020
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26. Peptoid-based siderophore mimics as dinuclear Fe 3+ chelators.
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D'Amato A, Ghosh P, Costabile C, Della Sala G, Izzo I, Maayan G, and De Riccardis F
- Subjects
- Chelating Agents chemical synthesis, Cyclization, Models, Molecular, Molecular Conformation, Peptoids chemical synthesis, Chelating Agents chemistry, Ferric Compounds chemistry, Peptoids chemistry
- Abstract
A practical synthesis of preorganized tripodal enterobactin/corynebactin-type ligands (consisting of a C
3 -symmetric macrocyclic peptoid core, three catecholamide coordinating units, and C2 , C4 , and C6 spacers) is reported. The formation of complexes with Fe3+ was investigated by spectrophotometric (UV-Vis) and spectrometric (ESI, negative ionization mode) methods and corroborated by theoretical (DFT) calculations. Preliminary studies revealed the intricate interplay between the conformational chirality of cyclic trimeric peptoids and metal coordination geometry of mononuclear species similar to that of natural catechol-based siderophores. Experimental results demonstrated the unexpected formation of unique dinuclear Fe3+ complexes.- Published
- 2020
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27. Presence of V72I, G123S and R127K Integrase Inhibitor polymorphisms could reduce ART effectiveness: a retrospective longitudinal study.
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Celotti A, Gargiulo F, Quiros-Roldan E, Properzi M, De Francesco MA, Coletto D, Caccuri F, Izzo I, Caruso A, Castelli F, and Focà E
- Subjects
- Adult, Drug Resistance, Viral, Female, HIV Infections virology, HIV Integrase metabolism, HIV-1 drug effects, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Middle Aged, Mutation, Mutation, Missense, Polymorphism, Genetic, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Outcome, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Integrase genetics, HIV Integrase Inhibitors administration & dosage, HIV-1 enzymology
- Abstract
Objectives: Structural aspects of HIV-1 integrase complex and role of integrase minor mutations and polymorphisms in ART effectiveness is still unknown. The objective of this study was to assess the 24 and 48 weeks (W) effectiveness of ART regimens in patients with Integrase Inhibitors (InSTI) minor mutations and polymorphisms receiving InSTI-based regimens. Methods: We enrolled all ART-naïve or InSTI-naïve HIV-infected patients, with a baseline InSTI genotypic resistances test between 2011 and 2016. We analyzed integrase resistance mutations using the Stanford University HIV Drug Resistance Database (HIVdb Program, version 6.3.0). The outcome was virological response at 24 and 48 W of follow up (FU) according to snapshot analysis. We defined virological failure as two consecutive HIV-RNA > 50 copies/ml, or one >1000 copies/ml. Patients were divided in those presenting InSTI minor mutations (Group 1), and those with only polymorphisms or wild type (Group 2). Results: We enrolled 83 patients. 81 patients reached 24 W of FU: 2/20 (10%) and 4/61 (6.5%) showed virological failure in Group 1 and 2 respectively. 66 patients reached 48 W of FU: 0/17 (0%) and 2/49 (4%) showed virological failure in Group 1 and 2 respectively. Interestingly, patients with polymorphisms G123S and R127K had higher risk of failure at 24 W (respectively, relative risk - RR - 36, IQR 2.1-613, p = 0.01; RR 36, IQR 2.1-613, p = 0.01) and patients with V72I had an higher risk of failure both at 24 W (RR 6.52, IQR 1.29-32.9, p = 0.02) and 48 W (RR 21.1, IQR 1.07-414, p = 0.04). Conclusions: Our study showed that the presence of V72I, G123S and R127K polymorphisms could play a role in reducing InSTI effectiveness.
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- 2020
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28. Prevalence of Non-B HIV-1 Subtypes in North Italy and Analysis of Transmission Clusters Based on Sequence Data Analysis.
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Lorenzin G, Gargiulo F, Caruso A, Caccuri F, Focà E, Celotti A, Quiros-Roldan E, Izzo I, Castelli F, and De Francesco MA
- Abstract
HIV-1 diversity is increasing in European countries due to immigration flows, as well as travels and human mobility, leading to the circulation of both new viral subtypes and new recombinant forms, with important implications for public health. We analyzed 710 HIV-1 sequences comprising protease and reverse-transcriptase (PR/RT) coding regions, sampled from 2011 to 2017, from naive patients in Spedali Civili Hospital, Brescia, Italy. Subtyping was performed by using a combination of different tools; the phylogenetic analysis with a structured coalescence model and Makarov Chain Monte Carlo was used on the datasets, to determine clusters and evolution. We detected 304 (43%) patients infected with HIV-1 non-B variants, of which only 293 sequences were available, with four pure subtypes and five recombinant forms; subtype F1 (17%) and CRF02_AG (51.1%) were most common. Twenty-five transmission clusters were identified, three of which included >10 patients, belonging to subtype CRF02_AG and subtype F. Most cases of alleged transmission were between heterosexual couples. Probably due to strong migratory flows, we have identified different subtypes with particular patterns of recombination or, as in the case of the subtype G (18/293, 6.1%), to a complete lack of relationship between the sequenced strains, revealing that they are all singletons. Continued HIV molecular surveillance is most important to analyze the dynamics of the boost of transmission clusters in order to implement public health interventions aimed at controlling the HIV epidemic., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2019
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29. From Cyclic Peptoids to Peraza-macrocycles: A General Reductive Approach.
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Schettini R, D'Amato A, Pierri G, Tedesco C, Della Sala G, Motta O, Izzo I, and De Riccardis F
- Subjects
- Crystallography, X-Ray, Kinetics, Macrocyclic Compounds chemistry, Models, Molecular, Molecular Structure, Oxidation-Reduction, Thermodynamics, Macrocyclic Compounds chemical synthesis, Peptoids chemistry
- Abstract
Peraza-macrocycles form chelates of high thermodynamic and kinetic stability useful in diagnostic imaging (MRI, SPECT, PET), in coordination chemistry, and as catalysts. In this letter, we report an advantageous method to prepare these compounds via BH
3 -induced reduction of cyclic peptoids. Using this procedure, 10 homo- and heterosubstituted aza-coronands, with different sizes and side chains, have been synthesized from the corresponding cyclic oligoamides. Solid structures of free, protonated, and Na+ coordinated polyaza-derivatives have been disclosed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis.- Published
- 2019
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30. Reverse Turn and Loop Secondary Structures in Stereodefined Cyclic Peptoid Scaffolds.
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D'Amato A, Pierri G, Tedesco C, Della Sala G, Izzo I, Costabile C, and De Riccardis F
- Abstract
Controlling the network of intramolecular interactions encoded by N α-chiral side chains and the equilibria between cis- and trans-amide junctions in cyclic peptoid architectures constitutes a significant challenge for the construction of stable reverse turn and loop structures. In this contribution, we reveal, with the support of NMR spectroscopy, single-crystal X-ray crystallography and density functional theory calculations, the relevant noncovalent interactions stabilizing tri-, tetra-, hexa-, and octameric cyclic peptoids (as free hosts and host-guest complexes) with strategically positioned N -( S )-(1-phenylethyl)/ N -benzyl side chains, and how these interactions influence the backbone topological order. With the help of theoretical models and spectroscopic/diffractometric studies, we disclose new γ-/β-turn and loop structures present in α-peptoid-based macrocycles and classify them according ϕ, ψ, and ω torsion angles. In our endeavor to characterize emergent secondary structures, we solved the solid-state structure of the largest metallated cyclic peptoid ever reported, characterized by an unprecedented alternated cis/trans amide bond linkage. Overall, our results indicate that molecules endowed with different elements of asymmetry (central and conformational) provide new architectural elements of facile atroposelective construction and broad conformational stability as the minimalist scaffold for novel stereodefined peptidomimetic foldamers and topologically biased libraries necessary for future application of peptoids in all fields of science.
- Published
- 2019
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31. Unprecedented Diastereoselective Arylogous Michael Addition of Unactivated Phthalides.
- Author
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Sicignano M, Schettini R, Sica L, Pierri G, De Riccardis F, Izzo I, Maity B, Minenkov Y, Cavallo L, and Della Sala G
- Abstract
The first highly enantioselective arylogous Michael reaction (AMR) of 3-unsubstituted phthalides has been described. This phase-transfer methodology, which uses catalytic amounts of KOH/18-crown-6 catalyst in mesitylene in the presence of N,O-bis(trimethylsilyl)acetamide (BSA), gives access to a broad range of 3-monosubstituted phthalides with high levels of syn diastereoselectivity and good yields, starting from 3-unsubstituted derivatives and diverse α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds. The reaction also applies to unactivated 3-alkyl phthalides to afford 3,3-dialkyl derivatives. A plausible mechanism has been suggested. DFT analysis of possible transition states gives a rationale of the high syn diastereoselectivity observed and its correlation with the solvent's dielectric constant., (© 2019 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2019
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32. Disengagement and reengagement of HIV continuum of care in a single center cohort in northern Italy.
- Author
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Comelli A, Izzo I, Donato F, Celotti A, Focà E, Pezzoli C, Castelli F, and Quiros-Roldan E
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, Databases, Factual, Female, Humans, Italy, Lost to Follow-Up, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Young Adult, Ambulatory Care Facilities statistics & numerical data, Continuity of Patient Care statistics & numerical data, HIV Infections drug therapy, Medication Adherence statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Despite the progress in HIV care, adherence to follow up remains critical. Disengagement impairs the benefit of HIV care and the increasing number of data that associates failed retention with worse outcomes has led public health institutions to consider retention in care as a new tool to fight against HIV pandemic. Objective: The aim of this retrospective, observational study was to estimate the burden of disengagement and reengagement in care in our HIV cohort and to identify the characteristics of our LTFU and reengaged patients. Moreover, we build our cascade of care to explore how closely our center aligned with the "90-90-90" targets. Methods: From the local electronic database we extracted all HIV-infected patients with at least one contact with HIV Clinic between 2012 and 2018 excluding deceased and transferred patients. Our definition of LTFU was based on the lack of any visit during at least 1 year after the last visit. Patients re-engaged were defined as those firstly considered as LTFU patients who subsequently were newly linked to HIV care. Results: About 8% of patients were lost to follow up during the period of study, with a rate of less than 2% per year and 14.1% of them were re-engaged in care. The cascade of care shows, among HIV cases diagnosed between 2011 and 2018, 86.7% patients retained in care, 94.1% of whom were on cART and 95.6% of whom were virologically suppressed. A higher attrition was found among infections diagnosed since 2011 than before 2011, such as women, patients coming from foreign countries and those with poor virological control. Conclusions: The retention rate found in our cohort is high and is in accordance with the 90-90-90 strategy. Nevertheless, understanding disengagement and re-engagement determinants is important to strengthen retention in care in the most fragile population.
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- 2019
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33. Cation-Induced Molecular Switching Based on Reversible Modulation of Peptoid Conformational States.
- Author
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Schettini R, Costabile C, Della Sala G, Iuliano V, Tedesco C, Izzo I, and De Riccardis F
- Subjects
- Ammonium Compounds chemistry, Borates chemistry, Cations chemistry, Models, Molecular, Protein Conformation, Sodium chemistry, Solid-Phase Synthesis Techniques, Stereoisomerism, Thermodynamics, Peptides, Cyclic chemical synthesis, Peptoids chemical synthesis
- Abstract
Peptoids are oligomers of N-substituted glycines with predictable folding and strong potentials as guest-binding receptor molecules. In this contribution, we investigate the structural features of a series of designed symmetric cyclic octamer peptoids (with methoxyethyl/propargyl side chains) as free hosts and reveal their morphologic changes in the presence of sodium and alkylammonium guests as tetrakis[3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]borate salts, reporting the first case of reversible adaptive switching between defined conformational states induced by cationic guests (Na
+ and benzylammonium ion) in the peptoid field. The reported results are based on1 H NMR data, theoretical models, and single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. They represent initial steps toward deciphering the unique conformational states of cyclic octamer peptoids as supramolecular hosts with the aim to fully disclose their functional and dynamic properties.- Published
- 2018
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34. Tuning the biomimetic performances of 4-hydroxyproline-containing cyclic peptoids.
- Author
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Schettini R, Costabile C, Della Sala G, Buirey J, Tosolini M, Tecilla P, Vaccaro MC, Bruno I, De Riccardis F, and Izzo I
- Subjects
- Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Proliferation drug effects, Humans, Sodium chemistry, Antineoplastic Agents chemistry, Antineoplastic Agents pharmacology, Biomimetic Materials chemistry, Biomimetic Materials pharmacology, Hydroxyproline chemistry, Peptoids chemistry, Peptoids pharmacology
- Abstract
Five new cyclic peptoids containing (2S,4R)-4-hydroxyproline (Hyp) residues have been designed and synthesized using a mixed "submonomer/monomer" approach. Alkali metal cation affinities and ion transport activities were assessed by experimental (NMR and HPTS assay in liposomes) and computational methods. Easy functionalization of hydroxyproline residues afforded a bouquet of cyclic oligomers showing correlation between ion transport abilities and cytotoxic activities on selected human cancer cell lines.
- Published
- 2018
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35. Cyclic Octamer Peptoids: Simplified Isosters of Bioactive Fungal Cyclodepsipeptides.
- Author
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D'Amato A, Della Sala G, Izzo I, Costabile C, Masuda Y, and De Riccardis F
- Subjects
- Animals, Bombyx drug effects, Depsipeptides chemical synthesis, Depsipeptides pharmacology, Fungal Proteins pharmacology, Insecticides chemistry, Insecticides pharmacology, Isomerism, Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy, Models, Molecular, Molecular Structure, Mycotoxins chemistry, Mycotoxins pharmacology, Peptoids chemical synthesis, Peptoids pharmacology, Protein Conformation, Structure-Activity Relationship, Depsipeptides chemistry, Fungal Proteins chemistry, Peptoids chemistry, Protein Multimerization
- Abstract
Cyclic peptoids have recently emerged as an important class of bioactive scaffolds with unique conformational properties and excellent metabolic stabilities. In this paper, we describe the design and synthesis of novel cyclic octamer peptoids as simplified isosters of mycotoxin depsipeptides bassianolide, verticilide A1, PF1022A and PF1022B. We also examine their complexing abilities in the presence of sodium tetrakis[3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]borate (TFPB) salt and explore their general insecticidal activity. Finally, we discuss the possible relationship between structural features of free and Na⁺-complexed cyclic octamer peptoids and bioactivities in light of conformational isomerism, a crucial factor affecting cyclic peptoids' biomimetic potentials.
- Published
- 2018
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36. Structural Basis of Outstanding Multivalent Effects in Jack Bean α-Mannosidase Inhibition.
- Author
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Howard E, Cousido-Siah A, Lepage ML, Schneider JP, Bodlenner A, Mitschler A, Meli A, Izzo I, Alvarez HA, Podjarny A, and Compain P
- Subjects
- Binding Sites, Canavalia enzymology, Catalytic Domain, Crystallography, X-Ray, Imino Sugars chemistry, Imino Sugars metabolism, Protein Structure, Tertiary, Zinc chemistry, Zinc metabolism, alpha-Mannosidase antagonists & inhibitors, alpha-Mannosidase metabolism
- Abstract
Multivalent design of glycosidase inhibitors is a promising strategy for the treatment of diseases involving enzymatic hydrolysis of glycosidic bonds in carbohydrates. An essential prerequisite for successful applications is the atomic-level understanding of how outstanding binding enhancement occurs with multivalent inhibitors. Herein we report the first high-resolution crystal structures of the Jack bean α-mannosidase (JBα-man) in apo and inhibited states. The three-dimensional structure of JBα-man in complex with the multimeric cyclopeptoid-based inhibitor displaying the largest binding enhancements reported so far provides decisive insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying multivalent effects in glycosidase inhibition., (© 2018 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.)
- Published
- 2018
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37. Prevalence of Integrase Strand Transfer Inhibitors Resistance Mutations in Integrase Strand Transfer Inhibitors-Naive and -Experienced HIV-1 Infected Patients: A Single Center Experience.
- Author
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De Francesco MA, Izzo I, Properzi M, Gargiulo F, Caccuri F, Quiros-Roldan E, Castelli F, Caruso A, and Focà E
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Genotype, Genotyping Techniques, HIV-1 enzymology, HIV-1 isolation & purification, Humans, Italy, Male, Microbial Sensitivity Tests, Middle Aged, Prevalence, Retrospective Studies, Drug Resistance, Viral, Gene Frequency, HIV Infections virology, HIV Integrase genetics, HIV-1 genetics, Mutation, Missense
- Abstract
Integrase strand transfer inhibitor (InSTI) resistance rates are low. However, genotypic resistance test (GRT) is not routinely performed in many centers. The aim of this study is to evaluate the prevalence of InSTI-related mutations in our large cohort. We examined all integrase GRTs performed as part of routine clinical practice at Spedali Civili General Hospital, University of Brescia from 2011 to 2016. Analysis was performed through the Stanford HIV Drug Resistance Database. A total of 341 patients were included. Genotypic resistance assays were performed in naive (48), ART-experienced but InSTI-naive (114), and both ART-experienced/InSTI-experienced (179) patients. No major resistance-associated mutations (RAMs) were detected in patients never exposed to InSTIs. Of 179 samples from patients exposed to InSTIs (mostly to raltegravir [RAL]), the overall prevalence of major RAMs was 11.7%. Among them, 10 harbored N155H, 4 Q148H, 2 Q148R, 2 Y143C/S, and 2 T66A/I/T, respectively. A novel mutation at a recognized resistance site (E92K) was identified in one RAL-experienced patient. The overall prevalence of InSTI mutations in our cohort was low, particularly in naive patients indicating no transmitted RAMs, although in InSTIs-experienced patients the rate of RAMs was high (11.7%). We support an implementation of surveillance of InSTI resistance.
- Published
- 2018
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38. Disseminated Histoplasmosis as AIDS-presentation. Case Report and Comprehensive Review of Current Literature.
- Author
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Zanotti P, Chirico C, Gulletta M, Ardighieri L, Casari S, Roldan EQ, Izzo I, Pinsi G, Lorenzin G, Facchetti F, Castelli F, and Focà E
- Abstract
Progressive disseminated histoplasmosis (PDH) is an AIDS-defining illness with a high lethality rate if not promptly treated. The wide range of its possible clinical manifestations represents the main barrier to diagnosis in non-endemic countries. Here we present a case of PDH with haemophagocytic syndrome in a newly diagnosed HIV patient and a comprehensive review of disseminated histoplasmosis focused on epidemiology, clinical features, diagnostic tools and treatment options in HIV-infected patients., Competing Interests: Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2018
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39. Biochemical and inflammatory modifications after switching to dual antiretroviral therapy in HIV-infected patients in Italy: a multicenter retrospective cohort study from 2007 to 2015.
- Author
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Quiros-Roldan E, Magro P, Raffetti E, Izzo I, Borghetti A, Lombardi F, Saracino A, Maggiolo F, and Castelli F
- Subjects
- Adult, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active methods, Atazanavir Sulfate therapeutic use, CD4-CD8 Ratio, Cohort Studies, Darunavir therapeutic use, Dideoxynucleosides therapeutic use, Female, HIV Infections blood, HIV Infections complications, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Reverse Transcriptase Inhibitors therapeutic use, Tenofovir therapeutic use, Treatment Outcome, Anti-HIV Agents therapeutic use, HIV Infections drug therapy, Inflammation virology
- Abstract
Background: Triple-drug regimens are the gold standard for HIV therapy. Nucleos(t)ide reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTIs) reducing regimens are used to decrease drugs toxicity, exposure and costs. Aim of our study was to evaluate trends of biochemical and inflammatory indices in patients switching to dual therapy (DT)., Methods: We included patients that a) switched to a DT from 2007 to 2015 from a tenofovir/abacavir-based triple regimen b) previously maintained a triple and c) subsequently a dual regimen for 12 months with virological suppression. We retrieved data measured at 5 points (at the switch, 6 and 12 months before and after switch). We used platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio (PLR), neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and CD4/CD8 ratio as inflammatory indices. We assessed temporal trends of viro-immunological, biochemical and inflammatory parameters., Results: Overall, 364 and 65 patients switched from a tenofovir- and an abacavir-triple regimen, respectively. In the tenofovir-reducing group, creatinine clearance and lipids raised after the switch. There was a significant increase in both CD4+ cells and CD4/CD8. CD8+ cells rose after the switch, while opposite trend was found for PLR. In the abacavir-reducing group total lipids showed a decrease during the first 6 months after the switch and then stabilized. An increase of CD4+ and a decrease of CD8+ cells was observed during the study period, although not statistically significant. While CD4/CD8 remained stable after simplification, PLR decreased significantly after 6 months, then returning to baseline. CD8+ cells increased in the tenofovir-reducing group despite a viro-immunological response. Intriguingly, PLR decreased, maintaining this trend for 12 and 6 months after tenofovir and abacavir interruption respectively., Conclusions: Increased PLR has been linked to hypercholesterolemia and metabolic-syndrome, while high CD8+ cells count to increased risk of non-AIDS-related events regardless of CD4 T-cell recovery and to virological failure. Whether these findings may have clinical implications, and which role DT plays on the immune system and on inflammation should be further investigated.
- Published
- 2018
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40. Hepatitis A outbreak in men who have sex with men (MSM) in Brescia (Northern Italy), July 2016-July 2017.
- Author
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Comelli A, Izzo I, Casari S, Spinetti A, Bergamasco A, and Castelli F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, Middle Aged, Time Factors, Young Adult, Disease Outbreaks, Hepatitis A epidemiology, Homosexuality, Male
- Abstract
Since June 2016, an outbreak of hepatitis A has been reported in Europe. Here we report the HAV outbreak in Brescia (Northern Italy) from July 2016 to July 2017. We actively recorded all HAV cases defined by detection of HAV IgM antibodies in serum. Data on sexual behaviour, travel attitudes, concomitant sexually transmitted diseases (STDs), clinical presentation and laboratory results were collected. Forty-two confirmed cases were recorded: 25 (60%) were MSM and reported sexual contact at risk of STDs. Compared to 2015 and the first half of 2016, when only three hepatitis A cases were recorded, in the 12 months in question the number of cases rose 14-fold. Among 25 MSM, 14 were HIV-infected. Hepatitis A is usually a self-limiting disease, but it could be more serious in the case of HIV co-infection, immunosuppression and chronic hepatitis. HAV infection has a high outbreak potential in MSM because of more common oro-anal practices compared to HS, a high interconnectedness global network, chemsex practices and a new tendency to travel abroad to attend group sex events. In our experience, most cases occurred in MSM and 56% of them were HIV-infected, suggesting the need to promote active screening, immunization and education in this population.
- Published
- 2018
41. Perinatally HIV-Infected Youths After Transition from Pediatric to Adult Care, a Single-Center Experience from Northern Italy.
- Author
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Izzo I, Quiros-Roldan E, Saccani B, Chiari E, Casari S, Focà E, Pezzoli MC, Forleo MA, Bonito A, Badolato R, Dotta L, and Castelli F
- Subjects
- Ambulatory Care Facilities, Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active, CD4 Lymphocyte Count, Female, Follow-Up Studies, HIV Infections epidemiology, Humans, Italy epidemiology, Male, RNA, Viral, Retrospective Studies, Viral Load, Young Adult, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Infections transmission, HIV Long-Term Survivors, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Transition to Adult Care standards
- Abstract
With the development of combination antiretroviral therapy (cART), the first generation of perinatally HIV-infected children has reached young adulthood. A retrospective study was conducted on perinatally HIV-infected young adults after transition to adult care in Brescia (Northern Italy). Twenty-four patients were transferred to Infectious Disease outpatient Clinic from Pediatric Clinic between 2004 and 2016. Median age at transition was 18 years. 37.5% were male, and 75% were Italian. Median CD4
+ T-cell count was 534 cell/μL, and 9/24 presented detectable HIV-RNA at the time of transition. At month 12 after transition, median CD4+ T-cell count was 626 cell/μL, and HIV-RNA was still detectable in 25% of patients. Nineteen patients were still in care at the end of follow-up (median of 52 months); 100% on cART, with undetectable HIV-RNA and a median CD4+ T-cell count of 716 cell/μL. After transition, cART regimen was modified in 14/19 patients (in 13 of them it was modified at least twice). Resistance testing is available for 13 patients showing resistance-associated mutations to at least one class of drugs in 9 patients. Transition to adult care is a critical point and youths present lower rates of viral suppression compared to adults. We observed 80% of viral suppression (5 young patients were lost to follow-up and considered as failures), notwithstanding social problems and resistance mutations. With the availability of more potent and better-tolerated drugs, optimization of cART is possible also in this previously difficult-to-treat group of patients. Novel tools to address adherence to cART in young adults and teenagers will also be needed.- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Cyclic Peptoids as Topological Templates: Synthesis via Central to Conformational Chirality Induction.
- Author
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D'Amato A, Pierri G, Costabile C, Della Sala G, Tedesco C, Izzo I, and De Riccardis F
- Abstract
Chiral induction was utilized for the synthesis of diastereopure cyclic peptoids containing an N-benzyl alanine residue. Molecular modeling, NMR spectroscopy, single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies, and HPLC with chiral stationary phase demonstrated easy formation of free and sodium/benzylammonium complexed cyclic oligomers through strategic incorporation of a single stereogenic center in the oligomeric backbone. The synthesis of cyclic peptoids with defined conformational chirality and appropriate side chain topology is now possible.
- Published
- 2018
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43. Effectiveness of kidney transplantation in HIV-infected recipients under combination antiretroviral therapy: a single-cohort experience (Brescia, Northern Italy).
- Author
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Izzo I, Casari S, Bossini N, Forleo MA, Sandrini S, Focà E, Brianese N, Zambolin G, Chirico C, Cancarini G, and Castelli F
- Subjects
- Adult, CD4 Lymphocyte Count statistics & numerical data, Cohort Studies, Female, HIV Infections surgery, Humans, Italy, Kidney Failure, Chronic physiopathology, Male, Middle Aged, Retrospective Studies, Anti-Retroviral Agents therapeutic use, HIV Infections virology, Kidney Failure, Chronic surgery, Kidney Transplantation statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Purpose: Kidney transplantation was recently introduced for the treatment of end stage renal disease (ESRD) in HIV-infected patients. We report the results of the first 28 procedures at our centre., Methods: A retrospective study was conducted on HIV-infected patients evaluated for kidney transplantation between January 2005 and October 2016. Patients were selected and monitored by the kidney transplantation and infectious diseases teams, according to the national protocol., Results: 60 patients were evaluated; 32 entered the list and 28 were transplanted. Median CD4+ count was 337 cell/μL at transplantation and 399 cell/μL 12 months thereafter. HIV RNA was undetectable at transplantation in 27/28 patients and became undetectable within 24 weeks in the only patient starting antiretroviral combination therapy (cART) after surgery. Four patients experienced virological failure, but reached again undetectability after cART regimen change. At last available point of follow-up (median 126.1 weeks), HIV RNA was undetectable in all patients. Three patients experienced AIDS-defining events. We observed a cumulative number of 19 acute rejections in 16 patients (median time from transplantation to first rejection 5.2 weeks). Survival rate was 82.1%. To avoid pharmacokinetics (PK) interactions, cART regimen was changed from a protease inhibitor (PI)/non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI)-based to an integrase inhibitor (InSTI)-based regimen in 11/20 alive patients with functioning graft., Conclusions: Kidney transplantation appears to be safe in HIV-infected patients carefully selected. As previously reported, we observed a high incidence of acute rejection. We expect that the recent implementation of the immunosuppressive protocols will allow a better immunologic control. Moreover, the introduction of InSTI permits a better strategy of cART, with lower incidence of PK interactions with immunosuppressive drugs.
- Published
- 2018
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44. Conformational isomerism in cyclic peptoids and its specification.
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D'Amato A, Schettini R, Della Sala G, Costabile C, Tedesco C, Izzo I, and De Riccardis F
- Subjects
- Crystallography, X-Ray, Models, Molecular, Protein Conformation, Stereoisomerism, Peptoids chemistry
- Abstract
Most of the structural studies made on the secondary structure of peptoids describe their geometric attributes in terms of the classic Ramachandran plot (based on the local analysis of ω, ψ, χ, φ dihedral angles). However, little intuitive understanding is available from internal coordinates when stereochemistry is involved. In this contribution we list all the conformationally stable cyclic peptoids reported up to the year 2017 and propose a simple method to define their geometric arrangement in terms of planar chirality. Evidence of conformational isomerism (due to the long average time of single bond rotation) and conformational chirality (induced by the absence of roto-reflection axes) in this promising class of synthetic macrocycles is provided by NMR spectroscopy (using Pirkle's alcohol as chiral solvating agent) and careful evaluation of X-ray crystallographic studies. The full understanding of the oligomeric macrocycles' structural properties and the clear framing of their conformational isomerism in a proper conceptual scheme is fundamental for future application of peptoids in asymmetric synthesis, chiral recognition and supramolecular chemistry.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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45. Lymphoproliferative disease with mixed cryoglobulinemia and hyperviscosity syndrome in an HIV-infected patient: HCV is the only culprit.
- Author
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Zanotti P, Izzo I, Casari S, Cattaneo C, Zaltron S, Spinetti A, Odolini S, Chirico C, Grecchi C, Festa E, and Castelli F
- Subjects
- HIV Infections complications, HIV Infections virology, Hepatitis C complications, Hepatitis C virology, Humans, Lymphoproliferative Disorders virology, Male, Middle Aged, Ribavirin therapeutic use, Antiviral Agents therapeutic use, Cryoglobulinemia drug therapy, HIV Infections drug therapy, Hepacivirus drug effects, Hepatitis C drug therapy, Lymphoproliferative Disorders etiology
- Abstract
The availability of direct antiviral agents (DAAs) offers the possibility to treat HCV-infected patients with a high rate of efficacy and a good safety profile. Little is known about the benefit of DAAs on HCV-related hematological diseases and their complications. We describe the case of an HIV/HCV-infected patient with HCV-related chronic lymphoproliferative disease, mixed cryoglobulinemia and hyperviscosity syndrome. Treatment with direct antiviral agents (DAAs) cured HCV infection and its complications, while HCV re-infection caused recrudescence of the associated diseases.
- Published
- 2017
46. Cyclic Peptoids as Mycotoxin Mimics: An Exploration of Their Structural and Biological Properties.
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D'Amato A, Volpe R, Vaccaro MC, Terracciano S, Bruno I, Tosolini M, Tedesco C, Pierri G, Tecilla P, Costabile C, Della Sala G, Izzo I, and De Riccardis F
- Subjects
- Cell Cycle drug effects, Cell Line, Tumor, Cell Survival drug effects, Crystallography, X-Ray, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Humans, Models, Molecular, Mycotoxins chemical synthesis, Mycotoxins chemistry, Peptidomimetics chemical synthesis, Peptidomimetics chemistry, Peptoids chemical synthesis, Peptoids chemistry, Protein Conformation, Quantum Theory, Structure-Activity Relationship, Mycotoxins pharmacology, Peptidomimetics pharmacology, Peptoids pharmacology
- Abstract
Cyclic peptoids have recently emerged as important examples of peptidomimetics for their interesting complexing properties and innate ability to permeate biological barriers. In the present contribution, experimental and theoretical data evidence the intricate conformational and stereochemical properties of five novel hexameric peptoids decorated with N-isopropyl, N-isobutyl, and N-benzyl substituents. Complexation studies by NMR, in the presence of sodium tetrakis[3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]borate (NaTFPB), theoretical calculations, and single-crystal X-ray analyses indicate that the conformationally stable host/guest metal adducts display architectural ordering comparable to that of the enniatins and beauvericin mycotoxins. Similarly to the natural depsipeptides, the synthetic oligolactam analogues show a correlation between ion transport abilities in artificial liposomes and cytotoxic activity on human cancer cell lines. The reported results demonstrate that the versatile cyclic peptoid scaffold, for its remarkable conformational and complexing properties, can morphologically mimic related natural products and elicit powerful biological activities.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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47. Highly Diastereoselective Crown Ether Catalyzed Arylogous Michael Reaction of 3-Aryl Phthalides.
- Author
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Sicignano M, Dentoni Litta A, Schettini R, De Riccardis F, Pierri G, Tedesco C, Izzo I, and Della Sala G
- Abstract
The first arylogous Michael reaction of 3-aryl phthalides has been developed. The reaction, promoted by catalytic amounts of KOH or K
3 PO4 and dibenzo-18-crown-6, affords the corresponding 3,3-disubstituted phthalides in good to high yields and as single diastereomers in nearly all studied cases.- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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48. Switchable Diastereoselectivity in the Fluoride-Promoted Vinylogous Mukaiyama-Michael Reaction of 2-[(Trimethylsilyl)oxy]furan Catalyzed by Crown Ethers.
- Author
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Della Sala G, Sicignano M, Schettini R, De Riccardis F, Cavallo L, Minenkov Y, Batisse C, Hanquet G, Leroux F, and Izzo I
- Abstract
The fluoride-promoted vinylogous Mukaiyama-Michael reaction of 2-[(trimethylsilyl)oxy]furan with diverse α,β-unsaturated ketones is described. The TBAF-catalyzed VMMR afforded high anti-diastereoselectivity irrespective of the solvents used. The KF/crown ethers catalytic systems proved to be highly efficient in terms of yields and resulted in a highly diastereoselective unprecedented solvent/catalyst switchable reaction. Anti-adducts were obtained as single diastereomers or with excellent diastereoselectivities when benzo-15-crown-5 in CH
2 Cl2 was employed. On the other hand, high syn-diastereoselectivities (from 73:27 to 96:4) were achieved by employing dicyclohexane-18-crown-6 in toluene. On the basis of DFT calculations, the catalysts/solvent-dependent switchable diastereoselectivities are proposed to be the result of loose or tight cation-dienolate ion pairs.- Published
- 2017
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49. Synthesis, crystallization, X-ray structural characterization and solid-state assembly of a cyclic hexapeptoid with propargyl and methoxyethyl side chains.
- Author
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Tedesco C, Macedi E, Meli A, Pierri G, Della Sala G, Drathen C, Fitch AN, Vaughan GBM, Izzo I, and De Riccardis F
- Abstract
The synthesis and the structural characterization of a cyclic hexapeptoid with four methoxyethyl and two propargyl side chains have disclosed the presence of a hydrate crystal form [form (I)] and an anhydrous crystal form [form (II)]. The relative amounts of form (I) and form (II) in the as-purified product were determined by Rietveld refinement and depend on the purification procedures. In crystal form (I), peptoid molecules assemble in a columnar arrangement by means of side-chain-to-backbone C=CH...OC hydrogen bonds. In the anhydrous crystal form (II), cyclopeptoid molecules form ribbons by means of backbone-to-backbone CH
2 ...OC hydrogen bonds, thus mimicking β-sheet secondary structures in proteins. In both crystal forms side chains act as joints among the columns or the ribbons and contribute to the stability of the whole solid-state assembly. Water molecules in the hydrate crystal form (I) bridge columns of cyclic peptoid molecules, providing a more efficient packing.- Published
- 2017
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50. Characteristics and Outcome of a Cohort of HIV-1 Non-B Subtype-Infected Patients After a 10-Year Follow-up Period: A Single Centre Experience.
- Author
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Izzo I, Quiros-Roldan E, Casari S, Gargiulo F, Caruso A, and Castelli F
- Subjects
- CD4 Lymphocyte Count, DNA, Viral drug effects, Follow-Up Studies, Genotype, HIV Antibodies immunology, HIV Infections immunology, HIV-1 enzymology, HIV-1 genetics, Humans, Italy, Phylogeny, Retrospective Studies, Treatment Failure, Viral Load immunology, Drug Resistance, Viral drug effects, HIV Infections drug therapy, HIV Protease Inhibitors pharmacology, HIV Reverse Transcriptase metabolism, HIV-1 drug effects, Viral Load drug effects
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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