37 results on '"F. Casini"'
Search Results
2. A Preliminary Study about SEU Effects on Programmable Interconnections of SRAM-based FPGAs
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G. Sorrenti, M. Sassi, F. Casini, Valentino Liberali, S. Pastore, Alessio Gravina, Monica Alderighi, M. Mancini, S. D'Angelo, and P. Musazzi
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Interconnection ,Engineering ,Hardware_MEMORYSTRUCTURES ,business.industry ,Hardware_PERFORMANCEANDRELIABILITY ,Avionics ,Upset ,Programmable logic array ,Embedded system ,Static random-access memory ,Sensitivity (control systems) ,Hardware_ARITHMETICANDLOGICSTRUCTURES ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Routing (electronic design automation) ,Field-programmable gate array ,business - Abstract
SRAM-based Field Programmable Gate Arrays (SRAM-FPGA) are more and more employed in today's applications. In space and avionic applications their operations might be harmed by occurrence of radiation-induced upsets, or Single Event Upsets (SEU), which require the adoption of mitigation techniques. In these devices the majority of the configuration memory rules the interconnection setting. In devices employing "switch matrix" routing, the density of interconnections in switch arrays seems to be a critical point. The higher the interconnection density (i.e., the higher the number of interconnection segments activated by the same switch matrix), the higher the probability of an upset due to a configuration bit controlling the switch matrix. This paper presents an approach to estimate the SEU sensitivity of programmable interconnections of SRAM-based FPGAs as a function of the density of programmable interconnection points inside device configurable logic blocks. A probabilistic model of the SEU effects in programmable interconnection points of Xilinx SRAM-FPGAs is described. The application of the proposed approach to a set of sample designs is illustrated.
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- 2013
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3. COTS-Based High-Performance Computing for Space Applications
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Maria Livia Esposti, Cristian Albanese, F. Casini, Monica Alderighi, Luca Giganti, Massimo Violante, Stefano Esposito, Claudio Monteleone, ITA, and NLD
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Engineering ,Space Applications ,Fault Injection ,Space (commercial competition) ,Space exploration ,Watchdog Processor ,Memory Protection ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Memory Encoding ,Commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) ,Software Implemented Fault Tolerance (SIFT) ,Watchdog Timer ,Single Event Upset (SEU) ,Central Processing Unit (CPU) ,business.industry ,Frame (networking) ,Electrical engineering ,Fault injection ,Supercomputer ,Watchdog timer ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Systems architecture ,Systems engineering ,business ,Memory protection - Abstract
Commercial-off-the-shelf devices are often advocated as the only solution to the increasing performance requirements in space applications. This paper presents the solutions developed in the frame of the European Space Agency's HiRel program, concluded in December 2014, where a number of techniques proposed in the past 10 years have been used to design a highly reliable system, which has been selected for forthcoming space missions. This paper presents the system architecture, describes performed evaluations, and discusses the results.
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- 2015
4. Purification and characterization of glutathione-dependent dehydroascorbate reductase from rat liver
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Mario Comporti, Emilia Maellaro, L Sugherini, Annalisa Santucci, B Del Bello, and Alessandro F. Casini
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Male ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Size-exclusion chromatography ,Succinimides ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cytosol ,Glutaredoxin ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cyanogen Bromide ,Molecular Biology ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Cell Biology ,Glutathione ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Ascorbic acid ,Dehydroascorbic Acid ,L-ascorbate oxidase ,Peptide Fragments ,Rats ,Enzyme ,Liver ,chemistry ,Sephadex ,Chromatography, Gel ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Dehydroascorbic acid ,Oxidoreductases ,Sequence Analysis ,Research Article - Abstract
GSH-dependent enzymic reduction of dehydroascorbic acid to ascorbic acid has been studied in rat liver cytosol. After gel filtration of cytosol on Sephadex G-100 SF, dehydroascorbate reductase activity was recovered in two distinct peaks, one corresponding to glutaredoxin (an enzyme already known for its dehydroascorbate reductase activity) and another, much larger one, corresponding to a novel enzyme different from glutaredoxin. The latter was purified to apparent homogeneity. The purification process involved (NH4)2SO4 fractionation, followed by DEAE-Sepharose, Sephadex G-100 SF and Reactive Red chromatography. SDS/PAGE of the purified enzyme in either the presence or absence of 2-mercaptoethanol demonstrated a single protein band of M(r) 31,000. The M(r) determined by both Sephadex G-100 SF chromatography and h.p.l.c. was found to be approx. 48,000. H.p.l.c. of the denatured enzyme gave an M(r) value identical with that obtained by SDS/PAGE (31,000). The apparent Km for dehydroascorbate was 245 microM and the Vmax. was 1.9 mumol/min per mg of protein; for GSH they were 2.8 mM and 4.5 mumol/min per mg of protein respectively. The optimal pH range was 7.5-8.0. Microsequence analysis of the electro-transferred enzyme band showed that the N-terminus is blocked. Data on internal primary structure were obtained from CNBr-and N-chlorosuccinimide-derived fragments. No significative sequence similarity was found to any of the protein sequences contained in the Protein Identification Resource database.
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- 1994
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5. Determination of 4-hydroxynonenal by high-performance liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection
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Alessandro F. Casini, Christopher Goldring, Mario Comporti, Barbara Del Bello, and Emilia Maellaro
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Male ,Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Kidney ,Biochemistry ,High-performance liquid chromatography ,Cell Line ,4-Hydroxynonenal ,Lipid peroxidation ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cricetinae ,Malondialdehyde ,Electrochemistry ,Animals ,Derivatization ,Carbon Tetrachloride ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Aldehydes ,Chromatography ,Liver Diseases ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Food Science ,Organic Chemistry ,Cell Biology ,Rats ,Liver ,chemistry ,Bromobenzene ,Microsomes, Liver ,Carbon tetrachloride ,Microsome ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury ,Bromobenzenes ,Bromotrichloromethane - Abstract
4-Hydroxy-trans-2-nonenal (HNE) is a highly reactive product of lipid peroxidation originating from the break-down of phospholipid-bound polyunsaturated fatty acids of cellular membranes. Despite its biological relevance, this aldehyde is only occasionally determined due to the complexity of previously described procedures. Here we present a simple and very sensitive method for the detection of HNE in biological samples. The method is based on the measurement of the 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazone (DNPH) of the aldehyde by electrochemical detection after separation by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). The greater sensitivity of this procedure as compared to the ultraviolet detection method commonly employed to measure DNPH derivatives of aldehydes after HPLC will allow the detection of HNE below the pmol level. The detection of HNE is highly reproducible even in normal tissues and cells. Increased amounts of HNE were detected in the livers of animals intoxicated with prooxidant agents such as carbon tetrachloride, bromotrichloromethane or bromobenzene. An exponential increase in HNE (and in malondialdehyde) was measured in peroxidizing liver microsomes (in the NADPH/Fe-dependent system). The method is also suitable for the study of very small samples, since HNE could be detected in approximately 1 million cultured cells (polyoma virus-transformed baby hamster kidney fibroblasts); the level rose after exposure of the cells to a Fe3+/ADP prooxidant system.
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- 1993
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6. Development of a 3D CZT detector prototype for Laue Lens telescope
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Irfan Kuvvetlli, Natalia Auricchio, John B. Stephen, E. M. Quadrini, F. Casini, L. Milano, Stefano Del Sordo, M. Zanichelli, Andrea Zappettini, Rui M. Curado da Silva, Pietro Ubertini, Lorenzo Natalucci, Leonardo Abbene, Carl Budtz-Jørgensen, Ezio Caroli, Caroli, E, Auricchio, N, Del Sordo, S, Abbene, L, Budtz Jørgensen, C, Casini, F, Curado da Silva, R M, Kuvvetlli, I, Milano, L, Natalucci, L, Quadrini E M, Stephen, J B, Ubertini, P, Zanichelli, M, and Zappettini, A
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CDTE DETECTORS ,Physics ,Physics::Instrumentation and Detectors ,business.industry ,Detector ,Voltage divider ,Gamma ray spectroscopy ,STRIPS ,CZT detector ,CZT detectors, 3D detectors, Laue lens ,Cathode ,Particle detector ,law.invention ,Anode ,Lens (optics) ,Telescope ,Optics ,Hard X- and soft gamma-ray astronomy ,3D imaging ,Drift strip ,law ,CDZNTE ,business - Abstract
We report on the development of a 3D position sensitive prototype suitable as focal plane detector for Laue lens telescope. The basic sensitive unit is a drift strip detector based on a CZT crystal, (similar to 19x8 mm(2) area, 2.4 mm thick), irradiated transversally to the electric field direction. The anode side is segmented in 64 strips, that divide the crystal in 8 independent sensor (pixel), each composed by one collecting strip and 7 (one in common) adjacent drift strips. The drift strips are biased by a voltage divider, whereas the anode strips are held at ground. Furthermore, the cathode is divided in 4 horizontal strips for the reconstruction of the third interaction position coordinate. The 3D prototype will be made by packing 8 linear modules, each composed by one basic sensitive unit, bonded on a ceramic layer. The linear modules readout is provided by a custom front end electronics implementing a set of three RENA-3 for a total of 128 channels. The front-end electronics and the operating logics (in particular coincidence logics for polarisation measurements) are handled by a versatile and modular multi-parametric back end electronics developed using FPGA technology.
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- 2010
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7. Robustness analysis of soft error accumulation in SRAM-FPGAs using FLIPPER and STAR/RoRA
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S. Pastore, D. Merodio Codinachs, G. Sorrenti, Luca Sterpone, M. Alderighi, M. Mancini, Roland Weigand, S. D'Angelo, Massimo Violante, and F. Casini
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Engineering ,Hardware_MEMORYSTRUCTURES ,business.industry ,Hardware_PERFORMANCEANDRELIABILITY ,Fault injection ,Soft error ,Logic synthesis ,Robustness (computer science) ,Single event upset ,Embedded system ,Electronic engineering ,Static random-access memory ,Field-programmable gate array ,business ,Electronic circuit - Abstract
We describe a methodology for analyzing the robustness of circuits implemented by SRAM-based FPGAs against the accumulation of soft errors within the configuration memory. A detailed analysis of the fault injection data is presented.
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- 2008
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8. Soft errors in SRAM-FPGAs: A comparison of two complementary approaches
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F. Casini, S. Pastore, Luca Sterpone, M. Alderighi, M. Mancini, Massimo Violante, and S. D'Angelo
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Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Engineering ,Finite impulse response ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Workload ,Fault injection ,Star (graph theory) ,Logic synthesis ,Nuclear Energy and Engineering ,Embedded system ,Electronic engineering ,Dependability ,Electronic design automation ,Static random-access memory ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Field-programmable gate array ,Electronic circuit - Abstract
As SRAM-based field-programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) are introduced in safety- or mission-critical applications, the availability of suitable Electronic Design Automation (EDA) tools for predicting systems dependability becomes mandatory for designers. Nowadays designers can opt either for workload-independent EDA tools, which provide information about system's dependability disregarding the workload the system is supposed to elaborate when deployed in the mission, or workload-dependent approaches. In this paper, we compare two tools for predicting the effects of soft errors in circuits implemented using SRAM-based FPGAs, a workload-independent one (STAR) and a workload-dependent one (FLIPPER). Experimental results show that the two tools are complementary and can be used fruitfully for obtaining accurate predictions.
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- 2007
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9. Evaluation of Single Event Upset Mitigation Schemes for SRAM based FPGAs using the FLIPPER Fault Injection Platform
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M. Alderighi, F. Casini, S. D'Angelo, M. Mancini, S. Pastore, G.R. Sechi, and R. Weigand
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Engineering ,business.industry ,Hardware description language ,Control reconfiguration ,Hardware_PERFORMANCEANDRELIABILITY ,Fault injection ,Single event upset ,Embedded system ,VHDL ,Verilog ,Static random-access memory ,Hardware_ARITHMETICANDLOGICSTRUCTURES ,business ,Field-programmable gate array ,Hardware_REGISTER-TRANSFER-LEVELIMPLEMENTATION ,computer ,Hardware_LOGICDESIGN ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
SRAM based reprogrammable FPGAs are sensitive to radiation-induced single event upsets (SEU), not only in their user flip-flops and memory, but also in the configuration memory. Appropriate mitigation has to be applied if they are used in space, for example the XTMR scheme implemented by the Xilinx TMRTool and configuration scrubbing. The FLIPPER fault injection platform, described in this paper, allows testing the efficiency of the SEU mitigation scheme. FLIPPER emulates SEU-like faults by doing partial reconfiguration and then applies stimuli derived from HDL simulation (VHDL/Verilog test-bench), while comparing the outputs with the golden pattern, also derived from simulation. FLIPPER has its device-under-test (DUT) FPGA on a mezzanine board, allowing an easy exchange of the DUT device. Results from a test campaign are presented using a design from space application and applying various levels of TMR mitigation.
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- 2007
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10. [Evaluation of glucose metabolism in acromegalic patients before and after treatment with octreotide LAR]
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Lívia L, Correa, Giselle F, Taboada, Flávia R, Van Haute, Alessandra F, Casini, Giovanna A, Balarini, Leonardo, Vieira Neto, Evelyn de O, Machado, Rosita, Fontes, Cláudia C de, Andrade, Yolanda, Schrank, and Mônica R, Gadelha
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Male ,Adolescent ,Antineoplastic Agents, Hormonal ,Human Growth Hormone ,Glucose Tolerance Test ,Octreotide ,Young Adult ,Glucose ,Treatment Outcome ,Acromegaly ,Glucose Intolerance ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Insulin-Like Growth Factor I ,Biomarkers - Abstract
To evaluate the glucose metabolism in acromegalic patients before and after treatment with octreotide LAR.This was a prospective and longitudinal study involving 30 patients from the acromegaly research outpatient clinic of the Endocrinology unit of the HUCFF/UFRJ. They underwent clinical and laboratorial evaluations, with measurements of growth hormone (GH), insulin-like growth factor type I (IGF-I), insulin, proinsulin, C peptide, glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c), IGF binding protein type 1 (IGFBP-1) and glucose, during oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT), before and after six months of treatment with octreotide LAR. The Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used and values of 5% were considered statistically significant.We found 16 (54%) patients with normal glucose tolerance, 7 (23%) with impaired glucose tolerance and 7 (23%) diabetics. Twelve patients completed the six-month treatment, out of which three showed worsening of glucose tolerance and two (diabetics) had worse blood glucose control. Whereas there was an increase in waist circumference (p=0.03), there was a decrease in GH (p=0.04), with %IGF-I above the upper limit of reference values (% ULRV) [p=0.001], insulin (p=0.019), C peptide levels (p=0.002) and homeostatic model assessment (HOMA-IR) [p=0.039].In this series, treatment with octreotide LAR led to a worsening of glucose tolerance in three non-diabetic patients and worsened glycemic control in two diabetics, in spite of reducing insulin resistance.
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- 2007
11. Purification of NADPH-dependent dehydroascorbate reductase from rat liver and its identification with 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase
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B Del Bello, Mario Comporti, Emilia Maellaro, Alessandro F. Casini, L. Sugherini, and Annalisa Santucci
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Male ,3-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenases ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Dehydrogenase ,Reductase ,Biochemistry ,Substrate Specificity ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,3-alpha-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenase (B-Specific) ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cyanogen Bromide ,Hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase ,Molecular Biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Cell Biology ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Ascorbic acid ,Peptide Fragments ,Rats ,Molecular Weight ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Liver ,Sephadex ,Chromatography, Gel ,Dehydroascorbic acid ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Oxidoreductases ,Oxidation-Reduction ,NADP ,Research Article - Abstract
Rat liver cytosol has been found to reduce dehydroascorbic acid (DHAA) to ascorbic acid in the presence of NADPH. The enzyme responsible for such activity has been purified by ammonium sulphate fractionation, DEAE-Sepharose, Sephadex G-100 SF and Reactive Red column chromatography, with an overall recovery of 27%. SDS/PAGE of the purified enzyme showed one single protein band with an M(r) of 37,500. A similar value (36,800) was found by gel filtration on a Sephadex G-100 SF column. The results indicate that the enzyme is a homogeneous monomer. The Km for DHAA was 4.6 mM and the Vmax. was 1.55 units/mg of protein; for NADPH Km and Vmax. were 4.3 microM and 1.10 units/mg of protein respectively. The optimum pH was around 6.2. Several typical substrates and inhibitors of the aldo-keto reductase superfamily have been tested. The strong inhibition of DHAA reductase effected by steroidal and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, together with the ability to reduce 5 alpha-androstane-3,17-dione strongly, suggest the possibility that DHAA reductase corresponds to 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. Microsequence analysis performed on the electro-transferred enzyme band shows that the N-terminus is blocked. Internal primary structure data were obtained from CNBr-derived fragments and definitely proved the identity of NADPH-dependent DHAA reductase with 3 alpha-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase.
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- 1994
12. Protection by ascorbic acid against oxidative injury of isolated hepatocytes
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Alfonso Pompella, Alessandro F. Casini, Emilia Maellaro, B Del Bello, L. Sugherini, and Mario Comporti
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Vitamin ,Male ,Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Antioxidant ,Vitamin K ,Cell Survival ,Propanols ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,1-Propanol ,Ascorbic Acid ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Antioxidants ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,Lipid peroxidation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Menadione ,Malondialdehyde ,medicine ,Animals ,Vitamin E ,Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Allyl alcohol ,Carbon Tetrachloride ,Pharmacology ,Chemistry ,Glutathione ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Liver ,Maleates ,Rats ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,General Medicine ,Ascorbic acid ,Health ,Sprague-Dawley - Abstract
1. The ability of ascorbic acid to protect from prooxidant-induced toxic injury was investigated in isolated, intact rat hepatocytes, whose ascorbic acid content had been restored by means of exogenous supplementation. 2. Ascorbate-supplemented and ascorbate-non-supplemented cells in suspension were treated with a series of different prooxidants (allyl alcohol, diethyl maleate, carbon tetrachloride, menadione), and the development of lipid peroxidation and cell injury was evaluated. 3. With allyl alcohol and diethyl maleate, ascorbic acid was able to protect cells from both lipid peroxidation and cell injury. The same protection was offered by ascorbate also in hepatocytes obtained from vitamin E-deficient animals. 4. With carbon tetrachloride, ascorbate supplementation did not affect the initial steps of lipid peroxidation, but nevertheless provided a marked protection against lipid peroxidation and cell injury at later times of incubation. The protection was unaffected by the vitamin E content of cells. 5. With menadione, a toxin which does not induce lipid peroxidation, ascorbic acid did not protect cells against injury. 6. It is concluded that ascorbic acid can act as an efficient antioxidant in isolated rat liver cells, with protection against cell injury. The antioxidant effect appears primarily to involve membrane lipids, and can be independent from the cellular content of vitamin E, thus suggesting that ascorbic acid can play a direct and independent role in the intact cell, in addition to its synergistic interaction with vitamin E described in other models.
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- 1994
13. Glutathione depletion: Its effects on other antioxidant systems and hepatocellular damage
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Mario Comporti, Emilia Maellaro, Alessandro F. Casini, and B Del Bello
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Vitamin ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antioxidant ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Antioxidants ,Lipid peroxidation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Pharmacology ,Vitamin C ,Vitamin E ,General Medicine ,Glutathione ,Ascorbic acid ,Endocrinology ,Liver ,chemistry ,Bromobenzene ,Health ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Chemical and Drug Induced Liver Injury - Abstract
1. The mechanisms of the liver damage produced by three glutathione (GSH)-depleting agents, bromobenzene, allyl alcohol and diethyl maleate, were investigated. 2. With each toxin liver necrosis was accompanied by lipid peroxidation that developed only after severe depletion of GSH. 3. Changes in antioxidant systems by alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E) and ascorbic acid were studied. A decrease in the hepatic level of vitamin E, and a change in the redox state of vitamin C (increase in oxidized over reduced form) were evident whenever extensive lipid peroxidation developed. However, in the case of bromobenzene intoxication these alterations preceded lipid peroxidation, and may be an index of oxidative stress leading to subsequent membrane damage. 4. Experiments carried out with vitamin E-deficient or supplemented diets indicated that pathological phenomena occurring as a consequence of GSH depletion depend on hepatic levels of vitamin E. In vitamin E-deficient animals, lipid peroxidation and liver necrosis appeared earlier than in animals fed the control diet. In animals fed a vitamin E-supplemented diet, bromobenzene and allyl alcohol had only limited toxicity, and diethyl maleate none, in spite of similar hepatic GSH depletion. Thus, vitamin E may largely modulate the expression of toxicity by GSH-depleting agents.
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- 1991
14. Lipid peroxidation and antioxidant systems in the liver injury produced by glutathione depleting agents
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Emilia Maellaro, Alessandro F. Casini, Barbara Del Bello, and Mario Comporti
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Vitamin ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Antioxidant ,Time Factors ,Propanols ,medicine.medical_treatment ,1-Propanol ,Ascorbic Acid ,Biochemistry ,Antioxidants ,Lipid peroxidation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Necrosis ,Internal medicine ,Malondialdehyde ,medicine ,Animals ,Vitamin E ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,Pharmacology ,Vitamin C ,Maleates ,Glutathione ,Ascorbic acid ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Liver ,Dehydroascorbic acid ,Lipid Peroxidation ,Bromobenzenes - Abstract
The mechanisms of the liver damage produced by three glutathione (GSH) depleting agents, bromobenzene, allyl alcohol and diethylmaleate, was investigated. The change in the antioxidant systems represented by alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E) and ascorbic acid were studied under conditions of severe GSH depletion. With each toxin liver necrosis was accompanied by lipid peroxidation that developed only after severe depletion of GSH. The hepatic level of vitamin E was decreased whenever extensive lipid peroxidation developed. In the case of bromobenzene intoxication, vitamin E decreased before the onset of lipid peroxidation. Changes in levels of the ascorbic and dehydroascorbic acid indicated a redox cycling of vitamin C with the oxidative stress induced by all the three agents. Such a change of the redox state of vitamin C (increase of the oxidized over the reduced form) may be an index of oxidative stress preceding lipid peroxidation in the case of bromobenzene. In the other cases, such a change is likely to be a consequence of lipid peroxidation. Experiments carried out with vitamin E deficient or supplemented diets indicated that the pathological phenomena occurring as a consequence of GSH depletion depend on hepatic levels of vitamin E. In vitamin E deficient animals, lipid peroxidation and liver necrosis appeared earlier than in animals fed the control diet. Animals fed a vitamin E supplemented diet had an hepatic vitamin E level double that obtained with a commercial pellet diet. In such animals, bromobenzene and allyl alcohol had only limited toxicity and diethylmaleate none in spite of comparable hepatic GSH depletion. Thus, vitamin E may largely modulate the expression of the toxicity by GSH depleting agents.
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- 1990
15. The role of vitamin E in the hepatotoxicity by glutathione depleting agents
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B Del Bello, Mario Comporti, Emilia Maellaro, and Alessandro F. Casini
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Liver injury ,Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology (all) ,biology ,Liver cell ,Acrolein ,Glutathione ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Lipid peroxidation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Bromobenzene ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Allyl alcohol ,Alcohol dehydrogenase - Abstract
During the last decades it has been recognized (1–3) that peroxidation of cellular membranes is an important event in the pathogenetic mechanisms of the liver injury induced by chemicals, such as CC14 or BrCCl3 , which give, upon metabolism, reactive free radicals. The latter ones alkylate cellular macromolecules but do not induce glutathione (GSH) depletion. It was subsequently shown (4–9) that lipid peroxidation is also strictly associated with the liver necrosis induced by chemi cals, such as bromobenzene and acetaminophen, which are converted to electrophilic intermediates giving extensive GSH conjugation and consequent GSH depletion. We have studied in particular the liver injury producedin vivo by three prototypical GSH depleting agents which undergo different fates in the liver cell: i) bromobenzene, that is metabolized by the microsomal monooxygenase system with consumption of NADPH (10–12); ii) allyl alcohol that is metabolized by the cytosolic enzyme alcohol dehydrogenase to acrolein and by aldehyde dehydrogenase to acrylic acid, with production of NADH (13,14); iii) and diethylmaleate which is mainly conjugated with GSH by GSH-transferases without previous metabolism (15).
- Published
- 1990
16. Glutathione Depletion, Lipid Peroxidation, and Liver Necrosis following Bromobenzene and lodobenzene Intoxication
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Alessandro F. Casini, Alfonso Pompella, and Mario Comporti
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Male ,Lipid Peroxides ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Necrosis ,040301 veterinary sciences ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Iodobenzene ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Toxicology ,030226 pharmacology & pharmacy ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,0403 veterinary science ,Lipid peroxidation ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Iodobenzenes ,Chemistry ,Vitamin E ,Maleates ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Cell Biology ,Glutathione ,Metabolism ,Endocrinology ,Liver ,Biochemistry ,Bromobenzene ,Trolox ,medicine.symptom ,Bromobenzenes - Abstract
NMRI Albino mice, in which the hepatic glutathione (GSH) content was decreased by nearly 50% by either the administration of a pure glucose diet or by starvation, were intoxicated with aryl halides, bromobenzene, and iodobenzene (13 and 9 mmol/kg body weight, respectively, p.o.). After both intoxications, the hepatic glutathione content decreased rapidly to very low values, and liver necrosis, as assessed by serum transaminase levels, occurred in about 45 or 60% of the animals (in the case of bromobenzene or iodobenzene, respectively) after a lag phase of 9 or 6 hr. In both instances liver necrosis was evident only when the hepatic GSH depletion reached a threshold value (3.5-2.5 nmols/mg protein). The same threshold value was evident for the occurrence of lipid peroxidation (measured as both carbonyl functions and conjugated dienes in liver phospholipids). The possibility that the depletion in hepatic GSH level is capable of inducing lipid peroxidation and necrosis could be supported by the fact that similar results were obtained after the administration of diethylmaleate (12 mmol/kg, p.o.), a drug which is expected to conjugate directly with GSH without previous metabolism. The covalent binding of reactive metabolites to cellular macromolecules was determined in the case of bromobenzene poisoning. A dissociation between liver necrosis and covalent binding was observed in experiments in which Trolox C, a lower homolog of vitamin E, was administered (270 μmol/kg) 9 and 13 hr after bromobenzene poisoning. The treatment with Trolox C, in fact, almost completely prevented both liver necrosis and lipid peroxidation, while the extent of the covalent binding of bromobenzene metabolites to liver proteins was not altered.
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- 1984
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17. Measurement of lipid peroxidation in vivo: A comparison of different procedures
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Marco Ferrali, Alessandro F. Casini, Lucia Ciccoli, Emilia Maellaro, Alfonso Pompella, and Mario Comporti
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Male ,Lipid Peroxides ,Clinical chemistry ,Phospholipid ,In Vitro Techniques ,Biochemistry ,Lipid peroxidation ,Membrane Lipids ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,In vivo ,Malondialdehyde ,Animals ,Phospholipids ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Cell Biology ,Glutathione ,Liver ,Fatty Acids, Unsaturated ,Microsomes, Liver ,Microsome ,lipids (amino acids, peptides, and proteins) ,Bromobenzenes ,Polyunsaturated fatty acid - Abstract
A study was undertaken to investigate whether some of the methods commonly used to detect lipid peroxidation of cellular membranes in vivo correlate with each other. The study was performed with the livers of bromobenzene-intoxicated mice, in which lipid peroxidation develops when the depletion of glutathione (GSH) reaches a threshold value. The methods tested and compared were the following: i) measurement of the malondialdehyde (MDA) content of the liver; ii) detection of diene conjugation absorption in liver phospholipids; iii) measurement of the loss of polyunsaturated fatty acids in liver phospholipids; and iv) determination of carbonyl functions formed in acyl residues of membrane phospholipids as a result of the peroxidative breakdown of phospholipid fatty acids. Correlations among the values obtained with these methods showed high statistical significances, indicating that the procedures measure lipid peroxidation in vivo with comparable reliability. Analogously, the four methods appeared also to correlate when applied to in vitro microsomal lipid peroxidation.
- Published
- 1987
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18. Lipid peroxidation, protein thiols and calcium homeostasis in bromobenzene-induced liver damage
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Alfonso Pompella, Emilia Maellaro, Alessandro F. Casini, Mario Comporti, and Marco Ferrali
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Male ,Lipid Peroxides ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Necrosis ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Deferoxamine ,Biochemistry ,Lipid peroxidation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Mice ,Internal medicine ,Malondialdehyde ,medicine ,Animals ,Homeostasis ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Calcium metabolism ,Pharmacology ,Liver cell ,Vitamin E ,Proteins ,Alanine Transaminase ,Glutathione ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Liver ,Bromobenzene ,Calcium ,Trolox ,Lipid Peroxidation ,medicine.symptom ,Bromobenzenes - Abstract
The mechanisms of bromobenzene hepatotoxicity in vivo were studied in mice. The relationships among glutathione (GSH) depletion, lipid peroxidation, loss of protein thiols, disturbed calcium homeostasis and liver necrosis were investigated. Liver necrosis (as estimated by the serum glutamate-pyruvate transaminase (SGPT) level) appeared between 9 and 12 hr and increased at 18 hr. Lipid peroxidation which was already detectable at 6 hr in some animals, increased thereafter showing a good correlation with the severity of liver necrosis. Despite a quite fast depletion of hepatic GSH, a significant decrease in protein thiols could be observed at 12-18 hr only. Loss of protein thiols in both whole liver and subcellular fractions (microsomes and mitochondria) was correlated with lipid peroxidation. Also a good inverse correlation was seen between lipid peroxidation and the calcium sequestration activity of liver microsomes and mitochondria. The treatment of mice with desferrioxamine (DFO) after bromobenzene-intoxication completely prevented lipid peroxidation, loss of protein thiols and liver necrosis in the animals sacrificed 15 hr after poisoning. When, however, the animals were examined at 24 hr, although the general correlation between lipid peroxidation and liver necrosis was held, in some animals (about 30% of the survivors) elevation of SGPT was observed in the virtual absence of lipid peroxidation. It seems likely therefore that the liver damage seen during the first phase of bromobenzene-intoxication is strictly related to lipid peroxidation. It is, however, possible that in some animals in which for some reason lipid peroxidation does not develop, another mechanism of liver necrosis unrelated to lipid peroxidation occurs at later times.
- Published
- 1987
19. Early alterations induced by carbon tetrachloride in the lipids of the membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum of the liver cell. II. Distribution of the alterations in the various lipid fractions
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Marco Ferrali, Angelo Benedetti, Alessandro F. Casini, and Mario Comporti
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Male ,Chromatography, Gas ,Membrane lipids ,Phospholipid ,In Vitro Techniques ,Toxicology ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,Chromatography, DEAE-Cellulose ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Phosphatidylcholine ,Animals ,Carbon Tetrachloride ,Phospholipids ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Phosphatidylethanolamine ,Chromatography ,Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning ,Liver cell ,Cell Membrane ,Fatty acid ,General Medicine ,Lipid Metabolism ,Thin-layer chromatography ,Rats ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Liver ,Microsomes, Liver ,Arachidonic acid ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ,Chromatography, Thin Layer - Abstract
The distribution of carbon tetrachloride-induced alterations of membrane lipids in various fractions of liver microsomal lipids was studied. The chromatographic spot (referred to as the “D” spot in the previous paper [1]) which has been shown to contain the compounds responsible for the diene conjugation absorption [1], was found in the fatty acid methyl esters prepared from the fraction containing phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and also in those obtained from the fraction containing phosphatidylserine (PS) and phosphatidylinositol (PI). The absorption of conjugated dienes was very marked in PE and less intense in PS and PI. The fatty acid methyl esters prepared from the fraction containing phosphatidylcholine (PC) showed no presence of the “D” spot and minimal absorption of conjugated dienes. A decrease in arachidonic acid content was found in the fraction containing PE, while no change in content of this fatty acid was found in the fraction containing PC. Results similar to those observed for PC were also found for neutral lipids (NL). Analysis of the fatty acid methyl esters of the various lipid fractions by gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) with an electron capture detector (ECD) gave a qualitative index of the free radical attack by CCl4 metabolites. Quantitative estimation was attained by study of the irreversible binding of 14C from 14CCl4 to the various lipid fractions. It was found that the fraction containing PS had the highest specific activity, while the fraction containing PC had the lowest specific activity of all the phospholipids. Thin layer chromatography (TLC) of the fraction containing PS revealed that only 11% of the radioactivity was associated with the pure PS moiety, while the remainder was associated with uncharacterized lipids (probably oxidation products). The possible relevance of the alterations induced by carbon tetrachloride in the various phospholipid fractions of liver microsomes to functional changes is discussed.
- Published
- 1977
20. Effects of diffusible products of peroxidation of rat liver microsomal lipids
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Angelo Benedetti, Marco Ferrali, Mario Comporti, and Alessandro F. Casini
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Vitamin ,Male ,History ,Erythrocytes ,In Vitro Techniques ,Hemolysis ,Education ,Dialysis tubing ,Lipid peroxidation ,Diffusion ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Cytochrome P-450 Enzyme System ,Animals ,Chromatography ,biology ,Cellular Interactions and Control Processes ,Lipid metabolism ,Haemolysis ,Lipid Metabolism ,Computer Science Applications ,Rats ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Microsome ,biology.protein ,Glucose-6-Phosphatase ,Microsomes, Liver ,Arachidonic acid ,Dialysis ,Glucose 6-phosphatase - Abstract
The effects on cellular structures of products of peroxidation of rat liver microsomal lipids were investigated. A system containing actively peroxidizing liver microsomal fraction was separated from a revealing or target system by a dialysis membrane. The target system, contained in the dialysis tube, consisted of either intact cells (erythrocytes) or subcellular fractions (liver microsomal fraction). When liver microsomal fractions were incubated with NADPH (or an NADPH-generating system), lipid peroxidation, as measured by the amount of malonaldehyde formed, occurred very rapidly. The malon-aldehyde concentration tended to equilibrate across the dialysis membrane. When the target system consisted of erythrocytes, haemolysis occurred abruptly after a lag phase. The lysis was greatly accelerated when erythrocytes from vitamin E-deficient rats were used, but no haemolysis was observed when erythrocytes from vitamin E-treated rats were used. When, in the same system, freshly prepared liver microsomal fractions were exposed to diffusible factors produced by lipid peroxidation, the glucose 6-phosphatase activity markedly decreased. A similar decrease in glucose 6-phosphatase activity, as well as a smaller but significant decrease in cytochrome P-450, was observed when the target microsomal fractions were exposed to diffusible factors derived from the peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids in a separate preincubation step. These and additional experiments indicated that the toxicological activity is relatively stable. Experiments in which the hepatic microsomal fractions destined for lipid peroxidation contained radioactively labelled arachidonic acid, previously incorporated into the membranes, showed that part of the radioactivity released from the microsomal fraction into the incubation medium entered the dialysis tube and was recovered bound to the constituents of the microsomal fractions of the target system. These results indicate that during the course of the peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids toxic products are formed that are able to induce pathological effects at distant loci.
- Published
- 1979
21. Early alterations induced by carbon tetrachloride in the lipids of the membranes of the endoplasmic reticulum of the liver cell. I. Separation and partial characterization of altered lipids
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Marco Ferrali, Angelo Benedetti, Alessandro F. Casini, and Mario Comporti
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Male ,Chromatography, Gas ,Double bond ,Diene ,Radical ,In Vitro Techniques ,Toxicology ,Endoplasmic Reticulum ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animals ,Carbon Tetrachloride ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Chromatography ,Chemistry ,Carbon Tetrachloride Poisoning ,Liver cell ,Cell Membrane ,Fatty Acids ,Fatty acid ,General Medicine ,Lipid Metabolism ,Thin-layer chromatography ,Rats ,Liver ,Microsome ,Carbon tetrachloride ,Spectrophotometry, Ultraviolet ,Chromatography, Thin Layer - Abstract
Alterations induced by carbon tetrachloride poisoning in fatty acids of liver microsomal lipids were studied. Thin layer chromatography of fatty acid methyl esters prepared from liver microsomal lipids, revealed, in the CCl 4 -treated rats, the presence of a component (the “D” spot) with an R f value lower than that of the methyl esters. The lipids recovered from this component showed a marked diene conjugation absorption when examined spectrophotometrically over the UV range, while the lipids recovered from the spot of the methyl esters showed no absorption of conjugated dienes. Studies carried out with labelled carbon tetrachloride indicated that compounds present in the “D” spot contained 28% of 14 C applied to the chromatoplate. The spot of the methyl esters (the “M” spot) contained 42% of 14 C applied to the chromatoplate. However, specific activity of the “D” spot was about 1000 times greater than specific activity of the “M” spot. The lipids recovered from either the “D” spot or the spot of the methyl esters were analyzed separately by gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) with an electron capture detector (ECD). It was found that the lipids recovered from the “D” spot showed no response, while those recovered from the spot of the methyl esters exhibited the response of the ECD, which was similar to that observed with the unfractionated fatty acid methyl esters. The lack of the response of the ECD for compounds in the “D” spot appears to be due to the fact that they cannot be eluted from the column. On the basis of the analytical results, it can be postulated that the “D” spot contains compounds formed by a chain termination addition reaction of free radicals derived from CCl 4 (probably trichloromethyl free radicals) to fatty acid free radicals containing conjugated dienes. On the other hand, the spot of the methyl esters appears to contain also, together with unmodified fatty acids, the fatty acids in which a simple addition of CCl 4 free radicals to double bonds has occurred.
- Published
- 1977
22. Lipid peroxidation and cellular damage in extrahepatic tissues of bromobenzene-intoxicated mice
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A F, Casini, M, Ferrali, A, Pompella, E, Maellaro, and M, Comporti
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Lung Diseases ,Male ,Lipid Peroxides ,Mice ,Animals ,Brain Damage, Chronic ,Kidney Diseases ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Cardiomyopathies ,Glutathione ,Bromobenzenes ,Research Article - Abstract
The mechanisms of bromobenzene toxicity in extrahepatic tissues of mice were studied. Kidney, lung, heart and brain were examined. As observed in this as well as in a previous report for the liver, bromobenzene intoxication caused a progressive decrease in the glutathione content of all the tissues examined. Cellular damage (as assessed by both biochemical determinations and histologic observations) appeared after 6 hours in the case of the kidney and the heart and after 15 hours in the case of the lung. Lipid peroxidation (as assessed by the tissue content of malonic dialdehyde, a parameter correlating with both the diene conjugation absorption and the amount of carbonyl functions in cellular phospholipids) was found to occur at the same times at which cellular damage was observed or even before. As in the case of bromobenzene-induced liver injury, when the individual values for cell damage obtained at 15-20 hours were plotted against the corresponding glutathione contents, a severe cellular damage was generally observed when the glutathione levels reached a threshold value (3.0-0.5 nmol/mg protein). Such a glutathione threshold was also observed for the onset of lipid peroxidation. Glutathione depletion and lipid peroxidation are therefore general phenomena occurring not only in the liver but in all the tissues as a consequence of bromobenzene poisoning. The possibility that lipid peroxidation is the cause of bromobenzene-induced damage to liver and extrahepatic tissues is discussed.
- Published
- 1986
23. Inhibition of protein synthesis by carbonyl compounds (4-hydroxyalkenals) originating from the peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids
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Luigi Barbieri, Alessandro F. Casini, Rosella Fulceri, Angelo Benedetti, Mario Comporti, and Marco Ferrali
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Male ,Aldehydes ,Lipid Peroxides ,Lysis ,Chemistry ,General Medicine ,In Vitro Techniques ,Toxicology ,Cellular protein ,Rats ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reticulocyte ,Biochemistry ,Protein Biosynthesis ,medicine ,Microsome ,Protein biosynthesis ,Microsomes, Liver ,Animals ,Rabbits ,Sulfhydryl Compounds ,Inhibitory effect ,Incubation - Abstract
Carbonyl compounds released during the NADPH-Fe dependent peroxidation of liver microsomal lipids and identified as 4-hydroxyalkenals (almost entirely as 4-hydroxynonenal) inhibit protein synthesis in a rabbit reticulocyte lysate. The ID50 was 0.48 mM. The inhibitory effect was reproduced by synthetic 4-hydroxynonenal. The inhibition was already evident at 1–2 min of incubation. The addition of −SH groups to the incubation medium afforded a marked protection against the inhibition of protein synthesis. The inhibitory effect seems to be due to an interaction of the carbonyl compound with −SH groups essential for the cellular protein synthetic machinery.
- Published
- 1981
24. Extraction of dialyzable toxic products produced by peroxidation of hepatic microsomal lipids
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A F, Casini, A, Benedetti, M, Ferrali, R, Fulceri, and M, Comporti
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Malondialdehyde ,Microsomes, Liver ,Animals ,Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase ,Lipid Metabolism ,Dialysis ,Rats ,Toxins, Biological - Published
- 1978
25. Application to a compacted soil of a Cam Clay model extended to unsaturated conditions
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Francesca Casini, Augusto Desideri, Roberto Vassallo, C. Mancuso, D.G. Toll, C.E. Augarde, D. Gallipoli, S.J Wheeler, F., Casini, R., Vassallo, Mancuso, Claudio, and A., Desideri
- Subjects
Cam-Clay model - Unsaturated soils - Laboratory investigation ,Materials science ,Shear stiffness ,Settore ICAR/07 - Geotecnica ,Water retention curve ,Soil science ,modeling ,Silt ,Shear (geology) ,Partial saturation ,Soil skeleton ,Compatibility (mechanics) ,Geotechnical engineering ,unsaturated soil ,Critical state soil mechanics - Abstract
This paper presents an interpretation of experimental results obtained at the Department of Geotechnical Engineering of the Universita di Napoli Federico II. The results are part of an extensive program carried out to investigate the effects of partial saturation on the volumetric behaviour and on the initial shear stiffness of a compacted silt. Tests were performed using two suction-controlled devices, a triaxial cell and a Resonant Column Torsional Shear (RCTS) cell. The compatibility of experimental data with a Bishop Stress Model (BSM) is discussed in the paper. The BSM permits highlighting of the two main effects of suction on soil behaviour: the increase of the average stress acting on the soil skeleton and the hardening—cementing of the soil packing. Hydraulic hysteresis is included in the definition of the water retention curve so that its effects, such as the irreversible component of volume change recorded during drying paths, are automatically incorporated in the predictions of the model.
- Published
- 2008
26. Interpretation of the behaviour of compacted soils using cam-clay extended to unsaturated conditions
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Francesca Casini, C. Mancuso, Augusto Desideri, Roberto Vassallo, T. Schanz, F., Casini, R., Vassallo, Mancuso, Claudio, and A., Desideri
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Materials science ,small strain behaviour ,Settore ICAR/07 - Geotecnica ,constitutive modelling ,Silt ,Cementation (geology) ,single stress variable ,modelling ,Partial saturation ,Soil skeleton ,Soil water ,Compatibility (mechanics) ,Hardening (metallurgy) ,Compressibility ,compressibility ,compacted soil ,Geotechnical engineering ,Unsaturated soil ,elastoplastic - Abstract
This paper is focused on the interpretation of experimental results obtained at the Department of Geotechnical Engineering of the University of Naples Federico II (Italy) to investigate the effects of partial saturation on the volumetric behaviour and the initial shear stiffness of a compacted silt. Tests were performed by using suction-controlled triaxial and resonant column cells. Herein, the compatibility of the results with a Single Stress Model (SSM) is discussed. The SSM allows to highlight that suction can have two effects on the mechanical behaviour of an unsaturated soil: it increases the average volumetric stress acting on the soil skeleton and it has a sort of cementing effect on the soil packing (hardening and cementation).
- Published
- 2007
27. Use of complementary and alternative medicine in children affected by oncologic, neurologic and liver diseases: a narrative review.
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Casini F, Scaltrito F, Grimaldi MT, Pop TL, Calcaterra V, Zuccotti GV, Pettoello-Mantovani M, Ferrara P, Corsello G, and Fabiano V
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- Humans, Child, Pain etiology, Complementary Therapies adverse effects, Complementary Therapies methods, Neurology, Neoplasms therapy, Liver Diseases therapy, Liver Diseases etiology
- Abstract
Complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) consist of a broad group of restorative resources often linked to existing local cultures and established health care systems and are also increasingly used in children with some serious illnesses. In this narrative review, we examine the epidemiology of the use, efficacy, and safety of complementary and alternative medicine in pediatric oncology, neurology, and hepatology. We searched for relevant articles published in Pubmed evaluating CAM use and its efficacy in safety in children affected by oncologic, neurologic and liver diseases. CAM is used to improve the success of conventional therapies, but also to alleviate the pain, discomfort, and suffering resulting from the diseases and their treatment, which are often associated with a significant burden of adverse effects. CAM use must be evaluated in children with neurological, oncological and liver diseases., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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28. Polyphenolic Profile and Antioxidant Activity of Green Extracts from Grape Pomace Skins and Seeds of Italian Cultivars.
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Guaita M, Motta S, Messina S, Casini F, and Bosso A
- Abstract
The possibility of industrial exploitation of winemaking products, as for all byproducts of vegetal origin, constantly deals with a raw material (grape pomace, GP) whose chemical composition and functional properties vary over time depending on the varietal and geographical origin of the grapes, the climatic conditions (vintage effect), and the winemaking technique. This work studied the compositional variability of polyphenolic skin and seed extracts from GP derived from white and red winemaking of different Italian grape varieties. The total polyphenolic content (GAE), the main classes of polyphenolic compounds, and the DPPH index were determined. Seed extracts were always richer in total polyphenols and condensed tannins and had higher antiradical activity (DPPH) than skin extracts: 144-298 mg GAE/g d.w. extract for skins and 327-540 mg GAE/g for seeds; the DPPH values were 1.77-3.40 mg AAE/g for skins and 3.10-10.48 mg AAE/g for seeds. Furthermore, it was verified that the evaluation of the GAE index of seed extracts, offering a good estimate of the antiradical properties (DPPH index), could represent a simple and rapid method for selecting the best lots of seeds to be used. Conversely, GP skins could be used as flour in the food industry due to their high content of dietary fiber and the presence of flavonols, which possess very interesting functional properties. Important differences in the flavonols profile were observed both between cultivars and between unfermented and fermented pomace., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
- Published
- 2023
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29. Probiotics and Polycystic Ovary Syndrome: A Perspective for Management in Adolescents with Obesity.
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Calcaterra V, Rossi V, Massini G, Casini F, Zuccotti G, and Fabiano V
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- Female, Adolescent, Humans, Insulin, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome complications, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome therapy, Polycystic Ovary Syndrome metabolism, Insulin Resistance, Pediatric Obesity therapy, Probiotics therapeutic use
- Abstract
Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) affects a considerable percentage of females of reproductive age. PCOS is an obesity-related condition and its effects are greatly amplified by obesity. Even though the pathogenesis of PCOS remains complex and has not been fully elucidated, a link between obesity, PCOS, and dysbiosis has been described. The potential role of the gut microbiota in the development and progression of PCOS and its associated symptoms has also been reported. The aim of this narrative review is to present a non-systematic analysis of the available literature on the topic of probiotics and PCOS in adolescents with obesity in order to revise the beneficial effects of probiotics/symbiotic supplementation on hormonal and metabolic profiles and inflammatory conditions. The effectiveness of probiotics/synbiotics in PCOS has been supported. The literature suggests that probiotic/symbiotic supplementation may ameliorate hormonal profiles, inflammatory indicators, and lipid metabolism disturbances caused by PCOS. Studies also show improvements in weight, BMI, insulin, and HOMA-IR, including a potential role it plays in protecting fertility. Even though further studies are needed to confirm these findings, particularly in adolescent patients, probiotic supplementation may be considered a solution for managing PCOS in adolescents with obesity.
- Published
- 2023
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30. Celiac crisis as the life-threatening onset of celiac disease in children: a case report.
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Mauro A, Casini F, Talenti A, Di Mari C, Benincaso AR, Di Nardo G, and Bernardo L
- Abstract
Celiac disease (CD) is an immune-mediated enteropathy caused by a permanent sensitivity to gluten in genetically susceptible individuals. In rare cases, CD may occur with a severe potential life-threatening manifestation known as a celiac crisis (CC). This may be a consequence of a delayed diagnosis and expose patients to possible fatal complications. We report the case of a 22-month-old child admitted to our hospital for a CC characterized by weight loss, vomiting, and diarrhea associated with a malnutrition state. Early identification of symptoms of CC is essential to provide a prompt diagnosis and management., 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., (© 2023 Mauro, Casini, Talenti, Di Mari, Benincaso, Di Nardo and Bernardo.)
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- 2023
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31. Recurrent pericarditis in a patient with Bardet-Biedl syndrome: A case report.
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Mauro A, Casini F, Congedo EC, L'assainato S, Pinto F, Ansuini V, Mascolo R, Pedroli A, and Bernardo L
- Abstract
Bardet-Biedl syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by rod-cone dystrophy, renal dysfunction, obesity, learning difficulties, hypogonadism, polydactyl, and many other minor features that can affect the cardiovascular, locomotive, neurological, and endocrine systems. We report the case of a 16-year-old boy affected by Bardet-Biedl syndrome who presented with recurrent pericarditis with an optimal response to treatment with Anakinra. To our knowledge, this is the first description of an association between Bardet-Biedl syndrome and recurrent pericarditis., 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., (© 2022 Mauro, Casini, Congedo, L'assainato, Pinto, Ansuini, Mascolo, Pedroli and Bernardo.)
- Published
- 2022
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32. Henoch-Schönlein purpura following COVID-19 vaccine in a child: a case report.
- Author
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Casini F, Magenes VC, De Sanctis M, Gattinara M, Pandolfi M, Cambiaghi S, Zuccotti GV, and Fabiano V
- Subjects
- Child, Female, Humans, BNT162 Vaccine adverse effects, COVID-19 prevention & control, IgA Vasculitis chemically induced, IgA Vasculitis diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Henoch-Schönlein purpura (HSP) is an IgA-mediated small vessel vasculitis, typical of childhood. It's a self-limiting disease and it affects different systems. HSP is characterized by dermatological, abdominal, joint and renal clinical manifestations. This condition usually occurs upon infections, mainly upper respiratory tract ones, medications, vaccinations and malignancies., Case Presentation: We describe the case of a 11 year-old girl who developed a urticarial rash 12 days after the first dose of Pfizer-BioNTech BNT16B2b2 mRNA vaccine and a clear picture of Henoch Schönlein purpura 5 days after administration of the second dose of the same vaccine., Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first description of a pediatric patient with Henoch-Schönlein purpura occurring in association with vaccination against COVID-19., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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33. HPV Vaccination in Young Males: A Glimpse of Coverage, Parental Attitude and Need of Additional Information from Lombardy Region, Italy.
- Author
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Mari A, Gianolio L, Edefonti V, Khaleghi Hashemian D, Casini F, Bergamaschi F, Sala A, Verduci E, Calcaterra V, Zuccotti GV, and Fabiano V
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Child, Cross-Sectional Studies, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Male, Patient Acceptance of Health Care, Surveys and Questionnaires, Vaccination, Papillomavirus Infections prevention & control, Papillomavirus Vaccines
- Abstract
Background: In the Lombardy Region, Italy, HPV vaccination is recommended and offered free of charge to 12-years-old males since 2017. The expected vaccination thresholds are still far to be reached. Methods: A cross-sectional survey to investigate parents' attitudes towards the HPV vaccine and knowledge about HPV was administered to parents of boys aged 6 to 18 years attending a large pediatric hospital for outpatient specialistic evaluations. Two parallel multiple logistic regression analyses were conducted to estimate the odds ratios (ORs) and the corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for attitude towards HPV vaccination and perceived need for more information about HPV vaccination. Results: A positive attitude towards HPV vaccination was found in 74% of interviewed parents. Knowledge of HPV, having a generally positive attitude toward vaccination, and mothers filling in the survey were positively associated with a positive attitude to the HPV vaccine. Parents' perceived need for more information about HPV vaccination was positively associated with the child's age, general positive attitude toward vaccination, Christian religion, and positive attitude toward HPV vaccination; knowing that HPV vaccination is free of charge significantly reduced the risk of asking for more information on HPV vaccination. Conclusions: The majority of parents of male children and adolescents in our study have a positive attitude toward HPV vaccination. Attitude toward HPV vaccination and perceived need for more information on HPV vaccination were directly related to a positive attitude toward vaccines in general. In addition, knowledge of HPV and related pathologies favors a positive attitude toward HPV vaccination. Future health programs should target an even wider diffusion of evidence-based information on vaccines in general and on the HPV vaccine in young males, to support a positive attitude toward vaccines in the general population.
- Published
- 2022
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34. Antibiotic-Induced Neutropenia in Pediatric Patients: New Insights From Pharmacoepidemiological Analyses and a Systematic Review.
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Battini V, Mari A, Gringeri M, Casini F, Bergamaschi F, Mosini G, Guarnieri G, Pozzi M, Nobile M, Zuccotti G, Clementi E, Radice S, Fabiano V, and Carnovale C
- Abstract
Aim: to characterize pediatric cases of antibiotic-associated neutropenia through a multidisciplinary approach, focusing on the temporal association between the wide spectrum of treatment options and the occurrence of this relatively uncommon but potentially clinically relevant adverse event. Methods: we carried out a pharmacoepidemiological analysis based on the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database, a retrospective chart review and a systematic review of the literature, focusing on the time to onset (TTO) of this side effect, in the pediatric clinical setting. Results: A total of 281 antibiotic-related neutropenia events, involving 11 categories of antibiotics, were included in the time to onset analysis. The median TTO ranged from 4 to 60 days after the start of the therapy. A shorter median TTO was found from the retrospective chart review [16 patients: median days (25th-75th percentiles) = 4 (3-5)], compared to 15 (9-18) vs. 10 (6-18) for literature (224 patients) and FAERS (41 cases), respectively. The Anatomical Therapeutic Chemical classes, J01X, J01F, J01E and J04A, and the median TTOs retrieved from more than one source revealed high accordance ( p > 0.05), with J01X causing neutropenia in less than a week and J01F/J01E/J04A in more than 10 days. Antibiotics were discontinued in nearly 34% of cases. In FDA Adverse Event Reporting System reports, half of the patients experiencing neutropenia were hospitalized. Conclusion: Whereas antibiotic associated neutropenia is benign in the majority of cases, yet it should not be neglected as, even if rarely, it may put children at higher risk of clinical consequences. Clinicians' awareness of antibiotic-associated neutropenia and its mode of presentation contributes to the continuous process of monitoring safety of antibiotics., 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 © 2022 Battini, Mari, Gringeri, Casini, Bergamaschi, Mosini, Guarnieri, Pozzi, Nobile, Zuccotti, Clementi, Radice, Fabiano and Carnovale.)
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- 2022
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35. Assessing subjective quality of life domains after multiple sclerosis diagnosis disclosure.
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Mattarozzi K, Casini F, Baldin E, Baldini M, Lugaresi A, Milani P, Pietrolongo E, Gajofatto A, Leone M, Riise T, Vignatelli L, and D'Alessandro R
- Subjects
- Adult, Employment, Family psychology, Female, Health Status, Humans, Italy, Male, Multiple Sclerosis diagnosis, Disclosure, Multiple Sclerosis psychology, Quality of Life
- Abstract
Background and Objective: An investigation of the domains Italian patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) named as constituting their quality of life over time., Design: We assessed, in 68 patients, QoL domains using the Schedule for the Evaluation of Individual QoL: (a) before MS diagnosis disclosure, (b) thirty days after disclosure, and (c) after one and (d) four years' follow-up., Results: The life domains most frequently named by patients were as follows: Family, Work and Finance, Hobbies, Health, Relationship with Friends and Job Effectiveness. Only Health and Job Effectiveness domains varied with time. The Health domain became a critical dimension when MS diagnosis was revealed. In addition, patients tended to be more satisfied with their health after disclosure compared to pre-diagnosis. Job Effectiveness seemed to be an important aspect until 1 year after diagnosis disclosure, but it tended to become less crucial over time. Family seems to be the most important domain over time, and psychological adaptation to MS seems to be characterized by a reconceptualization of aspects that revolve around oneself, such as professional success, rather than relational or affective factors., Conclusions: Evaluating the most relevant life domains for patients and their alteration over time may provide practitioners with an important tool in making health-related decisions, thus improving health outcomes and QoL., (© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
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36. Primary care physicians' perspective on the management of anxiety and depressive disorders: a cross-sectional survey in Emilia Romagna Region.
- Author
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Casini F, Sighinolfi C, Tedesco P, Bandieri PV, Bologna M, Colombini N, Curcetti C, Magnani M, Morini M, Serio A, Tarricone I, Berardi D, and Menchetti M
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Antidepressive Agents therapeutic use, Clinical Competence, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Physicians, Family education, Psychotherapy, Socioeconomic Factors, Surveys and Questionnaires, Anxiety Disorders therapy, Depressive Disorder therapy, Physicians, Family psychology
- Abstract
Background: Evidences from literature suggest that Primary Care Physicians' (PCPs) knowledge and attitude about psychological and pharmacological treatments of anxiety and depressive disorders could influence their clinical practice. The aim of the study is double: 1) to assess PCPs' opinions about antidepressants (ADs) and psychotherapy for the management of anxiety and depressive disorders; 2) to evaluate the influence of PCPs' gender, age, duration of clinical practice, and office location on their opinions and attitudes., Methods: This cross-sectional multicentre survey involved 816 PCPs working in four Local Health Units of the Emilia Romagna Region. Participating PCPs were asked to complete a questionnaire during educational meetings between October 2006 and December 2008., Results: The response rate was 65.1%. Eighty-five percent of PCPs agreed on the effectiveness of ADs for depressive disorder whereas lower agreement emerged for anxiety disorder and on psychotherapy for both anxiety and depression. Forty percent of PCPs reported to feel "very/extremely confident" in recognizing depression and 20.0% felt equally confident in treating it with pharmacotherapy. Considering anxiety disorder, these proportions increased. Female PCPs and those located in the rural/mountain areas reported to adopt more psycho-educational support compared to male and suburban colleagues., Conclusions: Our results suggest that an effort should be made to better disseminate recent evidences about the management of anxiety and depressive disorders in Primary Care. In particular, the importance of psychological interventions and the role of drugs for anxiety disorder should be addressed.
- Published
- 2013
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37. Adaptation and psychometric evaluation of the Italian version of the depression attitude questionnaire (DAQ).
- Author
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Sighinolfi C, Norcini Pala A, Casini F, Haddad M, Berardi D, and Menchetti M
- Subjects
- Attitude of Health Personnel, Depressive Disorder therapy, Humans, Surveys and Questionnaires, Depression, Psychometrics
- Abstract
Aims. To validate the Italian version of the 'depression attitude questionnaire' (DAQ), to assess its psychometric properties and to evaluate the primary care physicians' (PCPs) opinion and attitude towards depression. Methods. An Italian version of the DAQ was created and then administered to a representative sample of PCPs working in the Emilia-Romagna region. Results. The findings derived from the Italian version of the DAQ indicated a three-factor solution (professional confidence, negative viewpoint and biological stance), broadly similar to previous studies and with acceptable fit indices. Our results showed that the PCPs consider depression as an increasingly important issue for their daily clinical practice. A large majority of them believed in the effectiveness of antidepressants and considered psychopharmacological treatment as appropriate for the PCPs to undertake. However, most PCP respondents thought that psychotherapy should be left to the specialists. Our findings suggest a prevalent orientation to the biochemical aspects of depression and the use of antidepressant treatment. Conclusions. The PCPs' attitude and opinion towards depression is an important aspect of their understanding and response to this common and disabling condition. The Italian version of the DAQ appears to be an appropriate and useful instrument to assist the understanding of the PCPs' views and potential need for further professional development.
- Published
- 2013
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