21 results on '"Giuffrè L"'
Search Results
2. Spondylo-costal dysostosis in two siblings
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A. La Grutta, S. La Grutta, A. Bianco, Giovanni Corsello, V Benigno, Giuffrè L, La Grutta, A, Corsello, G, Benigno, V, Bianco, A, La Grutta, S, and Giuffrè, L
- Subjects
Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Ribs ,Genes, Recessive ,Consanguinity ,Recessive inheritance ,medicine ,Humans ,Abnormalities, Multiple ,Child ,Genetics ,Autosomal recessive inheritance ,Genetic heterogeneity ,business.industry ,Rib ,Dysostosis ,Syndrome ,medicine.disease ,Spine ,Radiography ,Parental consanguinity ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Trait ,Female ,Skeletal abnormalities ,business ,Human - Abstract
Two new cases of Spondylo-Costal Dysostosis (SCD) are reported in two siblings with strikingly similar skeletal abnormalities. Parental consanguinity documents in this family an autosomal recessive inheritance of trait. Clinical variability of SCD is discussed on the basis of clinical and radiological features. Its genetic heterogeneity is pointed out even considering the occurrence of cases with autosomal dominant as well as recessive inheritance.
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- 1992
3. Significato ed evoluzione del ricorso alla 'obbligatorietà' nella politica delle vaccinazioni in Italia per gli anni 2000
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Crovari, P., Principi, N., Valsecchi, Massimo, Blangiardi, F., Bonati, M., Buzzi, F., Carreri, V., Cinquetti, S., De Stefano Caraffa, D., Garattini, S., Giuffrè, L., Greco, D., Lagravinese, D., Lizioli, A., Maida, A., Oleari, F., and Romano, Gabriele
- Subjects
obbligatorietà ,vaccinazioni ,anni 2000 - Published
- 1998
4. P-selectin glycoprotein ligand 1 is a ligand for L-selectin on neutrophils, monocytes, and CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells.
- Author
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Spertini, O, primary, Cordey, A S, additional, Monai, N, additional, Giuffrè, L, additional, and Schapira, M, additional
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- 1996
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5. Phenotypic variability in the Nager Syndrome. Reoprt of four unrelated patients: a collaborative study
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Pavone, L, Dallapiccola, B, Rizzo, Renata, Mattina, Teresa, Zelante, L, Fabris, I, Giuffrè, L, Corsello, G, and Tine, A.
- Published
- 1988
6. The fragile X in Sicily: an epidemiological survey
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Neri, G., Sanfilippo, S., Pavone, L., Mollica, F., Barberi, I., Giuffrè, L., Corrado Romano, Mattina, Teresa, Cammarata, M., and Ragusa, Mg
- Published
- 1988
7. Hydrogenation of CO over ZrO 2-supported Rh catalysts: Role of experimental parameters in modifying the [formula omitted] product ratio
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Mazzocchia, C., Tempesti, E., Gronchi, P., Giuffrè, L., and Zanderighi, L.
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- 1988
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8. Comparison of the Faecal Microbiota Composition Following a Dairy By-Product Supplemented Diet in Nero Siciliano and Large White × Landrace Pig Breeds.
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Floridia V, Giuffrè L, Giosa D, Arfuso F, Aragona F, Fazio F, Chen C, Song C, Romeo O, and D'Alessandro E
- Abstract
The current study compared the faecal microbiota composition of two pig breeds (autochthonous vs. commercial) to understand what happens after the integration of liquid whey in the diet and what the role of the host genetic is. The trial was conducted for 60 days, and the faecal microbiota composition was investigated at three time points, T0, T1 (after 30 days) and T2 (after 60 days) in 30 female pigs (20 commercial crossbred and 10 Nero Siciliano pigs). The animals were divided into four groups (two control and two treatment groups). Generally, in both breeds, Firmicutes (51%) and Bacteroidota (36%) were the most abundant phylum whereas Prevotella , Treponema and Lactobacillus were the most abundant genera. The two breeds have a different reaction to a liquid whey diet. In fact, as shown by PERMANOVA analysis, the liquid whey significantly ( p < 0.001) affects the microbiota composition of crossbreeds while not having an effect on the microbiota of the Nero Siciliano. Despite this, in both breeds Bifidobacterium and Ruminococcus have been positively influenced by liquid whey and they promote intestinal health, improve immunity, increase performance, and feed efficiency. In conclusion, the integration of liquid whey had a different effect on the Nero Siciliano and crossbred pig breeds, emphasizing the importance of the host genetic profile in determining the faecal bacterial composition.
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- 2023
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9. Long-read PacBio genome sequencing of four environmental saprophytic Sporothrix species spanning the pathogenic clade.
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Du W, Giosa D, Wei J, Giuffrè L, Shi G, El Aamri L, D'Alessandro E, Hafidi M, de Hoog S, Romeo O, and Huang H
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- Base Sequence, Humans, Phylogeny, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Genome, Mitochondrial, Sporothrix genetics
- Abstract
Background: The genus Sporothrix belongs to the order Ophiostomatales and contains mainly saprobic soil and plant fungi, although pathogenic species capable of causing human infections are also present. The whole-genomes of disease-causing species have already been sequenced and annotated but no comprehensive genomic resources for environmental Sporothrix species are available, thus limiting our understanding of the evolutionary origin of virulence-related genes and pathogenicity., Result: The genome assembly of four environmental Sporothrix species resulted in genome size of ~ 30.9 Mbp in Sporothrix phasma, ~ 35 Mbp in S. curviconia, ~ 38.7 Mbp in S. protearum, and ~ 39 Mbp in S. variecibatus, with a variable gene content, ranging from 8142 (S. phasma) to 9502 (S. variecibatus). The analysis of mobile genetic elements showed significant differences in the content of transposable elements within the sequenced genomes, with the genome of S. phasma lacking several class I and class II transposons, compared to the other Sporothrix genomes investigated. Moreover, the comparative analysis of orthologous genes shared by clinical and environmental Sporothrix genomes revealed the presence of 3622 orthogroups shared by all species, whereas over 4200 genes were species-specific single-copy gene products. Carbohydrate-active enzyme analysis revealed a total of 2608 protein-coding genes containing single and/or multiple CAZy domains, resulting in no statistically significant differences among pathogenic and environmental species. Nevertheless, some families were not found in clinical species. Furthermore, for each sequenced Sporothrix species, the mitochondrial genomes was assembled in a single circular DNA molecule, ranging from 25,765 bp (S. variecibatus) to 58,395 bp (S. phasma)., Conclusion: In this study, we present four annotated genome assemblies generated using PacBio SMRT sequencing data from four environmental species: S. curviconia, S. phasma, S. protearum and S. variecibatus with the aim to provide a starting point for future comparative genome evolution studies addressing species diversification, ecological/host adaptation and origin of pathogenic lineages within the genus Sporothrix., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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10. Supplementation with SCFAs Re-Establishes Microbiota Composition and Attenuates Hyperalgesia and Pain in a Mouse Model of NTG-Induced Migraine.
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Lanza M, Filippone A, Casili G, Giuffrè L, Scuderi SA, Paterniti I, Campolo M, Cuzzocrea S, and Esposito E
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- Animals, Butyric Acid pharmacology, Butyric Acid therapeutic use, Dietary Supplements, Disease Models, Animal, Fatty Acids, Volatile adverse effects, Humans, Hyperalgesia chemically induced, Hyperalgesia drug therapy, Mice, Nitroglycerin adverse effects, Pain drug therapy, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Migraine Disorders chemically induced, Migraine Disorders drug therapy
- Abstract
Migraine is a common brain-disorder that affects 15% of the population. Converging evidence shows that migraine is associated with gastrointestinal disorders. However, the mechanisms underlying the interaction between the gut and brain in patients with migraine are not clear. In this study, we evaluated the role of the short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) as sodium propionate (SP) and sodium butyrate (SB) on microbiota profile and intestinal permeability in a mouse model of migraine induced by nitroglycerine (NTG). The mice were orally administered SB and SP at the dose of 10, 30 and 100 mg/kg, 5 min after NTG intraperitoneal injections. Behavioral tests were used to evaluate migraine-like pain. Histological and molecular analyses were performed on the intestine. The composition of the intestinal microbiota was extracted from frozen fecal samples and sequenced with an Illumina MiSeq System. Our results demonstrated that the SP and SB treatments attenuated hyperalgesia and pain following NTG injection. Moreover, SP and SB reduced histological damage in the intestine and restored intestinal permeability and the intestinal microbiota profile. These results provide corroborating evidence that SB and SP exert a protective effect on central sensitization induced by NTG through a modulation of intestinal microbiota, suggesting the potential application of SCFAs as novel supportive therapies for intestinal disfunction associated with migraine.
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- 2022
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11. Whole Genome Sequencing and Comparative Genome Analysis of the Halotolerant Deep Sea Black Yeast Hortaea werneckii .
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Romeo O, Marchetta A, Giosa D, Giuffrè L, Urzì C, and De Leo F
- Abstract
Hortaea werneckii , an extreme halotolerant black yeast in the order of Capnodiales, was recently isolated from different stations and depths in the Mediterranean Sea, where it was shown to be the dominant fungal species. In order to explore the genome characteristics of these Mediterranean isolates, we carried out a de-novo sequencing of the genome of one strain isolated at a depth of 3400 m (MC873) and a re-sequencing of one strain taken from a depth of 2500 m (MC848), whose genome was previously sequenced but was highly fragmented. A comparative phylogenomic analysis with other published H. werneckii genomes was also carried out to investigate the evolution of the strains from the deep sea in this environment. A high level of genome completeness was obtained for both genomes, for which genome duplication and an extensive level of heterozygosity (~4.6%) were observed, supporting the recent hypothesis that a genome duplication caused by intraspecific hybridization occurred in most H. werneckii strains. Phylogenetic analyses showed environmental and/or geographical specificity, suggesting a possible evolutionary adaptation of marine H. werneckii strains to the deep sea environment. We release high-quality genome assemblies from marine H. werneckii strains, which provides additional data for further genomics analysis, including niche adaptation, fitness and evolution studies.
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- 2020
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12. Transcriptome-wide expression profiling of Sporothrix schenckii yeast and mycelial forms and the establishment of the Sporothrix Genome DataBase.
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Giosa D, Felice MR, Giuffrè L, Aiese Cigliano R, Paytuví-Gallart A, Lo Passo C, Barresi C, D'Alessandro E, Huang H, Criseo G, Mora-Montes HM, de Hoog S, and Romeo O
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- Databases, Genetic, Genes, Fungal genetics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Gene Expression Profiling methods, Genome, Fungal genetics, Sporothrix genetics, Transcriptome genetics
- Abstract
Sporothrix schenckii is a dimorphic fungus existing as mould in the environment and as yeast in the host. The morphological shift between mycelial/yeast phases is crucial for its virulence, but the transcriptional networks implicated in dimorphic transition are still not fully understood. Here, we report the global transcriptomic differences occurring between mould and yeast phases of S. schenckii , including changes in gene expression profiles associated with these distinct cellular phenotypes. Moreover, we also propose a new genome annotation, which reveals a more complex transcriptional architecture than previously assumed. Using RNA-seq, we identified a total of 17 307 genes, of which 11 217 were classified as protein-encoding genes, whereas 6090 were designated as non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs). Approximately ~71 % of all annotated genes were found to overlap and the different-strand overlapping type was the most common. Gene expression analysis revealed that 8795 genes were differentially regulated among yeast and mould forms. Differential gene expression was also observed for antisense ncRNAs overlapping neighbouring protein-encoding genes. The release of transcriptome-wide data and the establishment of the Sporothrix Genome DataBase (http://sporothrixgenomedatabase.unime.it) represent an important milestone for Sporothrix research, because they provide a strong basis for future studies on the molecular pathways involved in numerous biological processes.
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- 2020
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13. Whole genome SNPs discovery in Nero Siciliano pig.
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D'Alessandro E, Giosa D, Sapienza I, Giuffrè L, Cigliano RA, Romeo O, and Zumbo A
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Autochthonous pig breeds represent an important genetic reserve to be utilized mainly for the production of typical products. To explore its genetic variability, here we present for the first time whole genome sequencing data and SNPs discovered in a male domestic Nero Siciliano pig compared to the last pig reference genome Sus scrofa11.1.A total of 346.8 million paired reads were generated by sequencing. After quality control, 99.03% of the reads were mapped to the reference genome, and over 11 million variants were detected.Additionally, we evaluated sequence diversity in 21 fitness-related loci selected based on their biological function and/or their proximity to relevant QTLs. We focused on genes that have been related to environmental adaptation and reproductive traits in previous studies regarding local breeds. A total of 6,747 variants were identified resulting in a rate of 1 variant every ~276 bases. Among these variants 1,132 were novel to the dbSNP151 database. This study represents a first step in the genetic characterization of Nero Siciliano pig and also provides a platform for future comparative studies between this and other swine breeds.
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- 2019
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14. Correction to: Robotic Pancreaticoduodenectomy: Technical Considerations.
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Marino MV, Gulotta G, and Komorowski AL
- Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1007/s12262-017-1628-9.].
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- 2018
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15. Multilocus Sequence Typing Reveals a New Cluster of Closely Related Candida tropicalis Genotypes in Italian Patients With Neurological Disorders.
- Author
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Scordino F, Giuffrè L, Barberi G, Marino Merlo F, Orlando MG, Giosa D, and Romeo O
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Candida tropicalis is a pathogenic yeast that has emerged as an important cause of candidemia especially in elderly patients with hematological malignancies. Infections caused by this species are mainly reported from Latin America and Asian-Pacific countries although recent epidemiological data revealed that C. tropicalis accounts for 6-16.4% of the Candida bloodstream infections (BSIs) in Italy by representing a relevant issue especially for patients receiving long-term hospital care. The aim of this study was to describe the genetic diversity of C. tropicalis isolates contaminating the hands of healthcare workers (HCWs) and hospital environments and/or associated with BSIs occurring in patients with different neurological disorders and without hematological disease. A total of 28 C. tropicalis isolates were genotyped using multilocus sequence typing analysis of six housekeeping ( ICL1, MDR1, SAPT2, SAPT4, XYR1 , and ZWF1 ) genes and data revealed the presence of only eight diploid sequence types (DSTs) of which 6 (75%) were completely new. Four eBURST clonal complexes (CC2, CC10, CC11, and CC33) contained all DSTs found in this study and the CC33 resulted in an exclusive, well-defined, clonal cluster from Italy. In conclusion, C. tropicalis could represent an important cause of BSIs in long-term hospitalized patients with no underlying hematological disease. The findings of this study also suggest a potential horizontal transmission of a specific C. tropicalis clone through hands of HCWs and expand our understanding of the molecular epidemiology of this pathogen whose population structure is still far from being fully elucidated as its complexity increases as different categories of patients and geographic areas are examined.
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- 2018
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16. Robotic Pancreaticoduodenectomy: Technical Considerations.
- Author
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Marino M, Gulotta G, and Komorowski AL
- Abstract
Robotic surgery can help to overcome some technical limitations of laparoscopic pancreaticoduodenectomy thanks to EndoWrist instrumentations and the 3D view. Despite the potential benefits, its employment is still low and controversial. We focused on some important technical details crucial for a safe robotic pancreatectomy. After performing 52 robotic pancreatic resections that included 10 pancreatoduodenectomies, the authors describe their technique. The review of literature on robotic and laparoscopic duodenopancreatectomy is also performed in order to evaluate possible benefits of the robotic platform. We describe the step-by-step surgical procedure, analyzing all possible troubleshooting occurring in an initial center experience. The estimated blood loss as well as the length of stay was reduced by the robotic approach. We did not observe any significant increase of pancreatic fistula rate and all other postoperative complications despite our initial learning curve. Robotic pancreatoduodenectomy is a technically advanced procedure that requires important laparoscopic and robotic skills but it shows to be safe, feasible with some clear advantages in the bleeding control and in the reconstructive phase of the procedure., Competing Interests: Compliance with Ethical StandardsThe authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.
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- 2018
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17. Whole RNA-Sequencing and Transcriptome Assembly of Candida albicans and Candida africana under Chlamydospore-Inducing Conditions.
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Giosa D, Felice MR, Lawrence TJ, Gulati M, Scordino F, Giuffrè L, Lo Passo C, D'Alessandro E, Criseo G, Ardell DH, Hernday AD, Nobile CJ, and Romeo O
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- Candida albicans classification, Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal, Species Specificity, Candida albicans genetics, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing methods, Sequence Analysis, RNA methods, Spores, Fungal genetics, Transcriptome
- Abstract
Candida albicans is the most common cause of life-threatening fungal infections in humans, especially in immunocompromised individuals. Crucial to its success as an opportunistic pathogen is the considerable dynamism of its genome, which readily undergoes genetic changes generating new phenotypes and shaping the evolution of new strains. Candida africana is an intriguing C. albicans biovariant strain that exhibits remarkable genetic and phenotypic differences when compared with standard C. albicans isolates. Candida africana is well-known for its low degree of virulence compared with C. albicans and for its inability to produce chlamydospores that C. albicans, characteristically, produces under certain environmental conditions. Chlamydospores are large, spherical structures, whose biological function is still unknown. For this reason, we have sequenced, assembled, and annotated the whole transcriptomes obtained from an efficient C. albicans chlamydospore-producing clinical strain (GE1), compared with the natural chlamydospore-negative C. africana clinical strain (CBS 11016). The transcriptomes of both C. albicans (GE1) and C. africana (CBS 11016) clinical strains, grown under chlamydospore-inducing conditions, were sequenced and assembled into 7,442 (GE1 strain) and 8,370 (CBS 11016 strain) high quality transcripts, respectively. The release of the first assembly of the C. africana transcriptome will allow future comparative studies to better understand the biology and evolution of this important human fungal pathogen., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)
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- 2017
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18. Whole Genome-Based Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis Reveals Genetic Diversity in Candida africana .
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Chowdhary A, Hagen F, Sharma C, Al-Hatmi AMS, Giuffrè L, Giosa D, Fan S, Badali H, Felice MR, de Hoog S, Meis JF, and Romeo O
- Abstract
This study aimed at investigating the genetic diversity of a panel of Candida africana strains recovered from vaginal samples in different countries. All fungal strains were heterozygous at the mating-type-like locus and belonged to the genotype A of Candida albicans . Moreover, all examined C. africana strains lack N -acetylglucosamine assimilation and sequence analysis of the HXK1 gene showed a distinctive polymorphism that impair the utilization of this amino sugar in this yeast. Multi-locus sequencing of seven housekeeping genes revealed a substantial genetic homogeneity among the strains, except for the CaMPIb, SYA1 and VPS13 loci which contributed significantly to the classification of our set of C. africana strains into six existing diploid sequence types. Amplified fragment length polymorphism fingerprint analysis yielded greater genotypic heterogeneity among the C. africana strains. Overall the data reported here show that in C. africana genetic diversity occurs and the existence of this intriguing group of C. albicans strains with specific phenotypes associated could be useful for future comparative studies in order to better understand the genetics and evolution of this important human pathogen.
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- 2017
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19. Molecular Characterization of the N-Acetylglucosamine Catabolic Genes in Candida africana, a Natural N-Acetylglucosamine Kinase (HXK1) Mutant.
- Author
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Felice MR, Gulati M, Giuffrè L, Giosa D, Di Bella LM, Criseo G, Nobile CJ, Romeo O, and Scordino F
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- Candida enzymology, Candida metabolism, Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic, Gene Expression Regulation, Fungal, Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) metabolism, Acetylglucosamine metabolism, Candida genetics, Genes, Fungal, Mutation, Phosphotransferases (Alcohol Group Acceptor) genetics
- Abstract
Background: In this study we report the genetic characterization, including expression analysis, of the genes involved in the uptake (NGT1) and catabolism (HXK1/NAG5, DAC1/NAG2, NAG1) of the aminosugar N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) in Candida africana, a pathogenic biovariant of Candida albicans that is naturally unable to assimilate the GlcNAc., Results: DNA sequence analysis of these genes revealed a number of characteristic nucleotide substitutions including a unique and distinctive guanine insertion that shifts the reading frame and generates a premature stop codon (TGA) 154 bp downstream of the ATG start codon of the HXK1 gene encoding the GlcNAc-kinase, a key enzyme of the GlcNAc catabolic pathway. However, all examined genes produced transcripts even though different levels of expression were observed among the Candida isolates examined. In particular, we found an HXK1-idependent relationship of the NGT1 gene and a considerable influence of the GlcNAc-kinase functionality on the transcription of the DAC1 and NAG1 genes. Additional phenotypic analysis revealed that C. africana isolates are hyperfilamentous in the first 24-48h of growth on filament-inducing media and revert to the yeast morphological form after 72h of incubation on these media., Conclusions: Our results show that C. africana is a natural HXK1 mutant, displaying a number of phenotypic characteristics distinct from typical C. albicans isolates.
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- 2016
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20. Monocyte adhesion to activated aortic endothelium: role of L-selectin and heparan sulfate proteoglycans.
- Author
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Giuffrè L, Cordey AS, Monai N, Tardy Y, Schapira M, and Spertini O
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- Animals, Aorta, Cattle, Cell Adhesion drug effects, Cells, Cultured, Cytokines pharmacology, Endothelium, Vascular drug effects, Heparan Sulfate Proteoglycans, Humans, Kinetics, L-Selectin biosynthesis, Ligands, Monocytes drug effects, Endothelium, Vascular physiology, Heparitin Sulfate physiology, L-Selectin physiology, Monocytes physiology, Proteoglycans physiology
- Abstract
This study examines the role of L-selectin in monocyte adhesion to arterial endothelium, a key pathogenic event of atherosclerosis. Using a nonstatic (rotation) adhesion assay, we observed that monocyte binding to bovine aortic endothelium at 4 degrees C increased four to nine times upon endothelium activation with tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha. mAb-blocking experiments demonstrated that L-selectin mediates a major part (64 +/- 18%) of monocyte attachment. Videomicroscopy experiments performed under flow indicated that monocytes abruptly halted on 8-h TNF-alpha-activated aortic endothelium, approximately 80% of monocyte attachment being mediated by L-selectin. Flow cytometric studies with a L-selectin/IgM heavy chain chimeric protein showed calcium-dependent L-selectin binding to cytokine-activated and, unexpectedly, unactivated aortic cells. Soluble L-selectin binding was completely inhibited by anti-L-selectin mAb or by aortic cell exposure to trypsin. Experiments with cycloheximide, chlorate, or neuraminidase showed that protein synthesis and sulfate groups, but not sialic acid residues, were essential for L-selectin counterreceptor function. Moreover, heparin lyases partially inhibited soluble L-selectin binding to cytokine-activated aortic cells, whereas a stronger inhibition was seen with unstimulated endothelial cells, suggesting that cytokine activation could induce the expression of additional ligand(s) for L-selectin, distinct from heparan sulfate proteoglycans. Under flow, endothelial cell treatment with heparinase inhibited by approximately 80% monocyte attachment to TNF-alpha-activated aortic endothelium, indicating a major role for heparan sulfate proteoglycans in monocyte-endothelial interactions. Thus, L-selectin mediates monocyte attachment to activated aortic endothelium, and heparan sulfate proteoglycans serve as arterial ligands for monocyte L-selectin.
- Published
- 1997
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21. Characterization of receptors for alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone on human melanoma cells.
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Siegrist W, Solca F, Stutz S, Giuffrè L, Carrel S, Girard J, and Eberle AN
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- Animals, Cell Line, Dogs, Glioma metabolism, Humans, Kinetics, Melanoma, Experimental metabolism, Mice, Neuroblastoma metabolism, Melanocyte-Stimulating Hormones metabolism, Melanoma metabolism, Receptors, Pituitary Hormone metabolism, Tumor Cells, Cultured metabolism
- Abstract
Receptors for alpha-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (alpha-MSH) on human malignant melanoma cell lines were investigated with a specific binding assay and characterized with structural analogues of alpha-MSH and adrenocorticotropic hormone and by photoaffinity cross-linking of the hormone-receptor complex. Specific binding of high-performance liquid chromatography-purified, monoiodinated alpha-MSH in the presence of 1 mM 1,10-phenanthroline as protease inhibitor was highest after a 2-h incubation at 37 degrees C. The nonspecific binding was less than 20% and dissociation of the ligand-receptor complex was relatively slow. Ten out of 12 human cell lines showed specific binding sites for alpha-MSH with Kp values ranging from 0.195 to 2.87 nM and the sites/cell being approximately 400 to approximately 1600. Virtually identical results were obtained in an assay where the cells remained attached to the culture dishes during the entire experiment. The study of hormone analogues with the D10 cell line showed that oxidized alpha-MSH had an approximately 40-fold lower affinity than alpha-MSH whereas [Nle4,D-Phe7]-alpha-MSH displayed a threefold and the adrenocorticotropic hormone fragments (1-17) and (1-24) a 20- and 8-fold higher affinity. Cross-linking of the alpha-MSH-receptor complex of three cell lines using monoiodinated [Nle4,D-Phe7,Trp(2-nitro-4-azidophenylsulfenyl)9]-alpha-MSH as photoaffinity label revealed a major Mr 45,000 protein band on sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels, analogous to the MSH receptor of mouse B16 melanoma cells.
- Published
- 1989
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