219 results on '"FILOSA, SILVANA"'
Search Results
102. Cell junctions during the early development of the sea urchin embryo Paracentrotus lividus. Cell Differ
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ANDREUCCETTI P, BARONE LUMAGA, MARIA ROSARIA, CAFIERO G, PARISI E., FILOSA, SILVANA, Andreuccetti, P, BARONE LUMAGA, MARIA ROSARIA, Cafiero, G, Filosa, Silvana, and Parisi, E.
- Published
- 1987
103. Separation and partial characterization of DNA polymerases in sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus eggs. Biochemical Bioph.Res.Comm.954-960
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DE PETROCELLIS B, PARISI E, CAPASSO A., FILOSA, SILVANA, DE PETROCELLIS, B, Parisi, E, Filosa, Silvana, and Capasso, A.
- Published
- 1976
104. Exogeneous vitellogenesis and micropinocytosis in the lizard Podarcis sicula treated with follicle stimulating hormone
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LIMATOLA E, FILOSA, SILVANA, Limatola, E, and Filosa, Silvana
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- 1989
105. RIBOSOMAL BODIES IN EARLY OOGENETIC STGES OF THE LIZARD PODARCIS SICULA RAF
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TADDEI C, FILOSA, SILVANA, Taddei, C, and Filosa, Silvana
- Published
- 1976
106. ACTINOMICIND- DISRUPTION OF THE MITOTIC GRADIENT IN THE CLEAVAGE STAGES OF THE SEA URCHIN EMBRYO
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PARISI E., MONROY A., FILOSA, SILVANA, Parisi, E., Filosa, Silvana, and Monroy, A.
- Published
- 1979
107. Intercellular bridges between follicle cells and oocyte during the differentiation of follicular epithelium in Podarcis sicula
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ANDREUCCETTI P, TADDEI C, FILOSA, SILVANA, Andreuccetti, P, Taddei, C, and Filosa, Silvana
- Published
- 1978
108. The pattern of cell division in the early development of the sea urchin, Paracentrotus lividus
- Author
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PARISI E., DE PETROCELLIS, B. , MONROY, FILOSA, SILVANA, Parisi, E., Filosa, Silvana, De, Petrocelli, and B., Monroy
- Published
- 1978
109. Role of cell junctions during germ cell differentiation in the lizard Podarcis sicula
- Author
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MOTTA, CHIARA MARIA, FILOSA, SILVANA, ANDREUCCETTI, PIERO, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Filosa, Silvana, and Andreuccetti, Piero
- Published
- 1987
110. Ribosomal DNA amplification in the oocytes of Podarcis sicula: similarities and differences with respect to other tetrapods
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MOTTA, CHIARA MARIA, FILOSA, SILVANA, ANDREUCCETTI, PIERO, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Filosa, Silvana, and Andreuccetti, Piero
- Published
- 1988
111. How follicle number is regulated in the ovary of the lizard Podarcis sicula?
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Motta, Chiara M., Tammaro, Stefania, de Stasio, Roberta, Borrelli, Lucia, and Filosa, Silvana
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- 2004
- Full Text
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112. Regression of the epithelium in late previtellogenic follicles of Podarcis sicula: A case of apoptosis
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Motta, Chiara M., Filosa, Silvana, and Andreuccetti, Piero
- Abstract
We investigated the reorganization of the follicular epithelium at the end of previtellogenesis in the lizard Podarcis sicula. In particular, we determined the mechanism of intermediate and pyriform cell regression and the fate of their different subcellular constituents. Morphological and biochemical analyses revealed the presence of hallmarks of apoptosis such as nuclear changes, chromatin condensation, protein scaffolds, RNA synthesis, and DNA fragmentation. It was therefore concluded that the remodelling of the follicular epithelium is associated with programmed cell death. Evidence was also obtained that during regression, the cytoplasmic constituents of intermediate and pyriform cells are transferred into the oocyte while the remnants of the nuclei are recycled by the small cells. The functional significance of these events is discussed. © 1996 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 1996
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113. Separation and partial characterization of DNA polymerases in sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus eggs
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Petrocellis, Benita De, primary, Parisi, Elio, additional, Filosa, Silvana, additional, and Capasso, Antonio, additional
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- 1976
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114. Exogenous vitellogenesis and micropinocytosis in the lizard, Podarcis sicula, treated with follicle-stimulating hormone
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Limatola, Ermelinda, primary and Filosa, Silvana, additional
- Published
- 1989
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115. The pattern of cell division in the early development of the sea urchin, Paracentrotus lividus
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Parisi, Elio, primary, Filosa, Silvana, additional, De Petrocellis, Benita, additional, and Monroy, Alberto, additional
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- 1978
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116. Separation and partial characterization of DNA polymerases in sea urchin [formula omitted] eggs
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Petrocellis, Benita De, Parisi, Elio, Filosa, Silvana, and Capasso, Antonio
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- 1976
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117. Actinomycin D—Disruption of the mitotic gradient in the cleavage stages of the sea urchin embryo
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Parisi, Elio, Filosa, Silvana, and Monroy, Alberto
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- 1979
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118. Oogenesis at subzero temperatures: A comparative study of the oocyte morphology in nine species of Notothenioids
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S. Filosa, T. Capriglione, C.M. Motta, S. Tammaro, Palma Simoniello, V. Frezza, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Capriglione, Teresa, Frezza, V, Simoniello, Palma, Tammaro, Stefania, and Filosa, Silvana
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round bodies ,Vitelline membrane ,Zoology ,round bodie ,Morphology (biology) ,Oogenesis ,Basement Membrane ,ovarian follicles ,cortical alveoli ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Species Specificity ,medicine ,Animals ,Cell Nucleus ,biology ,Phylogenetic tree ,Bathydraconidae ,antarctic teleosts ,Ecology ,antarctic teleost ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Oocyte ,Channichthyidae ,Perciformes ,Cold Temperature ,ovarian follicle ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oocytes ,Nototheniidae ,Female ,Vitelline Membrane ,Cell Nucleolus ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Oogenesis was examined in nine species of Antarctic fish to verify the existence of morphological peculiarities. The analyses were carried out on specimens belonging to three different families of Notothenioids (Nototheniidae, Channichthyidae and Bathydraconidae), all captured in the Ross Sea, in front of the Italian Station of Terra Nova Bay. Following dissection, the ovaries were processed and examined at the light and electron microscopes to determine the oocyte gross and fine morphology. The attention, in particular, was focused on the presence of cytoplasmic round bodies and on the organization of the cortical alveoli and the vitelline envelope. Results reveal significant specie-specific differences that could be partly correlated to the phylogenetic radiation but not to the peculiar environmental conditions being essentially comparable to those observed among temperate species.
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- 2005
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119. Oestrogen-induced expression of a novel liver-specific aspartic proteinase in Danio rerio (zebrafish)
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Silvana Filosa, Marilisa Riggio, Rosaria Scudiero, Elio Parisi, M., Riggio, Scudiero, Rosaria, Filosa, Silvana, E., Parisi, Riggio, M, Filosa, S, and Parisi, E.
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Male ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Cathepsin D ,Cathepsin E ,Biology ,Cathepsin A ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,Gene product ,Sex Factors ,Cathepsin O ,Cathepsin L1 ,Genetics ,Animals ,Aspartic Acid Endopeptidases ,Amino Acid Sequence ,RNA, Messenger ,Northern blot ,Zebrafish ,Regulation of gene expression ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Estrogens ,General Medicine ,Blotting, Northern ,Molecular biology ,Liver ,Biochemistry ,Female - Abstract
Aspartic proteinases are a group of endoproteolytic proteinases active at acidic pH and characterized by the presence of two aspartyl residues in the active site. They include related paralogous proteins such as cathepsin D, cathepsin E and pepsin. Although extensively investigated in mammals, aspartic proteinases have been less studied in other vertebrates. In a previous work, we cloned and sequenced a DNA complementary to RNA encoding an enzyme present in zebrafish liver. The sequence resulted to be homologous to a novel form of aspartic proteinase firstly described by us in Antarctic fish. In zebrafish, the gene encoding this enzyme is expressed only in the female liver, in contrast with cathepsin D that is expressed in all the tissues examined independently of the sex. For this reason we have termed the new enzyme liver-specific aspartic proteinase (LAP). Northern blot analyses indicate that LAP gene expression is under hormonal control. Indeed, in oestrogen-treated male fish, cathepsin D expression was not enhanced in the various tissues examined, but the LAP gene product appeared exclusively in the liver. Our results provide evidence for an oestrogen-induced expression of LAP gene in liver. We postulate that the sexual dimorphic expression of the LAP gene may be related to the reproductive process.
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- 2002
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120. Cadmium impairment of reproduction in the female wall lizard Podarcis sicula
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Simoniello, Palma, Filosa, S, Scudiero, R, Trinchella, F, Motta, Cm, Simoniello, Palma, Filosa, Silvana, Scudiero, Rosaria, Trinchella, Francesca, and Motta, CHIARA MARIA
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clutch size ,Reproduction ,Ovary ,Apoptosis ,Cell Count ,Lizards ,atresia ,heavy metal ,ovarian follicles ,metallotionein ,metallotioneins ,heavy metals ,Oogenesis ,Cadmium Chloride ,Ovarian Follicle ,Animals ,Environmental Pollutants ,Female ,Metallothionein ,lizard ,Zona Pellucida ,Cell Proliferation - Abstract
The exposure to environmental toxicants such cadmium (Cd) is an important research area in wildlife protection. In this study, the effect of Cd oral administration on the ovarian structure and function and on reproductive performance of the Italian wall lizard Podarcis sicula was studied. In vivo, adult female lizards were randomly assigned to three groups. Cd was given with food in single dose and in multiple doses 3 days/week for 4 weeks at dose of 1.0 μg/g body weight. Following euthanasia, the ovaries were removed and analyzed for morpho-functional changes. Results demonstrated that Cd increases prefollicular germ cells number; the evaluation of the number of follicles detects significantly higher number of atretic growing follicles, whereas primary follicles remain unchanged with respect to controls. After Cd treatments, follicles are deformed by the presence of large protrusions and a general dysregulation in the follicle organization is observed. The zona pellucida is also affected. Cd causes alteration in sugar metabolism and in metallothionein gene expression. Finally, Cd administration significantly reduces clutch size and dramatically increases embryo mortality. In conclusion, data here described show that Cd induces morpho-functional alterations in lizard follicles and indicates that these are responsible for a significant impairment of oogenesis. The effects of the dose are time independent, persisting essentially unchanged regardless of single or multiple administration, so it can be concluded that even occasional, sublethal Cd contamination may significantly impair reproductive performance in these animals.
- Published
- 2011
121. CADMIUM IN THE WALL LIZARD PODARCIS SICULA: MORPHOLOGICAL AND MOLECULAR EFFECTS ON EMBRYONIC AND ADULT TISSUES
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Scudiero, R, Filosa, S, Motta, Cm, Simoniello, Palma, Trinchella, F., K. J. Baker, Scudiero, Rosaria, Filosa, Silvana, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Simoniello, P., and Trinchella, F.
- Subjects
EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT ,large quantities of this metal are released in the different environmental compartments and may pose a significant threat to the biota exposed. Intracellular damage caused by cadmium exposure includes protein denaturation ,data on cadmium effects on fertility ,cadmium ,Cadmium is a persistent contaminant accumulated in the environment from both anthropogenic and natural sources. Every year, large quantities of this metal are released in the different environmental compartments and may pose a significant threat to the biota exposed. Intracellular damage caused by cadmium exposure includes protein denaturation, lipid peroxidation, generation of reactive oxygen species and DNA strand breaks. Many studies have also demonstrated that this ion has a teratogenic or lethal effect on embryos, related to the dose and exposure time. In spite of the wide number of studies carried out in laboratory mammals, data on cadmium effects on fertility, reproduction and embryonic development of wild terrestrial vertebrates are still limited. In particular, information on the consequences of environmental cadmium exposure on reptiles survival and biodiversity are particularly scanty. Reptiles are presently considered highly susceptible to a number of environmental pollutants and this has contributed to the global decline of several wild populations of turtles, crocodilians and lizards. As regarding cadmium effects on offspring survival, reptiles eggs for a long time have been considered well protect from the external environment and the presence of environmental contaminants in eggs or developing embryos has been attributed to a maternal transference during vitellogenesis and oviductal egg retention. More recently, it has been demonstrate that metal ions and organic contaminants present in soil may cross the flexible parchment-like shell of reptilian eggs. In consideration of the few data currently available we decided to investigate cadmium effects on biological processes such as reproduction and development in the reptile Podarcis sicula, a lizard species inhabiting both pristine and urbanized areas. The results summarized in this chapter clearly demonstrate that cadmium can interfere with the welfare and the reproductive fitness of adults, and with the development and survival of embryos. In turn, these detrimental effects on offspring production may dramatically modify the survival of wild populations inhabiting contaminated areas significantly endangering the local biodiversity and the ecological equilibrium ,Cadmium is a persistent contaminant accumulated in the environment from both anthropogenic and natural sources. Every year ,a lizard species inhabiting both pristine and urbanized areas. The results summarized in this chapter clearly demonstrate that cadmium can interfere with the welfare and the reproductive fitness of adults ,lipid peroxidation ,generation of reactive oxygen species and DNA strand breaks. Many studies have also demonstrated that this ion has a teratogenic or lethal effect on embryos ,information on the consequences of environmental cadmium exposure on reptiles survival and biodiversity are particularly scanty. Reptiles are presently considered highly susceptible to a number of environmental pollutants and this has contributed to the global decline of several wild populations of turtles ,and with the development and survival of embryos. In turn ,crocodilians and lizards. As regarding cadmium effects on offspring survival ,it has been demonstrate that metal ions and organic contaminants present in soil may cross the flexible parchment-like shell of reptilian eggs. In consideration of the few data currently available we decided to investigate cadmium effects on biological processes such as reproduction and development in the reptile Podarcis sicula ,these detrimental effects on offspring production may dramatically modify the survival of wild populations inhabiting contaminated areas significantly endangering the local biodiversity and the ecological equilibrium ,reptiles eggs for a long time have been considered well protect from the external environment and the presence of environmental contaminants in eggs or developing embryos has been attributed to a maternal transference during vitellogenesis and oviductal egg retention. More recently ,reproduction and embryonic development of wild terrestrial vertebrates are still limited. In particular ,lizard ,citotoxicology ,related to the dose and exposure time. In spite of the wide number of studies carried out in laboratory mammals - Published
- 2011
122. Cadmium-induced teratogenicity in lizard embryos: correlation with metallothionein gene expression
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Rosaria Scudiero, Francesca Trinchella, Palma Simoniello, Silvana Filosa, Chiara Maria Motta, Simoniello, Palma, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Scudiero, Rosaria, Trinchella, Francesca, and Filosa, Silvana
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Embryo, Nonmammalian ,Physiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Morphogenesis ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Gene Expression ,In situ hybridization ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Andrology ,Gene expression ,medicine ,Metallothionein ,Animals ,Soil Pollutants ,Northern blot ,RNA, Messenger ,teratogenesi ,Lizard embryo ,Genetics ,Cadmium ,Embryo ,Lizards ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Somite ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Teratogens ,chemistry ,embryonic structures ,Female ,sense organs - Abstract
Cadmium teratogenic effects and metallothionein expression were studied in tissues of lizard embryos at different stages of development. Incubation of eggs in cadmium contaminated soil had no effect on embryo survival, but strongly affected cranial morphogenesis. Cytological analyses demonstrated abnormalities in the development of proencephalic vesicles, mesencephalon and eyes. No defects were observed in somite or limb development. Northern blot analysis demonstrated that MT expression was much stronger in embryos developed in cadmium contaminated soil. In situ hybridization showed an early induction of MT gene expression in developing liver and gut, whereas in brain and eyes the spatial and temporal localization of MT transcripts did not change. A possible correlation between inability to induce MT expression and abnormalities observed in the head region of lizard developing embryos is suggested.
- Published
- 2010
123. Cadmium in Podarcis sicula Disrupts Prefollicular Oocyte Recruitment by Mimicking FSH Action
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Simoniello, Palma, Trinchella, F., Scudiero, R., Filosa, S., Motta, C. M., Simoniello, P, Trinchella, F, Scudiero, Rosaria, Filosa, Silvana, and Motta, CHIARA MARIA
- Published
- 2010
124. Spatiotemporal changes in metallothionein gene expression during embryogenesis in the wall lizard Podarcis sicula
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Rosaria Scudiero, Silvana Filosa, Francesca Trinchella, Palma Simoniello, Chiara Maria Motta, Simoniello, Palma, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Scudiero, Rosaria, Trinchella, Francesca, and Filosa, Silvana
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Amphibian ,Embryo, Nonmammalian ,Time Factors ,Physiology ,In situ hybridization ,Biology ,Ovarian Follicle ,Species Specificity ,biology.animal ,Gene expression ,Botany ,Genetics ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Molecular Biology ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Cellular localization ,In Situ Hybridization ,Zygote ,Embryogenesis ,Podarcis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Embryo ,Lizards ,biology.organism_classification ,Cell biology ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Female ,Metallothionein - Abstract
Lizard embryos are nutritionally independent from their environment. During the early phases of oogenesis, the egg prepares for development by storing reserve organelles, proteins, and RNAs sufficient to allow the zygote to transform into a juvenile. This preparation also includes the storage of metallothionein (MT) transcripts. This study investigated the localization of these transcripts by in situ hybridization throughout Podarcis sicula developmental stages. Our data show that MT expression undergoes shifts in both regional and cellular localization. MT transcripts were detected early in the central nervous system, later in tissues implicated in metabolic processes. Results are discussed highlighting differences in lizard embryonic spatial and temporal MT expression compared with piscine, amphibian, and mammalian embryos. We hypothesize that, under natural conditions, the nutritionally closed system represented by the lizard egg protects the developing embryo from an unwanted excess of metals. This mechanism would make MT expression and accumulation in detoxifying organs in developing animals unnecessary until hatching and food intake begins. Conversely, the presence of MT transcripts during brain development may ensure the correct final architecture of this organ.
- Published
- 2010
125. Differential gene expression profiles in embryos of the lizard Podarcis sicula under in ovo exposure to cadmium
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Marcello Cannetiello, Silvana Filosa, Rosaria Scudiero, Francesca Trinchella, Palma Simoniello, F., Trinchella, M., Cannetiello, P., Simoniello, Filosa, Silvana, and Scudiero, Rosaria
- Subjects
Untranslated region ,Time Factors ,Physiology ,Zygote ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Cadmium Chloride ,Gene expression ,Transcriptional regulation ,Animals ,Soil Pollutants ,Gene Regulatory Networks ,RNA, Messenger ,Gene ,Lizard embryo ,mRNA differential display ,Regulation of gene expression ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Podarcis ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Reproducibility of Results ,Lizards ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Blotting, Northern ,Molecular biology ,Cell biology ,Gene expression profiling ,Cadmium ,Signal transduction - Abstract
Screening for differentially expressed genes is a straightforward approach to study the molecular basis of contaminant toxicity. In this paper, the mRNA differential display technique was applied to analyze transcriptional regulation in response to cadmium exposure in the lizard embryos. Lizard eggs may be particularly susceptible to soil contamination and in ovo exposure may interfere or disrupt normal physiological function in the developing embryo, including regulation of gene expression. Fertilized eggs of the lizard Podarcis sicula were incubated in cadmium-contaminated soil at 25 degrees C for 20 days. Gene expression profiling showed 5 down- and 9 up-regulated genes. Four cDNAs had no homology to known gene sequences, thus suggesting that may either encode not yet identified proteins, or correspond to untranslated regions of mRNA molecules. Four fragments exhibited significant sequence similarity with genes encoding novel proteins or ESTs derived from other vertebrates. The remaining genes are mainly involved in molecular pathways associated with processes such as membrane trafficking, signal transduction, cytoskeletal organization, cell proliferation and differentiation. Cadmium also affected the expression of factors actively involved in the regulation of the transcription machinery. Down-regulated genes are mainly associated with cellular metabolism and cell-cycle regulation and apoptosis. All of these differentially expressed genes may represent candidates that function in cadmium responses. The present study leads to an increased understanding of genes and/or the biochemical pathways involved in perturbation of embryo development following cadmium exposure.
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- 2010
126. Responses to cadmium intoxication in the liver of the wall lizard Podarcis sicula
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Francesca Trinchella, Silvana Filosa, Rosaria Scudiero, Marilisa Riggio, S. Tammaro, Palma Simoniello, Chiara Maria Motta, P., Simoniello, Filosa, Silvana, M., Riggio, Scudiero, Rosaria, S., Tammaro, F., Trinchella, and Motta, CHIARA MARIA
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Physiology ,Kupffer Cells ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Apoptosis and caspase 3 ,Cell proliferation and PCNA ,Glycoconjugates ,Kupffer cells ,Metallothioneins ,Blotting, Western ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Gene Expression ,Apoptosis ,In situ hybridization ,Biology ,Carbohydrate metabolism ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Extracellular matrix ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Internal medicine ,Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen ,Parenchyma ,medicine ,In Situ Nick-End Labeling ,Metallothionein ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,In Situ Hybridization ,Cell Proliferation ,Cadmium ,Spectrophotometry, Atomic ,Podarcis ,Lizards ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Blotting, Northern ,Immunohistochemistry ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Liver ,Hepatocytes ,Italian wall lizard - Abstract
This study examined the cytological and molecular effects of cadmium, a toxic heavy metal, in the liver of the Italian wall lizard Podarcis sicula. Cadmium was administered in single dose, by diet, to induce a concentration comparable with that measured in animals living in contaminated sites. For comparison, cadmium was also administered in multiple doses by food (chronic) or in a single dose intraperitoneally (i.p.); the effects were followed at regular time intervals up to 30 days post treatments. Atomic absorption spectrometry analysis demonstrated cadmium ion uptake and accumulation in the parenchyma with an estimated half-life of approximately 8 days. Cytological analyses revealed that the metal induced oedema, activated metallothionein expression in Kupffer cells and extracellular matrix production in fat storing cells. It also caused swelling and alteration in lipid and sugar metabolism in hepatocytes. In conclusion, in the wall lizard cadmium is toxic to the liver even at very low concentrations, the response is not strictly dose and time dependent and almost no recovery occurs in short (30 days) time periods.
- Published
- 2010
127. Effects of cadmium on retinal development in lizard embryo: A molecular and morphological study
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Lucia Borrelli, Rosaria Scudiero, Silvana Filosa, Palma Simoniello, R. De Stasio, Francesca Trinchella, Chiara Maria Motta, Simoniello, P, Trinchella, F, Borrelli, L, De Stasio, R, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Filosa, Silvana, and Scudiero, Rosaria
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Cadmium ,Physiology ,Lizard ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Embryo ,Retinal ,Anatomy ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,biology.animal ,Molecular Biology - Published
- 2009
128. Ribosomal gene amplification in oocytes of the lizardPodarcis sicula
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Chiara Maria Motta, Piero Andreuccetti, Silvana Filosa, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Andreuccetti, Piero, and Filosa, Silvana
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DNA Replication ,DNA, Ribosomal ,Meiosis ,Gene expression ,Genetics ,Animals ,Ribosomal DNA ,Cell Nucleus ,biology ,DNA synthesis ,Podarcis ,Gene Amplification ,DNA replication ,Nucleic Acid Hybridization ,Lizards ,Cell Biology ,Ribosomal RNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Nuclear DNA ,Microscopy, Electron ,Oocytes ,Female ,Cytophotometry ,Cell Nucleolus ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
In order to provide cytological evidence of amplification, Podarcis sicula oocytes were studied by cytophotometry, thymidine incorporation and in situ DNA-DNA hybridization. Our results show that DNA replication is completed during the preleptotene stage, the leptotene oocytes having the typical 4C nuclear DNA content. Between the zygotene and the mid-pachytene stages further DNA synthesis occurs with consequent increase of the ribosomal nuclear DNA content. These results and the variations in nucleolar organization observed during differentiation give clear evidence of the existence of ribosomal gene amplification in Podarcis sicula oocytes.
- Published
- 1991
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129. cGnRH II involvement in pyriform cell apoptosis
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Silvana Filosa, S. Tammaro, Palma Simoniello, Chiara Maria Motta, Tammaro, Stefania, Simoniello, Palma, Filosa, Silvana, and Motta, CHIARA MARIA
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Programmed cell death ,GnRh receptors ,Fas/FasL ,Dnase I ,caspase 3 ,p17 ,reptiles ,podarcis sicula ,Histology ,Fas Ligand Protein ,Fas-Associated Death Domain Protein ,Caspase 3 ,Apoptosis ,Biology ,DNA laddering ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone ,Ovarian Follicle ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,Animals ,Deoxyribonuclease I ,Receptor ,GnRh receptor ,Epithelial Cells ,Lizards ,Cell Biology ,Oocyte ,In vitro ,reptile ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Female ,Receptors, LHRH ,Hormone - Abstract
We have investigated whether gonadotrophin-releasing hormone (GnRH) is involved in triggering the apoptotic death of pyriforms, the nurse cells that cooperate in oocyte growth during mid- to late previtellogenesis in the lizard Podarcis sicula. Our immunocytochemical analyses demonstrate that pyriforms express GnRH receptors and that, in late previtellogenesis, they are up-regulated by cGnRH II. The hormone however does not trigger receptor synthesis and activation, events that therefore must be under the control of other regulatory factors. Our results also indicate that in vitro treatment of pyriforms with cGnRH II induces DNAse I activation and DNA laddering, clear cytological evidence of apoptosis, but not Fas/Fas-L synthesis or caspase activation. We conclude that cGnRH II is pro-apoptotic to pyriform cells and that it exerts its effects by activating an alternative cell death pathway, probably involving calcium as first messenger and DNase I as first executioner.
- Published
- 2008
130. Molecular aspects of iron acquisition and storage in the cold-adapted Antarctic Notothenioids
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Francesca Trinchella, E. Parisi, S. Filosa, M. Riggio, Rosaria Scudiero, Trinchella, F, M., Riggio, Filosa, Silvana, Parisi, E, and Scudiero, Rosaria
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Physiology ,Metallurgy ,Environmental science ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Iron acquisition ,Cold adapted - Published
- 2008
131. Differential gene espresion in Podarcis sicula embryos developed under cadmium stress
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M. Cannetiello, S. Filosa, Rosaria Scudiero, Palma Simoniello, Francesca Trinchella, Trinchella, F, Cannetiello, M, Simoniello, P, Filosa, Silvana, and Scudiero, Rosaria
- Subjects
Cadmium ,Physiology ,Podarcis ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Embryo ,Anatomy ,Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Biochemistry ,Cell biology ,Stress (mechanics) ,chemistry ,Gene expression ,Molecular Biology ,Differential (mathematics) - Published
- 2008
132. Block of mitochondrial apoptotic pathways in lizard ovarian follicle cells as an adaptation to their nurse function
- Author
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Palma Simoniello, Silvana Filosa, S. Tammaro, Chiara Maria Motta, Tammaro, Stefania, Simoniello, Palma, Filosa, Silvana, and Motta, CHIARA MARIA
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Programmed cell death ,Histology ,Cell ,Mitochondrial Degradation ,Apoptosis ,Mitochondrion ,Biology ,Culture Media, Serum-Free ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Gonadotropin-Releasing Hormone ,mitochondrial morphology ,Follicle ,mitochondrial membrane potential ,Nursing ,Ovarian Follicle ,cell death ,GnRH ,Bcl-2 ,lizard ,podarcis sicula ,medicine ,Animals ,Ovarian follicle ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Indirect ,Membrane Potential, Mitochondrial ,Vitellogenesis ,Cytochromes c ,Lizards ,Cell Biology ,Oocyte ,Adaptation, Physiological ,Mitochondria ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2 ,Female ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
Pyriforms are ovarian follicle nurse cells that undergo apoptosis at the end of previtellogenesis and are completely eliminated by the epithelium. This event is accompanied by the active transfer of organelles and macromolecules to the oocyte via an intercellular bridge. Since it would be a nonsense for damaged mitochondria to reach the oocyte, we have postulated that pyriform cells have adapted their apoptotic machinery to prevent mitochondrial degradation. To verify this hypothesis, we have studied mitochondrial morphology and functionality during follicle cell regression. Cytological and biochemical evidence indicates that mitochondria in pyriforms maintain their size, organization and membrane potential. This clearly indicates that they are not involved in apoptosis signalling/progression. This block would favour both the oocyte, by increasing the pool of organelles available from follicle cells, and also the regressing pyriforms, by maintaining the energy resources required for completion of their nurse function. The block is probably attributable to an over-expression of Bcl-2 and might be carried out by sequestering cytochrome c inside the organelles. As demonstrated by in vitro experiments, the mitochondrial apoptosis pathway can be activated by stress induction, such as serum deprivation, but not following physiological pro-apoptotic signalling, such as treatment with gonadotrophin-releasing hormone.
- Published
- 2007
133. Identification and localization of alpha and beta spectrins in oocytes of three antarctic teleosts: Trematomus bernacchii, trematomus newnesi (Nototheniidae) and Chionodraco hamatus (Channichthyidae)
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R. Carotenuto, Chiara Maria Motta, Silvana Filosa, Palma Simoniello, V. Frezza, S. Tammaro, Tammaro, Stefania, Filosa, Silvana, Frezza, V., Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Simoniello, Palma, and Carotenuto, Rosa
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Gene isoform ,biology ,actin localization ,chorion ,notothenioids ,previtellogenic oocytes ,spectrin isoforms ,Immunocytochemistry ,previtellogenic oocyte ,Anatomy ,macromolecular substances ,Aquatic Science ,biology.organism_classification ,Channichthyidae ,notothenioid ,Biochemistry ,Chionodraco hamatus ,Trematomus ,Nototheniidae ,Spectrin ,Oocyte differentiation ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
The presence and localization of α- and β-spectrins and of the spectrin cross-linking protein actin were investigated, in previtellogenic oocytes of three species of Antarctic teleosts: the two red-blooded nototheniids, Trematomus bernacchii and Trematomus newnesi, and the channichthyid, the ice fish Chionodraco hamatus. Analyses by western blotting indicated that these species had an unusual abundance of spectrin isoforms and that they were characterized by rather low molecular masses. The immunocytochemistry in situ demonstrated that α- and β-spectrins showed a variable pattern of localization that clearly depended on both the species considered and the stage of oocyte differentiation. In particular, the two Trematomus spp. showed a distribution of spectrins absolutely comparable and rather different from that of C. hamatus. The evidences collected confirmed that channichthyids have isolated early from the group of red-blooded species and suggest that in notothenioids significant changes might have occurred in spectrin genes and in their protein products.
- Published
- 2007
134. Cadmium cytotoxicity in Podarcis sicula liver
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Simoniello, Palma, Tammaro, S., Motta, C. M., Frezza, V., Filosa, S., Simoniello, Palma, Tammaro, Stefania, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Frezza, V., and Filosa, Silvana
- Published
- 2006
135. metallothionein mRNA expression and localization in Podarcis sicula embryos exposed to cadmium
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Simoniello, Palma, Tammaro, S, Riggio, M, Trinchella, F, Scudiero, R, Frezza, V, Motta, Cm, Filosa, S., Simoniello, Palma, Tammaro, Stefania, Riggio, Marilisa, Trinchella, Francesca, Scudiero, Rosaria, Frezza, V., Motta, CHIARA MARIA, and Filosa, Silvana
- Published
- 2006
136. Evolutionary fate of duplicate genes encoding aspartic proteinases. Nothepsin case study
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Elio Parisi, Francesca Trinchella, Rosaria Scudiero, Roberta De Stasio, Silvana Filosa, Marilisa Riggio, Lucia Borrelli, L., Borrelli, R., DE STASIO, Filosa, Silvana, E., Parisi, M., Riggio, Scudiero, Rosaria, and F., Trinchella
- Subjects
Genetics ,Concerted evolution ,Base Sequence ,Gene duplication, aspartic proteinases, cathepsin, nothepsin, molecule evolution, gene gain and loss ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Fishes ,Pair-rule gene ,Lizards ,General Medicine ,Paralogous Gene ,Biology ,Cathepsin D ,Evolution, Molecular ,Amino Acid Substitution ,Gene Duplication ,Gene duplication ,Gene cluster ,Animals ,Aspartic Acid Endopeptidases ,Gene family ,Neofunctionalization ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Phylogeny ,Functional divergence - Abstract
Gene duplication is considered an important evolutionary mechanism leading to new gene functions. According to the classical model, one gene copy arising from gene duplication retains the ancestral function, whilst the other becomes subject to directional selection for some novel functions. Hence, according to this model, long-term persistence of two paralogous genes is possible only with the acquisition of functional innovation. In the absence of neofunctionalization, one of the duplicate genes may be lost following accumulation of deleterious mutations, ultimately leading to the loss of function. Recently, new mechanisms have been proposed according to which both paralogs are maintained without apparent neofunctionalization. In this paper we describe the molecular evolution of the aspartic proteinase gene family, with particular regard for the nothepsin gene, a sex- and tissue-specific form of aspartic proteinase active in fish. The finding of nothepsin in a reptile is indicative of the presence of this gene in organisms other than fish. However, the failure to find any nothepsin-like gene in avian, murine and human genome suggests that the gene has been lost in certain lineages during evolution. At variance with piscine nothepsin expressed exclusively in female liver under the estrogens action, the reptilian counterpart lacks both tissue and sex specificity, as it is constitutively expressed in different tissues of male and female specimens. The expression of the nothepsin gene in fish and lizard is accompanied by the expression of a paralogous gene encoding for cathepsin D. Functional divergence analysis indicates that cathepsin D accumulated amino acid substitutions, whereas nothepsin retained most of the ancestral functions. Phylogenetic analysis shows a preponderance of replacement substitutions compared to silent substitutions in the branch leading to the cathepsin D clade, whilst nothepsin evolves under negative selection. To explain the loss of the nothepsin gene in certain lineages, we propose a model that takes into account the complementary degenerative mutations occurring in regulatory elements of the promoter regions of the two genes. According to this model, gene loss occurs whenever the two genes acquire the same expression pattern. The coexistence of cathepsin D and nothepsin is explained in terms of metabolic cooperation of the two enzymes.
- Published
- 2006
137. Characterization of cortical alveoli content in several species of Antarctic notothenioids
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Loredana Ricchiari, Marina Prisco, Silvana Filosa, Piero Andreuccetti, Palma Simoniello, S. Tammaro, Chiara Maria Motta, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Tammaro, Stefania, Simoniello, Palma, Prisco, Marina, Ricchiari, Loredana, Andreuccetti, Piero, and Filosa, Silvana
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chemistry.chemical_classification ,biology ,Glycoconjugate ,Lectin ,Anatomy ,Antarctic teleost ,Sudan Black B ,Aquatic Science ,lectin stain ,biology.organism_classification ,Staining ,Silver salts ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Trematomus newnesi ,Trematomus ,biology.protein ,Nucleoid ,hyosophorin ,alveolar morphology ,PAS ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics - Abstract
Cytochemical analyses was used to study the organization and content of cortical alveoli in eight species of Antarctic teleosts belonging to three different families of notothenioids: nototheniids, bathydraconids and channichthyids. Results indicated differences existed among the various species in alveolar size and distribution and in their content. In nototheniids, in particular, typical nucleoids were formed that could be large and single or small and multiple, according to the species considered. As demonstrated by the affinity to periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) and lectin staining, these nucleoids were rich in glycoconjugates, whose nature was extremely varied in the different species, but not in lipo- or acidic proteins as indicated by Sudan Black B and silver salts staining. Protein extracts, electrophoresed and stained with Sudan, PAS and two lectins demonstrated that the alveoli in the two species, Trematomus bernacchii and Trematomus newnesi, contained c. 80 kDa protein rich in N-acetylglucosamine groups. By contrast, the typical hyosophorins, described as the major alveolar content in other fishes, were apparently present only in T. newnesi.
- Published
- 2005
138. EFFECT OF FOLLITROPIN ON ADENYLATE CYCLASE ACTIVITY AND ON FSH RECEPTOR MRNA EXPRESSION DURING THE OVARIAN CYCLE OF PODARCIS SICULA
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Elio Parisi, Roberta De Stasio, Lucia Borrelli, Silvana Filosa, Filosa, Silvana, Borrelli, L, DE STASIO, R, and Parisi, E.
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endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adenylate kinase ,Follitropin ,Ovary ,Biology ,Cyclase ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,heterocyclic compounds ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Northern blot ,Vitellogenesis ,Follicle-stimulating hormone receptor ,Cyclase activity ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists - Abstract
The relationship is reported between adenylate cyclase sensitivity to follitropin and FSH receptor mRNA expression in the ovary of the lizard Podarcis sicula. The results demonstrate that ovarian adenylate cyclase responsiveness to FSH parallels ovarian functions, being maximal during the ovulatory period. Ovarian sensitivity to FSH is also related to oocyte growth and vitellogenesis. Northern blot analyses revealed that the FSH receptor mRNAs were maximally expressed in vitellogenic oocytes during the reproductive period. In lizard treated in vivo with FSH during the pre‐ovulatory period, adenylate cyclase became refractory to further FSH stimulation 2 h after treatment, but sensitivity to the hormone was restored after two weeks. Nevertheless, the expression level of FSH receptor mRNAs was significantly enhanced in these animals. The conclusion is that in lizard the ovarian cycle is controlled by follitropin, FSH receptor and adenylate cyclase.
- Published
- 2004
139. CHANGES IN ZINC, COPPER AND METALLOTHIONEIN CONTENTS DURING OOCYTE GROWTH AND EARLY DEVELOPMENT OF THE TELEOST DANIO RERIO (ZEBRAFISH)
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Marilisa Riggio, Rosaria Scudiero, Silvana Filosa, Elio Parisi, Scudiero, Rosaria, S., Filosa, Riggio, M., Parisi, E., Riggio, M, Filosa, Silvana, and Parisi, E
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Male ,Embryo, Nonmammalian ,animal structures ,Physiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Embryonic Development ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Biology ,Toxicology ,Biochemistry ,Oogenesis ,Andrology ,medicine ,Animals ,Metallothionein ,Zebrafish ,Fertilisation ,Genetics ,Cadmium ,Embryogenesis ,Embryo ,Cell Biology ,General Medicine ,Oocyte ,Blastula ,Zinc ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,embryonic structures ,Oocytes ,Female ,Copper - Abstract
In the present report, we investigated zinc, copper and metallothionein (MT) contents in zebrafish oocytes and embryos. Our results demonstrate that the metal content increases during oocytes maturation. Zinc increases from 30 ng/oocyte (stage-1 oocytes) to 100 ng/oocyte (stage-3 oocytes); copper varied from 1 ng/oocyte (stage-1 oocytes) to 3.5 ng/oocyte (stage-3 oocytes). During embryogenesis, zinc and copper contents dramatically increase after fertilisation around the 512-cells stage, then slowly decrease until the mid-gastrula stage. During oocyte growth, the changes in the MT level are proportional to metal content, whereas during embryogenesis the pattern of MT accumulation does not parallel that of the two metals. Indeed, the maternal pool of MT decreases steadily during the early stages of the development until the gastrula stage. We have examined the effect of cadmium on the expression of MT during zebrafish development. After cadmium exposure, MT content increases in embryos at the blastula stage, whereas no induction occurs in embryos at the gastrula stage. However, pre-treatment of embryos at the gastrula stage with 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine induces MT synthesis following exposure to cadmium. These observations show that changes in metal levels are not correlated to MT content in the embryo, whereas DNA methylation is one of the factors regulating MT expression.
- Published
- 2003
140. Accumulation of zinc, copper and metallothionein mRNA in lizard ovary proceeds without a concomitant increase in metallothionein content
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Silvana Filosa, Rosaria Scudiero, Marilisa Riggio, Elio Parisi, Francesca Trinchella, Riggio, M, Trinchella, F, Filosa, S, Parisi, E, Scudiero, Rosaria, and Filosa, Silvana
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Molecular Sequence Data ,Ovary ,Biology ,Oogenesis ,Botany ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Metallothionein ,Amino Acid Sequence ,RNA, Messenger ,Northern blot ,Cloning, Molecular ,Ovum ,Messenger RNA ,Base Sequence ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Lizards ,Embryo ,Cell Biology ,Blotting, Northern ,Oocyte ,Molecular biology ,Blot ,Zinc ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Liver ,Chromatography, Gel ,Oocytes ,Female ,Sequence Alignment ,Copper ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The possible role of metallothionein (MT) in metal homeostasis has been investigated in growing oocytes and eggs of the lizard Podarcis sicula. Chromatographic analysis does not reveal the presence of MT in both ovary and eggs, the only metal-binding proteins detected being represented by high molecular mass components. De novo synthesis of MT could be observed in the ovary of cadmium-treated lizards. A cDNA encoding MT was obtained from the liver of P. sicula by RT-PCR followed by a RACE strategy, using primers designed on consensus motifs of vertebrate MT. In spite of the lack of MT in the ovary of untreated animals, Northern blot analysis demonstrates that the maternal untranslated MT transcript is expressed constitutively in the ovary in all the periods of the ovarian cycle. MT mRNA content increases during the oocyte growth, reaching the highest level in ovulated eggs, concomitantly with the accumulation of zinc and copper. Our findings suggest that maternal MT mRNA accumulates in the egg and is translated sometime during development to cope with the future needs of the growing embryo. The appearance of MT after cadmium treatment suggests that the block that makes the oocytarian MT mRNA untranslatable is removed by the metal.
- Published
- 2003
141. HIGH AFFINITY COPPER TRANSPORT PROTEIN IN THE LIZARD PODARCIS SICULA. MOLECULAR CLONING, FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION AND EXPRESSION IN SOMATIC TISSUES, FOLLICULAR OOCYTES AND EGGS
- Author
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Silvana Filosa, Elio Parisi, Rosaria Scudiero, Dennis J. Thiele, Jaekwon Lee, Marilisa Riggio, Scudiero, Rosaria, S., Filosa, Riggio, M, Lee, J, Parisi, E, Thiele, Dj, Riggio, M., Lee, J., Thiele, D. J., Parisi, E., and Filosa, Silvana
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Molecular Sequence Data ,Biophysics ,Reptilian Proteins ,Transfection ,Biochemistry ,Oogenesis ,Cell Line ,Structural Biology ,copper transporter ,Complementary DNA ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Northern blot ,Cloning, Molecular ,Gene ,Ovum ,Messenger RNA ,Base Sequence ,biology ,Membrane transport protein ,Membrane Transport Proteins ,RNA ,Lizards ,Oocyte ,Molecular biology ,Cell biology ,Zinc ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oocytes ,biology.protein ,gene expression ,lizard ,Copper - Abstract
Copper (Cu) is an essential element required in many biological processes including cellular growth and development. The molecular mechanisms involved in copper homeostasis include proteins that play a role in Cu uptake. Genes encoding high affinity copper transporters (Ctr) have been identified in yeast, plant and mammalian cells. Analysis of copper and zinc content in growing ovarian follicles and ovulated eggs of the reptilian Podarcis sicula demonstrated that the levels of both metals rise during oocyte growth, reaching the maximum in ovulated eggs. By exploiting the remarkable evolutionary conservation of the primary structure of Ctr proteins, cDNA encoding a Ctr was isolated from the liver of the lizard P. sicula by reverse transcriptase PCR and RACE strategy by using primers designed based on consensus motifs present in mammalian Ctr. The predicted protein sequence contains three transmembrane domains and a putative hydrophilic extracellular amino-terminal domain. Besides complementing the respiratory deficiency of yeast cells defective in high affinity Cu transport, expression of lizard Ctr1(1) in Hek293 cells stimulates Cu uptake.Gene expression assessed by Northern blot hybridization of RNA from different tissues of P. sicula shows the highest levels of transcript in both intestine and liver. The profile of Ctr1 mRNA in growing ovarian follicles and eggs demonstrates that the transcript accumulates during the oocyte growth and reaches the highest levels in ovulated eggs. These results suggest that lizard Ctr1 protein may function in Cu acquisition in growing oocytes and eggs.
- Published
- 2002
142. Analisi del contenuto di 'metalli traccia' e dei meccanismi molecolari che ne controllano l’omeostasi in Anfibi e Rettili del Parco del Matese
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M. RIGGIO, L. BORRELLI, R. DE STASIO, S. FILOSA, SCUDIERO, ROSARIA, G. ODIERNA F. M. GUARINO, M., Riggio, Scudiero, Rosaria, L., Borrelli, R., DE STASIO, Filosa, Silvana, and S., Filosa
- Subjects
rettili ,anfibi ,metalli traccia - Published
- 2002
143. TOXICITY AND TERATOGENIC EFFECTS OF FLUMEQUINE ON DANIO RERIO EMBRYOS
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Lancieri, M., Cozzolino, S., Filosa, S., Motta, C. M., Tammaro, S., Gaudio, L., Luciana Migliore, Lancieri, Massimo, Cozzolino, Salvatore, Filosa, Silvana, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Tammaro, Stefania, Gaudio, Luciano, and Migliore, Luciana
- Published
- 2002
144. Control of oocyte recruitment: regulative role of follicle cells through the release of a diffusible factor
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R. Muoio, D. Fierro, Chiara Maria Motta, S. Sica, C. Iodice, Silvana Filosa, Sica, Stefania, Fierro, D, Iodice, C, Muoio, R, Filosa, Silvana, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Sica, S., Fierro, D., and Iodice, C.
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,Ovary ,Biology ,Diffusion ,Andrology ,Biological Factors ,Follicle-stimulating hormone ,Follicle ,Oogenesis ,Ovarian Follicle ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,oogonial proliferation ,Animals ,Ovarian follicle ,Cells, Cultured ,Granulosa Cells ,Cell growth ,Demecolcine ,Cell Differentiation ,Lizards ,Cell Biology ,Oocyte ,reptiles ,Molecular Weight ,Meiosis ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cell culture ,Culture Media, Conditioned ,Theca Cells ,Oocytes ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Female ,Follicle Stimulating Hormone ,Gonadotropin ,oocyte recruitment ,Developmental Biology ,follicle cell - Abstract
To determine whether oogonial proliferation and oocyte recruitment are under control of hypophyseal and/or ovarian factors, we carried out a series of investigations using Podarcis sicula, a lizard inhabiting the temperate lowlands of Europe in which oocyte recruitment occurs throughout the year, as animal model. Germinal beds containing oogonia and oocytes in prefollicular stages were cocultured with different ovarian compartments in presence/absence of FSH, and the effects of different treatments were evaluated by counting the number of prelepto-leptotene oocytes. Results revealed that oocyte recruitment from the pool of oogonia is under the control of a factor released by follicle cells while FSH has an indirect effect on modulating oogonial proliferation. SDS-PAGE analyses carried out on media conditioned by follicles suggest that the factor involved in the control of oocyte recruitment may be a small protein (about 21 kDa) and that its release is dependent on the period of the ovarian cycle but apparently not on the circulating levels of FSH.
- Published
- 2001
145. Structural and functional analysis of metal regulatory elements in the promoter region of genes encoding metallothionein isoforms in the Antarctic fish Chionodraco hamatus (icefish)
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Stefania Filosa, Elio Parisi, Vincenzo Carginale, Clemente Capasso, Marilisa Riggio, Rosaria Scudiero, Scudiero, Rosaria, Carginale, V, Capasso, C, Riggio, M, Filosa, S, Parisi, E., Carginale, V., Capasso, C., Riggio, M., and Filosa, Silvana
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Gene isoform ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,TATA box ,Metal regulatory elements ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Regulatory Sequences, Nucleic Acid ,Biology ,Transfection ,Transcription (biology) ,Chionodraco hamatus ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Genetics ,Animals ,Humans ,Protein Isoforms ,Cloning, Molecular ,Luciferases ,Promoter Regions, Genetic ,Gene ,Sequence Deletion ,Regulation of gene expression ,Reporter gene ,Base Sequence ,Fishes ,Promoter ,DNA ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,General Medicine ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Zinc ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Metals ,Metallothionein ,Gene expression ,Sequence Alignment ,Cadmium - Abstract
To investigate the regulation of Chionodraco hamatus metallothionein (MT) encoding genes about 1000-bp regions of both MT-I and MT-II gene promoters were cloned and sequenced. Both promoters were rich in A–T content, and lacked the canonical TATA box; several putative cis-regulatory sequences were also present. In the MT-I promoter, four MREs were identified within the first 300 bp from the ATG codon. In the MT-II promoter, seven MREs were organized into two clusters, one containing three MREs located close to the ATG codon, and the other consisting of four MREs lying 500–900 bp upstream of the transcription starting point. The alignment of the MT-I and MT-II promoter regions showed 57% identity, which increased to 87% in the 300-bp region upstream of the ATG. Only the three proximal putative MREs identified were conserved both in position and sequence. Functional analysis of MT-I and MT-II promoters was performed by introducing deletion mutants of the 5′-flanking regions into vector pGL-3, directly upstream of the firefly luciferase reporter gene. Each construct was tested in the HepG2 cell lines in the absence or presence of zinc or cadmium ions. Maximum inducibility of the MT-II gene promoter was achieved with a construct containing both the proximal and the distal MRE clusters. The lack of the most distally located MRE dramatically affected MT-II promoter sensitivity to metals; removal of the distal cluster of MREs also reduced metal inducibility. The MT-I promoter was more compact, since maximal activity and metal inducibility depended on the presence of the proximal cluster of four MREs. This study suggests that the different organization of the MT-I and MT-II gene promoter regions might account for the observed differences in the basal and metal-induced expression of MT-I and MT-II isoforms in the C. hamatus liver.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
146. Storage in the yolk platelets of low MW DNA produced by the regressing follicle cells
- Author
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C. Iodice, P. Indolfi, A. Cicale, Maria Stefania Spagnuolo, Silvana Filosa, S. Tammaro, Chiara Maria Motta, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Tammaro, Stefania, Cicale, A, Indolfi, P, Iodice, C, Spagnuolo, S, and Filosa, Silvana
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,food.ingredient ,Apoptosis ,DNA laddering ,Biology ,Follicle ,food ,Ovarian Follicle ,follicular epithelium ,DNAse I ,Yolk ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Deoxyribonuclease I ,Ovarian follicle ,Epithelial Cells ,Lizards ,DNA ,Cell Biology ,Oocyte ,oocyte stock reserve ,Egg Yolk ,reptiles ,Cell biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Endocrinology ,Oocytes ,Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel ,Female ,Exogenous DNA ,Vitellogenesis ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
The present work was carried out to clarify the nature and origin of the yolk DNA present in vitellogenic oocytes of the lizard Podarcis sicula. Morphological and biochemical evidences indicate that it has an intrafollicular origin, from the apoptotic bodies resulting from follicle cells regression at the end of previtellogenesis. This conclusion is reinforced by the observation that the oocyte membrane, in in vitro experiments, is unpermeable to exogenous DNA. Biochemical evidences reveal that the yolk DNA has a low (200bp) molecular weight and this suggests that it is produced by the endonucleases typically involved in apoptotic DNA laddering. Indeed, immunocytochemical analyses demonstrate that follicle cells contain significant amounts of DNAse I. In immunoblots, carried out during different periods of the ovarian cycle, the enzyme shows a MW of about 33, 66 or 100 kDa thus indicating that its activity in the follicle of Podarcis is modulated by dimerization and/or binding to regulatory factors. Mol. Reprod. Dev. 59: 422–430, 2001. © 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
- Published
- 2001
147. Sex- and tissue-specific expression of aspartic proteinases in Danio rerio (zebrafish)
- Author
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Silvana Filosa, Elio Parisi, Marilisa Riggio, Rosaria Scudiero, M., Riggio, Scudiero, Rosaria, Filosa, Silvana, E., Parisi, Riggio, M, Filosa, S, and Parisi, E.
- Subjects
Male ,DNA, Complementary ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Cathepsin D ,Biology ,Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic ,Sex Factors ,Gene expression ,Genetics ,Animals ,Aspartic Acid Endopeptidases ,Tissue Distribution ,Northern blot ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Gene ,Zebrafish ,Phylogeny ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Cathepsin ,Base Sequence ,General Medicine ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,biology.organism_classification ,Blotting, Northern ,Molecular biology ,Amino acid ,Open reading frame ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,RNA ,Female - Abstract
Full-length zebrafish cDNAs encoding two aspartic proteinases were cloned and sequenced. One of the two cDNAs was a 1708 bp product with an open reading frame of 398 amino acid residues corresponding to a cathepsin D. The other was a 1383 bp product encoding a polypeptide chain of 416 amino acids homologous to nothepsin, an aspartic proteinase first identified by us in the liver of Antarctic Notothenioidei. Gene expression assessed by RT–PCR and northern blot hybridization of RNA from different tissues showed that the expression was tissue- and sex-specific. Whereas the cathepsin D gene was expressed in all the tissues examined independently of the sex, the nothepsin gene was expressed exclusively in female livers.
- Published
- 2000
148. Isolation, characterization and molecular cloning of cathepsin D from lizard ovary: changes in enzyme activity and mRNA expression throughout ovarian cycle
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Elio Parisi, Peter Kille, Roberta De Stasio, Silvana Filosa, Lucia Borrelli, DE STASIO, R, Borrelli, L, Filosa, Silvana, Parisi, E, and Kille, P.
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food.ingredient ,DNA, Complementary ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Cathepsin D ,Gene Expression ,Ovary ,Biology ,Oogenesis ,Vitellogenin ,food ,Yolk ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Northern blot ,Amino Acid Sequence ,RNA, Messenger ,Cloning, Molecular ,Gonads ,Cathepsin ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Reproduction ,Lizards ,Cell Biology ,Molecular biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Female ,Vitellogenesis ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
During vitellogenesis, the oocytes of oviparous species accumulate in the cytoplasm a large amount of proteic nutrients synthetized in the liver. Once incorporated into the oocytes, these nutrients, especially represented by vitellogenin (VTG) and very low-density lipoprotein (VLDL), are cleaved into a characteristic set of polypeptides forming yolk platelets. We have studied the molecular mechanisms involved in yolk formation in a reptilian species Podarcis sicula, a lizard characterized by a seasonal reproductive cycle. Our results demonstrate the existence in the lizard ovary of an aspartic proteinase having a maximal activity at acidic pH and a molecular mass of 40 kDa. The full-length aspartic proteinase cDNA produced from total RNA by RT-PCR is 1,442 base pairs long and encodes a protein of 403 amino acids. A comparison of the proteic sequence with aspartic proteinases from various sources demonstrates that the lizard enzyme is a cathepsin D. Lizard ovarian cathepsin D activity is maximal in June, in coincidence with vitellogenesis and ovulation, and is especially abundant in vitellogenic follicles and in eggs. Ovarian cathepsin D activity can be enhanced during the resting period by treatment with FSH in vivo. Northern blot analysis shows that cathepsin D mRNA is exceedingly abundant during the reproductive period, and accumulates preferentially in previtellogenic oocytes.
- Published
- 1999
149. Structural and functional modifications of the nucleolus during previtellogenic oocyte growth in the lizard Podarcis sicula
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S, Tammaro, P, Andreuccetti, S, Filosa, P, Indolfi, M, Prisco, C M, Motta, Tammaro, S, Andreuccetti, Piero, Filosa, Silvana, Indolfi, P, Prisco, M, Motta, CHIARA MARIA, Tammaro, Stefania, and Prisco, Marina
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Silver Staining ,Transcription, Genetic ,Vitellogenesis ,spherical bodie ,Lizards ,DNA ,immunogold ,nucleolu ,micronucleoli ,reptile ,Microscopy, Electron ,Oocytes ,Animals ,RNA ,Female ,oocyte ,Uridine ,Cell Nucleolus - Abstract
In the present study we analyse the nature and the functional significance of the spherical and fibrillo-granular structures appearing in the oocyte nucleus of the lizard Podarcis sicula, following the disappearance of the typical nucleolus. By LM and TEM approaches, we demonstrate that the fibrillo-granuli, containing DNA, RNA and nucleolar proteins, are micronucleoli transcriptionally active and that their DNA is probably derived from nucleolar fragmentation. By contrast, we could not explain the origin and role of the so-called spherical bodies, appearing earlier in oocyte growth; these, in fact, do not contain nucleic acids or nucleolar proteins and do not incorporate uridine. Different possible explanations of their significance are discussed.
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- 1998
150. Responsiveness of adenylate cyclase to pituitary gonadotropins and evidence of a hormone-induced desensitization in the lizard ovary
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V. Bovenzi, Elio Parisi, R. De Stasio, Silvana Filosa, Lucia Borrelli, L., Borrelli, R., DE STASIO, V., Bovenzi, E., Parisi, and Filosa, Silvana
- Subjects
Intracellular Fluid ,Male ,endocrine system ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.drug_class ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Stimulation ,Biology ,Cyclase ,Endocrinology ,Internal medicine ,Follicular phase ,Testis ,medicine ,Cyclic AMP ,Animals ,Ovulation ,media_common ,Cell Membrane ,Ovary ,Lizards ,Progesterone secretion ,DNA ,Fertility Agents, Female ,Luteinizing Hormone ,Blotting, Southern ,Gonadotropins, Pituitary ,Autoradiography ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Female ,Gonadotropin ,Follicle Stimulating Hormone ,DNA Probes ,Cyclase activity ,hormones, hormone substitutes, and hormone antagonists ,Hormone ,Adenylyl Cyclases - Abstract
Gonadotropins (FSH and LH) affect several mammalian gonadal functions. In particular, FSH stimulates oogonial proliferation and oocyte growth, while LH regulates ovulation and progesterone secretion. In lacertilian reptiles, gonadal function is also regulated by pituitary gonadotropins, but which hormone controls ovarian activities and the mechanisms of action are unknown. The present study aimed to clarify mechanisms of action of pituitary gonadotropins on the ovary of Podarcis sicula (Lacertilia). The data demonstrate that mammalian gonadotropins FSH and LH produce a threefold stimulation of adenylate cyclase activity in follicular membranes, while hCG and TSH are less effective, causing a twofold increase in adenylate cyclase activity. Neurotrasmitters such as dopamine, serotonin, and catecholamines have no effect on enzyme activity. The action of mammalian FSH and LH on the ovary mimics the effect of homologous hormones: in lizard ovaries incubated in vitro in the presence of isolated homologous pituitary glands, the intracellular cAMP level increased by 50% with respect to control ovaries. Mammalian gonadotropins appear homologous to lizard gonadotropin(s): Southern blot analyses show that the lizard genome contains nucleotide sequences homologous to those encoding for mammalian βFSH and βLH. Both homologous and heterologous desensitization of adenylate cyclase activity occurs in the lizard ovary. In fact, responsiveness of adenylate cyclase to gonadotropin stimulation is abolished in animals 2 hr after in vivo treatment with FSH. Sensitivity to gonadotropin stimulation is restored 2 weeks after the beginning of the in vivo treatment. Desensitization was also observed in ovaries incubated in vitro with mammalian FSH or with isolated pituitary glands.
- Published
- 1997
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