6 results on '"Zenatelli R"'
Search Results
2. Standardization and Commercialization of Extracellular Vesicles
- Author
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Zarovni N, Loria F, Zenatelli R, Mladenovic D, Paolini L, Adamo G, Radeghieri A, Bongiovanni A, and Bergese P
- Subjects
education ,extracellular vesicles ,health care economics and organizations - Abstract
Tiny vesicles have made a big impact in both research and business spotlights. With >20 000 related publications listed on PubMed, >2000 filed patents, >250 registered clinical trials, and diagnostic tests being one step from U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) clearance, extracellular vesicles (EVs) are boldly heading towards commercialization. However, they are not there yet. Huge expectations - fuelled by the prolific portfolio of the appealing EV traits, which include clinical translation as multiplexed biomarkers, precision vectors for drugs and biologicals, effectors in regenerative medicine and vaccines - are starting to deliver dizzying deals worth billions of dollars so that super-funded start-ups as well as big pharma companies are now buying into EVs. In addition, the market waiting room is getting, day by day, more and more crowded with analogous/new applications in consumer care and veterinary medicine. However, technology and regulatory hurdles still firmly hold back EVs' true market potential. This chapter will attempt to provide a first guide through the burgeoning jungle of premises, drivers and barriers to EV standardization and commercial exploitation.
- Published
- 2021
3. The transcriptome profile of human trisomy 21 blood cells
- Author
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Allison Piovesan, Chiara Locatelli, Francesca Catapano, Pierluigi Strippoli, Rossella Zenatelli, Giulia Guerri, Lorenza Vitale, Maria Chiara Pelleri, Guido Cocchi, Beatrice Vione, Alice Gori, Giuseppe Ramacieri, Maria Caracausi, Francesca Antonaros, Matteo Bertelli, Antonaros F., Zenatelli R., Guerri G., Bertelli M., Locatelli C., Vione B., Catapano F., Gori A., Vitale L., Pelleri M.C., Ramacieri G., Cocchi G., Strippoli P., Caracausi M., and Piovesan A.
- Subjects
Myxovirus Resistance Proteins ,0301 basic medicine ,Blood cells ,Trisomy 21 ,Chromosomes, Human, Pair 21 ,Mitochondrial translation ,Down syndrome ,Human chromosome 21 ,QH426-470 ,Biology ,Genome ,Transcriptome ,Reduced Folate Carrier Protein ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Intellectual Disability ,Drug Discovery ,Gene expression ,Genetics ,Humans ,Carbon-Nitrogen Ligases ,RNA-Seq ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Phosphoribosylglycinamide Formyltransferase ,Genome, Human ,Blood cell ,RNA sequencing ,Phenotype ,Mitochondria ,Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction ,030104 developmental biology ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Medicine ,Molecular Medicine ,Energy Metabolism ,Primary Research ,Chromosome 21 ,Software ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Trisomy 21 (T21) is a genetic alteration characterised by the presence of an extra full or partial human chromosome 21 (Hsa21) leading to Down syndrome (DS), the most common form of intellectual disability (ID). It is broadly agreed that the presence of extra genetic material in T21 gives origin to an altered expression of genes located on Hsa21 leading to DS phenotype. The aim of this study was to analyse T21 and normal control blood cell gene expression profiles obtained by total RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq). Results The results were elaborated by the TRAM (Transcriptome Mapper) software which generated a differential transcriptome map between human T21 and normal control blood cells providing the gene expression ratios for 17,867 loci. The obtained gene expression profiles were validated through real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay and compared with previously published data. A post-analysis through transcriptome mapping allowed the identification of the segmental (regional) variation of the expression level across the whole genome (segment-based analysis of expression). Interestingly, the most over-expressed genes encode for interferon-induced proteins, two of them (MX1 and MX2 genes) mapping on Hsa21 (21q22.3). The altered expression of genes involved in mitochondrial translation and energy production also emerged, followed by the altered expression of genes encoding for the folate cycle enzyme, GART, and the folate transporter, SLC19A1. Conclusions The alteration of these pathways might be linked and involved in the manifestation of ID in DS.
- Published
- 2021
4. Surface functionalization of extracellular vesicle nanoparticles with antibodies: a first study on the protein corona "variable".
- Author
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Musicò A, Zenatelli R, Romano M, Zendrini A, Alacqua S, Tassoni S, Paolini L, Urbinati C, Rusnati M, Bergese P, Pomarico G, and Radeghieri A
- Abstract
To be profitably exploited in medicine, nanosized systems must be endowed with biocompatibility, targeting capability, the ability to evade the immune system, and resistance to clearance. Currently, biogenic nanoparticles, such as extracellular vesicles (EVs), are intensively investigated as the platform that naturally recapitulates these highly needed characteristics. EV native targeting properties and pharmacokinetics can be further augmented by decorating the EV surface with specific target ligands as antibodies. However, to date, studies dealing with the functionalization of the EV surface with proteins have never considered the protein corona "variable", namely the fact that extrinsic proteins may spontaneously adsorb on the EV surface, contributing to determine the surface, and in turn the biological identity of the EV. In this work, we explore and compare the two edge cases of EVs modified with the antibody Cetuximab (CTX) by chemisorption of CTX (through covalent binding via biorthogonal click-chemistry) and by formation of a physisorbed CTX corona. The results indicate that (i) no differences exist between the two formulations in terms of binding affinity imparted by molecular recognition of CTX versus its natural binding partner (epidermal growth factor receptor, EGFR), but (ii) significant differences emerge at the cellular level, where CTX-EVs prepared by click chemistry display superior binding and uptake toward target cells, very likely due to the higher robustness of the CTX anchorage., Competing Interests: There are no conflicts to declare., (This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Microglial large extracellular vesicles propagate early synaptic dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease.
- Author
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Gabrielli M, Prada I, Joshi P, Falcicchia C, D'Arrigo G, Rutigliano G, Battocchio E, Zenatelli R, Tozzi F, Radeghieri A, Arancio O, Origlia N, and Verderio C
- Subjects
- Amyloid beta-Peptides, Animals, Hippocampus, Long-Term Potentiation, Mice, Microglia, Alzheimer Disease, Extracellular Vesicles
- Abstract
Synaptic dysfunction is an early mechanism in Alzheimer's disease that involves progressively larger areas of the brain over time. However, how it starts and propagates is unknown. Here we show that amyloid-β released by microglia in association with large extracellular vesicles (Aβ-EVs) alters dendritic spine morphology in vitro, at the site of neuron interaction, and impairs synaptic plasticity both in vitro and in vivo in the entorhinal cortex-dentate gyrus circuitry. One hour after Aβ-EV injection into the mouse entorhinal cortex, long-term potentiation was impaired in the entorhinal cortex but not in the dentate gyrus, its main target region, while 24 h later it was also impaired in the dentate gyrus, revealing a spreading of long-term potentiation deficit between the two regions. Similar results were obtained upon injection of extracellular vesicles carrying Aβ naturally secreted by CHO7PA2 cells, while neither Aβ42 alone nor inflammatory extracellular vesicles devoid of Aβ were able to propagate long-term potentiation impairment. Using optical tweezers combined to time-lapse imaging to study Aβ-EV-neuron interaction, we show that Aβ-EVs move anterogradely at the axon surface and that their motion can be blocked through annexin-V coating. Importantly, when Aβ-EV motility was inhibited, no propagation of long-term potentiation deficit occurred along the entorhinal-hippocampal circuit, implicating large extracellular vesicle motion at the neuron surface in the spreading of long-term potentiation impairment. Our data indicate the involvement of large microglial extracellular vesicles in the rise and propagation of early synaptic dysfunction in Alzheimer's disease and suggest a new mechanism controlling the diffusion of large extracellular vesicles and their pathogenic signals in the brain parenchyma, paving the way for novel therapeutic strategies to delay the disease., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. The transcriptome profile of human trisomy 21 blood cells.
- Author
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Antonaros F, Zenatelli R, Guerri G, Bertelli M, Locatelli C, Vione B, Catapano F, Gori A, Vitale L, Pelleri MC, Ramacieri G, Cocchi G, Strippoli P, Caracausi M, and Piovesan A
- Subjects
- Blood Cells metabolism, Blood Cells pathology, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 21 genetics, Down Syndrome epidemiology, Down Syndrome pathology, Energy Metabolism genetics, Gene Expression Regulation genetics, Genome, Human genetics, Humans, Intellectual Disability epidemiology, Intellectual Disability genetics, Intellectual Disability pathology, Mitochondria genetics, Mitochondria metabolism, RNA-Seq, Software, Transcriptome genetics, Carbon-Nitrogen Ligases genetics, Down Syndrome genetics, Myxovirus Resistance Proteins genetics, Phosphoribosylglycinamide Formyltransferase genetics, Reduced Folate Carrier Protein genetics
- Abstract
Background: Trisomy 21 (T21) is a genetic alteration characterised by the presence of an extra full or partial human chromosome 21 (Hsa21) leading to Down syndrome (DS), the most common form of intellectual disability (ID). It is broadly agreed that the presence of extra genetic material in T21 gives origin to an altered expression of genes located on Hsa21 leading to DS phenotype. The aim of this study was to analyse T21 and normal control blood cell gene expression profiles obtained by total RNA sequencing (RNA-Seq)., Results: The results were elaborated by the TRAM (Transcriptome Mapper) software which generated a differential transcriptome map between human T21 and normal control blood cells providing the gene expression ratios for 17,867 loci. The obtained gene expression profiles were validated through real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) assay and compared with previously published data. A post-analysis through transcriptome mapping allowed the identification of the segmental (regional) variation of the expression level across the whole genome (segment-based analysis of expression). Interestingly, the most over-expressed genes encode for interferon-induced proteins, two of them (MX1 and MX2 genes) mapping on Hsa21 (21q22.3). The altered expression of genes involved in mitochondrial translation and energy production also emerged, followed by the altered expression of genes encoding for the folate cycle enzyme, GART, and the folate transporter, SLC19A1., Conclusions: The alteration of these pathways might be linked and involved in the manifestation of ID in DS.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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