0000000000633864

AUTHOR

Rosalba Di Marzo

Efficacy of Rapamycin as Inducer of Hb F in Primary Erythroid Cultures from Sickle Cell Disease and β-Thalassemia Patients.

Phenotypic improvement of hemoglobinopathies such as sickle cell disease and β-thalassemia (β-thal) has been shown in patients with high levels of Hb F. Among the drugs proposed to increase Hb F production, hydroxyurea (HU) is currently the only one proven to improve the clinical course of these diseases. However, Hb F increase and patient's response are highly variable, indicating that new pharmacological agents could be useful for patients not responding to HU or showing a reduction of response during long-term therapy. In this study we evaluated the efficacy of rapamycin, a lypophilic macrolide used for the prevention of acute rejection in renal transplant recipients, as an inducer of Hb…

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The Sea Urchin sns5 Insulator Protects Retroviral Vectors From Chromosomal Position Effects by Maintaining Active Chromatin Structure

Silencing and position-effect (PE) variegation (PEV), which is due to integration of viral vectors in heterochromatin regions, are considered significant obstacles to obtaining a consistent level of transgene expression in gene therapy. The inclusion of chromatin insulators into vectors has been proposed to counteract this position-dependent variegation of transgene expression. Here, we show that the sea urchin chromatin insulator, sns5, protects a recombinant gamma-retroviral vector from the negative influence of chromatin in erythroid milieu. This element increases the probability of vector expression at different chromosomal integration sites, which reduces both silencing and PEV. By chr…

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321. Sea Urchin sns Chromatin Insulator Prevents Silencing and Positional Effect Variegation of Oncoretroviral Vectors Transgene Expression in Murine Erythroid Cell Line

Silencing and position effect are considered significant obstacles to obtain a consistent level of transgene expression in viral gene therapy. Furthermore recent studies had shown that retroviruses tend to land on active genes with the potential consequence of insertional mutagenesis. The inclusion of elements, such as chromatin insulators, capable to insulate a gene from the surrounding chromatin effects at the integration site should improve both efficacy and safety of gene therapy vectors. We have previously characterized a 265 bp insulator element, termed sns, localized at the 3’ end of the early histone H2A gene of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. This sequence contains three cis-…

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The AutoInflammatory Diseases Alliance Registry of monogenic autoinflammatory diseases

ObjectiveThe present manuscript aims to describe an international, electronic-based, user-friendly and interoperable patient registry for monogenic autoinflammatory diseases (mAIDs), developed in the contest of the Autoinflammatory Diseases Alliance (AIDA) Network.MethodsThis is an electronic platform, based on the Research Electronic Data Capture (REDCap) tool, used for real-world data collection of demographics, clinical, laboratory, instrumental and socioeconomic data of mAIDs patients. The instrument has flexibility, may change over time based on new scientific acquisitions, and communicate potentially with other similar registries; security, data quality and data governance are corner …

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Functional characterization of the sea urchin sns chromatin insulator in erythroid cells.

Abstract Chromatin insulators are regulatory elements that determine domains of genetic functions. We have previously described the characterization of a 265 bp insulator element, termed sns, localized at the 3′ end of the early histone H2A gene of the sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus. This sequence contains three cis-acting elements (Box A, Box B, and Box C + T) all needed for the enhancer-blocking activity in both sea urchin and human cells. The goal of this study was to further characterize the sea urchin sns insulator in the erythroid environment. We employed colony assays in human (K562) and mouse (MEL) erythroid cell lines. We tested the capability of sns to interfere with the communi…

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Quantification of HBG mRNA in primary erythroid cultures: prediction of the response to hydroxyurea in sickle cell and beta-thalassemia

Background and Objective Increased expression of fetal hemoglobin (HbF) may ameliorate the clinical course of hemoglobinopathies like sickle cell disease (SCD) and β-thalassemia. Hydroxyurea (HU) can stimulate HbF production in these diseases but the response is highly variable indicating the utility of developing an in vitro test to predict the patient's response to HU. We assessed whether the HbF response of patients with SCD and thalassemia intermedia (TI) to HU correlates with HBG (both γ-globin genes) expression in their cultured erythroid progenitors following exposure to HU. Patients and Methods We exposed primary erythroid cultures from peripheral blood mononuclear cells from 30 pat…

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Induction of gamma-globin gene transcription by hydroxycarbamide in primary erythroid cell cultures from Lepore patients.

Increased expression of fetal haemoglobin (HbF) may ameliorate the clinical course of beta-thalassemia and sickle cell disease. Some pharmacological agents, such as hydroxycarbamide (HC), can increase fetal haemoglobin synthesis during adult life. Cellular selection and/or molecular mechanisms have been proposed to account for this increase. To explore the mechanism of action of HC we focused on homozygous Hb-Lepore patients that presented with high fetal haemoglobin levels and were good responders to HC treatment "in vivo". We performed primary erythroid cultures from peripheral blood of four homozygous Lepore patients. The increase in HBG (gamma-globin) transcription levels and HbF conten…

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Different micrococcal nuclease cleavage patterns characterize transcriptionally active and inactive sea-urchin histone genes.

Micrococcal nuclease (MNase) and DNaseI have made a great contribution to our present understanding of the structural organization of the eucaryotic genome [l - 31. The enhanced sensitivity of active portions of the genome to DNaseI gave, in fact, the first indication of differences in the nucleoproteic arrangement of the transcribed as compared to the silent DNA regions [4]. The use of MNase, as a probe of the chromatin organization of specific genes in the active and inactive state, provided additional evidence for this and further showed that the packing of several coding segments of DNA in a regular array of nucleosomal particles is severely but reversibly affected by the transcriptiona…

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