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1.
Cerebellum ; 2023 Oct 31.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37906407

RESUMO

Cerebellar syndromes are clinically and etiologically heterogeneous and can be classified as hereditary, neurodegenerative non-hereditary, or acquired. Few data are available on the frequency of each form in the clinical setting. Growing interest is emerging regarding the genetic forms caused by triplet repeat expansions. Alleles with repeat expansion lower than the pathological threshold, termed intermediate alleles (IAs), have been found to be associated with disease manifestation. In order to assess the relevance of IAs as a cause of cerebellar syndromes, we enrolled 66 unrelated Italian ataxic patients and described the distribution of the different etiology of their syndromes and the frequency of IAs. Each patient underwent complete clinical, hematological, and neurophysiological assessments, neuroimaging evaluations, and genetic tests for autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (SCA) and fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome (FXTAS). We identified the following diagnostic categories: 28% sporadic adult-onset ataxia, 18% cerebellar variant of multiple system atrophy, 9% acquired forms, 9% genetic forms with full-range expansion, and 12% cases with intermediate-range expansion. The IAs were six in the FMR1 gene, two in the gene responsible for SCA8, and one in the ATXN2 gene. The clinical phenotype of patients carrying the IAs resembles, in most of the cases, the one associated with full-range expansion. Our study provides an exhaustive description of the causes of cerebellar ataxia, estimating for the first time the frequency of IAs in SCAs- and FXTAS-associated genes. The high percentage of cases with IAs supports further screening among patients with cerebellar syndromes.

3.
Oncotarget ; 9(12): 10561-10571, 2018 Feb 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29535827

RESUMO

Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) are clonal neoplasms where stem/progenitor cells endowed with self-renewal and capable of perpetuating the disease have been demonstrated. It is known that oxygen tension plays a key role in driving normal hematopoiesis and that hematopoietic stem cells are maintained in hypoxic areas of the bone marrow (BM). Hypoxia could also regulate leukemic/dysplastic hematopoiesis. We evaluated the stem cell potential of MDS cells derived from the BM of 39 MDS patients and selected under severe hypoxia. MDS cells rescued from hypoxia-incubated cultures were subjected to stem and progenitor cell assays in vitro, as well as to hematopoietic reconstitution assay in NOD-SCID mice. Incubation in severe hypoxia of cells explanted from MDS patients selected a cell subset endowed with stem cell potential, as determined in vitro. This occurred only from the BM of patients classified as IPSS low/INT-1 risk. Transplantation into NOD-SCID mice confirmed using an in vivo model that severe hypoxia selects a cell subset endowed with stem cell potential from bone marrow mononuclear cells (BMMC). derived from patients belonging to the IPSS low/int-1 risk group. Data here reported show that cells endowed with stem cell potential and capable of adapting to hypoxia and escaping hypoxia-induced apoptosis exist within MDS cell populations.

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