19 resultados para Keratinocyte Stem Cells


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Skeletal muscle possesses the remarkable capacity to complete a rapid and extensive regeneration, even following severe damage. The regenerative ability of skeletal muscle relies on Satellite Cells (SCs), a population of muscle specific adult stem cells. However, during aging or under several pathological conditions, the ability of skeletal muscle to fully regenerated is compromised. Here, a morphological and molecular study on SCs from patients affected by ALS is described. Moreover, the role of the cell cycle regulator P16Ink4a during skeletal muscle regeneration and aging has been investigated.

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This thesis investigates two distinct research topics. The main topic (Part I) is the computational modelling of cardiomyocytes derived from human stem cells, both embryonic (hESC-CM) and induced-pluripotent (hiPSC-CM). The aim of this research line lies in developing models of the electrophysiology of hESC-CM and hiPSC-CM in order to integrate the available experimental data and getting in-silico models to be used for studying/making new hypotheses/planning experiments on aspects not fully understood yet, such as the maturation process, the functionality of the Ca2+ hangling or why the hESC-CM/hiPSC-CM action potentials (APs) show some differences with respect to APs from adult cardiomyocytes. Chapter I.1 introduces the main concepts about hESC-CMs/hiPSC-CMs, the cardiac AP, and computational modelling. Chapter I.2 presents the hESC-CM AP model, able to simulate the maturation process through two developmental stages, Early and Late, based on experimental and literature data. Chapter I.3 describes the hiPSC-CM AP model, able to simulate the ventricular-like and atrial-like phenotypes. This model was used to assess which currents are responsible for the differences between the ventricular-like AP and the adult ventricular AP. The secondary topic (Part II) consists in the study of texture descriptors for biological image processing. Chapter II.1 provides an overview on important texture descriptors such as Local Binary Pattern or Local Phase Quantization. Moreover the non-binary coding and the multi-threshold approach are here introduced. Chapter II.2 shows that the non-binary coding and the multi-threshold approach improve the classification performance of cellular/sub-cellular part images, taken from six datasets. Chapter II.3 describes the case study of the classification of indirect immunofluorescence images of HEp2 cells, used for the antinuclear antibody clinical test. Finally the general conclusions are reported.

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In Leukemias, recent developments have demonstrated that the Hedgehog pathway plays a key-role in the peculiar ability of self renewal of leukemia stem cells. The aim of this research activity was to investigate, through a first in man, Phase I, open label, clinical trial, the role and the impact, mainly in terms of safety profile, adverse events and pharmacokinetics, of a Sonic Hedgehog inhibitor compound on a population of heavely pretreated patients affected by AML, CML, MF, or MDS, resistant or refractory to standard chemotherapy. Thirty-five patients have been enrolled. The drug was administered orally, in 28 days cycles, without rest periods. The compound showed a good safety profile. The half life was of 17-35 hours, justifying the daily administration. Significant signs of activity, in terms of reduction of bone marrow blast cell amount were seen in most of the patients enrolled. Interestingly, correlative biological studies demonstrated that, comparing the gene expression profyiling signature of separated CD34+ cells before and after one cycle of treatment, the most variably expressed genes were involved in the Hh pathway. Moreover, we observed that many genes involved in MDR (multidrug resistance)were significantly down regulated after treatment. These data might lead to future clinical trials based on combinatory approaches, including, for instance, Hh inhibitors and conventional chemotherapy.

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AGC1 deficiency is a rare demyelinating disease caused by mutations in the SLC25A12 gene, which encodes for the mitochondrial glutamate-aspartate carrier 1 (AGC1/Alarar), highly expressed in the central nervous system. In neurons, impairment in AGC1 activity leads to reduction in N-acetyl-aspartate, the main lipid precursor for myelin synthesis (Profilo et al., 2017); in oligodendrocytes progenitors cells, AGC1 down regulation has been related to early arrest proliferation and premature differentiation (Petralla et al., 2019). Additionally, in vivo AGC1 deficiency models i.e., heterozygous mice for AGC1 knock-out and neurospheres from their subventricular zone, respectively, showed a global decrease in cells proliferation and a switch in neural stem cells (NSCs) commitment, with specific reduction in OPCs number and increase in neural and astrocytic pools (Petralla et al., 2019). Therefore, the present study aims to investigate the transcriptional and epigenetic regulation underlying the alterations observed in OPCs and NSCs biological mechanisms, in either AGC1 deficiency models of Oli-neu cells (murine immortalized oligodendrocytes precursors cells), partially silenced by a shRNA for SLC25A12 gene, and SVZ-derived neurospheres from AGC1+/- mice. Western blot and immunofluorescence analysis revealed significant variations in the expression of transcription factors involved in brain cells’ proliferation and differentiation, in association with altered histone post-translational modifications, as well as histone acetylases (HATs) and deacetylases (HDACs) activity/expression, suggesting an improper transcriptional and epigenetic regulation affecting both AGC1 deficiency in vitro models. Furthermore, given the large role of acetylation in controlling in specific time-windows OPC maturation (Hernandez and Casaccia; 2015), pharmacological HATs/HDACs inhibitions were performed, confirming the involvement of chromatin remodelling enzymes in the altered proliferation and early differentiation observed in the AGC1 deficiency models of siAGC1 Oli-neu cells and AGC1+/- mice-derived neurospheres.