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Francesco Binni
Medical Genetics
San Camillo-Forlanini Hospital
Rome
fbinni@scamilloforlanini.rm.it

Journal articles

2008
 
DOI   
PMID 
Lucia Pedace, Silvia Majore, Francesca Megiorni, Francesco Binni, Carmelilia De Bernardo, Ivana Antigoni, Nicoletta Preziosi, Maria Cristina Mazzilli, Paola Grammatico (2008)  Identification of a novel duplication in the APC gene using multiple ligation probe amplification in a patient with familial adenomatous polyposis.   Cancer Genet Cytogenet 182: 2. 130-135 Apr  
Abstract: Germline mutations in the adenomatous polyposis coli (APC) gene cause familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP), an autosomal dominant disease characterized by hundreds to thousands of adenomatous polyps in the colon and rectum, with progression to colorectal cancer. The majority of APC mutations are nucleotide substitutions and frameshift mutations that result in truncated proteins. Recently, large genomic alterations of the APC gene have been reported in FAP. DNA from 15 FAP patients, in whom no APC germline mutations were detected with denaturing high performance liquid chromatography, was analyzed with multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) to evaluate gross genomic alterations in the APC gene. In one case, MLPA identified a novel duplication of exons 2-6 in one copy of the APC gene. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction revealed that the mutant allele contained an in-frame multiexon duplication including 18 nucleotides located in exon 2, upstream of the ATG initiation codon. The presence of a premature stop codon in the duplicated sequence leads to the synthesis of a truncated APC polypeptide. These findings highlight the utility of evaluating infrequent APC mutation events in FAP patients using MLPA.
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2006
 
DOI   
PMID 
Simone Martinelli, Claudio Carta, Elisabetta Flex, Francesco Binni, Emanuela Lucci Cordisco, Sonia Moretti, Efisio Puxeddu, Massimo Tonacchera, Aldo Pinchera, Heather P McDowell, Carlo Dominici, Angelo Rosolen, Concezio Di Rocco, Riccardo Riccardi, Paolo Celli, Mauro Picardo, Maurizio Genuardi, Paola Grammatico, Mariella Sorcini, Marco Tartaglia (2006)  Activating PTPN11 mutations play a minor role in pediatric and adult solid tumors.   Cancer Genet Cytogenet 166: 2. 124-129 Apr  
Abstract: The PTPN11 gene encodes SHP-2, a widely expressed cytoplasmic protein tyrosine phosphatase functioning as a signaling transducer. Germ-line PTPN11 mutations cause Noonan syndrome (NS), a developmental disorder characterized by an increased risk of malignancies. Recently, a novel class of activating mutations in PTPN11 has been documented as a somatic event in a heterogeneous group of leukemias. Because of the relatively higher prevalence of certain solid tumors in children with NS and the positive modulatory function of SHP-2 in RAS signaling, a wider role for activating PTPN11 mutations in cancer has been hypothesized. Here, we screened a number of solid tumors, including those documented in NS or in which deregulated RAS signaling occurs at significant frequency, for PTPN11 mutations. No disease-associated mutation was identified in rhabdomyosarcoma (n = 13), neuroblastoma (n = 32), melanoma (n = 50), thyroid (n = 85), and colon (n = 48) tumors; a novel missense change, promoting an increased basal phosphatase activity of SHP-2, was observed in one glioma specimen. Our data document that deregulated SHP-2 function does not represent a major molecular event in pediatric and adult tumors, further supporting our previous evidence indicating that the oncogenic role of PTPN11 mutations is cell-context specific.
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PMID 
S Majore, F Milano, F Binni, L Stuppia, A Cerrone, A Tafuri, C De Bernardo, G Palka, P Grammatico (2006)  Homozygous p.M172K mutation of the TFR2 gene in an Italian family with type 3 hereditary hemochromatosis and early onset iron overload.   Haematologica 91: 8 Suppl. Aug  
Abstract: The p.M172K TFR2 mutation was identified in two Italian siblings aged 32 and 40 years old with primary iron overload. The two patients showed a severe increase in serum iron indices. From the age of 25, the male sib also revealed abnormal levels of hepatic enzymes, presumably in relation to iron induced liver damage. Clinical findings seem to evidence that type 3 hemochromatosis can be more serious than classic hemochromatosis. This report adds two more type 3 hereditary hemochromatosis cases which suggest that TFR2 mutations could be more frequently involved in non-HFE hemochromatosis than has been actually thought.
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2005
 
DOI   
PMID 
Silvia Majore, Gianfranco Biolcati, Luana Barboni, Carlo Cannistraci, Francesco Binni, Alessandra Crisi, Mauro Picardo, Paola Grammatico (2005)  ATP2C1 gene mutation analysis in Italian patients with Hailey-Hailey disease.   J Invest Dermatol 125: 5. 933-935 Nov  
Abstract: Hailey-Hailey disease (HHD) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by recurrent skin lesions predominantly involving the body folds. It is caused by heterozygous mutations in the ATP2C1 gene, encoding the human secretory pathway Ca2+/Mn2+-ATPase protein 1 (hSPCA1). In this report we describe the molecular studies performed in eight HHD cases from Italy that led us to identify six different mutations scattered through the ATP2C1 gene in seven of eight cases. Four of the detected mutations were novel. Our results confirm the high allelic heterogeneity of the ATP2C1 gene and support the notion that HHD is a genetically homogeneous disorder. Furthermore, we created a table summarizing all previously reported ATP2C1 mutations, adapting the nomenclature, if needed, according to the guidelines of the Human Genome Variation Society.
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DOI   
PMID 
Liborio Stuppia, Ivana Antonucci, Francesco Binni, Alessandra Brandi, Nicoletta Grifone, Alessia Colosimo, Mariella De Santo, Valentina Gatta, Gianfranco Gelli, Valentina Guida, Silvia Majore, Giuseppe Calabrese, Chiara Palka, Anna Ravani, Rosanna Rinaldi, Gian Mario Tiboni, Enzo Ballone, Anna Venturoli, Alessandra Ferlini, Isabella Torrente, Paola Grammatico, Elisa Calzolari, Bruno Dallapiccola (2005)  Screening of mutations in the CFTR gene in 1195 couples entering assisted reproduction technique programs.   Eur J Hum Genet 13: 8. 959-964 Aug  
Abstract: Genetic testing of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance (CFTR) gene is currently performed in couples undergoing assisted reproduction techniques (ART), because of the high prevalence of healthy carriers in the population and the pathogenic relationship with congenital bilateral absence of vas deferens (CBAVD). However, discordant data have been reported concerning the usefulness of this genetic test in couples with no family history of cystic fibrosis (CF). In this study, we report the results of CFTR molecular screening in 1195 couples entering ART. Genetic testing was initially carried out in a single partner of each couple. CFTR mutations were detected in 55 subjects (4.6%), a percentage that overlaps with the one reported in the general population. However, significantly higher frequencies of were found in CBAVD individuals (37.5%) and in males with nonobstructive azoospermia (6.6%). The 5T allele was found in 78 patients (6.5%). This figure was again significantly different in males with nonobstructive-azoospermia (9.9%) and in those with CBAVD (100%). All together, 139 subjects (11.6%) had either a CFTR mutation or the 5T allele. Subsequent molecular analysis of their partners disclosed a CFTR mutation or 5T allele in nine cases (6.5%). However, none of these couples had CFTR alterations in both members, a CFTR mutation being invariably present in one partner and the 5T allele in the other. In order to improve genetic counselling of these couples, the TG-M470V-5T association was analyzed, and a statistically significant relationship between 12TG-V470 and CBAVD was detected.
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2004
 
DOI   
PMID 
S Majore, F Binni, A Pennese, A De Santis, A Crisi, P Grammatico (2004)  HAMP gene mutation c.208T>C (p.C70R) identified in an Italian patient with severe hereditary hemochromatosis.   Hum Mutat 23: 4. Apr  
Abstract: Hepcidin is a recently identified hormone peptide involved in regulation of iron homeostasis. HAMP gene mutations have been described to date in five families with iron overload. We have identified the c.208T>C (p.C70R) mutation in the HAMP gene in a patient affected by a severe form of hereditary hemochromatosis. The variant, occurring in a highly conserved amino acid, disrupts one of the 4 intramolecular disulphide bonds present in hepcidin molecules of all vertebrates, and is presumably able to destabilize the peptide structure. The investigated patient was also found to harbor a heterozygous HFE c.845G>A (p.C282Y) mutation that may have contributed in increasing his iron burden.
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2002
 
PMID 
Silvia Majore, Francesco Binni, Bianca Maria Ricerca, Gloria Brioli, Paola Grammatico (2002)  Absence of hepcidin gene mutations in 10 Italian patients with primary iron overload.   Haematologica 87: 2. 221-222 Feb  
Abstract: We analyzed the hepcidin gene in 10 Italian patients with hemochromatosis not related to C282Y, H63D or other less frequent HFE mutations, nor to Y250X in TFR2. The sequencing of the whole hepcidin coding region, intron-exon junctions, 5' and partially 3'UTRs, did not reveal any alteration in the studied patients.
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2001
 
PMID 
P Grammatico, F Binni, L Eibenschutz, C De Bernardo, B Grammatico, R Rinaldi, P De Simone, C Catricalà (2001)  CDKN2A novel mutation in a patient from a melanoma-prone family.   Melanoma Res 11: 5. 447-449 Oct  
Abstract: CDKN2A is thought to be the main candidate gene for melanoma susceptibility. Deletion or mutations in the CDKN2A gene may produce an imbalance between functional p16 and cyclin D, causing abnormal cell growth. We here describe a novel mutation consisting of a 1 bp deletion at nucleotide position 201 (codon 67) (CACGGcGCG) resulting in a truncated protein (stop codon 145). The patient, a female subject from a melanoma-prone family, presented at the age of 47 years with a superficial spreading melanoma of the trunk. Her father had colon cancer at the age of 43 years and melanoma at 63 years, her uncle suffered from gastric cancer, and her grandfather had laryngeal cancer.
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