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Maria Grazia Romanelli

Department of Life and Reproduction Sciences , Univerity of Verona
Strada le Grazie 8
37134 Verona, Italy
mariagrazia.romanelli@univr.it
Born in Copparo (Fe) on 21 Oct 1960. Graduated in Biological Sciences at the University of Ferrara in 1985. Research Fellow of the Italian Muscular Distrophy Association in 1986-1987 at the Institute of Biological Sciences of the University of Verona. Assistant professor of Applied Biology since 1987 at the University of Verona, Faculty of Medicine. She has been visiting researcher at the Dept of Molecular Genetics and Cellular Biology of the University of Chicago. In 1996 she was visiting researcher at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute Research Laboratories, Dept. of Biochemistry and Biophysics of the University of Pennsylvania at Philadelphia. At present she is Associate Professor (SSD BIO13, 05/F1) at Department of Life and Reproduction Sciences of the University of Verona Her research interests are directed to regulation of gene expression, intracelluar transport of proteins, virus-cell interactions. She teaches Applied Biology in several courses at the Faculty of Medicine and Exercise and Sport Science. She is member of the scientific committee in the PhD program: “Life Sciences and Health”

Journal articles

2012
Maria Grazia Romanelli, Pamela Lorenzi, Erica Diani, Agnese Filippello, Francesca Avesani, Carlo Morandi (2012)  Transcriptional regulation of the human Raver2 ribonucleoprotein gene.   Gene 493: 2. 243-252 Feb  
Abstract: Raver2 is a putative modulator of the activity of the polypyrimidine-tract binding protein (PTB), one of the most intensively studied splicing repressors. Little is known about Raver2 expression, and all current data is from mice where it shows tissue specificity. In the present study, by comparing Raver2 transcript expression in human and mouse tissues, we found that human Raver2 is ubiquitously expressed in adult tissues. In order to investigate human Raver2 transcription regulation, we identified and characterized a putative promoter region in a 1000bp region upstream of the transcription starting site of the gene. Dual luciferase reporter assays demonstrated that this region had promoter activity conferred by the first 160bp. By mutagenic analyses of putative cis-acting regulatory sequences, we identified an individual site that decreased the promoter activity by up to 40% when mutated. Together, our results suggest that regulation of human Raver2 expression involves TATA-less transcriptional activity.
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2011
Umberto Bertazzoni, Marco Turci, Francesca Avesani, Gianfranco Di Gennaro, Carlo Bidoia, Maria Grazia Romanelli (2011)  Intracellular localization and cellular factors interaction of HTLV-1 and HTLV-2 Tax proteins: similarities and functional differences.   Viruses 3: 5. 541-560 May  
Abstract: Human T-lymphotropic viruses type 1 (HTLV-1) and type 2 (HTLV-2) present very similar genomic structures but HTLV-1 is more pathogenic than HTLV-2. Is this difference due to their transactivating Tax proteins, Tax-1 and Tax-2, which are responsible for viral and cellular gene activation? Do Tax-1 and Tax-2 differ in their cellular localization and in their interaction pattern with cellular factors? In this review, we summarize Tax-1 and Tax-2 structural and phenotypic properties, their interaction with factors involved in signal transduction and their localization-related behavior within the cell. Special attention will be given to the distinctions between Tax-1 and Tax-2 that likely play an important role in their transactivation activity.
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S Ferronato, M G Lira, S Olivato, A Scuro, G F Veraldi, M G Romanelli, C Patuzzo, G Malerba, P F Pignatti, S Mazzucco (2011)  Upregulated expression of Toll-like receptor 4 in peripheral blood of ischaemic stroke patients correlates with cyclooxygenase 2 expression.   Eur J Vasc Endovasc Surg 41: 3. 358-363 Mar  
Abstract: An inflammatory process following stroke in human brains and systemic inflammatory responses after stroke in humans have been reported by numerous investigators. The aim of the study was to investigate if genes involved in the cyclooxygenase 2 (COX-2) pathway are upregulated at peripheral level in patients after transient ischaemic attack (TIA) and stroke.
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2010
Alessandra Pasquali, Elisabetta Trabetti, Maria Grazia Romanelli, Roberta Galavotti, Nicola Martinelli, Domenico Girelli, Giovanni Gambaro, Oliviero Olivieri, Pier Franco Pignatti (2010)  Detection of a large deletion in the P-selectin (SELP) gene.   Mol Cell Probes 24: 3. 161-165 Jun  
Abstract: P-selectin is an adhesion molecule involved in the pathogenesis of inflammation, thrombosis, and oncogenesis. In this study of 51 polymorphisms in candidate genes for cardiovascular disease in 1561 individuals, we identified a new allelic variant of the SELP gene, g.18196_20704del, that determined the lack of genotyping for one polymorphism in one individual. It is a deletion of 2509 nucleotides which starts in intron 6 and ends in intron 8. Re-genotyping of 1023 apparent homozygotes indicated an overall allele frequency of 0.27%. The inclusion of this allelic variant in genetic association studies will avoid genotyping errors and marginally improve the sensitivity.
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Francesca Avesani, Maria Grazia Romanelli, Marco Turci, Gianfranco Di Gennaro, Carla Sampaio, Carlo Bidoia, Umberto Bertazzoni, Françoise Bex (2010)  Association of HTLV Tax proteins with TAK1-binding protein 2 and RelA in calreticulin-containing cytoplasmic structures participates in Tax-mediated NF-κB activation.   Virology 408: 1. 39-48 Dec  
Abstract: HTLV-1 is more pathogenic than HTLV-2 despite having a similar genome and closely related transactivating oncoproteins. Both Tax-1 protein from HTLV-1 and Tax-2 from HTLV-2 activate the NF-κB pathway. The mechanisms involved in Tax-1 deregulation of this signalling pathway have been thoroughly investigated, but little is known about regulation by Tax-2. We have compared the interaction of Tax-1 and Tax-2 with two key NF-κB signalling factors: TAK1-binding protein 2 (TAB2), an adaptor involved in the activation of TAK1 kinase, and RelA, the active subunit of the canonical RelA/p50 NF-κB transcription factor. Tax-2 formed stable complexes with both RelA and TAB2. These two NF-κB factors colocalized with Tax proteins in dotted cytoplasmic structures targeted by calreticulin, a multi-process calcium-buffering chaperone. Co-expression of RelA and/or TAB2 markedly increased Tax-mediated NF-κB activation. These findings provide new insights into the role of RelA, TAB2 and Tax in the deregulation of the NF-κB pathway.
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Maria Grazia Romanelli, Laura Pressi, Maria Regele, Claudio Castellan (2010)  [Genomics in medicine: challenges and perspectives for the nursing care].   Assist Inferm Ric 29: 2. 62-68 Apr/Jun  
Abstract: The acknowledgment of the genetic component in the majority of pathologies, not only hereditary or oncological, and of the individual biological responses to therapies and in infectious diseases, is now granted.
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2009
Marco Turci, Julie Lodewick, Paola Righi, Angela Polania, Maria Grazia Romanelli, Françoise Bex, Umberto Bertazzoni (2009)  HTLV-2B Tax oncoprotein is modified by ubiquitination and sumoylation and displays intracellular localization similar to its homologue HTLV-1 Tax.   Virology 386: 1. 6-11 Mar  
Abstract: HTLV-1 is more pathogenic than HTLV-2B. The difference is generally attributed to the properties of their individual transactivating Tax proteins. By using internal Flag-6His tagged Tax-1 and Tax-2B, which display transcriptional activities comparable to the untagged proteins and can be recognized by a single anti-Flag antibody, we demonstrate that Tax-2B is modified by ubiquitination and sumoylation. In addition, Tax2B is distributed in punctuate nuclear structures that include the RelA subunit of NF-kappaB, as has been previously demonstrated for Tax-1.
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Maria Grazia Romanelli, Pamela Lorenzi, Antonella Sangalli, Erica Diani, Monica Mottes (2009)  Characterization and functional analysis of cis-acting elements of the human farnesyl diphosphate synthetase (FDPS) gene 5' flanking region.   Genomics 93: 3. 227-234 Mar  
Abstract: Farnesyl diphosphate synthetase (FDPS) is a key enzyme in the isoprenoid pathway responsible for cholesterol biosynthesis, post-translational protein modifications and synthesis of steroid hormones, whose expression is regulated by phorbol esters and polyunsaturated fatty acids. Genomic comparison of the 5' upstream sequence of the FDPS genes identifies conserved binding sites for NF-Y, SP1, SRE3, and YY1 regulatory elements in rat, mouse, dog and chimpanzee. Two additional specific consensus sequences, upstream of the core promoter that had not been analysed previously, are shared only by human and chimpanzee genomes. The work presented here aimed at characterizing these genomic sequence elements in the human FDPS promoter region and their contribution to gene expression. We have characterized functionally the minimal basal promoter of the human FDPS gene by means of deletion mutants and we have identified two cis-acting elements which modulate the FDPS gene expression and are recognized by Pax5 and OCT-1 transcription factors.
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2007
Maria Grazia Romanelli, Pamela Lorenzi, Francesca Avesani, Carlo Morandi (2007)  Functional characterization of the ribonucleoprotein, PTB-binding 1/Raver1 promoter region.   Gene 405: 1-2. 79-87 Dec  
Abstract: Raver1 is a ribonucleoprotein, evolutionarily conserved in mammals, which acts as a polypyrimidine tract-binding protein (PTB/hnRNPI) co-repressor in regulating alternative splicing events. The mouse homologue has been identified as a dual compartment protein that interacts with PTB within perinucleolar structures, and localizes at microfilament plasma membrane attachment sites in fibroblasts, epithelial and muscle cells. Human Raver1 gene is localized on chromosome 19p13.2 and encodes for an inferred 756 amino acid protein sharing 87% similarity with the mouse orthologue. The human Raver1 gene expression has not been previously investigated. Here we report the mRNA expression profile of human Raver1 gene and the molecular characterization of its promoter region. From the in silico analysis of 1542 bp of the Raver1 5'-flanking region (GC content=61%), no canonical TATA or CAAT boxes can be highlighted, whereas several consensus Sp1 putative binding sequences can be predicted within 1 kb from the transcription start site (TSS) that we determined by 5'-RACE. Functional analyses established a minimal region involved in the regulation of the human Raver1 promoter activity. Mutational analyses and transfection studies indicated that a GGGAGCTCCC sequence at -531 represents a putative cis signal acting as a negative regulator element of the promoter function. Altogether, our results indicate that human Raver1 gene promoter region shares common features of ubiquitously expressed gene with the interacting splicing regulator PTB.
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2006
Matthias Treiber, Hans-Ulrich Schulz, Olfert Landt, Joost P H Drenth, Carlo Castellani, Francisco X Real, Nejat Akar, Rudolf W Ammann, Mario Bargetzi, Eesh Bhatia, Andrew Glenn Demaine, Cinzia Battagia, Andrew Kingsnorth, Derek O'Reilly, Kaspar Truninger, Monika Koudova, Julius Spicak, Milos Cerny, Hans-Jürgen Menzel, Pedro Moral, Pier Franco Pignatti, Maria Grazia Romanelli, Olga Rickards, Gian Franco De Stefano, Narcis Octavian Zarnescu, Gourdas Choudhuri, Sadiq S Sikora, Jan B M J Jansen, Frank Ulrich Weiss, Matthias Pietschmann, Niels Teich, Thomas M Gress, Johann Ockenga, Hartmut Schmidt, Andreas Kage, Juliane Halangk, Jonas Rosendahl, David Alexander Groneberg, Renate Nickel, Heiko Witt (2006)  Keratin 8 sequence variants in patients with pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer.   J Mol Med 84: 12. 1015-1022 Dec  
Abstract: Keratin 8 (KRT8) is one of the major intermediate filament proteins expressed in single-layered epithelia of the gastrointestinal tract. Transgenic mice over-expressing human KRT8 display pancreatic mononuclear infiltration, interstitial fibrosis and dysplasia of acinar cells resulting in exocrine pancreatic insufficiency. These experimental data are in accordance with a recent report describing an association between KRT8 variations and chronic pancreatitis. This prompted us to investigate KRT8 polymorphisms in patients with pancreatic disorders. The KRT8 Y54H and G62C polymorphisms were assessed in a cohort of patients with acute and chronic pancreatitis of various aetiologies or pancreatic cancer originating from Austria (n=16), the Czech Republic (n=90), Germany (n=1698), Great Britain (n=36), India (n=60), Italy (n=143), the Netherlands (n=128), Romania (n=3), Spain (n=133), and Switzerland (n=129). We also studied 4,234 control subjects from these countries and 1,492 control subjects originating from Benin, Cameroon, Ethiopia, Ecuador, and Turkey. Polymorphisms were analysed by melting curve analysis with fluorescence resonance energy transfer probes. The frequency of G62C did not differ between patients with acute or chronic pancreatitis, pancreatic adenocarcinoma and control individuals. The frequency of G62C varied in European populations from 0.4 to 3.8%, showing a northwest to southeast decline. The Y54H alteration was not detected in any of the 2,436 patients. Only 3/4,580 (0.07%) European, Turkish and Indian control subjects were heterozygous for Y54H in contrast to 34/951 (3.6%) control subjects of African descent. Our data suggest that the KRT8 alterations, Y54H and G62C, do not predispose patients to the development of pancreatitis or pancreatic cancer.
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Marco Turci, Maria Grazia Romanelli, Pamela Lorenzi, Paola Righi, Umberto Bertazzoni (2006)  Localization of human T-cell lymphotropic virus type II Tax protein is dependent upon a nuclear localization determinant in the N-terminal region.   Gene 365: 119-124 Jan  
Abstract: Human T-cell lymphotropic viruses (HTLV) types I and II are closely related oncogenic retroviruses that have been associated with lymphoproliferative and neurological disorders. The proviral genome encodes a trans-regulatory Tax protein that activates viral genes and upregulates various cellular genes involved in both cell growth and transformation. Tax proteins of HTLV-I (Tax-I) and HTLV-II (Tax-II) exhibit more than 77% aa homology and expression of either Tax-I or Tax-II is sufficient for immortalization of cultured T lymphocytes. Tax-I shuttles from the nucleus to the cytoplasm and accumulates within the nucleus, whereas Tax-II is found mainly in the cytoplasm. In the present study we have used recombinant vectors to analyze the size and structure of the nuclear localization domain within the Tax-II protein sequence. The Tax-II protein was expressed in HeLa cells either as the complete protein, or regions thereof, that were individually fused to the green fluorescent protein (GFP). Immunoblot analysis of the fused Tax-II products confirmed their expression and size. Fluorescence microscopy studies indicated that the complete Tax-II as well as N-truncated forms presented a punctuate cytoplasmic distribution and that a nuclear localization determinant is confined to within the first 60 aa of Tax-II. Accordingly, site directed mutagenesis and deletion of specific sequences within the first 60 aa showed that the nuclear determinant lies within the first 41 residues of Tax-II. These results point to a direct involvement of the amino-terminal residues of Tax-II protein in determining its nuclear functionality.
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2005
Maria Grazia Romanelli, Pamela Lorenzi, Carlo Morandi (2005)  Identification and analysis of the human neural polypyrimidine tract binding protein (nPTB) gene promoter region.   Gene 356: 11-18 Aug  
Abstract: Neural polypyrimidine tract-binding protein nPTB, originally identified as the neuronal counterpart of the hnRNPI/PTB protein, is an RNA binding protein involved into tissue-specific alternative splicing regulation. Here we describe the functional characterization of the promoter sequence of nPTB in HeLa and neuroblastoma cells. By means of genomic sequence analysis we have isolated and cloned a 1587-base pair region upstream the human nPTB coding region. The nPTB proximal promoter, although rich in G+C content and presenting putative binding sites for the transcription factors Sp1, NF-1, NF-kB and Oct-1, lacks a typical TATA box. Luciferase transient expression assays using deletion mutants have identified the proximal promoter region at -125 relative to the transcription start site. Alignment of human, murine and chimpanzee genomic sequences upstream the nPTB exon 1 has provided evidences for the evolutionary conservation of specific transcription factor binding sites.
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2003
Maria Grazia Romanelli, Luciano Tato', Pamela Lorenzi, Carlo Morandi (2003)  Nuclear localization domains in human thyroid transcription factor 2.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1643: 1-3. 55-64 Dec  
Abstract: Thyroid transcription factor-2 (TTF2) is a nuclear protein involved in morphogenesis and gene expression in thyroid gland, belonging to the family of the forkhead/winged-helix transcription factors. In the present study we have investigated the sequence determinants for transport and accumulation into the nucleus of the TTF2 protein. By transient expression of fusion proteins constructed by joining different parts of TTF2 to the reporter gene of the jellyfish green fluorescent protein (GFP) and, in a separate set of deleted constructs, the glutathione S-transferase (GST) coding sequence, we have demonstrated that a basic amino acid stretch present at both ends of the DNA-binding domain is a bona fide nuclear localization signal (NLS). We have analyzed the subcellular localization of deleted GFP-GST-TTF2 fusion proteins and have shown that residues inside the forkhead domain (FHD) contributed to the complete nuclear TTF2 protein accumulation. Furthermore, by means of GST binding assays we have shown that distinct TTF2 fragments, containing the NLS, were able to bind the nuclear import receptor importin alpha. Taken together, our results provide the first documentation about nuclear targeting of a forkhead protein containing two identical NLS signal flanking the DNA-binding domain.
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2002
Maria G Romanelli, Carlo Morandi (2002)  Importin alpha binds to an unusual bipartite nuclear localization signal in the heterogeneous ribonucleoprotein type I.   Eur J Biochem 269: 11. 2727-2734 Jun  
Abstract: The heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) type I, a modulator of alternative splicing, localizes in the nucleoplasm of mammalian cells and in a discrete perinucleolar structure. HnRNP I contains a novel type of bipartite nuclear localization signal (NLS) at the N-terminus of the protein that we have previously named nuclear determinant localization type I (NLD-I). Recently, a neural counterpart of hnRNP I has been identified that contains a putative NLS with two strings of basic amino acids separated by a spacer of 30 residues. In the present study we show that the neural hnRNP I NLS is necessary and sufficient for nuclear localization and represents a variant of the novel bipartite NLS present in the NLD-I domain. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the NLD-I is transported into the nucleus by cytoplasmic factor(s) with active transport modality. Binding assays using recombinant importin alpha show an interaction with NLD-I similar to that of SV40 large T antigen NLS. Deletion analysis indicates that both stretches of basic residues are necessary for binding to importin alpha. The above experimental results lead to the conclusion that importin alpha acts as cytoplasmic receptor for proteins characterized by a bipartite NLS signal that extends up to 37 residues.
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2001
M G Romanelli, L Faggioli, P Lorenzi, C Morandi (2001)  Cloning and functional characterization of the human heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein type I promoter.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1520: 1. 85-88 Jul  
Abstract: We have cloned and functionally characterized a portion of the human hnRNP I (heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein type I) gene containing the promoter elements. HnRNP I is an alternative splicing modulator of tissue-specific transcripts that is expressed in three different isoforms. The DNA sequence at the transcription start site, identified by 5'-rapid amplification of cDNA ends, shows a high 'GC' content, lacks canonical TATA sequences and contains multiple putative Sp1 and NF1 transcription factor-binding sites, a GATA box and a CAAT box. By means of a chloramphenicol acetyltransferase reporter construct and deletion analyses, we have identified two regions between -770 bp and -206 bp that had a positive effect on expression activity in HeLa cells.
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2000
M Ferrari, T C Mettenleiter, M G Romanelli, E Cabassi, A Corradi, N Dal Mas, R Silini (2000)  A comparative study of pseudorabies virus (PRV) strains with defects in thymidine kinase and glycoprotein genes.   J Comp Pathol 123: 2-3. 152-163 Aug/Oct  
Abstract: In the course of two experiments, an examination was made of the virulence and neuroinvasiveness for pigs of two pseudorabies virus mutants (strain 6C2TK(-), with a defect in thymidine kinase (TK) function; and strain 6C2TK(-), gI(-)/gE(-), with defects in TK and glycoproteins I and E) and of the wild-type parent strain (86/27V). At various times after intranasal inoculation, pigs were killed and samples of tonsil, lung and different levels of the trigeminal and olfactory nervous pathways were examined by methods that included viral isolation, polymerase chain reaction assay and immunohistochemistry. Both mutant viruses were of reduced virulence, as indicated by no more than moderate clinical signs and lesions, and only sporadic isolation of virus; moreover, unlike the wild-type parent strain, the mutant viruses were not reactivated from the latent state by corticosteroid treatment. In addition, migration of the mutant strains to the central nervous system (olfactory and trigeminal nervous pathways) was reduced as compared with that of the wild-type strain. Thus, mutations in the genes encoding the TK enzyme and the gI/gE complex were associated with reduced virulence, reduced replication in peripheral target tissues, and reduced migration to the olfactory and trigeminal pathways.
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M Ferrari, G L Gualandi, A Corradi, C Monaci, M G Romanelli, M N Losio, A M Cantoni, A Pratelli (2000)  The response of pigs inoculated with a thymidine kinase-negative (TK-) pseudorabies virus to challenge infection with virulent virus.   Comp Immunol Microbiol Infect Dis 23: 1. 15-26 Jan  
Abstract: 12 Large-White-Landrace piglets were subdivided in four groups of 3 and housed in separate units. The piglets of three groups were inoculated with the 86/27V 6C2 thymidine kinase negative (TK-) mutant of pseudorabies virus (PRV), by different routes. A second inoculation with the same mutant was given to the pigs 21 days later. The animals of a fourth group were left as uninoculated controls. 21 days following the second inoculation with the TK- mutant all pigs were challenge infected with the virulent PRV. On post challenge day (PCD) 30 all pigs were killed and samples for virus detection and histology were taken from several organs. The inoculated TK- mutant of PRV did not induce any ill effects in the pigs except a transient febrile reaction in some animals. Virus was recovered from nasal swabbings from one pig 2 days after the first inoculation of the mutant. After challenge exposure with virulent PRV, the TK- mutant-inoculated pigs were apparently protected, whereas the control pigs all were severely affected and recovered very slowly over 3 weeks. Virus was isolated from the nasal swabbings from the TK- mutant-inoculated pigs on PCDs 2 and 4, whereas the nasal swabbings from the control piglets were all positive for virus from PCD 2 through PCD 10. DNA analysis of the virus recovered showed a pattern identical to that of the virulent PRV. Histologic lesions were found in the respiratory and the central nervous systems, however, the lesions in the TK- mutant-inoculated pigs were much milder compared to those registered for the control pigs. Virus was not isolated from any of the tissue samples that were tested, but viral DNA with sequences typical of PRV genome was detected by PCR in all samples of trigeminal ganglia from either the TK- mutant-inoculated pigs or from the controls.
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M Ferrari, A Brack, M G Romanelli, T C Mettenleiter, A Corradi, N Dal Mas, M N Losio, R Silini, C Pinoni, A Pratelli (2000)  A study of the ability of a TK-negative and gI/gE-negative pseudorabies virus (PRV) mutant inoculated by different routes to protect pigs against PRV infection.   J Vet Med B Infect Dis Vet Public Health 47: 10. 753-762 Dec  
Abstract: The capacity of a TK-negative (TK-) and gI/gE-negative (gI/gE-) pseudorabies virus (PRV) mutant to protect pigs against Aujeszky's disease carried out by experimental infection with a virulent PRV strain, was tested. There were three groups, each of four susceptible pigs which were inoculated twice by two different schedules. Group 1 received the modified virus by the intradermal (first inoculation)-intramuscular (second inoculation) routes; group 2 was treated by the intranasal (first inoculation)-intramuscular (second inoculation) routes. The third group was left untreated as the control. All of the pigs were challenged intranasally with a virulent PRV strain and they were subsequently injected with dexamethasone. Two pigs in each group were necropsied on days 5 and 15 after dexamethasone inoculation. The challenge exposure resulted in mild clinical signs, increase in growth and a shorter period of virus shedding in vaccinated pigs, whereas the control group showed severe signs of Aujeszky's disease. No difference in the titre of the virulent virus which was excreted by pigs of all three groups, was observed and all animals seroconverted. Both the mutant strain and the wild-type virus established a latent infection although only the latter was reactivated and shed. Slight lesions were observed in target tissues of the vaccinated animals and no significant differences were detected between the two inoculation schedules.
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M G Romanelli, P Lorenzi, C Morandi (2000)  Organization of the human gene encoding heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein type I (hnRNP I) and characterization of hnRNP I related pseudogene.   Gene 255: 2. 267-272 Sep  
Abstract: The human gene hnRNPI encoding the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein type I, an alternative splicing modulator of tissue-specific transcripts, also known as PTB (polypyrimidine tract-binding protein), was recently mapped on chromosome 14, as well as on chromosome 19, suggesting that two closely related copies of the same gene might exist in the human genome. We report here that the gene localized on chromosome 14 corresponds to a highly homologous processed pseudogene related to hnRNPI gene (psihnRNPI). Analysis by RT-PCR and by EST database comparison indicates that psihnRNPI is not expressed. In this report we have also analyzed the organization of the actual hnRNPI gene localized on chromosome 19. The DNA sequence at the intron-exon boundaries unveiled the possible mechanism by which three isoforms of the protein (namely hnRNPI, PTB2 and PTB3) are generated by means of alternative splicing of the same hnRNPI gene transcript.
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1998
M Ferrari, G L Gualandi, A Corradi, C Monaci, M G Romanelli, G Tosi, A M Cantoni (1998)  Experimental infection of pigs with a thymidine kinase negative strain of pseudorabies virus.   Comp Immunol Microbiol Infect Dis 21: 4. 291-303 Oct  
Abstract: Sixteen 20 day old pigs, devoid of neutralizing antibody to pseudorabies virus (PRV), were divided into two groups of eight, an the animals of each group were housed in a separate unit. In each group 6 pigs were inoculated intranasally with the thymidine kinase (TK-) mutant (Group 1) or the field strain of PRV (Group 2), each pig receiving an inoculum of 4 ml. The remaining 2 pigs in each group served as uninoculated controls. The only clinical sign observed in the pigs of Group 1 was a transient febrile reaction, in the case of six pigs inoculated with the TK- mutant of PRV, whereas no signs of disease were seen in the uninoculated controls. The virus was isolated from the 6 infected pigs of the group only on post infection day (PID) 2, whereas it was never isolated from the controls. By contrast, the pigs of Group 2, had a severe clinical response and one, among those that were inoculated with the field strain of the PRV, died on PID 9. Virus was consistently isolated from all pigs of Group 2, inoculated and control. On PID 30 all pigs, i.e. the 8 of Group 1 and 7 of the Group 2 which survived to the infection, were subjected to dexamethasone (DMS) treatment. After DMS treatment virus was never isolated from the nasal swabbings obtained from the pigs of Group 1, whereas it was consistently isolated from pigs of Group 2. After 30 d from the start of DMS treatment the pigs were killed and several tissues were collected from each pig for virus detection, by isolation in tissue culture and by PCR analysis. At necropsy no lesions were found in pigs of Group 1, whereas acute pneumonia and gliosis in the trigeminal ganglia were observed in pigs of Group 2. Virus was never isolated from any of the tissues taken from pigs of both, Group 1 and Group 2, nevertheless sequences of PRV were detected by PCR analysis in the trigeminal ganglia of the pigs of both Groups.
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1997
M G Romanelli, F Weighardt, G Biamonti, S Riva, C Morandi (1997)  Sequence determinants for hnRNP I protein nuclear localization.   Exp Cell Res 235: 1. 300-304 Aug  
Abstract: hnRNP I, also referred to as polypyrimidine tract binding protein, is one of the proteins associated with nascent pre-mRNA in the heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) complexes. As for all karyophilic proteins, the nuclear import of hnRNP proteins requires specific sequence determinants that in many instances differ from the canonical import signal. In order to identify the sequences responsible for the nuclear localization, various hnRNP I portions were fused to a reporter protein (bacterial chloramphenicol acetyl transferase) and used in transient transfection assay. By this approach we identified a 60-amino-acid sequence located at the amino terminus of hnRNP I (designated NLD-I) that is both necessary and sufficient for nuclear localization. NLD-I represents a novel bipartite type of nuclear localization signal that bears no resemblance to other nuclear localization determinants so far identified in hnRNP proteins.
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1996
A Achille, M T Scupoli, A R Magalini, G Zamboni, M G Romanelli, S Orlandini, M O Biasi, N R Lemoine, R S Accolla, A Scarpa (1996)  APC gene mutations and allelic losses in sporadic ampullary tumours: evidence of genetic difference from tumours associated with familial adenomatous polyposis.   Int J Cancer 68: 3. 305-312 Nov  
Abstract: We explored APC gene mutations and chromosome 5q21 allelic losses (5qLOH) in 18 neoplasms of the papilla of Vater, including 6 early-stage tumours (3 adenomas, 3 carcinomas) and 12 advanced-stage cancers. Eleven PCR-amplified polymorphic sequences were used to analyse 5qLOH. APC mutations were investigated both by an in vitro APC-protein truncation test and by single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis. Mutations in the Ki-ras, N-ras and p53 genes were also assessed. We found: 5qLOH in 8 of 16 cases (50%), including 1 adenoma, 3 early- and 4 advanced-stage cancers; APC mutations in 2 adenomas and 1 advanced-stage carcinoma; Ki- or N-ras mutations in 3 adenomas and 3 advanced-stage cancers; p53 mutations in 2 early-stage and 7 advanced-stage adenocarcinomas. Our results suggest that 5qLOH, APC mutations and ras mutations are present at early stages, whereas p53 inactivation is associated with progression of malignancy in a large proportion of cases. These data indicate that sporadic ampullary tumours differ from those occurring in familial adenomatous polyposis in the frequency (17% vs. 64%) as well as in the site of APC somatic mutations, suggesting a different molecular pathogenesis in the 2 conditions.
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M Tognon, E M Cattozzo, S Bianchi, M G Romanelli (1996)  Enhancement of HSV-DNA infectivity, in Vero and RS cells, by a modified calcium-phosphate transfection technique.   Virus Genes 12: 2. 193-197  
Abstract: Infectivity of herpes simplex virus (HSV) DNA was assessed by employing the calcium-phosphate transfection technique described by Chen and Okayama, originally applied to increase the efficiency of plasmid transfection by N, N-bis (2-hydroxyethyl)-2-aminoethane sulfonic acid (BES). The experimental conditions and efficiency of this transfection procedure were evaluated comparing the viral progeny titers obtained by the Chen and Okayama transfection method using DNA from wild-type strains of HSV-1 and HSV-2, as well as from mutant strains, with the viral progeny obtained by the most widely used transfection technique introduced by Graham and van der Eb. Furthermore, recombinant virus production was evaluated in marker transfer and marker rescue experiments, comparing both transfection techniques, using DNA fragments cotransfected with whole viral DNA into African green monkey (Vero) or rabbit skin (RS) cells. The viral production obtained from HSV-DNA transfected cells was enhanced approximately 1000-fold when the Chen and Okayama procedure was applied.
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1995
1994
C Gamberi, G Contreas, M G Romanelli, C Morandi (1994)  Analysis of the yeast NSR1 gene and protein domain comparison between Nsr1 and human hnRNP type A1.   Gene 148: 1. 59-66 Oct  
Abstract: The yeast nucleolar protein-encoding gene NSR1 was isolated by low-stringency screening of a yeast genomic library with the human heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein type A1 (hnRNP A1) cDNA probe, and was mapped to chromosome VII. RNA abundance was determined and the transcription start point and polyadenylation site were mapped. A comparison between the Nsr1 and hnRNP A1 proteins, based on homopolymer RNA binding to their structural domains in vitro, revealed a striking biochemical similarity. When the N-terminal, lysine- and arginine-rich domain of Nsr1 was removed, the truncated protein behaved similarly to hnRNP A1; furthermore, the two RRM (RNA recognition motif) domains of Nsr1 behaved in the same manner as the two RRM domains of hnRNP A1. The biochemical data, therefore, would support the hypothesis that the two RRM domains in hnRNP A1 and Nsr1 interact with RNA in a similar manner in both mammalian and yeast cells, respectively.
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1993
M Tognon, M G Romanelli, E M Cattozzo, C Bovolenta, E Liboi (1993)  c-fos proto-oncogene transient transcription is negatively affected in the ELa4-2 transformed rat cell line.   Pathobiology 61: 5-6. 288-292  
Abstract: To study the effects of the regulatory phosphoprotein ICP4 of the Herpes simplex virus, (HSV), a DNA tumor virus, on the induction of gene expression by the epidermal growth factor (EGF), we have constructed a cell line, ELa4-2, which constitutively expresses the a-4 gene product. The ELa4-2 cells are derived from the rat fibroblast EL2, in which EGF induces a marked c-fos and c-myc proto-oncogene transcription. Here we report that in ELa4-2 cells, the gene expression induced by EGF was negatively affected in respect to that obtained stimulating the parental EL2 cells. In particular, we studied the c-fos and c-myc proto-oncogene transcription induced by EGF. We found that in ELa4-2 cells the c-fos induction was dramatically reduced in comparison with the c-fos induction obtained in the parental EL2 cells. On the contrary, the c-myc induction by EGF was not affected by the presence of ICP4. Finally, we compared the HSV infectivity in ELa4-2 versus the EL2 cells. We showed that the virus growth capability was reduced, in the cells expressing ICP4.
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G Palu, M Tognon, M G Romanelli, M Rassu, M C Parolin, G Zagotto, M Palumbo (1993)  Relevance of DNA binding to the mechanism of anti-herpesvirus activity of benzhydrazone.   Antiviral Res 20: 4. 305-316 Apr  
Abstract: Benzhydrazone (1H-benz(f)indene-1,3(2H)-dione bis (amidino-hydrazone) (BH) is a synthetic compound with selective anti-herpesvirus activity. Its selectivity seems to stem from the inhibition of viral protein glycosylation and several hypotheses have been formulated to explain such an effect. Data presented here demonstrate that DNA binding is a prominent feature of BH. Interaction is taking place with a relatively high affinity constant and is more efficient for GC-rich viral sequences. Experiments with the cloned DNA fragments from a BH-resistant virus strain indicate that BH-DNA complex formation is drastically reduced as compared to BH-sensitive virus. The occurrence of the resistant phenotype in HEp-2 cells but not in Vero cells could be explained by differences in BH cytotoxicity. Changes in drug uptake and accumulation by cells following infection, in addition to GC preference, may also account for the degree of antiviral selectivity shown by BH.
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1992
M G Romanelli, P Mavromara-Nazos, D Spector, B Roizman (1992)  Mutational analysis of the ICP4 binding sites in the 5' transcribed noncoding domains of the herpes simplex virus 1 UL 49.5 gamma 2 gene.   J Virol 66: 8. 4855-4863 Aug  
Abstract: A previous report (P. Mavromara-Nazos and B. Roizman, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 86:4071-4075, 1989) demonstrated that substitution of sequences of the thymidine kinase (tk) gene, a beta gene, extending from -16 to +51 with sequences extending from -12 to +104 of the gamma 2 UL 49.5 gene in viral recombinant R3820 conferred upon the chimeric gene gamma 2 attributes in the context of the viral genome in a productive infection. The UL49.5 gene sequences extending from -179 to +104 contain four DNA binding sites for the major regulatory protein ICP4. Of these sites, two map between nucleotides +20 and +80 within the sequence which confers gamma 2 regulation upon the chimeric gene. To determine the role of these ICP4 binding sites in conferring the gamma 2 gene attributes, sequences comprising the two ICP4 binding sites were mutagenized and used to reconstruct the R3820 recombinant virus. In addition, a new recombinant virus (R8023) was constructed in which tk sequences extending from -240 to +51 were replaced with wild-type or mutated sequences contained between nucleotides -179 to +104 of the UL 49.5 gene. Vero cells infected with the recombinant viruses in the presence or absence of phosphonoacetate, a specific inhibitor of viral DNA synthesis, were then tested for accumulation of tk RNA by using an RNase protection assay. The results indicate that in the recombinant R3820, a mutation which destroyed one of the two UL49.5 ICP4 DNA binding sites significantly reduced the accumulation of tk RNA at both early and late times after infection. The effect of this mutation was less pronounced in cells infected with the R8023 virus, whose chimeric tk gene contains the two upstream UL49.5 ICP4 binding sites. None of the mutations affected the sensitivity of the chimeric genes to phosphonoacetate. The mutated site appears to be involved in the accumulation of RNA.
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1991
M G Romanelli, E M Cattozzo, L Faggioli, M Tognon (1991)  Fine mapping and characterization of the Syn 6 locus in the herpes simplex virus type 1 genome.   J Gen Virol 72 ( Pt 8): 1991-1995 Aug  
Abstract: The syncytial mutant of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1), HSV-1(13) S11, which carries three distinct syncytial mutations, Syn 1, Syn 5 and Syn 6, was described previously. Syn 1 maps to the BamHI L fragment, map units (m.u.) 0.707 to 0.745; Syn 5 is located within the BamHI Q fragment, m.u. 0.296 to 0.317; Syn 6 lies in the junction fragment BamHI SP, m.u. 0.81 to 0.85. Although Syn 1 of HSV-1(13) S11 seems to be homologous to that of HSV-1(MP) and other syncytial mutants, and Syn 5 has been recently characterized, Syn 6 represents a novel syncytial locus which has yet to be characterized. In this paper we report the fine mapping of the Syn 6 locus. This mutation has been mapped, by marker rescue and marker transfer experiments, to the long repeat regions (RL) at both ends of the L component of the HSV genome in a restriction endonuclease fragment of approximately 1.6 kb designated BamHI-SacI C (approximate m.u. 0.01 to 0.02 and 0.81 to 0.82). In the internal copy of RL the sequences containing the Syn 6 mutation were bounded to the left by the 5' end of the alpha gene specifying ICP0 and to the right by the gamma 1 gene encoding ICP34.5.
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M Tognon, R Guandalini, M G Romanelli, R Manservigi, B Trevisani (1991)  Phenotypic and genotypic characterization of locus Syn 5 in herpes simplex virus 1.   Virus Res 18: 2-3. 135-150 Mar  
Abstract: Previous papers have reported that the syncytial mutant HSV-1(13)S11 carries three segregable syn mutations and exhibits its altered phenotype in four different cell lines, i.e. HEp-2, VERO, BHK and HEL both at 34 degrees C and 39 degrees C. Those studies have shown that one of three syncytial loci, designated Syn 5, is located in the Bam HI Q fragment spanning map units 0.296-0.317 of the prototype arrangement. Recombinants obtained from marker transfer experiments with donor BamHI Q fragment, have shown that locus Syn 5 is able to induce cell-to-cell fusion in VERO, BHK and HEL but not in HEp-2 cells. In this paper we have characterized the syn mutant HSV-1(13)S11 with regard to plaque morphology, synthesis of viral polypeptides and glycoproteins, thymidine kinase activity and physical map position of locus Syn 5 on the genome. Pertinent to the syn phenotype, earlier papers claimed that two different polypeptides, thymidine kinase (TK) and glycoprotein H (gH), whose genes map in BamHI Q, may be responsible for the fusion activity. Functional studies on the TK of the syn mutant HSV-1(13)S11 indicate that this polypeptide accumulates normally in infected cells and is a fully active enzyme. The other gene product, gH, has been studied with SDS-PAGE and in radioimmunoprecipitation (RIP) experiments using specific monoclonal antibodies. The results indicate that the amount of gH accumulation in the syn mutant-infected cells is greater than its parental strain. However, new marker transfer experiments described here located locus Syn 5 in 663 base pairs between SstI and EcoRI restriction endonuclease sites at the right end of the BamHI Q fragment, where TK gene overlaps in opposite orientation with UL 24 gene. Altogether these results indicate that the Syn 5 locus segregates from the gene specifying gH, to a region encompassing portions of the TK and UL 24 genes, and that the syn mutation does not affect the expression or activity of TK.
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1989
G Palú, F Bevilacqua, M A Biasolo, C Parolin, M Tognon, M G Romanelli, G A Meloni (1989)  Acyclovir resistance in herpes simplex virus type 1: biochemical and functional studies on the thymidine kinase of the highly resistant R100 strain.   Virus Res 13: 4. 303-318 Aug  
Abstract: The biochemical and functional properties of the thymidine kinase (TK) of the herpes simplex virus type 1 mutant R100, that is highly resistant to 9-(2-hydroxyethoxymethyl)guanine (acyclovir), are reported in comparison with the properties of its parental strain, wt. The mutant induced the production of a TK activity that accounted for only 10% of the wt one. This feature was not apparently related to a defective expression of the TK gene but it was rather connected to some functional characteristics of R100 enzyme. Although affinities of this enzyme for ATP and thymidine were unchanged, apparent Vmax values for thymidine were much reduced. In addition, affinities for antiviral analogues acyclovir, 9-(1,3-dihydroxymethyl)guanine (DHPG), 5-(2-bromovinyl)2'-deoxyuridine (BVdU), and 5-iodo-2'deoxycytidine (IdCyd) were drastically diminished (between 50-fold and more than 100-fold). This mutation therefore seems to affect the active site of the enzyme which is involved in the catalytic conversion of thymidine and in the binding of the analogues. The above features of HSV-1 R100 seem quite distinct from those of previously described HSV-1 resistant mutants.
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1988
M Tognon, R Manservigi, M G Romanelli, A Rotola, R Gatti, L Foà-Tomasi, G Campadelli-Fiume (1988)  A herpes simplex virus type 1 mutant resistant to benzhydrazone, an inhibitor of glycoprotein synthesis in herpesvirus-infected cells. Preliminary mapping of benzhydrazone-resistance and of a novel syncytial mutation.   Arch Virol 98: 3-4. 199-212  
Abstract: Benzhydrazone (BH) is an inhibitor of glycoprotein biosynthesis. It acts selectively in Herpes simplex virus (HSV)-infected cells and does not significantly affect glycoprotein synthesis in uninfected cells and in cells infected with other viruses. Previously, we reported on a syncytial (syn) mutant, designated HSV-1(13)S11, resistant to BH, and showed that BH-resistance is encoded in the mutant virus DNA and therefore can be transferred into the genome of wild type HSVs. The present paper reports on a preliminary mapping in HSV-1(13)S11 genome of the loci which confer resistance to BH and of three distinct syn mutations present simultaneously in this mutant. Two of them were mapped in previously described syn loci localized in BamHI fragment L (map units 0.707-0.745) (locus syn 1) and BamHI fragment Q (map units 0.296-0.317) (locus syn 5). A third mutation not described before and mapping in BamHI fragment SP (c.a. map units 0.81-0.85) conferred the syn phenotype to both HEp-2 and Vero cells. This novel mutation has been designated herein locus syn 6. Transfer of BH-resistance could be achieved in cotransfection experiments involving two HSV-1(13)S11 fragments, BamHIL and BamHISP.
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M G Romanelli, P F Pignatti (1988)  Herpes simplex virus replication in the presence of DNA polymerase alpha inhibitors.   Virus Res 11: 4. 293-302 Nov  
Abstract: 2-(p-n-butylanilino)deoxyadenosine (BuAdA), and N-2-(p-n-butylphenyl)deoxyguanosine (BuPdG), selective inhibitors of mammalian DNA polymerase alpha, were added to BHK-21(C13) cell cultures infected with herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) strain 17 syn +. Infectious virus production decreased significantly in the presence of the inhibitor at concentrations varying from 1 nM to 100 microM. BuPdG was more effective than BuAdA at all concentrations tested, while it inhibited virus yield as much as BuAdA when CVG2, a thymidine kinase deficient (TK-) HSV-1, was employed. HSV DNA synthesis, determined by quantitation of CsCl separated DNA peaks, was inhibited by each compound. BuPdG inhibited viral DNA replication more than BuAdA, while the effect on cell DNA synthesis was the same as that of BuAdA. CVG2 DNA replication was inhibited to the same level by BuAdA as by BuPdG. These results indicate that HSV DNA replication is partially dependent on cell DNA polymerase alpha activity, and that the greater effect of BuPdG on viral replication may be ascribed to its action on HSV thymidine kinase.
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1986
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