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Rita Canipari


rita.canipari@uniroma1.it

Journal articles

2010
M C Guglielmo, G Ricci, A Catizone, M Barberi, M Galdieri, M Stefanini, R Canipari (2010)  The effect of hepatocyte growth factor on the initial stages of mouse follicle development.   J Cell Physiol Aug  
Abstract: Interactions between theca and granulosa cells of the follicle are critical for the coordination of ovarian follicle development. The cell-cell interactions are mediated through the local production and actions of a variety of factors. The current study is designed to investigate the expression of Hgf and its receptor, c-Met, in the mouse ovary during in vivo folliculogenesis. We found that Hgf and c-Met mRNAs were already expressed in 2-day-old ovaries, and that, while c-Met levels remained constant until 22-day-old, Hgf levels slightly but not significantly increased with age. The expression of Hgf mRNA in theca/interstitial cells was higher than in granulosa cells in 22-day-old ovaries. Immunohistochemistry analysis confirmed the expression pattern demonstrated by RT-PCR. We investigated the role of HGF at the beginning of mouse folliculogenesis and its possible interaction with Kit Ligand (KL). Interestingly, both KL and HGF were able to increase the expression of each other, creating a positive feedback loop. In the presence of HGF, we observed an increase of granulosa cell proliferation and an increase in the number of preantral and early antral follicles in ovary organ cultures. We also observed a significant increase in the diameters of follicles in individual follicle cultures. Moreover, HGF stimulated the expression of the FSH receptors (Fsh-rs), both in the whole ovary and in isolated preantral follicle cultures. Based on the data presented, we concluded that HGF exerts multiple levels of control over follicular cell functions, which collectively enable the progression of follicular development. J. Cell. Physiol. (c) 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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A Catizone, G Ricci, M A Tufano, B Perfetto, R Canipari, M Galdieri (2010)  Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) modulates Leydig cell extracellular matrix components.   J Androl 31: 3. 306-313 May/Jun  
Abstract: Hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) is a pleiotropic factor that plays multiple roles during mammalian development. We previously demonstrated that in the postnatal testes, the HGF receptor, c-met, is expressed by Leydig cells and HGF increases the steroidogenetic activity of the cells. In the present article, we report that HGF modifies the composition of the extracellular matrix of cultured Leydig cells. We show that HGF increases the metabolic activity of isolated Leydig cells; in particular, the factor increases urokinase plasminogen activator and matrix metalloproteinase 2 secretion. We have also shown that the levels of active transforming growth factor beta are increased by HGF. On the contrary, using the Western blotting technique, a strong reduction in the amount of fibronectin present in the culture medium of cells cultured in the presence of HGF has been detected. The presented data demonstrate that HGF modulates several functional activities of Leydig cells, further supporting the hypothesis that this factor has a relevant role in the regulation of mammalian spermatogenesis.
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Stefania Latini, Michela Chiarpotto, Barbara Muciaccia, Sergio Vaccari, Marzia Barberi, Maria Cristina Guglielmo, Mario Stefanini, Sandra Cecconi, Rita Canipari (2010)  Inhibitory effect of pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide on the initial stages of rat follicle development.   Mol Cell Endocrinol 320: 1-2. 34-44 May  
Abstract: Pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide (PACAP) is transiently expressed in preovulatory follicles of different species and positively affects parameters correlated with the ovulatory process. It has also been shown to be expressed in the interstitial tissue and in interstitial glandular cells in the proximity of primordial and preantral follicles. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether PACAP influences the recruitment of primordial follicles and the growth and differentiation of preantral follicles. Rat ovaries from 2-day-old animals were cultured for 5 days in the presence of PACAP. This treatment significantly inhibited the primordial to primary follicle transition. PACAP inhibited granulosa cell proliferation without affecting cell viability. PACAP also inhibited the growth of isolated preantral follicles cultured under basal conditions or in the presence of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH). These results suggest that PACAP is significantly involved in the cyclic recruitment of primordial follicles and in the FSH-dependent growth of preantral follicles.
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2009
Massimo De Felici, Rita Canipari (2009)  XIV workshop on the development and function of reproductive organs.   Int J Dev Biol 53: 7. 883-889  
Abstract: The XIV Workshop on the Development and Function of Reproductive Organs was held in Rome, from 14-17 September, 2008, at the Congress Centre of the University of Tor Vergata of Villa Mondragone (Rome, Italy). The Workshop was conceived to be a survey of the events from the formation of the gamete precursors, the primordial germ cells, to the development of the preimplantation embryo through female and male gametogenesis in the mouse experimental model. It was divided into six topics including classic and highly-debated current subjects in the field of the biology of reproduction: mammalian primordial germ cells, the formation of the gonads, stem cells and germ cells, gametogenesis from birth to adult (male), gametogenesis from birth to adult (female), and finally fertilization and preimplantation embryo.
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2008
Maria Beatrice Morelli, Marzia Barberi, Alessia Gambardella, Andrea Borini, Sandra Cecconi, Giovanni Coticchio, Rita Canipari (2008)  Characterization, expression, and functional activity of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide and its receptors in human granulosa-luteal cells.   J Clin Endocrinol Metab 93: 12. 4924-4932 Dec  
Abstract: CONTEXT: Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) are found in the ovary of mammalian species, although nothing is known about the possible role of PACAP and VIP in the human ovary. OBJECTIVE: We investigated the expression of PACAP and PACAP/VIP receptors in human granulosa-luteal (GL) cells obtained from consenting in vitro fertilization patients attending a private fertility clinic and assessed a possible antiapoptotic effect of these molecules. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: We measured the expression of PACAP and PACAP/VIP receptor mRNAs in GL cells in response to FSH or LH, as well as the effects of PACAP and VIP on apoptosis. We also evaluated the levels of procaspase-3 in GL cells cultured in the absence of serum. RESULTS: After 7 d in culture, GL cells displayed increased responsiveness to FSH and LH (100 ng/ml). FSH and LH promoted PACAP expression, LH doing so in a time-dependent fashion. VIP receptor (VPAC1-R and VPAC2-R) mRNAs were also induced by gonadotropin stimulation. Although PACAP receptor (PAC1-R) mRNA was barely detectable, Western blot analysis revealed its presence. The apoptotic effect of serum withdrawal from the culture environment was reverted by both PACAP and VIP. Both peptides showed the ability to reverse a decrease in procaspase-3 levels induced by culture in the absence of serum. CONCLUSIONS: PACAP and VIP appear to play a role in maintenance of follicle viability as a consequence of the antiapoptotic effect. Further studies are warranted to evaluate the respective roles of PACAP and VIP in ovarian physiology and to identify their mechanism of action.
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2007
Marzia Barberi, Barbara Muciaccia, Maria Beatrice Morelli, Mario Stefanini, Sandra Cecconi, Rita Canipari (2007)  Expression localisation and functional activity of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and their receptors in mouse ovary.   Reproduction 134: 2. 281-292 Aug  
Abstract: Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) positively affect several parameters correlated with the ovulatory process. PACAP is transiently expressed in rat preovulatory follicles, while VIP is present in nerve fibres at all stages of development. These two peptides act by interacting with three types of receptors: PACAP type I receptor (PAC1-R), which binds with higher affinity to PACAP, and two VIP receptors (VPAC1-R and VPAC2-R), which bind to PACAP and VIP with equal affinity. The aim of the present study was to characterise the PACAP/VIP/receptor system in the mouse ovary. Results obtained by RT-PCR, immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridisation showed that PACAP was transiently expressed in granulosa cells of preovulatory follicles after human chorionic gonadotrophin (hCG) stimulation, while VIP mRNA was never observed. All the receptors were present in 22-day-old untreated mice. In preovulatory follicles, PAC1-R was expressed both in granulosa cells and in residual ovarian tissue but was stimulated by hCG mainly in granulosa cells; VPAC2-R was present in both the cell compartments and was only mildly stimulated; VPAC1-R was present mainly in the residual ovarian tissue and was downregulated by hCG. PACAP and VIP were equipotent in inhibiting apoptosis in granulosa cells, confirming the presence of functional PACAP/VIP receptors. The contemporary induction by hCG of PACAP and PAC1-R in granulosa cells of preovulatory follicles suggests that, also in mouse ovary, PACAP may play a significant role around the time of ovulation. Moreover, the presence of PACAP/VIP receptors in the untreated ovary suggests a possible role for PACAP and VIP during follicle development.
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2006
Sergio Vaccari, Stefania Latini, Marzia Barberi, Anna Teti, Mario Stefanini, Rita Canipari (2006)  Characterization and expression of different pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide/vasoactive intestinal polypeptide receptors in rat ovarian follicles.   J Endocrinol 191: 1. 287-299 Oct  
Abstract: Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a bioactive peptide transiently expressed in preovulatory follicles. PACAP acts by interacting with three types of PACAP receptors. PACAP type I receptor (PAC(1)-R), which binds specifically to both PACAPs and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP), although with lower affinity, and two VIP receptors, VPAC(1)-R and VPAC(2)-R, which bind to PACAP and VIP with equal affinity. In the present study, we showed the expression of all three receptors in whole ovaries obtained from juvenile and gonadotropin-treated immature rats. A more detailed analysis on cells from preovulatory follicles showed that PAC(1)-R and VPAC(2)-R were expressed in granulosa cells, whereas only VIP receptors were expressed in theca/interstitial (TI) cells and fully grown oocytes presented only PAC(1)-R. The distribution of the VIP receptors was confirmed by immunofluorescence. HCG treatment induced stimulation of PAC(1)-R in granulosa cells and VPAC(2)-R in TI cells. The presence of functional PACAP/VIP receptors was also supported by metabolic studies. We further evaluated the presence of PACAP and VIP receptors by testing the effect of these peptides on apoptosis in granulosa cells cultured, isolated or in whole follicles. Treatment of follicles with PACAP and VIP dose-dependently inhibited apoptosis, while only PACAP significantly inhibited isolated granulosa cells. These results demonstrate a different expression of PACAP/VIP receptors in the various follicle compartments and suggest a possible role for PACAP and VIP on granulosa and TI cells, both during follicle development and ovulation.
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G Rossi, G Macchiarelli, M G Palmerini, R Canipari, S Cecconi (2006)  Meiotic spindle configuration is differentially influenced by FSH and epidermal growth factor during in vitro maturation of mouse oocytes.   Hum Reprod 21: 7. 1765-1770 Jul  
Abstract: BACKGROUND: To ascertain whether different hormonal treatment protocols could affect metaphase II (MII) spindle morphology, meiotic spindle organization was detected in prepubertal mouse oocytes matured under conditions allowing spontaneous, FSH- or epidermal growth factor (EGF)-dependent meiotic maturation. METHODS: Oocyte-cumulus complexes (OCCs) were matured either spontaneously (control; n=270) or in the presence of hypoxanthine (Hx) plus FSH (n=400) or EGF (n=370). Spindles were detected by immunofluorescence analysis. In vivo ovulated (IVO) oocytes were processed similarly. RESULTS: IVO oocytes displayed spindles underlying the oolemma and with focused poles marked by spots of gamma-tubulin, whereas the majority (89%) of control oocytes had barrel-shaped spindles, positioned away from the oolemma, and with gamma-tubulin distributed along microtubules. Similar configuration/localization was found in 85% of the oocytes matured in vitro in the presence of Hx and FSH. In the presence of Hx-EGF, 35% of the oocytes showed spindles with an IVO-like configuration, although gamma-tubulin was homogeneously distributed throughout microtubules. Independently of spindle shape, 52% of EGF-stimulated oocytes had spindles positioned near the oolemma, in comparison to just 24% of FSH-treated and 13% of control oocytes. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that FSH and EGF can differently affect meiotic spindle morphology, and that EGF might be a stronger contributor than FSH to the acquisition of oocyte competence.
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Elena Angelici, Massimiliano Spezzano, Sergio Vaccari, Sara Benedetti Valentini, Roberto Romani, Carlo Contini, Rita Canipari (2006)  Urokinase plasminogen activator and TGF-beta production in immunosuppressed patients with and without P. Jiroveci infection.   Microb Pathog 41: 1. 1-9 Jul  
Abstract: Macrophages play a pivotal role in a host's defence against pulmonary infections. Macrophage functions are impaired in immunosuppressed (IS) patients, regardless of whether they are HIV-positive (HIV+) or -negative (HIV-). Several studies have indicated that urokinase plasminogen activator (uPA) and transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) are important factors in a host's defence against pulmonary pathogens. We measured uPA and TGF-beta activity in unstimulated peripheral blood monocytes (PBM) of both HIV-infected and non-infected IS patients with or without Pneumocystis jiroveci (formerly carinii) pneumonia (PCP). As previously found in alveolar macrophages (AMs), the majority of uPA activity was found in cell lysates. The highest values of uPA activity were found in control subjects. All the patients displayed a decreased production of uPA, irrespective of HIV infection. Similarly, active TGF-beta was higher in control subjects than in HIV+ and IS patients. The presence of P. jiroveci infection further lowered uPA and TGF-beta activity. Decreased TGF-beta activation might be a consequence of lower uPA production, which may, in turn, influence virus replication, since it has been demonstrated that TGF-beta can suppress human HIV expression in monocytes/macrophages. Further studies are warranted to elucidate whether the decrease in uPA and TGF-beta activity impairs a host's defence against P. jiroveci infection.
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2005
Fiorella Miceli, Anna Tropea, Francesca Minici, Mariateresa Orlando, Giuseppina Lamanna, Maria Francesca Gangale, Barbara Panetta, Federica Tiberi, Sergio Vaccari, Rita Canipari, Antonio Lanzone, Rosanna Apa (2005)  Effects of insulin-like growth factor I and II on prostaglandin synthesis and plasminogen activator activity in human umbilical vein endothelial cells.   J Clin Endocrinol Metab 90: 1. 372-378 Jan  
Abstract: IGFs seem to contribute to the endothelial dysfunction observed in some vascular diseases. Because locally increased IGFs levels were detected in the preeclamptic fetoplacental unit, we hypothesized their involvement in the dysregulation of fibrinolysis and vascular tone typically observed in the fetoplacental compartment in this pregnancy disease. Therefore, in human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs), the potential effect of IGFs on the synthesis of plasminogen activators (PAs), PA inibitor-1 (PAI-1), and vasodilator and vasoconstrictor prostaglandins (PGs) was investigated. Moreover, in HUVECs treated with IGFs, the expression of cyclooxygenase (COX)-2, the rate-limiting enzyme in PG synthesis, was evaluated.HUVECs were treated for 24 h with IGFs (1-100 ng/ml) or IL-1beta (0.1 ng/ml). PA, PAI-1, and COX-2 mRNA was determined by RT-PCR and PG release and PA activity by RIA and colorimetric assay, respectively.We demonstrated an inhibition of urokinase-type PA activity and a 50% reduction of urokinase-type PA mRNA in HUVECs treated with IGFs. No effect was seen on PAI-1. Finally, both IGFs significantly decreased all PGs tested and COX-2 mRNA, whereas, as expected, IL-1beta had an opposite effect. In conclusion, our results suggest for IGFs a potential involvement in the endothelial dysfunction observed in preeclamptic fetoplacental unit.
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2004
Sandra Cecconi, Gianna Rossi, Marzia Barberi, Lucia Scaldaferri, Rita Canipari (2004)  Effect of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide on mouse preantral follicle development in vitro.   Endocrinology 145: 4. 2071-2079 Apr  
Abstract: Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a bioactive peptide isolated from ovine hypothalamus. It is transiently expressed in preovulatory follicles and positively affects several parameters correlated with the ovulatory process. It has also been shown to be expressed in the interstitial tissue around primordial and preantral follicles. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether PACAP influences preantral follicle growth and differentiation. Mouse preantral follicles were cultured for 5 d in the presence of FSH and increasing concentrations of PACAP or vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) (10(-12) to 10(-7) m). In the presence of FSH, follicles increased in diameter and formed an antrum. At the concentrations tested, neither PACAP alone nor VIP alone had any effect on follicle development, but the addition of either peptide to FSH-stimulated follicles caused a dose-dependent inhibition of follicle growth, antrum formation, granulosa cell proliferation, and estradiol production. The effect of PACAP on follicle growth and antrum formation was directly correlated with the length of stimulation and was reversible. Although exposure of follicles to 10(-7) m PACAP and VIP did not affect oocyte growth, it severely impaired completion of meiotic maturation in oocytes isolated from the follicles and cultured for 17 h in medium alone. The cyclic production of PACAP by preovulatory follicles during the estrous cycle in adult rats and its induction by LH in the rat and mouse ovary suggest that this peptide may play a role in the local regulation of preantral follicle growth.
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Sandra Cecconi, Gianna Rossi, Giovanni Coticchio, Guido Macchiarelli, Andrea Borini, Rita Canipari (2004)  Influence of thyroid hormone on mouse preantral follicle development in vitro.   Fertil Steril 81 Suppl 1: 919-924 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the role of 3,3',5-triiodothyronine (T(3)) on ovarian follicle development in vitro. DESIGN: Experimental study. SETTING: University reproductive biology unit. ANIMAL(S): CD1 mice (female). INTERVENTION(S): In vitro culture. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Assessment of follicle and oocyte development following a 6-day culture with FSH (100 mU/mL), (Bu)(2)cAMP (0.5 mM), and T(3) (1-100 nM), alone or in combination. RESULT(S): A high percentage of in vitro grown (IVG) FSH-stimulated follicles formed an antral cavity (AC), while the addition of T(3) (100 nM) significantly reduced this response in a statistically significant manner. A statistically significant recovery of AC formation was obtained by limiting exposure to 4 days of culture. Formation of AC was induced by (Bu)(2)cAMP, which prevented T(3)-mediated suppression of AC formation. Under different conditions, high proportions of germinal vesicle-arrested IVG oocytes displayed condensed chromatin configuration. The capacity to undergo germinal vesicle breakdown (GVBD) was similar in all groups, and a statistically significant reduction in the percentage of oocytes with PB1 was recorded when T(3) was added to FSH or (Bu)(2)cAMP. This ability was partially recovered by removing T(3) on day 4 of culture. CONCLUSION(S): Exposure to high T(3) concentrations can impair preantral follicle development, but this effect can be partly reverted by restoring a physiological hormonal milieu before follicle commitment to antral development.
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Sandra Cecconi, Carmen Ciccarelli, Marzia Barberi, Guido Macchiarelli, Rita Canipari (2004)  Granulosa cell-oocyte interactions.   Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol 115 Suppl 1: S19-S22 Jul  
Abstract: Throughout oogenesis the oocyte and follicle cells establish an intricate system of mutual interactions that ultimately lead to the acquisition of their respective competences. Paracrine factors released by both cell types are believed to stimulate formation of the primordial follicle and support the initial phases of follicle growth. At the same time, these processes are also dependent on gap junction communication between the germinal and somatic compartment. At later stages of follicle development, activities released by the oocyte induce the adjacent granulosa cells to express a specialized phenotype. In their turn, these cells crucially regulate the ability of the oocyte to progress through the meiotic process and acquire full developmental potential.
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2002
Rosanna Apa, Antonio Lanzone, Fiorella Miceli, Sergio Vaccari, Elisabetta Macchione, Mario Stefanini, Rita Canipari (2002)  Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide modulates plasminogen activator expression in rat granulosa cell.   Biol Reprod 66: 3. 830-835 Mar  
Abstract: Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a bioactive peptide isolated from ovine hypothalamus. It has been demonstrated to be transiently expressed in preovulatory follicles and to positively affect several parameters correlated with the ovulatory process. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether PACAP influences the plasminogen/plasmin system in rat ovary. Plasminogen activators (PAs) are serine proteases, modulated by gonadotropins and several peptides in preovulatory follicles, that appear to be involved in ovulation. Granulosa cells obtained from immature eCG-treated rats were cultured for 24 h in the presence of increasing concentrations of PACAP and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP). A significant, dose-dependent increase in tissue-type PA (tPA) activity and decrease in urokinase-type (uPA) PA activity were observed in PACAP-treated cells. These effects were exerted at the mRNA level. The use of cycloheximide, a protein synthesis inhibitor, suggested that PACAP requires an intermediary protein to decrease uPA-mRNA, but not to induce tPA-mRNA. However, no significant modulation of PAs was observed in the presence of VIP. When granulosa cells were stimulated within the intact follicle (i.e., maintaining the three-dimensional structure and in the presence of the theca cell layers), both PACAP and VIP dose-dependently stimulated tPA. These data suggest that, in addition to the PACAP type I receptor present on granulosa cells, different subtypes of PACAP receptors are present in the different ovarian compartments.
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2001
C D'Alessandris, R Canipari, M Di Giacomo, O Epifano, A Camaioni, G Siracusa, A Salustri (2001)  Control of mouse cumulus cell-oocyte complex integrity before and after ovulation: plasminogen activator synthesis and matrix degradation.   Endocrinology 142: 7. 3033-3040 Jul  
Abstract: During the preovulatory period, cumulus cells (CCs) form a hyaluronan-protein extracellular matrix (cumulus expansion) that positively influences oocyte fertilization. Degradation of this matrix and CC-oocyte complex (COC) dissociation occurs within a few hours of ovulation and parallels the aging of oocytes. Modulation of CC proteolytic activity by gonadotropins and oocyte soluble factors has been hypothesized to determine such cumulus matrix changes. In the present study, we investigated plasminogen activator (PA) synthesis by COCs during the expansion and disassembly processes. Our results show that the secretion of tissue type PA and urokinase type PA (uPA) by oocytes and CCs, respectively, does not change significantly during expansion but dramatically increases thereafter. Compact COCs were isolated from immature mice, primed 48 h earlier with 5 IU PMSGs, and were induced to expand in vitro with 100 ng/ml FSH in the presence of 1% FCS. Full expansion was achieved at 16 h, when hyaluronan synthesis ceased. Release of hyaluronan and CCs from the COC matrix began between 18 and 20 h of culture, which indicates that matrix degradation started at this time. PA activities in culture media were determined by SDS-PAGE, followed by a zymography at various time intervals between 4 and 32 h of culture. Secreted tissue type PA and uPA activity abruptly increased between 16 and 20 h after FSH stimulation. Slot blot hybridization of CC messenger RNA showed that uPA messenger RNA levels correlated with the increase in uPA activity. Similar temporal patterns of PA synthesis and matrix degradation were found in COCs induced to expand in vivo by injection of 5 IU human CG into PMSG-primed mice. Cultures of CCs, both in the presence and absence of oocytes, revealed that uPA synthesis is repressed in FSH-stimulated CCs by an oocyte-soluble factor for the first 16 h of culture, whereas CC responsiveness to this factor is lost thereafter. In conclusion, the data show that a sophisticated interplay between oocyte and CCs causes the two cell types to simultaneously secrete PA activity after ovulation. The fact that matrix degradation parallels PA production strongly supports the hypothesis that these enzymes may destabilize the expanded COC matrix.
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E Angelici, C Contini, M Spezzano, R Romani, P Carfagna, P Serra, R Canipari (2001)  Plasminogen activator production in a rat model of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia.   Microbiol Immunol 45: 8. 605-611  
Abstract: Several studies have indicated that the serine protease urokinase-plasminogen-activator (uPA) is an important factor in host defense against pulmonary pathogens. To gain a better insight into the role of uPA in Pneumocystis carinii (P. carinii) pneumonia (PCP), we evaluated PA production in alveolar macrophages (AMs) obtained from rats with steroid-induced PCP. Treatment with cortisone acetate favored PCP in 91% of rats. In the bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) samples of immunosuppressed rats both with and without PCP, we observed a decrease in uPA activity as well as a decrease in cell number. Urokinase-PA production by AMs was reduced in rats treated with cortisone alone. However, an increase in cell-associated uPA was observed in rats with PCP. This increase appears to be produced in response to P carinii infection. In fact, when AMs obtained from untreated healthy or immunosuppressed uninfected rats were challenged with P carinii, a significant increase in PA activity in cell lysates was observed, though a lower response was obtained in cortisone-treated animals. Our results suggest that healthy AMs respond to the presence of P carinii with an increase in uPA production and that this response in immunodepressed rat-AMs is partially impaired.
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2000
M BouchĂ©, R Canipari, R Melchionna, D Willems, M I Senni, M Molinaro (2000)  TGF-beta autocrine loop regulates cell growth and myogenic differentiation in human rhabdomyosarcoma cells.   FASEB J 14: 9. 1147-1158 Jun  
Abstract: Transforming growth factor beta (TGF) is a well-known inhibitor of myogenic differentiation as well as an autocrine product of rhabdomyosarcoma cells. We studied the role of the TGF-beta autocrine loop in regulating growth and myogenic differentiation in the human rhabdomyosarcoma cell line, RD. We previously reported that the phorbol ester 12-O-tetradecanoylphorbol-13-acetate (TPA) induces growth arrest and myogenic differentiation in these cells, which constitutively express muscle regulatory factors. We show that TPA inhibits the activation of secreted latent TGF-beta, thus decreasing the concentration of active TGF-beta to which the cells are exposed. This event is mediated by the TPA-induced alteration of the uPA/PAI serine-protease system. Complete removal of TGF-beta, mediated by the ectopic expression of a soluble type II TGF-beta receptor dominant negative cDNA, induces growth arrest, but does not trigger differentiation. In contrast, a reduction in the TGF-beta concentration, to a range of 0.14-0.20 x 10(-2) ng/ml (which is similar to that measured in TPA-treated cells), mimics TPA-induced differentiation. Taken together, these data demonstrate that cell growth and suppression of differentiation in rhabdomyosarcoma cells require overproduction of active TGF-beta; furthermore, they show that a 'critical' concentration of TGF-beta is necessary for myogenic differentiation to occur, whereas myogenesis is abolished below and above this concentration. By impairing the TGF-beta autocrine loop, TPA stabilizes the factor concentration within the range compatible for differentiation to occur. In contrast, in human primary muscle cells a much higher concentration of exogenous TGF-beta is required for the differentiation inhibitory effect and TPA inhibits differentiation in these cells probably through a TGF-beta independent mechanism. These data thus clarify the mechanism underlying the multiple roles of TGF-beta in the regulation of both the transformed and differentiated phenotype.
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R Canipari (2000)  Oocyte--granulosa cell interactions.   Hum Reprod Update 6: 3. 279-289 May/Jun  
Abstract: In the past, different protocols of ovulation induction, aimed to overcome problems of anovulatory infertility in humans, have been developed during IVF programmes. However, administration of exogenous hormones may cause severe health problems, e.g. ovarian hyperstimulation syndrome. To overcome this problem an attractive alternative is to develop in-vitro systems that allow follicle and oocyte growth and maturation. This paper reviews the current status of research on oocyte-granulosa cell interactions and on the autocrine and paracrine factors involved in follicle development. The ovarian follicle is a morphological and functional unit in which the somatic and germ cell components are intimately associated and interdependent. The co-ordinate development of follicle and oocyte leads to a number of modifications in the growing oocyte necessary for the acquisition of competence to mature correctly and to undergo fertilization and embryo development. The search for the optimal culture conditions and the correct balance of hormones necessary to obtain a fertilizable oocyte in vitro is extremely important for clinical and agricultural applications.
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S Cecconi, G Gualtieri, A Di Bartolomeo, G Troiani, M G Cifone, R Canipari (2000)  Evaluation of the effects of extremely low frequency electromagnetic fields on mammalian follicle development.   Hum Reprod 15: 11. 2319-2325 Nov  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of pulsed, extremely low-frequency electromagnetic fields (ELF-EMF) on in-vitro mouse pre-antral follicle development. Pre-antral follicles were cultured for 5 days and exposed to ELF-EMF at the frequencies of 33 or 50 Hz. ELF-EMF application did not affect follicular growth over a 3 day culture period, but on day 5 the growth of 33 Hz-exposed follicles was significantly reduced when compared with controls, while the 50 Hz-exposed follicles were not significantly affected. However, ELF-EMF severely impaired antrum formation at both frequencies, as 79 +/- 3% of control follicles developed antral cavities compared with 30 +/- 6% and 51.6 +/- 4% of 33 or 50 Hz-exposed follicles respectively. The follicles with failed antrum formation showed lower oestradiol release and granulosa cell DNA synthesis, but these effects were not related to granulosa cell apoptosis. Furthermore, a high percentage of the in-vitro grown oocytes obtained from exposed follicles had a reduced ability to resume meiotic maturation when compared with controls. These results suggest that ELF-EMF exposure might impair mammalian female reproductive potentiality by reducing the capacity of the follicles to reach a developmental stage that is an essential pre-requisite for reproductive success.
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E Macchione, O Epifano, M Stefanini, D Belin, R Canipari (2000)  Urokinase redistribution from the secreted to the cell-bound fraction in granulosa cells of rat preovulatory follicles.   Biol Reprod 62: 4. 895-903 Apr  
Abstract: Plasminogen activators (PAs) have been shown to be synthesized in ovarian follicles of several mammalian species, where they contribute to the ovulation process. The type of PA secreted by granulosa cells is species-specific. In fact, whereas in the rat, gonadotropins stimulate tissue-type PA (tPA) production, the same hormonal stimulation induces urokinase PA (uPA) secretion in mouse cells. To investigate in more detail the hormonal regulation of this system, we used the rat ovary as a model in which we analyzed the production of PAs by theca-interstitial (TI) and granulosa cells obtained from preovulatory follicles after gonadotropin stimulation. In untreated rats, uPA was the predominant enzyme in both TI and granulosa cells. After hormonal stimulation, an increase in uPA and tPA activity was observed in both cell types. Surprisingly, only tPA mRNA increased in a time-dependent manner in both cell types, while uPA mRNA increased only in TI cells and actually decreased in granulosa cells. These divergent results between uPA enzyme activity and mRNA levels in granulosa cells were explained by studying the localization of the enzyme. Analysis of granulosa cell lysates showed that after hormonal stimulation, 60-70% of the uPA behaved as a cell-associated protein, suggesting that uPA, already present in the follicle, accumulates on the granulosa cell surface through binding to specific uPA receptors. The redistribution of uPA in granulosa cells and the differing regulation of the two PAs by gonadotropins in the rat ovary suggest that the two enzymes might have different functions during the ovulation process. Moreover, the ability of antibodies anti-tPA and anti-uPA to significantly inhibit ovulation only when coinjected with hCG confirmed that the PA contribution to ovulation occurs at the initial steps.
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R Canipari, M Galdieri (2000)  Retinoid modulation of plasminogen activator production in rat Sertoli cells.   Biol Reprod 63: 2. 544-550 Aug  
Abstract: Tissue type (t) and urokinase type (u) plasminogen activators (PAs) have been shown to be secreted by Sertoli cells in the seminiferous tubules in a cyclic fashion and to be dependent upon FSH stimulation or upon the presence of adjacent spermatogenic cells. In the present study we have analyzed the production of PAs by retinoid-treated rat Sertoli cells. In addition, because retinoids modulate the response of Sertoli cells to FSH either potentiating or antagonizing its action, we have investigated a possible modulation of FSH-stimulated PA production. Under basal conditions, Sertoli cells, isolated from prepubertal rats, secrete predominantly uPA. A significant dose-dependent inhibition of uPA activity was observed after treatment with retinol, while no significant effect was detected upon tPA secretion. When Sertoli cells were cultured in the presence of 0.25 microM retinol, a significant inhibition of uPA activity was evident after 16 h of treatment and reached approximately 80% after 48 h of treatment. The analysis of the mRNA levels revealed that retinol induces an inhibition of the steady-state levels of uPA mRNA without affecting those of tPA. Moreover, retinol affected uPA mRNA levels by increasing mRNA turnover. The effect of retinoids on Sertoli cells isolated from older animals was less evident, possibly due to the reduced production of uPA with the increase of age of the donor animals. Our results on the effect of retinoids upon Sertoli cell uPA production reinforce the importance of retinoids in the control of postnatal testis development.
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1999
C Contini, E Angelici, R Canipari (1999)  Structural changes in rat Pneumocystis carinii surface antigens after terbinafine administration in experimental P. carinii pneumonia.   J Antimicrob Chemother 43: 2. 301-304 Feb  
Abstract: Terbinafine is a synthetic antifungal agent which has recently been found to be highly effective against Pneumocystis carinii. This study evaluated the efficacy of terbinafine on rat P. carinii antigenic profile and the immune response by Western blot analysis, in comparison with atovaquone and co-trimoxazole in rats with pneumocystosis. Terbinafine was shown to target two specific major antigens, particularly those of 116 and 35-40 kDa. Antibodies reactive against these moieties were found in all rats treated with atovaquone and co-trimoxazole, but not in those treated with terbinafine. These surface antigen modifications could be related to disease severity and could provide additional information for monitoring the efficacy of this treatment.
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1998
C Contini, E Fainardi, R Cultrera, R Canipari, F Peyron, S Delia, E Paolino, E Granieri (1998)  Advanced laboratory techniques for diagnosing Toxoplasma gondii encephalitis in AIDS patients: significance of intrathecal production and comparison with PCR and ECL-western blotting.   J Neuroimmunol 92: 1-2. 29-37 Dec  
Abstract: The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for detection of cerebral spinal fluid (CSF) Toxoplasma gondii DNA was combined with the study of intrathecal antibody synthesis by antibody specific index calculation (ASI) and the detection of specific oligoclonal IgG bands (OCB) by affinity mediated immunoblotting (AMI) in 11 AIDS patients with T. gondii encephalitis (TE) and in 20 control patients with or without neurological disorders. Enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) western-blot technique was employed to evaluate the antigenic specificity of CSF-IgG towards individual T. gondii antigens. PCR was positive in all TE patients which displayed brain-derived or blood-derived specific OCB, even when comparative ASI failed. Four TE patients had a unique anti-T. gondii OCB restricted to the CSF and a strong antibody response toward the 29 kDa band by ECL western blot. This response could be an important marker to discriminate TE from other opportunistic central nervous system (CNS) infections in the course of AIDS.
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1997
R Apa, A Lanzone, M Mastrandrea, F Miceli, E Macchione, A M Fulghesu, A Caruso, R Canipari (1997)  Effect of pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating peptide on meiotic maturation in follicle-enclosed, cumulus-enclosed, and denuded rat oocytes.   Biol Reprod 57: 5. 1074-1079 Nov  
Abstract: Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) is a novel bioactive peptide isolated from ovine hypothalamus. Recently, its presence and action have been demonstrated also in peripheral tissues such as testis and ovary. On the basis of sequence similarity, PACAP is included in the vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)/glucagon/secretin/growth hormone-releasing factor (GRF) family of neuropeptides. Because both VIP and GRF stimulate oocyte maturation in the rat ovary, we wanted to evaluate whether PACAP also could influence this process. Granulosa cells and follicle-enclosed, cumulus-enclosed, and denuded oocytes were obtained from immature eCG-treated rats. The addition of PACAP-38 significantly accelerated meiotic maturation in follicle- and cumulus-enclosed oocytes from treated rats and in follicle enclosed-oocytes from immature untreated rats, while VIP was effective only on follicle-enclosed oocytes. Interestingly, when used on denuded oocytes, PACAP was able to directly affect the meiotic process. In fact, the neuropeptide delayed oocyte maturation by maintaining elevated levels of intracellular cAMP. Our results clearly demonstrate an involvement of PACAP in oocyte meiotic maturation. Furthermore, for the first time, a direct effect of a peptide on the oocytes has been shown. Moreover, the differences in the action of PACAP and VIP on granulosa cells and oocytes suggest the presence of PACAP type I receptors on both cell types. Our results, along with the data demonstrating the presence of the peptide in the ovary, strongly suggest a potential relevance of PACAP in ovarian physiology.
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A Teti, A De Giorgi, M T Spinella, S Migliaccio, R Canipari, A Onetti Muda, T Faraggiana (1997)  Transforming growth factor-beta enhances adhesion of melanoma cells to the endothelium in vitro.   Int J Cancer 72: 6. 1013-1020 Sep  
Abstract: Melanoma invasion requires migration through the vascular barrier. An early event in this process is the adhesion of metastatic cells to the endothelium. To elucidate the role of TGF-beta in the regulation of this process, human melanoma SK-MEL24 cells were labelled with [5'-(3)H]-thymidine and co-cultured with bovine pulmonary artery endothelial-cell monolayers. Radioactivity was assumed to be proportional to the number of SK-MEL24 cells bound to the endothelium. A low number of melanoma cells adhered to endothelial cells in a time-related manner. Pretreatment for 24 hr with 0.001 to 10 ng/ml TGF-beta1 or TGF-beta2 of both cell types enhanced melanoma-endothelium adhesion in a dose-dependent manner. Both melanoma and endothelial cells expressed RI- and RII-type TGF-beta receptors. The effect of TGF-beta was abolished by co-incubation with the proteoglycan decorin. Conditioned media from melanoma-endothelium co-cultures contained latent TGF-beta and failed to affect cell-cell adhesion. However, activation of TGF-beta by heating the medium or reducing the pH, increased melanoma-endothelium adhesion to an extent similar to that of the TGF-beta administered to the cultures. Zimography demonstrated that both cell types expressed urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). Addition of plasminogen to the co-cultures, which was likely to be activated to plasmin by uPA, resulted in activation of TGF-beta and parallel stimulation of melanoma-endothelium adhesion. In conclusion, TGF-beta may enhance adhesion of melanoma cells to the endothelium, playing a relevant autocrine/paracrine role in the progression of invasive melanoma.
Notes:
1996
E Angelici, C Contini, R Romani, O Epifano, P Serra, R Canipari (1996)  Production of plasminogen activator and plasminogen activator inhibitors by alveolar macrophages in control subjects and AIDS patients.   AIDS 10: 3. 283-290 Mar  
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To reveal a possible impairment of the plasminogen activator system in the pulmonary infections of AIDS patients. DESIGN: To test the plasminogen activator system functionality in alveolar macrophages and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (BALF) in control subjects and AIDS patients. Procedures were designed to detect the presence of imbalance in plasminogen activator activity and to ascertain if this imbalance is due to a direct effect of the HIV virus on macrophages or to superimposed opportunistic infection. METHODS: Alveolar macrophages obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage (BAL) were either lysed with Triton X-100 or cultured for 24 h. Plasminogen activators and plasminogen activator inhibitors (PAI) were measured by chromogenic substrate assay and binding to 125I-urokinase followed by 10% sodium dodecyl-sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), respectively. RESULTS: Plasminogen activator activity in BALF and in alveolar macrophages from AIDS patients was decreased. This reduction was independent of the presence of an infectious pulmonary process. In contrast, free PAI was increased in AIDS patients with Pneumocystis carinii infection. This increase is possibly caused by a different glycosylated form of PAI-2. CONCLUSIONS: Our data support the view that the pulmonary fibrogenic response is in part secondary to an imbalance within the plasminogen activator system and provide the basis for clarifying the role of these alterations in the pathophysiology of AIDS-related pulmonary infections.
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M Pesce, R Canipari, G L Ferri, G Siracusa, M De Felici (1996)  Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) stimulates adenylate cyclase and promotes proliferation of mouse primordial germ cells.   Development 122: 1. 215-221 Jan  
Abstract: During migration and for about 2 days after their arrival in the gonadal ridges, primordial germ cells (the embryonic precursors of gametes of the adult animal) proliferate actively. Certain growth factors, such as stem cell factor and leukemia inhibitory factor, seem to be essential for survival, proliferation and possibly differentiation of mouse primordial germ cell in vivo and/or in vitro. Similarly, increase in intracellular cAMP is followed by a marked enhancement of primordial germ cell proliferation, at least in culture. In the present study, we show that pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptides (PACAP-27 and PACAP-38), two neuropeptides of the secretin-glucagon-vasoactive intestinal polypeptide-GH-releasing hormone family, stimulate in vitro proliferation of mouse primordial germ cells, bind to primordial germ cells and gonadal somatic cells (possibly to type I PACAP receptor) and activate adenylate cyclase in the same cells. Moreover, PACAP-like immunoreactivity was found in gonadal ridges, mostly on germ cell surface. In conclusion, evidence is provided that PGC proliferation can be stimulated by certain bioactive polypeptides, thus suggesting a novel regulatory role for such compounds in early gonad development.
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C Contini, D Colombo, R Cultrera, E Prini, T Sechi, E Angelici, R Canipari (1996)  Employment of terbinafine against Pneumocystis carinii infection in rat models.   Br J Dermatol 134 Suppl 46: 30-2; discussion 40 Jun  
Abstract: The anti-Pneumocystis carinii response of terbinafine together with that of three other compounds, trimethoprim sulphamethoxazole (TMP-SMX), atovaquone (ATQ) and albendazole (ALB), has been investigated in immunosuppressed Sprague-Dawley rats with established pneumocystosis. Drugs were administered orally (terbinafine in dosages of 40 and 80 mg/kg per day, TMP 12.5 mg/kg per day plus SMX 62.5 mg/kg per day, ATQ 100 mg/kg per day and ALB 600 mg/kg per day) to six rat groups except one which served as a control. P. carinii pneumonia (PCP) was identified post-mortem in nine (90%) of the control rats which exhibited a marked P. carinii burden, and mean lung weights were higher with respect to the other treatment groups. During treatment, five rats in the control group died, whereas between 11 and 13 rats in all treatment groups survived. In the terbinafine groups (40 mg and 80 mg/kg per day), a mild P. carinii infection developed in three and two rats (27.2 and 18%), respectively, and almost the same infectivity score was obtained for those treated with 40 mg and 80 mg/kg per day. Histological changes in the lungs in animals receiving terbinafine treatment were minimal. Among the remaining compounds the rate of infection was seven (58.3%) for the ALB treatment group and five (45.4%) for the ATQ group (mean score 19.4 +/- 7.1 and 23 +/- 2.1, respectively). In the TMP-SMX treatment group, there were 13 surviving rats and P. carinii organisms were found in two (15.3%, mean infection score 8 +/- 1.1).
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1995
R Canipari, O Epifano, G Siracusa, A Salustri (1995)  Mouse oocytes inhibit plasminogen activator production by ovarian cumulus and granulosa cells.   Dev Biol 167: 1. 371-378 Jan  
Abstract: Following the preovulatory surge of gonadotropins, the compact layer of cumulus cells in the antral follicle secretes a hyaluronic acid-enriched extracellular matrix and undergoes a morphological change referred to as cumulus expansion. It has been previously shown that a soluble factor(s) produced by the oocyte is required, in combination with FSH, to promote this process. Since such matrix is sensitive to proteases we have now studied the effect of the oocyte on another gonadotropin-controlled follicle cell function, i.e., the synthesis of plasminogen activator (PA). Our data indicate that isolated cumulus cells secrete uPA in the medium and that FSH or dbcAMP increases this production. The presence of the oocyte or the oocyte-conditioned medium greatly reduces uPA synthesis induced by FSH and dbcAMP in cumulus cells by modulating the abundance of its mRNA. The ability of the mouse oocyte to produce such a factor(s) is dependent upon its stage of development, with fully grown oocytes but not growing oocytes or two-cell embryos being able to inhibit uPA synthesis. A preliminary characterization of this factor suggests that it is a heat-unstable protein with an apparent molecular weight above 100 kDa. Thus, the mouse oocytes appear to promote preovulatory matrix accumulation that occurs just prior ovulation by modulating the gonadotropin action on both the synthesis and the degradation of specific matrix component.
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R Tolli, L Monaco, P Di Bonito, R Canipari (1995)  Hormonal regulation of urokinase- and tissue- type plasminogen activator in rat Sertoli cells.   Biol Reprod 53: 1. 193-200 Jul  
Abstract: Tissue type (t) and urokinase type (u) plasminogen activators (PA) have been shown to be secreted by Sertoli cells in the seminiferous tubules in a cyclic fashion and to be dependent upon hormonal stimulation or the presence of adjacent spermatogenic cells. Furthermore, in cultured Sertoli cells, tPA has been shown to respond to FSH induction whereas uPA appears to be nonresponsive to gonadotropins. In the present study we analyzed the production of PA by Sertoli cells and regulation of this production by FSH during puberty. Cultured Sertoli cells under basal conditions secreted predominantly uPA. This production was high in 10-day-old animals and gradually decreased in older animals. The treatment of cultures with FSH or dibutyl cAMP induced production of tPA by Sertoli cells but at the same time produced a decrease in uPA activity. Northern blot analysis revealed that the control of PA synthesis is at the steady-state level of their mRNAs. Moreover, the use of cycloheximide, a protein synthesis inhibitor, showed that while tPA stimulation did not require intermediary protein synthesis, the decrease in uPA production was dependent upon protein synthesis. The differences in PA production by Sertoli cells obtained after FSH stimulation could explain the cyclic production of the two enzymes during the spermatogenic cycle and reinforce the hypothesis that different roles are played by the two enzymes in the several events occurring in testis development.
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R Apa, A Lanzone, F Miceli, M Mastrandrea, E Macchione, A Caruso, S Mancuso, R Canipari (1995)  Growth hormone-releasing factor stimulates meiotic maturation in follicle- and cumulus-enclosed rat oocyte.   Mol Cell Endocrinol 112: 2. 195-201 Aug  
Abstract: This study was designed in order to assess the possible role of growth hormone-releasing factor (GRF) on oocyte maturation. This effect was analyzed in follicle-enclosed, cumulus-enclosed and denuded oocytes obtained from immature pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin-treated rats. The addition of GRF to the cultures significantly accelerated maturation in follicle- and cumulus-enclosed oocytes while no effect was seen on denuded oocytes. Also, the neuropeptide was able to induce maturation in follicle-enclosed oocytes obtained from immature untreated rats. The GRF action was probably not mediated by the vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP) receptors since the two hormones had different effects on oocyte maturation and on cAMP production by granulosa cells. In addition the disappearance of the GRF effect observed in the presence of antibodies anti-GH suggested that GRF required the intermediacy of GH to accomplish its effect on oocyte maturation. Finally, GRF did not affect meiotic maturation when dbcAMP was added to the cultures. Our results demonstrate the ability of GRF to accelerate maturation in oocytes from both primed and unprimed rats. Since the presence and the involvement of GRF at the ovarian levels is now well established, the present data strongly suggest an important potential role of GRF in the ovarian physiology.
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1994
R Apa, A Lanzone, F Miceli, A Caruso, S Mancuso, R Canipari (1994)  Growth hormone induction of rat granulosa cell tissue-plasminogen activator expression and progesterone synthesis.   Mol Cell Endocrinol 99: 2. 153-159 Mar  
Abstract: The plasminogen activator (PA) system is present in the ovary and appears to be involved both in follicular growth and ovulation. Similarly, the growth hormone (GH) has been demonstrated to positively affect some ovarian activities. Interestingly, GH appears not only as a mediator of gonadotropin effects, but also as having an independent action of its own on the ovary. In the present study we wanted to investigate if GH could affect ovarian plasminogen activator (PA) activity and steroidogenesis. Granulosa cells from immature rats, injected with pregnant mare serum gonadotropin (PMSG) for inducing follicular growth, were cultured for 24 h with increasing concentrations of GH. A significant dose-dependent increase in tPA activity was observed in the GH-treated cells. This effect was exerted at the mRNA level and the use of cycloheximide, a protein synthesis inhibitor, suggested that GH did not require any other intermediary protein for inducing tPA-mRNA. Furthermore, cAMP levels were not affected by GH treatment. Finally, GH was found to increase progesterone (P) synthesis by granulosa cells. The correlation between the PA system and ovulation and the importance of a normal steroidogenesis for the ovarian physiology claim for a key role of GH in the ovarian activities.
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O Epifano, M Riminucci, C Manna, R Apa, E Greco, A Lanzone, M Stefanini, R Canipari (1994)  In vitro production of plasminogen activator by human granulosa cells.   J Clin Endocrinol Metab 78: 1. 174-179 Jan  
Abstract: Plasminogen activator (PA) production by granulosa cells has been demonstrated in several species. In the human ovary, tissue-type PA and urokinase-type PA antigens have been found in the follicular fluids, but neither PA activity nor mRNA for both enzymes was found in granulosa cells of preovulatory follicles. All of these studies were performed on granulosa cells collected from follicles immediately before ovulation, when the cells were already in the luteal phase. In the attempt to better characterize the PA/plasminogen system in the human ovary, we examined PA and PA inhibitor (PAI) production in cultures of granulosa cells obtained from normally cycling untreated women at different stages of the cycle. In addition, we analyzed granulosa-luteal cells obtained from hormonally stimulated women undergoing gamete intrafallopian tube transfer, as a model of late phase follicular development. Zymographic analysis as well as immunoprecipitation with specific antisera revealed that granulosa cells from follicles at early phases of antral stages secreted high levels of PA of the urokinase type in the medium. No free tissue-type PA activity was found in any of the examined samples. On the contrary, free PAI was undetectable in medium obtained from granulosa cell cultures, and it was abundant in granulosa-luteal cell cultures, where it was found in two forms. These data show that in the human ovary as in that of the rat, PAs and PAIs are tightly time regulated. The timing of PA production in human granulosa cells suggests a role for PA activity at early stages of follicular maturation.
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R Apa, A Lanzone, F Miceli, M Mastrandrea, A Caruso, S Mancuso, R Canipari (1994)  Growth hormone induces in vitro maturation of follicle- and cumulus-enclosed rat oocytes.   Mol Cell Endocrinol 106: 1-2. 207-212 Dec  
Abstract: The aim of this study was to assess the possible role of growth hormone (GH) on rat oocyte maturation. This effect was analyzed in follicle-enclosed, cumulus-enclosed and denuded oocytes obtained from immature pregnant mare's serum gonadotropin (PMSG)-treated rats. The addition of GH to the cultures significantly accelerated maturation in both follicle- and cumulus-enclosed oocytes while no effect was seen on denuded oocytes maturation. Also, GH accelerated meiotic maturation in follicle-enclosed oocytes from immature untreated rats. The GH action was not mediated by lactogenic receptors since prolactin (Prl) did not affect the maturation process while it was mediated by insulin growth factor-I (IGF-I) as suggested by the block of GH action observed in the presence of antibodies anti-IGF-I. Finally, no GH effect was found when dbcAMP was added to the cultures. Our results demonstrate that GH is capable of inducing maturation in oocytes from both primed and unprimed rats. Since the presence of physiological levels of GH in the ovary is now well established, the present data strongly suggest a potential relevance of GH in the reproductive biology.
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1992
E Sieh, M L Coluzzi, M G Cusella De Angelis, A Mezzogiorno, M Floridia, R Canipari, G Cossu, S Vella (1992)  The effects of AZT and DDI on pre- and postimplantation mammalian embryos: an in vivo and in vitro study.   AIDS Res Hum Retroviruses 8: 5. 639-649 May  
Abstract: This study reports the effects of the nucleoside analogs dideoxyinosine (DDI) and 3'-azido-3'-deoxythymidine (AZT) on mammalian embryonic development. When administered to pregnant mice (at concentrations ranging from 10 to 300 mg/kg/day), through all or part of gestation, AZT and DDI did not result in any visible effect on mouse embryos nor did they cause any obvious malformation or defect at birth or during postnatal growth. Similarly, when embryonic or fetal mouse or human cells (from brain, limb buds, or different organ rudiments) were exposed to AZT or DDI in vitro, cytotoxicity was observed only in the mM range, with AZT showing slightly higher cytotoxicity and brain cells appearing slightly more sensitive to both nucleosides. However, even in cultures treated with very high concentrations of AZT or DDI, the reduction in the number of terminally differentiated skeletal myotubes, cardiocytes, neurons, and chondrocytes was similar to the reduction in the total number of cells, indicating that AZT and DDI did not selectively inhibit differentiation of any of the above-mentioned cell types. Finally, preimplantation mouse embryos (at the 2-cell or 4-cell stage), treated in vitro with micromolar concentrations of AZT, were arrested at the 4-cell stage. DDI or other nucleoside analogs tested did not have this effect.
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R Canipari, C Zurzolo, C Polistina, C Garbi, L Aloj, G Calì, R Gentile, L Nitsch (1992)  Polarized secretion of plasminogen activators by epithelial cell monolayers.   Biochim Biophys Acta 1175: 1. 1-6 Dec  
Abstract: We have investigated the synthesis and the polarized secretion of plasminogen activators (PAs) in three epithelial cell lines (FRT, derived from rat thyroid; MDCK, from canine kidney, and CaCo-2, from human intestine) grown on filters, in bicameral systems. Confluency and acquisition of functional polarity were assessed by measuring transepithelial resistance and by showing polarized secretion of endogenous proteins. By zymography, before and after immunoprecipitation with specific antibodies, we found that FRT cells synthesized tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) and that tPA activity was mostly confined to the apical cell compartment. MDCK and CaCo-2 cells, instead, synthesized urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA). In MDCK cells the uPA activity was found predominantly in the apical cell compartment while in CaCo-2 cells it was mostly basolateral.
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1991
C Manna, O Epifano, M Riminucci, L Baschieri, M Stefanini, R Canipari (1991)  In vitro production of estradiol by ovarian granulosa cells in a case of McCune-Albright syndrome.   J Endocrinol Invest 14: 4. 311-315 Apr  
Abstract: A 14-year-old girl presented with classic McCune-Albright syndrome. She underwent the ablation of several cysts during a laparotomy performed on the basis of persistent and intense pelvic pain and recurrent episodes of menometrorrhagia not responsive to pharmacologic therapy. Granulosa cells obtained from an isolated follicle and a cyst were cultured and estradiol (E2) secreted in the culture medium measured. Granulosa cells, obtained from the follicle, produced much higher levels of estradiol compared to those of cells coming both from follicles of equivalent size and preovulatory follicles of normal patients. Secretion of E2 by granulosa cells from the cyst was comparable to that of normal preovulatory follicles. We conclude that in this patient, ovaries are hyperfunctioning in terms of E2 production. This high production of estradiol and the fact that several cysts were found in the ovaries can justify the high levels of estradiol found in the serum of this patient at the moment of the operation.
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S Dolci, M V Bertolani, R Canipari, M De Felici (1991)  Involvement of carbohydrates in the hardening of the zona pellucida of mouse oocytes.   Cell Biol Int Rep 15: 7. 571-579 Jul  
Abstract: The effect of lectins with different saccharide specificity (ConA, LCA, DBA, WGA and PNA) on enzymatic digestion of the zona pellucida (ZP) of mouse oocytes was studied. All lectins tested, except PNA, induced ZP hardening with different degrees of efficiency. Moreover, extensive ZP digestion with mixed exoglycosidase prevented "spontaneous" ZP hardening. These observations suggest that changes of the carbohydrate moieties can be involved in the hardening of the zona pellucida of mouse oocytes.
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1989
C Boitani, D Farini, R Canipari, C W Bardin (1989)  Estradiol and plasminogen activator secretion by cultured rat Sertoli cells in response to melanocyte-stimulating hormones.   J Androl 10: 3. 202-209 May/Jun  
Abstract: Pro-opiomelanocortin-derived peptides, alpha-MSH and beta-endorphin, are synthesized and secreted by Leydig cells, and are believed to have paracrine effects on Sertoli cells in the testis. Peptides with MSH activity stimulate adenylate cyclase and cAMP accumulation in Sertoli cell-enriched cultures. The purpose of the present study was to determine whether such peptides would affect Sertoli cell parameters, such as aromatase and plasminogen activator activities, that are known to be regulated by cAMP. alpha-MSH stimulated aromatase activity in Sertoli cell-enriched cultures prepared from 10-day-old rats and this effect was potentiated by methyl isobutylxanthine (MIX). The combination of alpha-MSH plus MIX was not as potent as FSH. alpha-MSH, des-acetyl-alpha-MSH, beta-MSH, ACTH(1-13), and ACTH(1-24) stimulated aromatase activity to a similar extent, suggesting that Sertoli cells do not distinguish between the activities of these peptides. alpha-MSH potentiated the action of dbcAMP and forskolin on Sertoli cell aromatase, but unexpectedly had no effect on the action of either half-maximal or maximal doses of FSH. The regulation of plasminogen activator was examined next; urokinase was markedly suppressed by FSH in 10-day-old Sertoli cells. Although neither alpha-MSH nor MIX alone had an effect on urokinase secretion, in combination they were as effective as FSH. In 10-day-old Sertoli cells each of these peptides had little or no effect on tissue plasminogen activator.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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1988
R Canipari, A Bevilacqua, R Colonna, M De Felici, F Mangia (1988)  Actin synthesis is not regulated by granulosa cells in mouse growing and preovulatory oocytes.   Gamete Res 20: 2. 115-124 Jun  
Abstract: The synthesis and intracellular distribution of actin were studied in isolated dictyate and metaphase II mouse oocytes by 1) sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of newly synthetized oocyte protein and 2) cytochemical F-actin labeling by fluorescent phalloidin. Unpermeabilized, fully grown oocytes bound phalloidin intensely at the level of the zona pellucida (ZP), such ZP-associated actin representing a significant portion of total actin found in these cells. In contrast, phalloidin binding to ZP was very low in growing oocytes and was undetectable in ovulated, metaphase II eggs. When ZP-associated actin of fully grown oocytes was removed by prolongedly exposing oocytes to alpha-chymotrypsin, the amount of newly synthesized actin displayed by cumulus-enclosed oocytes was reduced to a level comparable to that shown by oocytes isolated from granulosa cells. We demonstrate that ZP-associated actin belongs to granulosa cell processes that remain within the ZP as a consequence of oocyte isolation procedures. We conclude that actin synthesis of mouse oocytes is not regulated by granulosa cells.
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1987
M L O'Connell, R Canipari, S Strickland (1987)  Hormonal regulation of tissue plasminogen activator secretion and mRNA levels in rat granulosa cells.   J Biol Chem 262: 5. 2339-2344 Feb  
Abstract: Granulosa cells from immature rats produce tissue plasminogen activator (tPA) in response to follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) or luteinizing hormone (LH) both in vitro and in vivo. We have used the in vitro system to investigate the level at which the hormonal induction of tPA is regulated. Within 12 h following FSH addition, a dramatic but transient increase in tPA secretion occurs for by 24 h secretion returns to basal levels. This pattern of enzyme induction is similar with LH, but the onset of the increase is delayed. When steady-state tPA mRNA levels are examined after hormone treatment, the results mirror those obtained if one measures enzyme activity; a large increase in tPA mRNA followed by a decrease to basal levels is observed with both hormones, and the lag in induction by LH is also apparent. These results demonstrate that the regulation of tPA activity by gonadotropins occurs at the level of the steady-state concentration of the mRNA. In the presence of cycloheximide, the induction of tPA mRNA by FSH or LH is not greatly affected, indicating that this phase of the response to gonadotropins does not require the synthesis of new protein. However, the decrease in tPA mRNA levels observed 24 h after FSH treatment is affected by cycloheximide, in that the drug delays the reduction in mRNA levels seen with hormone alone.
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R Canipari, M L O'Connell, G Meyer, S Strickland (1987)  Mouse ovarian granulosa cells produce urokinase-type plasminogen activator, whereas the corresponding rat cells produce tissue-type plasminogen activator.   J Cell Biol 105: 2. 977-981 Aug  
Abstract: It is well established that rat ovarian granulosa cells produce tissue plasminogen activator (tPA). The synthesis and secretion of the enzyme are induced by gonadotropins, and correlate well with the time of follicular rupture in vivo. We have found that in contrast, mouse granulosa cells produce a different form of plasminogen activator, the urokinase-type (uPA). As with tPA synthesis in the rat, uPA production by mouse granulosa cells is induced by gonadotropins, dibutyryl cAMP, and prostaglandin E2. However, dexamethasone, a drug which has no effect on tPA synthesis in rat cells inhibits uPA synthesis in the mouse. Results of these determinations made in cell culture were corroborated by examining follicular fluid, which is secreted in vivo predominantly by granulosa cells, from stimulated rat and mouse ovarian follicles. Rat follicular fluid contained only tPA, and mouse follicular fluid only uPA, indicating that in vivo, granulosa cells from the two species are secreting different enzymes. The difference in the type of plasminogen activator produced by the rat and mouse granulosa cells was confirmed at the messenger RNA level. After hormone stimulation, only tPA mRNA was present in rat cells, whereas only uPA mRNA was found in mouse cells. Furthermore, the regulation of uPA levels in mouse cells occurs via transient modulation of steady-state levels of mRNA, a pattern similar to that seen with tPA in rat cells.
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1986
R Canipari, S Strickland (1986)  Studies on the hormonal regulation of plasminogen activator production in the rat ovary.   Endocrinology 118: 4. 1652-1659 Apr  
Abstract: When granulosa cells are prepared from rats primed with PMSG, it is possible to induce plasminogen activator (PA) production in vitro with a variety of hormones. We have compared the effects of the gonadotropins FSH and LH on granulosa cells in culture. Although both hormones can induce enzyme secretion, the time courses of their effects are different. Whereas FSH yields a linear increase in PA production starting 2 h after the time of hormone addition, the effect of LH shows a longer lag phase, but it eventually reaches the same degree of stimulation as FSH. Experiments with an inhibitor of prostaglandin (PG) synthesis, indomethacin, and with PGs suggest the following interpretation. Granulosa cells that can produce PA can be directly stimulated by FSH, but only a small fraction of these cells can be induced by LH. However, the population that is responsive to LH begins to produce PGs after hormone treatment, and the PGs can then stimulate the entire population. Cumulus cells, which have few LH receptors, can be induced by FSH and PGs, but not LH. Experiments involving treatment of rats with indomethacin in vivo or treatment of follicles in vitro demonstrate that this compound can suppress PA secretion in the ovary, which may partially explain its ability to inhibit ovulation.
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1985
R Canipari, S Strickland (1985)  Plasminogen activator in the rat ovary. Production and gonadotropin regulation of the enzyme in granulosa and thecal cells.   J Biol Chem 260: 8. 5121-5125 Apr  
Abstract: The production of plasminogen activator by ovarian granulosa cells has been previously reported to be temporally correlated with ovulation in the rat and to be under hormonal control of gonadotropins. We have examined the type of plasminogen activator produced by granulosa cells and also investigated other ovarian cell types for synthesis of this enzyme. Using antibodies specific for tissue-type or urokinase-type plasminogen activator, we have found that granulosa cells produce exclusively the tissue-type enzyme. However, in cultures of whole follicles isolated from the ovary, there is primarily synthesis of urokinase-type plasminogen activator. Examination of other isolated ovarian cell types has demonstrated that thecal cells secrete the urokinase-type plasminogen activator and that the production of this enzyme is also regulated by gonadotropins and temporally correlated with ovulation. These results suggest that ovulation requires both types of plasminogen activator and that the neighboring granulosa and thecal cells cooperate to ensure rupture of the follicle wall and unimpeded passage of the ovum into the oviduct.
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1984
R Canipari, F Palombi, M Riminucci, F Mangia (1984)  Early programming of maturation competence in mouse oogenesis.   Dev Biol 102: 2. 519-524 Apr  
Abstract: Growing mouse oocytes incompetent to mature were freed of attached granulosa cells at different stages of growth, and cultured in vitro in the presence of fibroblast monolayers and/or their products. In these culture conditions, although growth was arrested, isolated oocytes survived in vitro for several days, and finally resumed meiosis spontaneously, progressing up to metaphase I. The culture time length needed for in vitro acquisition of the capacity to mature was inversely related to the initial oocyte size at the time of isolation from granulosa cells, and closely corresponded to developmental timing of acquisition of such ability in vivo. We conclude that the acquisition of mouse oocyte competence to mature follows a definite time program, which is independent of the presence of granulosa cells and of heterologous cell contacts, at least within the developmental stages studied.
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1979
R Canipari, A Pietrolucci, F Mangia (1979)  Increase of total protein synthesis during mouse oocyte growth.   J Reprod Fertil 57: 2. 405-413 Nov  
Abstract: Quantitative changes of mouse oocyte protein synthesis during oogenesis have been studied by determining the rate of leucine incorporation into total cell protein. The leucine intracellular poor was artificially expanded by exposing the isolated oocytes to different concentrations of radiolabelled leucine, and leucine incorporation was followed as a function of the time. Protein synthesis by mouse oocytes increases linearly with the increase of the cell volume, and such increase is constant throughout the entire period of oocyte growth.
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