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Institution

University of Milan

EducationMilan, Italy
About: University of Milan is a education organization based out in Milan, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Medicine. The organization has 58413 authors who have published 139784 publications receiving 4636354 citations. The organization is also known as: Università degli Studi di Milano & Statale.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that the NO/cGMP-dependent mitochondrial biogenesis is associated with enhanced coupled respiration and content of ATP in U937, L6, and PC12 cells, and that this stimulation isassociated with increased mitochondrial function, resulting in enhanced formation of ATP.
Abstract: We recently found that long-term exposure to nitric oxide (NO) triggers mitochondrial biogenesis in mammalian cells and tissues by activation of guanylate cyclase and generation of cGMP. Here, we report that the NO/cGMP-dependent mitochondrial biogenesis is associated with enhanced coupled respiration and content of ATP in U937, L6, and PC12 cells. The observed increase in ATP content depended entirely on oxidative phosphorylation, because ATP formation by glycolysis was unchanged. Brain, kidney, liver, heart, and gastrocnemius muscle from endothelial NO synthase null mutant mice displayed markedly reduced mitochondrial content associated with significantly lower oxygen consumption and ATP content. In these tissues, ultrastructural analyses revealed significantly smaller mitochondria. Furthermore, a significant reduction in the number of mitochondria was observed in the subsarcolemmal region of the gastrocnemius muscle. We conclude that NO/cGMP stimulates mitochondrial biogenesis, both in vitro and in vivo, and that this stimulation is associated with increased mitochondrial function, resulting in enhanced formation of ATP.

486 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review focus on COVID‐19 cardiac and arrhythmic manifestations and makes an appraisal of other virus epidemics as SARS‐CoV, Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, and H1N1 influenza.
Abstract: In December 2019, the world started to face a new pandemic situation, the severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Although coronavirus disease (COVID-19) clinical manifestations are mainly respiratory, major cardiac complications are being reported. Cardiac manifestations etiology seems to be multifactorial, comprising direct viral myocardial damage, hypoxia, hypotension, enhanced inflammatory status, ACE2-receptors downregulation, drug toxicity, endogenous catecholamine adrenergic status, among others. Studies evaluating patients with COVID-19 presenting cardiac injury markers show that it is associated with poorer outcomes, and arrhythmic events are not uncommon. Besides, drugs currently used to treat the COVID-19 are known to prolong the QT interval and can have a proarrhythmic propensity. This review focus on COVID-19 cardiac and arrhythmic manifestations and, in parallel, makes an appraisal of other virus epidemics as SARS-CoV, Middle East respiratory syndrome coronavirus, and H1N1 influenza.

485 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: These findings show the limited predictive power of these theoretical methods to describe the electronic structure of reduced titania in the absence of accurate experimental data.
Abstract: The removal of lattice O atoms, as well as the addition of interstitial H atoms, in TiO(2) is known to cause the reduction in the material and the formation of "Ti(3+)" ions. By means of electronic structure calculations we have studied the nature of such oxygen vacancy and hydrogen impurity states in the bulk of the anatase polymorph of TiO(2). The spin polarized nature of these centers, the localized or delocalized character of the extra electrons, the presence of defect-induced states in the gap, and the polaronic distortion around the defect have been investigated with different theoretical methods: standard density functional theory (DFT) in the generalized-gradient approximation (GGA), GGA+U methods as a function of the U parameter, and two hybrid functionals with different admixtures of Hartree-Fock exchange. The results are found to be strongly dependent on the method used. Only GGA+U or hybrid functionals are able to reproduce the presence of states at about 1 eV below the conduction band, which are experimentally observed in reduced titania. The corresponding electronic states are localized on Ti 3d levels, but partly delocalized solutions are very close in energy. These findings show the limited predictive power of these theoretical methods to describe the electronic structure of reduced titania in the absence of accurate experimental data.

485 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Evidence is provided for a major early onset FAD locus on the long arm of chromosome 14 near the markers D14S43 and D 14S53 and it is suggested that the inheritance of FAD may be more complex than had initially been suspected.
Abstract: Familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) has been shown to be genetically heterogeneous, with a very small proportion of early onset pedigrees being associated with mutations in the amyloid precursor protein (APP) gene on chromosome 21, and some late onset pedigrees showing associations with markers on chromosome 19. We now provide evidence for a major early onset FAD locus on the long arm of chromosome 14 near the markers D14S43 and D14S53 (multipoint lod score z = 23.4) and suggest that the inheritance of FAD may be more complex than had initially been suspected.

485 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review summarizes the results of 20 studies investigating the issue of barriers to optimal highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) adherence and found inconsistent findings regarding the relationship of adherence.
Abstract: Knowledge of factors associated with medication adherence could help HIV clinicians to target persons in need of intervention, design these interventions, and help researchers to plan studies of adherence. This review summarizes the results of 20 studies investigating the issue of barriers to optimal highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) adherence. Only a few determinants were consistently associated with nonadherence. Symptoms and adverse drug effects, psychologic distress, lack of social or family support, complexity of the HAART regimen, low patient self-efficacy, and inconvenience of treatment were the factors most consistently associated with nonadherence. There were inconsistent findings regarding the relationship of adherence and the following variables: sociodemographic characteristics, substance abuse, depressive symptoms, quality of life, CD4+ cell count, knowledge and beliefs about treatment, patients' satisfaction with health care, and patient-provider relationship. A synthesis of findings relating various factors to adherence to HAART is difficult to reach because of several limitations of the existing body of research. These limitations concern the measurement of adherence, the assessment of correlates and predictors of adherence, the study population, and the study design.

485 citations


Authors

Showing all 58902 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Yi Cui2201015199725
Peter J. Barnes1941530166618
Thomas C. Südhof191653118007
Charles A. Dinarello1901058139668
Alberto Mantovani1831397163826
John J.V. McMurray1781389184502
Giuseppe Remuzzi1721226160440
Russel J. Reiter1691646121010
Jean Louis Vincent1611667163721
Tobin J. Marks1591621111604
Tomas Hökfelt158103395979
José Baselga156707122498
Naveed Sattar1551326116368
Silvia Franceschi1551340112504
Frederik Barkhof1541449104982
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023240
2022777
20219,390
20209,000
20197,475
20186,804