Chiara La Morgia

Chiara La Morgia
  • MD, PhD
  • Researcher at University of Bologna

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228
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8,314
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Current institution
University of Bologna
Current position
  • Researcher

Publications

Publications (228)
Preprint
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Mitochondrial disease encompasses inherited disorders affecting mitochondrial function. A severe and untreatable form of mitochondrial disease is Leigh syndrome (LS) causing psychomotor regression and metabolic crises. To accelerate drug discovery for LS, we screened a library of 5,632 repurposable compounds in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-...
Article
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Background and objectives: The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) genes MT-ATP6 and MT-ATP8 encode for subunits α and 8 (A6L) of the adenosine triphosphate synthase complex. Pathogenetic variants in MT-ATP6/8 cause incurable mitochondrial syndromes encompassing a wide spectrum of clinical features including ataxia, motor and language developmental delay, d...
Article
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We report on a sporadic patient suffering Leigh syndrome characterized by bilateral lesions in the lenticular nuclei and spastic dystonia, intellectual disability, sensorineural deafness, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, exercise intolerance, and retinitis pigmentosa. Complete sequencing of mitochondrial DNA revealed the heteroplasmic nucleotide change...
Article
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Background Current evidence on non‐pharmacological treatments in Dementia with Lewy Bodies (DLB) are relatively few and limited by small sample sizes. The goal of this pilot study was to test the efficacy of a new multimodal treatment that combines Tele‐Neurorehabilitation and “Bright Light” Therapy (BLT) in a sample of DLB patients. Method Eighte...
Chapter
Optic nerve and retinal involvement are a frequent finding in many neurodegenerative disorders. Optic atrophy can be severe and diffuse or sectorial and can be associated with visual complaints and reduction of visual acuity. We here report the main optical coherence tomography (OCT) findings in rare neurological syndromes for which OCT data are av...
Article
Importance Limited studies have assessed the long-term benefit/risk of gene therapy for Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). Objective To determine the safety and efficacy of lenadogene nolparvovec in patients with LHON due to the MT-ND4 gene variant for up to 5 years after administration. Design, Setting, and Participants The RESCUE and REV...
Article
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Leber’s Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) is a maternally inherited optic nerve disease primarily caused by mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). The peak of onset is typically between 15 and 30 years, but variability exists. Misdiagnosis, often as inflammatory optic neuritis, delays treatment, compounded by challenges in timely genetic diagnosi...
Article
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Background: This work aimed to study the Village Test (VT) in a group of patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and compare the results with those of a group of patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and controls. Methods: A total of 50 patients with AD, 28 patients with MCI, and 38 controls were evaluated. All participants underwent the VT...
Article
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Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a mitochondrial disease characterized by visual loss, and rarely associated with extraocular manifestations including multiple sclerosis‐like lesions. The association of LHON and neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders has rarely been reported. Here is reported a case of glial fibrillary acidic protein...
Article
Autosomal recessive pathogenetic variants in the DGUOK gene cause deficiency of deoxyguanosine kinase activity and mitochondrial deoxynucleotides pool imbalance, consequently, leading to quantitative and/or qualitative impairment of mitochondrial DNA synthesis. Typically, patients present early-onset liver failure with or without neurological invol...
Article
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Leigh syndrome spectrum (LSS) is a primary mitochondrial disorder defined neuropathologically by a subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy and characterized by bilateral basal ganglia and/or brainstem lesions. LSS is associated with variants in several mitochondrial DNA genes and more than 100 nuclear genes, most often related to mitochondrial com...
Article
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The endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT) machinery is essential for membrane remodeling and autophagy and it comprises three multi-subunit complexes (ESCRT I-III). We report nine individuals from six families presenting with a spectrum of neurodevelopmental/neurodegenerative features caused by bi-allelic variants in SNF8 (GenBan...
Article
Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a mitochondrial disease leading to rapid and severe bilateral vision loss. Idebenone has been shown to be effective in stabilizing and restoring vision in patients treated within 1 year of onset of vision loss. The open-label, international, multicenter, natural history-controlled LEROS study (ClinicalTri...
Article
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Idebenone is the only approved treatment for Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). It promotes recovery of visual function in up to 50% of patients, but, based on the current knowledge, we can neither predict nor understand the non‐responders. Idebenone is reduced by the cytosolic NAD(P)H oxidoreductase I (NQO1) and directly shuttles electron...
Article
Aims/Purpose: To study the optic nerve head (ONH) dimension in symptomatic and asymptomatic patients with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) and to correlate ONH parameters with genotype and clinical phenotype. Methods: Seventy‐eight affected patients, 175 asymptomatic carriers, and 29 age‐matched healthy controls were enrolled in the study....
Article
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Idebenone, the only approved treatment for Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), promotes recovery of visual function in up to 50% of patients, but we can neither predict nor understand the non-responders. Idebenone is reduced by the cytosolic NAD(P)H oxidoreductase I (NQO1) and directly shuttles electrons to respiratory complex III, bypassing...
Article
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The evaluation of pupillary light reflex (PLR) by chromatic pupillometry may provide a unique insight into specific photoreceptor functions. Chromatic pupillometry refers to evaluating PLR to different wavelengths and intensities of light in order to differentiate outer/inner retinal photoreceptor contributions to the PLR. Different protocols have...
Article
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Purpose Ferredoxin reductase (FDXR) is a flavoprotein that functions in both iron sulfur cluster biogenesis and steroid biosynthesis pathways in the mitochondria. Not surprisingly, loss of FDXR function causes severe mitochondrial diseases in humans. Although several FDXR-related mitochondriopathy (FRM) cohorts have been reported in the literature,...
Article
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Background Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a mitochondrial disorder characterised by complex I defect leading to sudden degeneration of retinal ganglion cells. Although typically associated with pathogenic variants in mitochondrial DNA, LHON was recently described in patients carrying biallelic variants in nuclear genes DNAJC30 , NDUF...
Article
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Objective: In Alzheimer's disease (AD), the presence of circadian dysfunction is well-known and may occur early in the disease course. The melanopsin retinal ganglion cell (mRGC) system may play a relevant role in contributing to circadian dysfunction. In this study, we aimed at evaluating, through a multimodal approach, the mRGC system in AD at a...
Article
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Optic neuritis (ON) often occurs at the presentation of multiple sclerosis (MS), neuromyelitis optica spectrum disorders (NMOSD), and myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody-associated disease (MOGAD). The recommended treatment of high-dose corticosteroids for ON is based on a North American study population, which did not address treatm...
Chapter
Mitochondrial optic neuropathies have a leading role in the field of mitochondrial medicine ever since 1988, when the first mutation in mitochondrial DNA was associated with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). Autosomal dominant optic atrophy (DOA) was subsequently associated in 2000 with mutations in the nuclear DNA affecting the OPA1 gene...
Article
Mitochondrial diseases are caused by both nuclear DNA (nDNA) and mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations and are characterized by heterogeneous clinical presentations due to the potential affection of each organ of the body, in particular those with high energy requirements. The most common clinical presentations of mitochondrial defects are mitochondr...
Article
Parkinson's disease (PD) is a neurogenerative disorder characterized by sleep and circadian dysfunction. Melanopsin retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs) are intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells mainly contributing to circadian photoentrainment by projecting to the suprachiasmatic nucleus of the hypothalamus. They also regulate pupillary li...
Article
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Background Myoclonus, Epilepsy and Ragged-Red-Fibers (MERRF) is a mitochondrial encephalomyopathy due to heteroplasmic mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) most frequently affecting the tRNA Lys gene at position m.8344A > G. Defective tRNA Lys severely impairs mitochondrial protein synthesis and respiratory chain when a high percentage of mutant...
Article
Purpose: To investigate the clinical and molecular genetic features of childhood-onset Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) to gain a better understanding of the factors influencing the visual outcome in this atypical form of the disease. Design: Retrospective cohort study. Methods: We retrospectively included two cohorts of LHON patients...
Article
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IntroductionLenadogene nolparvovec is a promising novel gene therapy for patients with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) carrying the m.11778G>A ND4 mutation (MT-ND4). A previous pooled analysis of phase 3 studies showed an improvement in visual acuity of patients injected with lenadogene nolparvovec compared to natural history. Here, we rep...
Article
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The in vivo role for RNase H1 in mammalian mitochondria has been much debated. Loss of RNase H1 is embryonic lethal and to further study its role in mtDNA expression we characterized a conditional knockout of Rnaseh1 in mouse heart. We report that RNase H1 is essential for processing of RNA primers to allow site-specific initiation of mtDNA replica...
Article
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Background and Objectives To date, approximately 20 heterozygous mainly loss-of-function variants in KCND3 have been associated with spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) type 19 and 22, a clinically heterogeneous group of neurodegenerative disorders. We aimed at reporting the second patients with the V374A KCND3 mutation from an independent family, confirm...
Article
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Background: Parkinsonian features have been described in patients harboring variants in nuclear genes encoding for proteins involved in mitochondrial DNA maintenance, such as TWNK. Objectives: The aim was to screen for TWNK variants in an Italian cohort of Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients and to assess the occurrence of parkinsonism in patients p...
Article
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Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), a disease associated with a mitochondrial DNA mutation, is characterized by blindness due to degeneration of retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) and their axons, which form the optic nerve. We show that a sustained pathological autophagy and compartment-specific mitophagy activity affects LHON patient-derived c...
Article
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Tractography based on multishell diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (DWI) can be used to estimate the course of myelinated white matter tracts and nerves, yielding valuable information regarding normal anatomy and variability. DWI is sensitive to the local tissue microstructure, so tractography can be used to estimate tissue properties w...
Article
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Isolated complex I deficiency represents the most common mitochondrial respiratory chain defect involved in mitochondrial disorders. Among these, the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) m.13513G>A pathogenic variant in the NADH dehydrogenase 5 subunit gene (MT-ND5) has been associated with heterogenous manifestations, including phenotypic overlaps of mitocho...
Article
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Purpose to capture the key features patterning the transition from unaffected mutation carriers to clinically affected Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), as investigated by Optical Coherence Tomography. Design Observational case series. Methods four unaffected eyes of four LHON patients with first eye affected, followed across conversion...
Article
Purpose To describe the clinical phenotype of a cohort of Wolfram syndrome (WS) patients, focusing on the pattern of optic atrophy correlated with brain MRI measurements, as compared to OPA1-associated mitochondrial optic neuropathy. Design Retrospective, comparative cohort study Methods 25 WS patients and 33 age-matched patients affected by OPA1...
Article
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Introduction Both prevalence and clinical features of the various movement disorders in adults with primary mitochondrial diseases are unknown. Methods Based on the database of the “Nation-wide Italian Collaborative Network of Mitochondrial Diseases”, we reviewed the clinical, genetic, neuroimaging and neurophysiological data of adult patients wit...
Article
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The recent description of biallelic DNAJC30 variants in Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) and Leigh syndrome (LS) challenged the longstanding assumption for LHON to be exclusively maternally inherited and broadened the genetic spectrum of LS, the most frequent paediatric mitochondrial disease. Herein, we characterise 28 so far unreported ind...
Article
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To evaluate differences in macular and optic disc circulation in patients affected by Wolfram Syndrome (WS) employing optical coherence tomography-angiography (OCTA) imaging. In this retrospective study, 18 eyes from 10 WS patients, 16 eyes of 8 patients affected by type I diabetes and 17 eyes from 17 healthy controls were enrolled. All patients we...
Article
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PURPOSE. The purpose of this study was to evaluate optic disk perfusion and neural retinal structure in patients with subacute Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) and LHON carriers, as compared with healthy controls. METHODS. This study included 8 patients with LHON in the subacute stage, 10 asymptomatic carriers of a LHON-associated mitoch...
Article
Narcolepsy type 1 (NT1) is due to selective loss of hypocretin (hcrt)-producing-neurons. Hcrt is a neuropeptide regulating the sleep/wake cycle, as well as feeding behavior. A subset of NT1 patients become overweight/obese, with a dysmetabolic phenotype. We hypothesized that mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequence variation might contribute to the metab...
Article
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Many physiological processes in the human body follow a 24-h circadian rhythm controlled by the circadian clock system. Light, sensed by retina, is the predominant “zeitgeber” able to synchronize the circadian rhythms to the light-dark cycles. Circadian rhythm dysfunction and sleep disorders have been associated with aging and neurodegenerative dis...
Article
Background Melanopsin retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs) are deputed to circadian photoentrainment and pupillary light reflex (PLR) regulations. Circadian dysfunction is reported in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and contributes to dementia. Single‐Nucleotide‐Polymorphisms (SNPs) in clock genes have been associated to AD. Method We included 29 mild‐moderate...
Article
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Auditory Neuropathy (AN) is characterized by disruption of temporal coding of acoustic signals in auditory nerve fibers resulting in alterations of auditory perceptions. Mutations in several genes have been associated to the most forms of AN. Underlying mechanisms include both pre-synaptic and post-synaptic damage involving inner hair cell (IHC) de...
Article
Introduction The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) m.3243A > G mutation in the MT-TL1 gene results in a multi-systemic disease, that is commonly associated with neurodegenerative changes in the brain. Methods Seventeen patients harboring the m3243A > G mutation were enrolled (age 43.1 ± 11.4 years, 10 M/7F). A panel of plasma biomarkers including lactate...
Article
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Background: Melanopsin retinal ganglion cell (mRGC)-mediated pupillary light reflex (PLR) abnormalities have been documented in several neurodegenerative disorders including Parkinson's disease. Overall, isolated rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) represents the strongest prodromal risk factor for impending α-synucleinopathies...
Article
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Background: RESCUE and REVERSE were 2 Phase 3 clinical trials that assessed the efficacy and safety of intravitreal gene therapy with lenadogene nolparvovec (rAAV2/2-ND4) for the treatment of Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). RESTORE is the long-term follow-up study of subjects treated in the RESCUE and REVERSE trials. Methods: In RESCUE...
Article
Introduction Isolated complex I deficiency causes several clinical syndromes, including Leigh syndrome (LS), Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) and mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS). Here we reported two new patients carrying the rare m.3890G>A/MT-ND1 (p.Arg195Gln) mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) path...
Article
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Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is due to missense point mutations affecting mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA); 90% of cases harbor the m.3460G>A, m.11778G>A, and m.14484T>C primary mutations. Here, we report and discuss five families with patients affected by symptomatic LHON, in which we found five novel mtDNA variants. Remarkably, these mtDNA...
Article
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Objective: This work aimed to compare the evolution of visual outcomes in Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) patients treated with intravitreal gene therapy to the spontaneous evolution in prior natural history (NH) studies. Design: A combined analysis of two phase three randomized, double-masked, sham-controlled studies (REVERSE and RESCUE)...
Article
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Movement disorders are increasingly being recognized as a manifestation of childhood-onset mitochondrial diseases (MDs). However, the spectrum and characteristics of these conditions have not been studied in detail in the context of a well-defined cohort of patients. We retrospectively explored a cohort of individuals with childhood-onset MDs query...
Article
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Objective The purpose of this study was to investigate correlations between brain proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (¹H‐MRS) findings with serum biomarkers and heteroplasmy of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations. This study enrolled patients carrying mtDNA mutations associated with Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathy, Lactic Acidosis, and Stroke‐l...
Article
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Background/objectives REALITY is an international observational retrospective registry of LHON patients evaluating the visual course and outcome in Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). Subjects/methods Demographics and visual function data were collected from medical charts of LHON patients with visual loss. The study was conducted in 11 stud...
Article
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Biallelic mutations in ACO2, encoding the mitochondrial aconitase 2, have been identified in individuals with neurodegenerative syndromes, including infantile cerebellar retinal degeneration and recessive optic neuropathies (locus OPA9). By screening European cohorts of individuals with genetically unsolved inherited optic neuropathies, we identifi...
Article
A 45-year-old woman was referred to the medical retina service for evaluation of bilateral macular atrophy noted by her general ophthalmologist. Medical history was positive for bilateral sensorineural hearing loss with cochlear origin as determined by an otolaryngologist and headache since age 35 years. She had no history of longer-term use of med...
Article
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Patients with mitochondrial diseases, who usually manifest a multisystem disease, are considered potentially at-risk for a severe coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The objective of this study is to analyze the clinical features, prognosis and outcomes of COVID-19 in patients with primary mitochondrial diseases in a cohort of patients followed in...
Article
Melanopsin retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs) are intrinsically photosensitive photoreceptors contributing both to image and non-image-forming (NIF) functions of the eye. They convey light signal to the brain to modulate circadian entrainment, sleep, alertness, cognition, brightness perception and coarse vision. Given that rods and cones also contribut...
Article
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The study aims to characterize the epilepsy phenotype of maternally inherited Leigh's syndrome (MILS) and neuropathy, ataxia, retinitis pigmentosa (NARP) due to mutations in the mitochondrial ATP6 gene and to correlate electroclinical features with mutant heteroplasmy load (HL). We investigated 17 individuals with different phenotype, from asymptom...
Article
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Leber’s hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is the most frequent mitochondrial disease and was the first to be genetically defined by a point mutation in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). A molecular diagnosis is reached in up to 95%, the vast majority of which are accounted for by three mutations within mitochondrial complex I (CI) subunit encoding ge...
Chapter
Melanopsin retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs) are the third class of retinal photoreceptors with unique anatomical, electrophysiological, and biological features. There are different mRGC subtypes with differential projections to the brain. These cells contribute to many nonimage-forming functions of the eye, the most relevant being the photoentrainmen...
Article
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REVERSE is a randomized, double-masked, sham-controlled, multicenter, phase 3 clinical trial that evaluated the efficacy of a single intravitreal injection of rAAV2/2- ND4 in subjects with visual loss from Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON). A total of 37 subjects carrying the m.11778G>A ( MT-ND4 ) mutation and with duration of vision loss be...
Article
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Background Circadian and sleep disturbances are associated with increased risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Wearable activity trackers could provide a new approach in diagnosis and prevention. Objective To evaluate sleep and circadian rhythm parameters, through wearable activity trackers, in MCI and AD patients...
Article
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Options for the effective treatment of hereditary optic neuropathies have been a long time coming. The successful launch of the antioxidant idebenone for Leber’s Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON), followed by its introduction into clinical practice across Europe, was an important step forward. Nevertheless, other options, especially for a variety...
Article
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Autozygosity-driven exome analysis has been shown effective for identification of genes underlying recessive diseases especially in countries of the so-called Greater Middle East (GME), where high consanguinity unravels the phenotypic effects of recessive alleles and large family sizes facilitate homozygosity mapping. In Italy, as in most European...
Article
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p>In the last 20 years, research focused on developing retinal imaging as a source of potential biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease and other neurodegenerative diseases, has increased significantly. The Alzheimer's Association and the Alzheimer's & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment, Disease Monitoring editorial team (companion journal to Alzheimer's &...
Article
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Mitochondrial diseases are highly heterogeneous metabolic disorders caused by genetic alterations in the mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) or in the nuclear genome. In this study, we investigated a panel of blood biomarkers in a cohort of 123 mitochondrial patients, with prominent neurological and muscular manifestations. These biomarkers included creatine...
Preprint
Full-text available
Melanopsin retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs) are intrinsically photosensitive photoreceptors contributing to visual and non-image-forming functions of the eye. Isolating mRGC roles in humans is challenging, therefore mRGCs functions remains to be fully characterized. We explored mRGCs contribution to light-driven visual and cognitive brain responses i...
Article
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Intrinsically photosensitive melanopsin retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs) are crucial for non-image forming functions of the eye, including the photoentrainment of circadian rhythms and the regulation of the pupillary light reflex (PLR). Chromatic pupillometry, using light stimuli at different wavelengths, makes possible the isolation of the contribut...
Article
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An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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Objective To improve the genetic diagnosis of dominant optic atrophy (DOA), the most frequently inherited optic nerve disease, and infer genotype-phenotype correlations. Methods Exonic sequences of 22 genes were screened by new-generation sequencing in patients with DOA who were investigated for ophthalmology, neurology, and brain MRI. Results We...
Article
Mitochondrial medicine is a field that expanded exponentially in the last 30 years. Individually rare, mitochondrial diseases as a whole are probably the most frequent genetic disorder in adults. The complexity of their genotype–phenotype correlation, in terms of penetrance and clinical expressivity, natural history and diagnostic algorithm derives...
Article
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Objective Dominant optic atrophy (DOA) is the most common inherited optic neuropathy, with a prevalence of 1:12,000 to 1:25,000. OPA1 mutations are found in 70% of DOA patients, with a significant number remaining undiagnosed. Methods We screened 286 index cases presenting optic atrophy, negative for OPA1 mutations, by targeted next generation seq...
Article
Background: Nonophthalmologist physicians do not confidently perform direct ophthalmoscopy. The use of artificial intelligence to detect papilledema and other optic-disk abnormalities from fundus photographs has not been well studied. Methods: We trained, validated, and externally tested a deep-learning system to classify optic disks as being norm...
Article
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We previously documented that idebenone treatment in OPA1‐Dominant Optic Atrophy (OPA1‐DOA) led to some degrees of visual improvement in seven patients. We here present the results of a cohort study, which investigated the effect of off‐label idebenone administration in a larger OPA1‐DOA group compared with untreated patients. Inclusion criteria we...
Article
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Many aspects of epilepsy in mitochondrial disorders (MDs) need to be further clarified. To this aim, we explored retrospectively a cohort of individuals with MDs querying the “Nationwide Italian Collaborative Network of Mitochondrial Diseases” (NICNMD) database (1467 patients included since 2010 to December 2016). We collected information on age at...
Article
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Wolfram syndrome (WS) is a recessive multisystem disorder defined by the association of diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy, reminiscent of mitochondrial diseases. The role played by mitochondria remains elusive, with contradictory results on the occurrence of mitochondrial dysfunction. We evaluated 13 recessive WS patients by deep clinical phenoty...
Article
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ADCA-DN and HSN-IE are rare neurodegenerative syndromes caused by dominant mutations in the replication foci targeting sequence (RFTS) of the DNA methyltransferase 1 (DNMT1) gene. Both phenotypes resemble mitochondrial disorders and mitochondrial dysfunction was first observed in ADCA-DN. To explore mitochondrial involvement we studied the effects...
Chapter
Optic nerve and retinal involvement are a frequent finding in many neurodegenerative disorders. Optic atrophy can be severe and diffuse or sectorial and can be associated with visual complaints and reduction of visual acuity.
Article
Full-text available
Introduction: Charles Bonnet syndrome is characterized by simple or complex visual hallucinations (VH) due to damage along the visual pathways. We report a functional MRI study of brain correlates of VH in the context of a severe optic atrophy in a patient with Leber's Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON). Case report: A 62-year-old man was diagno...
Article
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Background: Transverse sinus stenosis is a common brain MRI finding in chronic migraine (CM) and chronic tension-type headache (CTTH) patients in clinical practice; however, its clinical and diagnostic role is unclear. The aim of the study is to determine the frequency of transverse sinus stenosis in these headache patients resistant to preventive...
Article
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Background Melanopsin-expressing retinal ganglion cells (mRGCs), intrinsically photosensitive RGCs, mediate the light-based pupil response and the light entrainment of the body’s circadian rhythms through their connection to the pretectal nucleus and hypothalamus, respectively. Increased awareness of circadian rhythm dysfunction in neurological con...
Article
None: Mutations in exons 21 and 20 of the DMNT1 gene have been associated with two multisystem neurodegenerative diseases that involve central and peripheral nervous system ADCADN (Autosomal Dominant Cerebellar Ataxia with Deafness and Narcolepsy) and HSAN 1E (Hereditary Sensory and Autonomic Neuropathy IE). We describe a new case of ADCADN that w...

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