Dr. Gianfranco  Risuleo
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Dr. Gianfranco Risuleo

Research Scientist
Sapienza University of Rome, Italy


Highest Degree
Ph.D. in Biological Sciences from University of Rome-La Sapienza, Italy

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Biography

PROFESSIONAL and PERSONAL BIO-SKETCH

I developed my doctoral work at the Max-Planck-Institute fÊr Molekulare Genetik (Berlin, Germany). Thereafter I was visiting scientist at the Karolinska Institute, Nobel Laboratory (Stockholm, Sweden) and at the Biokemiskt Centrum, Dept. of Molecular Virology (Uppsala, Sweden). I received fellowships from the European Molecular Biology Organization and from Italian private and public foundations. I also received research and travelling grants from homologous agencies (e.g. Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche, Fondazione “Institut Pasteur-Cenci Bolognetti”, Ministero della Ricerca Scientifica e Tecnologica). I was invited professor (short-term) at the University of Mexico City and presently I have research and teaching contacts with different universities (Health Science Center - State University of New York at Brooklyn, the Max-Planck-Institute fÊr Molekulare Genetik, the Department of Biology at the Humboldt-UniversitÏt (Berlin, Germany) and the University of the Witswatersrand (Johannesburg, South Africa). Recently I was selected by the organization ERASMUS Mundus ACP, to teach molecular biology at the University of Antananarivo, where I spent a total three months. From 2007 to 2010 I was relocated on a temporary basis to the Italian Space Agency where I covered the role of program manager and collaborated to the development of simulated missions to Mars. I was also selected by IMPAKT (ERASMUS) to visit for one month the the Institute of Science and Technology (Surabaya – Indonesia).
I am author of two essays (in Italian) on genetic engineering and molecular evolution, a third one is in preparation. I collaborate with the Italian Medical Encyclopaedia where I wrote several different entries, free-lance writer for popular science magazines and translator from English into Italian for scientific publishers and pharmaceutical industries. I participated and communicated results in over 90 different national and international meetings held in Europe, Russia and USA, Canada and India.
My scientific production consists of about 90 papers in international peer-reviewed journals (and invited book chapters) of molecular biology, biochemistry and biophysics and about 30 articles in popular science magazines. I was invited speakers at several international meetings.

Area of Interest:

Biomedical Sciences
100%
Nanomaterials
62%
Apoptosis
90%
Molecular Biology
75%
Natural Products
55%

Research Publications in Numbers

Books
0
Chapters
0
Articles
0
Abstracts
0

Selected Publications

  1. Scarsella, G and G. Risuleo, 2015. Lipoic acid and superoxide dismutase modulate positively the neurodegenerative events during senescence. Intl. J. Life Sci. Med. Res., 5: 16-24.
    CrossRef  |  
  2. Muzi, L., C. Menard-Moyon, J. Russier, W.H. Ang, G. Pastorin, G. Risuleo and A. Bianco, 2015. Diameter-dependent release of a cisplatin pro-drug from small and large functionalized carbon nanotubes. Nanoscale, 7: 5383-5394.
    CrossRef  |  Direct Link  |  
  3. Bonincontro, A and G. Risuleo, 2015. Electrorotation: a spectroscopic imaging approach to study the alterations of the cytoplasmic membrane. Adv. Mol. Imaging, 10.4236/ami.2015.51001.
    CrossRef  |  Direct Link  |  
  4. Stefanutti, E., F. Papacci, S. Sennato, C. Bombelli and I. Violae et al., 2014. Cationic liposomes formulated with DMPC and a gemini surfactant traverse the cell membrane without causing a significant bio-damage. Biochimica Biophysica Acta (BBA)-Biomembr., 1838: 2646-2655.
    CrossRef  |  PubMed  |  Direct Link  |  
  5. Milardi, G.L., A. Stringaro, M. Colone, A. Bonincontro and G. Risuleo, 2014. The cell membrane is the main target of resveratrol as shown by interdisciplinary biomolecular/cellular and biophysical approaches. J. Membr. Biol., 247: 1-8.
    CrossRef  |  PubMed  |  Direct Link  |  
  6. Mattetti, A and G. Risuleo, 2014. Apoptosis: a mode of cell death. Biochem. Mol. Biol., 2: 34-39.
    CrossRef  |  
  7. La Mesa, C., F. Papacci, C. Pucci, G. Risuleo and F. Tardani, 2014. Use of cat-anionic vesicles as molecular vectors for gene transfer into target cells. J. Mod. Med. Chem., 2: 78-94.
  8. Russo, L., V. Berardi, F. Tardani, C. La Mesa and G. Risuleo, 2013. Delivery of RNA and its intracellular translation into protein mediated by SDS-CTAB vesicles: potential use in nanobiotechnology. BioMed Res. Int., 10.1155/2013/734596.
    CrossRef  |  Direct Link  |  
  9. Cosimati, R., G.L. Milardi, C. Bombelli, A. Bonincontro and F. Bordi et al., 2013. Interactions of DMPC and DMPC/gemini liposomes with the cell membrane investigated by electrorotation. Biochim. Biophys. Acta, 1828: 352-356.
    CrossRef  |  PubMed  |  Direct Link  |  
  10. Eom, T., V. Berardi, J. Zhong, G. Risuleo and H. Tiedge, 2011. Dual nature of translational control by regulatory BC RNAs. Mol. Cell. Biol., 31: 4538-4549.
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  11. Aiello, C., P. Andreozzi, C.L. Mesa and G. Risuleo, 2010. Biological activity of SDS-CTAB cat-anionic vesicles in cultured cells and assessment of their cytotoxicity ending in apoptosis. Colloids Surf., B, 78: 149-154.
    CrossRef  |  PubMed  |  Direct Link  |  
  12. Berardi, V., C. Aiello, A. Bonincontro and G. Risuleo, 2009. Alterations of the plasma membrane caused by murine polyomavirus proliferation: an electrorotation study. J. Membr. Biol., 229: 19-25.
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