Maria Josefa Polanco
University of Trento
3 Papers
2 Citations
Maria Josefa Polanco is an academic researcher from University of Trento. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications.
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Papers
Aberrant Autophagic Response in The Muscle of A Knock-in Mouse Model of Spinal and Bulbar Muscular Atrophy.
Paola Rusmini,Paola Rusmini,Maria Josefa Polanco,Riccardo Cristofani,Riccardo Cristofani,Maria Elena Cicardi,Maria Elena Cicardi,Marco Meroni,Marco Meroni,Mariarita Galbiati,Mariarita Galbiati,Margherita Piccolella,Margherita Piccolella,Elio Messi,Elio Messi,Elisa Giorgetti,Andrew P. Lieberman,Carmelo Milioto,Carmelo Milioto,Carmelo Milioto,Anna Rocchi,Tanya Aggarwal,Maria Pennuto,Valeria Crippa,Angelo Poletti,Angelo Poletti +25 more
TL;DR: Alteration in HSPB8-based PQC machinery may represent muscle-specific biomarkers useful to assess SBMA progression in mice and patients in response to pharmacological treatments.
Antagonistic effect of cyclin-dependent kinases and a calcium-dependent phosphatase on polyglutamine-expanded androgen receptor toxic gain of function
Diana Piol,Laura Tosatto,Emanuela Zuccaro,Eric N. Anderson,Antonella Falconieri,Maria Josefa Polanco,Caterina Marchioretti,Federica Lia,Joseph White,Elisa Bregolin,Giovanni Minervini,Sara Parodi,Xavier Salvatella,Giorgio Arrigoni,Andrea Ballabio,Albert R. La Spada,Silvio C. E. Tosatto,Fabio Sambataro,Diego L. Medina,Udai Bhan Pandey,Manuela Basso,Maria Pennuto +21 more
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated what kinases and phosphatases target polyQ-expanded AR, whether polyQ expansions modify AR phosphorylation, and how this contributes to neurodegeneration.
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Modulation of stress-related behaviour by hypothalamic engagement of preproglucagon neurons in the nucleus of the solitary tract
TL;DR: Through chemogenetic manipulations, it is revealed that cNTS PPG neurons have the ability to moderately increase anxiety-like behaviours in mice in a sex-dependent manner and a hypothalamic-brainstem pathway in stress-induced hypophagia is highlighted.