# In tribute to Francesco Di Virgilio, a great scientist and a wonderful friend

**Authors:** Simonetta Falzoni, Anna Lisa Giuliani, Elena Adinolfi, Robson Coutinho-Silva, Peter Illes, Simon C. Robson, Yong Tang, Henning Ulrich, Charles Kennedy

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s11302-026-10135-9 · Purinergic Signalling · 2026-02-12

## TL;DR

This paper honors Francesco Di Virgilio, a leading expert in purinergic signaling, and highlights his scientific achievements and legacy.

## Contribution

The paper commemorates Di Virgilio's pioneering work on P2X7 receptors and their role in inflammation.

## Key findings

- Francesco Di Virgilio made significant contributions to understanding P2X7 receptors in inflammatory diseases.
- He published over 370 peer-reviewed articles with more than 35,000 citations and an H-index over 100.
- His work established a leading research lab in purinergic signaling and inflammation.

## Abstract

Francesco Di Virgilio, one of the giants of purinergic signalling, died suddenly on September 22, 2024, which is an immense loss to so many friends and colleagues and especially to his beloved wife, Dorianna. Here, 1 year on, we pay tribute to him and his immense contribution to our field. Francesco graduated in medicine from the University of Padova, Italy, in 1979, with what became a lifelong interest in inflammation. He then held post-doctoral positions at University College London, Padova University, and Columbia University, New York, where he became acquainted with P2X7 receptors. He then returned to Padova as an Associate Professor of Molecular Pathology before moving to the University of Ferrara in 1992, where he set up a world-leading lab that studied the roles and underlying cellular mechanisms of the action of P2X7 receptors in inflammatory pathologies. Francesco published over 370 peer-reviewed articles, which have been cited > 35,000 times, giving him an H-index > 100. In addition, he filed several patents related to purinergic signalling. He also collaborated extensively, both within the University of Ferrara and worldwide, including in universities in the UK, Spain, Germany, the USA, and Brazil. Francesco was a man of great passion and intellect, who possessed scientific vision, intuition, and integrity, and he became the go-to world expert on P2X7 receptors and inflammation. We have lost a giant in the field and a dear friend, but he leaves behind an exceptional body of work, an outstanding legacy, and many friends who will miss him.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** inflammation (MESH:D007249)

## Full text

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## Figures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12900987