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Dive into the research topics where Alfredo Fusco is active.

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Featured researches published by Alfredo Fusco.


Cell | 1990

PTC is a novel rearranged form of the ret proto-oncogene and is frequently detected in vivo in human thyroid papillary carcinomas

Michele Grieco; Massimo Santoro; Maria Teresa Berlingieri; Rosa Marina Melillo; Rosangela Donghi; Italia Bongarzone; Marco A. Pierotti; Giuseppe Della Ports; Alfredo Fusco; Giancarlo Vecchiot

We recently detected a novel activated oncogene by transfection analysis on NIH 3T3 cells in five out of 20 primary human thyroid papillary carcinomas and in the available lymph node metastases. We designated this transforming gene PTC (for papillary thyroid carcinoma). Here we describe the molecular cloning and sequencing of the gene. The new oncogene resulted from the rearrangement of an unknown amino-terminal sequence to the tyrosine kinase domain of the ret proto-oncogene. This gene rearrangement was detected in all of the transfectants and in all of the original tumor DNAs, but not in normal DNA of the same patients, thus indicating that this genetic lesion occurred in vivo and is specific to somatic tumors. Moreover, the transcript coded for by the fused gene was detected in an additional PTC-positive human papillary carcinoma for which mRNA was available.


Nature Medicine | 2002

Cytoplasmic relocalization and inhibition of the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27(Kip1) by PKB/Akt-mediated phosphorylation in breast cancer.

Giuseppe Viglietto; Maria Letizia Motti; Paola Bruni; Rosa Marina Melillo; Amelia D'Alessio; Daniela Califano; Floriana Vinci; Gennaro Chiappetta; Philip N. Tsichlis; Alfonso Bellacosa; Alfredo Fusco; Massimo Santoro

The cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p27kip1 is a putative tumor suppressor for human cancer. The mechanism underlying p27kip1 deregulation in human cancer is, however, poorly understood. We demonstrate that the serine/threonine kinase Akt regulates cell proliferation in breast cancer cells by preventing p27kip1-mediated growth arrest. Threonine 157 (T157), which maps within the nuclear localization signal of p27kip1, is a predicted Akt-phosphorylation site. Akt-induced T157 phosphorylation causes retention of p27kip1 in the cytoplasm, precluding p27kip1-induced G1 arrest. Conversely, the p27kip1-T157A mutant accumulates in cell nuclei and Akt does not affect p27kip1–T157A-mediated cell cycle arrest. Lastly, T157-phosphorylated p27kip1 accumulates in the cytoplasm of primary human breast cancer cells coincident with Akt activation. Thus, cytoplasmic relocalization of p27kip1, secondary to Akt-mediated phosphorylation, is a novel mechanism whereby the growth inhibitory properties of p27kip1 are functionally inactivated and the proliferation of breast cancer cells is sustained.


Nature Reviews Cancer | 2007

Roles of HMGA proteins in cancer

Alfredo Fusco; Monica Fedele

The high mobility group A (HMGA) non-histone chromatin proteins alter chromatin structure and thereby regulate the transcription of several genes by either enhancing or suppressing transcription factors. This protein family is implicated, through different mechanisms, in both benign and malignant neoplasias. Rearrangements of HMGA genes are a feature of most benign human mesenchymal tumours. Conversely, unrearranged HMGA overexpression is a feature of malignant tumours and is also causally related to neoplastic cell transformation. Here, we focus on the role of the HMGA proteins in human neoplastic diseases, the mechanisms by which they contribute to carcinogenesis, and therapeutic strategies based on targeting HMGA proteins.


Oncogene | 2007

Specific microRNAs are downregulated in human thyroid anaplastic carcinomas.

Rosa Visone; Pierlorenzo Pallante; Andrea Vecchione; R. Cirombella; Manuela Ferracin; Angelo Ferraro; Stefano Volinia; S. Coluzzi; V. Leone; E. Borbone; Chang Gong Liu; Fabio Petrocca; Giancarlo Troncone; George A. Calin; Aldo Scarpa; C. Colato; Giovanni Tallini; Massimo Santoro; Carlo M. Croce; Alfredo Fusco

Thyroid carcinomas comprise a broad spectrum of tumors with different clinical behaviors. On the one side, there are occult papillary carcinomas (PTC), slow growing and clinically silent, and on the other side, rapidly growing anaplastic carcinomas (ATC), which are among the most lethal human neoplasms. We have analysed the microRNA (miR) profile of ATC in comparison to the normal thyroid using a microarray (miRNACHIP microarray). By this approach, we found an aberrant miR expression profile that clearly differentiates ATC from normal thyroid tissues and from PTC analysed in previous studies. In particular, a significant decrease in miR-30d, miR-125b, miR-26a and miR-30a-5p was detected in ATC in comparison to normal thyroid tissue. These results were further confirmed by northern blots, quantitative reverse transcription–PCR analyses and in situ hybridization. The overexpression of these four miRs in two human ATC-derived cell lines suggests a critical role of miR-125b and miR-26a downregulation in thyroid carcinogenesis, since a cell growth inhibition was achieved. Conversely, no effect on cell growth was observed after the overexpression of miR-30d and miR-30a-5p in the same cells. In conclusion, these data indicate a miR signature associated with ATC and suggest the miR deregulation as an important event in thyroid cell transformation.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2005

The RET/PTC-RAS-BRAF linear signaling cascade mediates the motile and mitogenic phenotype of thyroid cancer cells

Rosa Marina Melillo; Maria Domenica Castellone; Valentina Guarino; Valentina De Falco; Anna Maria Cirafici; Giuliana Salvatore; Fiorina Caiazzo; Fulvio Basolo; Riccardo Giannini; Mogens Kruhøffer; T F Ørntoft; Alfredo Fusco; Massimo Santoro

In papillary thyroid carcinomas (PTCs), rearrangements of the RET receptor (RET/PTC) and activating mutations in the BRAF or RAS oncogenes are mutually exclusive. Here we show that the 3 proteins function along a linear oncogenic signaling cascade in which RET/PTC induces RAS-dependent BRAF activation and RAS- and BRAF-dependent ERK activation. Adoptive activation of the RET/PTC-RAS-BRAF axis induced cell proliferation and Matrigel invasion of thyroid follicular cells. Gene expression profiling revealed that the 3 oncogenes activate a common transcriptional program in thyroid cells that includes upregulation of the CXCL1 and CXCL10 chemokines, which in turn stimulate proliferation and invasion. Thus, motile and mitogenic properties are intrinsic to transformed thyroid cells and are governed by an epistatic oncogenic signaling cascade.


Trends in Genetics | 2001

The RET receptor: function in development and dysfunction in congenital malformation.

Serge Manié; Massimo Santoro; Alfredo Fusco; Marc Billaud

Germline mutations in the RET proto-oncogene are responsible for two unrelated neural crest disorders: Hirschsprung disease, a congenital absence of the enteric nervous system in the hindgut, and multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2, a dominantly inherited cancer syndrome. Moreover, somatic rearrangements of RET are causally involved in the genesis of papillary thyroid carcinoma. The receptor tyrosine kinase encoded by the RET gene acts as the subunit of a multimolecular complex that binds four distinct ligands and activates a signalling network crucial for neural and kidney development. Over the past few years, a clearer picture of the mode of RET activation and of its multifaceted role during development has started to emerge. These findings, which provide new clues to the molecular mechanisms underlying RET signalling dysfunction in Hirschsprung disease, are summarized in this review.


Archives of General Psychiatry | 2010

Increased BDNF Promoter Methylation in the Wernicke Area of Suicide Subjects

Simona Keller; Federica Zarrilli; Alja Videtič; Angelo Ferraro; Vladimir Carli; Silvana Sacchetti; Francesca Lembo; Antonella Angiolillo; N. Jovanovic; Francesco Pisanti; Rossella Tomaiuolo; Antonella Monticelli; Joze Balazic; Alec Roy; Andrej Marusic; Sergio Cocozza; Alfredo Fusco; Carmelo B. Bruni; Giuseppe Castaldo; Lorenzo Chiariotti

CONTEXT Brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) plays a pivotal role in the pathophysiology of suicidal behavior and BDNF levels are decreased in the brain and plasma of suicide subjects. So far, the mechanisms leading to downregulation of BDNF expression are poorly understood. OBJECTIVES To test the hypothesis that alterations of DNA methylation could be involved in the dysregulation of BDNF gene expression in the brain of suicide subjects. DESIGN Three independent quantitative methylation techniques were performed on postmortem samples of brain tissue. BDNF messenger RNA levels were determined by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction. SETTING Academic medical center. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS Forty-four suicide completers and 33 nonsuicide control subjects of white ethnicity. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES The DNA methylation degree at BDNF promoter IV and the genome-wide DNA methylation levels in the brains Wernicke area. RESULTS Postmortem brain samples from suicide subjects showed a statistically significant increase of DNA methylation at specific CpG sites in BDNF promoter/exon IV compared with nonsuicide control subjects (P < .001). Most of the CpG sites lying in the -300/+500 region, on both strands, had low or no methylation, with the exception of a few sites located near the transcriptional start site that had differential methylation, while genome-wide methylation levels were comparable among the subjects. The mean methylation degree at the 4 CpG sites analyzed by pyrosequencing was always less than 12.9% in the 33 nonsuicide control subjects, while in 13 of 44 suicide victims (30%), the mean methylation degree ranged between 13.1% and 34.2%. Higher methylation degree corresponded to lower BDNF messenger RNA levels. CONCLUSIONS BDNF promoter/exon IV is frequently hypermethylated in the Wernicke area of the postmortem brain of suicide subjects irrespective of genome-wide methylation levels, indicating that a gene-specific increase in DNA methylation could cause or contribute to the downregulation of BDNF expression in suicide subjects. The reported data reveal a novel link between epigenetic alteration in the brain and suicidal behavior.


Laryngoscope | 1997

Expression of the RET/PTC Fusion Gene as a Marker for Papillary Carcinoma in Hashimoto's Thyroiditis†

Ari Wirtschafter; Richard R. Schmidt; David Rosen; Nandita Kundu; Massimo Santoro; Alfredo Fusco; Hinke Multhaupt; Joseph P. Atkins; Marc Rosen; William M. Keane; Jay L. Rothstein

Hashimotos thyroiditis is an inflammatory disease of the thyroid gland with autoimmune etiology. 1 Patients afflicted with Hashimotos have a higher risk of thyroid malignancies such as papillary thyroid carcinoma. 2 In the present study, we investigated the frequency of papillary thyroid carcinoma specific genes in patients diagnosed with Hashimotos disease. The newly identified oncogenes RET/PTC1 and RET/PTC3 provide useful and specific markers of the early stages of papillary carcinoma as they are highly specific for malignant cells. Using a sensitive and specific reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) assay, we found messenger RNA(mRNA) expression for the RET/PTC1 and RET/PTC3 oncogenes in 95% of the Hashimotos patients studied. All Hashimotos patients presenting without histopathologic evidence of papillary thyroid cancer showed molecular genetic evidence of cancer. These data suggest that multiple, independent occult tumors exist in these patiens at high frequency.


Oncogene | 2004

Disease associated mutations at valine 804 in the RET receptor tyrosine kinase confer resistance to selective kinase inhibitors.

Francesca Carlomagno; Teresa Guida; Suresh Anaganti; Giancarlo Vecchio; Alfredo Fusco; Anderson J. Ryan; Marc Billaud; Massimo Santoro

We have recently demonstrated that the pyrazolopyrimidines PP1 and PP2 and the 4-anilinoquinazoline ZD6474 display a strong inhibitory activity (IC50⩽100 nM) towards constitutively active oncogenic RET kinases. Here, we show that most oncogenic MEN2-associated RET kinase mutants are highly susceptible to PP1, PP2 and ZD6474 inhibition. In contrast, MEN2-associated swap of bulky hydrophobic leucine or methionine residues for valine 804 in the RET kinase domain causes resistance to the three compounds. Substitution of valine 804 with the small amino- acid glycine renders the RET kinase even more susceptible to inhibition (ZD6474 IC50: 20 nM) than the wild-type kinase. Our data identify valine 804 of RET as a structural determinant mediating resistance to pyrazolopyrimidines and 4-anilinoquinazolines.


British Journal of Cancer | 2003

An increased high-mobility group A2 expression level is associated with malignant phenotype in pancreatic exocrine tissue.

Nobutsugu Abe; Takashi Watanabe; Yutaka Suzuki; N Matsumoto; Tadahiko Masaki; Toshiyuki Mori; Masanori Sugiyama; Gennaro Chiappetta; Alfredo Fusco; Yutaka Atomi

The altered form of the high-mobility group A2 (HMGA2) gene is somehow related to the generation of human benign and malignant tumours of mesenchymal origin. However, only a few data on the expression of HMGA2 in malignant tumour originating from epithelial tissue are available. In this study, we examined the HMGA2 expression level in pancreatic carcinoma, and investigated whether alterations in the HMGA2 expression level are associated with a malignant phenotype in pancreatic tissue. High-mobility group A2 mRNA and protein expression was determined in eight surgically resected specimens of non-neoplastic tissue (six specimens of normal pancreatic tissue and two of chronic pancreatitis tissue) and 27 pancreatic carcinomas by highly sensitive reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction (RT–PCR) techniques and immunohistochemical staining, respectively. Reverse transcriptase–polymerase chain reaction analysis revealed the expression of the HMGA2 gene in non-neoplastic pancreatic tissue, although its expression level was significantly lower than that in carcinoma. Immunohistochemical analysis indicated that the presence of the HMGA2 gene in non-neoplastic pancreatic tissue observed in RT–PCR reflects its abundant expression in islet cells, together with its focal expression in duct epithelial cells. Intense and multifocal or diffuse HMGA2 immunoreactivity was noted in all the pancreatic carcinoma examined. A strong correlation between HMGA2 overexpression and the diagnosis of carcinoma was statistically verified. Based on these findings, we propose that an increased expression level of the HMGA2 protein is closely associated with the malignant phenotype in the pancreatic exocrine system, and accordingly, HMGA2 could serve as a potential diagnostic molecular marker for distinguishing pancreatic malignant cells from non-neoplastic pancreatic exocrine cells.

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Monica Fedele

University of Naples Federico II

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Gennaro Chiappetta

National Institutes of Health

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Pierlorenzo Pallante

University of Naples Federico II

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Giovanna Maria Pierantoni

University of Naples Federico II

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Giancarlo Vecchio

University of Naples Federico II

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Rosa Marina Melillo

University of Naples Federico II

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Francesco Trapasso

Thomas Jefferson University

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