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Featured researches published by Antonella D'Anneo.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2013

RB1 in cancer: Different mechanisms of RB1 inactivation and alterations of pRb pathway in tumorigenesis

Riccardo Di Fiore; Antonella D'Anneo; Giovanni Tesoriere; Renza Vento

Loss of RB1 gene is considered either a causal or an accelerating event in retinoblastoma. A variety of mechanisms inactivates RB1 gene, including intragenic mutations, loss of expression by methylation and chromosomal deletions, with effects which are species–and cell type‐specific. RB1 deletion can even lead to aneuploidy thus greatly increasing cancer risk. The RB1gene is part of a larger gene family that includes RBL1 and RBL2, each of the three encoding structurally related proteins indicated as pRb, p107, and p130, respectively. The great interest in these genes and proteins springs from their ability to slow down neoplastic growth. pRb can associate with various proteins by which it can regulate a great number of cellular activities. In particular, its association with the E2F transcription factor family allows the control of the main pRb functions, while the loss of these interactions greatly enhances cancer development. As RB1 gene, also pRb can be functionally inactivated through disparate mechanisms which are often tissue specific and dependent on the scenario of the involved tumor suppressors and oncogenes. The critical role of the context is complicated by the different functions played by the RB proteins and the E2F family members. In this review, we want to emphasize the importance of the mechanisms of RB1/pRb inactivation in inducing cancer cell development. The review is divided in three chapters describing in succession the mechanisms of RB1 inactivation in cancer cells, the alterations of pRb pathway in tumorigenesis and the RB protein and E2F family in cancer. J. Cell. Physiol. 228: 1676–1687, 2013.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2011

Parthenolide sensitizes hepatocellular carcinoma cells to trail by inducing the expression of death receptors through inhibition of STAT3 activation

Daniela Carlisi; Antonella D'Anneo; Liliana Angileri; Marianna Lauricella; Sonia Emanuele; Andrea Santulli; Renza Vento; Giovanni Tesoriere

This article shows that HepG2, Hep3B, and SK‐Hep1 cells, three lines of human hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) cells, are resistant to apoptosis induced by tumor necrosis factor‐related apoptosis‐inducing ligand (TRAIL). Parthenolide, a sesquiterpene lactone found in European feverfew, has been shown to exert both anti‐inflammatory and anti‐cancer activities. This article demonstrates that co‐treatment with parthenolide and TRAIL‐induced apoptosis with synergistic interactions in the three lines of HCC cells. In order to explain these effects we ascertained that parthenolide increased either at protein or mRNA level the total content of death receptors TRAIL‐R1 and ‐R2 as well as their surface expression. These effects were found in the three cell lines in the case of TRAIL‐R2, while for TRAIL‐R1 they were observed in HepG2 and SK‐Hep1 cells, but not in Hep3B cells. We suggest that the effects of parthenolide on death receptors depend on the decrease in the level of phosphorylated and active forms of STAT proteins, an event which could be a consequence of the inhibitory effect exerted by parthenolide on the activation of JAK proteins. In agreement with this hypothesis treatment with STAT3 siRNA increased in HCC cells the effect of parthenolide on the expression of death receptors. Sensitization by parthenolide to TRAIL stimulated in the three cell lines the extrinsic mechanism of apoptosis with the activation of both caspases 8 and 3, whereas mitochondria were not involved in the process. Our results suggest that co‐treatment with parthenolide and TRAIL could represent a new important therapeutic strategy for hepatic tumors. J. Cell. Physiol. 226: 1632–1641, 2011.


Cell Death and Disease | 2013

Parthenolide generates reactive oxygen species and autophagy in MDA-MB231 cells. A soluble parthenolide analogue inhibits tumour growth and metastasis in a xenograft model of breast cancer

Antonella D'Anneo; Daniela Carlisi; Marianna Lauricella; Roberto Puleio; Roberta Martinez; S. Di Bella; P. Di Marco; Sonia Emanuele; R. Di Fiore; A. Guercio; Renza Vento; Giovanni Tesoriere

Triple-negative breast cancers (TNBCs) are clinically aggressive forms associated with a poor prognosis. We evaluated the cytotoxic effect exerted on triple-negative MDA-MB231 breast cancer cells both by parthenolide and its soluble analogue dimethylamino parthenolide (DMAPT) and explored the underlying molecular mechanism. The drugs induced a dose- and time-dependent decrement in cell viability, which was not prevented by the caspase inhibitor z-VAD-fmk. In particular in the first hours of treatment (1–3 h), parthenolide and DMAPT strongly stimulated reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation. The drugs induced production of superoxide anion by activating NADPH oxidase. ROS generation caused depletion of thiol groups and glutathione, activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) and downregulation of nuclear factor kB (NF-kB). During this first phase, parthenolide and DMAPT also stimulated autophagic process, as suggested by the enhanced expression of beclin-1, the conversion of microtubule-associated protein light chain 3-I (LC3-I) to LC3-II and the increase in the number of cells positive to monodansylcadaverine. Finally, the drugs increased RIP-1 expression. This effect was accompanied by a decrement of pro-caspase 8, while its cleaved form was not detected and the expression of c-FLIPS markedly increased. Prolonging the treatment (5–20 h) ROS generation favoured dissipation of mitochondrial membrane potential and the appearance of necrotic events, as suggested by the increased number of cells positive to propidium iodide staining. The administration of DMAPT in nude mice bearing xenografts of MDA-MB231 cells resulted in a significant inhibition of tumour growth, an increment of animal survival and a marked reduction of the lung area invaded by metastasis. Immunohistochemistry data revealed that treatment with DMAPT reduced the levels of NF-kB, metalloproteinase-2 and -9 and vascular endothelial growth factor, while induced upregulation of phosphorylated JNK. Taken together, our data suggest a possible use of parthenolide for the treatment of TNBCs.


International Journal of Oncology | 2014

MicroRNA-29b-1 impairs in vitro cell proliferation, self‑renewal and chemoresistance of human osteosarcoma 3AB-OS cancer stem cells

Riccardo Di Fiore; Rosa Drago-Ferrante; Francesca Pentimalli; Domenico Di Marzo; Iris Maria Forte; Antonella D'Anneo; Daniela Carlisi; Anna De Blasio; Michela Giuliano; Giovanni Tesoriere; Antonio Giordano; Renza Vento

Osteosarcoma (OS) is the most common type of bone cancer, with a peak incidence in the early childhood. Emerging evidence suggests that treatments targeting cancer stem cells (CSCs) within a tumor can halt cancer and improve patient survival. MicroRNAs (miRNAs) have been implicated in the maintenance of the CSC phenotype, thus, identification of CSC-related miRNAs would provide information for a better understanding of CSCs. Downregulation of miRNA-29 family members (miR-29a/b/c; miR-29s) was observed in human OS, however, little is known about the functions of miR-29s in human OS CSCs. Previously, during the characterization of 3AB-OS cells, a CSC line selected from human OS MG63 cells, we showed a potent downregulation of miR-29b. In this study, after stable transfection of 3AB-OS cells with miR-29b-1, we investigated the role of miR-29b-1 in regulating cell proliferation, sarcosphere-forming ability, clonogenic growth, chemosensitivity, migration and invasive ability of 3AB-OS cells, in vitro. We found that, miR-29b-1 overexpression consistently reduced both, 3AB-OS CSCs growth in two- and three-dimensional culture systems and their sarcosphere- and colony-forming ability. In addition, while miR-29b-1 overexpression sensitized 3AB-OS cells to chemotherapeutic drug-induced apoptosis, it did not influence their migratory and invasive capacities, thus suggesting a context-depending role of miR-29b-1. Using publicly available databases, we proceeded to identify potential miR-29b target genes, known to play a role in the above reported functions. Among these targets we analyzed CD133, N-Myc, CCND2, E2F1 and E2F2, Bcl-2 and IAP-2. We also analyzed the most important stemness markers as Oct3/4, Sox2 and Nanog. Real-time RT-PCR and western-blot analyses showed that miR-29b-1 negatively regulated the expression of these markers. Overall, the results show that miR-29b-1 suppresses stemness properties of 3AB-OS CSCs and suggest that developing miR-29b-1 as a novel therapeutic agent might offer benefits for OS treatment.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2010

Paclitaxel and beta-lapachone synergistically induce apoptosis in human retinoblastoma Y79 cells by downregulating the levels of phospho-Akt.

Antonella D'Anneo; Giuseppa Augello; Andrea Santulli; Michela Giuliano; Riccardo Di Fiore; Concetta Maria Messina; Giovanni Tesoriere; Renza Vento

Paclitaxel (PTX) and beta‐lapachone (LPC) are naturally occurring compounds that have shown a large spectrum of anticancer activity. In this article we show for the first time that PTX/LPC combination induces potent synergistic apoptotic effects in human retinoblastoma Y79 cells. Combination of suboptimal doses of PTX (0.3 nM) and LPC (1.5 µM) caused biochemical and morphological signs of apoptosis at 48 h of treatment. These effects were accompanied by potent lowering in inhibitor of apoptosis proteins and by activation of Bid and caspases 3 and 6 with lamin B and PARP breakdown. PTX/LPC combination acted by favoring p53 stabilization through a lowering in p‐Akt levels and in ps166‐MDM2, the phosphorylated‐MDM2 form that enters the nucleus and induces p53 export and degradation. Treatment with wortmannin or transfection with a dominant negative form of Akt anticipated at 24 h the effects induced by PTX/LPC, suggesting a protective role against apoptosis played by Akt in Y79 cells. In line with these results, we demonstrated that Y79 cells contain constitutively active Akt, which forms a cytosolic complex with p53 and MDM2 driving p53 degradation. PTX/LPC treatment induced a weakness of Akt–MDM2–p53 complex and increased nuclear p53 levels. Our results suggest that phospho‐Akt lowering is at the root of the apoptotic action exerted by PTX/LPC combination and provide strong validation for a treatment approach that targets survival signals represented by phospho‐Akt and inhibitor of apoptosis proteins. J. Cell. Physiol. 222: 433–443, 2010.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2015

The synergistic effect of SAHA and parthenolide in MDA-MB231 breast cancer cells.

Daniela Carlisi; Marianna Lauricella; Antonella D'Anneo; Giuseppina Buttitta; Sonia Emanuele; Riccardo Di Fiore; Roberta Martinez; Christian Rolfo; Renza Vento; Giovanni Tesoriere

The sesquiterpene lactone Parthenolide (PN) exerted a cytotoxic effect on MDA‐MB231 cells, a triple‐negative breast cancer (TNBC) cell line, but its effectiveness was scarce when employed at low doses. This represents an obstacle for a therapeutic utilization of PN. In order to overcome this difficulty we associated to PN the suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid (SAHA), an histone deacetylase inhibitor. Our results show that SAHA synergistically sensitized MDA‐MB231 cells to the cytotoxic effect of PN. It is noteworthy that treatment with PN alone stimulated the survival pathway Akt/mTOR and the consequent nuclear translocation of Nrf2, while treatment with SAHA alone induced autophagic activity. However, when the cells were treated with SAHA/PN combination, SAHA suppressed PN effect on Akt/mTOR/Nrf2 pathway, while PN reduced the prosurvival autophagic activity of SAHA. In addition SAHA/PN combination induced GSH depletion, fall in Δψm, release of cytochrome c, activation of caspase 3 and apoptosis. Finally we demonstrated that combined treatment maintained both hyperacetylation of histones H3 and H4 induced by SAHA and down‐regulation of DNMT1 expression induced by PN. Inhibition of the DNA‐binding activity of NF‐kB, which is determined by PN, was also observed after combined treatment. In conclusion, combination of PN to SAHA inhibits the cytoprotective responses induced by the single compounds, but does not alter the mechanisms leading to the cytotoxic effects. Taken together our results suggest that this combination could be a candidate for TNBC therapy. J. Cell. Physiol. 230: 1276–1289, 2015.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2013

Parthenolide induces caspase-independent and AIF-mediated cell death in human osteosarcoma and melanoma cells†

Antonella D'Anneo; Daniela Carlisi; Marianna Lauricella; Sonia Emanuele; Riccardo Di Fiore; Renza Vento; Giovanni Tesoriere

The mechanism of the cytotoxic effect exerted by parthenolide on tumor cells is not clearly defined today. This article shows that parthenolide stimulates in human osteosarcoma MG63 and melanoma SK‐MEL‐28 cells a mechanism of cell death, which is not prevented by z‐VAD‐fmk and other caspase inhibitors. In particular treatment with parthenolide rapidly stimulated (1–2 h) reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation by inducing activation of extracellular signal‐regulated kinase 1/2 (ERK 1/2) and NADPH oxidase. This event caused depletion of thiol groups and glutathione, NF‐κB inhibition, c‐Jun N‐terminal kinase (JNK) activation, cell detachment from the matrix, and cellular shrinkage. The increase of ROS generation together with the mitochondrial accumulation of Ca2+ also favored dissipation of Δψm, which seemed primarily determined by permeability transition pore opening, since Δψm loss was partially prevented by the inhibitor cyclosporin A. Staining with Hoechst 33342 revealed in most cells, at 3–5 h of treatment, chromatin condensation, and fragmentation, while only few cells were propidium iodide (PI)‐positive. In addition, at this stage apoptosis inducing factor (AIF) translocated to the nucleus and co‐localized with areas of condensed chromatin. Prolonging the treatment (5–15 h) ATP content declined while PI‐positive cells strongly augmented, denouncing the increase of necrotic effects. All these effects were prevented by N‐acetylcysteine, while caspase inhibitors were ineffective. We suggest that AIF exerts a crucial role in parthenolide action. In accordance, down‐regulation of AIF markedly inhibited parthenolide effect on the production of cells with apoptotic or necrotic signs. Taken together our results demonstrate that parthenolide causes in the two cell lines a caspase‐independent cell death, which is mediated by AIF. J. Cell. Physiol.


FEBS Letters | 2001

pRb suppresses camptothecin-induced apoptosis in human osteosarcoma Saos-2 cells by inhibiting c-Jun N-terminal kinase

Marianna Lauricella; Giuseppe Calvaruso; Maria Carabillò; Antonella D'Anneo; Michela Giuliano; Sonia Emanuele; Renza Vento; Giovanni Tesoriere

This paper studies the cytotoxic effect induced by the topoisomerase I inhibitor camptothecin in human osteosarcoma Saos‐2 cells, which lack p53 and contain a non‐functional form of the product of the retinoblastoma gene, pRb. Cytotoxicity induced by camptothecin was dose‐ and time‐dependent; the treatment with 100 nM camptothecin reduced cell viability by 50% at 32 h and by 75% at 72 h of exposure. The cytotoxic effect was caused by apoptosis, as ascertained by morphological evidence, acridine orange‐ethidium bromide staining and flow cytometric analysis. Apoptosis was accompanied by both the activation of caspase‐3 and the fragmentation of poly(ADP‐ribose) polymerase. Treatment with camptothecin caused a threefold increase in the activity of c‐Jun N‐terminal kinase (JNK) and an eightfold increase in the level of phosphorylated c‐Jun. The introduction of the RB gene into Saos‐2 cells reduced the rate of cell growth. Moreover, stable clones of transfected cells were resistant to camptothecin. Exposure to 100 nM camptothecin for 72 h reduced the viability of transfected cells by only 10%; moreover, very modest effects were observed on the activity of JNK as well as on the level of phosphorylated c‐Jun. The results reported in this paper support the conclusion that the expression of wild‐type pRb in Saos‐2 cells exerts an anti‐apoptotic influence through the control of JNK activity.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2012

Modeling human osteosarcoma in mice through 3AB‐OS cancer stem cell xenografts

Riccardo Di Fiore; A. Guercio; Roberto Puleio; Patrizia Di Marco; Rosa Drago-Ferrante; Antonella D'Anneo; Anna De Blasio; Daniela Carlisi; Santina Di Bella; Francesca Pentimalli; Iris Maria Forte; Antonio Giordano; Giovanni Tesoriere; Renza Vento

Osteosarcoma is the second leading cause of cancer‐related death for children and young adults. In this study, we have subcutaneously injected—with and without matrigel—athymic mice (Fox1nu/nu) with human osteosarcoma 3AB‐OS pluripotent cancer stem cells (CSCs), which we previously isolated from human osteosarcoma MG63 cells. Engrafted 3AB‐OS cells were highly tumorigenic and matrigel greatly accelerated both tumor engraftment and growth rate. 3AB‐OS CSC xenografts lacked crucial regulators of beta‐catenin levels (E‐cadherin, APC, and GSK‐3beta), and crucial factors to restrain proliferation, resulting therefore in a strong proliferation potential. During the first weeks of engraftment 3AB‐OS‐derived tumors expressed high levels of pAKT, beta1‐integrin and pFAK, nuclear beta‐catenin, c‐Myc, cyclin D2, along with high levels of hyperphosphorylated‐inactive pRb and anti‐apoptotic proteins such as Bcl‐2 and XIAP, and matrigel increased the expression of proliferative markers. Thereafter 3AB‐OS tumor xenografts obtained with matrigel co‐injection showed decreased proliferative potential and AKT levels, and undetectable hyperphosphorylated pRb, whereas beta1‐integrin and pFAK levels still increased. Engrafted tumor cells also showed multilineage commitment with matrigel particularly favoring the mesenchymal lineage. Concomitantly, many blood vessels and muscle fibers appeared in the tumor mass. Our findings suggest that matrigel might regulate 3AB‐OS cell behavior providing adequate cues for transducing proliferation and differentiation signals triggered by pAKT, beta1‐integrin, and pFAK and addressed by pRb protein. Our results provide for the first time a mouse model that recapitulates in vivo crucial features of human osteosarcoma CSCs that could be used to test and predict the efficacy in vivo of novel therapeutic treatments. J. Cell. Biochem. 113: 3380–3392, 2012.


Bone | 2014

Mutant p53 gain of function can be at the root of dedifferentiation of human osteosarcoma MG63 cells into 3AB-OS cancer stem cells

Riccardo Di Fiore; Michela Marcatti; Rosa Drago-Ferrante; Antonella D'Anneo; Michela Giuliano; Daniela Carlisi; Anna De Blasio; Francesca Querques; Lucio Pastore; Giovanni Tesoriere; Renza Vento

Osteosarcoma is a highly metastatic tumor affecting adolescents, for which there is no second-line chemotherapy. As suggested for most tumors, its capability to overgrow is probably driven by cancer stem cells (CSCs), and finding new targets to kill CSCs may be critical for improving patient survival. TP53 is the most frequently mutated tumor suppressor gene in cancers and mutant p53 protein (mutp53) can acquire gain of function (GOF) strongly contributing to malignancy. Studies thus far have not shown p53-GOF in osteosarcoma. Here, we investigated TP53 gene status/role in 3AB-OS cells-a highly aggressive CSC line previously selected from human osteosarcoma MG63 cells-to evaluate its involvement in promoting proliferation, invasiveness, resistance to apoptosis and stemness. By RT-PCR, methylation-specific PCR, fluorescent in situ hybridization, DNA sequence, western blot and immunofluorescence analyses, we have shown that-in comparison with parental MG63 cells where TP53 gene is hypermethylated, rearranged and in single copy-in 3AB-OS cells, TP53 is unmethylated, rearranged and in multiple copies, and mutp53 (p53-R248W/P72R) is post-translationally modified and with nuclear localization. p53-R248W/P72R-knockdown by short-interfering RNA reduced the growth and replication rate of 3AB-OS cells, markedly increasing cell cycle inhibitor levels and sensitized 3AB-OS cells to TRAIL-induced apoptosis by DR5 up-regulation; moreover, it strongly decreased the levels of stemness and invasiveness genes. We have also found that the ectopic expression of p53-R248W/P72R in MG63 cells promoted cancer stem-like features, as high proliferation rate, sphere formation, clonogenic growth, high migration and invasive ability; furthermore, it strongly increased the levels of stemness proteins. Overall, the findings suggest the involvement of p53-R248W/P72R at the origin of the aberrant characters of the 3AB-OS cells with the hypothesis that its GOF can be at the root of the dedifferentiation of MG63 cells into CSCs.

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