Apollonia Tullo
Sapienza University of Rome
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Publication
Featured researches published by Apollonia Tullo.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2009
Marina Mangiulli; Alessio Valletti; Mariano Francesco Caratozzolo; Apollonia Tullo; Elisabetta Sbisà; Anna Maria D’Erchia
p63 belongs to a family of transcription factors, which, while demonstrating striking conservation of functional domains, regulate distinct biological functions. Its principal role is in the regulation of epithelial commitment, differentiation and maintenance programs, during embryogenesis and in adult tissues. The p63 gene has a complex transcriptional pattern, producing two subclasses of N-terminal isoforms (TA and ΔN) which are alternatively spliced at the C-terminus. Here, we report the identification of two new C-terminus p63 variants, we named p63 δ and ε, that increase from 6 to 10 the number of the p63 isoforms. Expression analysis of all p63 variants demonstrates a tissue/cell-type-specific nature of p63 alternative transcript expression, probably related to their different cellular functions. We demonstrate that the new p63 variants as ΔN isoforms are active as transcription factors as they have nuclear localization and can modulate the expression of p63 target genes. Moreover, we report that, like ΔNp63α, ΔNp63δ and ε sustain cellular proliferation and that their expression decreases during keratinocyte differentiation, suggesting their involvement in this process. Taken together, our results demonstrate the existence of novel p63 proteins whose expression should be considered in future studies on the roles of p63 in the regulation of cellular functions.
BMC Bioinformatics | 2007
Elisabetta Sbisà; Domenico Catalano; Giorgio Grillo; Flavio Licciulli; Antonio Turi; Sabino Liuni; Anna De Grassi; Mariano Francesco Caratozzolo; Anna Maria D'Erchia; Beatriz Navarro; Apollonia Tullo; Cecilia Saccone; Andreas Gisel
BackgroundThe p53 gene family consists of the three genes p53, p63 and p73, which have polyhedral non-overlapping functions in pivotal cellular processes such as DNA synthesis and repair, growth arrest, apoptosis, genome stability, angiogenesis, development and differentiation. These genes encode sequence-specific nuclear transcription factors that recognise the same responsive element (RE) in their target genes. Their inactivation or aberrant expression may determine tumour progression or developmental disease. The discovery of several protein isoforms with antagonistic roles, which are produced by the expression of different promoters and alternative splicing, widened the complexity of the scenario of the transcriptional network of the p53 family members. Therefore, the identification of the genes transactivated by p53 family members is crucial to understand the specific role for each gene in cell cycle regulation. We have combined a genome-wide computational search of p53 family REs and microarray analysis to identify new direct target genes. The huge amount of biological data produced has generated a critical need for bioinformatic tools able to manage and integrate such data and facilitate their retrieval and analysis.DescriptionWe have developed the p53FamTaG database (p53 FAMily TArget Genes), a modular relational database, which contains p53 family direct target genes selected in the human genome searching for the presence of the REs and the expression profile of these target genes obtained by microarray experiments. p53FamTaG database also contains annotations of publicly available databases and links to other experimental data.The genome-wide computational search of the REs was performed using PatSearch, a pattern-matching program implemented in the DNAfan tool. These data were integrated with the microarray results we produced from the overexpression of different isoforms of p53, p63 and p73 stably transfected in isogenic cell lines, allowing the comparative study of the transcriptional activity of all the proteins in the same cellular background.p53FamTaG database is available free at http://www2.ba.itb.cnr.it/p53FamTaG/Conclusionp53FamTaG represents a unique integrated resource of human direct p53 family target genes that is extensively annotated and provides the users with an efficient query/retrieval system which displays the results of our microarray experiments and allows the export of RE sequences. The database was developed for supporting and integrating high-throughput in silico and experimental analyses and represents an important reference source of knowledge for research groups involved in the field of oncogenesis, apoptosis and cell cycle regulation.
Cell Cycle | 2006
Anna Maria D'Erchia; Apollonia Tullo; Konstantinos Lefkimmiatis; Cecilia Saccone; Elisabetta Sbisà
The discovery that the p53 family consists of three members (p53, p63 and p73) in vertebrates and of a single homolog in invertebrates has raised the challenge of understanding the functions of the ancestor and how they have evolved and differentiated within the duplicated genes in vertebrates. Here, we report that the fatty acid synthase (FAS) gene, encoding for a key enzyme involved in the biogenesis of membrane lipids in rapidly proliferating cells, is a conserved target of the p53 family throughout the evolution. We show that CEP-1, the C. elegans p53 homolog, is able to bind the two p53 family responsive elements (REs) identified in the worm fasn-1 gene. Moreover, we demonstrate that fasn-1 expression is modulated by CEP-1 in vivo, by comparing wild-type and CEP-1 knockout worms. In human, luciferase and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays demonstrate that TAp73α and ΔNp63α, but not p53, TAp73β and TAp63α bind the two p53 REs of the human FASN gene. We show that the ectopic expression of TAp73β and ΔNp63α leads to an increase of FASN mRNA levels, while their silencing produces a decrease of FASN expression. Furthermore, we present data showing a correlation between ΔNp63α and FASN expression in cellular proliferation. Of relevant importance is that fasn-1 is the first CEP-1 direct target gene identified so far in C. elegans and our results suggest a new CEP-1 role in cellular proliferation and development, besides the one already described in apoptosis of germ cells. These data confirm the hypothesis that the ancestral functions of the single invertebrate gene may have been spread out among the three vertebrate members, each of them have acquired specific role in cell cycle regulation.
Cancer and Metabolism | 2013
Claudia Calabrese; Luisa Iommarini; Ivana Kurelac; Maria Antonietta Calvaruso; Mariantonietta Capristo; Pier Luigi Lollini; Patrizia Nanni; Giordano Nicoletti; Carla De Giovanni; Anna Ghelli; Valentina Giorgio; Mariano Francesco Caratozzolo; Flaviana Marzano; Caterina Manzari; Christine M. Betts; Valerio Carelli; Claudio Ceccarelli; Marcella Attimonelli; Giovanni Romeo; Romana Fato; Michela Rugolo; Apollonia Tullo; Giuseppe Gasparre; Anna Maria Porcelli
BackgroundAerobic glycolysis, namely the Warburg effect, is the main hallmark of cancer cells. Mitochondrial respiratory dysfunction has been proposed to be one of the major causes for such glycolytic shift. This hypothesis has been revisited as tumors appear to undergo waves of gene regulation during progression, some of which rely on functional mitochondria. In this framework, the role of mitochondrial complex I is still debated, in particular with respect to the effect of mitochondrial DNA mutations in cancer metabolism. The aim of this work is to provide the proof of concept that functional complex I is necessary to sustain tumor progression.MethodsComplex I-null osteosarcoma cells were complemented with allotopically expressed complex I subunit 1 (MT-ND1). Complex I re-assembly and function recovery, also in terms of NADH consumption, were assessed. Clones were tested for their ability to grow in soft agar and to generate tumor masses in nude mice. Hypoxia levels were evaluated via pimonidazole staining and hypoxia-inducible factor-1α (HIF-1α) immunoblotting and histochemical staining. 454-pyrosequencing was implemented to obtain global transcriptomic profiling of allotopic and non-allotopic xenografts.ResultsComplementation of a truncative mutation in the gene encoding MT-ND1, showed that a functional enzyme was required to perform the glycolytic shift during the hypoxia response and to induce a Warburg profile in vitro and in vivo, fostering cancer progression. Such trigger was mediated by HIF-1α, whose stabilization was regulated after recovery of the balance between α-ketoglutarate and succinate due to a recuperation of NADH consumption that followed complex I rescue.ConclusionRespiratory complex I is essential for the induction of Warburg effect and adaptation to hypoxia of cancer cells, allowing them to sustain tumor growth. Differently from other mitochondrial tumor suppressor genes, therefore, a complex I severe mutation such as the one here reported may confer anti-tumorigenic properties, highlighting the prognostic values of such genetic markers in cancer.
Mitochondrion | 2015
Anna Maria D'Erchia; Anna Atlante; Gemma Gadaleta; Giulio Pavesi; Matteo Chiara; Caterina De Virgilio; Caterina Manzari; Francesca Mastropasqua; Gian Marco Prazzoli; Ernesto Picardi; Carmela Gissi; David S. Horner; Aurelio Reyes; Elisabetta Sbisà; Apollonia Tullo
Eukaryotic cells contain a population of mitochondria, variable in number and shape, which in turn contain multiple copies of a tiny compact genome (mtDNA) whose expression and function is strictly coordinated with the nuclear one. mtDNA copy number varies between different cell or tissues types, both in response to overall metabolic and bioenergetics demands and as a consequence or cause of specific pathological conditions. Here we present a novel and reliable methodology to assess the effective mtDNA copy number per diploid genome by investigating off-target reads obtained by whole-exome sequencing (WES) experiments. We also investigate whether and how mtDNA copy number correlates with mitochondrial mass, respiratory activity and expression levels. Analyzing six different tissues from three age- and sex-matched human individuals, we found a highly significant linear correlation between mtDNA copy number estimated by qPCR and the frequency of mtDNA off target WES reads. Furthermore, mtDNA copy number showed highly significant correlation with mitochondrial gene expression levels as measured by RNA-Seq as well as with mitochondrial mass and respiratory activity. Our methodology makes thus feasible, at a large scale, the investigation of mtDNA copy number in diverse cell-types, tissues and pathological conditions or in response to specific treatments.
Cancer Research | 2009
Konstantinos Lefkimmiatis; Mariano Francesco Caratozzolo; Paola Merlo; Anna Maria D'Erchia; Beatriz Navarro; Massimo Levrero; Elisabetta Sbisà; Apollonia Tullo
Despite extensive studies on the role of tumor suppressor p53 protein and its homologues, p73 and p63, following their overexpression or cellular stress, very little is known about the regulation of the three proteins in cells during physiologic cell cycle progression. We report a role for p73 and p63 in supporting cellular proliferation through the transcriptional activation of the genes involved in G(1)-S and G(2)-M progression. We found that in MCF-7 cells, p73 and p63, but not p53, are modulated during the cell cycle with a peak in S phase, and their silencing determines a significant suppression of proliferation compared with the control. Chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis shows that in cycling cells, p73 and p63 are bound to the p53-responsive elements (RE) present in the regulatory region of cell cycle progression genes. On the contrary, when the cells are arrested in G(0)-G(1), p73 detaches from the REs and it is replaced by p53, which represses the expression of these genes. When the cells move in S phase, p73 is recruited again and p53 is displaced or is weakly bound to the REs. These data open new possibilities for understanding the involvement of p73 and p63 in cancer. The elevated concentrations of p73 and p63 found in many cancers could cause the aberrant activation of cell growth progression genes and therefore contribute to cancer initiation or progression under certain conditions.
Cell Cycle | 2006
Elisabetta Sbisà; Giuseppe Mastropasqua; Kostantinos Lefkimmiatis; Mariano Francesco Caratozzolo; Anna Maria D'Erchia; Apollonia Tullo
An unresolved issue regards the role of p73 and p63, the two homologs of the p53 oncosuppressor gene, in normal cells and in tumour development. Specific target genes for each protein need to be identified and characterized in order to understand the specific role of each protein in tumour initiation and progression as well as in oncosuppression and development. We tested whether p63 is implicated in transcriptional events related to sustaining cell proliferation by transactivation of antiapoptotic and cell survival target genes such as Adenosine Deaminase (ADA), an important gene involved in cell proliferation. We demonstrate that ADA is a direct target gene of p63 isoforms. In human keratinocytes, the rate of proliferation and the high level of ADA transcript diminished upon elimination of p63 by small interfering RNA. Reporter assays and chromatin immunoprecipitation experiments indicate a physical interaction of p63 with the two putative p53 binding sites we identified in the ADA gene. Moreover, in response to p53 stabilization and ?Np63 downregulation in normal keratinocytes after U.V. treatment, we found a change in the transcriptional pattern of the p53 family target genes, consistent with the different roles played by p53 and p63 in tumour suppression and cellular proliferation. In fact p53 upregulation determined an increase in p21, which in turn mediated the cell cycle arrest, while the downregulation of ?Np63 determined a marked decrease in ADA transcript. The experiments reported here support the hypothesis that TAp63 and ?Np63 might contribute to tumour genesis not exclusively by antagonizing p53, but by conferring a proliferative potential on cancer cells through the transactivation of target genes indispensable for cell division, such as the Adenosine Deaminase gene.
Cell Death and Disease | 2013
A Bartoletti-Stella; Elisa Mariani; Ivana Kurelac; Alessandra Maresca; Mariano Francesco Caratozzolo; Luisa Iommarini; Valerio Carelli; Leonardo Henry Eusebi; A. Guido; Giovanna Cenacchi; Lorenzo Fuccio; Michela Rugolo; Apollonia Tullo; Anna Maria Porcelli; Giuseppe Gasparre
Mitochondrial biogenesis is an orchestrated process that presides to the regulation of the organelles homeostasis within a cell. We show that γ-rays, at doses commonly used in the radiation therapy for cancer treatment, induce an increase in mitochondrial mass and function, in response to a genotoxic stress that pushes cells into senescence, in the presence of a functional p53. Although the main effector of the response to γ-rays is the p53-p21 axis, we demonstrated that mitochondrial biogenesis is only indirectly regulated by p53, whose activation triggers a murine double minute 2 (MDM2)-mediated hypoxia-inducible factor 1α (HIF1α) degradation, leading to the release of peroxisome-proliferator activated receptor gamma co-activator 1β inhibition by HIF1α, thus promoting mitochondrial biogenesis. Mimicking hypoxia by HIF1α stabilization, in fact, blunts the mitochondrial response to γ-rays as well as the induction of p21-mediated cell senescence, indicating prevalence of the hypoxic over the genotoxic response. Finally, we also show in vivo that post-radiotherapy mitochondrial DNA copy number increase well correlates with lack of HIF1α increase in the tissue, concluding this may be a useful molecular tool to infer the trigger of a hypoxic response during radiotherapy, which may lead to failure of activation of cell senescence.
Cell Cycle | 2012
Mariano Francesco Caratozzolo; Lucia Micale; Maria Giuseppina Turturo; Silvia Cornacchia; Carmela Fusco; Flaviana Marzano; Bartolomeo Augello; Anna Maria D'Erchia; Luisa Guerrini; Elisabetta Sbisà; Giuseppe Merla; Apollonia Tullo
p53 is a central hub in controlling cell proliferation. To maintain genome integrity in response to cellular stress, p53 directly regulates the transcription of genes involved in cell cycle arrest, DNA repair, apoptosis and/or senescence. An array of post-translational modifications and protein-protein interactions modulates its stability and activities in order to avoid malignant transformation. However, to date it is still not clear how cells decide their own fate in response to different types of stress. We described here that the human TRIM8 protein, a member of the TRIM family, is a new modulator of the p53-mediated tumor suppression mechanism. We showed that under stress conditions, such as UV exposure, p53 induced the expression of TRIM8, which in turn stabilized p53 leading to cell cycle arrest and reduction of cell proliferation through enhancement of CDKN1A (p21) and GADD45 expression. TRIM8 silencing reduced the capacity of p53 to activate genes involved in cell cycle arrest and DNA repair, in response to cellular stress. Concurrently, TRIM8 overexpression induced the degradation of the MDM2 protein, the principal regulator of p53 stability. Co-immunoprecipitation experiments showed that TRIM8 physically interacted with p53, impairing its interaction with MDM2. Altogether, our results reveal a previously unknown regulatory pathway controlling p53 activity and suggest TRIM8 as a novel therapeutic target to enhance p53 tumor suppressor activity.
Gene | 2002
Cecilia Saccone; Pierre-Olivier Barome; Anna Maria D'Erchia; Ilenia D'Errico; Elisabetta Sbisà; Apollonia Tullo
During the evolution of Metazoa, the mitochondrial genome has remained practically unchanged as indicated by its small size and constant gene content in each lineage, although several evolutionary processes have taken place. In contrast, the nuclear genome of Metazoa has undergone dramatic changes, as is demonstrated by some entire genomes completely sequenced so far. The expansion of gene families and the appearance of new functions and new regulatory circuits are among the most prominent features. Here, we report a description of the evolution of the p53 gene family as an example of expansion of both genetic complexity and gene expression of the nuclear genome.