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Featured researches published by B Torsello.


Journal of Hepatology | 2013

Notch signaling regulates tubular morphogenesis during repair from biliary damage in mice

Romina Fiorotto; Aileen Raizner; Carola M. Morell; B Torsello; R. Scirpo; Luca Fabris; Carlo Spirli; Mario Strazzabosco

BACKGROUND & AIMS Repair from biliary damages requires the biliary specification of hepatic progenitor cells and the remodeling of ductular reactive structures into branching biliary tubules. We hypothesized that the morphogenetic role of Notch signaling is maintained during the repair process and have addressed this hypothesis using pharmacologic and genetic models of defective Notch signaling. METHODS Treatment with DDC (3,5-diethoxycarbonyl-1,4-dihydrocollidine) or ANIT (alpha-naphthyl-isothiocyanate) was used to induce biliary damage in wild type mice and in mice with a liver specific defect in the Notch-2 receptor (Notch-2-cKO) or in RPB-Jk. Hepatic progenitor cells, ductular reaction, and mature ductules were quantified using K19 and SOX-9. RESULTS In DDC treated wild type mice, pharmacologic Notch inhibition with dibenzazepine decreased the number of both ductular reaction and hepatic progenitor cells. Notch-2-cKO mice treated with DDC or ANIT accumulated hepatic progenitor cells that failed to progress into mature ducts. In RBP-Jk-cKO mice, mature ducts and hepatic progenitor cells were both significantly reduced with respect to similarly treated wild type mice. The mouse progenitor cell line BMOL cultured on matrigel, formed a tubular network allowing the study of tubule formation in vitro; γ-secretase inhibitor treatment and siRNAs silencing of Notch-1, Notch-2 or Jagged-1 significantly reduced both the length and number of tubular branches. CONCLUSIONS These data demonstrate that Notch signaling plays an essential role in biliary repair. Lack of Notch-2 prevents biliary tubule formation, both in vivo and in vitro. Lack of RBP-Jk inhibits the generation of biliary-committed precursors and tubule formation.


American Journal of Pathology | 2010

Primary Cell Cultures from Human Renal Cortex and Renal-Cell Carcinoma Evidence a Differential Expression of Two Spliced Isoforms of Annexin A3

C Bianchi; S Bombelli; Francesca Raimondo; B Torsello; Valentina Angeloni; Stefano Ferrero; Vitalba Di Stefano; Clizia Chinello; Ingrid Cifola; Lara Invernizzi; Paolo Brambilla; Fulvio Magni; Marina Pitto; G. Zanetti; Paolo Mocarelli; R Perego

Primary cell cultures from renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and normal renal cortex tissue of 60 patients have been established, with high efficiency (more than 70%) and reproducibility, and extensively characterized. These cultures composed of more than 90% of normal or tumor tubular cells have been instrumental for molecular characterization of Annexin A3 (AnxA3), never extensively studied before in RCC cells although AnxA3 has a prognostic relevance in some cancer and it has been suggested to be involved in the hypoxia-inducible factor-1 pathway. Western blot analysis of 20 matched cortex/RCC culture lysates showed two AnxA3 protein bands of 36 and 33 kDa, and two-dimensional Western blot evidenced several specific protein spots. In RCC cultures the 36-kDa isoform was significantly down-regulated and the 33-kDa isoform up-regulated. Furthermore, the inversion of the quantitative expression pattern of two AnxA3 isoforms in tumor cultures correlate with hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha expression. The total AnxA3 protein is down-regulated in RCC cultures as confirmed also in tissues by tissue microarray. Two AnxA3 transcripts that differ for alternative splicing of exon III have been also detected. Real-time PCR quantification in 19 matched cortex/RCC cultures confirms the down-regulation of longer isoform in RCC cells. The characteristic expression pattern of AnxA3 in normal and tumor renal cells, documented in our primary cultures, may open new insight in RCC management.


Stem Cell Research | 2013

PKHhigh cells within clonal human nephrospheres provide a purified adult renal stem cell population

S Bombelli; Maria Anna Zipeto; B Torsello; Giorgio Bovo; Vitalba Di Stefano; Cristina Bugarin; Paola Zordan; P Viganò; Giorgio Cattoretti; G Strada; C Bianchi; R Perego

The existence and identification of adult renal stem cells is a controversial issue. In this study, renal stem cells were identified from cultures of clonal human nephrospheres. The cultured nephrospheres exhibited the activation of stem cell pathways and contained cells at different levels of maturation. In each nephrosphere the presence of 1.12-1.25 cells mirroring stem cell properties was calculated. The nephrosphere cells were able to generate three-dimensional tubular structures in 3D cultures and in vivo. In clonal human nephrospheres a PKH(high) phenotype was isolated using PKH26 epifluorescence, which can identify quiescent cells within the nephrospheres. The PKH(high) cells, capable of self-renewal and of generating a differentiated epithelial, endothelial and podocytic progeny, can also survive in vivo maintaining the undifferentiated status. The PKH(high) status, together with a CD133(+)/CD24(-) phenotype, identified a homogeneous cell population displaying in vitro self-renewal and multipotency capacity. The resident adult renal stem cell population isolated from nephrospheres can be used for the study of mechanisms that regulate self-renewal and differentiation in adult renal tissue as well as in renal pathological conditions.


European Journal of Cancer | 2008

Concentration and microsatellite status of plasma DNA for monitoring patients with renal carcinoma

R Perego; Matteo Corizzato; Paola Brambilla; Stefano Ferrero; C Bianchi; Ester Fasoli; Stefano Signorini; B Torsello; Lara Invernizzi; S Bombelli; Valentina Angeloni; Marina Pitto; Cristina Battaglia; Vanessa Proserpio; Fulvio Magni; Giacomo Galasso; Paolo Mocarelli

We verified the feasibility of plasma bound method for detecting renal cell carcinoma (RCC) combining the study of plasma DNA concentration and microsatellite alterations (LOH). Plasma DNA concentration was evaluated with real-time PCR in 54 patients with renal neoplasm before surgery and in 20 of these patients during a 26-64 month follow-up. Microsatellite study was performed on tumour tissue DNA of 33 RCC clear cell (RCCcc) and on plasma DNA of 14 RCCcc patients during preoperative and/or follow-up period. Patients had a significantly high (26.4+/-48.3 ng/ml versus controls 3.2+/-1.5 ng/ml; p=0.003) preoperative plasma DNA concentration that decreased after nephrectomy. During follow-up, plasma DNA increased in 12 patients without evidence of neoplasia; 3 patients successively relapsed. Tumour tissue DNA of 25 RCCcc patients (75.8%) displayed microsatellite LOH. Preoperative plasma DNA of 9 patients harboured LOH in 5 cases (55.6%). Augmented plasma DNA of 7 patients displayed LOH in 3 cases (42.9%) at follow-up, and in 1 case preceded the recurrence of disease. Plasma DNA concentration combined with microsatellite LOH in plasma DNA may predict disease recurrence in RCC patients.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2008

Eight full‐length abelson related gene (Arg) isoforms are constitutively expressed in caki‐1 cell line and cell distribution of two isoforms has been analyzed after transfection

C Bianchi; B Torsello; Valentina Angeloni; S Bombelli; Monica Soldi; Lara Invernizzi; P.G. Brambilla; R Perego

The human Arg (Abl2) nonreceptor tyrosine kinase has a role in cytoskeletal rearrangements by its C‐terminal F‐actin‐ and microtubule‐binding sequences. We have previously identified Arg transcripts with different 5′‐ and 3′‐ends, named respectively long and short 1A and 1B (1AL, 1AS, 1BL, 1BS) and long and short C‐termini (CTL and CTS), that have different expression patterns in various cell types. The combination of the different ends permits to predict eight putative full‐length Arg transcripts and corresponding proteins. By Reverse Transcription‐Long PCR we show here that all eight full‐length transcripts are endogenously expressed in Caki‐1 cells and the two bands, ≃10 kDa different, shown by 1‐D Western blots of Hek293T and Caki‐1 lysates correspond to the full‐length Arg protein isoforms with different C‐termini. 2‐D Western blot analysis evidenced different high molecular weight and slight acidic specific spots in Hek293T and Caki‐1 lysates. The cellular localization of two Arg isoforms (1BLCTL and 1BLCTS) transfected in Caki‐1 and Hek293T cells was cytoplasmic, and some differences in cytoskeleton interactions have been evidenced. Moreover, in Hek293T cells only the transfected 1BLCTS isoform gives rise to a large intracytoplasmic cylindrical structure containing phalloidin‐positive amorphous actin aggregates. The presence of eight full‐length Arg isoforms with different cellular expression may imply a diverse functional role in normal and neoplastic cells. J. Cell. Biochem. 105: 1219–1227, 2008.


Experimental Cell Research | 2013

One isoform of Arg/Abl2 tyrosine kinase is nuclear and the other seven cytosolic isoforms differently modulate cell morphology, motility and the cytoskeleton.

C Bianchi; B Torsello; Vitalba Di Stefano; Maria Anna Zipeto; Rita Facchetti; S Bombelli; R Perego

The non-receptor tyrosine kinase Abelson related gene (Arg/Abl2) regulates cell migration and morphogenesis by modulating the cytoskeleton. Arg promotes actin-based cell protrusions and spreading, and inhibits cell migration by attenuating stress fiber formation and contractility via activation of the RhoA inhibitor, p190RhoGAP, and by regulating focal adhesion dynamics also via CrkII phosphorylation. Eight full-length Arg isoforms with different N- and C-termini are endogenously expressed in human cells. In this paper, the eight Arg isoforms, subcloned in the pFLAG-CMV2 vector, were transfected in COS-7 cells in order to study their subcellular distribution and role in cell morphology, migration and cytoskeletal modulation. The transfected 1BSCTS Arg isoform has a nuclear distribution and phosphorylates CrkII in the nucleus, whilst the other isoforms are detected in the cytoplasm. The 1BLCTL, 1BSCTL, 1ASCTS isoforms were able to significantly decrease stress fibers, induce cell shrinkage and filopodia-like protrusions with a significant increase in p190RhoGAP phosphorylation. In contrast, 1ALCTL, 1ALCTS, 1ASCTL and 1BLCTS isoforms do not significantly decrease stress fibers and induce the formation of retraction tail-like protrusions. The 1BLCTL and 1ALCTL isoforms have different effects on cell migration and focal adhesions. All these data may open new perspectives to study the mechanisms of cell invasiveness.


Journal of Cell Science | 2016

Arg tyrosine kinase modulates TGF-β1 production in human renal tubular cells under high-glucose conditions.

B Torsello; C Bianchi; C Meregalli; Vitalba Di Stefano; Lara Invernizzi; Sofia De Marco; Giorgio Bovo; Rinaldo Brivio; G Strada; S Bombelli; R Perego

ABSTRACT Renal tubular cells are involved in the tubular interstitial fibrosis observed in diabetic nephropathy. It is debated whether epithelial–mesenchymal transition (EMT) affects tubular cells, which under high-glucose conditions overproduce transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β), a fibrogenic cytokine involved in interstitial fibrosis development. Our study investigated the involvement of non-receptor tyrosine kinase Arg (also called Abl2) in TGF-β production. Human primary tubular cell cultures exposed to high-glucose conditions were used. These cells showed an elongated morphology, stress fibers and vimentin increment but maintained most of the epithelial marker expression and distribution. In these cells exposed to high glucose, which overexpressed and secreted active TGF-β1, Arg protein and activity was downregulated. A further TGF-β1 increase was induced by Arg silencing with siRNA, as with the Arg tyrosine kinase inhibitor Imatinib. In the cells exposed to high glucose, reactive oxygen species (ROS)-dependent Arg kinase downregulation induced both RhoA activation, through p190RhoGAPA (also known as ARHGAP35) modulation, and proteasome activity inhibition. These data evidence a new specific involvement of Arg kinase into the regulation of TGF-β1 expression in tubular cells under high-glucose conditions and provide cues for new translational approaches in diabetic nephropathy. Summary: The downregulation of Arg kinase, induced in human primary tubular cell cultures by incubation in a high glucose concentration, is specifically involved in TGF-β1 overproduction that activates fibroblasts.


American Journal of Pathology | 2018

Nephrosphere-Derived Cells Are Induced to Multilineage Differentiation when Cultured on Human Decellularized Kidney Scaffolds

S Bombelli; C Meregalli; Carla Rossana Scalia; Giorgio Bovo; B Torsello; Sofia De Marco; Massimiliano Cadamuro; P Viganò; G Strada; Giorgio Cattoretti; C Bianchi; R Perego

In end-stage chronic kidney disease, the option of organ transplantation is limited because of the scarce availability of kidneys. The combination of stem cell research, regenerative medicine, and tissue engineering seems a promising approach to produce new transplantable kidneys. Currently, the possibility to repopulate naturally obtained scaffolds with cells of different sources is advancing. Our aim was to test, for the first time, whether the nephrosphere (NS) cells, composed by renal stem/progenitor-like cells, were able to repopulate different nephron portions of renal extracellular matrix scaffolds obtained after decellularization of human renal tissue slices. Our decellularization protocol enabled us to obtain a completely acellular renal scaffold while maintaining the extracellular matrix structure and composition in terms of collagen IV, laminin, and fibronectin. NS cells, cultured on decellularized renal scaffolds with basal medium, differentiated into proximal and distal tubules as well as endothelium, as highlighted by histology and by the specific expression of epithelial cytokeratin 8.18, proximal tubular CD10, distal tubular cytokeratin 7, and endothelial von Willebrand factor markers. Endothelial medium promoted the differentiation toward the endothelium, whereas epithelial medium promoted the differentiation toward the epithelium. NS cells seem to be a good tool for scaffold repopulation, paving the way for experimental investigations focused on whole-kidney reconstruction.


PLOS ONE | 2017

Notch signaling and progenitor/ductular reaction in steatohepatitis

Carola M. Morell; Romina Fiorotto; Marica Meroni; Aileen Raizner; B Torsello; Massimiliano Cadamuro; Gaia Spagnuolo; Eleanna Kaffe; Salvatore Sutti; Emanuele Albano; Mario Strazzabosco

Background and objective Persistent hepatic progenitor cells (HPC) activation resulting in ductular reaction (DR) is responsible for pathologic liver repair in cholangiopathies. Also, HPC/DR expansion correlates with fibrosis in several chronic liver diseases, including steatohepatitis. Increasing evidence indicates Notch signaling as a key regulator of HPC/DR response in biliary and more in general liver injuries. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the role of Notch during HPC/DR activation in a mouse model of steatohepatitis. Methods Steatohepatitis was generated using methionine-choline deficient (MCD) diet. For hepatocyte lineage tracing, R26R-YFP mice were infected with AAV8-TBG-Cre. Results MCD diet promoted a strong HPC/DR response that progressively diffused in the lobule, and correlated with increased fibrosis and TGF-β1 expression. Notch signaling was unchanged in laser-capture microdissected HPC/DR, whereas Notch receptors were down regulated in hepatocytes. However, in-vivo lineage tracing experiments identified discrete hepatocytes showing Notch-1 activation and expressing (the Notch-dependent) Sox9. Stimulation of AML-12 hepatocyte-cell line with immobilized Jag1 induced Sox9 and down-regulated albumin and BSEP expression. TGF-β1 treatment in primary hepatic stellate cells (HSC) induced Jag1 expression. In MCD diet-fed mice, αSMA-positive HSC were localized around Sox9 expressing hepatocytes, suggesting that Notch activation in hepatocytes was promoted by TGF-β1 stimulated HSC. In-vivo Notch inhibition reduced HPC response and fibrosis progression. Conclusion Our data suggest that Notch signaling is an important regulator of DR and that in steatohepatitis, hepatocytes exposed to Jag1-positive HSC, contribute to pathologic DR by undergoing Notch-mediated differentiation towards an HPC-like phenotype. Given the roles of Notch in fibrosis and liver cancer, these data suggest mesenchymal expression of Jag1 as an alternative therapeutic target.


Oncotarget | 2017

The glucose and lipid metabolism reprogramming is gradedependent in clear cell renal cell carcinoma primary cultures and is targetable to modulate cell viability and proliferation

C Bianchi; C Meregalli; S Bombelli; Vitalba Di Stefano; Francesco Salerno; B Torsello; Sofia De Marco; Giorgio Bovo; Ingrid Cifola; Eleonora Mangano; Cristina Battaglia; G Strada; Giuseppe Lucarelli; Robert H. Weiss; R Perego

Clear cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) has a poor prognosis despite novel biological targeted therapies. Tumor aggressiveness and poor survival may correlate with tumor grade at diagnosis and with complex metabolic alterations, also involving glucose and lipid metabolism. However, currently no grade-specific metabolic therapy addresses these alterations. Here we used primary cell cultures from ccRCC of low- and high-grade to investigate the effect on energy state and reduced pyridine nucleotide level, and on viability and proliferation, of specific inhibition of glycolysis with 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2DG), or fatty acid oxidation with Etomoxir. Our primary cultures retained the tissue grade-dependent modulation of lipid and glycogen storage and aerobic glycolysis (Warburg effect). 2DG affected lactate production, energy state and reduced pyridine nucleotide level in high-grade ccRCC cultures, but the energy state only in low-grade. Rather, Etomoxir affected energy state in high-grade and reduced pyridine nucleotide level in low-grade cultures. Energy state and reduced pyridine nucleotide level were evaluated by ATP and reduced 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium (MTT) dye quantification, respectively. 2DG treatment impaired cell proliferation and viability of low-grade ccRCC and normal cortex cultures, whereas Etomoxir showed a cytostatic and cytotoxic effect only in high-grade ccRCC cultures. Our data indicate that in ccRCC the Warburg effect is a grade-dependent feature, and fatty acid oxidation can be activated for different grade-dependent metabolic needs. A possible grade-dependent metabolic therapeutic approach in ccRCC is also highlighted.

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R Perego

University of Milano-Bicocca

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C Bianchi

University of Milano-Bicocca

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S Bombelli

University of Milano-Bicocca

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G Strada

University of Milano-Bicocca

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P Viganò

University of Milano-Bicocca

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Vitalba Di Stefano

University of Milano-Bicocca

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