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Featured researches published by Caterina Russo.


Molecular Cancer Research | 2007

Osteoactivin Promotes Breast Cancer Metastasis to Bone

April A.N. Rose; François Pepin; Caterina Russo; Jad Abou Khalil; Michael Hallett; Peter M. Siegel

The skeleton is a preferred site of metastasis in patients with disseminated breast cancer. We have used 4T1 mouse mammary carcinoma cells, which metastasize to bone from the mammary fat pads of immunocompetent mice, to identify novel genes involved in this process. In vivo selection of parental cells resulted in the isolation of independent, aggressively bone metastatic breast cancer populations with reduced metastasis to the lung. Gene expression profiling identified osteoactivin as a candidate that is highly and selectively expressed in aggressively bone metastatic breast cancer cells. These cells displayed enhanced migratory and invasive characteristics in vitro, the latter requiring sustained osteoactivin expression. Osteoactivin depletion in these cells, by small interfering RNA, also lead to a loss of matrix metalloproteinase-3 expression, whereas forced osteoactivin expression in parental 4T1 cells was sufficient to elevate matrix metalloproteinase-3 levels, suggesting that this matrix metalloproteinase may be an important mediator of osteoactivin function. Overexpression of osteoactivin in an independent, weakly bone metastatic breast cancer cell model significantly enhanced the formation of osteolytic bone metastases in vivo. Finally, high levels of osteoactivin expression in primary human breast cancers correlate with estrogen receptor–negative status and increasing tumor grade. Thus, we have identified osteoactivin as a protein that is expressed in aggressive human breast cancers and is capable of promoting breast cancer metastasis to bone. (Mol Cancer Res 2007;5(10):1001–14)


Clinical Cancer Research | 2010

Glycoprotein Nonmetastatic B Is an Independent Prognostic Indicator of Recurrence and a Novel Therapeutic Target in Breast Cancer

April A.N. Rose; Andrée-Anne Grosset; Zhifeng Dong; Caterina Russo; Patricia Macdonald; Nicholas Bertos; Yves St-Pierre; Ronit Simantov; Michael Hallett; Morag Park; Louis Gaboury; Peter M. Siegel

Purpose: Although the murine orthologue of glycoprotein nonmetastatic B (GPNMB), Osteoactivin, promotes breast cancer metastasis in an in vivo mouse model, its importance in human breast cancer is unknown. We have examined the significance of GPNMB expression as a prognostic indicator of recurrence and assessed its potential as a novel therapeutic target in breast cancer. Experimental Design: The clinical significance of GPNMB expression in breast cancer was addressed by analyzing GPNMB levels in several published gene expression data sets and two independent tissue microarrays derived from human breast tumors. GPNMB-expressing human breast cancer cell lines were further used to validate a toxin-conjugated anti-GPNMB antibody as a novel therapeutic agent. Results: GPNMB expression correlates with shorter recurrence times and reduced overall survival of breast cancer patients. Epithelial-specific GPNMB staining is an independent prognostic indicator for breast cancer recurrence. GPNMB is highly expressed in basal and triple-negative breast cancers and is associated with increased risk of recurrence within this subtype. GPNMB expression confers a more migratory and invasive phenotype on breast cancer cells and sensitizes them to killing by CDX-011 (glembatumumab vedotin), a GPNMB-targeted antibody-drug conjugate. Conclusions: GPNMB expression is associated with the basal/triple-negative subtype and is a prognostic marker of poor outcome in patients with breast cancer. CDX-011 (glembatumumab vedotin) is a promising new targeted therapy for patients with metastatic triple-negative breast cancers, a patient population that currently lacks targeted-therapy options. Clin Cancer Res; 16(7); 2147–56. ©2010 AACR.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 2008

Signaling through ShcA Is Required for Transforming Growth Factor β- and Neu/ErbB-2-Induced Breast Cancer Cell Motility and Invasion

Jason J. Northey; Juliann Chmielecki; Elaine Ngan; Caterina Russo; Matthew G. Annis; William J. Muller; Peter M. Siegel

ABSTRACT Cooperation between the Neu/ErbB-2 and transforming growth factor β (TGF-β) signaling pathways enhances the invasive and metastatic capabilities of breast cancer cells; however, the underlying mechanisms mediating this synergy have yet to be fully explained. We demonstrate that TGF-β induces the migration and invasion of mammary tumor explants expressing an activated Neu/ErbB-2 receptor, which requires signaling from autophosphorylation sites located in the C terminus. A systematic analysis of mammary tumor explants expressing Neu/ErbB-2 add-back receptors that couple to distinct signaling molecules has mapped the synergistic effect of TGF-β-induced motility and invasion to signals emanating from tyrosine residues 1226/1227 and 1253 of Neu/ErbB-2. Given that the ShcA adaptor protein is known to interact with Neu/ErbB-2 through these residues, we investigated the importance of this signaling molecule in TGF-β-induced cell motility and invasion. The reduction of ShcA expression rendered cells expressing activated Neu/ErbB-2, or add-back receptors signaling specifically through tyrosines 1226/1227 or 1253, unresponsive to TGF-β-induced motility and invasion. In addition, a dominant-negative form of ShcA, lacking its three known tyrosine phosphorylation sites, completely abrogates the TGF-β-induced migration and invasion of breast cancer cells expressing activated Neu/ErbB-2. Our results implicate signaling through the ShcA adaptor as a key component in the synergistic interaction between these pathways.


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1998

Genomic and non-genomic mechanisms of oxytocin receptor regulation.

Hans H. Zingg; E. Grazzini; C Breton; A Larcher; Florence Rozen; Caterina Russo; Gilles Guillon; Bernard Mouillac

Our recent studies have shown that regulation of uterine oxytocin (OT) binding involves at least two different mechanism: Estradiol (E2)-induced upregulation is accompanied by an increase in OT receptor (OTR) mRNA accumulation, implying that the E2 effect is mediated via increased OTR gene transcription and/or OTR mRNA stabilization. In contrast, P (P)-induced OTR down-regulation occurs via a novel non-genomic mechanism, involving a direct interaction of P with the OTR at the level of the cell membrane. We found that P specifically binds to the OTR and inhibits its ligand binding and signalling functions. Physiological levels of P repress in vitro the ligand binding capacity (Bmax) of the OTR by > 50%. When expressed in CHO cells, the OTR provides a high affinity (Kd: 20nM) membrane binding site for P. OT-induced inositol phosphate production and intracellular calcium mobilization is inhibited 85% and 90%, respectively, by P. These effects are specific as signalling and binding functions of the closely related V1a vasopressin receptor remain unaffected by P, and as other, related steroids are devoid of any effect on OTR binding or signalling functions. The present observation of a specific interaction of a steroid with a G-protein-linked receptor defines a new mechanism of non-genomic steroid action and uncovers a novel level of crosstalk between steroid and peptide hormone action.


Bone | 2008

Osteoclast precursors acquire sensitivity to breast cancer derived factors early in differentiation

Yubin Guo; Kerstin Tiedemann; Jad Abou Khalil; Caterina Russo; Peter M. Siegel; Svetlana V. Komarova

The development of osteolytic breast cancer bone metastases relies on the ability of tumor cells to stimulate the formation of bone-resorbing osteoclasts. We have studied the effects of soluble factors produced by MDA-MB-231 breast carcinoma cells on osteoclast formation from human monocytic precursors and RAW 264.7 monocytic cells. Although factors produced by breast cancer cells were ineffective in inducing osteoclast formation from monocytes, priming with RANKL for 1-3 days dramatically increased receptiveness of osteoclast precursors to cancer-derived factors, which enhanced osteoclast formation 2-3 fold in the absence of supporting cell types. Osteoclasts formed by exposure to cancer factors expressed proteases critical for bone resorption, cathepsin K and matrix metalloproteinase 9, and were capable of resorbing calcified matrices. Expression of key osteoclastogenic transcription factor NFATc1 in osteoclast precursors was dramatically increased by short treatment with RANKL. NFATc1 was localized in the nuclei of primed osteoclast precursors when RANKL was present; however removal of RANKL led to rapid nuclear export of NFATc1. Cancer-derived factors were able to substitute for RANKL in supporting nuclear localization of NFATc1. Using neutralizing antibodies against TGFbeta, and a kinase inhibitor targeting the TGFbeta type I receptor, we identified TGFbeta as a permissive factor, required for the effects of breast cancer cells on NFATc1 nuclear accumulation and osteoclast formation. Our data suggest that, during differentiation, osteoclast precursors acquire the competency to respond to factors secreted by breast cancer cells, which may serve to promote tumor growth at skeletal sites undergoing active bone turnover.


PLOS ONE | 2010

Exon-level transcriptome profiling in murine breast cancer reveals splicing changes specific to tumors with different metastatic abilities.

Amandine Bemmo; Christel Dias; April A.N. Rose; Caterina Russo; Peter M. Siegel; Jacek Majewski

Background Breast cancer is the second most frequent type of cancer affecting women. We are increasingly aware that changes in mRNA splicing are associated with various characteristics of cancer. The most deadly aspect of cancer is metastasis, the process by which cancer spreads from the primary tumor to distant organs. However, little is known specifically about the involvement of alternative splicing in the formation of macroscopic metastases. Our study investigates transcript isoform changes that characterize tumors of different abilities to form growing metastases. Methods and Findings To identify alternative splicing events (ASEs) that are associated with the fully metastatic phenotype in breast cancer, we used Affymetrix Exon Microarrays to profile mRNA isoform variations genome-wide in weakly metastatic (168FARN and 4T07) and highly metastatic (4T1) mammary carcinomas. Statistical analysis identified significant expression changes in 7606 out of 155,994 (4%) exons and in 1725 out of 189,460 (1%) intronic regions, which affect 2623 out of 16,654 (16%) genes. These changes correspond to putative alternative isoforms—several of which are novel—that are differentially expressed between tumors of varying metastatic phenotypes. Gene pathway analysis showed that 1224 of genes expressing alternative isoforms were involved in cell growth, cell interactions, cell proliferation, cell migration and cell death and have been previously linked to cancers and genetic disorders. We chose ten predicted splice variants for RT-PCR validation, eight of which were successfully confirmed (MED24, MFI2, SRRT, CD44, CLK1 and HNRNPH1). These include three novel intron retentions in CD44, a gene in which isoform variations have been previously associated with the metastasis of several cancers. Conclusion Our findings reveal that various genes are differently spliced and/or expressed in association with the metastatic phenotype of tumor cells. Identification of metastasis-specific isoforms may contribute to the development of improved breast cancer stage identification and targeted therapies.


Journal of Cellular Physiology | 2007

Parathyroid hormone‐related protein (PTHrP) inhibits mitochondrial‐dependent apoptosis through CK2

Liliane Okoumassoun; Caterina Russo; Francine Denizeau; Diana A. Averill-Bates; Janet E. Henderson

Over the past decade, parathyroid hormone‐related protein (PTHrP) has been identified as a key survival factor for cells subjected to apoptotic stimuli. Its anti‐apoptotic activity has been attributed to nuclear accumulation of the intact protein, or a synthetic peptide corresponding to its nuclear targeting sequence (NTS), which promotes rapid exit of nutrient deprived cells from the cell cycle. Intracellular PTHrP also inhibited apoptosis by blocking tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα)‐induced apoptosis by blocking signaling from the “death receptor” and preventing damage to the mitochondrial membrane. In both cases, the anti‐apoptotic activity was significantly reduced in the presence of a nuclear deficient form of PTHrP with a 88K/E K/E·K/I91 mutation in the NTS. The current work was undertaken to determine the mechanism by which nuclear PTHrP blocked mitochondrial‐mediated apoptosis. Using sub‐cellular fractionation and functional assays we showed that pre‐treatment of HEK293 cells with exogenous NTS peptide before inducing apoptosis with TNFα was as effective as expression of the full‐length protein in inhibiting apoptosis. Inhibition of apoptosis was associated with increased expression of protein kinase casein kinase 2 (CK2) and in sustained CK2 accumulation and activity in the nuclear fraction. In primary chondrogenic cells harvested from the limb buds of PTHrP+/− and PTHrP−/− embryonic mice, there was a dose‐dependent decrease in CK2 expression and activity that correlated with increased susceptibility to apoptosis. Taken together the results indicate that nuclear accumulation of PTHrP effectively inhibits mitochondrial‐mediated apoptosis through regulation of the expression, activity, and sub‐cellular trafficking of CK2. J. Cell. Physiol. 212:591–599, 2007.


Endocrinology | 1995

Oxytocin Receptor Gene Expression in the Rat Uterus During Pregnancy and the Estrous Cycle and in Response to Gonadal Steroid Treatment

A Larcher; J Neculcea; C Breton; Ali Arslan; Florence Rozen; Caterina Russo; Hans H. Zingg


Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology | 1995

Gonadal steroid regulation of oxytocin and oxytocin receptor gene expression.

Hans H. Zingg; Florence Rozen; C Breton; A Larcher; Neculcea J; Chu K; Caterina Russo; Arslan A


Endocrinology | 2005

Oxytocin induces dephosphorylation of eukaryotic elongation factor 2 in human myometrial cells.

Dominic Devost; Milena Girotti; Marie Eve Carrier; Caterina Russo; Hans H. Zingg

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