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Dive into the research topics where Clelia Di Serio is active.

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Featured researches published by Clelia Di Serio.


Nature Biotechnology | 2006

Hematopoietic stem cell gene transfer in a tumor-prone mouse model uncovers low genotoxicity of lentiviral vector integration

Eugenio Montini; Daniela Cesana; Manfred Schmidt; Francesca Sanvito; Maurilio Ponzoni; Cynthia C. Bartholomae; Lucia Sergi Sergi; Fabrizio Benedicenti; Alessandro Ambrosi; Clelia Di Serio; Claudio Doglioni; Christof von Kalle; Luigi Naldini

Insertional mutagenesis represents a major hurdle to gene therapy and necessitates sensitive preclinical genotoxicity assays. Cdkn2a−/− mice are susceptible to a broad range of cancer-triggering genetic lesions. We exploited hematopoietic stem cells from these tumor-prone mice to assess the oncogenicity of prototypical retroviral and lentiviral vectors. We transduced hematopoietic stem cells in matched clinically relevant conditions, and compared integration site selection and tumor development in transplanted mice. Retroviral vectors triggered dose-dependent acceleration of tumor onset contingent on long terminal repeat activity. Insertions at oncogenes and cell-cycle genes were enriched in early-onset tumors, indicating cooperation in tumorigenesis. In contrast, tumorigenesis was unaffected by lentiviral vectors and did not enrich for specific integrants, despite the higher integration load and robust expression of lentiviral vectors in all hematopoietic lineages. Our results validate a much-needed platform to assess vector safety and provide direct evidence that prototypical lentiviral vectors have low oncogenic potential, highlighting a major rationale for application to gene therapy.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2009

The genotoxic potential of retroviral vectors is strongly modulated by vector design and integration site selection in a mouse model of HSC gene therapy

Eugenio Montini; Daniela Cesana; Manfred Schmidt; Francesca Sanvito; Cynthia C. Bartholomae; Marco Ranzani; Fabrizio Benedicenti; Lucia Sergi Sergi; Alessandro Ambrosi; Maurilio Ponzoni; Claudio Doglioni; Clelia Di Serio; Christof von Kalle; Luigi Naldini

gamma-Retroviral vectors (gammaRVs), which are commonly used in gene therapy, can trigger oncogenesis by insertional mutagenesis. Here, we have dissected the contribution of vector design and viral integration site selection (ISS) to oncogenesis using an in vivo genotoxicity assay based on transplantation of vector-transduced tumor-prone mouse hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells. By swapping genetic elements between gammaRV and lentiviral vectors (LVs), we have demonstrated that transcriptionally active long terminal repeats (LTRs) are major determinants of genotoxicity even when reconstituted in LVs and that self-inactivating (SIN) LTRs enhance the safety of gammaRVs. By comparing the genotoxicity of vectors with matched active LTRs, we were able to determine that substantially greater LV integration loads are required to approach the same oncogenic risk as gammaRVs. This difference in facilitating oncogenesis is likely to be explained by the observed preferential targeting of cancer genes by gammaRVs. This integration-site bias was intrinsic to gammaRVs, as it was also observed for SIN gammaRVs that lacked genotoxicity in our model. Our findings strongly support the use of SIN viral vector platforms and show that ISS can substantially modulate genotoxicity.


Nature Medicine | 2013

Coexpression of CD49b and LAG-3 identifies human and mouse T regulatory type 1 cells

Nicola Gagliani; Chiara Francesca Magnani; Samuel Huber; Monica E. Gianolini; Mauro Pala; Paula Licona-Limón; Binggege Guo; De’Broski R. Herbert; Alessandro Bulfone; Filippo Trentini; Clelia Di Serio; Rosa Bacchetta; Marco Andreani; Leonie Brockmann; Silvia Gregori; Richard A. Flavell; Maria Grazia Roncarolo

CD4+ type 1 T regulatory (Tr1) cells are induced in the periphery and have a pivotal role in promoting and maintaining tolerance. The absence of surface markers that uniquely identify Tr1 cells has limited their study and clinical applications. By gene expression profiling of human Tr1 cell clones, we identified the surface markers CD49b and lymphocyte activation gene 3 (LAG-3) as being stably and selectively coexpressed on mouse and human Tr1 cells. We showed the specificity of these markers in mouse models of intestinal inflammation and helminth infection and in the peripheral blood of healthy volunteers. The coexpression of CD49b and LAG-3 enables the isolation of highly suppressive human Tr1 cells from in vitro anergized cultures and allows the tracking of Tr1 cells in the peripheral blood of subjects who developed tolerance after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. The use of these markers makes it feasible to track Tr1 cells in vivo and purify Tr1 cells for cell therapy to induce or restore tolerance in subjects with immune-mediated diseases.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2007

Multilineage hematopoietic reconstitution without clonal selection in ADA-SCID patients treated with stem cell gene therapy

Alessandro Aiuti; Barbara Cassani; Grazia Andolfi; Massimiliano Mirolo; Luca Biasco; Fabrizia Urbinati; Cristina Valacca; Samantha Scaramuzza; Memet Aker; Shimon Slavin; Matteo Cazzola; Daniela Sartori; Alessandro Ambrosi; Clelia Di Serio; Maria Grazia Roncarolo; Fulvio Mavilio; Claudio Bordignon

Gene transfer into HSCs is an effective treatment for SCID, although potentially limited by the risk of insertional mutagenesis. We performed a genome-wide analysis of retroviral vector integrations in genetically corrected HSCs and their multilineage progeny before and up to 47 months after transplantation into 5 patients with adenosine deaminase-deficient SCID. Gene-dense regions, promoters, and transcriptionally active genes were preferred retroviral integrations sites (RISs) both in preinfusion transduced CD34(+) cells and in vivo after gene therapy. The occurrence of insertion sites proximal to protooncogenes or genes controlling cell growth and self renewal, including LMO2, was not associated with clonal selection or expansion in vivo. Clonal analysis of long-term repopulating cell progeny in vivo revealed highly polyclonal T cell populations and shared RISs among multiple lineages, demonstrating the engraftment of multipotent HSCs. These data have important implications for the biology of retroviral vectors, the dynamics of genetically modified HSCs, and the safety of gene therapy.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2009

Pseudomonas aeruginosa microevolution during cystic fibrosis lung infection establishes clones with adapted virulence

Alessandra Bragonzi; Moira Paroni; Alessandro Nonis; Nina Cramer; Sara Montanari; Joanna Rejman; Clelia Di Serio; Gerd Döring; Burkhard Tümmler

RATIONALE During long-term lung infection in patients with cystic fibrosis (CF), Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains develop mutations leading to clonal expansion. This microevolution is believed to be correlated with a reduced virulence. OBJECTIVES We tested this hypothesis in models of lung infection, using mice with different genetic backgrounds. METHODS From infected airways of six patients with CF, 25 P. aeruginosa clones were isolated during a period of up to 16.3 years and genotypically and phenotypically characterized. Virulence of the 8 early, 6 intermediate, and 11 late CF isolates and 5 environmental strains was assessed by monitoring acute mortality versus survival and P. aeruginosa chronic persistence versus lung clearance in mice of different genetic backgrounds, including CF mice. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Different patients harbored clonally unrelated strains, but early, intermediate, and late P. aeruginosa isolates from single patients were clonally related, allowing comparative in vivo analysis. Although late isolates were attenuated in causing acute mortality in the mouse models, compared with early and intermediate clonal isolates and environmental strains, they did not differ from early and intermediate clonal isolates in their capacity to establish chronic infection and cause extensive inflammation in the murine respiratory tract. CONCLUSIONS Our findings indicate that clonal expansion of P. aeruginosa strains during microevolution within CF lungs leads to populations with altered but not reduced virulence. These P. aeruginosa clones with adapted virulence play a critical role in the pathogenesis of chronic infections and may serve to define virulence determinants as targets for novel therapies.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2011

TIE2-expressing macrophages limit the therapeutic efficacy of the vascular-disrupting agent combretastatin A4 phosphate in mice

Abigail F. Welford; Daniela Biziato; Seth B. Coffelt; Silvia Nucera; Matthew Fisher; Ferdinando Pucci; Clelia Di Serio; Luigi Naldini; Michele De Palma; Gillian M. Tozer; Claire E. Lewis

Vascular-disrupting agents (VDAs) such as combretastatin A4 phosphate (CA4P) selectively disrupt blood vessels in tumors and induce tumor necrosis. However, tumors rapidly repopulate after treatment with such compounds. Here, we show that CA4P-induced vessel narrowing, hypoxia, and hemorrhagic necrosis in murine mammary tumors were accompanied by elevated tumor levels of the chemokine CXCL12 and infiltration by proangiogenic TIE2-expressing macrophages (TEMs). Inhibiting TEM recruitment to CA4P-treated tumors either by interfering pharmacologically with the CXCL12/CXCR4 axis or by genetically depleting TEMs in tumor-bearing mice markedly increased the efficacy of CA4P treatment. These data suggest that TEMs limit VDA-induced tumor injury and represent a potential target for improving the clinical efficacy of VDA-based therapies.


Blood | 2010

High-definition mapping of retroviral integration sites identifies active regulatory elements in human multipotent hematopoietic progenitors.

Claudia Cattoglio; Danilo Pellin; Ermanno Rizzi; Giulietta Maruggi; Giorgio Corti; Francesca Miselli; Daniela Sartori; Alessandro Guffanti; Clelia Di Serio; Alessandro Ambrosi; Gianluca De Bellis; Fulvio Mavilio

Integration of retroviral vectors in the human genome follows nonrandom patterns that favor insertional deregulation of gene expression and increase the risk of their use in clinical gene therapy. The molecular basis of retroviral target site selection is still poorly understood. We used deep sequencing technology to build genomewide, high-definition maps of > 60 000 integration sites of Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV)- and HIV-based retroviral vectors in the genome of human CD34(+) multipotent hematopoietic progenitor cells (HPCs) and used gene expression profiling, chromatin immunoprecipitation, and bioinformatics to associate integration to genetic and epigenetic features of the HPC genome. Clusters of recurrent MLV integrations identify regulatory elements (alternative promoters, enhancers, evolutionarily conserved noncoding regions) within or around protein-coding genes and microRNAs with crucial functions in HPC growth and differentiation, bearing epigenetic marks of active or poised transcription (H3K4me1, H3K4me2, H3K4me3, H3K9Ac, Pol II) and specialized chromatin configurations (H2A.Z). Overall, we mapped 3500 high-frequency integration clusters, which represent a new resource for the identification of transcriptionally active regulatory elements. High-definition MLV integration maps provide a rational basis for predicting genotoxic risks in gene therapy and a new tool for genomewide identification of promoters and regulatory elements controlling hematopoietic stem and progenitor cell functions.


The Lancet | 2016

Lentiviral haemopoietic stem-cell gene therapy in early-onset metachromatic leukodystrophy: an ad-hoc analysis of a non-randomised, open-label, phase 1/2 trial

Maria Sessa; Laura Lorioli; Francesca Fumagalli; Serena Acquati; Daniela Redaelli; Cristina Baldoli; Sabrina Canale; Ignazio Diego Lopez; Francesco Morena; Andrea Calabria; Rossana Fiori; Paolo Silvani; Paola M. V. Rancoita; Michela Gabaldo; Fabrizio Benedicenti; Gigliola Antonioli; Andrea Assanelli; Maria Pia Cicalese; Ubaldo Del Carro; Maria Grazia Natali Sora; Sabata Martino; Angelo Quattrini; Eugenio Montini; Clelia Di Serio; Fabio Ciceri; Maria Grazia Roncarolo; Alessandro Aiuti; Luigi Naldini; Alessandra Biffi

BACKGROUND Metachromatic leukodystrophy (a deficiency of arylsulfatase A [ARSA]) is a fatal demyelinating lysosomal disease with no approved treatment. We aimed to assess the long-term outcomes in a cohort of patients with early-onset metachromatic leukodystrophy who underwent haemopoietic stem-cell gene therapy (HSC-GT). METHODS This is an ad-hoc analysis of data from an ongoing, non-randomised, open-label, single-arm phase 1/2 trial, in which we enrolled patients with a molecular and biochemical diagnosis of metachromatic leukodystrophy (presymptomatic late-infantile or early-juvenile disease or early-symptomatic early-juvenile disease) at the Paediatric Clinical Research Unit, Ospedale San Raffaele, in Milan. Trial participants received HSC-GT, which consisted of the infusion of autologous HSCs transduced with a lentiviral vector encoding ARSA cDNA, after exposure-targeted busulfan conditioning. The primary endpoints of the trial are safety (toxicity, absence of engraftment failure or delayed haematological reconstitution, and safety of lentiviral vector-tranduced cell infusion) and efficacy (improvement in Gross Motor Function Measure [GMFM] score relative to untreated historical controls, and ARSA activity, 24 months post-treatment) of HSC-GT. For this ad-hoc analysis, we assessed safety and efficacy outcomes in all patients who had received treatment and been followed up for at least 18 months post-treatment on June 1, 2015. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01560182. FINDINGS Between April, 2010, and February, 2013, we had enrolled nine children with a diagnosis of early-onset disease (six had late-infantile disease, two had early-juvenile disease, and one had early-onset disease that could not be definitively classified). At the time of analysis all children had survived, with a median follow-up of 36 months (range 18-54). The most commonly reported adverse events were cytopenia (reported in all patients) and mucositis of different grades of severity (in five of nine patients [grade 3 in four of five patients]). No serious adverse events related to the medicinal product were reported. Stable, sustained engraftment of gene-corrected HSCs was observed (a median of 60·4% [range 14·0-95·6] lentiviral vector-positive colony-forming cells across follow-up) and the engraftment level was stable during follow-up; engraftment determinants included the duration of absolute neutropenia and the vector copy number of the medicinal product. A progressive reconstitution of ARSA activity in circulating haemopoietic cells and in the cerebrospinal fluid was documented in all patients in association with a reduction of the storage material in peripheral nerve samples in six of seven patients. Eight patients, seven of whom received treatment when presymptomatic, had prevention of disease onset or halted disease progression as per clinical and instrumental assessment, compared with historical untreated control patients with early-onset disease. GMFM scores for six patients up to the last follow-up showed that gross motor performance was similar to that of normally developing children. The extent of benefit appeared to be influenced by the interval between HSC-GT and the expected time of disease onset. Treatment resulted in protection from CNS demyelination in eight patients and, in at least three patients, amelioration of peripheral nervous system abnormalities, with signs of remyelination at both sites. INTERPRETATION Our ad-hoc findings provide preliminary evidence of safety and therapeutic benefit of HSC-GT in patients with early-onset metachromatic leukodystrophy who received treatment in the presymptomatic or very early-symptomatic stage. The results of this trial will be reported when all 20 patients have achieved 3 years of follow-up. FUNDING Italian Telethon Foundation and GlaxoSmithKline.


Embo Molecular Medicine | 2011

Integration profile of retroviral vector in gene therapy treated patients is cell-specific according to gene expression and chromatin conformation of target cell

Luca Biasco; Alessandro Ambrosi; Danilo Pellin; Cynthia C. Bartholomae; Immacolata Brigida; Maria Grazia Roncarolo; Clelia Di Serio; Christof von Kalle; Manfred Schmidt; Alessandro Aiuti

The analysis of genomic distribution of retroviral vectors is a powerful tool to monitor ‘vector‐on‐host’ effects in gene therapy (GT) trials but also provides crucial information about ‘host‐on‐vector’ influences based on the target cell genetic and epigenetic state. We had the unique occasion to compare the insertional profile of the same therapeutic moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV) vector in the context of the adenosine deaminase‐severe combined immunodeficiency (ADA‐SCID) genetic background in two GT trials based on infusions of transduced mature lymphocytes (peripheral blood lymphocytes, PBL) or a single infusion of haematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSC). We found that vector insertions are cell‐specific according to the differential expression profile of target cells, favouring, in PBL‐GT, genes involved in immune system and T‐cell functions/pathways as well as T‐cell DNase hypersensitive sites, differently from HSC‐GT. Chromatin conformations and histone modifications influenced integration preferences but we discovered that only H3K27me3 was cell‐specifically disfavoured, thus representing a key epigenetic determinant of cell‐type dependent insertion distribution. Our study shows that MLV vector insertional profile is cell‐specific according to the genetic/chromatin state of the target cell both in vitro and in vivo in patients several years after GT.


Molecular Therapy | 2014

Uncovering and Dissecting the Genotoxicity of Self-inactivating Lentiviral Vectors In Vivo

Daniela Cesana; Marco Ranzani; Monica Volpin; Cynthia C. Bartholomae; Caroline Duros; Alexandre Artus; Stefania Merella; Fabrizio Benedicenti; Lucia Sergi Sergi; Francesca Sanvito; Chiara Brombin; Alessandro Nonis; Clelia Di Serio; Claudio Doglioni; Christof von Kalle; Manfred Schmidt; Odile Cohen-Haguenauer; Luigi Naldini; Eugenio Montini

Self-inactivating (SIN) lentiviral vectors (LV) have an excellent therapeutic potential as demonstrated in preclinical studies and clinical trials. However, weaker mechanisms of insertional mutagenesis could still pose a significant risk in clinical applications. Taking advantage of novel in vivo genotoxicity assays, we tested a battery of LV constructs, including some with clinically relevant designs, and found that oncogene activation by promoter insertion is the most powerful mechanism of early vector-induced oncogenesis. SIN LVs disabled in their capacity to activate oncogenes by promoter insertion were less genotoxic and induced tumors by enhancer-mediated activation of oncogenes with efficiency that was proportional to the strength of the promoter used. On the other hand, when enhancer activity was reduced by using moderate promoters, oncogenesis by inactivation of tumor suppressor gene was revealed. This mechanism becomes predominant when the enhancer activity of the internal promoter is shielded by the presence of a synthetic chromatin insulator cassette. Our data provide both mechanistic insights and quantitative readouts of vector-mediated genotoxicity, allowing a relative ranking of different vectors according to these features, and inform current and future choices of vector design with increasing biosafety.

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Dive into the Clelia Di Serio's collaboration.

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Alessandro Ambrosi

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Danilo Pellin

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Luigi Naldini

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Chiara Brombin

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Paola M. V. Rancoita

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Alessandro Aiuti

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Alessandro Nonis

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Eugenio Montini

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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Francesca Sanvito

Vita-Salute San Raffaele University

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