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International Journal of Gynecological Pathology | 2004

p16INK4A expression is related to grade of CIN and high-risk human papillomavirus but does not predict virus clearance after conization or disease outcome

Margherita Branca; Marco Ciotti; Donatella Santini; L. Di Bonito; Colomba Giorgi; Arrigo Benedetto; Cartesio Favalli; Silvano Costa; Alberto Agarossi; M. Alderisio; K. Syrjänen

The role of p16INK4a as a marker of HR-HPV and in the diagnosis of CIN has been well established, but its predictive value in the clearance of the virus after CIN treatment and its use as a prognostic marker of cervical cancer has not been studied. A series of 302 archival samples, including 150 squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) and 152 CIN lesions, were subjected to immunohistochemical staining for p16INK4a and HPV testing using PCR with three primer sets (MY09/11, GP5+/GP6+, SPF). Follow-up data were available of 88 SCC patients, and 67 of the CIN lesions had been followed-up with serial PCR after conization. HR-HPV types were closely associated with CIN (OR 19.12; 95%CI 2.31–157.81) and SCC (OR 27.25; 95%CI 3.28–226.09). There was a significant linear relationship between the lesion grade and intensity of p16INK4a staining (p = 0.0001). The expression of p16INK4a was also closely related to HR-HPV (p = 0.0001). p16INK4a staining was a 100% specific indicator of CIN, with 100% PPV, and showed 83.5% sensitivity and 80.1% PPV in detecting HR-HPV. However, p16INK4a staining did not predict clearance/persistence of HR-HPV after treatment of CIN. Similarly, despite a slightly more favorable survival in women with strong/intense p16INK4a staining in univariate analysis, p16INK4a expression was not an independent prognostic predictor in multivariate survival (Cox) analysis. After adjustment for p16INK4a staining, HR-HPV, histological grade, International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics (FIGO) stage, and age, only the last two were significant prognostic predictors (p = 0.0001 and p = 0.003, respectively). The present data confirm the role of p16INK4a as a highly specific marker of CIN and HR-HPV type, but expression of this protein does not seem to be of any prognostic value in cervical cancer or in predicting the clearance of HR-HPV after treatment of CIN. We speculate that different subgroups of cervical cancer are characterized by aberrant p16INK4a/cyclin D/Rb pathways that are due to different mechanisms that can be mutually exclusive.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2005

Survivin as a Marker of Cervical Intraepithelial Neoplasia and High-Risk Human Papillomavirus and a Predictor of Virus Clearance and Prognosis in Cervical Cancer

Margherita Branca; Colomba Giorgi; Donatella Santini; Luigi Di Bonito; Marco Ciotti; Silvano Costa; Arrigo Benedetto; Elena A. Casolati; Cartesio Favalli; Pierluigi Paba; Paola Di Bonito; Luciano Mariani; Stina Syrjänen; D. Bonifacio; Luisa Accardi; Francesca Zanconati; K. Syrjänen

We analyzed survivin as a marker of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and high-risk human papillomavirus (HR-HPV) and a predictor of HPV clearance and disease outcome in cervical cancer in 302 samples (squamous cell carcinomas [SCCs], 150; CIN lesions, 152) by immunohistochemical staining with survivin antibody and HPV testing using polymerase chain reaction. HR-HPV types were associated closely with CIN and SCC. There was a significant linear relationship between grade and intensity of survivin expression (P = .0001). Survivin overexpression also was associated strongly with HR-HPV type (P = .0001). Multivariate regression analysis revealed survivin and p16(INK4a) as equally strong independent predictors of HR-HPV. Deregulated survivin expression did not predict clearance or persistence of HR-HPV after treatment of CIN or survival in cervical cancer in univariate (P = .417) or multivariate analysis. After adjustment for HR-HPV, stage, age, and tumor grade in the Cox regression model, only stage (P = .0001) and age (P = .0001) remained independent prognostic predictors. Survivin seems to be an early marker of cervical carcinogenesis. Up-regulated survivin expression was an independent predictor of HR-HPV in cervical lesions, most plausibly explained by its normal transcriptional repression by wild-type p53 being eliminated by HR-HPV E6 oncoprotein.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 1996

Inhibition of HIV-1 replication by cyclopentenone prostaglandins in acutely infected human cells. Evidence for a transcriptional block.

Carmela Rozera; Alessandra Carattoli; A De Marco; Carla Amici; Colomba Giorgi; M.G. Santoro

Cyclopentenone prostaglandins (PGs) inhibit virus replication in several DNA and RNA virus models, in vitro and in vivo. In the present report we demonstrate that the cyclopentenone prostaglandins PGA(1) and PGJ(2) at nontoxic concentrations can dramatically suppress HIV-1 replication during acute infection in CEM-SS cells. PGs did not affect HIV-1 adsorption, penetration, reverse transcriptase activity nor viral DNA accumulation in HIV-1 infected cells. A dramatic reduction in HIV-1 mRNA levels was detected up to 48-72 h after infection (p.i.) in PG-treated cells, and HIV-1 protein synthesis was greatly reduced by a single PG-treatment up to 96 h p.i. Repeated PGA(1)-treatments were effective in protecting CEM-SS cells by the cytopathic effect of the virus, and in dramatically reducing HIV-1 RNA levels up to 7 d after infection. The antiviral effect was not mediated by alterations in the expression of alpha-, beta-, or gamma-interferon,TNFalpha, TNFbeta, IL6, and IL10 in HIV-infected CEM-SS cells. The fact that prostaglandins are used clinically in the treatment of several diseases, suggests a potential use of cyclopentenone PGs in the treatment of HIV-infection.


Expert Review of Vaccines | 2010

Human papillomavirus vaccines in plants.

Colomba Giorgi; Rosella Franconi; Edward P. Rybicki

Human papillomaviruses are the etiological agents of cervical cancer, one of the two most prevalent cancers in women in developing countries. Currently available prophylactic vaccines are based on the L1 major capsid protein, which forms virus-like particles when expressed in yeast and insect cell lines. Despite their recognized efficacy, there are significant shortcomings: the vaccines are expensive, include only two oncogenic virus types, are delivered via intramuscular injection and require a cold chain. Plant expression systems may provide ways of overcoming some of these problems, in particular the expense. In this article, we report recent promising advances in the production of prophylactic and therapeutic vaccines against human papillomavirus by expression of the relevant antigens in plants, and discuss future prospects for the use of such vaccines.


American Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2004

Activation of the ERK/MAP kinase pathway in cervical intraepithelial neoplasia is related to grade of the lesion but not to high-risk human papillomavirus, virus clearance, or prognosis in cervical cancer.

Margherita Branca; Marco Ciotti; Donatella Santini; Luigi Di Bonito; Arrigo Benedetto; Colomba Giorgi; Carterio Favalli; Silvano Costa; Alberto Agarossi; Mauro Alderisio; Kari Syrjänen

We subjected 302 archival samples (150 squamous cell carcinomas [SCCs] and 152 cervical intraepithelial neoplasia [CIN] lesions) to immunohistochemical staining with extracellular signal-regulated kinase-1 (ERK1) antibody and human papillomavirus (HPV) testing with 3 primer sets. Follow-up data were available for all SCC cases and 67 CIN cases. High-risk (HR) HPV types were associated with CIN (odds ratio [OR], 19.12; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.31-157.81) and SCC (OR, 27.25; 95% CI, 3.28226.09). There was a significant linear relationship between lesion grade and ERK1 staining intensity (P = .0001). ERK1 staining was a 100% specific indicator of CIN, with a 100% positive predictive value, but a poor predictor of HR HPV. ERK1 expression did not predict clearance or persistence of HR HPV after CIN treatment. ERK1 staining did not significantly predict survival in cervical cancer in univariate (P = .915) or multivariate analysis. After adjustment for HR HPV, stage, age, and tumor grade in the Cox regression model, only stage (P = .0001) and age (P = .002) remained independent prognostic factors. ERK1 expression seems to be an early marker of cervical carcinogenesis. ERK1 overexpression is not a specific marker of HR-HPV in CIN and cervical cancer, nor does it predict virus clearance after CIN treatment or disease outcome in cervical cancer.


Journal of Clinical Pathology | 2006

Aberrant expression of VEGF-C is related to grade of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) and high risk HPV, but does not predict virus clearance after treatment of CIN or prognosis of cervical cancer

Margherita Branca; Colomba Giorgi; Donatella Santini; L. Di Bonito; Marco Ciotti; Arrigo Benedetto; Silvano Costa; D. Bonifacio; P. Di Bonito; Luisa Accardi; Cartesio Favalli; K. Syrjänen

Aims: Increased angiogenesis leads to invasion in cervical cancer. Vascular endothelial growth factors (VEGFs) are involved in angiogenesis, but molecular links to the most important aetiological agent, human papillomavirus (HPV), need clarifying. Material/Methods: Archival samples—150 squamous cell carcinomas (SCCs) and 152 cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) lesions—were examined immunohistochemically for anti-VEGF-C antibody and for HPV by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Follow up data were available for all SCC cases, and 67 CIN lesions were monitored with serial PCR to assess HPV clearance/persistence after treatment. Results: High risk (HR) HPV types were closely associated with CIN (odds ratio, 19.12; 95% confidence interval, 2.31 to 157.81) and SCC (27.25; 3.28 to 226.09). There was a linear increase of VEGF-C expression—weak in CIN1 and intense in CIN3 and SCC (20.49; 8.69 to 48.26). VEGF-C upregulation was a sensitive (93.5%; 95% CI, 90.1% to 96.9%) marker of HR-HPV type (4.70; 2.17 to 10.21), but lost its significance in multivariate regression—p16INK4a and survivin were equally strong independent predictors of HR-HPV. Aberrant expression of VEGF-C did not predict clearance/persistence of HR-HPV after treatment of CIN. In cervical cancer, VEGF-C had no prognostic value in univariate or multivariate survival analysis. After adjustment for HR-HPV, FIGO stage, age, and tumour grade, only FIGO stage and age remained independent prognostic predictors. Conclusions: VEGF-C is an early marker of cervical carcinogenesis, with linearly increasing expression starting from low grade CIN. VEGF-C expression is closely related to HR-HPV in cervical lesions, probably because of its p53 independent upregulation by the E6 oncoprotein of HR-HPV.


Archive | 1996

Molecular Biology of Phleboviruses

Colomba Giorgi

The Phlebovirus genus encompasses two groups of viruses, the phlebotomus or sandfly fever group (PHL) and the Uukuniemi group (Calisher, 1991). In a previous taxonomic organization the two groups, based on serological relationships, were considered as different genera in the Bunyaviridae family, but because of the similarities in biochemical properties and in genome organization and expression, the two groups were combined into one genus, Phlebovirus. However, the biological properties of the two groups are distinct: the phlebotomus fever viruses are transmitted by sandflies and gnats whereas the uukuviruses are transmitted by ticks (Bishop and Shope, 1979). Several PHL viruses, but none of the uukuviruses, have been associated with disease in humans, although antibodies to Uukuniemi virus have been detected in humans (Tesh, 1988; Beaty and Calisher, 1991). This chapter focuses on phlebovirus genome organization and expression, and the data obtained in the past few years will be discussed to provide an update on earlier reviews (Elliott, 1990; Bouloy, 1991; Elliott et al., 1991). The Phlebovirus genus is composed of at least 51 different viruses (39 within the sandfly fever group and 12 within the Uukuniemi group; Calisher, 1991; see Chapter 1), but the information on the molecular biology of these viruses comes from the analysis of only a few of them, namely Punta Toro (PT), Rift Valley fever (RVF), sandfly fever Sicilian (SFS), Toscana (TOS), and Uukuniemi (UUK) viruses.


Virology | 2009

Anti-tumor CD8+ T cell immunity elicited by HIV-1-based virus-like particles incorporating HPV-16 E7 protein.

Paola Di Bonito; Felicia Grasso; Stefania Mochi; Linda Petrone; Emanuele Fanales-Belasio; Arianna Mei; Armando Cesolini; Giuseppe Laconi; Heinke Conrad; Helga Bernhard; Claudia J. Dembek; Antonio Cosma; Stefano M. Santini; Caterina Lapenta; Simona Donati; Claudia Muratori; Colomba Giorgi; Maurizio Federico

Here we report a novel strategy for the induction of CD8(+) T cell adaptive immune response against viral and tumor antigens. This approach relies on high levels of incorporation in HIV-1 VLPs of a mutant of HIV-1 Nef (Nef(mut)) which can act as anchoring element for foreign proteins. By in vitro assay, we found that VLP-associated Nef(mut) is efficiently cross-presented by antigen presenting cells. Inoculation in mice of VLPs incorporating the HPV-16 E7 protein fused to Nef(mut) led to an anti-E7 CD8(+) T cell response much stronger than that elicited by E7 recombinant protein inoculated with incomplete Freunds adjuvant and correlating with well-detectable anti-E7 CTL activity. Most relevantly, mice immunized with Nef(mut)-E7 VLPs developed a protective immune response against tumors induced by E7 expressing tumor cells. These results make Nef(mut) VLPs a promising candidate for new vaccine strategies focused on the induction of CD8(+) T cell immunity.


Infectious Agents and Cancer | 2006

Serum antibody response to Human papillomavirus (HPV) infections detected by a novel ELISA technique based on denatured recombinant HPV16 L1, L2, E4, E6 and E7 proteins

Paola Di Bonito; Felicia Grasso; Stefania Mochi; Luisa Accardi; Maria Gabriella Donà; Margherita Branca; Silvano Costa; Luciano Mariani; Alberto Agarossi; Marco Ciotti; Kari Syrjänen; Colomba Giorgi

BackgroundHuman papillomaviruses (HPVs) are the primary etiological agents of cervical cancer and are also involved in the development of other tumours (skin, head and neck). Serological survey of the HPV infections is important to better elucidate their natural history and to disclose antigen determinants useful for vaccine development. At present, the analysis of the HPV-specific antibodies has not diagnostic value for the viral infections, and new approaches are needed to correlate the antibody response to the disease outcome. The aim of this study is to develop a novel ELISA, based on five denatured recombinant HPV16 proteins, to be used for detection HPV-specific antibodies.MethodsThe HPV16 L1, L2, E4, E6 and E7 genes were cloned in a prokaryotic expression vector and expressed as histidine-tagged proteins. These proteins, in a denatured form, were used in ELISA as coating antigens. Human sera were collected from women with abnormal PAP smear enrolled during an ongoing multicenter HPV-PathogenISS study in Italy, assessing the HPV-related pathogenetic mechanisms of progression of cervical cancer precursor lesions. Negative human sera were collected from patients affected by other infectious agents. All the HPV-positive sera were also subjected to an avidity test to assess the binding strength in the antigen-antibody complexes.ResultsMost of the sera showed a positive reactivity to the denatured HPV16 proteins: 82% of the sera from HPV16 infected women and 89% of the sera from women infected by other HPV genotypes recognised at least one of the HPV16 proteins. The percentages of samples showing reactivity to L1, L2 and E7 were similar, but only a few serum samples reacted to E6 and E4. Most sera bound the antigens with medium and high avidity index, suggesting specific antigen-antibody reactions.ConclusionThis novel ELISA, based on multiple denatured HPV16 antigens, is able to detect antibodies in women infected by HPV16 and it is not genotype-specific, as it detects antibodies also in women infected by other genital HPVs. The assay is easy to perform and has low cost, making it suitable for monitoring the natural history of HPV infections as well as for detecting pre-existing HPV antibodies in women who receive VLP-based HPV vaccination.


International Journal of Cancer | 2013

Successful therapeutic vaccination with integrase defective lentiviral vector expressing nononcogenic human papillomavirus E7 protein.

Felicia Grasso; Donatella R.M. Negri; Stefania Mochi; A. R. Rossi; Armando Cesolini; Andrea Giovannelli; Maria Vincenza Chiantore; Pasqualina Leone; Colomba Giorgi; Andrea Cara

Persistent infection with high risk genotypes of human papillomavirus (HPV) is the cause of cervical cancer, one of most common cancer among woman worldwide, and represents an important risk factor associated with other anogenital and oropharyngeal cancers in men and women. Here, we designed a therapeutic vaccine based on integrase defective lentiviral vector (IDLV) to deliver a mutated nononcogenic form of HPV16 E7 protein, considered as a tumor specific antigen for immunotherapy of HPV‐associated cervical cancer, fused to calreticulin (CRT), a protein able to enhance major histocompatibility complex class I antigen presentation (IDLV‐CRT/E7). Vaccination with IDLV‐CRT/E7 induced a potent and persistent E7‐specific T cell response up to 1 year after a single immunization. Importantly, a single immunization with IDLV‐CRT/E7 was able to prevent growth of E7‐expressing TC‐1 tumor cells and to eradicate established tumors in mice. The strong therapeutic effect induced by the IDLV‐based vaccine in this preclinical model suggests that this strategy may be further exploited as a safe and attractive anticancer immunotherapeutic vaccine in humans.

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Luisa Accardi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Paola Di Bonito

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Marco Ciotti

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Margherita Branca

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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P. Di Bonito

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Cartesio Favalli

University of Rome Tor Vergata

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Arrigo Benedetto

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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Stefania Mochi

Istituto Superiore di Sanità

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