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Dive into the research topics where Cristiana Gaiteiro is active.

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Featured researches published by Cristiana Gaiteiro.


Drug Resistance Updates | 2016

Mechanisms of cisplatin resistance and targeting of cancer stem cells: Adding glycosylation to the equation

José Alexandre Ferreira; Andreia F. Peixoto; Manuel Neves; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Celso A. Reis; Yehuda G. Assaraf; Lúcio Lara Santos

Cisplatin-based chemotherapeutic regimens are the most frequently used (neo)adjuvant treatments for the majority of solid tumors. While platinum-based chemotherapeutic regimens have proven effective against highly proliferative malignant tumors, significant relapse and progression rates as well as decreased overall survival are still observed. Currently, it is known that sub-populations of chemoresistant cells share biological properties with cancer stem cells (CSC), which are believed to be responsible for tumor relapse, invasion and ultimately disease dissemination through acquisition of mesenchymal cell traits. In spite of concentrated efforts devoted to decipher the mechanisms underlying CSC chemoresistance and to design targeted therapeutics to these cells, proteomics has failed to unveil molecular signatures capable of distinguishing between malignant and non-malignant stem cells. This has hampered substantial developments in this complex field. Envisaging a novel rationale for an effective therapy, the current review summarizes the main cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying cisplatin resistance and the impact of chemotherapy challenge in CSC selection and clinical outcome. It further emphasizes the growing amount of data supporting a role for protein glycosylation in drug resistance. The dynamic and context-dependent nature of protein glycosylation is also comprehensively discussed, hence highlighting its potentially important role as a biomarker of CSC. As the paradigm of cancer therapeutics shifts towards precision medicine and patient-tailored therapeutics, we bring into focus the need to introduce glycomics and glycoproteomics in holistic pan-omics models, in order to integrate diverse, multimodal and clinically relevant information towards more effective cancer therapeutics.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Abnormal Protein Glycosylation and Activated PI3K/Akt/mTOR Pathway: Role in Bladder Cancer Prognosis and Targeted Therapeutics.

Céu Costa; Sofia S Pereira; Luís Lima; Andreia F. Peixoto; Elisabete Fernandes; Diogo Neves; Manuel Neves; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Ana Tavares; Rui M. Gil da Costa; Ricardo Cruz; Teresina Amaro; Paula A. Oliveira; José Alexandre Ferreira; Lúcio Lara Santos

Muscle invasive bladder cancer (MIBC, stage ≥T2) is generally associated with poor prognosis, constituting the second most common cause of death among genitourinary tumours. Due to high molecular heterogeneity significant variations in the natural history and disease outcome have been observed. This has also delayed the introduction of personalized therapeutics, making advanced stage bladder cancer almost an orphan disease in terms of treatment. Altered protein glycosylation translated by the expression of the sialyl-Tn antigen (STn) and its precursor Tn as well as the activation of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway are cancer-associated events that may hold potential for patient stratification and guided therapy. Therefore, a retrospective design, 96 bladder tumours of different stages (Ta, T1-T4) was screened for STn and phosphorylated forms of Akt (pAkt), mTOR (pmTOR), S6 (pS6) and PTEN, related with the activation of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway. In our series the expression of Tn was residual and was not linked to stage or outcome, while STn was statically higher in MIBC when compared to non-muscle invasive tumours (p = 0.001) and associated decreased cancer-specific survival (log rank p = 0.024). Conversely, PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway intermediates showed an equal distribution between non-muscle invasive bladder cancer (NMIBC) and MIBC and did not associate with cancer-specif survival (CSS) in any of these groups. However, the overexpression of pAKT, pmTOR and/or pS6 allowed discriminating STn-positive advanced stage bladder tumours facing worst CSS (p = 0.027). Furthermore, multivariate Cox regression analysis revealed that overexpression of PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway proteins in STn+ MIBC was independently associated with approximately 6-fold risk of death by cancer (p = 0.039). Mice bearing advanced stage chemically-induced bladder tumours mimicking the histological and molecular nature of human tumours were then administrated with mTOR-pathway inhibitor sirolimus (rapamycin). This decreased the number of invasive lesions and, concomitantly, the expression of STn and also pS6, the downstream effector of the PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway. In conclusion, STn was found to be marker of poor prognosis in bladder cancer and, in combination with PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway evaluation, holds potential to improve the stratification of stage disease. Animal experiments suggest that mTOR pathway inhibition could be a potential therapeutic approach for this specific subtype of MIBC.


Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces | 2015

Dual ligand immunoliposomes for drug delivery to the brain

Joana A. Loureiro; Bárbara Gomes; Gert Fricker; Isabel Cardoso; Carlos Ribeiro; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Manuel Coelho; Maria do Carmo Pereira; Sandra Rocha

Drug delivery systems that can reach brain areas affected by amyloid deposits are still underdeveloped. We propose pegylated liposomes functionalized with two antibodies, the anti-transferrin receptor monoclonal antibody (OX26MAb) and the anti-amyloid beta peptide antibody (19B8MAb), as nanocarriers of drugs for Alzheimers disease therapy. Two distinct conjugation methods are investigated. In one formulation, the OX26MAb is conjugated to the tip of polyethylene glycol molecules through the maleimide group and the 19B8MAb is bound through the streptavidin-biotin complex. In the second system the conjugation reagents are swapped between the antibodies. Fluorescence spectroscopy experiments on porcine brain capillary endothelial cells show that the cellular uptake of the immunoliposomes is substantially more efficient if OX26MAb antibody is conjugated through the streptavidin-biotin complex instead of the maleimide group. The ability of the immunoliposomes to cross the blood brain barrier was established by in vivo studies in wild type rats. Our results demonstrate the importance of the conjugation method used to bind the antibody that targets the blood brain barrier to immunoliposomes for efficient drug delivery to the brain.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Transthyretin participates in beta-amyloid transport from the brain to the liver- involvement of the low-density lipoprotein receptor-related protein 1?

Mobina Alemi; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Carlos Ribeiro; Luís Miguel Santos; João Rodrigues Gomes; Sandra Oliveira; Pierre-Olivier Couraud; Babette B. Weksler; Ignacio A. Romero; Maria João Saraiva; Isabel Cardoso

Transthyretin (TTR) binds Aβ peptide, preventing its deposition and toxicity. TTR is decreased in Alzheimer’s disease (AD) patients. Additionally, AD transgenic mice with only one copy of the TTR gene show increased brain and plasma Aβ levels when compared to AD mice with both copies of the gene, suggesting TTR involvement in brain Aβ efflux and/or peripheral clearance. Here we showed that TTR promotes Aβ internalization and efflux in a human cerebral microvascular endothelial cell line, hCMEC/D3. TTR also stimulated brain-to-blood but not blood-to-brain Aβ permeability in hCMEC/D3, suggesting that TTR interacts directly with Aβ at the blood-brain-barrier. We also observed that TTR crosses the monolayer of cells only in the brain-to-blood direction, as confirmed by in vivo studies, suggesting that TTR can transport Aβ from, but not into the brain. Furthermore, TTR increased Aβ internalization by SAHep cells and by primary hepatocytes from TTR+/+ mice when compared to TTR−/− animals. We propose that TTR-mediated Aβ clearance is through LRP1, as lower receptor expression was found in brains and livers of TTR−/− mice and in cells incubated without TTR. Our results suggest that TTR acts as a carrier of Aβ at the blood-brain-barrier and liver, using LRP1.


Cancer Letters | 2017

Protein glycosylation in gastric and colorectal cancers: Toward cancer detection and targeted therapeutics

José Alexandre Ferreira; Ana Magalhães; Joana Gomes; Andreia F. Peixoto; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Elisabete Fernandes; Lúcio Lara Santos; Celso A. Reis

Glycosylation is the most frequent and structurally complex posttranslational modification in cell-surface and secreted proteins. Glycans are major orchestrators of biological processes, namely, by controlling protein folding and key biological functions such as cell adhesion, migration, signaling and immune recognition. Altered glycosylation is considered a hallmark of malignant transformations that decisively contributes to disease outcome. This review comprehensively summarizes the main findings related with gastrointestinal cancers and the decisive impact of aberrant glycosylation on tumor biology toward more aggressive phenotypes. Particular emphasis is given to alterations in O-glycosylation, namely, the overexpression of immature O-glycans, and the sialylated Lewis antigens sialyl-LeA and sialyl-LeX, frequently implicated in lymphohematogenous metastasis. We further discuss how recent contributions from glycoproteomics and glycoengineering fields have broadened our understanding of the human O-glycoproteome and its implications for cancer research. Finally, we address the tremendous potential of glycans in the context of targeted therapeutics (selective inhibition of glycosylation pathways, immunotherapy) and discuss the need to include glycomics/glycoproteomics in holistic panomics models toward true precision medicine settings.


Molecular Oncology | 2017

Targeted O‐glycoproteomics explored increased sialylation and identified MUC16 as a poor prognosis biomarker in advanced‐stage bladder tumours

Sofia Cotton; Rita Azevedo; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Dylan Ferreira; Luís Lima; Andreia F. Peixoto; Elisabete Fernandes; Manuel Neves; Diogo Neves; Teresina Amaro; Ricardo Cruz; Ana Tavares; Maria Rangel; André M. N. Silva; Lúcio Lara Santos; José Alexandre Ferreira

Bladder carcinogenesis and tumour progression is accompanied by profound alterations in protein glycosylation on the cell surface, which may be explored for improving disease management. In a search for prognosis biomarkers and novel therapeutic targets we have screened, using immunohistochemistry, a series of bladder tumours with differing clinicopathology for short‐chain O‐glycans commonly found in glycoproteins of human solid tumours. These included the Tn and T antigens and their sialylated counterparts sialyl‐Tn(STn) and sialyl‐T(ST), which are generally associated with poor prognosis. We have also explored the nature of T antigen sialylation, namely the sialyl‐3‐T(S3T) and sialyl‐6‐T(S6T) sialoforms, based on combinations of enzymatic treatments. We observed a predominance of sialoglycans over neutral glycoforms (Tn and T antigens) in bladder tumours. In particular, the STn antigen was associated with high‐grade disease and muscle invasion, in accordance with our previous observations. The S3T and S6T antigens were detected for the first time in bladder tumours, but not in healthy urothelia, highlighting their cancer‐specific nature. These glycans were also overexpressed in advanced lesions, especially in cases showing muscle invasion. Glycoproteomic analyses of advanced bladder tumours based on enzymatic treatments, Vicia villosa lectin‐affinity chromatography enrichment and nanoLC‐ESI‐MS/MS analysis resulted in the identification of several key cancer‐associated glycoproteins (MUC16, CD44, integrins) carrying altered glycosylation. Of particular interest were MUC16 STn+‐glycoforms, characteristic of ovarian cancers, which were found in a subset of advanced‐stage bladder tumours facing the worst prognosis. In summary, significant alterations in the O‐glycome and O‐glycoproteome of bladder tumours hold promise for the development of novel noninvasive diagnostic tools and targeted therapeutics. Furthermore, abnormal MUC16 glycoforms hold potential as surrogate biomarkers of poor prognosis and unique molecular signatures for designing highly specific targeted therapeutics.


Oncotarget | 2016

Hypoxia enhances the malignant nature of bladder cancer cells and concomitantly antagonizes protein O -glycosylation extension

Andreia F. Peixoto; Elisabete Fernandes; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Luís Lima; Rita Azevedo; Janine Soares; Sofia Cotton; Beatriz Parreira; Manuel Neves; Teresina Amaro; Ana Tavares; Filipe Teixeira; Carlos M. Palmeira; Maria Rangel; André M. N. Silva; Celso A. Reis; Lúcio Lara Santos; Maria José Oliveira; José Alexandre Ferreira

Invasive bladder tumours express the cell-surface Sialyl-Tn (STn) antigen, which stems from a premature stop in protein O-glycosylation. The STn antigen favours invasion, immune escape, and possibly chemotherapy resistance, making it attractive for target therapeutics. However, the events leading to such deregulation in protein glycosylation are mostly unknown. Since hypoxia is a salient feature of advanced stage tumours, we searched into how it influences bladder cancer cells glycophenotype, with emphasis on STn expression. Therefore, three bladder cancer cell lines with distinct genetic and molecular backgrounds (T24, 5637 and HT1376) were submitted to hypoxia. To disclose HIF-1α-mediated events, experiments were also conducted in the presence of Deferoxamine Mesilate (Dfx), an inhibitor of HIF-1α proteasomal degradation. In both conditions all cell lines overexpressed HIF-1α and its transcriptionally-regulated protein CA-IX. This was accompanied by increased lactate biosynthesis, denoting a shift toward anaerobic metabolism. Concomitantly, T24 and 5637 cells acquired a more motile phenotype, consistent with their more mesenchymal characteristics. Moreover, hypoxia promoted STn antigen overexpression in all cell lines and enhanced the migration and invasion of those presenting more mesenchymal characteristics, in an HIF-1α-dependent manner. These effects were reversed by reoxygenation, demonstrating that oxygen affects O-glycan extension. Glycoproteomics studies highlighted that STn was mainly present in integrins and cadherins, suggesting a possible role for this glycan in adhesion, cell motility and invasion. The association between HIF-1α and STn overexpressions and tumour invasion was further confirmed in bladder cancer patient samples. In conclusion, STn overexpression may, in part, result from a HIF-1α mediated cell-survival strategy to adapt to the hypoxic challenge, favouring cell invasion. In addition, targeting STn-expressing glycoproteins may offer potential to treat tumour hypoxic niches harbouring more malignant cells.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Reference Genes for Addressing Gene Expression of Bladder Cancer Cell Models under Hypoxia: A Step Towards Transcriptomic Studies.

Luís Lima; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Andreia F. Peixoto; Janine Soares; Manuel Neves; Lúcio Lara Santos; José Alexandre Ferreira

Highly aggressive, rapidly growing tumors contain significant areas of hypoxia or anoxia as a consequence of inadequate and/or irregular blood supply. During oxygen deprivation, tumor cells withstand a panoply of adaptive responses, including a shift towards anaerobic metabolism and the reprogramming of the transcriptome. One of the major mediators of the transcriptional hypoxic response is the hypoxia-inducible factor 1 (HIF-1), whose stabilization under hypoxia acts as an oncogenic stimulus contributing to chemotherapy resistance, invasion and metastasis. Gene expression analysis by qRT-PCR is a powerful tool for cancer cells phenotypic characterization. Nevertheless, as cells undergo a severe transcriptome remodeling.in response to oxygen deficit, the precise identification of reference genes poses a significant challenge for hypoxic studies. Herein, we aim to establish the best reference genes for studying the effects of hypoxia on bladder cancer cells. Accordingly, three bladder cancer cell lines (T24, 5637, and HT1376) representative of two distinct carcinogenesis pathways to invasive cancer (FGFR3/CCND1 and E2F3/RB1) were used. Additionally, we have explored the most suitable control gene when addressing the influence of Deferoxamine Mesilate salt (DFX), an iron chelator often used to avoid the proteasomal degradation of HIF-1α, acting as an hypoxia-mimetic agent. Using bioinformatics tools (GeNorm and NormFinder), we have elected B2M and HPRT as the most stable genes for all cell lines and experimental conditions out of a panel of seven putative candidates (HPRT, ACTB, 18S, GAPDH, TBP, B2M, and SDHA). These observations set the molecular basis for future studies addressing the effect of hypoxia and particularly HIF-1α in bladder cancer cells.


Oncotarget | 2017

Over forty years of bladder cancer glycobiology: Where do glycans stand facing precision oncology?

Rita Azevedo; Andreia F. Peixoto; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Elisabete Fernandes; Manuel Neves; Luís Lima; Lúcio Lara Santos; José Alexandre Ferreira

The high molecular heterogeneity of bladder tumours is responsible for significant variations in disease course, as well as elevated recurrence and progression rates, thereby hampering the introduction of more effective targeted therapeutics. The implementation of precision oncology settings supported by robust molecular models for individualization of patient management is warranted. This effort requires a comprehensive integration of large sets of panomics data that is yet to be fully achieved. Contributing to this goal, over 40 years of bladder cancer glycobiology have disclosed a plethora of cancer-specific glycans and glycoconjugates (glycoproteins, glycolipids, proteoglycans) accompanying disease progressions and dissemination. This review comprehensively addresses the main structural findings in the field and consequent biological and clinical implications. Given the cell surface and secreted nature of these molecules, we further discuss their potential for non-invasive detection and therapeutic development. Moreover, we highlight novel mass-spectrometry-based high-throughput analytical and bioinformatics tools to interrogate the glycome in the postgenomic era. Ultimately, we outline a roadmap to guide future developments in glycomics envisaging clinical implementation.The high molecular heterogeneity of bladder tumours is responsible for significant variations in disease course, as well as elevated recurrence and progression rates, thereby hampering the introduction of more effective targeted therapeutics. The implementation of precision oncology settings supported by robust molecular models for individualization of patient management is warranted. This effort requires a comprehensive integration of large sets of panomics data that is yet to be fully achieved. Contributing to this goal, over 40 years of bladder cancer glycobiology have disclosed a plethora of cancer-specific glycans and glycoconjugates (glycoproteins, glycolipids, proteoglycans) accompanying disease progressions and dissemination. This review comprehensively addresses the main structural findings in the field and consequent biological and clinical implications. Given the cell surface and secreted nature of these molecules, we further discuss their potential for non-invasive detection and therapeutic development. Moreover, we highlight novel mass-spectrometry-based high-throughput analytical and bioinformatics tools to interrogate the glycome in the postgenomic era. Ultimately, we outline a roadmap to guide future developments in glycomics envisaging clinical implementation.


Talanta | 2018

Glycan affinity magnetic nanoplatforms for urinary glycobiomarkers discovery in bladder cancer

Rita Azevedo; Janine Soares; Cristiana Gaiteiro; Andreia F. Peixoto; Luís Lima; Dylan Ferreira; Marta Relvas-Santos; Elisabete Fernandes; Ana P.M. Tavares; Sofia Cotton; Ana L. Daniel-da-Silva; Lúcio Lara Santos; Rui Vitorino; Francisco Amado; José Alexandre Ferreira

Bladder Cancer (BC) presents one of the highest recurrence rates amongst solid tumours and constitutes the second deadliest disease of the genitourinary track. Non-invasive identification of patients facing disease recurrence and/or progression remains one of the most critical and challenging aspects in disease management. To contribute to this goal, we demonstrate the potential of glycan-affinity glycoproteomics nanoplatforms for urinary biomarkers discovery in bladder cancer. Briefly, magnetic nanoprobes (MNP) coated with three broad-spectrum lectins, namely Concanavalin A (ConA; MNP@ConA), Wheat Germ Agglutinin (WGA; MNP@WGA), and Sambucus nigra (SNA; MNP@SNA), were used to selectively capture glycoproteins from the urine of low-grade and high-grade non-muscle invasive as well as muscle-invasive BC patients. Proteins were identified by nano-LC MALDI-TOF/TOF and data was curated using bioinformatics tools (UniProt, NetOGlyc, NetNGlyc, ClueGO app for Cytoscape and Oncomine) to highlight clinically relevant species. Accordingly, 63 glycoproteins were exclusively identified in cancer samples compared with healthy controls matching in age and gender. Specific glycoprotein sets exclusively found in low-grade non-muscle invasive bladder tumours may aid early diagnosis, while those only found in high-grade non-invasive and muscle-invasive tumours hold potential for accessing progression. Amongst these proteins is bladder cancer stem-cell marker CD44, which has been associated with poor prognosis. Orthogonal validation studies by slot-blotting demonstrated an elevation in urine CD44 levels of high-grade patients, which became more pronounced upon muscle-invasion, in mimicry of the primary tumour. These observations demonstrate the potential of MNP@lectins for identification of clinically relevant glycoproteomics signatures in bladder cancer. Future clinical validation in a larger and well characterized patient subset is required envisaging clinical translation of the results.

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Lúcio Lara Santos

Instituto Português de Oncologia Francisco Gentil

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Teresina Amaro

Instituto Português de Oncologia Francisco Gentil

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