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Dive into the research topics where Daniela Castanotto is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniela Castanotto.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

Combinatorial delivery of small interfering RNAs reduces RNAi efficacy by selective incorporation into RISC

Daniela Castanotto; Kumi Sakurai; Robert Lingeman; Haitang Li; Louise Shively; Lars Aagaard; Harris S. Soifer; Anne Gatignol; Arthur D. Riggs; John J. Rossi

Despite the great potential of RNAi, ectopic expression of shRNA or siRNAs holds the inherent risk of competition for critical RNAi components, thus altering the regulatory functions of some cellular microRNAs. In addition, specific siRNA sequences can potentially hinder incorporation of other siRNAs when used in a combinatorial approach. We show that both synthetic siRNAs and expressed shRNAs compete against each other and with the endogenous microRNAs for transport and for incorporation into the RNA induced silencing complex (RISC). The same siRNA sequences do not display competition when expressed from a microRNA backbone. We also show that TAR RNA binding protein (TRBP) is one of the sensors for selection and incorporation of the guide sequence of interfering RNAs. These findings reveal that combinatorial siRNA approaches can be problematic and have important implications for the methodology of expression and use of therapeutic interfering RNAs.


Molecular Therapy | 2003

Inhibition of HIV-1 infection by lentiviral vectors expressing Pol III-promoted anti-HIV RNAs.

Ming-Jie Li; Gerhard Bauer; Alessandro Michienzi; Jiing Kuan Yee; Nan Sook Lee; James Kim; Shirley Li; Daniela Castanotto; John A. Zaia; John J. Rossi

A primary advantage of lentiviral vectors is their ability to pass through the nuclear envelope into the cell nucleus thereby allowing transduction of nondividing cells. Using HIV-based lentiviral vectors, we delivered an anti-CCR5 ribozyme (CCR5RZ), a nucleolar localizing TAR RNA decoy, or Pol III-expressed siRNA genes into cultured and primary cells. The CCR5RZ is driven by the adenoviral VA1 Pol III promoter, while the human U6 snRNA Pol III-transcribed TAR decoy is embedded in a U16 snoRNA (designated U16TAR), and the siRNAs were expressed from the human U6 Pol III promoter. The transduction efficiencies of these vectors ranged from 96-98% in 293 cells to 15-20% in primary PBMCs. A combination of the CCR5RZ and U16TAR decoy in a single vector backbone gave enhanced protection against HIV-1 challenge in a selective survival assay in both primary T cells and CD34(+)-derived monocytes. The lentiviral vector backbone-expressed siRNAs also showed potent inhibition of p24 expression in PBMCs challenged with HIV-1. Overall our results demonstrate that the lentiviral-based vectors can efficiently deliver single constructs as well as combinations of Pol III therapeutic expression units into primary hematopoietic cells for anti-HIV gene therapy and hold promise for stem or T-cell-based gene therapy for HIV-1 infection.


RNA | 2002

Functional siRNA expression from transfected PCR products.

Daniela Castanotto; Haitang Li; John J. Rossi

RNA interference (RNAi) is a process in which double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) induces the postranscriptional degradation of homologous transcripts. RNAi can be initiated by exposing cells to dsRNA either via transfection or endogenous expression. In mammalian systems, the sequence-specific RNAi effect has been observed by expression of 21-23 base transcripts capable of forming duplexes, or via expression of short hairpin RNAs. We describe here a facile PCR based strategy for rapid synthesis of siRNA expression units and their testing in mammalian cells. The siRNA expression constructs are constructed by PCR, and the PCR products are directly transfected into mammalian cells resulting in functional expression of siRNAs. This approach should prove useful for identification of optimal siRNA-target combinations and for multiplexing siRNA expression in mammalian cells.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

CRM1 mediates nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling of mature microRNAs

Daniela Castanotto; Robert Lingeman; Arthur D. Riggs; John J. Rossi

Drosha-processed microRNAs (miRNAs) have been shown to be exported from the nucleus to the cytoplasm by Exportin 5, where they are processed a second time to generate mature miRNAs. In this work we show that miRNAs also use CRM1 for nuclear-cytoplasmic shuttling. Inhibition of CRM1 by Leptomycin B results in nuclear accumulation of miRNA guide sequences. Nuclear to cytoplasmic transport can be actively competed by synthetic small interfering RNAs, indicating that this pathway is shared by different classes of processed small RNAs. We also find that CRM1 coimmunoprecipitates with Ago-1, Ago-2, Topo2α, EzH2, and Mta, consistent with a role of Argonautes and small RNAs in chromatin remodeling.


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2003

RNA‐Mediated Inhibition of HIV in a Gene Therapy Setting

Alessandro Michienzi; Daniela Castanotto; Nancy Lee; Shirley Li; John A. Zaia; John J. Rossi

Abstract: At present, treatment for HIV‐1 infection employs highly active anti‐retroviral therapy (HAART), which utilizes a combination of RT and protease inhibitors. Unfortunately, HIV can escape many therapies because of its high mutation rate and the complexity of its pathogenesis. HIV‐1 integrates into the cellular genome, which facilitates persistence and acts as a reservoir for reactivation and replication. As an alternative or adjuvant to chemotherapy we have been developing an RNA‐based gene therapy approach for the treatment of HIV‐1 infection. This article summarizes the various RNA based technologies that we have developed for potential application in a gene therapy setting.


Molecular Therapy | 2017

FDA-Approved Oligonucleotide Therapies in 2017

Cy A. Stein; Daniela Castanotto

Oligonucleotides (oligos) have been under clinical development for approximately the past 30 years, beginning with antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) and apatmers and followed about 15 years ago by siRNAs. During that lengthy period of time, numerous clinical trials have been performed and thousands of trial participants accrued onto studies. Of all the molecules evaluated as of January 2017, the regulatory authorities assessed that six provided clear clinical benefit in rigorously controlled trials. The story of these six is given in this review.


Advances in pharmacology | 1994

Antisense Catalytic RNAs as Therapeutic Agents

Daniela Castanotto; John J. Rossi; Nava Sarver

Publisher Summary This chapter presents an overview of well-characterized ribozymes with an emphasis on the problems that remain to be overcome before ribozyme therapy can be made a useful form of medical treatment. The chapter illustrates that many techniques are currently being used to enhance ribozyme activity. Chemical modifications can be used to assess the sequence requirements for cleavage. In one case, nucleotides that may naturally inhibit the cleavage reaction have been identified. The in vitro evolution has also been used to isolate mutant forms of a group I intron, which cleave DNA up to 100-fold more efficiently than the wild-type intron. In vitro evolution takes advantage of the known ligation activities of the hairpin and group I ribozymes. Unfortunately, the hammerhead is less amenable to such in vitro selection as its ligation reaction is extremely inefficient. In conclusion, ribozymes hold considerable promise for future therapeutic applications and will play a key role in the arsenal of pharmacotherapy.


RNA Biology | 2006

Endogenous expression of an anti-TAR aptamer reduces HIV-1 replication.

Gaëlle Kolb; Sandrine Reigadas; Daniela Castanotto; Aurélie Faure; Michel Ventura; John J. Rossi; Jean Jacques Toulmé

An anti-TAR RNA aptamer called R06, which binds tightly and specifically to the trans-activation responsive (TAR) element of the human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) through loop-loop interactions has been previously selected1. We used HIV-based retroviral vectors to express the R06 aptamer. Its synthesis was driven by the U16 snoRNA. We investigated the ability of this cassette to interfere with TAR-mediated transcription using HeLa P4 cells stably expressing the β-galactosidase gene under the control of the HIV-1 5’LTR. We demonstrated that, upon HIV-1 infection, the β-galactosidase activity was reduced in cells expressing the nucleolar U16-R06 transcript. The replication of HIV-1 in these cells was also reduced as shown by quantification of the HIV-1 protease gene 24 h post-infection. This effect was specific and related to the formation of R06 TAR complex as an aptamer with a mutated loop, which was no longer able to bind to TAR, did not show any effect. The nucleolus is likely a compartment of interest for targeting the TAR-protein complex responsible for the trans-activation of transcription of the HIV-1 genome.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

A cytoplasmic pathway for gapmer antisense oligonucleotide-mediated gene silencing in mammalian cells

Daniela Castanotto; Min Lin; Claudia M. Kowolik; LiAnn Wang; Xiao-Qin Ren; Harris S. Soifer; Troels Koch; Bo Rode Hansen; Henrik Oerum; Brian Armstrong; Zhigang Wang; Paul H. Bauer; John J. Rossi; Cy A. Stein

Antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) are known to trigger mRNA degradation in the nucleus via an RNase H-dependent mechanism. We have now identified a putative cytoplasmic mechanism through which ASO gapmers silence their targets when transfected or delivered gymnotically (i.e. in the absence of any transfection reagent). We have shown that the ASO gapmers can interact with the Ago-2 PAZ domain and can localize into GW-182 mRNA-degradation bodies (GW-bodies). The degradation products of the targeted mRNA, however, are not generated by Ago-2-directed cleavage. The apparent identification of a cytoplasmic pathway complements the previously known nuclear activity of ASOs and concurrently suggests that nuclear localization is not an absolute requirement for gene silencing.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2006

Bcl-2 Protein in 518A2 Melanoma Cells In vivo and In vitro

Luba Benimetskaya; Kanyalakshmi Ayyanar; Noah Kornblum; Daniela Castanotto; John J. Rossi; Sijian Wu; Johnathan Lai; Bob D. Brown; Natalia Popova; Paul S. Miller; Harilyn McMicken; Yin Chen; C. A. Stein

Purpose: Bcl-2 is an apoptotic protein that is highly expressed in advanced melanoma. Several strategies have been employed to target the expression of this protein, including G3139, an 18-mer phosphorothioate oligodeoxyribonucleotide targeted to the initiation region of the Bcl-2 mRNA. This compound has recently completed phase III global clinical evaluation, but the function of Bcl-2 as a target in melanoma has not been completely clarified. To help resolve this question, we have permanently and stably down-regulated Bcl-2 protein and mRNA expression in 518A2 cells by two different technologies and evaluated the resulting clones both in vitro and in vivo. Experimental Design: 518A2 melanoma cells were transfected with plasmids engineered to produce either a single-stranded antisense oligonucleotide targeted to the initiation codon region of the Bcl-2 mRNA or a short hairpin RNA also targeted to the Bcl-2 mRNA. In vitro growth, the apoptotic response to G3139, and the G3139-induced release of cytochrome c from isolated mitochondria were evaluated. Cells were then xenografted into severe combined immunodeficient mice and tumor growth was measured. Results:In vitro, down-regulation of Bcl-2 expression by either method produced no change either in the rate of growth or in sensitivity to standard cytotoxic chemotherapeutic agents. Likewise, the induction of apoptosis by G3139 was entirely Bcl-2 independent. In addition, the G3139-induced release from isolated mitochondria was also relatively independent of Bcl-2 expression. However, when xenografted into severe combined immunodeficient mice, cells with silenced Bcl-2, using either technology, either failed to grow at all or grew to tumors of low volume and then completely regressed. In contrast, control cells with “normal” levels of Bcl-2 protein expression expanded to be large, necrotic tumors. Conclusions: The presence of Bcl-2 protein profoundly affects the ability of 518A2 melanoma cells to grow as human tumor xenografts in severe combined immunodeficient mice. The in vivo role of Bcl-2 in melanoma cells thus differs significantly from its in vitro role, and these experiments further suggest that Bcl-2 may be an important therapeutic target even in tumors that do not contain the t14:18 translocation.

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John J. Rossi

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Haitang Li

Beckman Research Institute

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Cy A. Stein

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Arthur D. Riggs

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Laurence J.N. Cooper

University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center

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John A. Zaia

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Michael C. Jensen

National Bureau of Economic Research

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Sergio Gonzalez

City of Hope National Medical Center

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Shirley Li

Beckman Research Institute

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